Showing posts with label dedication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dedication. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 9, 2011


YOUR TIME IS PRECIOUS; DON’T WASTE IT!



I’ve already written that LESS is MORE.  The key to successfully implementing the less is more principle is by cranking up the intensity. That’s because cardiovascular exercise relies on frequency, duration and intensity for effectiveness.  Both frequency and duration are about time, and none of us has enough time. So don’t waste it.  The only variable left is intensity.  So how do we increase the intensity?

Your heart rate is the best way to judge intensity:
The traditional formula (the latest formula takes into account a person’s resting heart rate and has results that vary slightly from the traditional formula presented here) used to calculate target heart rate zones is:
220 minus your age = 100% (maximum heart rate)

For example:  a 35 year old’s maximum heart rate is:
220 - 35 =  185.0


Many people who exercise regularly often workout at a moderate intensity level.  Moderate is defined as 60% - 70% of the maximum.  In our example the moderate range; 60% - 70% of the maximum 185.0 is 111 – 129.5.

A high intensity level falls between about 75 - 85% of your maximum heart rate.  At this level exercise feels challenging and leaves you too breathless to talk much.  For our 35 year old, this is a range of 139 – 157.

Thursday, January 13, 2011


5 Tips for January

It’s January.  It’s GREAT to see both so many familiar faces as well as new ones.  Hopefully more than just a few of you become much more than just faces to Jay and the rest of the staff. SO! – Don’t let the January effect wear off.
You need to stay motivated!  Long enough to make health & fitness part of your life – forever.  

OK – How do we do that?

Monday, November 29, 2010


IT'S NEVER TOO LATE


I was inspired by the article in The New York Times magazine, November 28, 2010; The Incredible Flying Nonagenarian by Bruce Grierson, to share the following:


My highlights of the article are as follows:
The cohort of people 85 and older — the fastest-growing segment of the population, as it happens — is increasingly being studied for longevity clues.
Some researchers now see aging itself as a kind of mitochondrial disease. Defective mitochondria appear as we get older, and these researchers say that they rob us of endurance, strength and function. There’s evidence that for young patients with mitochondrial disease, exercise is a potent tool, slowing the symptoms. If that’s true, then exercise could also potentially be a kind of elixir of youth, combating the ravages of aging far more than we thought. 
EXERCISE HAS BEEN shown to add between six and seven years to a life span (and improve the quality of life in countless ways).

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

It's only day 2 of the blog, but you've got to love this:

Believe in yourself; and with some commitment, dedication, hard work, and a worthwhile goal YOU WILL get there!

Make sure to watch at least 35 seconds!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZWUq_HgSVM

Jay