Showing posts with label resolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resolution. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2014

5 Ways Yoga Can Help Boost Athletic Performance

 This is a great article from Brook Robert of Muscle & Fitness we just had to share! Check it out!
Ahh, yoga. Crunchy, serene, woo-woo yoga. But we've got news for you: It’s not just for hippies or girls in yoga pants anymore – just ask the Seattle Seahawks. If you think yoga is a waste of your precious lifting time, think again. Developing a steady practice can actually help you get stronger.
The dirty truth of the matter is that putting your body through any repetitive movement (even weightlifting) will eventually create muscular imbalances and lead to injury. So hard-chargers take note: Incorporating yoga into your existing routine might be exactly what your body needs in order to improve.

Here are five ways yoga can benefit even the most muscular among us.

1. Increased Power

Flexibility keeps muscles and joints safe. Chances are, if you've just been using the same muscles for repetitive movements, they’re going to be pretty tight. Top-flight bodybuilders and dedicated weekend warriors alike love a good massage for this reason. Maybe you've even noticed a one rep max plateau, or a speed block. If a muscle is so tight that injury is imminent, your body will start to recruit other muscles to help out with certain moves. And if those muscles are under trained, you’re looking at a torn muscle and -gasp- down time. Elastic muscles and supple joints move more efficiently, recover more quickly and continue doing their jobs. Increasing your flexibility will also increase range of motion, which means an increased power output due to greater muscle recruitment, and more efficient movements.

2. Better Muscle Function

Yoga is a lot of things but it is basically all about breath and movement, movement and breath. To fully be present and to full articulate each posture in yoga, a strong, focused breath is essential. Doesn't hurt that it tames busy brain or helps take the edge off your pre-workout drink. Getting in touch with your breath can help establish better breathing patterns and access parts of your respiratory system that you didn't even know you could control. Get ready for more efficient oxygen intake, more complete exhalation, and better muscle function. Hello, gains. Goodbye muscle fatigue, symptoms of asthma, ragged breathing, and side stitches. Just like you wouldn't restrict precious nutrients and protein from your muscles, you should also be feeding your muscles with more delicious blood flow and oxygen. This is also certain to develop positive respiratory habits that you can carry into the rest of your training endeavors.

3. Mental Toughness

One of the biggest benefits of yoga is its emphasis on the connection between body and mind. Whether through meditation, or through the holding a headstand for an extended period of time, your mental toughness and focus are likely to improve. This might be the hardest benefit to achieve but once you begin to get your head in the game the benefits are almost unlimited.

4. Control   

“Pull your belly button to your spine,” “feel your lungs expanding,” “roll down your spine, one vertebrae at a time,” are all common phrases in yoga classes. It’s this constant cuing to pay attention to the smallest of sensations that helps build the neurological connections between our brains and our muscles (See No. 3). Yoga builds body awareness, and this can help you analyze your form during your workout to both optimize your lifting techniques, and help prevent compensation based injury. Again, this carries over into your normal cadre of sets-and-reps: the better you are able to “connect” mind and muscle, the more focused (read: efficient) each rep will be. Tough to think about the burn when you’re laser-focused on the effort.

5. Active Recovery and Muscle Repair

Active recovery typically means a light workout on an off day. These low-key days are a perfect way to slide yoga seamlessly into your schedule. Using specifically yoga as a form of active recovery can actually repair muscle fibers more quickly than other common forms, as the combination of stretching and relaxing muscles encourages blood flow to broken down muscle tissues. Do yoga, lift again sooner.
If you think yoga is just for slim, prissy girls with hot yoga pants on, think again. A great many of you out there likely have at least some familiarity with yoga through your TV-ordered set of P90X DVDs. Through yoga, you learn to control your body and your mind. And when it comes to building a stronger, leaner, more functional physique, that control can truly provide next-level results. 
Along with yoga a good nutritional diet will help keep your body balanced and ready for the next workout. Come see one of our certified nutrition specialist and let them help you balance out your diet!
Til next time,
Mikie

Sunday, December 29, 2013

3 Reasons You Shouldn't Make a Fitness-Related New Years Resolution for 2014

2014 is just around the corner and the talk of New Years resolutions are in full swing. But how serious are you about it? Do you make a New Years resolution every year, just to see it fail within a few short weeks or months?

Check out these 3 reasons you shouldn’t make a fitness-related New Years resolution for 2014.

New Years resolutions often fail

I’ve read a number of articles that state anywhere from 88% to 92% of New Years resolutions fail. Even taking the most optimistic number, a 12% chance of success for a New Years resolution is not very good odds.

I understand that New Years resolutions are fun, and the idea of starting the new year with a clean slate is enticing. My advice to you is if you are going to make a New Years resolution, make it something less important that doesn’t have to do with fitness or taking care of your body. Because your body deserves a whole lot better than a 12% chance you’re going to take care of it.

New Years resolutions aren’t structured for success

What are some of the fitness-related New Years resolutions you hear about?

I want to eat healthier
I want to lose weight
I want to start going to the gym

These are such bland statements. There is no defined path as to how you are going to reach your resolution. Additionally, how are you going to measure your success? If you lose one lb? Ten lbs?

New Years resolutions often aren’t specific enough to be able to measure and define success. That makes it hard to stay motivated.

Instead of a New Years resolution, I encourage you to make a goal or goals. Not just any goals, specific goals. If you want to lose weight, how much weight do you want to lose and by when? How are you going to get there?

A great goal might be something like I want to lose five pounds by March 1st by keeping my body active at least three days a week. Boom. You know exactly what you want, when you want it, and how you’re going to achieve it.

Choosing to make a goal instead of a New Years resolution is a BIG WIN in my opinion.

New Years resolutions make you wait

Okay, so you have your resolution in mind and you’re patiently waiting for the new year to roll around so you can start. Here’s my question to you: why are you waiting for the new year?

Anything that you think worth starting is worth starting today. Not tomorrow. Not a week from now. Not a month from now. Today.

New Years resolutions give people a false sense of hope. They think that just because it’s a new year it somehow increases their chance of success. But do you think that years of living a sedentary lifestyle are all of a sudden going to disappear with the new year? Of course not! It’s going to carry over with you into the new year.

I always encourage people to start today. There’s absolutely no reason in the world to wait. If you truly want something, work towards taking it by starting today. I believe fitness is a lifetime commitment. The sooner you start, the sooner you’re going to reach your goals, which leads you to create new goals, and on and on and on.

I certainly hope I don’t derail you from creating a New Years resolution for 2014. New Years resolutions can be fun. I just encourage you to keep fitness-related resolutions out of the equation. Instead, create fitness goals and start today. This path will give you a lot better chance of success than relying on a New Years resolution to get you there.

Can you think of any other reasons you shouldn't make a fitness-related New Years resolution for 2014? What is your New Years resolution for 2014?

Til next time,
President at MyBestHealthPortal.net