dimanche 22 février 2015

The Perfect Playlist for Pretty Much Any Workout

COURTESY OF SLT
Every week, Your New Favorite Playlist introduces you to workout-worthy tunes from a different fitness brand. This week, SLT shares one of its recent playlists.

One of the first things people unfamiliar with SLT think when they walk into the studio: What is that? "That" would be a megaformer—or a Pilates reformer with extra add-ons that work your body even harder. "SLT is a one stop shop," says Caitlin Krause, an instructor at the studio. "It's a muscle-quivering, sweat-inducing, total-body workout that is tough but fun."
Krause brings the fun (at least in part) by making sure her playlist is at the top of its game. "It's so important to throw in some heart-pumping songs three-quarters of the way in," she says. "That’s just about the time you're feeling exhausted but realize you still have about 15 minutes left." Can't make it to a class? Try one of Krause's mixes to power-up your next workout. "This playlist is perfect for any type of heart-pounding cardio: running, stairs, jump rope, and of course, dancing," she says.




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The Best Cardio Workout for People Who Hate Cardio

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This article was written by Alex Zakrzewski and provided by our partners at Men's Health.
Cardio haters, rejoice. The four-minute calorie-torching wonder known as the Tabata protocol lives up to the hype, according to an Auburn University study.
Participants performed eight 20-second rounds of jump squats separated by only 10 seconds of rest. Each round was done at an all-out pace with the participants working as hard as possible from start to finish. While they burned an average of 13.4 calories per minute during the workout, they also doubled their post-exercise metabolic rate for at least 30 minutes afterward. 
"You would have to do five times the amount of moderate-intensity exercise—like power walking or light jogging—to burn the same amount of calories as you did in just four minutes," says study author Michele Olson, Ph.D. "Even more if you   want to achieve the after-burn benefits, too."
Since it requires energy to help the body recover post-workout, the higher the intensity of your sweat session, the longer your metabolism stays elevated afterward, says Olson. In this case, the participants worked up to 95 percent of their maximum capacity (read: as hard as they could go), so it took a long time for their bodies to return to normal, even though they were resting.
Want to try a Tabata-style workout for yourself? Check out the Bodyweight Cardio Burners—a high-intensity fitness DVD that will give you the workout of your life in just 20 minutes. 

5 Ways to Lose 5 Pounds—From the Guy Who Gets A-Listers in Shape

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This article was written by Cathryne Keller and provided by our partners at Fitbie.
When you first started to overhaul your food and fitness habits, it probably felt like you were slimming down faster than a new celebrity mom. But now that you're getting closer to your goal, the scale is no longer cooperating. What gives?
RELATED: 7 Reasons You're Not Losing Weight 
Part of the problem is that bigger bodies burn more calories, so the smaller you get, the harder you have to work in order to drop pounds. But that doesn't mean you have to starve or kill yourself at the gym to lose more fat.
We called up celebrity trainer Harley Pasternak (responsible for such impressive slim-downs as Jessica Simpson's) to find out how to push past your plateau and finally reach your weight-loss goal. Here are the 5 Poundsauthor's top five tips for losing those last five pounds:
1. Stop working out so much. 
Yes, you read that right. There's nothing wrong with intense workouts, but if you're focused solely on traditional exercise, you may be getting less activity than you think.
"There are 168 hours in the week, says Pasternak," so if you're exercising for only three of those, then there are 165 hours of the week that you're not active—sitting at your desk, sitting in the car, sitting at dinner. That shows you the importance of staying on the move all the time." Pasternak's recommendation? Invest in a fitness tracker. "I tell all my clients to get aFitbit to monitor how much—or how little—hey move throughout the day," he says. "There are several studies that show that people who take at least 10,000 steps a day have more success losing weight than people who actually go to the gym."

I Didn't Let Cancer Stop Me From Getting to a Healthy Weight

WILL AGUILA/ JULIE LETSOS
The Lifestyle
After I gave birth to my son in April 2013, I weighed 155 pounds, and I just didn't feel like myself. I decided I needed to get back to my pre-baby weight and began slowly working out at the gym. Then, my whole world was turned upside down when I was diagnosed with breast cancer almost six months later.
I had to put weight loss on the back burner, but I started researching the healthiest way to eat so that my body could be at its best during the mastectomy and chemo treatments I needed. Even though my revamped eating habits didn't impact my weight, I felt ready to conquer the disease.
By my son's first birthday, I had finished chemo, recovered from my surgery, and was in full remission. At that moment, I decided it was time to take another shot at getting back to the weight I was when I got married five years earlier.
The Change

After telling my sister I wanted to lose weight, she introduced me to the doctor she worked for, Will Aguila, M.D., who had created an eating plan called The Baseball Diet. To be honest, I know nothing about baseball, so I was a little worried that I wouldn't understand what was going on. But I decided to give it a try anyways. For the diet, Aguila gives you a list of recipes to make for breakfast, lunch, snacks, and dinner. A typical breakfast was half of an avocado, an egg (cooked however you want), and a slice of whole-wheat toast. Lunch was usually a piece of fish with some greens, and dinner would include some kind of protein, veggies, and a carbohydrate. The "baseball" aspect of the  diet is that when you incorporate the healthy foods into your meals, you get to "move" around the bases. First base might be a serving or protein, second base could be a serving of veggies, and third base could servings of fruit or grains. Since I was already eating so healthy during my cancer treatments, it wasn't too difficult to transition into this diet. Plus, if I did slip up one day by having more carbs than I supposed to at one meal, I could subtract them from my next meal. And as it turns out, you don't need to know anything about baseball to do the diet. 
When I finally got clearance to go to the gym, I started doing circuit training three times a week, which I loved because it has a little bit of strength training and cardio. It felt great to start working out again.  
Nine weeks after setting out to lose weight, I had lost 20 pounds. Since then, I've gone on to lose five more pounds by continuing with the diet for lunch and dinner and subbing a protein shake in for breakfast. I now weigh 130 pounds. I'm so proud!
Eating healthy has really become a way of life for me—though I do sometimes have a cookie, cereal, or ice cream (I am human). If I treat myself, I know the next day I can just eat lighter to balance it out. My ultimate goal is to hit 120 pounds, the weight I was when I got married. And I'm well on my way!
The Reward
I love knowing that the lifestyle that I'm living now is going to help me be here longer for my son. When you go through something like cancer at a young age, your whole mindset changes and you just want to be alive. What I've learned by going through cancer and starting a weight-loss plan is that eating healthy can help me live a longer and more fulfilling life. 
Julie's Tips:
Make easy meals: 
Keeping my meals simple kept me from getting overwhelmed with cooking. That's great because when I get overwhelmed, I just want to give up.
Try to keep your stress levels down: Even though I was eating very healthy foods while going through cancer treatments, I think the stress of dealing with the disease kept me from sleeping and totally killed my metabolism. Stress made it so much harder to lose weight. I learned that if you don't take a step back and relax by having some "me time," your weight loss might not progress as much as it could.
Exercise however you can: Even when I couldn't go to the gym because of the surgery or chemo, I was walking. Staying active made it easier to get back into working out when I got the all-clear.
More from Women's Health:

Why Sex with Single Dads is the Best Kind of Sex

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This article was written by Kristen Chase and repurposed with permission from Lifetime Moms.
I can't say I've ever really had a type when it comes to dating, other than "asshole." Okay, but seriously, I’m not really one to discriminate with appearance or hair color or height. Well, mostly anyway.
I am almost six feet tall, and as much as the nice man on OK Cupid told me, "We're all the same height laying down," I don't want to be able to pat my date on the head. But lately, I have to say that I'm all about the dads, especially in the bedroom. Now, I'm not talking about married dads or anything—even though the whole sister wife thing is definitely intriguing.
I'm referring to single dads versus regular dudes with no kids (DWNK).Yes, I completely made up that acronym.
I realize I'm about to make some pretty sweeping generalizations here, but in my humble experience, and by humble I mean fairly extensive yet hoping not to completely embarrass myself on the Internet, I’ve found a few things that dads do that I just haven't gotten from DWNK.
It's Not Over Until the Sexy Mom Sings
Yes, I have to say that for the most part, the dads that I have been with, particularly the over-40 dad crowd, will keep trying and trying no matter what it takes. That means even though their party is over, they are more than willing to find other ways, sometimes very creative ways, to finish the job. I cannot tell you how many times a DWNK gives me some lame excuse about being tired—how is that possible when you do not have any children? Take a couple of breaths, splash some water on your face if you need it, and get working.
Get more reasons why sex with single dads is the best from Lifetime Moms!
More From Lifetime Moms:

Why Men Are Suddenly Drinking Breast Milk

This article was written by Michael Easter and provided by our partners at Men's Health.
“I'm feeling soooo anabolic right now.”
“You are selling your gains short if you are not supplementing with this stuff.”
“I made the greatest gains of my life, an unrivaled 35 pounds in 10 months.”
Those are the words of bodybuilders, each man speaking about his favorite new supplement: breast milk.
As in, milk from a human woman’s breast. The same stuff you probably drank as a baby, a time in your life when you also shit your pants regularly and cried hysterically for a good two hours a day.
Pounding mom milk for gains is the newest tactic that a handful of bodybuilders are using to put on more muscle, arguing that the substance has special properties that make it superior to just about any other food.
“I think the idea behind drinking breast milk for muscle growth is that it’s incredibly calorie- and nutrient-dense, and it has some additional healthy substances,” says Brian St. Pierre, a sports dietitian with Precision Nutrition. “Breast milk is designed to rapidly grow a human baby, so maybe people think a similar effect will happen to fully grown humans?”
RELATED: How Bradley Cooper Gained 40 Pounds forAmerican Sniper
A cup of breast milk contains about 170 calories a cup (20 more than whole milk), 10 grams of fat, 16 carbs, and two grams of protein (five fewer than whole milk), as well as vitamins and minerals. “Theoretically, there’s also some human growth hormone in breast milk,” says St. Pierre. “Although I’m not sure it’s all that much for a human adult to benefit from.”
Scientists and trainers agree that taking in more nutritious calories than you burn, eating enough protein, and regularly performing smart workouts are what drives muscular growth. So, yes, adding a nutrient- and calorie-dense liquid to your diet can help you gain muscle as long as you’re training. No question. But breast milk? Not the smartest idea, says Marc Halpern, a registered dietitian based in Salt Lake City.
First, it’s hard to come by, says Halpern. You can’t just pick up a gallon of breast milk at the local super market on the way home from work. Many bodybuilders buy their milk off somewhat sketchy websites like Craigslist, or they barter with a pregnant woman (talk about awkward conversations). Second, breast milk is expensive, averaging about $1.50 an ounce, according to The Human Milk Banking Association of North America, an organization that banks milk for mothers who cannot produce breast milk.
Finally, breast milk is only as good as the diet and general health of the person who produces it, says Halpern. "If the woman has a terrible diet, the breast milk will be terrible quality," he says. "And diseases like HIV can be transmitted through breast milk.” What’s more, because you’re oftentimes buying the milk off of people who may pump it in their homes and not a controlled, sterile environment, the milk can be contaminated.
Science agrees: A recent study in the journal Pediatrics found that of 101 samples of breast milk purchased online, 63 percent tested positive for staphylococcus, 36 percent for streptococcus, and three percent for salmonella.
Men work harder to get ahold of this supplement, pay an exorbitant amount for it, and put themselves at risk of sickness by taking it. But here's the thing: There’s just no evidence to suggest that breast milk is a magic muscle builder, says St. Pierre.
“Could breast milk help you build more muscle? I don’t think anyone knows, and it’s never been studied, but all you’re going on is very rare anecdotes from online forums [note: a terrible source]. Is it possible? Of course. Is it likely? No. Are there easier and cheaper ways to get nutrients that help you put on muscle? Absolutely. This stuff probably just isn’t special, and it’s not worth the hassle, risk, or money.”
More From Men's Health:

Triceps with Band - Both Arms (II)

Description:

This exercise is designed to work the shoulders, upper back and triceps. If you want to increase or decrease the resistance or challenge of the exercise you can do so by changing the type of exercise band to either a stronger or less resistant one. 

Instructions:



              1
Start by standing with feet shoulder width apart. Elbows should be level with shoulders and elbows bent to form a 90 degree angle. Hold each end of the band tightly. The band should be directly above your head.

Triceps with Band - Both Arms (II)

Exercise: Triceps with Band - Both Arms (II)
2                    
                                                         
Exhale and pull band by straightening your elbows. Hold for 2 seconds and release back to start position.