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Acheive Your Fitness Goals!

Posted by: Dr. Marybeth Crane Posted Date: 01/03/2011

The most common New Year’s resolution in the United States is to lose weight or improve your fitness. Let’s face it, even for the veteran marathoner or triathlete, the New Year gives us an excuse to refocus or give us just a little kick in the butt we need. We all need a plan to achieve our fitness goals or race success. I woke up on January first and realized it was 21 weeks until Ironman Texas. Wow! That crept up on me! Janet has been blogging for months about the road to Ironman Texas. I’ve been so busy working my butt off and being Mom, it crept up on me. Now it is time to refocus on my fitness goals, so I don’t perish on the streets of Houston on May 21st.

 

Maybe you are like me, a race is creeping up on you, or maybe you have just gained a few extra pounds from the holidays, or maybe you are like some of my friends who realized running up their stairs they get out of breath. This is a great time of year to refocus on your fitness goals. We all have obstacles; time, energy, financial, and our own self-defeating voice in our heads! Here are some tips that will help you focus and reach your fitness goals in 2011!

  1. Know your goals: You need to start with the end in mind. What are your goals? Lose weight? Get faster? Get fitter? Get stronger? Body sculpting? Finish your first marathon? Finish your first Ironman? Whatever they are, start with small focused goals and build to larger ones.
  2. Start Simple: Begin with a basic program. Make it a habit, and then you can build from it. Maybe you run for 30 minutes every morning at 5:30 am. Maybe you add a strength work out twice a week. Maybe it is as simple as adding a tempo run once a week. By starting simple, after 21 days you have now made a new habit to build on.
  3. Write it Down: A goal not written down is a mere wish. Also, logging your workouts make them more real. It also makes any blank spots much more glaring! There are lots of logs or even phone apps to log your workouts and your nutrition. Use one! Include your goals at the top of each page of your log. I also find it helpful to leave myself sticky notes around the house. When you find a note that says “20 weeks to Ironman” on your bathroom mirror when you get up in the morning that is powerful motivation!
  4. Enable Yourself: Make sure your equipment is working well. Time to get that new pair of running shoes. Time to tune up the treadmill and work on your bike. Buy yourself a new toy like a chin up bar or power meter for your bike. New toys make fitness goals even more fun!
  5. Make it Fun: Find some workout peeps. Make sure you are having fun even when your muscles are screaming at you to stop. I find a weekly group run or ride, coupled with a weekly mostly social weight workout at the gym, makes the many solitary miles on my bike, treadmill or road a lot more tolerable.
  6. Confuse your body: Mix up your workouts. Your body gets stronger and faster with small incremental increases in stress. This means changing speeds, changing routines and scenery to confuse you muscles to get stronger. Throw in a crazy yoga workout, a new routine or just a bunch of hills when you usually avid them. Change your energy levels for better success.
  7. Be Committed and Consistent: Every year I see a whole gaggle of new people at the gym in the first week of January, and then they are gone by Valentine’s Day. Fitness goal cannot be reached in a month or two. You have to commit to your goals and work towards them. It may take a year to reach your goals. I started working towards my first Ironman two years ago. Now I am less than 5 months away. Rome was not built in a day. When you feel like quitting, pull out your goals and read them again. Start a mantra, “Pain is temporary and quitting is forever” is the one I use with my middle school cross country running daughter. I personally like, “It’s all about the finish line”. Find one that works for you. It really is true that the hardest part of a marathon is the first three steps out of bed in the morning! You will find that once you get up, the rest is easy.

If you follow these few tips, I promise you will reach your fitness goals in 2011! You will thank me! And I will live though Ironman Texas this year! Run happy and towards your goals!

 

 
 
 

Walk To Run into 2010!

Posted by: Dr. Marybeth Crane Posted Date: 12/24/2009

Kick Start Your New Years Resolution!

 

Many of our patients, much like their estimated 75 million obese neighbors, are stuck in a never-ending, life-threatening cycle: Obesity aggravates the pain in their feet; sore feet make it almost impossible to exercise for weight loss; and without exercise, their weight continues to increase which puts them at risk for worsening of diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, stroke and other life threatening diseases.

It’s the New Year and more than 50% of New Year’s resolutions have something to do with weight loss. This includes a resolution to exercise on a regular basis. Do not let foot pain thwart your resolution to exercise! The best way to break the pain cycle is to seek help from your podiatrist. Often simply placing you in the correct shoes with arch supports or custom foot orthotics will decrease your foot pain and fast track your resolution to exercise.

Many of our patients have not exercised in years, so they have many questions on how to get started. Before starting any program, it is important to discuss exercise with your doctor to see if you have any restrictions due to heart disease, diabetes, or arthritis. Get a physical! It’s a great way to start off the year. After your physical, visit your podiatrist to discuss your foot and ankle aches and pains.

There is no perfect exercise program for anyone, but if you are more than 20 pounds overweight, I recommend you start with a walking program that also has a strength and flexibility component worked in. What does that mean? Start with walking, not running, and add stretching and a little weight training to balance your program. If you need help with program specifics, consult a personal trainer or physical therapist.

Walking really is the easiest and least expensive exercise program that can be done indoors or outdoors; and this can progress to a running program as you lose weight and get healthier.

Did you know that inactivity is the second leading preventable cause of death in the United States, second only to tobacco use?

Need more motivation? Here are six great reasons other than the obvious physical fitness improvements to start a walking program:

1. Walking prevents type 2 diabetes. The Diabetes Prevention Program showed that walking 150 minutes per week and losing just 7% of your body weight (12-15 pounds) can reduce your risk of diabetes by 58%.
2. Walking strengthens your heart. In one study, mortality rates among men who walked less than one mile per day were nearly twice that among those who walked more than two miles per day. Women in one study who walked three hours or more per week reduced their risk of a heart attack or other coronary event by 35% compared with women who did not walk.
3. Walking is good for your brain. In a study on walking and cognitive function, researchers found that women who walked the equivalent of an easy pace at least 1.5 hours per week had significantly better cognitive function and less cognitive decline than women who walked less than 40 minutes per week. Think about that!
4. Walking is good for your bones. Research shows that postmenopausal women who walk approximately one mile each day have higher whole-body bone density than women who walk shorter distances, and walking is also effective in slowing the rate of bone loss from the legs.
5. Walking helps alleviate symptoms of depression. Walking for 30 minutes, three to five times per week for 12 weeks reduced symptoms of depression as measured with a standard depression questionnaire by 47%.
6. Walking reduces the risk of breast and colon cancer. Women who performed the equivalent of one hour and 15 minutes to two and a half hours per week of brisk walking had an 18% decreased risk of breast cancer compared with inactive women. Many studies have shown that exercise can prevent colon cancer and even if an individual person develops colon cancer, the benefits of exercise appear to continue both by increasing quality of life and reducing mortality.

I don’t know if we’ve convinced you yet, but a walking program is a great way to start the New Year! Write down your fitness goals. Put a sticky note on your bathroom mirror that asks, “Did you exercise today?” or a picture of yourself 20+ pounds lighter. Come visit Janet at Healthy Steps and get a new pair of shoes to start your program. (She gives great advice as well). Make 2010 your year to keep your New Years resolution and become your ideal self!

Walk or Run Happy! Moving in the Right Direction!!

 
 

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