Monday, April 2, 2012

Food for thought

Plan ahead, whether it be your food for the week or training for the week. Look at the bigger picture. If you only decide on the day, you will most likely go for the easy options. If you can sit down for 30mins over the weekend and plan your meals and training, you will find it easier, if it means you plan for 2-4 weeks ahead and even it's only a week's meal plan with days swapped for the different weeks and increasing the weight/intensity for training then at least you have that planned and can stick to it.


"If you fail to plan, you plan to fail"


Remember that one fast food meal can make a huge difference to your diet, it can throw your taste buds off and your mind set. Be prepared. You're health is as important as your work if not more. You only get one body, so look after it. Don't wait until you realise you're not happy with it or that you are unwell before you doing exercise and eating well. Just because you're feeling ok now doesn't mean there are no long term effects further down the track.


"Be Proactive, not reactive"


Set good examples for your family, lead by example. Education is the key.


Goal setting
Set yourself a goal or a few. Some long term goals and break it down to smaller milestones to help you get there. Work towards these goals. Make these goals attainable and achievable yet challenging. Be realistic and allow yourself to adjust when needed if life throws something your way you weren't expecting. Something measurable is always good, as you can track it. If you want a nice body, what does that mean? What exactly does a nice body mean to you? How can we measure this?


Once you hit those goals, start thinking of new goals. You are more motivated when you are working towards something. When you can see the finish line. Very much like other aspects of life and work.


Making every workout count
A 10min workout in reality isn't going to really burn as much calories or have that 'afterburn' effect then a longer session. In saying that, depending on your goals, most people don't need to train more than an hour per session (unless you plan to run a marathon!).


The best way is to ensure that every session you have, you are making the most of it. For short sessions, make sure the intensity is high for most of the session but listen to your body for those who maybe injured or pregnant.


I've had many clients realise what they thought was a hard session on their own was no where as hard as it could have been. Some have really seen the benefits of training with a trainer in comparison to training on their own. For some of you, it may be better training either with a trainer or a training partner. So get onto it!


Food for thought:
If you keep doing the same thing, how can you expect change to occur.


Remember to...
Be honest
Work hard
Don't give up


Train Hard, Eat Well, Rest Up

No comments:

Post a Comment