Showing posts with label competition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label competition. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Real Fit or Fake Fit

Conforming to Your Image


Did you ever notice that you can't lie to or con the person in the mirror?

You can Ponzi your partner, scam your spouse, or maybe even do slim shady your live-in lover but you can't put on or bend the truth a smidgen with the reflexion that's glaring back at you from the aluminum-coated glass you shave in or put your morning makeup on in front of. The image returning your glance knows the real YOU.

And that brings us to the subject of today's post: "Are you Real Fit or Fake Fit?" Do you even really know anymore?

In so many areas of our lives, you and I have to augment our authentic selves to suit someone else or to be the most effective in the situation that we're in regardless of the ultimate cost. Today's social and business arenas oftentimes demands that we give 110% all the time and perform whether or not we're sick, tired, or just burnt out.

We feel constrained to jack ourselves up on quadruple espressos or artificial stimulants just to be that super charged, always positive leader, mentor, or salesperson that's always on the ball. The mega-dose of caffeine we ingest six days out of seven disguises our natural proclivity to get up slowly,  expands our normal attitude to larger than life in order to accomplish the goal that receives our achievement or captures the sale that must be penned, and amplifies our voice tones to a heightened crescendo above their usual evenness.

Might I offer a cautionary warning of "Buyer beware" to those who fake it on more days than they're living authentic self image?

My friend, there's a real danger in conforming to a portrayed or phony persona too often. While trying to please or achieve for ourselves for monetary reasons or for others in order to secure a career advancement, you and I lose our truth and compromise our future health. Our authentic self image blurs and well-being eventually vanishes.

In my area of expertise which is health and fitness, I find myself meeting one person at an initial consultation, hearing all about their personal life, work, dietary habits, exercise routine, and weekend hobbies only to become very well acquainted with someone entirely different after four to six weeks of diet monitoring under my watchful guise and an electronic scale who only tells it like it is.

The individual who originally contacted me for dietary guidance and assistance that described themselves as self disciplined and said that he or she only had one cheat day per week and ate clean on every other day really flip-flopped their real dietary intake. They ate clean just one day a week and filled their bellies with boxed, bagged, and wrapped food almost everyday.

And I don't just get the p.c. answer when it comes to eating, I get flimflammed in the area of exercise too. The man or woman who identified and likened themselves as an athlete, always making it to the gym to do at least 30-60 minutes of fasted cardio on five days out of seven and who rarely had one or at most two alcoholic drinks over the course of a weekend didn't have the cardiovascular capacity to walk up a flight of stairs carrying their daily mail but, strangely, was called by their first name at the neighborhood bar.

It's important to live who we really are most of the time in order to avoid losing ourselves and then, as a result, drown our self loathing in drugs and alcohol, permanently screwing up our metabolisms with weight-loss pills or steroids, and being diagnosed by our GP as having blocked arteries similar to the Hoover Dam, possessing skyscraper high blood pressure, or owning a total cholesterol number that looks more like the Power Ball Jackpot winnings than it does a serum blood fat amount.

So how do you and I stay authentic in the airbrushed, edited world that we find ourselves in?

What works for me and for many of the people I coach is to consistently address on a daily and weekly basis the five areas of our lives that we commonly lie to ourselves and other people about. The five spheres of life that make up who we are.

1.) Nutrition. We are what we consume each and every day. The food and drink that passes through our lips make up the cells, tissues, bones, and organs of our body which is ultimately you and me.  Eat as close to nature as possible at every meal.

2.) Mental Health. Learn to cope with the high stress of life, love, and work by putting yourself to a self-control test regularly, might I suggest weekly, where you can talk yourself down from off the ledge without chemicals. By doing this on a regular basis, you and I learn that in the hard times we can truly stand without bending or breaking. Hot yoga is one of the best ways to test ones mental strength. Putting yourself in a room that's heated to 105 degrees with mirrors reflecting back how unbalanced you are when a single droplet of sweat is about to drip off the tip of your nose while attempting to stand on one foot is a mental test like no other.

3.) Physical Fitness. I'm going to have to say it, "Leg Day." Sorry everybody. No one likes doing wall sits, weighted squats, cheek-to-cheek sprints, or walking lunges but almost everyone needs them and not one of us does enough of them on a regular basis (at least two days per week). Making yourself do the really hard stuff, the garbage you hate to do, defines you and having an awesome butt and set of legs can't hurt either when life goes on the skids.

4.) Environmental.  You and I are exposed to air toxins that can cause cancer as well as other serious health effects like reproductive and birth defects. We're exposed to toxic chemicals overtime with the air we breathe along with the toxic substances found in our water and soil, therefore, it's important for us to detox as much of these toxins as possible through the largest organ that we have -- our skin. Sweating is one of the best ways in my opinion to accomplish this so get outdoors and burn baby burn.

Hate the heat, then how about getting in subzero temperatures in a cryotherapy chamber. Cryo businesses are opening up in many major cities and their research speaks of reducing systemic inflammation, relieving muscle and arthritic pain, and improving nerve conduction velocity.

5.) Financial. You can't live very long without realizing that money matters. You can't be healthy mentally or physically without a balanced checkbook, credit cards that are max'ed out, or a mortgage payment that's late again. Being in the financial red is taxing on the mind and the body, eventually affecting the health of your brain, organ systems, and heart. Learn to live within your means and you'll feel better I promise.

At the end of our life, you and I wind up leaving this world solo so we might as well start getting familiar and really comfort with who that person truly is since we'll be spending the rest of eternity with them.

Thank you for reading and inspiring me to be genuine.

Bell Gia
Nutrition and Fitness Expert

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Address the Source of Your Performance Weakness

Don't Sleep in Your Weak Spot [Infographic]

As 2016 is drawing to a close, many of us can't seem to stop thinking over our year's past accomplishments and conquered goals. Maybe you nailed a PB in your bench press, mastered the double under, or whipped out a sub six finally. You're feeling pretty darn proud of your performance and your bod. Perhaps you're even thinking you're in the best shape of your life, but are you?

The best trained athletes like Tom Brady, Peter Sagan, Lionel Messi, and Stephen Curry all have something in common besides being the top dog in their respective sports. They all work on their -- weaknesses.

Say what? Yeah, this is usually where the rubber meets the road between the pros we watch and the rest of us. These sports superstars aren't on the field, in the gym, on the track, or in their clips working on their strengths. These talented and gifted individuals spend the bulk of their practice addressing the problem with their game, striving to constantly improve their shortcomings. We've all heard the saying: "a chain is only as strong as its weakest link."

How about in 2017, you and I stop sleeping in the weak spot of our performance and hit the source of it instead, getting to the root of our performance problem. With the correct diagnosis and approach, we can get faster, stronger, and endure.

Lack of strength in weight training or inadequate speed while cycling or running can mean you have weak biomechanics. If your form is suffering, you'll use more energy and work at a higher work rate when engaging in your favorite sport which will deplete your fuel, increase the acidity of your muscle pH, hinder your lungs from turning over carbon dioxide than someone else who ably and effectively moves the kinetic chain with accuracy, using less effort and muscle glycogen to cross the finish line.

If your thing is weight lifting, check out your movement patterns by watching yourself in the mirror or in a video captured by your phone. Perform an unweighted movement and determine if your basics are spot on from set up to finish. BOLO for knee(s) that shoot out, incorrect foot placement or weight distribution in your shoe or bare foot, eyeball uneven barbell or dumbbell height. These are all signs that you need to dial back on the weight when lifting or lowering.

If you fade in the saddle or fatigue before your journey's end, then endurance is your Achille's heel. If you consistently do shorter, more intense practice like HIIT several times per week instead of going for more frequent and time demanding longer durations or if you fail to follow up your anaerobic push with a lengthy steady-state pace, your body probably goes to higher percentages of MHR sooner rather than later, knocking your muscles out from under you or crippling your lungs. Solution: Add more time onto your workout each week, increasing gradually and consistently until you reach your sport's ultimate length. In generally a month to month and a half of working around or slightly below 70% of your maximum heart rate, your body will adapt and create additional mitochondria or power plants in your muscle cells which will allow you to go longer with greater metabolic vigor, less fatigue, and breathlessness. 

Speed, strength, and endurance are all measurable values. Do what the pros do to improve their sports performance and eliminate the weak spots in your game by charting your workout details. Composing a workout history will help remind you to address your troubled spots in a move in order for you to perfect a flawed movement pattern and provide you with the critical info to work on strengthening all of the muscles that power that move, helping you to strengthen weaker muscle fibers in say maybe your shoulders, low back, hips, or core. Logging your workout times, pace, splits, and distance covered in your phone or on paper consistently without fail will provide you with an accurate recollection of really how much time you are putting into your practice and show you if you are incrementally increasing your quickness and endurance as you should. 

Yes, self improvement takes time but what better investment of your days than spending seconds, minutes, and hours creating the best you that you can be. Right?

Thanks for reading. Your readership encourages me and I appreciate that.

- Bell Gia
Nutrition and Fitness Expert






Thursday, August 4, 2016

Offsetting Training Stress with Nutrition

Still smiling after a 20 mile run. 

Stress: An Inevitable Component of Achievement

There's a common joke amongst long-distance runners: You don't have to outrun the tiger, you just have to outrun your FRIEND! 

Competition is healthy. It promotes mental and physical growth. It forces us to try harder than we had ever tried before, to persevere longer than we thought possible, and to push beyond ones comfort zone and pain threshold to perform at a level that the athlete did not know that they were capable of reaching, achieving, and surpassing. 

To compete means to perform. Performance competitions like triathlons & ironman triathlons, half & full marathons, as well as expedition & adventure races require professional and amateur athletes alike to push their limits throughout the entire training process in order to improve both their mental and physical condition to emerge victorious. 

The amount of training necessary to compete at a high-performance sport is cognitively and physically demanding. Demanding on ones time, balancing work & family life.  There also exists a continuous tug-of-war and second-guessing game that goes on in the mind and body of a performance athlete as she or he attempts to weigh and assess training intensity with the risk of potential injury, trying to sustain motivation while experiencing physical and mental training fatigue, and struggling to stay hydrated and properly nourished but lean enough to stay competitive during the entire training process up to the day of the race.  

Training is stressful. Stress that is both physical and mental. Performance stress can be physically manifested in swollen joints, sore muscles, lethargy, nutritional deficiency, and weight gain. Mental stress can also be physical in nature, showing up as anxiety, inability to concentrate and sleep at night, depression, and fatigue. 

Initially appearing as weight gain and fatigue, stress, if ignored and unaddressed, can lead to systemic inflammation. Inflammation, now shown in clinical research to be one of the leading causes of acute and chronic illness as well as one of the leading causes of disease. Stress's ability to inflame the body and weaken the immune system is not to be taken lightly. 

So how can an athlete offset the negative physical manifestations of high-level training and speed up recovery? Nutrition and adequate hydration are two effective ways to counteract and mitigate training enervation and fatigue.

A healthy athlete is a well-performing competitor. Health begins with consuming nutrient-dense foods as part of a well-balanced diet that is full of plant-based variety and color.  Correct nutrition and adequate hydration are the legs on which sports conditioning and recovery stand. 

Muscle recovery requires a full range of vitamins and minerals coming from nutritious living foods. High-level training offset with a proper nutrient-dense diet can continually regenerate the athlete's cells by providing both the physical energy as well as the chemical building blocks required to replace lost or injured tissues as well as to rejuvenate and revitalize joints, tendons, ligaments, and muscles necessary to compete on race day

Before you sign up for your next race, sit down and look at what you are feeding your body with. Eating sport-specific foods can help enhance the athlete's workout quality and fitness level by providing the correct balance of carbohydrates, fats, and protein as determined by exercise intensity and performance requirement. Ultimately, your body is only as good as the food you feed it and an athlete is only as good as her or his body is on the day of the race.

Thank you for your readership. I definitely appreciate your support as I live out my passion in words.

- Bell Gia
Nutrition and Fitness Expert
BellGia.com