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5-Minute Pilates Stretching.

2/11/2019

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Well worth a read!

1/30/2019

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I did not write this, my friend Kev did. As I totally agree with him and his point of view on this i asked him if i could share it here on my website. I think he really has nailed the struggle loads of us have, this can definetly be of help for most of us, if not for you, then somebody you know.
You don't need a resolution, you need a plan


There is a sort of global running joke these days that new year’s resolutions are doomed to failure. We set goals every January fully expecting to fail in the long term.

But what about people that really do want to instigate some sort of meaningful change in their lives? New Years day is as good a time to start as any. Actually no. The best time to start with any positive lifestyle change is right now. It doesn’t matter what day your calendar says it is.

Regardless of when you start, saying that you are going to do something is easy. Anyone can do that. Saying you are going to do something and actually following through over the long term is something else entirely.

THE WHY

Step one in making any meaningful change is figuring out WHY you are doing it. Don't just say you are going to do something, say WHY you are doing it too. Even if you are only saying it to yourself. This is what will provide motivation when January 1st has become a distant memory and you're struggling on some miserable Tuesday afternoon.

Maybe you want to get fit and healthy so that you can play and be active with your kids, or see your grand kids grow a bit older.

Maybe you lost a friend who always wanted to run a marathon so you are going to do it for them.

Maybe you lost your parents to some chronic lifestyle disease and are determined that your kids won't have to go through the same.

Understanding this 'why' is crucial for long term success. Doing it for your kids, or your friends or whatever thing means something to you is a lot more valuable that doing it because it’s what you think you should do, or because it's trendy or fashionable. Do it for you and know why you are doing it.

If you have trouble figuring out your why then try this exercise. Ask yourself why five times. Ask why, answer and then ask why again. For example:

I want too lose weight

Why?

Because I want to be thin.

Why?

Because I would look better

Why?

Because I would feel better

Why?

Because I don’t like looking at myself in the mirror

Why?

Because I was bullied as a kid for being fat

It can hurt, but it’s worth getting to the bottom of why you are really trying to make change. Write it down, hold on to it, remember it. It might not take all five whys to get to the bottom of it, or it might take more, but five is a good starting number.

THE HOW

Once you know why, then you need to figure out how. What most people need at New Years is a plan, not a resolution.

Oh, you're going to quit smoking?

How?

What are you going to do in three weeks when you've had a horrible day at work and you're now stuck in traffic? In 2018 you would have whipped out one of those sexy little cancer sticks and gotten a quick mental massage. But it's not 2018 anymore. How are you gonna to deal with the stress now? Chewing gum? A quick meditation?

It's important to think about this stuff. Identifying the hurdles up front will help you get over them.

That's what planning is all about, being prepared. It’s not about creating a rigid set of rules to live your live by, it’s about being prepared for the challenges that you will face along the way… and you will face them.

Step one is to identify your goal, which we’ve talked about already. Now you need to ensure it’s SMART. By this I mean make it Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant & Time based.

The next step is to figure out if there are any dependencies. Maybe you are unequipped to actually follow through on your resolution. Will you need money? Are there cheaper alternatives?

Then you can figure out what tools you will use to help you on your journey. These as simple as a bunch of post-it notes or as complex as a full featured diet and exercise tracking app.

Finally you need to figure out how to measure progress and by what standards you will judge your success.

As you can see the resolution is just the first step.

Lets go ahead and apply this theory to some real world examples, hopefully someone out there finds it useful.

FOR EXAMPLE

HEALTH

Resolution: To eat healthier

This isn't a great resolution because it is too fuzzy. What does 'healthier' mean? To someone that eats nothing but McDonalds and chocolate then doing just about anything would be healthier. You need to get specific.

A better resolution: "To remove all processed food from my diet" or "To remove all added sugar from my diet", or maybe an easier first step "To remove fizzy drinks from my diet".

With these ones the success conditions are clear. You know immediately if you have broken the resolution.

The why:

Insert your own here - this should be unique for everyone

The how:

Remove processed food from the shopping list entirely

Don't carry loose change, rendering the vending machines at the office unusable

Prep lunches and dinners for the week on Sundays

Start the day with porridge and berries

Add healthier snack options to the shopping list

Dependencies:

Being able to cook will be important and might be something you need to learn.

Do you have the minimum required cookware to enable you to prepare your own meals from fresh unprocessed produce?

Handy tools:

Recipe apps to help you prepare food

Calendar for meal planning

Different size boxes for food storage

Risks:

That stag party in two weeks

Maybe you've just gotta accept that you will eat and drink poorly here, which is fine - just be ready to get back on the horse after. You could prep food for after so that once it's done you are ready to go again

Busy periods in work leave little time to prepare food

This can be tricky - but really it's just about time management. You can prep 4 or 5 lunch and dinners in a couple of hours if you know what you are doing - time to learn efficient food prep

Weekly date night at the cinema

Trade in cinema junk food for some nuts and dried fruit

Measuring progress:

Count the number of meals you have per week that contain processed foods - this should trend down over the course of the year

Count the number of processed snack foods you have per week - this should trend down over the year

Count the number of times you had fresh fruit as a snack per week - this should trend up

Count the number of meals that were prepared entirely from fresh produce per week - this should trend up

By the end of the year your target could be 95% of all meals are made with fresh produce and 90% of snacks are fruit/nuts/wholefoods.

Working with percentages means you can be flexible. Don't strive for perfection, it's near impossible to achieve - strive for a trend that is going in the right direction and don't be too hard on yourself if you slip up, just get back on track and remember your percentages.

FITNESS

Resolution: To get fit

Another poor resolution. What does fit even mean? Most body builders couldn't run a 5k, but they look fit, and most marathon runners can't lift decent amounts of weight but can run forever.

Get more specific: "To be able to run 5k in under 30 minutes" or "To be able to deadlift 150kg".

These new resolutions are better, same as with the diet ones above they contain the success criteria right there in plain text.

The why:

Insert your own here - this should be unique for everyone

The how:

Exercise at least three time per week - with fitness target in mind (run if your goal is a 5k)

Avoid any counter productive activities - ie. Stop smoking if you want to be able to run

Find a community, online or real world, with similar goals for support

Dependencies:

To be able to lift weight you will need a gym or a barbell setup at home.

To run you will need a decent pair of shoes and some shorts are advisable

Maybe some high visibility clothing if you run at night

Handy tools:

Run tracking app

Weight progression tracking app - though you could do this with a pen an paper

Risks:

Injury - leaves you disheartened and will cost you momentum

Being sidelined for two or three weeks could make it so that the healthy habit you’ve worked hard to cultivate is destroyed - but there is always something you can do, even if it’s just going for walk instead of a run, don’t break the routine.

Make sure that you don't over exert, find a good mobility and flexibility routine to reduce your risk.

Reduce the risk of injury significantly by reading up on how to protect your joints and muscles

Weather - for runners

Figure out a home cardio routine you can do when it's too horrible to go out for a run, or maybe a bit of yoga - something, anything, preserve your routine and your momentum

Scheduling

Life often gets in the way of our fitness goals - keep this in mind when creating a workout schedule, it needs to be maintainable and flexible. For example three work outs a week can happen on any day - having a rigid set of gym days can cause problems. Having said that, discipline and routine is good - find a balance between the two.

Measuring progress

With weights this is easy - figure out what the max you can lift right now is and track how much you are adding week on week, month on month - this should trend up

For running you can track how far you can run and how much you can add each week/month. Or you can time a specific distance and try to get that time down.

Count how many times you exercise each week and set a minimum/maximum

Fitness and exercise can be frustrating because when it is done correctly progress will be slow. Tracking your work outs vital. You can look back through your progress for a little hit of motivation when ever you need it. Progress pictures can be useful too.

THE CLASSIC

Resolution: To quit smoking

This resolution is fine - it speaks for itself

The Why:

Insert your own here - this should be unique for everyone

The How:

Avoid alcohol for three months - it's hard enough to quit without having to do so while drunk

Meditate for 5 minutes whenever a craving comes along

Create dedicated savings account for money that would have been spent on cigarettes

Find an online community of people for support and advice

Disrupt routines and change habits that usually involved smoking (ie. If you always had a cigarette after lunch, find something else to occupy you during that time - create a new healthy habit)

Dependencies:

Your own will power - this will be important during the first few weeks

Handy Tools:

Tracking app that tells you how much you have reduced smoking related health risks and how much money you have saved

Meditation app to help learn meditation as a way to stave off cravings

Risks:

Stressful day at work

Parties with friends who are smokers

Measuring success:

Track the amount of cigarettes you currently smoke on an average day

After quitting track the amount you have per day - this should be zero or at least trend down

If you usually smoke 60 cigarettes per week and during the first week of January you have 2, then this is not failure, it is success - provided you can maintain the downward trend

Track the number of cravings you have per day and what you did to subdue them - this should trend down

Track the amount of money saved from not buying cigarettes

Track any physical changes you notice - better breathing, sense of taste, sense of smell etc...

By now you should see a common theme here - lots of tracking. Keep track of the positives and any progress, or lack there of. Seeing progress provides motivation and helps you define future goals. Seeing a lack of progress lets you know you need to tweak something. Then at the end of the year you can look back on everything you've achieved using this clear and concise record.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Try taking your own resolution and applying the same thought process as above. Figure out if you are really ready to take this on and make sure you understand why you are doing it.

I think it's fine to spend January planning and learning about the changes you want to make. Jump right in and start learning, but feed all of these learnings back into your plan. By the end off January you should be in a great position to keep going for the next year.

The best thing about this approach is that if you can't even sit down to make a plan, or if during planning you get overwhelmed and pack it in, deciding instead to just 'wing it' then you can just forget about the resolution straight away and save yourself a month of trying.

Happy New Year!
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Food for thought

1/5/2019

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Easy dinner..

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Pack with nutrition
Time;10min.

How:
Throw 2 salmon fillets
( you can use whatever option you like, vegan, vegetarian, ) into a frying pan. No oil needed as salmon has loads of healthy fats as there is.
I squeeze lemon and some chili flakes on mine.
While that’s cooking away, chop up red pepper, tomato, avocado, sugar-snap, carrot.
Or anything veggie you have in the fridge.
Place your now ready salmon on top of your little veggie mountain of goodness, slap on a bit of hummus.
And you are all set.
Couldn’t be easier

What, Why and When ??

A lot of people ask me what I eat, it’s a hard question to answer... people that know me would say I like life simple and uncomplicated. That’s also how I like my food. I don’t often eat because I’m hungry, what? You think... she’s not hungry? That’s not what I mean. I eat before I would get hungry, I fuel ⛽️ my body. I try to keep my blood sugar levels steady, this way I don’t overeat or get highs/lows. I don’t eat eggs & dairy as I’m intolerant. After I eat I like to feel satisfied & energetic, not full/bloated/heavy/tired. So I listen to what my body says, this way I change the food that don’t make me feel good. @

Today’s lunch: Toasted rye bread, mushed avocado, chilli & salt. Miso soup. Red pepper, tomato, celery & hummus. . ☝️Btw: when making miso soup, make sure you ad the hot water last minute before eating it, as the hot temperatures will ruin the benefits (fermented = good bacteria)of the soup if you leave it standing . 
Red peppers has way way way more vitamin C then an orange!! ​
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Introduction to Pilates and the 6 principles

12/22/2018

2 Comments

 
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Pilates is a workout that will stretch, straighten and strengthen you body, with a balance between body and mind. 
It is very important to understand all the principles and to be patient. 


Breath: “ Above all.....learn to breath correctly”
I can’t stress enough about the importance of this in Pilates. It is also the most complex element to learn, but it is essential to do it right. 
The inhale can often be easier to learn, but one needs to take the time to develop a great inhale and exhale. If the breathing pattern is not made correctly it will restrict your move, and it will also make us more likely to pick injuries.
A correct exhale will stabilize your pelvis and that in return will keep your spine in neutral. This is crucial as we build and strengthen our bodies. 
As a general rule, we inhale to prepare for the movement and exhale as we execute it, particularly through the more difficult parts. We inhale through the nose and exhale through the mouth. Always breathing deeply and fully. 


Concentration:
There are no mindless or careless moves in Pilates. During each part of every movement you should be conducting an internal dialogue, directing your body through the exercise. Concentrating on what’s correct and what’s not. Feel your body. What can you improve? This is why it doesn’t matter if you are a beginner or advanced, the better you get the more you are expecting from yourself. There is always room for improvement. 


Control:
Joseph Pilates called his method “Contrology” or “The art of control” 
Pilates requires the complete control of your body by your mind. Every motion you perform should be meticulously calculated and planned for. In this way the Pilates method reduces the risk of injury. 


Centring:
Your centre is the foundation for all your movements. No movement occurs without a strong and stable centre. So each and every exercise focuses on strengthening the centre. 
Centre = wide band of the midsection from your navel around your lower back.


Precision:
Precision will bring each exercise from superficial to intense. Focus on completing each exercise as perfectly as possible rather than just executing the movement. 


Flow:
Each move shall have a continuous flow, often combined with your breathing. Also try to interlink the next exercise together with the previous one. This will improve concentration, control, coordination and balance. 




Pilates body in motion
The Pilates Barn
Kristina Leddy
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Joseph Pilates Quotes

12/15/2018

1 Comment

 
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​"Change happens through movement and movement heals.”

“You are only as young as your spine is flexible.”

“Everyone is the architect of their own happiness.”

“You will feel better in ten sessions, look better in twenty sessions, and have a completely new body in thirty sessions.“

“It’s the mind itself which shapes the body.”

“Physical fitness is the first requisite of happiness.“

“Not only is health a normal condition, but it is our duty not only to attain it but to maintain it.”

“Every moment of our life can be the beginning of great things”

“The Pilates Method of Body Conditioning is complete coordination of body, mind and spirit.“
​

“True flexibility can be achieved only when all muscles are uniformly developed.“
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My favorite booty burn workout 

12/8/2018

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Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
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The 100 - traditional Pilates move.

12/1/2018

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This move is a traditional Pilates move. That can be preformed by the novice beginner or the most advanced. It has loads of modification options. Teaching all the principles of Pilates
  • BREATH
  • CONCENTRATION
  • CONTROL
  • CENTERING
  • PRECISION
  • FLOW
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    The Pilates Barn
    Kristina Leddy

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