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Thursday, August 19, 2010

Bodybuilding Devolved From Healthy Fitness Training

Introduction

Bodybuilding, lovely as it is, negatively evolved from health practices and fitness training exercises that ancient civilizations used to keep fit. Professional bodybuilding reaches a glorious termination when a bodybuilder holds the statuette of MR. Olympia, modeled in honor of Eugene Sandow, the father of modern bodybuilding. Nevertheless, before Sandow came by, core bodybuilding exercises had been in practice for centuries among the Greek, Indians, Egyptians, Africans, Americans and many other communities. What Sandow and his followers did was to corrupt those healthy fitness exercises into an entertainment sport.

How did this happen? Let us go over the devolvement eras and see the divorce process of bodybuilding from healthy fitness training exercises.

Health Based Weight Training Era

Weight training was an ancient general athletic activity in many communities. The weight training exercises and equipments used varied, but the intent was similar, amplifying body health and strength for personal reasons. In the ancient Greek and Egyptian societies men initially trained to keep physically fit, agile and strong. They primarily used huge stones to seek bodily development into healthy physiques.

At this time, every man had to seek strenuous physical activities daily as a means of 'staying a man'. These were combined with supremely healthy diets and natural herbs. There was never any need for physical display as a goal of engaging in the physical fitness exercises.

In India, by the 11th Century we had stone dumbbell weights (locally called Nals) lifted by men who wanted to enhance their physical health and stamina. Note, the most important aim was to help the men overcome numerous challenges that daily activities presented. By the 16th century, physical training gyms became commonplace in the India region and health based weight training, an India's national hobby.

Health Based Strength Training Era

Soon enough however weight training lost the noble intention of health and stamina and slowly emphasized physique development. Still, the exercises were not meant to develop the body for show but for strength in strongman competitions. This was a healthy dimension too since strength was built up in healthy practices that included proper dieting and daily physical activities.

Nevertheless, the idea of thrilling crowds gradually crept in as men engaged in amazing feats of personal strength. Professional strongman competitions saw weight training intensify from primitive stone lifting practices into psycho lifting sessions within dark dungeons. The physical fitness and strength training practice became hugely popular across Asia.

Although onlooker amusement had crept into the training goals, the exercises were still within the precincts of fitness and body health. Some examples of the fitness exercises included pulling carts, running with weights, lifting animals etc. The physique definition still did not matter.

Bodybuilding for Display Era

For a long time (between 16th and 17th Century) Asians and especially Indians, learnt the essence of training and dieting to develop the body for display purposes. Strongman competitions gained an exhibitive edge and competitors started removing their clothes. The practice was similar across the world communities. Celebrating the human body's muscular development became a prominent Greek ideal during this time. By the 19th Century, physical exercises were no longer for strength or stamina.

Weight training took on a totally different meaning from the ancient tradition of health based fitness training. New training system evolved and the goal became displaying physiques for entertainment purposes. Europe exacerbated the physical display culture where body symmetry became the aesthetic goal of training and not health or physical fitness. It was this culture that the 20th Century Eugene Sandow met and perfected. Modern bodybuilding where muscle mass display and definition overtook health conscious physical training had been born.

Modern Bodybuilding Era

Modern bodybuilding can be traced perse to around 1890s when Eugene officially crafted a body display sport as a profession. He is thus rightly famed as the grandfather of modern bodybuilding. He was a phenomenon hit as a pioneer in muscle mass and strength accumulation. The competitive sport gradually grew to exclusively feature the best muscle mass in total disregard of physical fitness or of the healthiness of the individual's practice while gaining that mass. That is the tradition to which we were born and to which some still live.

Muscle Craze Era

Within the modern bodybuilding era, there was three decades that were so profound that they deserve a special mention. Beginning 1960 and up to 1990, muscle mass generation became the greatest craze that ever hit the bodybuilding industry. Anabolic steroids became a staple. Despite the anabolic steroids being grossly dangerous to health, they were used in their tons if only to gain an inch of muscle.

Bodybuilding Health Era

Luckily, we have awoken to the fact that gaining muscle mass and strength should never have to compromise on our health or our physical fitness. There is no reason why I should loose my kidney just to gain a marvelous bicep. Acne, cancer and the hundreds of other side effects of steroids can never be borne just because you want some muscle mass.

The current era in bodybuilding, emphasizes on an individual who trains natural, trains hard not just for muscle but also for a comprehensively healthy body. The idea is to be masculine, healthy and physically fit. Bodybuilding training is slowly returning into the shoes of the primitive art where health and fitness are the driving goals of bodybuilding training.

There is a link between a bodybuilding lifestyle and optimal health. Once an individual strikes that link, he or she attains optimal physical fitness as a by-product. With the right information, you can easily set up a training regimen that is centered on bodybuilding health. From this program, muscle mass and strength will accrue and with it physical fitness.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Incorporating Gym Sports Into Your Workout

By William M. Douglas

One of the top reasons that people stop going to their gym and working out is because they are BORED. It has happened to everyone who works out in a gym setting. The same old exercise machines, the same old treadmill, the same old classes. Spicing up your exercise routine is key to staying motivated and excited. A lot of people find that pizazz in gym sports. Basketball, racquetball and kickboxing to name a few. Once I introduced these activities into my workout routine, I stopped dreading going to the gym and started looking forward to it.

Since adding a gym sport like basketball to my repertoire, there has been a considerable improvement in my jumping height, which isn't something you can readily work on using weights or gym machines. Sometimes doing something your body is not used to can wake up muscles that you haven't used in a while.

Something like a kickboxing class will definitely take care of that for you. After my first class, I could barely walk, but it was exciting and upbeat enough to keep me wanting to come back the next week. A few months later and suddenly you are doing things you never thought you could do. It is such a great feeling!

Racquetball was the gym sport that I was most worried about. It is intensely fast paced and in such an enclosed space. The little blue racquetball balls were lighter than I expected and didn't hurt if you got hit by it. It is more like an aerobic workout than the other activities.

By playing these sports as part of my fitness routine, I preemptively stopped myself from giving up on the gym for a while from boredom. Growing up, I never played sports, and perhaps that is why I got so overweight. I am happy to rectify it now by adding these healthy activities to my life. I hope you do too! See you on the court!


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Health Clubs Fitness

By John O'Riley


Many people are aware that exercise is an integral part for the human body. It helps keep maintain a healthy body and also a sound mind. Millions of people are spending lots of money for this endeavor alone.

The fitness center industry is booming. As more and more people are becoming aware of the potential benefits of a good workout, many more clients are finding their way into these fitness centers. It is easy to become a member, but how long are you going to be happy with them? Some of these fitness centers require their members to sign a membership contract, which in the end, can be difficult to cancel. Here are a few tips to help you decide.

Be sure of what you want.

Always be mindful of what your goals are for your planned exercise. These goals will determine what you particularly need in a gym. A very good example is that if you are more into sports fitness rather than a typical fitness gym, then your obvious choice would be gyms that have sports facilities, and not just treadmills or aerobics.

Check out the competition.

Just like when you are shopping, it would be better if you check out every fitness center that you can find and compare the services and prices they offer. Most importantly, also compare the equipment and the facilities of each center. By doing so, you will be able to choose the most affordable and best equipped fitness center suited for you.

Check your budget and know what you are paying for.

Having a lot of money does not necessarily mean that you get your money's worth by becoming a member in a particular fitness gym. It is often wise to consider where you are investing your money and if you are getting your money's worth. Do not just sign up immediately with the first fitness center you encounter. Always follow your budget. It may be healthy to work out, but it is even healthier to stay out of debt.

Is it clean or not?

Always check the health record of the gym. Make sure they have proper hygiene and safety with their facilities and equipment. You are working out to be healthy in the first place, so make sure the center you are planning to join is also healthy.

Bottom line is that you do not have to look for the perfect fitness center. Chances are that the gym that you like will have some aspects that you dislike. It is your overall outlook that matters. As long as you are happy with the center and it helps you get the job done they why not join, right?


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Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Best Sport for Overall Fitness

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

The best sports for fitness are the ones in which you exercise continuously, those that are least likely to injure you and the ones you enjoy the most. You become fit by exercising vigorously enough to increase the circulation of blood. It makes no difference to your heart how you increase your circulation. The best sports for fitness use your legs because the blood vessels in your legs are so much larger that you can circulate far more blood with your leg muscles. Furthermore, arm exercises tire you earlier because most people have weaker arms.

Some sports require a great level of fitness just to start. For example, to jump rope, you must spin the rope more than 80 times a minute to keep it from tangling. Many people can't jump 80 times a minute. The safest sports are low-impact aerobics, walking, swimming and pedaling a stationary bicycle. Running causes lots of injuries because the force of your foot striking the ground can be three times your body weight, which can damage muscles and bones.

You are most likely to continue a lifelong fitness program if you pick an activity that you enjoy. However, sports that don't keep you moving may be fun, but they won't make you fit. Most tennis players spend about 80 percent of their playing time waiting for the ball; and golfers are often required to ride in carts, even if they would prefer to walk.


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Physical Fitness Test For Youth Athletes

By Elise Jackson

Traditionally, many children grow up thinking of conditioning activities as a punishment for poor behavior. Late for gym class? 25 push-ups. Talking too much during volleyball practice? 10 laps around the gym.

However, conditioning is an essential method of building muscle strength, flexibility, and overall athlete readiness for an active lifestyle, and coaches and parents should work to remove the negative connotations it can carry.

To help your players understand the importance of conditioning and how it fits into a healthy sports preparation program, include it regularly as part of your practices. If physical fitness is presented as a normal, everyday part of an athlete's activities at sports practice, there will be no resentment toward it or avoidance of it.

Here are some tips on how to incorporate physical fitness testing as part of your regular practices:

· Inform parents and players at the beginning of the season about your conditioning plan
· Include conditioning in practices regularly and at the same point in practice, such as just after the warm-up
· Measure athlete progress during conditioning by testing their abilities at the beginning of the season, in the middle, and near the end
· Give awards or recognition for athletes making improvements because of conditioning
· Explain the impact that conditioning has on players abilities to perform certain skills and improve their performance

All athletes should come to respect and understand conditioning and its impact on sports performance. If they begin to look at it as a tool to build strength, endurance, and agility on the field, they will come to the exercises with more dedication and enthusiasm.

Physical fitness is comprised of many different components. The following factors affect an athlete's overall fitness level and ability to play a sport:

· Lung capacity and ability to process adequate oxygen while exercising
· Body mass index, or percentage of body fat
· Muscle flexibility
· Muscle endurance
· Response time
· Proper diet and nutrient intake

A coach's physical conditioning plan should take into account the basic benchmarks for physical fitness for certain levels and ages. If a coach has unreasonable expectations for their players endurance levels, they will be disappointed with team's performance at conditioning drills as well as during the actual competition.

However, when coaches understand that all factors of physical fitness develop with time, they are more able to create a plan that takes into account the age and sport of their players to develop the most appropriate plan possible for the skills those players need to develop.

Creating a physical fitness program is also a great way to catch any limiting factors for athletes, such as dangerously high BMI, or body mass index. This factor, which determines the percentage of fat in the body in relation to muscle, is an indicator of other issues that may require a doctor's care. Another factor, lung capacity can also be determined simply through a physical fitness program.

Though it may seem that some players do not have the endurance that others do, the problem may actually be related to lung capacity and that player's ability to process oxygen. Exercise-induced asthma, a common condition brought on by rigorous sports participation, affects many athletes but goes unnoticed or misdiagnosed. A simple physical fitness program may bring this condition to light, because if a player is conditioning at the same level as their peers in exercises such as push-ups and sit-ups, they should have a similar level of endurance. If not, something else, such as asthma, may be to blame.


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Fitness Programs

Forget About Exercise, Play A Sport Instead
By Roy Palmer


Fitness programmes usually contain exercises such as sit-ups, stomach curls or some sort of jumping activity. That is what you would expect, right? But have you ever stopped to consider if these sort of exercises are the best way to get fit? Or that they are even good for you? Do they really help with your sport, lose weight, stay supple or keep in shape? We have come to accept the exercise is the only way to train if we are serious about our health, fitness and performance.

I would like to suggest there is another way, and a far better way for you to get what you want from a fitness plan. What is this way? Well, what about playing a sport? When you were younger did you go down the park with a few friends and just kick a ball around? Just think how much exercise you got from doing that. Calculate how many calories were used up in one hour of playing a game of football. And don't forget the cardio-vascular benefits.

But, more importantly, just how much more fun is playing a game than doing exercises? When did fitness begin to mean exercise in place of sport? Just how many more types of exercise do we really need to learn? Surely there are only so many different types of exercise our body's can perform!

One of my main interests is the state athletes call The Zone. People describe putting in the performance of their life as one of the easiest, effortless things they have done. Everything just comes together, their body feels light, their mind clear and the whole experience is one of pure joy.

If the sensations experienced in The Zone are what it feels like for every part of our body to be working at its optimum, then our fitness programmes should surely work to replicate this. Many of today's popular methods in my view do not encourage what I think of as total body integration. Muscle isolation training, core strengthening and postural exercises are some of the main culprits that ignore some of the basic principles of human movement and therefore likely to obstruct your path to true fitness.

Does your body benefit from performing specialist exercises that work individual muscles? It sure wasn't designed to work in this way. You may argue that traditional fitness programmes have exercises that are specifically designed to build strength in your core, thigh muscles or your upper back. But lets stop and consider this, do you ever use your body in your sport or everyday activities that look anything like these exercises?

Do you perform a movement like a stomach crunch at work or on the playing field? Probably not! I believe that traditional exercises can set up performance-limiting habits that will adversely affect your movement. We develop these habits unknowingly until our movement is compromised to the point it will damage out fitness. If your body is not moving as well as it should then your chances of getting a sports injury are increased.

So I would argue it is better for us to use our body as a whole playing a sport to engage the mind and body. All of your muscle groups will be worked, your heart, lungs and circulation get a great workout, but best of all, it is so much more fun! If it is enjoyable, you will be more likely to continue being active and stay fit and trim at the same time.

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Exercise and Sport For All

By Jaks Lloyd


Exercise and Sport. Most of us, keep fit enthusiasts excepted, will sooner or later, suffer from the dawning realization that our mirrors are telling us that our bottoms are sagging, our stomachs are bulging and our faces are getting puffy.

Some will just accept natures way and carry on with their usual lifestyle but there will be others that want to regain a trim and toned body and that feeling of well being that comes with being fit.

No matter what age you are when you become aware of the dreaded signs that your body is not the temple of excellence that you expected it to remain. Sloth, bad habits and diet will have their way.

They will affect even a teenager's body in just the same way as it will with any older person.

Having the right genes plays a huge part in our ability to delay the deteriorating effects of a bad lifestyle but sooner or later the body will begin give out ever-stronger signals that action should be taken to restore it to the way it was.

So what are the options?

The first thought that comes to many peoples mind is jogging. It does not require any expensive equipment, just trainers and any old clothes to suit the weather and can be carried out at any convenient time of the day or even night.

OK that's fine for those who prefer their own company but if you suffer from loneliness or just don't want to be alone when pounding the highways and byways of your neighborhood you will have to find a friend who shares your dedication to getting fit.

Incidentally there is a school of thought that considers jogging one of the worst activities for causing joint problems and associated pain.

Another option is to equip a home gym if you have the spare space.

Whether you buy just a few weights and maybe find a second hand simple treadmill or even if you can afford a comprehensive multi-gym machine it will still cost you.

As with all exercise regimes you will have to have the will power to continue with what can eventually become a boring routine, particularly so if budget and space consideration limit your choice of equipment.

Again great if you have company to help keep you going as listening to music on an I-pod or watching telly while you go through your routine can pall after a while. If you are a mother at least you haven't the problem of finding a baby sitter.

If you are a sociable type join a gym.

You can keep your interest up by trying out the variety of machines that a well run gym should be equipped with, take advantage of the good advice on hand from the staff and probably find a new circle of friends with the same interests which should help you sustain your efforts.

Subscriptions vary but are usually affordable.

This is a great option unless the whole idea of exercise without seeing a tangible result after each session doesn't appeal and the idea of running, lifting weights and other similar gym type exercises fills you with total boredom.

So lets look at Sport.

All sports have a definite objective and that is to win or lose at the end of a session.

I cannot think of a recognized sport in which women don't take part, even the roughest and toughest such as Rugby Union and League, American Football. Wrestling and Boxing have ladies teams competing against each other. Male or female, there are very few bars to taking up any sport you fancy.

Anybody can take part in any sport; the question is whether to take up a team sport or an individual sport.

Both will have clubs and associations and with few exceptions will welcome new members irrespective of their ability and most have an emphasis on the social side of their activities so making new friends and acquaintances with common interests is an added bonus.

The competitive atmosphere generated in sports clubs can become infectious and is a spur to increasing physical fitness to better ones performance on the playing field, court or wherever the sport is taking place.

For those who cannot get on with fast ball games such as Tennis, Squash or Racquetball there are many other options open.

Fencing, with three disciplines (foil, epee and sabre) requires good reflexes and fast feet, Wrestling needs application to technique good balance and strength. Then there is Judo, various martial arts, archery, boxing and a large variety of athletic pursuits. Football of whatever kind is so popular that a team to suit any standard of play however poor, is likely to be located nearby.

My Dad who is 70 still plays a two-hour competitive game of tennis three times a week and has recently taken up golf once a week so he will have a sport when he is too old for tennis.

He still contrives to get out of taking the family's little Shih-Tzu dog for a short daily walk because he says that just walking is boring

Another alternative for those who find road and gym work tedious and boring is to take up swimming.

Clubs organize races, water polo, sub aqua and other water activities that also require a good level of fitness and provide competition, companionship and interest, as is the case with every sport.

So for that trim and toned body and to feel good without the drudgery of jogging or the dread of boredom in the gym try taking up a sport.

There is a sport suitable for every one whatever their age, shape, standard or disability.


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