Do Women have it all WRONG (Guest Post)

22 04 2009

Women have it all wrong!
By Rachel Cosgrove

Women have it all wrong when it comes to weight loss. The average woman when she joins a gym looks at how many treadmills there are and the aerobics schedule to see if there are classes that fit in her schedule. When women want to lose weight they torture themselves with repetitive movement for hours on end spinning their wheels or running to nowhere like a hamster in a habitrail! If you take a look at all of the women walking on the treadmills you’ll notice none of them have the body most women want.   

The problem is that most personal trainers haven’t figured it out yet either. They get a female client who hires them to change their body and they think, "Oh man…another one of those stupid toning programs in the ladies only section with the pink dumbbells doing lots of reps…" Most trainers don’t realize that they need to challenge women to get their bodies to change and to stop being afraid of pushing her to gain muscle to boost her metabolism to change the way her body looks, permanently.  

Weight Loss Program the average woman does:

  • Endless hours of cardio or aerobics classes
  • Avoids strength training because she doesn’t want to get "big and bulky" or maybe she uses some rinky dink pink dumbbells to "tone" for lots of reps
  • Cuts back her diet to practically starve herself
  • Focuses on the scale weight and a number she wants it to say

What works about this plan: NOTHING!
What is wrong with this plan: EVERYTHING!  

She will lose weight but it will be a mixture of muscle, water and maybe some fat so she’ll end up looking like a smaller version of her same self but in the process she will have dropped her metabolism so there will be no way she can keep the weight off and will gain it back guaranteed. This is the cycle most women have been through many times throughout their lifetime. Yet, when they want to lose weight they do the same thing again. The definition of insanity is to do the same thing over and over and expect a different result.  

Weight Loss Program the average Women SHOULD do:

  • Metabolically demanding full body strength training program lifting challenging weights. This should be their priority workouts 2-4 days a week.
  • Boost their intensity and drop the duration on their cardio sessions performing interval style workouts for no more than 30 minutes at a time.
  • Fuel their body with healthy food every couple hours getting their metabolism revving.
  • Focus on how her clothes fit and how she looks and feels and not on a number on the scale. Focus in Fat Loss, not Weight Loss.

What works about this plan: It will boost her metabolism, it will change her body, it will make her feel confident about herself, she can eat and she will be able to maintain her new body!  
What is wrong with this plan: NOTHING!  

To really change their bodies permanently women need to start checking out the strength training floor. They need to get out of their comfort zone and push their bodies beyond what it is used to. No more walking to nowhere on the treadmill! I am not talking about bodybuilding routines where you split up each body part and bomb and blitz the pecs or pump up the biceps. It is not necessary for a woman to isolate any muscle group to get the defined look she wants.  

Instead a woman should do a full body, metabolically demanding program in which she alternates between an upper body compound movement such as a push up or chin up with a lower body compound movement such as a squat or lunge. Keep the rest periods short and use a weight that is challenging. Use 3-4 pairs of exercises working out for no more than an hour at a time.  

The woman with toned arms and defined legs looks that way because she has the very thing most women are terrified of, muscle. They are so afraid to lift weights in fear of bulking up that they never get their bodies to look the way they want them to. They have it deeply seeded in their subconscious that as soon as they touch anything over 10 pounds, they will sprout humungous muscles! Even if they do use weights, they probably still aren’t lifting heavy enough and pushing themselves hard enough to get the look they want. Most women don’t know what their bodies are capable of and tend to not push themselves hard enough. There was actually a research study done on this where they showed that women when left to train on their own, lifted loads below what they were capable of.  

Maybe it is because women have been conditioned our whole lives to exercise from the point of view of what we "can’t" do, rather than what we can do. Women grew up doing "girl" push ups, because we were told we "can’t" do actual push ups or hanging from the bar instead of a chin up because girls "can’t" do chin ups. The first woman to run the marathon had to sneak in dressed as a man because women "can’t" run a marathon, and that was only in the 70′s, not that long ago. Women "can’t" lift too heavy, they will hurt themselves. We still subconsciously hold ourselves back when it comes to training whether we realize it or not.

 

We need to start training from the standpoint of- What CAN you do? How much CAN you lift? How strong CAN you get? And stop letting "can’t" enter our vocabulary. As women start to push themselves in the gym, lifting weights and building lean muscle tissue, their metabolisms will be revving and they will be the toned, defined body they have always wanted.  

So how do you get your body to change? You have to lift enough weight to build muscle to increase your metabolism, fuel your body with healthy food and turn your body into a fat burning machine. Stop pounding your body with hours of cardio and stop starving yourself!  

If you are a gym owner or work in a gym start looking around at what the women in your gym are doing to lose weight and change their bodies. Do you have members who have been walking on your treadmills for the last three years and still look exactly the same? Educating your trainers and your female members you can help them to make permanent changes that will last a lifetime which also means their memberships will last a lifetime.  

Your gym will be packed with toned, strong women doing squats, chin ups and push ups showing off their new found six pack or their defined delts, feeling confident and good about themselves and I don’t think the men in your gym will complain…  

 —

For more information…
In this live seminar with Rachel Cosgrove, filmed at the Perform Better Rhode Island Summit – she shares her tips for getting great results from the female training population:

*Convincing female clients to embrace heavy strength training
*How to explain the importance of correct metabolic training and implement smart protocols
*Increase motivation through the power of social support
*Key differences in the psychology and physiology of training males and females
*Increase results by using an Athletic approach to program design
*The "Crab Theory" and other insights into the female mind

Pick up the DVD here: Training Jill Not Jack!

====

Regards

 

Wild Geese

every cause but our own

Kenpo / Eskrima / BJJ / Strength & Conditioning
www.wildgeesema.com/ wildgeesema.blogspot.com

info@wildgeesema.com

+353 87 672 6090

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How do YOU rate Wild Geese Martial Arts?

21 04 2009

Hi All,

 

We’re looking to improve the Wild Geese and for this we need your help. 

We want to know how you rate Wild Geese Martial Arts. We’re looking for feedback about:

 

*    Classes – What classes do you take, how good are they, how do they compare to other classes you’ve attended and how can we make them better?

*    Instructors – Who is your instructor, could you write a few lines as a review?

*    Management – Is there any way in which you think the club could be better managed?

*    Premises & Facilities – What about our club, can we make it better for you?

*    Anything else that you feel  may help us to make the Wild Geese Martial Arts Academy a better training ground

All the above will be treated in the strictest of confidence.

 

Plus a new area on the website is being set up for your testimonials and reviews on classes, personal training and workshops. 
We would like you to share your story and encourage more like minded people to make the club stronger, the first 5 people to have their testimonial or review that get chosen and published on the site will get a wild geese t shirt.

 

So, send an email or pen a letter and send it to info@wildgeesema.com

If there is something you’d like a response on, let us know.

 

PS The first draft of the bodyweight training manual, “No Equipment, No Excuses” by Dave Hedges is written and almost ready for release.
Keep an eye on your inbox’s for more updates.

 

Regards

 

Wild Geese

every cause but our own

Kenpo / Eskrima / BJJ / Strength & Conditioning
www.wildgeesema.com/ wildgeesema.blogspot.com

info@wildgeesema.com

+353 87 672 6090

Facebook / Twitter / RSS feed

 

 

 





Beware Your Instructor

21 04 2009

In the perfect world you would be able to walk into any gym or any martial arts studio and receive the best of instruction and training .

Unfortunately, this is not the case.

 

The martial arts world is almost completely unregulated and is fraught with politics and ego’s. The fitness industry is little different.

 

Many times over the years have I met instructors who are teaching information that they have no experience of and  people who have been on a weekend course cashing in on their new “expertise”.

I have personally witnessed instructors checking out video footage before stepping onto the training floor to teach the same thing they just learned from the screen. I’ve seen instructors try to teach things that they read in a book the day before. And I’ve seen instructors teach things that if tried for real, would get the student badly hurt.
That’s not all.

There are Martial Arts instructors giving themselves and their buddies grades, fabricating tournament results and fight experience on order to make themselves look cool. This is both disrespectful to their own teachers but also to the students.

 

The gyms are no different. Spotty skinny teenage personal trainers? It has taken me 15 years to build the knowledge and experience to train other to a high level of fitness and performance, and you know what, I’m still learning every day (check out my inbox, there are around 20 newsletter updates from top trainers around the world every day!).
Gym instructors who have no knowledge of correct bodymechanics, of how to perform the basic lifts and are limited to aerobics and machines. Ask one of the regulars at the Kettlebell class, he was the victim of one such gym instructor. The instructor refused to teach him the Deadlift, as it is too dangerous, the lad was left to his own devices and got himself hurt trying to do it on his own.

OK, you could blame the lad for trying on his own, but seriously, the deadlift is a cornerstone of any strength program and is one of the simplest, most basic moves in the world.

 

I strongly advise you to check out your instructors. After all you will be paying them a substantial amount of cash to get you fit, strong and fight capable.

 

You wouldn’t employ somebody at work without checking their references, so why not check your instructors certifications and claims. Just remember, look at who signed the certs.

Certificates are easy to forge, signatures not quite so. Plus, why not contact the people who issued the certs?
I know of several notable instructors who show off false certificates, one even has a cert signed by an instructor who can’t write! How is that right?

 

If you are looking to train, you are looking for quality instruction.

 

Make sure you get it.

 

Self Defence is about a lot more than hitting people, it’s about protecting yourself from all forms of attack, and that means scam artists and shams.

 

Regards

 

Wild Geese

every cause but our own

Kenpo / Eskrima / BJJ / Strength & Conditioning
www.wildgeesema.com/ wildgeesema.blogspot.com

info@wildgeesema.com

+353 87 672 6090

Facebook / Twitter / RSS feed

 

 

 





Kettlebell Instructor Certification

20 04 2009

Many of you have asked about the potential of a KBS Certification for Kettlebell Instruction. We’ll my friends at Londond Kettlebells have put together a fantastic two day instructors course which is very much targeted towards Trainers and Coachs and most definitely comes with the Kettlebells Scotland seal of approval. The certification is recognised by REPS, mapped to the National Occupational Standards and carries 16 CPD points.

 

 

I’ll be helping the guys with this Certification on June 6th & 7th at the Energy Gym Scotland. LKB have been at the forefront of Kettlebell Training and Instruction for over 5 years now.

 

Anyone who has been through a KBS workshop can claim £50.00 off the cost of the 2 day course.

 

Please don’t hestitate to contact me if you have any questions.

 

I have a post on the blog about it London Kettlebells Instructor Certification

 

Cheers

 

Rannoch


www.kettlebellsscotland.com
www.simplestrength.com

"What we teach is how we train"


www.kettlebellsscotland.com
www.simplestrength.com

"What we teach is how we train"

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No Rest for the Wicked

17 04 2009

The Wild Geese are busy busy bee’s!

Paul has just jetted away to Africa again, he’ll be training up some high level security types while he’s out there as well as ensuring our African representative is keeping his skills up. As he flew from London, Paul left a day earlier than needed, just so he could spend the day training under Grandmaster Danny Guba.

Dave, who’s just busy anyway, will also be refereeing Irelands first National Padded Stick Eskrima Tournament tomorrow (18 April), then the following weekend skipping up to Belfast to be tested by non other than 7 times kettlebell lifting world record holder, Vasilly Gincko.He’s also putting the finishing touches to his eBook, “No Equipment, No Excuses” a book on bodyweight fitness that will be available to buy very soon.

No rest for the wicked eh?

Hope your keeping up!

Regards

Wild Geese
Doce Pares Ireland / Kenpo Karate / Self Protection / Security Training
www.wildgeesema.com / wildgeesema.blogspot.com
info@wildgeesema.com
+353 87 672 6090
subscribe to our newsletter simply send a blank email to: newsletter-subscribe@wildgeesema.com





4th U.K. FMA Festival

15 04 2009

ooooohhhhh, can’t wait!!!





Open Workshop – Brazillian JuJitsu

14 04 2009

A quick reminder:

This Sunday will see Mariusz teaching an open workshop at the Academy.

Every one will benefit from this mans years of knowledge and experience (he’s Marcello Monteiro’s only european rep for a reason!). For more on Mariusz click here

The workshop will cover:-Proper warm up practices for the ground fighter-Stand up-to the ground (takedowns)-Defending from your back-Chokes and counters from chokes

Wether you’re a fighter, recreational martial artist or fitness enthusiast, you will benefit from this workshop.

Everybody is welcome, regardless of experience and background.

Date – Sunday 19 April
Time – 3pm to 6(ish)pm
Cost – €30 (Wild Geese members) €40 (everyone else)

See you there

Wild Geese
every cause but our own
www.wildgeesema.com





Complex Simplicity

9 04 2009

If you train at home, in a busy commercial gym or if your a fighter looking for the best in strength and condition while leaving you fresh for the technical work, you’ll go a long way to find a better training modality than complexes.

A complex is circuit, performed continuously with a single piece of equipment. They’re great for Barbells, Kettlebells and sandbags.

Just yesterday evening when I got home I dragged my sandbag from the shed and in the cool twilight of my back garden in went through on of the simple complexes I got from Alwyn Cosgrove.

Here it is:

Perform 6 reps of each exercise, do not put the bag down between exercises.

1 Bent Over Row
2 Clean, Front Squat, Overhead Press
3 Alternating Lunge
Go for 6 rounds, keep the rest periods short (30 seconds)

It wont take long to complete, but you’ll hit all the major areas, including your cardio.

Changing the reps, rest and weight will change the focus of the drill.
For example, go lighter for longer sets with minimal rest for endurance work, or load up heavy and increase the rest for strength.

Here’s one I return to often to build strength and staying power:
Take one barbell, put on some pumping tunes and get ready to swear (this drill was nicknamed the m£therf&*!ker by one guy who tried it). Here it is:

1 Deadlift
2 Romanian Deadlift
3 Bent Over Row
4 Hang Clean & Overhead Press
5 Squat
6 Alternating Lunge

To really push the boundaries we would start light, 10-15 reps for 1 round. Then up the weight, drop to 8 reps, up again for 5reps, up again for 3 reps and finally just attempt to get 1 rep of each!

This got us strong, durable and determined. There wasn’t much that could stop us.

You’ll find more on Alwyn by clicking Here

Regards

Wild Geese
every cause but our own
www.wildgeesema.com





Osteoperosis

7 04 2009

I just heard an ad on the radio from the Irish Osteoporosis Society, they reckon that 1 in 5 men will suffer this disease.

This is a disease usually associated with older women (post menopause) but in more recent times has been found in young males. I’ve copied a section of their website entitled risk factors:

Osteoporosis risk factors (from http://www.irishosteoporosis.ie/risk.htm):
For women:
- a lack of oestrogen, caused by:
- early menopause (before the age of 45)
- early hysterectomy (before the age of 45), particularly when both ovaries are removed (oophorectomy)
- missing periods for six months or more (excluding pregnancy) as a result of over-exercising or over-dieting
For men:
- low levels of the male hormone, testosterone (hypogonadism)
For men and women:
- long-term use of high dose corticosteroid tablets (for conditions such as arthritis and asthma)
- close family history of osteoporosis (mother or father), particularly if your mother has suffered a hip fracture
- other medical conditions such as Cushing’s syndrome, intestinal diseases and liver and thyroid problems
- malabsorption problems (Coeliac disease, Crohn’s disease, gastric surgery)
- long-term immobility
- heavy drinking
- smoking
If you think you may have one or more of these risk factors you are at increased risk of developing osteoporosis. You need to discuss your risk with your doctor and find out how to prevent and treat the disease. If you have broken a bone after a minor bump or fall you may already have osteoporosis and you should discuss this with your GP.
To read the brief explanations regarding the main risk factors for osteopenia and/or osteoporosis,
click here.

Did you see the bit I highlighted? Here it is again:
-Low level of the male hormone, testosterone
in other words if through laziness, poor diet and excessive drinking and smoking you have managed to emasculate yourself.

Lads, get a grip on yourself.

The good news is exercise is great for the prevention and even helpful in treating the disease, for men and women.
Weight training is especially good as it stress the entire musculoskeletal system causing it to get stronger. Thats right you actually make the bones stronger.

Drop into one of the kettlebell classes, book in for a personal training session or look through some of the links in the side bar for other great resources.

These stats make me ill just thinking about them.
Ok, if your post menopausal you are at most risk, but you can help yourself. If your not, especially if your a bloke in his prime years, it’s your own fault, now get off the sofa and do something about it.

Wild Geese
every cause but our own
www.wildgeesema.com





Here Come the Girls – Flora Mini Marathon 2009

2 04 2009

Hi,
Preparations are well under way for the 2009 Flora Women’s Mini Marathon which will take place on June 1st. We at Rehab Group are looking for volunteers to run to help raise funds and be part of Team Rehab.

This year our focus for the Marathon will be to raise funds for our HeadsUp Suicide Prevention Programme aimed at young people between 15 and 24 years old. The programme consists of a number of strands which include life-skills programmes for young people, a web and text based service that provides information on where to seek help as well as delivering courses aimed at those who interact with young people in their local communities. As you know, sadly suicide is growing in Ireland with 460 registered deaths in 2007 up from 409 in 2006. Over a quarter of the deaths are in the 15-24 year age category with a significant proportion being young men. If you would like to find out more about the programme please log on to www.headsup.ie where there is more detail. The HeadsUp project provides valuable support in this area. This year alone we need to raise €200,000 for this service so you will see it is a very worthy cause that we hope you will support by participating in the marathon. We’d love to have you on board as part of our team.

The 2009 Flora Women’s Mini Marathon is a great fun day out providing an opportunity to get fit while raising money for this great cause and supporting those in need in your local area. If you would like to run or know of anyone else that would like to run, please register for Rehab on www.florawomensminimarathon.ie or pass this e-mail on to your friends.

If you would like to set up your own fundraising page so your friends can easily sponsor you it’s easy to do. Just log on to http://www.mycharity.ie/create.php where you can create your own fundraising page and keep your supporters up to date on your progress!
Let us know you’re registering for Rehab and we’ll send you on a pack, which contains an information sheet, t-shirt and a sponsorship card.
I look forward to hearing from you and having you as part of our team.
Many thanks,
Kate
Kate Ryan
Administration Assistant – Marketing & Fundraising
Rehab Group
Roslyn Park, Beach Road
Sandymount, Dublin 4

P. +353 (0)1 205 7231
M. +353 (0)87 980 5057
F. +353 (0)1 205 7219
E. kate.ryan@rehab.ie
www.rehab.ie

Wild Geese are offering to help all the female athletes raising money for Rehab.ie in their preperations for the event.
If you’re planning on running and need training help or advice, drop us an email or visit our discussion page on facebook

All the best

Wild Geese
every cause but our own
www.wildgeesema.com








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