Monday, December 1, 2014

Conscious Fitness


Starting a training program can seem daunting at the beginning, there is a lot to learn about the exercise techniques, how to perform each movement, even how to breathe for optimal results.
Your body may move in ways you have not experienced before and you may feel uncertain, even anxious about what you are being asked to do.

MET Fitness training programs are more than just exercises; they are designed to improve your strength and posture and teach you to be more conscious of how you move your body, in your training session and in everyday life.
We often dissociate physical activity from our thoughts and feelings, but as many clients will attest, they have noticed profound changes in the way they think and feel in the whole of their lives, as a direct result of participation in their training program.

The word ‘whole’ comes from the same root as the word ‘health’ and by inquiring into deeper causes of our health problems, not ‘what’ but how we eat, drink, exercise and go about living our lives, we give ourselves the ability to influence our health in a profound and lasting way.
Increased personal neglect contributes to increased reliance on symptomatic ‘fixes’ such as drugs or surgery. What is required are new ways of thinking, feeling and being in our bodies with an awareness that we operate as ‘whole’ rather than a collection of our parts.

Criticism vs Cooperation
By confronting learning opportunities with curiosity instead of fear and being comfortable with the idea of ‘not knowing’ while we are learning, we give ourselves the space to observe, receive feedback and alter our habitual patterns, creating new ways of moving and being.

We usually think that ‘controlling’ ourselves is the best way to effect changes in our lives or ‘improve’ ourselves, when what is needed most is cooperation.
Overemphasis on ‘knowing’ as opposed to ‘learning’ makes looking good in the short term more important that being good in the long term.

A new perspective is required.

Cooperating with ourselves
At MET Fitness we focus on deep learning on a physical level that allows us to embody new capabilities for effective action and movement. This embodiment is a developmental process that continues over time, in a continuous cycle of action and practice.

The impatient quest for improvement often results in superficial changes that leave our deeper patterns untouched. Conscious action is critical for transforming our will, thinking, emotions and body; we must be fully conscious to be fully effective for deeper learning.
Deeper learning often produces fewer obvious consequences for long periods of time.
In order to embody new competencies we have to practice continuously for periods of no apparent improvement. In Chinese, ‘learning’ is expressed by two symbols: the first stands for ‘take in’, the second stands for ‘practice constantly’. In the West, we are so focused on results that we have little time for ‘practice constantly’.”


Learning is a lifelong process that doesn’t end when we leave school; it can feel dangerous or scary ‘not knowing’ and many people prefer the safety of this, rather than questioning, exploring or experiencing anything new in their lives.
We humans are complex beings, we need to experience the unity of our system as a whole, working with our breath and being fully present in our body, to experience conscious activation of the correct muscles for the job.

What we tell ourselves about that feeling can stop us in our tracks and prevent us learning something new and delightful about ourselves, our bodies and our relationships.
There are no mistakes with learning. 
You cannot do it wrong.
Just keep going.


Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Fit Your Own Oxygen Mask First


One of the most important lessons I learned, while training in New York, was the importance of managing my energy.

I was training solidly for two hours a day most days, from 1 - 3pm and two mornings a week was 7am Bootcamp, which was "only" an hour.

I was also out and about seeing galleries, museums and everything else that great city had to offer.
With this schedule, I worked out pretty quickly that eating appropriate food, resting when I was tired and paying attention to how I was feeling, physically and emotionally, was very important.

When your energy levels are low, don't try to "get things done" until you've taken care of yourself first. Y
ou will still get everything done.

I call this the "airline oxygen mask" situation.

During the safety demonstration on a plane, the reason you fit your own oxygen mask before fitting those of children or other people who rely on you, is because if you fit them first, you will pass out from lack of oxygen and can be of no further use to them.
Managing your energy means getting enough sleep, drinking enough water, eating enough good quality food and keeping your body fit & strong.

Paradoxically, the more you use your energy, the more you have to live your fabulous life. Most importantly is noticing when you need to do each of these things; check in with yourself, assess how you are feeling and take appropriate action to restore yourself.

Managing your energy takes a little more thought and planning than just scrambling through life wondering why you always seem to be exhausted.


The pace of life may not slow down, but taking care of yourself leaves you feeling calmer, more in control and nurtured in the face of anything life throws at you.


Taking time to look after your Self is entirely necessary.
Start today.


Thursday, July 10, 2014

Food Is Not The Enemy



Our relationship with food is primal and complex.

We need to eat to live, but modern convenience combined with sedentary jobs means we often eat more than we need or food which does not nourish us.

As children, our mothers and others often "loved" us with food, or we learned ways to satisfy emotional needs with food and if those habits continued into adulthood, we find ourselves eating not for hunger, but for other reasons.

If you have been 'dieting' for many years, you may be surprised at how quickly you regain weight after the 'diet' has ended and how you manage to gain a little more each time.

You have effectively been teaching your metabolism to become more efficient at fat storage.

For long-term, sustainable fat-loss that you can maintain once you reach a healthy weight range is most effective when you examine your relationship with food and make some changes about the way you think of food in your life and in your body.


Non-Hungry eating plays a big part in weight gain and as the name suggests, happens for reasons other than hunger, boredom, anxiety, sadness, tiredness, for example.

Working with a food diary, initially without making any changes to what you usually eat, gives you a more accurate map of what you're currently doing. 
Don't judge, just record.

Imagine using a map of Sydney to navigate your way around Melbourne - impossible!
A food diary helps you to get an accurate picture of where you're at, and better equips you with the right map to get to where you want to be. 


Eat mindfully, slowly, focusing completely on each mouthful of whatever you are eating, without distraction. Put your fork down between each bite & really take your time, checking in with your body to see whether you are still hungry.

Eating until satisfied is not the same as eating to fullness and it takes time to become fully aware of the difference.

You may be used to the following kind of thoughts:
  • food is a temptation
  • food means being out of control
  • food means gaining weight
  • food means wanting things I can't have
  • food gives me comfort
  • food makes me guilty
  • food is the enemy.
Well stop right there!

Shifting your thinking around food will shift your experience of food.

Try these thoughts for a week and notice the difference you experience:

  • food means energy
  • food means strength
  • food means having enough vitality to work
  • food means not getting tired before the end
  • food means brainpower
  • I am doing my best to eat slowly and enjoy will all my senses.
  • I can have it if I want it, but do I really feel like it?

For a more detailed consultation on mindful eating, contact MET Fitness.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

5 Weight Loss Myths - busted.



"I want to lose weight", is something I hear from almost every client I work with.
My goal is to educate them on the difference between losing weight and losing fat.

Many people have forgotten about food as nourishment and prefer to base their choices on taste, comfort and habit.

The long-term results of these choices can be seen in ever increasing waistlines and diabetes diagnosis.

To clear up some myths about losing weight and 'dieting', here are my responses to comments I have had from actual clients.

1. "Some people are 'naturally thin'."


Firstly, how thin you are is not a determinant of how healthy you are but most people over 35 are interested in dropping a few kilos or fitting back into clothes they used to wear.

Follow a 'naturally thin' person around for an entire day, better yet, over the course of a week and you will notice how they balance energy intake & expenditure as well as the choices they make over that time.

Genetics does play a part in what body type you inherit - about 20%. So you have an 80% contribution to make.

Ask yourself how often you do the following:
eat in your car
eat walking around (for example, at the shops)
eat in front of the television.

These are all examples of unconscious eating and contribute significantly to weight gain.

And after age 35, good luck with relying on your 'natural thinness'!


2. "I don't eat very much but I can't lose weight."


I hear this a lot and the first thing I ask clients to do is to keep a Food Diary each week, to get accurate information about what they are eating and drinking.

Most of us underestimate what we eat & drink and overestimate how much activity we do.
We're optimists that way  :-)

Usually, if the client is honest with themselves and me, we will see where and when they are eating more than they need or making poor nutritional choices. We make adjustments to give the body the nourishment it needs and they find they are not hungry and start to lose weight.

Refusal to keep a Food Diary is a refusal to acknowledge the reality of your diet and is a red flag that you will have trouble changing the situation.

Get the information, deal with your reality.

Of course if you really are eating too little and eating the wrong kind of food, you may also believe myth #3...


3. "I have a slow metabolism. "

This is about body composition; having a higher body fat percentage than is considered in the healthy range will have a lot to do with how your metabolism works.

Basal Metabolic Rate or BMR and lean body weight, are more accurate indicators of how much energy you need to take in, than the amount of exercise you do.

BMR is the amount of calories you would need if you were ill in bed all day, just to keep all of your bodily processes working.

Lean body weight is your muscles, bones and organs, all the tissues of the body that are not body fat.

Here's an example of how BMR and calories work:

Person A weighs 80kg and has 20% body fat.
This means she has 64kg of muscles, bones, brain & organs that require energy.
She needs 1523 calories per day to maintain regular bodily processes.

Person B also weights 80kg and has 30% body fat.
This means she has 56kg of muscles, bones, brain & organs that require energy.
She needs 1333 calories per day to maintain regular bodily processes.

Person A NEEDS to eat around 200 calories a day MORE!

Merely cutting back on calories will force your body to conserve fat, refusing to release it as an energy source, and of course drastic calorie reduction is unsustainable.

When you go back to 'normal eating' you have just trained your body to store fat even more efficiently thereby starting the whole cycle again.


4. Bodies respond differently to food.

No. No they don't.

Some bodies may be more efficient at storing excess energy as fat due to the way the metabolism has been trained, but the human body responds to macronutrients, with the same physiological processes.

When you eat protein, carbohydrate and fat, your internal chemical processes are the same as the next guy or gal.

Carbohydrate, particularly starchy carbs, are stored very efficiently as fat when converted to glucose and the body will always use carbohydrate as fuel first.
 

The body will only burn fat when there is no glucose available.

Essentially the body is a starchy-carbohydrate/glucose/fat storage environment OR a starchy-carbohydrate-free/fatty acid/fat burning environment.


5. "I've tried everything and nothing works for me."


There are many fads, restrictions and just plain crazy diets and other products that promise you instant weight loss.

Many of them contain the small print "when used in conjunction with a calorie controlled diet and regular exercise." (hint: save your money and follow this advice)

I'm sorry to break it to you but they just don't work, mostly because they are unsustainable over the long term.

I would respectfully suggest you may have tried everything - for a week or two, whereas it takes your body at least 4 - 6 weeks to make the necessary metabolic adjustments for fat loss.

For more information on how to create a sustainable eating plan that works for YOUR life, contact kim@metfitness.com


Join our next 6 Week Challenge for a fully-supported change program that will teach how HOW to eat - for life!

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Winter Soup Recipes



Soup is the perfect winter meal.
These delicious soups from the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Program are easy to make and a hit with kids and adults alike.

Cauliflower Soup

Ingredients:

25g butter
I leek, finely chopped
1 garlic clove, crushed
1 bay leaf
1/2 cauliflower, chopped
2 potatoes, peeled & chopped
750ml vegetable stock
500ml milk
150ml cream
4 - 6 sprigs of fresh thyme, leaves removed from stalks
salt & pepper

Method:

Melt butter in a saucpan over low heat.
Add the leek, garlic, thyme & bay leaf and cook 5 - 8 minutes until leek has softened.
Add the cauliflower, potato, stock & milk and cook for 15 minutes on medium heat until cauliflower and potato are soft.
Remove from heat and blend until smooth.
Add cream, slat and pepper to taste.


Pumpkin and Apple Soup

Ingredients:

1/2 butternut pumpkin, chopped into small cubes
1 small brown onion, finely chopped
1 green apple, peeled and sliced
1 litre vegetable stock  
1 tablespoon butter

Method:

In a deep pot, fry onion in butter until golden.
Add pumpkin, apple and vegetable stock - boil until soft.
Blend and serve.


Enjoy!


 



Thursday, May 1, 2014

The Five Stages of Exercise



It's always interesting to me how people go through various mental gymnastics, justifications and rationalisations to avoid doing what they know to be necessary to maintain or improve their health and reminds me of the five stages of grief, described by Elizabeth Kübler-Ross.

I understand that not everyone wants to exercise or eat healthy foods, I too used to be one of those people who thought the words 'fun' and 'run' had no business ever being put together.

Then when I was a teenager, my mum was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes at almost the age I am now. I saw how ill she was leading up to the diagnosis, while also dealing with other health issues, namely rheumatoid arthritis and osteoporosis.

It was also around this time we started learning about genetics at high school and the confluence of events made me take stock of my own attitude to my health for the future.

Now don't get me wrong, I did not suddenly start exercising and eating right, I was a teenager after all, I was invincible, right? 

What was happening to my mum wasn't going to happen to me, it just wasn't; I decided that without even realising it WAS a decision and without necessarily having a plan in mind.

I had just hit the first stage - Denial.

In the proceeding years, as I moved from the corporate world into the field of health & wellness, as I started a family and wanted to be a good example for my child, I began choosing healthy foods and actually enjoying them. My studies into health and nutrition led me to regard junk food as not actually real food at all, making it easier not to eat it. 


When I eventually began a fitness program with a personal trainer, I realised that I did not enjoy exercise at all and discovered the second stage of Anger.

During our training sessions, I would feel quite angry towards my trainer for 'making me' do whatever set of exercises she had planned for that session and luckily she was tolerant of my sweariness (yes, it's a word) on those occasions I verbalised my feelings, without directing them towards her.

Eventually I worked out that I had a choice to train or not, I had a choice to feel better or not and the anger subsided. 

Then I moved smoothly into stage three - Bargaining. 
This was possibly harder on my trainer than my swearing because I would be constantly negotiating and re-negotiating the program. 
"Can I do this instead of that?"
"Can I just do 20?"
"Do I really have to do that again???" 

I didn't really move through stage four, Depression, but I have seen it play out for many of my own clients, particularly if they have unrealistic expectations of themselves and the amount of time it will take to feel and see a real difference.

Their enthusiasm is sky-high when they come for their fitness assessment. 

They are so keen at their first session, I actually have to hold them back from overdoing it. 
The first few weeks are "amazing!" and they feel so good but often they will give up, saying life has become too busy, one thing or another is getting in the way of training and for a little while, they stop.

During this time, they go back to feeling tired, having no energy and feeling badly about themselves that they tried and failed. 

It's at this stage that I gently remind them why they started exercising in the first place, how great they felt when they made it important to fit it in and that the only failure is giving up.

Some get it some don't, but the transformation in the people who move to Acceptance, who acknowledge how great it feels to move their body, to give their best to their family and to have more energy to live a great life, is just joyful to witness.
 
The single most important factor I see in whether people get to the final stage of Acceptance is that they made a decision. It's not a question of "will I exercise tomorrow?", it's a just a decision that they no longer question. 

They know why they do it and they know they are worth the effort.



If you're sick and tired of being sick and tired, contact me at MET Fitness or on Facebook and take the first step to a healthier you.











Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Healthy Basics

There are all kinds of powders, pills, products and programs that promise you weight-loss, body sculpting and six-pack abs.
Mostly on late night infomercials.


Surprisingly, the mere purchase of these items does not deliver the results you want.

I have seen the most expensive exercise equipment sit in people's living rooms and become the most expensive clothes hangers.

This happens a lot with treadmills and elliptical machines; they are great for drying washing.

No, those "shoes with the curved sole" do not magically tone your thighs and bottom; try walking everyday, in any well-fitting sports shoe and doing strength exercises a few times a week.

No, that "scientific sports drink" isn't "more hydrating than water" (yes, I've had a salesperson actually say this to me) it just contains sugar, salt and colors. And is more expensive.

Nothing is more hydrating than water.
Drink more water.

No, that "slim-shake" won't make you lose weight and therefore happy; you may drop kilograms on the scale but it's likely to also be lean muscle.

When you stop taking the shake (you were planning on living on them forever?) and you haven't learned to prepare and enjoy real food, you burn less energy and your body gains back the weight plus some.

And if you're unhappy, losing weight won't make you happy.
Be happy now.

You can make the small manageable changes to your environment that will get you to you goals.

You are the only one who can.

Drink enough water.

Get enough sleep.

Eat quality food, regularly.

Move your body, regularly and specifically.


These four basic principles of health are not particularly sexy, they won't make you look like a supermodel, they do not sparkle and fizz and they do not have any celebrity endorsement or a glamorous and expensive marketing campaign.

They do work and they are free.

Do them every day and feel the difference.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Start Your Engine


Your metabolism is the engine room of your body, it's what gives you your energy, helps you get up in the morning and allows you to burn off extra kilos throughout your day.

You can begin to lose muscle strength and muscle mass in your 30's, if you are not participating in some kind of strength training program.

It is increased calorie consumption and decreased activity that sees people gaining weight as they get older, it certainly isn't 'natural' and doesn't have to be 'the way it is'.

As you lose this muscle mass you not only lose strength you also lose energy, as your metabolism slows down.

This is why strength training is essential for weight loss programs as it's the best way to increase your metabolism and my clients who know they are stronger than they've ever been, can attest to what a great feeling that is.

Your body is like a car in the sense that even if it is not running on all cylinders, it still runs, but not as well or as efficiently.

How well is your body running?