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You may have heard the saying it's better to "Eat to Live" than to "Live to Eat." In a world full of impulse eating, artificial and processed foods, it can be challenging to make the right food choices each day. The following is my food philosophy. As you create your journey, I would love to hear more about the choices that guide you to "Live Fit!"
"Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food."-- Hippocrates FOOD GUIDE (MY FOOD PHILOSOPHY)
Disclaimer: This article is intended to share a journey of living fit. The information posted are not meant to diagnose, treat, or cure any condition, disease, or ailment. Please consult your physician first before making changes to your diet and/or starting any exercise program. CORE Fitness is a whole foods & fitness concept that embraces all that is delicious & nutritious.
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![]() A pose that involves linking the hands (or sometimes a hand to a wrist) in a process that rotates both the shoulders and the torso is called a bind. This link causes the body to be "bound" and held as a container, and therefore constricted in some ways by the arms and hands. Binds require flexibility both in the physical body -- in order to come into and maintain the pose -- and in the mind, in order to stay present and sustain the pose. If you’re looking to go physically deeper into a pose and increase the effects of rotation, binds can be an excellent way to do this. They also offer a different way to explore and experience alignment by forcing you to make adjustments to make the pose work. Binds allow you to be curious, to play, and to be your own teacher -- in other words, they’re fun! References: https://www.yogajournal.com/poses/qa-binding-beneficial-yoga
My childhood memories of Thanksgiving and Christmas are happy and warm. I loved the special food, the time off from school and just being with my friends and family laughing and playing games. My sister and I got the biggest kick out of playing dress up and dancing to our favorite tunes. We laughed until we cried!
Now faced with the season screaming, "bring down the busy!" among all the holiday cheer, I'm still in the practice of staying centered somehow with the juggling that the holidays bring. Some of the family members I loved have passed on. Because of divorce and blended families, a lot of juggling is required to bring everyone together in love to honor the wonderful birth of my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ! Is it possible to stay calm and balanced during the holiday season? The answer is yes, if you apply three simple keys to creating a season filled with love, good memories and great experiences. First, determine how you want to feel when the holidays are over. Second, redefine your traditions and holiday habits to match your current values. And third, plan and shop ahead to reduce the stress level. Key #1: Determine How You Want to Feel Key #2: Match Your Traditions to Your Values Key #3: Plan and Shop Ahead Reviewing your beliefs and values before the season starts lets you live by your own rules versus trying to meet the hyped-up expectations touted on TV. Staying centered and at peace during the holiday season can be very challenging. However, once you uncover what you and your family consider most meaningful and eliminate what’s not important, you will discover the simplicity and peace the season was intended to celebrate. References : Kay Cross, MEd, St. James, E. 1998. Simplify Your Christmas. Kansas City: Andrews McMeel Publishing. Ever taken a barre class? Pulse! Activate the core and balance. Oh, what a feeling!! This engaging exercise opens the hips, working the inner thigh and quadricep muscles while elevated on the ball of the foot of the standing leg, strengthening the calf muscle. Stand tall, breathe and embrace the feeling that comes from building your best self, mind and body. Join me on Tuesday’s at 9:30 am for Core Barre Fusion at Solstice Yoga + Barre! www.solsticeatlanta.com
How do you know which approach is best for you? Do you have have difficulty exercising on your own or does your behavior patterns continually interfere with the successful attainment of your goals—in the gym and elsewhere? Have you expressed an interest in using physical activity for personal development or to achieve life balance? For these and others, personal fitness training may not be enough. A fitness subspecialty—lifestyle fitness coaching—needs to be considered.
Lifestyle fitness coaches (LFCs) encourage clients to use training and sports to build behavioral skills for use at work, at home or in their social lives. This specialty is particularly relevant to fitness professionals because it is founded on expertise in sports and exercise science. People trained as LFCs develop communication competencies parallel to those of professionals trained as more generic life coaches, but LFCs choose to specialize in issues that arise from, or can be related to, the world of sports, fitness and health. The fitness industry workscape—once dominated by part-time employees and occasional instructors—is increasingly staffed by long-term, full-time, dedicated professionals whose credentials likely include degrees in the sport and health sciences. In the late 20th century, personal fitness trainers (PFTs) frequently relied on a one-dimensional approach to fitness, believing that biomechanical knowledge and technical expertise were sufficient for helping clients adopt more active lifestyles. But over time, as PFTs regularly encountered diverse client agendas, they realized that clients often required far more than instruction and technical support for maintaining exercise commitments. Investigating exercise issues led to exploring emotional needs and/or nutrition concerns and sometimes revealed unsupportive lifestyle patterns, addictive behaviors, and family and personal challenges that needed to be addressed before clients could experience success. Yet before the development of life coaching models, PFTs may have lacked the necessary communication skills and models for intervening in these domains. The advent of life coaching provided PFTs with access to methods for working with clients on these other agendas. Then the question became: Which works better for which clients—personal training, life coaching or a blend of the two? Making the right decision requires an understanding of how each model works and what each can do for clients. Distinguishing Coaching and Training ModelsClients who hire LFCs rather than PFTs are likely to encounter different work methods and communication techniques. For one thing, LFCs tend to identify relationship building and communication as their principal domains of expertise. They may attempt to elicit client stories, strategize, and provide motivational and supportive messaging. Though some coaching schools recommend giving advice (Coach U 2005), LFCs generally prefer to encourage clients to come up with their own answers by using powerful questions that challenge and confront client self- perceptions and self-limiting beliefs (Strachan 2001; Whitworth, Kimsey-House & Sandahl 1998). Texts on life coaching typically indicate that it is based on the following elements (Cantwell & Rothenberg 2000; Coach U 2005; Martin 2001; Neenan & Dryden 2002; Whitworth, Kimsey-House & Sandahl 1998):
For a more complete view of the two different models, reach out to us for a FREE Lifestyle Fitness Assessment. Resources, Websites: International Coach Federation, www .coachfederation.org/abouticf/index.asp Lifestyle Coaching Institute, www.lifestyle coaching.ca/home.html Books Gavin, J. 2005. Lifestyle Fitness Coaching. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics. Whitworth, L., Kimsey-House, H., & Sandahl, P. 1998. Co-active Coaching. Palo Alto, CA: Davies-Black. TopicsCareer IssuesPersonal TrainingPersonal Training: Ethics/Scope of Practice ReferencesBandura, A. 1997. Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control. New York: W.H. Freeman and Company. Bohm, D., & Nichol, L. 1996. On Dialogue. New York: Routledge. Cantwell, S., & Rothenberg, B. 2000. The benefits of lifestyle coaching. IDEA Personal Trainer, 11 (7), 24–35. Coach U. 2005. Coach U’s Essential Coaching Tools. Hoboken, NY: John Wiley & Sons. Gavin, J. 2005. Lifestyle Fitness Coaching. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics. Gavin, J., & Mcbrearty, M. 2003. Lifestyle Fitness Coaching Training Guide. Montreal: private printing. Martin, C. 2001. The Life Coaching Handbook. Carmarthen, Wales: Crown House. Neenan, M., & Dryden, W. 2002. Life Coaching: A Cognitive-Behavioural Approach. East Sussex, England: Brunner-Routledge. Roberts, S.O. (Ed.) 1996. The Business of Personal Training. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics. Strachan, D. 2001. Questions That Work. Ottawa: ST Press. Whitworth, L., Kimsey-House, H., & Sandahl, P. 1998. Co-active Coaching. Palo Alto, CA: Davies-Black. Yankelovich, D. 1999. The Magic of Dialogue: Transforming Conflict Into Cooperation. New York: Simon & Schuster. IDEA Fitness Journal, Volume 2, Issue 9 ![]() How do you relax? Reading an engaging book (I love C.S. Lewis), soaking in a mineral-infused bath, embarking on a sun-filled spa day? Well, how does an afternoon paddle-boating under the autumn sky with the one you love sound? On this beautiful Saturday, there was no place I’d rather be. A short drive away, Sweetwater Park was a welcomed getaway to center our spirits. After our in-town excursion, we journeyed to downtown College Park to a trendy restaurant tucked away in Hotel Indigo for a quick bite of spicy chicken tacos (shared plates on dates are much more fun). What's the takeaway? In a world of busy lifestyles, know that your mini-vacay is just minutes away. |
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