Saturday, October 10, 2009

Got Goals!?

So, around 5:00 or 5:15 this morning you heard an obnoxious noise and couldn’t figure out what was going on. Then you remember the noise is your alarm and that this is your first day with Rialto Wellness Boot Camp! After those thoughts of “what was I thinking?” left your head, you got up, got dressed and headed out. You have now become one of those weird people who roll around in the dirt for fun! Was it everything you expected? Were you pushed beyond your comfort zone? For those of you with PM camps, are you excited for your first workout?

You joined boot camp for a reason, right? That reason can usually be translated into a goal. So what are your goals this month? Run with the fast group? 6-pack abs? Lose a size? How about just making it through the month? All of these goals require small steps in order to reach the prize. Take small bites out of these things. Step One: Decide to make it all your sessions this week. Then make a deal with yourself to make it to all week 2 sessions, and so on and so forth. Pretty soon, the month is over and you are running fast or showing off your baggy pants!

This article about setting a fitness goal reminds us that our goals need to be achievable. Setting short term goals like making it to boot camp every day gives us a sense of accomplishment before we reach the end result of losing 10 pounds. The sense of accomplishment you feel with the short term goals makes staying on track to reach the long-term goals easier.

This blog is for you. Tell the world your goals in the comments and we'll help you stay accountable. You can do this...whatever "it" is!

Have you come up with your Halloween costume yet?

Thursday, October 8, 2009

7 Simple Techniques to Minimize Your Swine Flu Risk

Hi All:

We're not an alarmist kinda people. Not at all. However, the statistics don't lie:

- Seasonal flu annually sickens 5-20% of the population

But there's no need for gloom and doom. Just read these 7 simple techniques that reduce your Swine Flu risk and you'll start feeling much better!

http://rialtowellness.getprograde.com/Swine-Flu-Prevention.html

Monday, September 21, 2009

Bars?!

When walking around the health food section of a grocery store these days, you may find that there are many different types of bars. And with so many options and fancy marketing, it is good to arm yourself with a little bit of knowledge about what type of bars you should be eating.

Since we are not scientists or a medical professional of any sort, we asked some of our nutrition experts for a little help on this topic.

Alisa, who doubles as a Registered Dietitian in her every day life, holds a Masters in Allied Health with an emphasis in Nutrition from Georgia State University. We also asked Justin, who is some sort of fancy scientist and just really smart when it comes to nutrition.

Alisa and Justin give us these helpful hints when it comes to which snack bars to choose:

- A bar is a good “in a pinch” snack, but should NEVER replace a meal.
- The bars should be all natural, organic and if possible should not have any high fructose corn syrup.
- When choosing a bar look for:
200 calories or less
8-10 grams of protein
30 grams of carbs or less
2-3 grams of fiber
3 grams of saturated fat or less
- The less saturated fat, the better. The saturated fat is usually due to the milk chocolate or any yogurt coating added to the bars. Saturated fat is the bad animal fats that we do not need a lot of, and most people eat too much. Dark chocolate is the best.

With these guidelines in mind, Alisa and Justin recommend the following:

-Prograde Bars - Packed with healthy fats your body needs and zero trans fats
No preservatives, Less than 200 calories so it’s THE perfect snack - Satisfies your chocolate craving with 100% Organic Dark Chocolate - Perfect (and safe) for kids and young athletes.

Three great flavors: Peanut Butter, Almond Butter and Spirulina


-Zone Perfect Fruitified bars (because they don’t have a chocolate/yogurt coating) – 190 calories, 14 grams of protein, 24 grams of carb (3 grams of fiber), 2.5 grams saturated fat

-Luna Toasted Nuts ‘n Cranberry bar (also no coating) – 180 calories, 10 grams of protein, 26 grams of carb (3 grams of fiber), 0.5 grams saturated fat

-Kashi Go Lean Crunchy! Bars – the Chocolate Almond flavor (some coating) – 170 calories, 27 grams of carb (5 grams of fiber), 8 grams of protein, 2.5 grams saturated fat

So remember, if you are “in a pinch” and need to eat a bar for one of your snacks, make sure you are following Alisa and Justin's suggestions to choose the best possible bar. This is especially important if weight loss is one of your goals, as some of the bars pack a lot of calories into very little space- there is a reason some of them taste like candy bars! Pay attention to the labels and find one you like that is also healthful.

Anytime you have any nutrition questions, feel free to post them to the blog where one of our nutrition experts can answer them for you. You can also check out the nutrition blog on a daily basis for recipes and tips.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Shop Smart

You signed up for boot camp and have made the commitment to give it your all every day. But is that enough? Some of you might think that is a crazy question. Of course that is enough, right? Well, maybe not. Getting in shape and being healthy takes more then just exercise. Yes, you have made the first step in the right direction. You have signed up for a hardcore program that is going to kick your butt! Now it’s time to learn how to change your eating so that you get the most out of boot camp.

If you don’t have healthy and nutritious foods at home, it is going to be easier to slip up and “cheat.” That is why this article “Healthy Eating Begins at the Supermarket” makes sense. Think about it. If you are at the store and you are buying Twinkies and Oreos, then obviously when you get home, you are not going to have healthy foods to eat. But if you make the right choices while you are shopping, eating healthy will become a natural occurrence. If you surround yourself with the “right” foods, you won’t even have to think about what to eat.

So here are a few tips from this article that we thought were particularly important. One of the most important tips for healthy eating is to shop the perimeter of the store. The perimeter of the store is where you find all of the fresh foods. Your fruits, veggies, meats and seafood are all around the outside of the store. Are there exceptions to this rule? Yes, canned tomatoes are great to use while cooking, as are frozen veggies, but in general you can avoid the majority of the aisles in a grocery store.

Another great tip is to shop with a list. Plan out your meals and snacks for a few days and write down what you need. Shopping with a list will make you focus on the foods you really need and not the foods that you want. Making a list also cuts down the time you spend at the grocery store and can help save money since you won’t be buying all the unnecessary foods.

We hear a lot from our campers (especially the single ones) that they don’t like to cook at home because the food goes to waste. If you buy your fruits and vegetables a few days before they are ripe, there is less chance of them going bad. Then once you cook the foods, split the meal out into individual Tupperware containers. You can freeze these containers and have meals for the future when you don’t have time to cook.

When you are looking through the produce section, focus on the fruits and vegetables that are in season. Foods that are in season will often cost less and will always taste better. So do yourself a favor and stick to in season fruits and veggies.

There are a lot of other tips in this article. So check it out here. For our veteran campers, we know you have heard a lot of these tips before in one way or another. What changes did you make to your shopping habits that have helped you the most?

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Miss Us Yet?

The Rialto Wellness Staff knows how much you must be missing camp this week. So we put together a couple of workouts you can do at home...you can thank us later...

1) I'm So Excited!!

30 - 20 - 10

Vertical Jumps

Xtreme Jacks

Vertical Leg Scissors

Do 30 of each, then 20 of each, then 10. Not enough? Build it back up! Do 10 of each, then 20, then 30.

2) Jump Rope

Grab a rope and see how many skips you can get in a minutes. Take 3/4 of that number and skip that many times each minute for 20 minutes.

So if you can skip 100 times in 1 minute. Then for each minute for 20 minutes, you need to try and skip 75 times. Try to complete each minute as fast as possible and use the remaining seconds as rest.

3) Grind it Out

Push ups on the wall

Wall Jumps

20+1

19+2

18+3

all the way down until 1+20

So start with 20 push ups on the wall and 1 wall jump. Then 19 push ups and 2 wall jumps.

4) Lunge Walk 400 meters (1 loop around a track)

Friday, August 14, 2009

"Why Exercise Won't Make You Thin" - ...Sans Proper Diet!


TIME Magazine recently published a very controversial article on the effects of exercise on weight loss.

The article was called “Why Exercise Won’t Make You Thin” (to read the article in full: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1914857-1,00.html)

Not exactly a sweeping promotion for fitness!

Though there were a lot of things within the article that I found misleading or flat out incorrect, the article does bring to light some very important concepts that are critical for the general population to understand:

1.) Exercise WILL make you hungrier

There is no question here. Exercise, especially intensive exercise, ramps up metabolism and our body’s natural response to energy expenditure (calories burnt from activity) is to increase energy consumption (food intake).
However, being hungrier from exercise is not the culprit- choosing the wrong type of food following exercise is!

In other words, if our diets focus on lots of lean protein, healthy fats, and high-fiber fruits and veggies every 2-4 hours, then we will be able to squash our exercise-induced hunger and build muscle and burn fat from exercise like we intend to. These foods are proven to promote optimal health, performance, and body composition.

However, if you are are a carb addict (think lots of refined grains and sugars), exercise will only make you crave more carbs leading to intense feelings of insatiability throughout the day due to unstable blood sugar levels. Make no mistake about it- in this case, exercise will not only cause you to NOT lose weight, but most likely will cause weight gain.

Here’s the line we tell most people who come to us to lose weight for them to understand they key to the success they crave:

“If you want to bulk up, add size, and gain weight, be sure to eat plenty of starches and sugars. But if you want to be lean and muscular, swap the starches and sugars for high fiber fruits and vegetables, with a special emphasis on green veggies.”

It’s really that simple, which brings us to point #2…

2.) Exercise sans proper nutrition WILL NOT cause significant weight loss

Nutrition is without a doubt 80-90+% of the equation when it comes to weight management. Hormones govern fat loss and both exercise and nutrition impact your body’s hormone levels- positively or negatively depending on what type of exercise and diet plan you follow.

However, you can never wipe out poor nutritional habits with exercise- NEVER! In terms of diet, the hormone we must be most concerned about is insulin, a storage hormone that’s released in large amounts when consuming refined starches and sugars.

Not matter how hard you workout, if you are releasing insulin through the day with a high carb diet, you will be helpless to its fat-storing effects.

On the other hand, lean proteins, healthy fats, and high-fiber fruits and veggies do not significantly impact your insulin levels thus allowing you to preferentially burn fat and build muscle in conjunction with the right exercise plan, which brings me to point#3…

3.) Not all exercise is created equal

The aforementioned article failed to distinguish between different forms of exercise. It misleadingly uses the word “exercise” to refer to aerobic activity or any form of exercise of low to moderate intensity.

Well, we already know that aerobic training has zero effect on fat loss over dieting alone- many studies support this.

So this article should not be using aerobics as the marker for “exercise” and it’s impact on weight loss… it’s like taking a dull knife to a gun fight!

Furthermore, we know that high-intensity interval training (HIIT) burns 9x more fat than ordinary exercise (aerobic training) and actually builds lean muscle and elevates metabolism for up to 24-48 post-workout (please reference our most recent blog posts for a ton of interval workouts that fit the bill here)

In conclusion, study after study proves that when it comes to exercise for fat loss:

CARDIO SUCKS AND INTERVALS ROCK!

So this TIME magazine article missed the ball on the big picture here: When it comes to being lean, muscular, and healthy, the key is an integrated and research based diet AND exercise regimen- exercise alone simply doesn’t cut it!


PS- What are your thoughts about this article? Does this hurt or help the weight loss cause? Please share your mind by making a comment to this blog post below, thanks!

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Locally Grown/Raised...Grassfed...These Things Just Taste Better?!

If you were in Denver this weekend, you know that Saturday morning was an amazing 70 something degrees, sunny, idyllic. The perfect kind of day to be outside, for sure. Some bootcampers may have headed on over to the Local Farmer’s Market to do some research...and of course buy a few items not currently available in our garden;-) There were vendors hocking their sauces, veggies, meats, pottery – Some vendors may have been demonstrating a culinary cooking utensils, etc. There is nothing quite like getting out and going to see what’s local and in season – with the "people watching" which provids added entertainment.

Anyhoo, onto the point of this blog. The place was hopping at 9am, with vendors passing out samples of homemade bacon, locally grown organic tomatoes, and of course the bread people were there, with the longest line, passing out their samples too.

Why are we such proponents of grass fed meats? Well, in case you don’t remember, check out these links: Grassfed basics, you are what your animals eat, choose grassfed! And YES, we are realists, and know darn well it’s not always available or accessible or even affordable to go grassfed, in which case just do the best you can.

Now the BEST part?

If you have not heard the buzz on the street about the incredible new fruits and veggie mart let us be the first. It's called Blazer Street market, located at 15550 E. 6th Avenue, Aurora CO 80011. Located off of 6th and Chambers in the old Cub Foods store. One bootcamper states, "I was able to purchase 27 of our Fathers most divine earthly pleasures for under $25.00: The juiciest of juicy heart shape black cherries only $.99 a pound...gtfoh!!! 3 pink lady apples for $1.00, WHAT! And 2 bunches of spinach for $1.00, mustard greens for $.69 a bundle....SHUT UP! So check it out my fine friends in fitness. It's only open from Thursday to Sunday, 10am to 8pm-it's what's up!!!"

Next weekend we strongly encourage you to go check out these Farmer's Markets - the assortment of locally grown veggies they have available this time of year is fantastic (that is of course if you aren't harvesting such things from your own garden source!)...

PS - There are markets all over the metro Denver area. (i.e. near Cherry Creek Mall, Tiffany Plaza Parking Lot.) If you know of more locations, list them in the comments section of the blog for all to enjoy!