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Tuesday, 15 October 2013
Ways To Get A Nice Se'xy Build-Up Body!
You can do it while you’re waiting for
pasta to cook or for your iron to heat up.
That’s why it almost immediately became
one of the most popular workouts in the
country, inspiring dozens of smartphone
apps and countless derivative routines.
1. If you have one minute…drop and do
10 push-ups (or 20, or 5).
There’s a reason that push-ups are every
trainer’s favorite exercise: They engage
muscle groups in the arms, chest,
abdomen, hips and legs; they don’t
require any equipment; they’re endlessly
adaptable (you can work them into a yoga
routine; add jumps to turn them into a
cardio move; change your hand position
to make them a triceps toner).
More important to most of us is the fact
that these intense moves get results.
“Female clients have told me that they’ve
seen noticeable differences in their arms
after doing daily push-ups against a wall
or on the edge of a sink,” says Shirley
Archer, a certified fitness expert and a co-
author of Weight Training for Dummies. In
as little as two weeks, the exercise should
feel easier (no more soreness!), says
Archer, and you may see a visible
difference in muscle tone after four to
eight weeks, depending on your age and
your exercise history. Here’s how to do
push-ups correctly.
2. If you have four minutes…jump and
squat. Rest. Repeat.
The Tabata Protocol, which sounds like
the title of a Robert Ludlum novel, is
actually a mini-workout that really makes
a difference. Originally named after the
Japanese fitness researcher Izumi Tabata,
this interval workout alternates 20
seconds of ultra-intense exercises with 10
seconds of rest, for a grand total of four
minutes. While working with Olympic
speed skaters in the mid-1990s, Tabata
found that this type of workout helped
build muscle and improve aerobic and
anaerobic capacity. More recently,
Michele Olson, PhD, a professor of
exercise science and a principal
researcher at the Auburn University at
Montgomery Kinesiology Laboratory,
revealed that a Tabata-style workout of
squat jumps burned 13.5 calories a
minute and doubled calorie-burning
potential for 30 minutes afterward.
Olson’s research also showed that this
four-minute routine was as effective as
five times the amount of traditional
cardio. Try it yourself: Do 20 seconds of a
full-body move like squat jumps at
maximum effort (it should hurt), then
rest for 10 seconds. Repeat this circuit
continuously for four minutes
3….Or sprint up and down a flight of
stairs for four minutes straight.
While exercise scientists are still trying to
figure out exactly how many (or how few)
sprints we need to do to get optimal
effects, and how many seconds each
interval should last, they all agree that
any amount of time is better spent
moving than sitting. “We know that all-out
intervals—like you’re sprinting to save a
child from a burning car—produce a
calorie burn that persists even when
you’re sitting down,” says exercise
physiologist Martin Gibala, PhD, the chair
of the department of kinesiology at
McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario
(and one of the leading HIIT—high-
intensity interval training—researchers).
“But we don’t know enough yet to say
how much better that would be than a
four-minute all-out sprint without
breaks.” So, if you’ve got a few extra
minutes and are feeling physically spry
but too mentally fried to remember how
many jump-squats you need to do in
what amount of time, Gibala suggests
running up and down the stairs or doing
a lap around the parking lot—you’ll burn
50 to 75 calories.
4. If you have seven minutes…try the
routine that is basically excuse-proof.
The “scientific seven-minute workout” that
appeared in the May–June issue of the
American College of Sports Medicine’s
Health & Fitness Journal (and then in The
New York Times) has a lot going for it:
It’s fast, it’s easy, it works your entire
body and doesn’t require any extra
equipment. You can do it while you’re
waiting for pasta to cook or for your iron
to heat up. That’s why it almost
immediately became one of the most
popular workouts in the country, inspiring
dozens of smartphone apps and
countless derivative routines. However,
the seven-minute workout comes with an
important and underreported caveat: The
researchers who developed this routine
intended it to be repeated three times in
a row—making it more of a 21-minute
workout. But they agree that one round is
better than none. You’ll still get
significant calorie burning and muscle-
building benefits, especially if you’re
doing this on your “off days” (i.e.,
sandwiched between a yoga day and a
swim day).
5. If you have 10 minutes…do a super-
condensed version of cardio and
sculpting classes.
These routines from New York trainer
Michael Gonzalez-Wallace combine
standard gym classics—for example,
biceps curls while lunging—to help you
build muscle and improve balance while
getting a full-body aerobic workout. You’ll
need a pair of weights between two and
five pounds—but that’s it! Mix and match
the routines to keep things fresh, and
remember that the more energy you put
into them, the more you’ll get out of
them.
6. If you have 20 minutes…break a
sweat with this HIIT workout.
Hot new research that shows that high-
intensity interval training (HIIT) can boost
muscular and cardiovascular fitness as
effectively as steady-state cardio—n half
the time. This circuit routine was created
for Oprah.com by Jessica Matthews, an
exercise physiologist for the American
Council on Exercise (ACE), and each move
involves multiple body parts, adding up to
a legitimately challenging workout that
even gym bunnies will take seriously.
7. If you have 30 minutes…grab a
kettlebell.
ACE found that a 20-minute kettlebell
routine that involved swinging the weight
while lunging, squatting and reaching
burned at least 20.2 calories per minute—
which even the study authors admitted
was “off the charts.” They determined that
a well-executed kettlebell routine can be
as effective as running at a six-minute-
mile paceand then lifting weights. Note:
The reason this workout clocks in at 30
minutes instead of 20 is that a dynamic
warm-up is non-negotiable: As Jessica
Matthews notes, you shouldn’t go
swinging 15 pounds over your head and
between your knees when your muscles
are stiff (the ACE study also included a
five-minute cooldown, which Matthews
recommends for injury prevention)
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