TIPS BY NIC 

Each month Nickie will provide tips to a happier, healthier fitness routine. These tips are meant to keep you up-to-date on the latest information on how to improve your overall health.** Some of the tips will be given in general workout routines, specific exercise techniques, nutritional tips, as well as upcoming fitness events.

November Tips

With the holidays right around the corner it’s never too early to start watching what one eats and the energy that is burned.
I have a few holiday tips ready for you, click on Tips By Nic and discover what you can do to keep away the holiday blues and pounds.

To divert depressive feelings that sometimes come between Thanksgiving and the first of the year here are some of Nickie’s tips:

  1. Stay away from sugar. Although a holiday cookie can be tasty, ten or twelve of them add to unwanted inches around the mid-section.
  2. Moderate alcohol consumption - and NEVER drink and drive. Although a cup of holiday cheer may seem like a good idea at the time, too many and you won’t make it to your work out. So be responsible!
  3. Do Not overeat. Just because you may eat turkey does not mean you need to be stuffed like one.
  4. Surround yourself with supportive friends and family, who will encourage you to stay on your fitness track.
  5. Continue to work out!! This is a necessity during the holidays. Do not skip a work out, even if all you do is stretch and your cardiovascular workout. Remember: it’s easier to stop a good habit than a bad one. So keep fit!

Tips about cardiovascular training:

First off, there is a misconception about what cardiovascular activity is. Simply put, cardiovascular activity is any activity that places stress on the cardiorespiratory system. This includes walking on a treadmill, the pre-cor step machine AND weight training. Some people seem to think that if they lift weights they will gain weight. This does not necessarily have to happen. If you do gain weight it is most likely due to lifting heavy weight. When using weight lifting for cardiovascular reasons the rule of thumb is to increase repetitions, not weight.                          Now, the National Academy of Sports Medicine suggests that a cardiorespiratory warm-up should last five to ten minutes. Depending on the individual’s goal, where the individual is in their training and how fit the individual is, ten to fifteen minutes of walking on the treadmill, plus light stretching and abdominal exercises could be the complete workout. Everyone is different, which is why everyone cannot be given the same exercise routine.
However, here are the general definitions for cardiovascular training:
There are three basic cardiorespiratory workouts. Here they are:
1. Warm-up - a cardiovascular warm-up prepares the body for physical activity. It can be a general warm-up or specific to the physical activity. This portion of the warm-up should last five to ten minutes.
2. Cool-down - a cool-down provides the body with a transition period from exer-cise back to a steady resting state. It also brings the muscles back to their original resting length after a workout.

3. Primary - a cardiovascular activity as the primary workout may be running. If this is the case, the runner will want to do a warm-up and cool-down which may or may not consist of the same primary activity.

Here’s a general health activity recommendation for the individual just beginning a workout routine, for someone just coming off an injury, or for the individual who just wants to workout through the holidays to ward off those extra pounds they otherwise will gain without a workout program:

5 - 7 days per week: 30 minutes a day of a general activity, walking, using stairs etc. at a moderate pace - enough to raise the heart and respiration rate.
And remember, the more you enjoy the activity the more you’ll be inclined to do it!
Have a fun and safe holiday.
For any questions please see my new section of Q & A.

Good luck & have fun!!
Thank you all & Happy Holidays!!!
Nickie Nicolas

** The tips I will be given in tipsbynic will be from, but not limited to, the following resources: Magazines: Fitness Journal, Triathelete, Runners, Woman’s Health, LA Yoga, Health & Fitness, as well as internet resources such as the American Heart Association and the American Diabetes Association. There are a lot of wonderful resources out there. Please feel free to research your own specific area of interest; and please remember to consult your physician before starting any exercise or diet program.

View tips from August

Copyright © 2007 FitbyNic.com.
All Rights Reserved.