Tuesday, 28 November 2017

STEP AEROBIC WORKOUT


Step Aerobics



Step aerobics is a classic cardio workout. It's lasted for decades for a simple reason: It delivers results.
The "step" is a 4-inch to 12-inch raised platform. You step up, around, and down from the platform in different patterns to boost your heart rate and breathing, and strengthen your muscles.
Step aerobics moves range from simple to advanced. The most basic is a step-up, step-down. Once you get more experienced, you do moves that take you over the top and around the step forwards, sideways, and backwards.
Most people take step aerobics classes at a gym, with an instructor showing you each move. The instructor and the upbeat music motivate you to keep going.
Your class will start with a warm-up, followed by choreographed routines on the step, and a cooldown at the end. In some classes, you'll use hand weights for strength-training moves off the step.

Intensity Level: Medium

The intensity level depends on how high you make the step and what kinds of movements you do on it.
For the lowest intensity, put the step flat on the floor. To make it more intense, add risers that raise the step's height. Use your arms, too. The more you raise your arms overhead, the harder you'll work.

Areas It Targets

Core: Yes. Your core muscles stabilize you as you're stepping. You'll also burn fat and get stronger abs.
Arms: Yes. Your lower body is the star of step aerobics, but you may also use your arms and do strength- training exercises with weights specifically for your arms.
Legs: Yes. Stepping up and down works your calves, quadriceps, and hamstrings.
Glutes: Yes. All those step-ups strengthen and tone your buttocks.
Back: Yes. You'll use the muscles in your lower back with each step.

Type

Flexibility: Yes. The fluid motions of stepping will improve your flexibility.
Aerobic: Yes. Your heartwill pump harder. You'll sweat as you burn calories.
Strength: Yes. Stepping up and down works the muscles in your calves, legs, and buttocks. Many step aerobics classes add strength-training with weights. Although you can also use light weights while you step, it's best not to, since you could injure your shoulder joint.
Sport: No. If you're an athlete, you might use step aerobics to cross train.
Low-Impact: Yes. You usually keep one foot on the bench or ground, so step aerobics can be a low-impact program.

What Else You Should Know

Cost: If you're planning to do step aerobics at home, you'll need to buy a step and risers, which can run anywhere from $17 to more than $100. You may also want to buy a DVD to walk you through the moves. You can also take a step class at a gym or community center, which will have membership or class fees.
Good for beginners? Yes. Start with basic steps and work your way up to more difficult movements.
Outdoors: No. You could take your step outdoors, but most people do step aerobics in a gym or at home.

At home: Yes. You can set up the step at home and exercise to music or with a workout video.

Equipment required? Yes. You need a step and enough risers to lift it to the height you want.

What Dr. Melinda Ratini Says:

Step aerobics is a great way to get your cardio. To get a complete workout, you should add some strength-building exercises to your routine a couple of times a week, especially for your upper body.
If you like low-tech workouts, or the option of working out on your own in front of a screen, then you will like step aerobics. Because you can easily change the height of the step to fit different fitness levels, step can be a good choice no matter what shape you are in. You also have the choice of enrolling in a class where an instructor can take you through the steps. Think music, dance moves, and stomps.
Step aerobics is not for you if you’d rather be outside. If you want to take a more meditative approach to fitness, walking and yoga are better picks.
Is It Good for Me If I Have a Health Condition?

f you have high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or diabetes, your doctor has likely told you to get up and get moving. Step aerobics is a great waStep DVD still photo 2y to do this.
If you get into a routine of doing it on most days of the week for at least a half hour at a time, it can help you drop weight and lower your bad  as well as your bloodpressure. Lowering these helps prevent heart disease. It can raise your good cholesterol(HDL), too.
If you already have heart disease, check with your doctor first, so you know what activities are OK for you.
If you have prediabetes, aerobic exercise is a proven way to help keep it from becoming diabetes. Step aerobics can also help manage existing diabetes, along with good nutrition and any medication that you are on. Follow your diabetes doctor's  treatment plan for exercise.
If you have arthritis, step aerobics can be a good weight-bearing exercise for you, since you can adjust the step's height and the intensity of your workout.
If you have hip, foot, ankle, or knee pain, step isn't for you. Ask your doctor or physical therapist about other activities you could do instead. For instance, swimming takes the weight off your joints while you exercise.
Pregnant? If you have been doing step aerobics before your pregnancy, you can usually continue as long as your pregnancy is going well. Confirm that with your doctor. To keep you and your baby healthy, take these precautions: Lower the step as your belly grows and your center of gravity changes, drink water, and don't overheat.
Check with your doctor before starting a new exercise programme, especially if you haven't been active in a while.

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Monday, 27 November 2017

MORE EFFECTIVE EXERCISE WITH THERA BAND

MORE EFFECTIVE MOVES WITH THERA BAND




Mini band workout moves
GETTY IMAGES
Here at WH, we’re huge fans of the thera band. For one, they’re dirt cheap (l. Two, they weigh next to nothing and, as such, can be thrown without thought into any gym bag or suitcase for an on-the-go workout. .

Mini bands apply tension during both the contracting and lengthening phases of a move, and since the band loops around your limbs, it naturally refines your form on most movement patterns. While there are dozens on dozens of exercises that can benefit from this tiny piece of rubber, here are the crucial, functional moves that, with the addition of a mini band, will change your fitness game

mini band squat
ALYSSA ZOLNA
SQUATS
Another double whammy! Placing the band above or below your knees for squats pulls your knees together, which can cause “valgus”—a form flaw women are more prone to than men because of their wider hip angle. The band then forces you to reflexively push your knees apart, helping you burn out your glutes and hamstrings. (Correcting valgus also reduces knee pain.) The band aids upper-body positioning, too, if you double up with one around your wrists and stretch your arms in front of your body, according to Gaddour. “This puts your chest in better postural position when you squat by preventing the slight rounding of your upper back. You’ll feel the need to spread your shoulders and screw them into their sockets
mini band mountain climb
EMILY TIBERIO
MOUNTAIN CLIMBERS
Adding resistance in the form of a band can take your fast-paced mountain climbers to a different level. Simply start by looping the mini band around your feet, then get into a high plank position. Lift your right foot off the floor and raise your knee to your chest. Repeat on the other side. This version makes the usual stamina-building move way more slow and intentional, which actually helps strengthen your hips. Not to mention, you'll still reap all the major abs benefits (if not more) with this variation.

band walk slider

ALYSSA ZOLNA
SQUAT WALKS
Walking in a squatted position blasts your legs, but doing so with a band around your ankles makes it that much harder: You increase muscle activation in your glutes and hamstrings, helping make the move less quad-dominant. You’ll also strengthen your hips and develop better mobility and stability in your lateral plane (a.k.a. moving side to side), which we don’t train often enough
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5 STRETCHES YOU SHOULD NEVER DO BEFORE WORKOUT

5 STRETCHES YOU SHOULD NOT DO BEFORE

WORKOUT

These moves are doing your body no favors.


Pre-workout stretches to avoid
GETTY IMAGES
Pop quiz: Should you always stretch before a workout? If your answer was “stretch,” you’re half right. You should never start exercising without stretching, because “muscles need to be warmed up in order to increase your heart rate, which translates to increased blood flow, and therefore oxygen, to the muscles,” , an AFAA- and NASM-certified trainer and the founder of A.C.C.E.S.S., an active recovery fitness class. “And you want more oxygen in your muscle cells to assist in the stress you’re about to place on them.” But the type of stretching you do matters, a, or moving stretches, should be your go-to before a workout. As far as static stretching goes (a.k.a. holding a position for 30 seconds or longer), you’d be better off skipping that warm-up, accor “Static stretching prior to a workout reduces muscle strength, decreases muscle power, and impairs explosive muscle performance,” says physical therapist Christina Ciccione, C.S.C.S., the clinic director at  “Static stretching can ultimately damage your muscles or tendons when performed before the muscles are adequately warmed up.
The five positions below are the most commonly misused stretches pre-workout, according to Kennedy. Nix them from your routine and warm up instead for five to 10 minutes with dynamic stretches, light aerobic work, you can always go for the static stretches post-workout!
1
ELEVATED HAMSTRING STRETCH
This is when you place one foot on a surface slightly lower than your hip, like a bench, and flex your foot before hinging at the hips to bend toward your flexed foot. This stretch often leads to a deep burn in the back of the knee, which you might translate as a good stretch. “In reality, this sensation is only tension being applied to the sciatic nerve,” explains Ciccione. “The hamstring isn’t actually increasing in length or becoming more flexible."


2
FORWARD FOLD
You know this one from yoga: You stand with your feet together, hinge at the hips, and bend forward to reach palms toward the floor. “The hamstrings are a huge muscle group assisting in squats, deadlifting, running, and lunging,” says Kennedy. “A static hold could make them less efficient during training and potentially lead to painful injuries like microtears, which could limit your movement.
3
STANDING ISOLATED QUAD STRETCH
This is a classic stretch, where you start in a standing position and grab one foot with the same-side hand, keeping your thighs aligned. But “the standing quadriceps stretch is often performed incorrectly and puts too much stress on the knee joint, causing anterior knee pain,” says Ciccione. “Anterior knee pain can indicate patellofemoral joint issues—“which you should try to avoid.”
3 Exercises to Combat Running Pain
3 Exercises to Combat Running Pain
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FIGURE 4
In Figure 4, you’re either lying on your back with your legs bent, one ankle resting on the other thigh right above the knee, or standing on one bent leg with the other crossed over it, ankle resting on thigh. “This position requires hip flexion, abduction, and external rotation in order to get into the proper stretch position, but prior to your workout, when the muscles haven’t had an adequate warm-up, the hip doesn’t have the range of motion, and the muscles surrounding the hip joint don’t have the adequate flexibility to target the glute muscles you’re trying to stretch,” says Ciccione. “It’s a waste of time,” says Kennedy.
5
PIGEON POSE
Ah, pigeon. The goal of this hip opener—with one leg bent and parallel to the top of a mat and the other extended straight behind you while your torso hinges over your front leg—is to stretch the piriformis muscle and the external rotators of the hip. But “forcing this position with a fixed object, the floor, can torque your knee or ankle,” says Kennedy. Plus, “getting into pigeon pose involves several other muscles in the pelvis, hip, and knee,” says Ciccione. “If those muscles are tight, the stretch is often 

7 POSES OF YOGA BEFORE YOU EAT BIG MEAL


It will work wonders for your digestion.

November 22, 2017
Upward dog yoga pose
Whether it's because you're eating not-so-great foods, chowing down on too much, feeling completely stressed out, or a combo of all three (can anyone say "the holidays"?), poor digestion can totally sneak up on you. And it's the worst! While there are foods you can eat to promote a healthy gut, or eats that can help out when you're all stopped up, getting your body moving before mealtime can also do wonders for your digestion.
According to Ayurveda teachings (yoga’s sister science), if we honor our digestion, we will be in overall good health, says Kim Rossi, certified Kripalu Ayurvedic consultant and Kundalini yoga instructor. Here, Rossi has put together a yoga flow that's meant to optimize your digestive health. She recommends practicing the following nine postures while taking deep breaths in and out of your nose, "Relax into the pose, and really feel it. The longer, slower, and deeper the breath and the longer the holding, the better for digestion." 
Rossi notes this flow is also best to do on an empty stomach, and while she recommends holding most postures for two to three minutes, you should do whatever you feel comfortable with. "The goal here is to make an effort, but without strain." So the next time you're about to indulge in a festive meal, or you're just feeling a bit off, try this soothing flow to get things on track.
Breathing through the Right Nostril
 
BODY ROTATIONS
How to: Begin in a cross-legged position, with your hands resting on the knees. Gently, lean your torso back as you inhale, then rotate to the right as you exhale. Then bring your body forward and down. Inhale and reverse this motion to the left side, then return back to center. Repeat several times and switch rotations to the left.

RELATED: 'I TRIED KUNDALINI YOGA WITH THE GURU—HERE'S WHAT HAPPENED'

Sat Kriya
ANDREW KEAVENEY
CAT-COW
How to: Get on your hands and knees. Inhale as you lift your tailbone and forehead up to the ceiling. Exhale as you pull your navel to the spine and forehead and pelvis toward navel. Let the movement generate from your tailbone, and allow the rest of the spine follow, neck and head last. Repeat several times.
(For full-length yoga workouts that will help you tone up and zen out, try

Spinal Flex
ANDREW KEAVENEY
BOAT POSE
How to: In a seated position, bend your knees and reach arms to the sides of the knees. Lift your feet off the floor and keep your chest lifted. Be sure to engage your core as you do so, to stabilize your body. If your chest is lifted and this feels effortless, try extending your legs and raising your feet as high as your eyes. Take long, slow deep breaths. Hold for two to three minutes.
Frog Pose
EATED FORWARD BEND
How to: In seated position extend your legs, and inhale as you lift your arms up overhead. Then as you exhale, reach toward toes and hold the big toes. If the knees bend while you do this, then keep the knees straight and rest the hands on the shins. Keep chest lifted and avoid rounding your back. For an added challenge, lift your heels off the floor. Try to focus on long, slow deep breathing as you stretch. Hold for two to three minutes.
Neck Turns
ANDREW KEAVENEY
SEATED SPINAL TWIST
How to: In a seated position with both legs extended, bend your right knee and cross that foot to the outside of your left knee. Bring your right hand behind, but close to, your body. Use that arm like a kickstand, so the arm is close to the back and the spine is straight. Inhale as you lengthen your spine, and exhale while you gently twist your lower back, middle back, then upper back to the left. Inhale as you lengthen your spine and gently twist your neck, head to the left, looking out the right eye. Take long, slow deep breaths, hold for two to three minutes, then repeat on the other side.

RELATED: THIS IS THE BEST EXERCISE TO ERASE YOUR BELLY POOCH, SAYS SCIENCE


Spinal Bend
ANDREW KEAVENEY
BOW POSE
How to: Get onto your belly, chin on the mat. Inhale as you bend your left knee and hold left ankle, then exhale. Inhale as you bend the right knee and hold the right ankle, then exhale. Bring your knees together and exhale as you kick your feet away from your head. This should also cause your thighs to lift off the floor, feet toward ceiling. Find a position that you can hold comfortably and easily, while taking long, slow, deep breathes. Hold for two to three minutes.
Meditate

CHILD'S POSE

How to: Get onto your hands and knees, then reach your buttocks back to your heels. Then bring your palms up by your ankles, and focus on taking long, slow deep breathes. Hold for two to three minutes.