Stretching is vital for chronic pain, building muscle tone, and full movement.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft016.mp3
- Featured Speaker Hollis Lance Liebman
- Book Title 1,500 STRETCHES: The Complete Guide to Flexibility and Movement
- Guest Website Hollis Lance Liebman
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/hollis.liebman
- Guest Twitter Account @hllpac
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Guest Bio
Hollis Lance Liebman has won national body building competitions, trained celebrities like Hugh Jackman and Jane Lynch, and worked as a fitness magazine editor and photographer.
He has published twelve books on exercise and anatomy, including 1,500 STRETCHES: The Complete Guide to Flexibility and Movement.
He lives in Los Angeles, California. -
Transcription
Stretching to Transform Your Movement, Flexibility & Performance with Hollis Lance Liebman
This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.
Lisa Davis (Host): It is so important to stretch. I mean honestly. If you are working out, no matter what kind of workout you are doing, no matter what kind of fitness you’re in, no matter what you’re doing in your life, you have got to stretch. If you are sitting for long periods of time, it makes such a difference. If you are doing a lot of weight training, you need to stretch out. So, I have got the best stretching book I have ever seen and as a matter of fact, it’s heavy. I’m doing curls with it. I can get my workout in. It is by our guest Hollis Liebman. It is 1500 stretches The Complete Guide to Flexibility and Movement. Hollis welcome to the show.
Hollis Lance Liebman (Guest): Thank you so much for having me on your show. A real honor. Thank you very much.
Lisa: Well thank you, Hollis. I want to say that you won National Bodybuilding competitions which I want to have you back to talk about that, trained celebrities and worked as a fitness magazine editor and photographer. Holy cow Hollis. This is great. So, let’s talk about this. When did first think to yourself, okay, I need to get the best ultimate guide, the bible, I will say of stretching? When did this first come to you?
Hollis: You know this book came to me actually, there’s a couple of ways in the publishing world of books, some books you sort of on your own you have the idea and you go about it and doing it. This was an idea I thought of an amazing one, a very grand idea as you have in front of you that came to me as the guy to write it, and I was up to the challenge. I thought is was a great idea, stretching is often overlooked and underutilized and I was up for the challenge and everything came together. But to answer your question, time frame was the very beginning of this year. That it was sort of under a crunch. In the publishing world, you are always under a crunch and I was up for the challenge. And I think the final result with the editorial team and the design team and it’s a beautiful book. I’m honored to be a part of this book.
Lisa: Oh, it is absolutely beautiful. And I love in the beginning you say, “We all do it, we stretch in the morning to get our blood flowing, we stretch our legs after a long drive, and we stretch our shoulders after sitting at our desk for hours. Stretching is an intuitive movement not only for humans, but animals as well.” You know it’s funny, my dog Blue, he’s a pit bull, he’s like the love of my life. He does this great thing where he lies, and his back legs totally spread and then are flat on the ground, it always cracks people up. And then my lab will come over and do like downward dog. It’s so natural. You know when you see them getting on furniture, right, their feet kind of- or their paws I should say, the kind of stay on the back of whatever they are getting off of and they just sit there for a second. I’m like we could learn a lot, right?
Hollis: We can it’s true and you know, and it is natural for the animal kingdom to stretch coldly basically but I must say a sedentary person is not often acclimated towards sudden movements so stretching, the nature of stretching and the way you go about it is very, very important. I think a great analogy I can give you is if you were to take a frozen piece of chicken or a vegie patty for the vegans out there out of the freezer and you were to sort of play with it, it would rip. So, it’s very important to thaw the body out before any sort of strenuous stretching. I can’t emphasize this point enough. It’s very important to thaw out and probably you are going to ask me, but I’ll just skip ahead. When is the best time to stretch? Is actually during and after your workout. Because again, if you stretch cold muscles it is subject to possibly tearing and we do not want that. When your body temperature is warmed up, and we are thawed out that is an ample time to stretch. During and after exercise can’t emphasize it enough.
Lisa: Oh, I’m so glad that you mentioned that. In the book, you talk about different stretching techniques. You have got static versus dynamic and active versus passive. Talk to us about those.
Hollis: Yeah static stretching is basically which most of the stretches in this book are static passive stretches, that is stretches like bending forward to touch your toes. You would hold for 30 seconds to overcome what is called the stretch reflex which is your body’s protective mechanism against over extending your muscles. So, this is the most common stretch certainly in the book and done with life. Dynamic stretch is basically a stretch that combines movement with the stretch. For example, if you were going to run, you might lightly jog in place just to get everything loose and pliable. Active stretching would be basically unassisted stretching so, example being extending an arm overhead and holding that pose unassisted versus a passive assisted stretch would introduce a force that exerts pressure on the muscle to obtain a deeper stretch. So, let’s say you clasp you hands and extend it overhead, the additional force of both arms working together, will result in a passive stretch.
Lisa: I see. Now you also have in the book, the things that stretching helps. It improves your workouts. Reduces the risk of injury. I like, stretch away the stress, boost your mood, align your spine. There are so many important reasons to be stretching. You know I just got back into yoga after not doing it for like 14 years, although I have been doing Pilates for the last six years. But what’s interesting with yoga it’s stretching but God there’s a heck of a lot of strengthening going on and it’s flipping hard. So, it’s different than if I’m just lying on the ground and I just I have one leg up and one leg is flat and I’m stretching my leg. But if I’m doing like some sort of standing pose, you’re still getting a stretch, because of the way you are aligned, but you are still working your muscles. So, talk to us about that and it seems like it’s important to get both types of stretching.
Hollis: Well yeah, the difference would be with yoga, it is basically you are utilizing your core. So, basically you are going to get I don’t want to say more bang for your buck, but yoga is unique again in that you get the stretching benefits, many of them, but you also it’s kind of you versus you and the really cool thing about it is you can sort of change the angles and increase or decrease intensity by simply just chipping the angle. So, yoga is very important, I would say piece of this puzzle. But in and of itself, it is not a complete workout, in my humble opinion. And I have great respect for yoga.
Lisa: Oh sure. Now what do you think goes well with yoga as a workout if that is something that you are doing? What should you be incorporating?
Hollis: I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it per se, but in my opinion, my background is I was a former national body building champion and fitness editor this and that and this and that and the point is, my background is largely weight training. I think that to truly change the body, there is nothing like progressive resistance training. And I get that your listeners, a lot of them don’t want to get big or huge or even out here in Los Angeles, body building is – tends to be a four-letter word. But, stretching out by itself and yoga by itself, even cardiovascular work by itself, in my opinion is just a leg of a table and it’s the complete utilization of those things in addition to good nutrition and weight training that enhances the shape of one’s body and helps bone density, posture and the list goes on and on.
Lisa: Yeah, I do think that’s important. I need to get back to that. Because right now I have been doing Pilates, which actually does have a lot of resistance in it because I am doing a more intermediate. Yeah Pilates, I love it. Are you a Pilates fan?
Hollis: I am not experienced with Pilates, but I will tell you from what I have seen, I approve of it from what I have seen and in the hands of a good professional. And I also think we live in very busy times and I think a lot of people are like okay, you know I got to pick and choose and I think if one is hard pressed for time, I think that’s a good way to go. I would say.
Lisa: Yeah, I think so too. And you get some nice – we did some nice stretching at the end today as a matter of fact. I had it this morning. I love it. Like I said I have been doing it for more than six years. although I do want to get back into weight training because I was doing that as well and then I kind of again, it’s a time thing but I was just talking to Lisa Druxman on another episode and we were talking about that you know the time thing and picking and choosing but as long as you are doing something, you got to do something. Right. And you got to stay active. I think that’s so important. Alright let’s talk about these stretches. Oh, go ahead.
Hollis: Yeah, no I was – I forgot my point, I was going to say take somethings, stick with something. I think it’s important to work within one’s comfort zone but also to challenge one’s comfort zone and also to be consistent. So, whatever it might be. I think it’s important to challenge oneself and just to stick with it and make the time. We are all busy. We all have the same 24 hours. It is really, in my opinion, no excuses, just get it in and get it done because the body is like a car. You would not think about driving a car for five years and not servicing it, it would fail. The body is the same way. We have got to service it intermittently to keep it running well.
Lisa: Oh definitely. Alright, so let’s talk about these stretches. It’s so great. Is you have got head and neck, shoulder, arm, back, chest, core upper leg, lower leg, and then you have got dance stretches, dynamic stretches, partner stretches, yoga stretches, and pregnancy stretches and what is so great is not only do you have incredible photos, but you have wonderful descriptions as well. And these bodies are just gorgeous to look at I must say, very inspiring.
Hollis: Yeah, thank you and I must say again, this was a collaborative medium, this book. I’m very, very proud of it and I also must, must mention this is probably I think my eleventh fitness book and I must say, on this book, the packager, the person that the project was presented to, and I had a discussion and I must mention a Sophie Kornishky who really is my coauthor came in, helped with the book, which was a huge fun, but challenging project and I must mention I had a coauthor Sophie Kornishky on this book. I must mention that. I’m very proud of our combined efforts to make this book.
Lisa: Oh, well you guys did a hell of a job. Now what are the – are there absolutely necessary stretches that you should do, let’s say after weight training?
Hollis: I would say, it might be obvious, but perhaps not, with weight training per se you would want to do stretches that coincide with those particular body parts worked that day. For example, if one worked say their chest and their biceps, it would follow suit that during and after the workout that day, they would stretch the chest and the bicep muscles. I would do that first and actually stretch them the antagonistic or back and triceps muscle groups as well to help further the healing process. Because as you know with weight training, what we are doing is micro tears in the muscles. We are breaking down the muscle tissue, through rest and good nutrition, it grows back stronger hence the four-letter word, body building because we are really all trying to do body building if you think about it. Maximal lean muscle, minimal body fat, who doesn’t want that.
Lisa: I don’t know if this is called mirror syndrome or something, but I used to hear that guys who were body builders or women too, they would look – they are looking in the mirror and they end up overworking the front of their body more and then they get really kind of rounded shoulders and they get really tight. Is that something or did I dream about that? What is that?
Hollis: No, you know you didn’t dream about that because in body building, the chest and the abdominals tend to be the focal but then the biceps of course, so there are a lot of people out there that will focus predominantly on these body parts because they are most visible. You will often see great upper bodies on basically stilts because legs day is hard to do. My background and I was also a judge in body building so, I’m looking at the physique should flow, the eyes should travel. Everything should be symmetrical and proportionate from any angle and to me that’s the beauty of what we are doing here, of this body building if you will. Everything should flow and be symmetrical and nothing should stand out. If someone is looking at your physique, in my opinion, and their eye is just not travelling it is caught on something, something is off.
Lisa: Alright, so you have to have that balance.
Hollis: Balance and also the other thing is it was a myth, I feel years ago, that body builders were inflexible and tight, and muscle bound and this and that. That is the furthest thing from the truth. Because of the often-large amounts of muscle mass accumulated, if you think about it, you have to be flexible because the more flexible you are, the further range of motion you can go, the more muscle you can develop. There are plenty of body builders, males, that can do full splits on stage today. That’s how flexible some of these people are. It’s amazing.
Lisa: That’s incredible. So, it’s a myth then. So, when you were a body builder, you were very flexible it sounds like?
Hollis: I was not the most flexible, but I must say it was something I always worked on and I continue to work on. And when I was a kid, there was a pro who did, I have never seen this before, a full split with his back facing the audience into a basically a rear back shot, and it was phenomenal. And I always wanted to do that on stage. I came kind of close, but you know flexibility is an individual thing. It’s something we can all work on. I don’t think it’s a team effort. Though there are assisted stretches and that’s part of the beauty of this journey, is it’s an individual thing and that’s why I fell in love with it so many years ago.
Lisa: You know, I’m looking at some of the photos and some of these stretches look really hard. And that’s where like the callie squat sideways hands bound. I mean you are definitely working, so I imagine your legs are apart, your knees are bent and you’re kind of sitting into it and then you are stretching to the side and you have got to be really using your quads for that, that’s what I mean like some of these stretches require strength too. Right.
Hollis: Oh, yes, strength and some of them are clearly not for beginners and my advice is the book is beautiful, but it can seem intimidating and overwhelming. Look through the book and my advice is to try what feels not comfortable, challenge oneself, but you know just start with perhaps something that is not quite as challenging because the book is for any level and the great thing is we can work up to some of these stretches. Like with it is a companion book to the yoga piece that came out I believe a couple of years ago, bestselling book, fantastic book, I think it was called 2100 Asanas, gorgeous book, my point is, that book also very intimidating, so the beginner, the neophyte if you will, will open it up and try some of the poses, not all.
Lisa: Yeah, because the first time I was looking at it, I thought well, I’m glad I’m back to doing yoga. Because some of these are pretty intense. And some of the – when you look at the people, they look so wonderful and you might feel intimidated because you are not them, but you know what, you are who are and you need to be able to be where you are at and get where you want to go. You have to start somewhere. Right, so you might as well do these stretches. I noticed too, that you have bars and balls and chairs and other things to assist you and bands are really helpful.
Hollis: Some of the peripherals throughout the book, in the later section -these are just – you could say band stretches are ways and means to get a little bit more out of the stretches. But I would very strongly suggest just starting out with the stretches that perhaps are just you and you alone. Perhaps I might even wait for the partner stretching until later. But these are wonderful ways to go in the future. I just wouldn’t perhaps start there right away. The book gives you infinite possibilities.
Lisa: Oh yeah, I mean 1500.
Hollis: Ah yes, and I should tell you that’s a funny thing. I think it was funny. It was quite a thing to get- that was the number they wanted and that’s what we delivered, and I was looking at every resource possible. At one point I was in the library and I had a Spanish book in front of me on stretching. I didn’t understand a word, I do wish I spoke Spanish, but it was helpful in just accumulating every possible stretch. I felt like I went to the corners of the globe to get this list right. And we did. They wanted it translated and I had to look up the translation for the English equivalent if you will. I thought it was funny.
Lisa: I think it’s funny too. No, I think it’s great. Because it shows that even without understanding the language, you can see what they are doing and be like heh, I need that stretch in this book and it doesn’t seem, I mean you guys didn’t miss a thing. And you have stretches that people have seen before and people probably do and then you have ones that are brand new and like I said bring them into more of a yoga arena, so it can open the door to other things which I think is great.
Hollis: It can and also I even was – the cool thing is I was responsible too for the organization of the book because they asked my opinions and I like that section one is the targeted body parts stretching and then the section two is the specialized stretches including the dance, dynamic, partner yoga and pregnancy stretches and I’m skipping, but for those listeners that don’t know, it’s very important regarding the pregnancy stretches that after the first trimester, avoid doing stretches while lying on your back. Because this can reduce blood flow to your uterus and cause abnormally low blood pressure and lightheadedness. So, I just, I didn’t know if you were going to ask that, but I wanted to just put that out there. Pregnancy stretches, please be cautious after the first trimester.
Lisa: Now how long should somebody stretch? Let’s say after they do like a thirty-minute run or something or a thirty-minute swim.
Hollis: Great question. Frequency can be every day. I would do different body parts. I wouldn’t do the same body parts every day. And to answer that question that you just asked, five to ten minutes is more than enough time. I’m not a fan of the ballistic stretching or anything that’s bouncy or anything like that. I have always believed in holding the stretch and then trying to get to a new level there, but naturally because again the body is going to kick in say this hurts, we need to stop. I’m just not a fan – I am a fan of everything controlled, I’m a fan of everything targeted and even in my training; I have never believed in doing say five sets of something because if you think about it, you won’t give your all. If you are doing like a bench press and you have five sets; you know you might be inclined to like take it easy, but if you are only doing two sets; you are going to give your all and I’m much more about quality and not quantity with anything, training, food, stretching, always quality. Push the envelope on quality.
Lisa: Oh, I like that. And what – would that also be push the envelope on weight as well because that’s a big thing now, isn’t it like just do heavier weights, less reps?
Hollis: You know it’s a fallacy that to get tight or ripped light weight will get you one centimeter harder, because what happens is if you built your body with heavy weights in the first place, and then you switch to light weights high reps, it’s as if you took the nails out of the house. The house can crumble. You have to continue to do what brought you to the dance. And I might be skipping around, I know we are on stretching, but when I competed I always trained as heavy as I could, smartly up to the show because my competitors were training lighter and all that and what happened was, I would arrive with as much muscle or as much or most of the muscle I had accumulated in the off season and I would use my cardio and diet and stretching to get ripped and in shape and a lot of people would sort of lose muscle and that’ s how you win is continue to do what brought you to the dance in the first place is what I’m trying to say.
Lisa: I love the way you speak. I love that. Continue what brought you to the dance in the first place. That I such a great image. I like that. Now when did you first get interested in body building?
Hollis: You know, I don’t think my story is that uncommon in how I started. I watched Pumping Iron and it really impressed me with Arnold that not only just charisma but the fact that you could change your body. This is one thing in life that we have very little control over a lot of things, but our body we do. I my case, I was bullied very bad and I didn’t do it to beat them up, I didn’t do it to get women, though it didn’t hurt. I did it to just try to build some self-esteem. Something I could work on instead of being living in fear of this bully, and I did, it was something I could be proud of and it just, the love grew and grew insatiably and it lead to competing and all these other wonderful opportunities I have had and now to be on this side of things with writing these books and these opportunities and people reading your words and this interview, I mean you never, ever take it for granted because I’m still that in some respects, and this might be TMI, but that’s scared 13 year old kid that was bullied. You know, you never forget.
Lisa: No, you never do forget. No, I’m glad you brought that up. Because you know, I was – I’ve talked about it before, about being not only picked last but they fought over who got stuck with me on the team, from like kindergarten all the way up through high school. Like same jackass kids, same treatment. And so, when I got into fitness industry when I got older, I mean not that much older, my early 20s people were shocked, like I bumped into people and they were like you’re a personal trainer but you can’t even throw a ball and I’m like yeah, I still can’t throw a ball but who cares. You know and get off my back and it’s kind of cool when they see me now and like oh wow, you are still in health, you are doing media and it’s interesting because I think we can let that hold us back or we can kind of say blank you and do it. I mean it is more for ourselves, but you know I’m going to lie if there isn’t some satisfaction in them being like wow, look at what Lisa’s doing.
Hollis: Oh yeah, no definitely. Yeah when I walk in a Barnes and Noble and there’s this title there, I’m very proud of this book, it is very humbling and thankful and there’s a- I don’t remember the exact song, but I will say that there is a Kiss song and he says Paul Stanley says in the song, I still love you. And I swear to you when I do these books, I think of that and my passion is still raging for fitness and how far can we push things and I still love this. And I think that resonates with passionate people and getting things done. This book was a colossal endeavor, but a labor of love as well and a very important – I don’t think anything like this has ever been attempted. And if you put passion in, it shows. It shows in the work.
Lisa: Yeah, it really does. I love to talk to you all the time. I love your passion and there is so much to talk about. I can’t wait to have you back again. We’re not done yet, but I’m just putting that out there. Because we have a lot to talk about.
Hollis: Yes, thank you.
Lisa: You’re very, very nice. Alright, so with these wonderful models, and athletes, did you help pick out who was in the book or how did that work?
Hollis: You know I have to say on this particular book, I had certain assignments and then it was left up to the production team. There is what is called a packager in publishing sometimes, where a publisher will go to a packager in this case Moseley Road Inc. who I can’ t say enough nice things about, they gave me start and the publisher says here’s what I want and it’s the packagers job to do it. I was contacted, and I was told what I needed from me, which was the list of exercises, the description of exercises and the intros and all the – all those kind of things. I very much enjoy like on my own other books, I have complete say over the models and this and that. On this particular project, I must say, that was in the hands of the publisher or the packager rather and I think they did very good. It’s a diverse looking. Beautiful global looking. Even the color, I don’t know what you call the color of that book, but it’s beautiful.
Lisa: Yeah, it’s like a in the turquoise family.
Hollis: Okay, there you go. It’s beautiful.
Lisa: It is beautiful, and it has got six gorgeous people on the front too doing the stretching.
Hollis: Yeah, it’s just beautiful. It really is. I will say that then there is other kind of books and maybe I’m babbling, but I think maybe your listeners would like this, Moseley Road Inc. gave me the first opportunity I wrote a core book. I was paid, my name is on it, I wrote it, I even modeled for it and I was off the project and it goes to press and this and that and here’s what I would like to tell your listeners. I got offered many books. It did many books this way, I wrote it, I was in and out, paid, it’s all good. You get to a point as an artist, and I consider myself an artist, where if all you do is hired to paint in black and white, but you can paint in color, I think you owe it to yourself to do so. And what I’m trying to drive at, as proud as I am of this stretch book, and I am, December comes out my greatest book of all time which is called Complete Physique which takes stretching, and weight training and nutrition and all my experience in body building and everything fitness through the years and there is no greater pleasure than when this book is going to come out. I took a risk because it cost quite a bit to put together, I had to hire a model, I had to myself get into supreme shape, I had to write it, hire an editor, layout artist and hope I was able to get it published and I did and but I’m trying to say without pitching it too much, Complete Physique really is combining like a table has three legs, weight training being one, cardio and nutrition and stretching is just one leg. Now this is quite a leg. This book, this stretch book. But Complete Physique combines everything to get somebody to be the best they can be because the competition is not the person next to you, it’s not the guy or girl on Instagram with all the lights, it’s the person in the mirror in front of you. And that’s the point I’m trying to drive home. This book has been a huge labor of love. It is finally about to drop December 26th just very thankful.
Lisa: Okay, Hollis, I’m going to have you back, we can do a bunch of interviews about it. I’m super excited. I wish we had more time. I think you’re absolutely delightful. The book is 1500 Stretches A Complete Guide to Flexibility and Movement. Tell us all the places we can find you on social media.
Hollis: Social media I am Hllpac on Instagram, Hollis Liebman on Facebook, Holliswashere.com I my website. Pretty much if you go to www.holliswashere.com . it will take you everywhere I am.
Lisa: Awesome. Hollis, I think you’re so handsome as well. I can throw the in. Those blues eyes, huba huba. Alright. Everyone thank you for listening to Talk Fitness Today, you can follow me on Twitter at healthemediagal1, you can also follow the podcast at Talk Fitness2 day and you can find us on Twitter and snapchat and also on Facebook, Talk Fitness Today podcast. Thanks for listening. Get this book, get stretching and stay well.
This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to www.Vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs. - Length (mins) 25:16
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
Lisa Druxman is a mom on a mission! It is her hope to inspire all moms to live a healthier life.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft015.mp3
- Featured Speaker Lisa Druxman
- Organization FIT4MOM
- Book Title The Empowered Mama: How to Reclaim Your Time and Yourself while Raising a Happy, Healthy Family
- Guest Website Lisa Druxman
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/LisaDruxman
- Guest Twitter Account @LisaDruxman
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Guest Bio
In 2001, Lisa Druxman became a mom and an entrepreneur. She was looking for a way to blend her passion for fitness with motherhood. “I decided to create a workout that I could do with my baby,” she recalls. “I didn’t want to miss a moment of his new life but also knew that I needed to take care of myself.” It was one beauty of a brainstorm. Lisa created an exercise routine for new moms and realized that other mothers would benefit from working together to restore their well-being.
Now she leads a business that brings exercise, companionship and support to tens of thousands of moms around the country with more than 1,500 instructors and 300 franchisees. Stroller Strides grew over the years and added Fit4Baby (prenatal classes) and Body Back (classes for any stage of motherhood). All of the classes now make up the FIT4MOM brand. -
Transcription
Fit4Mom: Get Fit While Connecting with Other Moms with Lisa Druxman
This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.
Lisa Davis (Host): I did yoga every day of my pregnancy and it was pretty darn cool. I have to say it made the delivery easier. I stayed in really good shape and then I kind of fell off – the baby came, and the yoga went out the window and it’s a lot to juggle. So, I really admire our guest today. She’s fabulous. Lisa Druxman. She has done so many cool things in her career. She is Fit 4 Mom and I absolutely love the stuff that she has done and encouraging moms to get out there and exercise and also to take great care of ourselves. She has got a wonderful book that I also love. The Empowered Mama How to Reclaim Your Time and Yourself While Raising a Happy, Healthy Family. Heh Lisa.
Lisa Druxman (Guest): Heh, thanks for having me.
Lisa: It is so great to have you on. So, like I said, yoga was going great until the baby came.
Lisa D: That happens.
Lisa: Right. So, let’s talk about this, because I know from reading about you, you had a baby and you felt like where’s my community, and this is really hard, and I need some women around me, so you started a group with what you and three other moms and you take it from there. I don’t want to tell you whole story.
Lisa D: No, it’s all good. Yeah, it has been a while now, so I started Stroller Strides when my little one was just three months old and that was 16 years ago. And I was a fitness professional, so I knew how to get back in shape, but I needed a community. I needed connection. I had so many questions about motherhood. I had questions about nursing and sleeping and all the things and, so I decided to start a stroller based workout. I figured I could help us all get back in shape and they could help me with everything I needed to know about motherhood. And apparently, I wasn’t the only one looking for that connection and that community because long story short, it took off and we are now a nationwide program.
Lisa: See that is so exciting. So, you have Stollers Strides, Fit 4 Baby and Body Back and these are all part of the Fit For Mom family. So, is this something that now other trainers, they learn how to do what you are doing, and they do it? Is it a franchise as in it’s an actual place you go? Talk to us about this.
Lisa D: Yeah, so as my kids grew up, the program grew up. We added more programs. We added Fit 4 Baby which is our prenatal program, we added Body Back which is our transformational program that includes nutrition coaching and it is just for moms only to kind of regain themselves and we did franchise the business. Not only was I not the only one looking to connect, I also wasn’t the only one looking to have a career that was supportive of motherhood. And I felt so blessed to have this amazing career in San Diego where I could be home with my baby and teaching these amazing classes and contributing in my community. So, we franchised the business and, so we now have 300 franchisees nationwide. We have almost 2000 class locations and it really does give women who have a passion for fitness and motherhood, this opportunity to contribute both to their home and into their community.
Lisa: I think that’s awesome. And it really does help to have the group of women around you. Because you’re not just getting fit together, but you’re sharing life experiences and the ups and downs and the tiredness and everything that comes in it and then you feel more encouraged to go, I would think because oh I haven’t seen Susie and I get to talk to her. You know, it’s that comradery right and I bet there is some really great friendships that come out of that.
Lisa D: My original group from 16 years ago, they are still all friends. And I think that women today are missing that sense of community. You think about past generations or even other cultures today where you are surrounded by a village, you are surrounded by your family, but here in America, we tend to bring up baby alone and we feel very isolated and we might stay home, but husband might go back to work or maybe we have to go back to work and still feel alone, because we are at work and then we just we are home alone with this baby and so, by creating our own village, it really does give us a chance to lean in on each other in motherhood.
Lisa: I think so too. You know I want to jump into your wonderful book The Empowered Mama. I was just wow, when I was reading the introduction, I was so taken aback and like wow that story that you describe about being 13 and with your dad in a dark parking lot and a man came out of the darkness and he put a gun right to you and how you talked about your life passing and you more thought about the things that you weren’t going to have because you were 13. So, talk to us about that moment.
Lisa D: Yeah, so, a lot of people don’t know this story, but I did have kind of one of those life changing experiences as a young teenager where my dad and I were held up and luckily nobody was hurt but at that moment, I definitely thought my life was passing before me and at 13, I already had a life of regret. I was a kid who was not very social. I didn’t do very well in school. And I just really didn’t try anything. So, this was my opportunity, because I walked away from that, to turn things around and I really started to try in my life and guess what. You know putting energy and effort into something even if you are not a natural, absolutely works. And so, I look back at that as really a life changing moment where I now take anything that I think I can’t do and turn it into a possible opportunity that I can turn it around.
Lisa: I think that is so great that you were able to do that. It’s funny, when I was reading about the doing terrible in school and then you found out later you had ADD and being socially awkward and very few friends and terrible in sports. I’m like wait, did I write this? Because, that sounds just like me. And then all my listeners go oh my God, there she goes again. But not only was I picked last every time in gym, they fought over who got stuck with me when I was the last one standing. And it was very difficult. So, I completely gave up and I didn’t do anything athletic until I was 17 and I started swimming and I’m like wow, I have a knack for this because I’m 5’10”, I’m all arms and legs. And I was really good, and I thought damn if I had just tried earlier. I always quit everything and it’s so funny because if someone and then I started working in aquatic therapy and in the fitness field and I became a personal trainer. And it is funny because for me, I was so interested in health and healthy living even though I was like I don’t know if I can do this, I’m just going to try, but all through school, I didn’t and so I’m glad. I mean I hate that it took such a traumatic event, but it is nice that you were able to go after things that you liked.
Lisa D: Well it is so funny, for both of us that we ended up working in the fitness industry. I mean people always are like what, you’re not – you were not athletic, but I was not at all and you’re lucky you at least found your thing with swimming. I never found anything. I have never to this day at 47 years old, ever been a natural at anything. I have had to work towards anything and that’s alright. Like that’s my thing and I’ll just keep on working on whatever it is, and I got into fitness because I figured I could lift some weights and I could do what was a group exercise at the time was aerobics at the time and not take anybody down and nobody had to depend on me. It was something I could just do for myself. So, I don’t know I definitely have found my competitive spirit since then and I might not be a natural, but I’ll go for it. So, so much of it is just perspective and what energy we put toward something.
Lisa: That is true. I have to say what I’m definitely not a natural at Lisa, is teaching aerobics. I was terrible. Because my arms are so long, that everyone else’s arms were already back down like I could even keep up with myself or the class and it was just horrendous, so that was not for me. But lifting weights and doing and I love Pilates. I love yoga. There’s other things that are – I want to jump into this book. So, this is so important because I talk about this all the time. I am so big on self-care. I think it is huge and we need it, right because it’s that whole I know everyone knows this but put on the facemask first, right. Otherwise you’re just going to crumble, and you are not going to be able to take care of everybody else.
Lisa D: Well, everybody knows that we should. I think all moms have heard that metaphor, but nobody knows how to do it. They’re like yeah that sounds great and all, but I’m so busy and like you talk to any mom and you ask her how she is, and everybody is like oh my God, I’m so busy, it’s so chaotic and so overwhelmed. And so, the idea of putting an oxygen mask on us well how? So, that’s really why I wanted to write this book was because I do meet women across the country and I don’t think that it should be a badge of honor for us to be crazy and overwhelmed. I want to see moms living as they one day want their kids to live. So, if you want your kids to stress less, have more fun, exercise more, eat better, our best chance is they are going to learn it from us and so, it’s a gift for them but It’s a gift for us. And so, I kind of turn the self-care priority list upside down to say we need to actually take care of you first and figure out how to get that on the schedule and then if something falls off, well you know it is maybe Facebook or a reality television show, but we have least gotten your self-care in at least a minimum dose.
Lisa: Oh, it is so key. You know, my daughter, she’s on the autism spectrum. She has ADD and dyslexia and a couple of other things, so her babyhood was – I mean heard doesn’t even begin to describe it. She would only sleep on top of me. Literally. And I’m not going to bore everybody, but the point is that that there are certain situations that are so incredibly hard, and I did not do any self-care and every week, my husband would sit me down. I lost like 30 pounds. I was 5’10” 124 pounds and it was not pretty. I was just depressed, it was horrible. And I remember him saying it’s okay, so she wont sleep on you today, and she will be up more tonight. But I’m like no, but I can’t, I was in this horrible cycle of like I have to be here every second because if she doesn’t sleep, I’m never going to sleep again. It was very difficult, and I couldn’t get myself out of that and I didn’t do any self-care for the first few years and it really took a toll on me. So, I love to say, even if you are in the thick of it gals, even if it is that bad, just do what you can. Now she’s thirteen and I get a facial once a month and I exercise every day. We still have challenges, but I look back and that almost seems like somebody else’s life. I’m like that was so hard and yet I survived. And so, for people out there, if you’re in it, I don’t know if you ever work with special needs moms, but it’s kind of different ballgame. I mean it definitely changes things.
Lisa D: And I think those moms need it more. I think impossible but I think those moms need it more, so it’s like find somebody, whether it is your spouse or a childcare provider or another parent that you can do child share with like that mom needs a chance to go get a chance to go a run in or a walk or something, even more and it’s like it might not be a lot, but I talk a lot about like what’s your minimum effective dose to make you at least feel well. Like, so whether it is how many vegetables you need to get in and how much movement you need each day. It might not be perfect, where you get to go to the gym and do an hour workout, but what’s the minimum that you need to get in, so you feel healthy? That’s what we need to get in for all moms.
Lisa: Yeah, I think so too. You know I remember a few times I would go to a restaurant and meet a friend for maybe an hour and they were just like what happened to you. Like you’re not even you anymore. You just lose yourself and I think it’s so important that we don’t do that, and we get the help that we need. Let’s jump into some of these things. I love this. Focus on yourself. Find your purpose. Make more time. Alright Lisa, let’s talk about that. Because that’s the biggest thing. I don’t have time, I don’t have time.
Lisa D: Well, yeah, if I’m going to tell you that we need to now fit in self-care on your already full schedule, we have to figure out how can we create more time for you. You know I always say to moms, that if I were to give you a 25th hour in the day, do you really think anything would change? And the truth is, it wouldn’t. Nothing would change. We would be just as full, we would fill it the same way we already are. So, the first thing is to be very purposeful in how we use our hours. And I do a variety of activities in the book to help you figure that out. We have something called the ideal week and ideal day schedule, so we are actually creating a budget for our time just like we would create a budget for our money. It’s not about being perfect. But it’s about planning in the things that are important to you and then we have to figure out how do we make more time? How can we create space in your life? And it’s a variety of things. I mean I’ll just give a few ideas. But you don’t have to have a personal assistant to be able to delegate. Delegating could look like I buy the roasted chicken and the precut vegetables at the market. Delegating could mean that I have my small kids helping me with some chores, even if they don’t do it as well as I would, they are still eventually helping me. And they do get it, train them well. My kids do all the laundry, walk the dog, feed the dog, they are definitely a big help. Start thinking about what are the things you can shop for online. You know there is Instacart, Amazon Fresh, like are there ways to save yourself time so you are not the one having to go to the market. Are there ways to meal plan so that you actually know what you need for the week, so you don’t have to go to the market fives times in one week. Can you buy your clothes online? Like using a company like Stitch Fix or Le Tote. So, we just look at all these different areas and we start to go okay, you know what, that would save me twenty minutes here or that might save me an hour there. And those times do add up.
Lisa: Yeah, they really do. You know I’m actually – I love second hand clothes so I love eBay. A lot of times they are not even second hand. It’s crazy. It’s like people buy stuff and I love Pronta, and Athleta and I have no connection with them, I wish I did. People buy this stuff and they maybe wear it once or they don’t wear it at all and I’m like this is great. I just spent like an eighth of what I would have spent. It’s awesome.
Lisa D: I think another one today is Posh Mart. I haven’t bought from there, but someone just told me that like you can buy amazing brands on there from somebody like they are just cleaning out their closet and like yeah, I never wore this, or it didn’t fit me. You think about, we are in a world where that’s available that never was. When my kids were born, this was not all available, but you could literally order anything from your groceries to your household goods. It’s almost like you don’t have to leave the house. But leaving the house to go shopping does take time and so that’s just one of the many things that you can delegate, and we have a whole chapter on all the things that we can take off of your schedule. Thinking about being more efficient with even your mom’s nights out. Like how many times do you see your friends. Like is there a way that you get multiple friends together and just go out one time instead of going out multiple times. Is there a way you can do a phone meeting instead of an in-person meeting which would cause driving? So, I’m just very, very careful about what I say yes to. Because every time I say yes to something, it means I’m saying no to something else. Because my life was already really full, there was no time that I was sitting around eating bon bons and watching Ellen. I used to say Oprah, but then I realized how dated that was. I never get to sit around, and I don’t know anyone who eats bon bons, but or if they even eat those anymore. But, yes, so your life is already busy so every time you are saying yes to something, you are saying no to something else. And so, it might be like when I started my podcast, I realized alright how am I going to do podcast once a week when I’m already really full? So, I turned down some of my blogging opportunities and I’m like well that takes time and so thinking about – it’s got to be a trade. You can’t keep adding more clothes in the closet without ever taking anything out.
Lisa: Oh, I love that. And that is so true. And I regularly get rid of stuff in my closet. So. Big bags of stuff.
Lisa D: Now you need to get rid of stuff on your calendar.
Lisa: Exactly. Alright, so being that this is a Talk Fitness Today, let’s talk about some of the fitness things we can do at home. I mean and maybe with friends like you were talking about, or joining the programs that you have, the Fit 4 Mom. Talk to us about that.
Lisa D: Yeah, I mean I love going and taking classes and the reason is why I started it. I started this for myself, right, I love going and taking a class because it keeps me motivated, it holds me accountable. There should be a good instructor who is putting me through a purposeful workout and that is awesome. And so, I actually do, I actually take not only do I teach my Body Back classes, I take the classes. But on the days, that I don’t have time for that, I do a workout in my garage. Like and we have this in the book as well, like a baby step workout. Pick five or six core moves that you are like – and I don’t mean core as in your abs, core as in like some all over functional moves that you are like you know what, this would help me feel fit and that I would like to progress on. And so just as an example, we have got in the book a squat, a pushup, a plank, a lunge and a pullup. I’m a big fan of pullups. If you can get a pullup bar and we give you a download that you can grab that is the baby step workout where you see how many can you do of each one of those things and for plank it is how long can you plank. And you write it down. And I don’t care if you can’t do any. Like it is whatever you are at and then a few days a week, redo that workout and just keep pushing yourself for one percent more. So, often in fitness we try to do too much, too hard, too fast. The idea is very much ties in which is just constant never-ending improvement. Just keep making a step forward. You will get to wherever you want to go, and can you imagine if you did that three days a week, where you would be a year from right now? It’s amazing. And you can put in different exercises, if there is something else that you are working on or want to do. Right now, I have two challenge exercises – I should say three, for myself. But I’m like, these are the things I can’t do, and I want to be able to say I can. So, I’m working on crow pose for yoga, I’m working on a handstand and for me it is like that pullup is my nemesis, but I’m going to be able to do it. And so, to just move forward and so I think doing a baby step workout. I am all about HIT workout, which is high intensity interval training. You can only do it a couple of days a week. But the idea is, that if you don’t have a lot of time, get in a quick HIT workout and that’s what our Body Back workouts are based on HIT as well. And so, you get the chance to really work on your endurance, you work on burning fat and it is just really efficient.
Lisa: That’s so cool. And you know my husband’s really into that and he’ll be gone, he’ll be like okay I’m going to go workout. He’s back ten minutes later and he is like drenched in sweat. Because he did that.
Lisa D: Yeah, totally. It’s amazing what you can do.
Lisa: I know I need to do that. I don’t focus enough on cardio. I focus a lot on the strength training, so I need to do that as well. And of course, stretching is so important. Let’s talk about fuel for you and your family, especially getting our kids to eat healthy.
Lisa D: Yeah, you know it’s so funny, I have – over the years of doing this, and I’ve been in the fitness industry for 25 years, so it even goes back to before Fit 4 Mom; I have had so many moms call me and say I’m really concerned about the way my daughter’s eating or I’m concerned about the way my family is eating. And I always ask them for a food diary of themselves and they are like no, no, no, I’m not talking about me, I’m talking about my kids. And I say no, let’s see what you’re eating. And nine times out of ten, when they have done this, the mom is on some diet. The mom is eating some – doing some cleanse. The mom is trying some latest packaged food product whatever it might be and the thing is, again, they are learning from us and so, I think us sharing food and food is fuel and realizing that it’s a wonderful way to bring us all together is a gift to our family and so, I have never eaten healthier than when I got pregnant. And when I became a mom. Because I knew that every single thing I ate, was creating and building my baby. And then I continued with that once my kids were born because I wanted them to see this is how I want you to eat. And so, I didn’t want packaged and processed foods in the house. And I didn’t want artificial ingredients and chemicals that could hurt us and so again, for me so much of motherhood is a gift not only for our family but ourselves. Because it gives us the opportunity to be model moms. It gives us the opportunity to be role models for them. And so, we are such a generation of looking for the latest cleanse and diet and goodness if any of those things worked, we would all be on it, like it’s never going to work long-term. Like just I know it doesn’t sound sexy, but just eat good food. Just eat real food. Eat whole foods. And so, I think that this is a gift that we can give not only to our family but as next generation of teaching our kids that eat good foods and you are going to feel good.
Lisa: It is so true. And I’m constantly talking about that. Just eat whole foods and you will feel much better. We only like a minute or two left Lisa so let’s talk about the last chapter Celebrate because I don’t think we celebrate enough. We kind of just oh this is hard. There is so much to do but, da, da, da, right?
Lisa D: I agree with you which is why I made a whole chapter about celebration. I don’t think we celebrate enough. At the end of the day, when your head hits the pillow, and I’m speaking to everybody, not just moms. You have done so much. You might not check off all of these boxes, but chances are, that you have been a cook, and a driver and a worker and a lover and a friend and a nurse and a teacher and a – it just keeps going on an on. But we don’t give ourselves any celebration for any of that. In fact, all we do is should on ourselves. S-H-O-U-L-D. That we should have done more. We didn’t get to things, but you did a lot and success begets success. Start paying attention to what you did do. Like, okay you know what, did you wake up early and get in a ten-minute workout? Or did you go for a walk during your lunch break? Like what did you do and really celebrate that. Focus on what you did right, and it will be something that will be repeated.
Lisa: That is so awesome. Lisa, tell us how we can hear your podcast?
Lisa D: Oh, it’s called the Motivating Mom podcast and, so you can find it on iTunes and you can find out anything about me or Fit 4 Mom at Fit4mom.com or feel free to find me at lisadruxman.com.
Lisa: Awesome. And the book is The Empowered Mama How to Reclaim Your Time and Yourself While Raising a Happy, Healthy Family. I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can check us out on Twitter at talkfitness2day and on Snapchat, also on Facebook Talk Fitness Today podcast and you can check me out at healthmediagal1. Thanks for listening and stay well.
This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to www.Vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs. - Length (mins) 23:30
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
As an entrepreneur in the fitness industry, one of the aspects Eraldo Maglara truly enjoys about personal training is educating his clients on health and fitness.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft013.mp3
- Featured Speaker Eraldo Maglara, NSCA-CPT
- Guest Website Healthy Lifestyle with Eraldo
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/EraldoMaglara/
- Guest Twitter Account @eraldomaglara
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Guest Bio
Eraldo Maglara holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Business, a Personal Fitness Degree from the National Personal Training Institute (NPTI), as well as certification from the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA). Eraldo is the Executive Producer and Host of “Healthy Lifestyle with Eraldo” which airs on WMCN-TV44.
As an entrepreneur in the fitness industry, one of the aspects Eraldo truly enjoys about personal training is educating his clients on health and fitness. His goal is to reach out to as many people as he can to help them achieve productive longevity.
Eraldo has been quoted by dozens of publications and websites, including Men’s Health, Latin Trends, and Galtime, where he has shared his knowledge of fitness training. He is an on-camera talent for the popular website eHow.com, which receives 100 million visitors a month and is also part of the expert network for Livestrong.com. -
Transcription
What to Look for in a Personal Trainer with Eraldo Maglara
This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.
Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today and I am thrilled to have the wonderful TV host, author, personal trainer on the program. I’m a big fan of his show Healthy Lifestyle with Eraldo. Eraldo Maglara joins us now. Heh Eraldo, how are you?
Eraldo Maglara (Guest): Hi Lisa. How are you?
Lisa: I’m good. How are you doing?
Eraldo: Terrific. I’m doing great. No complaints.
Lisa: Oh good, well you look great and I love your show and you know its so funny because I started in media with a show called Health Power back in 1999 and I loved doing a show and I wanted to get to one. So, you are really inspiring me. I’ll have to pick your brain sometime about it. But at any rate, let’s talk about you. I want to talk about your career. I want to talk about how you inspire people. Tell us about when you first got into healthy living and fitness.
Eraldo: Well, I have always been very active growing up. I have always – I consider myself either an athlete or a musician. So, I knew my career path was one or the other and I actually started with weight training back in high school because I wanted to add a little more muscle, add a little more strength because my frame has always been very thin. I had some muscle definition but not too much but when I first – when I got involved with weight training obviously, I started gaining muscle mass and I started feeling better about myself and I started gaining strength. So, then I obviously, I entered into the corporate world for 20 years and I got married, obviously and I had two wonderful children. So, my career was focused just on being a purchasing agent for different industries around the country.
And then about 2008, I felt like I needed to make a change. I wanted to talk to people, reach out to people about health and fitness which was always my passion since I was in high school basically. So, that’s when I went back to school. I actually went back to school at 42, got my certification through a national personal training institute and in addition to that I went to get a certificate from – certified from the National Strength and Conditioning Association and then I started my company Fitness Training by Eraldo in 2009. I started immediately training people in their homes and from then on, I was offered the opportunity to have my own television show and in a nutshell, I’m here.
Lisa: That is so cool. You know Eraldo, I’m so impressed with that fact that you were like okay, I need a change and I think a lot of people feel like they get stuck and once they are a certain age, it’s too late and it’s never too late. You can always make a change. You know I got into the health field in my early 20s and I have stayed in it in lots of different facets of it but, I have always been in this same sort of field and I think it’s really cool to be like you know what, I want to make a change, and make it and then become so successful like you have and your TV show is great. Tell us a bit about it Healthy Lifestyle with Eraldo.
Eraldo: I love my show. It’s so – I shot two brand new episodes yesterday and every time I go to the studios, I get this overwhelming feeling that this is where I belong. This is what I’m supposed to do. So, in 2015, I had an opportunity through my PR person to have my show on WMCN and I’ve recorded 52 shows actually yesterday was my 52 episode and let me tell you Lisa, it’s just so gratifying to be in the show and be able to help individuals because that’s the crux of the show is to educate, to inform, to provide alternative solutions on how to improve your health, how to improve your self-being and how to help others as well. So, that’s the main crux of the show. And I have been so fortunate and so blessed to be able to continue for over two years now it’s been so, and I look forward to keep going.
Lisa: That is great. What are some of the things that you have learned from some of your guests that were like oh I hadn’t thought about that or oh, I’m going to put that into practice myself or did you find that you were already doing a lot of things? Talk to us about that.
Eraldo: Well I have – it’s funny because I have a number of professionals on the show. I’ll cover topics from – you know I have chefs on, I’ll have doctors on the shows, I’ll have writers on the show. I have other celebrity individuals who have done reality shows, as a matter of fact, I had Ashley White n the show yesterday, she was one of the Princesses of Long Island, I believe it was on Bravo, I can remember quite now but it was a reality show that was on. And I have had singers on, I’ve had everybody from A to Z basically. And for me, I’ve always been a big compassionate – I always want to learn. There is always something new that you learn every single day, so when I listen to and especially the struggles that some of these people have gone through. I’ve had individuals on who were very close to just saying I don’t want to live anymore, this is it for me. But somehow or somewhere they received that extra inspiration or guidance from someone that instantly changed their life. So, I can’t really pinpoint which one, but there has ben so many. It’s just overwhelming. I just, I can’t explain to you what a feeling it is.
Lisa: Oh, I’m sure it is. Alright, well let’s talk about being a personal trainer. What do people need to keep in mind when they are looking for a trainer and especially if they are new to exercise or they haven’t exercised in a long time.
Eraldo: Well one of the complaints that I get most often, and I have talked to many people. I used to belong to a Chamber of Commerce, so I did many events and just spoke to many one on one individuals. The number one complaint that I heard over and over again is that they tried exercising, but they got hurt and therefore they stopped. So, that is the most common reason why some people just completely stop exercising all together. So, if I had to make a recommendation to someone who is looking for a trainer and you want – you are placing your health in the hands of somebody who should be knowledgeable, should have gone to school, should have some form of education, some form of certification that says they have gone through – the most perfect example that I can give you is going to a doctor. Obviously, you want to go to a doctor that is the most qualified, that has the experience and has gone through good schools. Because bottom line, you are placing your health in their hands. And that’ s how I look at when you hire a personal trainer. It is important that they have the education and have the experience to be able to effectively teach someone how to go to the gym, how to effectively use the equipment, how to be careful if you have injuries and the nutrition side of it. Now I don’t consider myself an expert in nutrition, but I know enough to know there are certain foods that you should stay away from, so and then it goes into other things as well. So, I mean the important thing is to keep in mind is that somebody should be certified and should be knowledgeable of what they are doing and just don’t place your hands into any Joe Schmo out there basically.
Lisa: I completely agree. And you know yesterday, I was asking what were some of the things you wanted to talk about and one of them you mentioned was obesity. I mean there is such a huge obesity epidemic and I think for a lot of people, I would imagine, if they haven’t exercised for a while or they feel intimidated at the gym or they are not sure where to start; then finding a trainer is important and I think finding a compassionate trainer is really important as well and willing to meet that person where they are, rather than where they think they should be because I think if you push too hard, it can backfire. What have you found?
Eraldo: Well, it’s funny because I consider myself – when I train – when I get to meet my clients, and I have been with some clients for quite a while. I think the oldest one is about six years. And it is interesting because you get to know them so well. You get to know what makes them tick, what makes them – what gets them energized, what gets them motivated and you also get to know them personally on the family side and some of the struggles they go through. So, I consider someone tells me or I find myself to be a psychiatrist so to speak. And it’s good because you definitely get to know more than just to person that you are training and that to me is great because there’s just so many things you can – I can help them in so many ways. Some people just have a hard time getting out to exercise, so they will call me and say Eraldo, I don’t feel like exercising today and I’m like come on. Come on. You know you can exercise. You know you can do this. I’ll be there with you. We will push through it and then it seems to work. And I have seen it with many different of my clients so, it’s just great to know that you are able to help someone in that respect. So, to me, I consider myself a trainer, a psychiatrist, a friend. You can throw out all the titles that you want and it really, it’s really rewarding to see the transformation they go through.
Lisa: Oh, I bet. And when you’re working with people who are really heavy, I assume you approach it a different way in terms of what exercises you do first. I assume is it a walking program or what do you usually do?
Eraldo: Well, I talk to them. When I meet somebody new, I always give them a free consultation and I think that’s very important because in this consultation you get to find out exactly who they are, what they like, what they don’t like, are there any reasons or issues that you have and not just the physical condition but the mental aspect of it. Because that’s very crucially important. You are able to do things everyday because you mentally made that decision to do them. If you don’t, you are not going to be able to do them. Or you are not going to accomplish your goals. So, it’s important to understand a person that is maybe having some difficulty making some decisions, so if you are able to convince them or able to say heh listen, make that decision, do your change. First of all, nobody else in going to do it for you and second of all, the benefits are immense. Immense benefits to exercise. And so that’s the way I approach it so if you can get past that mental barrier, there is great things you can accomplish. So, I have friend who in the nutrition business and that’s extremely important obviously, so you need to have a common sense eating based program that you can start off with and one thing that I do recommend to everyone going and learning more about is nutrition. Because everything 80% base of what you do is what you eat, and you are exactly – you are what you eat. There is no way to sugarcoat that one.
Lisa: That is so true. It really is, what is it, 80% in the kitchen 20% in the gym.
Eraldo: Absolutely. There’s no other way to do it. If you eat bad and exercise, you are not going to get the results you want. You might get stronger, but you don’t get the results you want. People are very – when they look at themselves in the mirror and they see the transformation happening, that’s what gives them the opportunity – or the energy or the motivation to move forward. If they don’t see anything changing, there is really not that much. I mean you can be positively happy about it, but you still need to see that physical transformation, that’s what I call it.
Lisa: Yeah, exactly. So, sometimes when you see someone you are working with who isn’t making the progress; do you have them keep a food diary or how do you get them aware, so because sometimes people say well I am eating healthy. But they’re really not. Or they are eating too much.
Eraldo: What I recommend to most of my clients especially to ones that start off with, I like to know what they’re eating. So, it’s important for me to understand, to jot down, to have them jot down normally what they would eat throughout the week. And then normally, what they would eat the weekend because normally your eating habits change from the week to the weekend. So, I need to exactly know basically how they – what kind of meals they are having, how many times a day they are eating, what kind of foods they are eating, how much food are they eating. So, it is important to understand. And this is just basics to learn and understand because again, my understanding and I totally agree with it is if you eat more than what you burn, your body has a tendency to store it. It’s just a way your body works. Your body will fight starvation at every corner. It does not like to be starved, your body, so it will fight that. So, when you are eating, if you don’t exercise it to burn it off, it is going to store it. And when you start piling on more weight than you should, now you are falling into that category that I could call obesity. And that’s the trend that has been happening with the young children, adults and it’s been happening. It’s been growing over since back in I guess way back in the 80s or when we started first exercising, the trend has been going up and up and up. And it’s a concern. It really is a concern.
Lisa: Now do you ever work with teens or children or is it all adults?
Eraldo: I have worked with younger kids. I have worked with 7-8-year olds, 9-year-olds obviously there is a different approach with a 7-8-year-old than you would with a 17 or 18-year-old. So, it’s – when you are dealing with younger kids, you have to make it important and you have to make it fun. You have to approach it differently in a more playful way, but you still have to be able to coach them appropriately and make sure that you do exercises that are fun, that are structured for that age group as opposed to an 18-year-old or a 17-year-old. They are adults basically and some kids develop faster than others. So, there is more of a – you have more of a leverage on that particular age group because you can do more things. So, there is definitely a challenge, but again safety, making sure that you learn proper technique, learning how to get around a gym properly, knowing which equipment to work on or to leave off. It makes a big difference, so that’s why you need somebody who is qualified, who has been there and done that.
Lisa: Yeah, I completely agree. Now on your wonderful show, Healthy Lifestyle with Eraldo, you have a tip of the week, your healthy tip of the week, your healthy lifestyle tip. What are some of your favorites?
Eraldo: I like to answer Twitter questions. And that’s funny because I actually answered three questions from the Twitter feed that I receive from many individuals and that’s probably been my best one because I get to actually interact with some of the people. So, when I get questions and I get a barrage of questions from different individuals from men, women, I get them from seniors, I get them from younger adults, I get them from all categories. And it is interesting because you get to speak to them on camera about different particular issues. So, that’s one of the things that I like to cover on my Healthy Lifestyle tips. I also talk about many of the things that I’m passionate about whether it’s again, exercising, about making it a priority to get some form of exercise throughout the day, keep your body moving, are there other things that might also are spiritual needs. If there is something that you are having an issue with, if it is preventing you from doing certain things. I like to talk about that. So, basically, it’s just a one on one that I have a conversation with my audience to help them. Because that’s my strength is being able to help individuals who are watching the show say you know what, he makes total sense, that was great, tomorrow I’m changing my life, I’m going to apply what he’s taught me and I’m going to make a change in my life. So, that’s the great thing about giving a tip during the show.
Lisa: I completely agree. Eraldo, the time goes by way too quickly. Tell us all the ways we can find you on social media and especially how to watch your great show.
Eraldo: Well, Healthy Lifestyle with Eraldo is primarily shown on the Philadelphia market and in the southern New Jersey area. So, that’s where the show is mostly viewable on. It’s on Comcast, Verizon, it’s on Xfinity. If you can’t watch my show through those means you can always catch it on YouTube under Healthy Lifestyle with Eraldo and it has every single episode that I have done. And you can watch the show there. So, that’s the long way how to get there. Also, my website www.healthylifestyleeraldo.com. I have people that have been on the show previously, some of the notable guests that have been on, sponsors that have been working with the show. I have all my TV appearances that I make throughout the east coast, whether it be in New York market, the Boston market or the Washington. Those are just appearances that I make on and off throughout the month. And publications that I’ve written, articles, magazines, articles and hopefully my second book which is trying to get a publishing company to go through will also come out hopefully next year as well.
Lisa: Oh, that would be great. Well you have to come back and talk about your first book. Eraldo, thank you so much for coming on Talk Fitness Today. It’s been so great, and I hope everyone continues to check out the show. You can listen to us on iTunes, Stitcher, iHeart. You can find all the other places by going to RadioMD.com. Click on programs. Click on Talk Fitness Today. Everybody thanks for listening and stay well.
This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to www.vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs. - Length (mins) 20:21
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
There's a secret to a successful fitness program: you won't feel truly satisfied with your results until your mind and spirit are as strong as your body.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft014.mp3
- Featured Speaker Holly Rilinger
- Book Title Lifted: 28 Days to Focus Your Mind, Strengthen Your Body, and Elevate Your Spirit
- Guest Website Holly Rilinger
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/HollyRilingerFitness/
- Guest Twitter Account @hollyrilinger
-
Guest Bio
Coach, trainer, and 10-year veteran of the fitness world, Holly Rilinger delivers doses of inspiration bundled up in high-intensity sweat sessions. A Nike Master Trainer, Flywheel Sports Master Trainer, Certified Personal Trainer, and Group X Instructor with numerous certifications, Rilinger channels the same drive and discipline it took for her to make it as a professional basketball player internationally, into every one of her clients.
She runs seasonal outdoor Training Camps, Destination Training Camps around the globe, club-themed After HRs workout parties, personal training services, and a popular fitness blog at HollyRilinger.com.
The ultimate coach, Rilinger uses a true team approach she learned in the real life locker room, moving shoulder-to-shoulder with her clients as she encourages them to focus and take charge of not only physical goals, but life aspirations too. - Length (mins) 26:18
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
Learn why "aging in America" is in the past and how 60 is the new 30.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft010.mp3
- Featured Speaker David Essel, MS
- Book Title Positive Thinking Will Never Change Your Life... But this Book Will
- Guest Website David Essel, MS
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/davidessel?fref=ts
- Guest Twitter Account @davidessel
-
Guest Bio
David Essel, MS, Is a number one best-selling author, counselor, master life coach, and international speaker whose mission is to positively affect one million people or more every day, regardless of their current circumstances.
David's work is also highly endorsed by the late Wayne Dyer, chicken soup for the soul's Mark Victor Hansen, as well as many other celebrities and radio and television networks from around the United States of America. Celebrity Jenny McCarthy says "David Essel is the new leader of the positive thinking movement." -
Transcription
Is 60 the New 30? with David Essel
Lisa Davis (Host): Hi, I’m Lisa Davis. So glad you are listening to Talk Fitness Today. One of my favorite guests is back. He has not been on this show yet. He has been on all of my others. He is full of energy. He is super fun and I adore him. His name is David Essel. He is fantastic, and he joins us now. Hey, David.
David Essel (Guest): Lisa, great to be back with you. I know this is my intro on this one of your one million radio shows.
Lisa: Well, you know David, I recently saw a photo of you and I went holy cow, is this guy ripped. I mean okay, so I want to dig into everything. What is your fitness routine? How long have you been working out? And then I found out that you are on the cover of Men’s Fitness in the 80s. So, obviously, you have been doing this for a while. Tell us about your entrée into fitness.
David: Yeah, well you know, 37 years ago, you know I came into the world of personal growth and I started Lisa, the first eight years or nine years, 1980-1989, I was traveling the world in the world of fitness and doing lectures and presentations and seminars all over the world and what you said in 1988, this was back when exercise videos were huge and we had done – I think I was on twelve exercise videos in the 80s, Shape Magazine selected one of my videos as one of the top 10 videos of all time. So, it was a huge time – yeah it was so cool. I was right there with Kathy Smith and Jane Fonda you know, and it was kind of funny because there was only two male guys that were selected. It was me and a guy from Hawaii named Gilad Jankowitz and he went by Gil and he was a super star in the world of fitness back then and then all of the sudden in 1988, when men’s fitness had seen my career explode in fitness, they said we got to get this guy on the cover. So, I have been into fitness a long time. I played basketball for two years at Syracuse University, so athletics have always been a big part of my life. And then the picture you saw, what’s really funny is that I wrote this article called 60 is the New 30. And I just turned 61 and I have been a huge advocate of fitness my whole life and I promise you Lisa, right now, I mean I guess probably the most incredible shape I was ever in was in the late 90s. But right now, even I come somewhat close to that and it’s a dedication. And one of the biggest things that when you talk to people that are in really great shape, unless they are genetically predispositioned to have a great body; so much of it is your diet.
You know it is like, like Lisa, I have been in the now – I haven’t in a long time but from 1980 to almost 1990; I was in the fitness club industry, the gym club industry and I owned clubs and all that stuff. There are people that will come in and they will be regular members for four years, they are in five days a week and their body never freakin changes. And the reason for that is that while exercise of course is crucial, you can exercise hours a day and if your diet isn’t clean, you’re not going to see the results you want.
Lisa: That is 100% true.
David: Yeah and a lot of people don’t understand that and so they will get really frustrated. You know I walk an hour a day or I’m in the gym five days a week and you know they are still carrying the body fat and that’s because of the diet. So, let’s talk diet first. There are a million diets out there and some of them will work for some people, but the one that works for everyone is what we call the Higher Protein, Lower Carbohydrate Diet and the easiest way I tell my clients because we have been teaching a weight loss class called Weight Loss Now and Forever, forever and what we say to people is if you look at a circular plate, a dinner plate, 50% of that plate should be protein, then you break down the other half of the plate into vegetables, and carbohydrates. So, you have 50% of your meals should be protein and then a quarter of the meals should be vegetable, you can throw in some fruit of course and then the other quarter. But that is the simplest way I can tell people what a clean diet looks like.
So, on the one half of the plate you would have grilled chicken, you would have fish, you would have – if you were a vegetarian, you would have a high protein bean dish let’s say, on the right hand side, for those people that eat all kinds of foods, let’s say at the top you have a steamed vegetable and then at the bottom, you would have a super clean carbohydrate which might mean something like a brown rice or a full grain pasta. But the American diet, is quite reversed. The American diet is 50% of that plate is carbohydrate and then 25% is protein and if you are lucky, 25% vegetables. But that’s like the absolute cleanest way to eat. Now, there is withdrawal. You know people get addicted to carbohydrate and sugar and all this other kind of stuff, fast foods and so there is a period of time that when you are putting yourself on this super clean diet that you are going to have cravings for sugar. You are going to have cravings for carbohydrates. That’s normal. But as you get further into eating really clean; it just becomes a way of life.
Lisa: Oh yeah, it definitely does. I have to say, I would add some really good healthy fat to that meal. I’m a big believer in a healthy fat kind of girl like I love my avocadoes and my coconut oil and my olive oil and my avocado oils and like for breakfast I had a huge bunch of kale that I got at the Farmer’s Market. I sautéed it in some Avohaas avocado oil, I love them. And I made some eggs and I had some salsa and I got an avocado and mushed it up and it was delicious, and I put a little extra fat in there because that keeps you satiated and I think if you are cutting out the carbs, the healthy fat can really help keep you full. Now that was a big mistake of course in the 80s and 90s remember the whole low carb thing. That’s when you were big into fitness and I’m sure that’s what we were telling people back then, right, because that’s what we thought was the best way to go.
David: Well, you know it’s funny, in 1997, this is when I had – 1996 when I had my big break through with diet is that I was a really hi carb diet. I was that person that ate bagels for breakfast and pastas for dinners and then a girl I was dating at the time, came home one time and she said you know you are eating all of this food, but the guys in the gym that have rockin bodies eat the opposite. And I got really insecure, right. And of course, I got defensive and I said they don’t know what they are talking about. They don’t know what they are doing. And then in 1997, I was introduced to Bill Phillips who wrote a book Body for Life and in that book, it changed me. Like my girlfriend saying that her male friends in the gym that had great bodies, that actually pushed me more into carbohydrates Lisa and then when I had a guy that I respected write a book and I followed his book and that was the first time, I go oh my God, look at the transformation of my own body. So, from around 1997 on, is when I really cut and what you are saying about fats, you know what we tell people is that every day in the morning I have two tablespoons of organic coconut oil, right and then whenever I have my steamed vegetables, I’ll put organic olive oil all over them. So, you are 100% correct. The healthy fats are really crucial part of the diet and I love that you said that. Because I think with every meal, you can do it.
Now one of the confusing things that we believe, and it doesn’t mean we are right, it just means these are our beliefs; is that you have got to be super careful with fruits. Fruit juices are nothing but freakin sugar. Even if you get the high pulp orange juice, it is basically sugar. So, sometimes people will be feeding their kids you know we have the highest rate of obesity with children ever in the history of the United States. And when they are drinking their fruit juices and they are drinking their fruit drinks, I mean that’s basically sugar and we say – and even if you have organic orange juice, it is still freakin sugar. So, you have go to look at what sabotaging things you bring into your diet that might be putting you more behind the eight ball and the other thing and I know some of your listeners are going to cringe to hear this. I don’t care how many studies you read that red wine is good for your heart or white wine is good for your toenails or whatever the hell is out there. Because Lisa, you and I both know enough about research to know that whatever the hell you want to pack up, you are going to find it. There will be a study somewhere saying that these people in this outrageously tiny village in Afghanistan live to 700 years old and they basically lived on organic tobacco and homemade wine. I mean fuckin a. You can find anything. But I will tell you the other big sabotager for a lot of my clients and I am working with one right now is taking away those two glasses of wine after dinner. That is – if you are looking at your body and your body is great, and you have a glass of wine a night, fine. If you’re not happy with your body, first thing you look at is where are my simple carbohydrates coming from? Alcohol is sugar basically. So those are a bunch of dietary tips to help people get on the right track.
Lisa: Oh, those are great. I want to get back into the fitness because, seeing you now is so incredible. Now you have been fit for a really long time and for people who are new, and they might say well I’m not going to, I’m already 60, I can never look like that; what do you say?
David: Oh my God, well let me give you one of the greatest stories ever. And this is – we have a brand-new book. You know my book that we have talked about Positive Thinking Will Never Change your Life But this Book Will? Okay. In that book, I tell stories about people that have battled, one of my clients Lisa, she was 100+ pounds overweight for 30 years. She came to me in her 60s and she looked at me and she said David, this is the last stop. If whatever you take me through and she signed up for a 12-month program, she said, if at the end of the year, my body isn’t changing, I’m just accepting it. I’m tired of this yoyo, losing weight, gaining weight. Now I write in the book, she did everything we said Lisa; at the end of 12 months, she had lost 120 pounds. That was 17 years ago, and it is still off. So, and she was in her 60s and it was like and then here’s the other story. This is even more profound. And this next story that I’m going to talk about Evelyn, my friend Evelyn is in my new book that comes out in January called Focus. For your listeners, I would love for them to write this down. Just write down the number I’m going to tell you. She lost 245 pounds. So, I want you to imagine a 5’4” woman weighing 245 pounds overweight, being 245 pounds a 5’4” woman. The pictures of her before and after are enough to make people cry. It is such a profound change. In the beginning, she got into the gym in a wheelchair. People would wheel her into the gym, stand her up on a treadmill for a three-minute walk Lisa, then put her into the wheelchair then the next day it was a four-minute walk. Through her perseverance, dietary changes and exercise. Now here is the most phenomenal end result that anyone could ever hear. Is that she lost 245 pounds and last year, in Las Vegas, she walked out on stage in front of 15,000 screaming fans as a body builder. At 54-years-of-age. Right. And so, when people say well, you know just like what you said, I’m 50, I’m 60, I’m whatever; it is like no. it’s not your genetics. University of Florida study came out and said that only 6% of people who are obese or overweight have any genetic link whatsoever. That means 94% is our lifestyle. Yeah, 94% is our lifestyle.
Lisa: Oh, it is so true. You know David I want to make sure we have the time to talk about your fitness routines. So, tell us what you are doing these days. Take us through it.
David: Okay, so it is so simple, and it is going to blow your mind. I spend less than an hour a day in the gym, six days a week. It is right about 50 minutes, 5-0. And the first thing I go in and I do is I do my strength training first. You know a lot of people want to go in and do your cardio first but every man and every woman that wants to see body transformation has to do strength training. If you want to see a great body, and going back to the 80s, Lisa, back then we used to tell people that everything was aerobics, right. It was
Lisa: I remember. I was terrible at aerobics. Oh my gosh I was the worst. I’m 5”10” David, I’m all arms and legs and most of the people who do aerobics are shorter and so when my arms were up, theirs were already back down. I couldn’t keep up. I was tripping over my feet. It was a disaster.
David: Oh my God. Well, and we were trained back then, and this is some of the biggest breakthroughs that we have to experience. We were trained that when you want to loss body fat, that you have got to do aerobics, but the truth is this and this is going to shock people. People who lose body fat and keep it off are those who do strength training because let me give you the example. You want to build lean muscle tissue so that you are burning calories 24-hours a day. That’s the real key. When you strength train, the body is burning more calories after you are down with your session for six hours. Like in other words, you continue to burn calories because you have just taken your body from a six-cylinder engine when you add lean muscle tissue; it becomes an eight-cylinder engine. So, it is burning more calories. It is taking more fuel. When you do cardio. Now cardio is a great because you will burn like 150 calories in a session or 200 calories in a session, but think about that. Think about how little that is. Some people think if they exercise a long period of time, might burn 400 calories but if you have a bagel and cream cheese, you have just put it all back on. So, the real key and what I do is I go in and I do my strength training, I do again, six days a week my strength training routine takes about 20 minutes in the gym. It is not an extreme amount of time, then I put 20-25 minutes on the cardio and I’m done. And so, if someone says well I don’t have the time you know to get that kind of a body that David has at 61 and I say it’s not about time. It about a clean diet and effective weight training and effective cardio. And that’s really if there is a secret to it Lisa, that’s the secret.
Lisa: And what is your strength training? Is it weights? Is it yoga? Is it other body weight exercises? Is it a mix?
David: This is just my bias. My bias says that you have got to do weights. And a lot of women will say well, if I do weights I get really bulky. Oh my God. Here’s the truth. Let’s go back through the statistics. About 4% of the US female population has the same amount of testosterone as a man. 4%. Okay. Those 4%, if they are smart, will be body builders. If those girls are smart. Because those are girls that can put on and young women and older women they can put on lean muscle tissue quicker and they will get bulky. But that only 4%. That means 96& of women who strength train will never get bulky. Now, if you see yourself getting bulky, that tells me that your diet sucks. It doesn’t tell me that your strength training is doing it. But you know I really think that weight training is imperative. It doesn’t have to be free weights, it can be machines and if a person is afraid of doing it, get a personal trainer for your first two or four, six sessions so that you really learn how to do it correctly. It is money well-invested and then find a workout partner. The biggest excuse we see with my clients that don’t stick with an exercise program is that they don’t have anyone to workout with. So, what we need to do, is ask a friend, ask someone you work with or even put a sign up at the gym. Get humble. Be vulnerable. Saying that you are looking for a female or a male to workout with you, these number of days and this time of day. Get out of your comfort zone to become successful.
Lisa: You know, David, you are so fantastic. And I always love you on Sirius with Jenny McCarthy. The two of you are so great together. Let’s talk about all the ways we can find you and then I want to have on next month to talk everything motivation.
David: Oh gosh Lisa, that would be great yeah. All people have to do is go to www.talkdavid.com because that’s all I do Lisa, like you, is talk. So just go to www.talkdavid.com and you will find out about all of our books and our programs and everything in the world that you can need to know about improving your life is at talkdavid.com.
Lisa: David, thank you so much. So, glad you listened to Talk Fitness Today. You can check us out on social media at talkfitness2day on Snap Chat and Twitter. Check us out on Facebook at Talk Fitness Today and also on Instagram. I want to thank everyone for listening and stay well. - Length (mins) 19:11
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
Yoga is more than just "stretching." Learn how you can use it to build up your athletic capacity.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft009.mp3
- Featured Speaker Jake Panasevich
- Guest Website Yoga with Jake
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/yogawithjakep
- Guest Twitter Account @yogawithjake
-
Guest Bio
Jake Panasevich is a yoga teacher in Philly specializing in yoga for men and office workers.
He is also a yoga trainer for professional athletes.
Listen to Jake’s recent interview on NPR. You could also learn more about Jake in his featured articles in Men’s Health, Huffington Post and U.S. News.
Visit Jake’s website at yogawithjake.com. -
Transcription
How Yoga Helps Build Athletic Performance with Jake Panasevich
Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you are listening to Talk Fitness Today. When I was 14 years old, my mother forced me, yes forced me, to do yoga. Now she took me to this amazing guy. He was from India. I was trained at Iyengar Yoga. He was sought out by amazing people and I was this begrudging awkward teen who just thought it was a big pain in the ass. So, for years I did not like yoga. Because it was really hard. I was skinny and awkward and weak and uncoordinated and the whole nine yards. And then I started doing it again in college and then I kind of fell off the yoga bandwagon and then when I was pregnant, I did it every day of my pregnancy and what a difference. So, my daughter is 13 now and I just started back to it. It took me a while and it’s amazing how yoga can help you build athletic performance and that’s what we are going to be talking about today and so much more with the wonderful Jake Panasevich. He is a yoga teacher in Phillie, specializing in yoga for men. Heh, Jake.
Jake Panasevich (Guest): Heh Lisa. Nice to talk to you again.
Lisa: Yeah, it is always a great time. Okay so there’s my history with yoga. Tell us yours.
Jake: Sure: I mean it’s not all that different. I was dragged to my first yoga class just completely resistant and kicking and screaming by a friend an ex-girlfriend and yeah, that first class went by very quickly and I was just confused by the end of it and, but I felt great afterwards. I felt completely relaxed. I slept better than I had ever slept, and I figured I would give it a real shot and, so I signed up for a month and then within that month, I was shocked. All the aches and pains from athletics just kind of washed away and my chronic back pain cleared and after that month, I was completely convinced there is something to this yoga stuff and the rest is history.
Lisa: That is so great and then what was it like to be a man in a yoga class at the time you went? Were there very many others or was it just you and maybe a couple or just you?
Jake: Sure, there was oftentimes just me or maybe one or two other guys in the class. There were very few guys that braved the yoga class but yeah it was definitely different. A lot of yoga teachers weren’t entirely sure how to handle me and my body when I would ask how to advance in certain poses, the answer I got frequently was “heh, these poses weren’t meant for a big dude like you.” So, it wasn’t very empowering at the time and so I made it a point to seek out other styles and different teachers, those who could kind of help me advance and really get a sense of how to work within my body which was much larger than it is now from weight lifting and sports like wrestling and yeah it just took some extra leg work I feel as a guy to really learn how to modify things and keep things safe as I progressed in my practice.
Lisa: Now speaking of yoga and styles, for somebody who is brand new to it, whether they are a man or a woman; what do they want to look for and then I would love to talk about what compliments for example if you are cyclist, if you are a runner, if you are a strength trainer, if you do some other types of fitness, what is sort of the best yoga. So, talk about some of the types and for a beginner; do you have a certain one that you would say you know what, you should start here?
Jake: Sure. So, there’s so many styles out there now. But they all kind of fall under two different branches of yoga. One is more of an Ashtanga vinyasa which is more of like a flow fast paced one breath, one movement. You are moving, in vinyasa. And then the other branch is Iyengar which is more of an alignment based style, where you slow it down, take a couple of breaths in a pose, maybe focus on a specific key action in your poses and yeah. So, the most popular style available is primarily vinyasa which is that flow, that power yoga, fast paced. Oftentimes it is heated and then there’s the more alignment based hatha classes which are often labeled as like an align and flow class which does slow it down, talk about alignment and for most beginners I would recommend starting off with the beginner series if it is available, actually. Oftentimes yoga studios will either require or offer a beginner series once a season, like four times a year and I think it is very much worth doing it just to get really clear on the basics, your foundation and what yoga really is before you jump in there head first and that’s often found in most vinyasa studios and alignment based classes as well. So, I would really seek out those beginner series, go through them before you jump into the all levels classes.
Lisa: You know Jake, it’s interesting because I think that it is so important to take that beginning class because if you don’t, if you are in some kind of flow class and they just say the posture but what if you are doing it wrong and there are a lot of people in the class and I know the teacher obviously tries to help and align everybody up but you really need to have the basics I think to make sure you are doing it correctly and then once you know some of the poses then I think it is great. Like I went back after years of not going and I went to a beginner class, but it was a little bit fast paced for me and I thought geez I might need a beginner’s beginner I mean even though I already knew the poses, and I have been doing Pilates for six years consistently. She did say that I had good form, so I’m think the Pilates must have helped with that. But I think it’s such a great compliment. So, let’s jump into this. Talk to us about how yoga helps build athletic performance and then talk to us about some specifics like I mentioned earlier, running, cycling, weight training. I mean it seems like it helps with everything. But if you have some little details you can share with us.
Jake: Yeah sure. I mean I really truly believe yoga gives you the edge that you need to optimize your fitness, and this is proven across the board from professional athletes like MBA superstar LeBron James, to your average guy just trying to stay healthy while working an office job. Yoga delivers and yoga supplements fitness through many ways; injury prevention, yoga teaches you to be fierce without losing your composure, it teaches you to stay attuned to your breath, which is paramount if you are trying to avoid injury while working in fitness and just self-awareness with that connection to your breath. The yoga really drives home alignment and form and biomechanics in a very subtle way, but it is also super accessible to the masses and it shows you how to move fluidly and use leverage and it also helps with balance, symmetry and if you are trying to recover and get back in there and work out, and give it your all, yoga helps you recover quickly and get back to your workout at your fullest potential. But I think the most beneficial component is how yoga connects you with your why. Like why you are working out, what the bigger reason is, your vision for yourself and if you are not clear on that, your fitness is going to ebb and flow and then ultimately fizzle out. And yeah, I think yoga does help build strength. It is well you known that yoga improves mobility and with any workout, you really want to move seamlessly and but yoga also it builds functional movement through body weight strength training so all those pushups you do, the chaturangas, all the lunges, the warriors, and in every pose you are engaging your core and building those stabilizer muscles through the balancing poses and so it does help build strength and it also helps to complement any sort of strength training you are working on.
Lisa: Well, you know, it’s interesting because whenever I see someone with really kick ass arms like super lean, long beautiful muscles, I always ask do you do yoga. For example, I was picking up my daughter yesterday and we want to get there early so you are not waiting in line forever and there was this woman standing outside her car. I always get out of my car, walk around and we started talking and I said you do yoga, right and she said oh yeah and I was like damn, like her arms were just beautiful and my husband does yoga and he is tall and lean and he has these wonderful long lean muscles and beautiful triceps and I mean to me it depends on what you are looking for but you can get an incredible definition through yoga. That’s why I want to do it again. And to get clear on my why of course, and to breathe and be mindful, but I mostly just want yoga arms. Okay everyone, I’m super official, no I’m not. Well I am a little. I just want my yoga arms.
Jake: Gotta look hot in the hot pants like they say, you got to.
Lisa: Yeah, I’m trying. That’s why I have got to do more yoga.
Jake: It totally tones up your body. It really does. Like in a different way like you said, like I feel like it really leans you out, I mean which I, I mean, I really needed because I was like a rock otherwise.
Lisa: So what did you do before yoga? Were you athletic at all before? Were you doing other types of exercise? Or was this sort of like okay time to exercise, let’s try this? Begrudgingly, as you mentioned.
Jake: No, from the time I was really young six years old all the way through college, I wrestled primarily so I was a wrestler and I don’t know if you know any wrestlers, but I mean short, stocky like kind of like little gorillas and so yeah, I was a wrestler. I played soccer. I loved soccer, but my body was way more built for the wrestling type. So, yeah, I wrestled my whole life pretty much and to compliment that, I also lifted a lot of weights, did all kinds of training for wrestling and yeah yoga really – I was shocked within the first six months or so, I thought I was going to lose all my strength and all my kind of muscle that I had built through wrestling in strength training and it was really just a great way – like I leaned out, like I looked more like a fighter, like I looked more toned and more ripped than I did like bulky and awkward.
Lisa: Oh, that’s nice. Now let’s talk a little bit about yoga for men because my husband was saying. He goes when I go to yoga classes around here I’m the only guy, so he does it at home. He is so, gosh he is so disciplined. He gets up at 4:30 in the morning. He writes because he writes horror fiction novels, he does his yoga, he does his meditation, which is why he is always so much calmer than I am. He is so happy I’m doing yoga again, he goes hon, you need it so bad. Oh my gosh I’m so happy you are doing yoga again. But anyway, but when we used to live Santa Cruz. Well Santa Cruz is like yoga studios on every corner, health food stores on every corner, it is like hip and fun and so there was always lots of men, so I’m assuming most places are not like Santa Cruz. So, my point is, for guys you feel a little intimidated, if they can’t find a cool gym like yours that is yoga for men; what do you advise for them to just go and learn it in the class and they can always do it on their own or just get used to being with a bunch of cool women or whatever works?
Jake: Sure. Yeah, I mean if you are willing to I think there is probably more support to be in a room of all women when you are more single. I have noticed from teaching the guys classes, we get way more support from their significant others because it is all guys. It’s like go, go with these guys. So, if there is not a men’s class available like a men’s specific class, I really recommend doing some leg work, so get on the internet, look up the local studios and search out some of these guy teachers. They are out there. There’s not many but there is usually one in every location I have been to and I think it’s worth going to the guy teacher and if you can get more specific look for the male teacher who has got a similar history as you do. So, if you are an athlete get in to the studio’s website and read the bios of the teachers and really seek out teachers that have had a similar history as you did. And that’s a little bit of extra work but it really helps. If you go to a yoga class with a twenty something year old girl who is also a professional dancer who could already put her foot behind her head, it’s a little bit discouraging at first at least and it’s also like they don’t really understand what it’s like not being able to touch your knees when you bow forward like, so you really want to find somebody who is similar to you, who has got the same kind of challenges you do. So, I would say, do the leg work, find the guy teacher and preferably the guy who has had a similar history as you did.
Lisa: Oh, that’s great. You know I mentioned earlier, yoga for runners and I think what is so great about that is it really helps with the flexibility, right and I think that goes for a lot of your strength training, if you are doing a lot of different types of athletics you get really tight and there is that wonderful stretching component that goes with the strengthening, if you can touch on that.
Jake: Sure. Yeah yoga I mean is so great for running. I have one class I teach that as soon as it is running season, it just fills up. Because yoga is great at stretching your hamstrings, your IT bands, your quads all the trouble areas for runners and if you are running super tight, it is especially difficult on your knee joints. So, if your IT bands are super tight it just creates more torque every time you run, every time you step and after even just a month of yoga, we really start to work out some of those kinks and stretch all sides of the legs so that you are running more fluidly, more pain free and there is also just the focus on the breath that is great for running and any kind of cardio. Like it trains you to breathe more effectively and in yoga you are asked to be aware of your breath at all times and so the breathing technique you use really demands a consciously deep breath and when you are struggling for breath while you are running, it could affect your entire stride. It can affect your entire performance because you are breathing awkwardly, or choppy and so yoga also has that benefit to it too for runners.
Lisa: That is awesome. You know we just have a few minutes left, Jake. Tell us a little bit about your studio.
Jake: I’m sorry?
Lisa: Tell us about your studio where you do yoga for men.
Jake: Sure. So, I teach at not a studio actually. I teach the men’s classes at a gentleman’s church in Philadelphia.
Lisa: Oh cool.
Jake: Yeah, so it’s really awesome because it’s a space that is their own. It is a guy who own this church and he renovated the whole thing. It’s super awesome and he has opened his doors for us and it is a group of upwards to 100 guys that show up for the class now and yeah, my men’s classes are there in Phillie and yeah I do teach at a studio and anyone can go including women and that studio is in Center City Philadelphia. It is called Maha Yoga.
Lisa: Oh cool. Well this was super fun Jake. I always love having you on. Tell us all the ways that we can learn more about you and all the great work you are doing.
Jake: Yeah sure, so I’m on social media and that is where I tend to be most responsive and I tend to keep it more up to date on Twitter and on Instagram it is Yoga with Jake. My website is yogawithjake.com and I’m planning to run a men series, a beginner’s men’s series here in Philadelphia and that’s coming up. We are shooting for the winter for that series. And yeah, I’m always writing for the US News about yoga. You can find all those articles posted on my social media. If you ever want to learn more about yoga for free, you can find it there and yeah, that’s where I’m at.
Lisa: That is great. Jake, I want to thank you and I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. you can check us out on social media I am healthmediagal1 and you can also check us out on let’s see, talkfitness2day on Twitter and Snapchat and Talk Fitness Today podcast and I’m so glad you are listening. Get out there. Do some yoga. Get those sexy yoga arms going. Take care. Stay well. - Length (mins) 19:43
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
Could you benefit from an exercise prescription?
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft008.mp3
- Featured Speaker Beth Frates, MD
- Book Title Life After Stroke: The Guide to Recovering Your Health and Preventing Another Stroke
- Guest Website Wellness Synergy
- Guest Twitter Account @BethFratesMD
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Guest Bio
Beth Frates, MD, is trained as a physiatrist and a health and wellness coach. Her expertise is in lifestyle medicine, and she works to empower patients to reach their optimal level of wellness by adopting healthy habits. Elected to the Board of Directors of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, Dr. Frates is helping to shape the scope of this new specialty. She is an award-winning teacher at Harvard Medical School and developed and taught a college lifestyle medicine curriculum at the Harvard Extension School, which is one of the most popular courses offered at the school. As the Director of Wellness Programming at the Stroke Institute for Research and Recovery at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Dr. Frates has created and implemented a twelve-month wellness program for stroke survivors and their caregivers. This program is being replicated at Stanford and other academic teaching hospitals.
Dr. Frates is the co-author of the book, Life After Stroke: The Guide to Recovering Your Health and Preventing Another Stroke and co-author of three chapters on behavior change in different medical textbooks, as well as multiple journal articles on lifestyle medicine topics including exercise prescription, connection prescription, lifestyle medicine case series, and walking meeting for sustained weight loss. Her next book titled, Handbook of Lifestyle Medicine is due out in October 2017.
Dr. Frates is passionate about developing programs focused on lifestyle medicine and wellness. -
Transcription
Fitness Rx: The Exercise Prescription with Dr. Beth Frates
This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.
Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you are listening to Talk Fitness Today. You know, I really think that exercise should be prescribed, right, you go to your doctor, they tell you, you have all these things wrong and then they give you some medication and then you leave. No, I want them to sit and chat with you. I know I live in this like dream world, but what about if doctors could prescribe exercise? Well here we have a fantastic MD who I am a huge fan of. Her name is Beth Frates, MD. She is trained as a – how do you say that?
Beth Frates, MD (Guest): Yeah, it is not a common term, Lisa, so you are not alone. It is physiatry and most people do confuse it with psychiatry.
Lisa: I thought there was like a spelling error. Okay I mean people are used to me mispronouncing things but okay so physiatrist and a health and wellness coach. Okay, Dr. Frates, welcome to the show and now you have to tell us what is a physiatrist?
Dr. Frates: Yes, yes, what is a physiatrist? Exactly. And I love this specialty because it is a relatively new one. It really came into existence after the world wars because our soldiers were coming home with amputations, spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries and there was no one available to take care of them in the long term. It is really how our specialty started. So, physiatry also known as physical medicine and rehabilitation is the area of medicine that specializes in trauma to the central nervous system or musculoskeletal system. So, what does that mean? Trauma to the central nervous system, to the brain, so a traumatic brain injury, a stroke, or to the spinal cord, spinal cord injury and then when we get into musculoskeletal, that would involve amputations and it could also involve knee pain, head pain, back pain, elbow pain and the specialty really breaks down into two areas. Those that are involved with say nonsurgical orthopedic type injury and those that are involved with the central nervous system processes such as stroke, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury. And my area of you may know this Lisa, initial interest was stroke.
Lisa: Yes, and you know I want to mention that you are also a health and wellness coach and you work in something called Lifestyle Medicine, which I’m a huge fan of. Tell us a little bit about lifestyle medicine and then let’s jump into this whole idea of physicians writing exercise prescriptions and then I want to get into the nitty gritty of how much we should be exercising, and you know a lot of the shows here on Talk Fitness Today are really about like people who already work out and how to build more muscle mass and should you be doing body weight exercises versus weight training versus this. But I want to get just like to the basics for like the everyday person too.
Dr. Frates: Okay, terrific. And this is all connected. So fortunately, we started with physiatry, physical medicine and rehab and in that specialty, we actually write physical therapy prescriptions which is another way of writing an exercise prescription, but it is specific for a stroke survivor or a traumatic injury survivor. Out of this area, came lifestyle medicine or really my interest in lifestyle medicine to help people prevent stroke. So, lifestyle medicine is even newer than physiatry in fact, really it got on the map in I would say 2006 when our national college American College of Lifestyle Medicine started. And lifestyle medicine is the area of medicine that works with our lifestyles meaning our feet, fingers and forks, meaning how we move with our feet, what we do with our fingers and that is hopefully not put cigarettes in them, prevent putting any kind of cigarettes in our fingers and puffing and then our forks what we eat. It stretches beyond those three Fs feet, fingers and forks and goes into stress resiliency, sleep and social connection so those are our six pillars, but specifically exercise, and the exercise prescription and physical activity as a vital sign.
It has gotten a lot of attention in our field of lifestyle medicine. Because there is so much data to support the fact that exercise is as good as say ten or more medications. You probably know this, Lisa and probably a lot of your listeners know this, but exercise can help with cholesterol, it can help with blood pressure, it can help with glucose monitoring, if you have diabetes, it can lower your glucose levels and increase your insulin sensitivity. It can help with depression. It can decrease depressive symptoms and in fact, increase serotonin which is what a lot of antidepressant medicines do. It can lower anxiety levels and it can lower stress. It can also help us with our body composition. And it can help us in terms of our interest in sex and it opens up blood vessels which is helpful for all of our organs and it – if you think about that, already we have gotten probably ten medications there but if you are interested in stroke, it helps prevent strokes by increasing something called fibrinolysis. That’s the ability of the body, the blood to break up any clots. It can also increase our metabolism. It increases the number of mitochondria in your cells which means you will have more energy because mitochondria are the powerhouses, they are the workhorses, that’s how we get energy is through our mitochondria and when we get involved with exercise and routine exercise we can increase the number of mitochondria.
So, exercise is hopefully gonna be prescribed like you said, when you go to your doctor’s for an annual visit. You will leave with an actual prescription because it is that powerful and that’s what we promote in lifestyle medicine.
Lisa: Do you think that will ever happen actually? Do you think that the paradigm will shift enough that they actually will do that? Or do you think it is just I mean the healthcare system, there is so much chaos right now and it seems like I joked about in the beginning, it seems like a dream. But as long as people like you who are MDs who are in lifestyle medicine, there’s hope, right?
Dr. Frates: Yes. There really is hope. Now one thing that has changed and hopefully you have noticed this, and your listeners have noticed this. Physical activity is supposed to be a vital sign. So not only do you check your weight, your height, your blood pressure, your heart rate, these are vital signs, but we also ask patients how often are you exercising. What are you doing? What intensity is it and you ask about exercise. So that’s supposed to be a vital sign. May I ask you Lisa, if your doctor has ever asked you about exercise.
Lisa: I think so. It has been a while. But I think he has. Yeah. I think he just assumes I have because I’m in the health field and I am in pretty good shape. Yeah, I think he has asked.
Dr. Frates: And that is good. The thing about assuming though, is this is probably good for your listeners too in that I know they are probably very athletic as you said you are thinking about which type of exercise is best for you. But what we will all admit to and I love exercise, have always quite frankly, it is my own stress reliever that I can use, and I used through medical school at Stanford I would run every single day and it got me through. It is also great for cognition, focus, creativity. So, there are so many reasons why I personally use it as my own kind of self-medication and also why I promote it so much. But for people who love it like you, like me and many of your listeners; we also have sometimes in our lives where there are stumbling blocks, where there’s obstacles. For me it happened when I had my two boys and I was writing a book. My Life After Stroke book. I really was feeling overwhelmed and I wasn’t able to get out and do my jogs and it definitely affected me physically, emotionally, everything and I think when I went to see my physician that year I was hoping to brainstorm with her about what I could do but instead, she assumed like I guess your physician is doing that I was exercising because I had for so many years. But you really can’t make that assumption because things change in people’s lives and we have to be open to that. So, I would say hopefully next time you see your physician you will have a good conversation about your own exercise routine and I would invite listeners to bring it up with their physicians and say well you know I want to start exercising or I want to start high intensity interval training, do you have some ideas. Can we talk about it? And see how that goes. Because if the physician cannot talk about it, then perhaps they need to come to one of our continuing medical education courses and learn a little bit more about it. But by the patients bringing it up they can help push the system forward. Supply and demand, right.
Lisa: Oh, that makes sense. Yes. Oh, go ahead.
Dr. Frates: Oh, well the truth is, if there isn’t a box to check for insurance to cover, so for example, I think we should have PADD as a diagnosis. What’s that? Physical activity deficit disorder. So, once we give it a disorder, or a title, then we can check it off on a box for insurance to cover it and we can counsel on it and get reimbursed. Why do I mention that? Because physicians are overworked, overstressed and under reimbursed right now, so sometimes physicians avoid these conversations because they think it will take extra time and they won’t get reimbursed. So, if we can make it something that gets reimbursed, you know there is something called sedentary behavior. Have you heard of that term, Lisa and do you know what defines an individual that is sedentary? Have you heard of that one?
Lisa: I have heard the term, but I don’t know what exactly defines it. So, tell us.
Dr. Frates: Right, so we could use that, which means someone falls into sedentary category if they are not actively routinely exercising 30 minutes three days a week for three months straight. So, some listeners may fall into that category and that means you have a risk factor for heart disease. That’s clearly understood by American Medical Association, cardiologists, we know sedentary behavior is a risk factor. So, hopefully, it will get to the importance level where we are able to again, get reimbursed. Because I think that will influence how the physician practices. Personally, as a health and wellness coach, as you mentioned, I talk about exercise all the time. In fact, I walk with my patients when we have visits together. Right now, it makes me wonder if I am huffing and puffing what’s going on with me, but I am on my exercise workstation and what I have is a stationary bicycle and it has attached to it a laptop space and my laptop is right in front of me and I am actually bicycling while we talk. Because today is a tough day in terms of work for me to actually be able to get outside and get some activity.
Lisa: Oh, that’s so funny because I have a treadmill desk, but something is not working on it right now or I usually am walking. But really slowly, otherwise it makes too much noise. But that’s awesome, I wouldn’t even know if you didn’t tell me.
Dr. Frates: I was going to say; can you hear mine or did you notice my breathing?
Lisa: I was – you know you were speaking at a - now that you mention it because we have spoken before your cadence is a little and I was like hmm. I thought you were just being a little extra slow. Well not slow, you know what I mean.
Dr. Frates: Right, right. Yeah completely. So, I needed to explain that to you. But hopefully that answers some of the questions but what else can we dive into?
Lisa: Well, I would like to know more just like a basic exercise plan for people who are starting and how much is enough and yeah.
Dr. Frates: Good, okay. So, what we recommend for physicians to do when they are writing an exercise prescription is to write fitt prescription. What does that mean? F-I-T-T. So you would help the patient determine the frequency at which they would exercise, how many days a week, the intensity will that be low intensity, moderate intensity, high intensity then the amount of time that they will exercise each session and then the last T is type. What’s the type of exercise? And one might argue that’s the most important part of the prescription is what is the type because you have got to do something that is fun, that’s fun for you so that you feel motivated to go out and do it. That’s the key.
But looking at the prescription what we are striving for, what research has shown us, researchers, physicians, different exercise physiologists reviewed about 8000 studies, probably eight years ago now. And they came up with guidelines. So, for your health, we are striving to achieve 150 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity in one week. Moderate intensity means you can talk but you can’t sing. I’m probably at moderate right now where I am easily talking to you, but I probably can’t sing. If I could sing, I would be at low. If I couldn’t talk at all, I would be at vigorous. And for those listeners that enjoy vigorous physical activity and exercise, to get maximum health benefits; you can do 150 minutes of vigorous intensity exercise in the week. If you are going for regular to try to get health benefits, not as much as you can. To get as much as you can is 150 minutes of vigorous but you could do 75 minutes of vigorous and be getting your health benefits. Notice that’s half of what I said for moderate intensity I said you need to accumulate 150 of moderate intensity. Now to get maximum benefits, the research shows 300 minutes of moderate intensity exercise in the week will give you maximum benefits. Now can you go beyond that? And aren’t there really healthy athletic people especially professional athletes that go way beyond these guidelines? Yes, yes that is true. Is there too much exercise? Yes, research has shown that multiple marathons in one year can take a toll on the heart. So, on the heart muscle as well as on the arteries. So, it is something to be careful about.
But the dose if we are talking about a prescription, the dose that we are really looking for, for health is 150 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity in a week or 75 minutes of vigorous intensity in the week and then if you can go more and you want maximum benefits, you will double that, so you will do 300 minutes of moderate or 150 of vigorous in the week. Does that help?
Lisa: Yes. Now that is mix of cardio and some sort of weight training whether it be body weight exercises, lifting weights, using bands, using – okay.
Dr. Frates: Yeah. Great question Lisa. So that is for cardio. On top of that recommendation, we would like people to do two days of strength training. Now that could be with weights in the weight room. It could be your own body weight. It could be the bands, kettle bells, whatever you would like but two days a week and on nonconsecutive days. Now of course you can do them on consecutive days if you are working your upper body one-day, lower body the next day, etc. But not the same muscle two days in a row because you want to wait and let that muscle recover. So, it is actually the strength training is in addition to the 150 minutes of moderate or 75 of vigorous. And then, if we are really trying to be balanced, we are going to do flexibility exercises. Now you can do stretching after a workout and work on the flexibility that way and if you do something like yoga, you know you could get cardio, body weight strength training, flexibility and even balance all in one activity. Because a lot of the time, people hear oh, I have to do cardio, I have to do the strength training and now they are asking me to do flexibility and balance it is so much. But you can pick an activity where you get all those different types of exercises wrapped up in one.
Lisa: Yeah, I just started doing yoga after not doing it for a long time and it kicked my butt and it was all of those. It is everything.
Dr. Frates: It’s crazy, isn’t it?
Lisa: It is. It is. It’s hard but it’s great. It is really great. I have been doing Pilates for years which, I’m in an intermediate and I’m telling you, that’s pretty hard. It is not hard it’s intermediate.
Dr. Frates: And I think it’s important to hear that you were doing it then you stopped then you got back to it, but you were doing Pilates. I mean we change. Quite frankly, when I was in college and I was in medical school, I really thought yoga – who does yoga? Who has time to go to a studio for an hour and a half and do this, this is not for me and it wasn’t until after kids and really looking for stress reduction that I started it and I fell in love with it. So, I did not do yoga really until I would say 35. I had never done any yoga. So, we change. We evolve and so do our preferences for exercise.
Lisa: Yeah, I also started swimming and that’s great too. Got my heart rate up, feel like I was using all my muscles. It was fantastic. Except for the chlorine.
Dr. Frates: I find it completely exhausting because I don’t have the right form. So, for me to go from one side of the pool to the other side of the pool, it is exhausting. I don’t have good form, so I get out of breath and it is something that I would love to take up actually this year. But I could run for an hour and be perfectly happy, but the one lap will do me in.
Lisa: Well, I can help you. I have great form. I really do. And I just want to say, this has been so much fun Dr. Frates the time goes by way too quickly. Tell us all the ways we can learn more about you and all the great work you are doing.
Dr. Frates: Oh, you are so kind, Lisa, thank you so much for having me on your show. I am on Twitter at Beth Frates MD. I’m on LinkedIn as well, Beth Frates MD and I have a website wellness-synergy S-Y-N-G-E-R-Y, wellness-synergy.com.
Lisa: Fantastic. I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can follow us on Twitter and Snap Chat at talk fitness 2 day. You can find us on Facebook as well Talk Fitness Today podcast. You can listen on iTunes, iHeart, Stitcher, Tune In, Radio MD and you can follow me on Twitter at healthmediagal1. Thanks for listening everyone and stay well.
This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs. - Length (mins) 21:58
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
An inspirational speaker, author, and former Wall Street rainmaker, Jim Owen was 70 when he decided he had to get fit. Now, he's helping others do the same.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft004.mp3
- Featured Speaker James P. Owen
- Book Title Just Move: A New Approach to Fitness After 50
- Guest Website Center for Cowboy Ethics & Leadership
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/CowboyEthics
- Guest Twitter Account @Cowboy_Ethics
-
Guest Bio
James P. Owen is a forty-year veteran of Wall Street and the founder of the Center for Cowboy Ethics and Leadership.
Author of several bestselling books, Jim’s new book is Just Move: A New Approach to Fitness After 50.
Jim currently lives in Austin, Texas. -
Transcription
Just Move! A New Approach to Fitness After 50 with James Owen
This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.
Lisa Davis (Host): Hi, I’m Lisa Davis and I’m so glad that you are here because we have got a fantastic guest today. I am in love with his book. it is called Just Move! A New Approach to Fitness After 50. It is by James P. Owen, best-selling author of Cowboy Ethics. James joins us now or do you prefer Jim?
James P. Owen (Guest): Jim. And by the way, Lisa, I’m dancing as we are speaking.
Lisa: Oh, are you?
Jim: It’s called Just Move!
Lisa: Well you know that is a good thing and I actually have a treadmill desk which I am not using at the moment because I have a knee injury, but usually I am walking slowly because if it is too loud you will hear this like hmmmm. But I just have to say; this is great and what good timing. My husband and I both just turned 50 and we are very active and very athletic and everything. But I’m looking at fitness in a different way. I think for so many of us, when we are younger, we look at it more from an aesthetic perspective, which I think is good to get you motivated but there is a point where like I’m never going to look like I’m 25. I want to be functional; which you talk about functional fitness. I want to be able to move when I get older. I don’t want to be using a walker if I don’t have to. There are all these things. So, Jim, tell us about yourself and then let’s jump into this fabulous book.
Jim: Well, Lisa, I spent 35 years in the investment world and I was on the road continually meeting with clients and that kind of stuff. And so, it was good – it was great for business, my wife of 49 years was understanding, the kids you know grew up but the truth is; the day I turned 70, someone sent me a video, a little clip of me shuffling up to give a speech. And I said, “That’s not me. I’m not that old guy.” I said, “What happened to my energy?” My shoulders were slumped and my back was killing me. It was obvious, I was in pain. Knees were shot, hips were tight and my right rotator cuff was frozen. I was in awful shape. The truth is, I got lucky, whatever you want to call it. I had a great career, but it darn near killed me so to speak. I didn’t have time to exercise. And the day I turned 70, I looked in the mirror and I said, “If I feel like this now, how am I going to feel in five years or ten years or whatever?” and that’s what got me started doing this fitness thing. Jim, are you certified? Yeah. Certified couch potato. That’s what I was.
Lisa: Well that’s just so interesting to me because I received the book, before I read it I assumed that you had been in the fitness industry your whole life and you know you were like the Jack LaLanne type and for the young people listening; Jack LaLanne google him you YouTube him. I grew up, my mother was really into Jack LaLanne and she used to actually.
Jim: Oh he was the best.
Lisa: Wasn’t he and we used to go to this Jack LaLanne Spa. He’s wonderful. So, then okay, because there is so much great information, this must have taken a long time because you did your research. Let me tell you, I have been in the fitness and health world for years and your advice is spot on.
Jim: Lisa, I think understand this, anybody who is in the investment world, you know managing money and that kind of stuff; loves research. If you don’t you shouldn’t be in the business because most of what we do is pretty non-glamorous. It is just reading and talking to smart people and that kind of stuff. And so, I love research, always have loved reading books and that kind of stuff so I didn’t – I’m not an expert. I don’t claim – I don’t have an advanced degree in kinesiology. I just started reading. I went to the best book store in America called Powell P-O-W-E-L-L, Powell Books in Portland Oregon. And there I squatted down for about three days. They must have had 600-800 books, used books and I bought probably 20 or 30 of them. And I went home and devoured them and said I want to learn all I can because I’m a novice about this, before I go into it.
And what I developed was some – I don’t want to call them rules, but kind of principles that I developed based on my own experience and what I have learned. And that is kind of what has helped me get through this thing. And all I can say is Lisa, I’m in the best shape of my life. I’m down to 154 pounds. I weighed 205 at one point. I could not do one real push up on the first day I worked out with a trainer. I can do three sets of 50. I don’t do it every day. But it just goes to show you; it’s the key, is just small continuous progress. There is no big giant leaps, particularly if you are 50 or 60 or 70. It’s not possible. It just you got to get started. Do the best you can with what you have got but think about longer term as opposed to I have got to get a quick fix. Or I have got to lose 20 pounds over the next you know three or four months.
When you are young; exercising I think is probably vanity driven. I need to lose forty, I need to lose twenty pounds, I’m getting married next year or something. Or I need to – I want to look good in a bathing suit. When you are 50, or 60; I think it hopefully, is health driven. And so, the by-product of all this exercising and fitness stuff is you do look better and you certainly feel better. But that should not be the driving force. The driving force for me was, I came across a statistic, Lisa, which maybe you have seen and it said if you make it to 70; you are expected to live, statistically out a very large population, you are going to live at least another 15 years, on average. You might get hit by a truck the next day. You might live to be 100. But when I looked in the mirror and I’m telling you I was in terrible shape, I said, “Jim, you can only downhill from here. If you do make it to 85, can you imagine what you are going to look like and feel like, if you look like this now?” I’m an old man at 70 and I said I don’t like that. I said what can I do? So, this was an educational thing for me. It also became a lot of fun.
This is not – never a chore. I mean I said I needed to do this and Lisa, I made it a priority and said I’m going to learn whatever I can about exercising, what to do, what not to do and I’m going work out with the best trainers I can find and read all the medical stuff. I read everything about the science of exercise I could get my hands on. But then I talked to a lot of really, really experienced trainers around the country and so the book is a combination of the science of exercise. And these are the science I’m not so sure. But, some stuff that we should all be aware of along with the practical tips and it’s the practical tips I think that makes the difference between somebody who succeeds at this and doesn’t succeed.
Lisa: Oh, I think so too. And it is such a great guide. In the book you have I love this, How Getting Fit is Different When You Are Older. Number 1: You finally have more time to vote. 2: There is shortage of motivation. 3: It’s about how your body works, not how it looks. And you go on and on and you know I mentioned that earlier and I think it’s so important, you know my father-in-law is 84 and he has gone to a baseball fantasy camp for the last seven years and he is going again this year with my brother-in-law and he plays with guys half his age for a week. And he rides his bike and it is so important. He is 84. Now Jim I have to ask. How old are you now?
Jim: Well I will be if I make it another week or so, I will be 77 on October 20.
Lisa: Alright. Oh, you’re going to make it.
Jim: I’m in the best shape of my life. That’s all I can say.
Lisa: See, that’s so exciting.
Jim: Well, your father-in-law is the inspiration. I mean that’s wow. That’s an amazing. I love stuff like this.
Lisa: Yeah, but see he’s always been active. Like he was athletic growing up.
Jim: and I wasn’t. I was a couch potato.
Lisa: Yeah, and that’s see the message I think is so important Jim, is the fact that you were a couch potato and now you are not. Because there are so many people like oh, but I was never into sports, I was never athletic and this and that. I was like the least athletic person ever. I didn’t start doing anything until late high school, I realized I was good at swimming and then I got into fitness and health at that point. But it is never too late to start and you know your book is perfect.
Jim: And that’s the message. It is never too late to start.
Lisa: Yeah, because it takes you through everything that you want to go through. I mean I’m going to read some of this table of contents. I mean you have got how to succeed at fitness, functional fitness, five facets of functional fitness, flexible step by step fitness program, there’s great stuff. Let’s talk about functional fitness. For people who don’t know. What does that mean?
Jim: Well functional fitness is such a simple thing. It just means being physically able to handle all your normal day to day activities without aches and pains. It is just being able to move through your normal daily life and that when you are 20 or 30 or 40; you kind of chuckle. But when you get to 60 or 70; you realize, I have got to put away this bag of groceries and I’m having a hard time reaching up on a shelf. Or I just dropped something on the floor, I can’t even bend down to pick it up. So, all this. I have a grandchild, I would like to be able to hold in my arms. It is hard to do that. So, it is just real, simple. It has nothing to do with the old Arnold Schwarzenegger. It has nothing to do with the old body building culture. This is more just able being able to function day by day with minimal or no aches and pains. Someone who says Jim, gosh you look great, you’re trim. Yeah, but the main thing is my aches and pains are gone. No back pain. What’s that worth? Money could never replace that. Not in my book.
Lisa: Yeah. No, you are so right. My mother used to always say health is everything because she had a lot of health problems and so she knew. Getting back into the – you have five facets of functional fitness. Core stability and strength, flexibility, balance, muscular strength and cardiovascular endurance and what is so great in the book, is you give ways for us to do all of these things.
Jim: Well, and I think you can do all five, I call them dimensions, in one hour a day, five or six days a week. And Lisa, someone says gee, I don’t have that kind of time. We are talking about 4% of a 24-hour day. Now if you are raising a family and you are building a career; it can be hard to squeeze this in. But, when you reach my age, let’s say you are 60, 65 years of age; let’s make priority. Let’s make exercise a priority. And that is what I did. That was the number one thing I did. I said, this is my priority is to be as healthy as I can as long as I can. And I picture this Lisa as fighting off old age. And in the morning, when I wake up; the first thing I do, my wife rolls her eyes. I get out of bed and I do about a minute or two of shadow boxing. And she says, what are you doing? I said, sweetie; I’m fighting off old age. I said, someday this sucker is gonna win, but it aint going to be today. And then I smile it just makes my day. It just means, just move. It doesn’t matter what you do.
Lisa: You know, I wanted to mention you have a great smile and you do look incredible. In the book, you have five basic exercises everyone should do. You have got the plank, the squat, the lat pull down, the lunge and the push up.
Jim: And I bet you do all five of those.
Lisa: Yes, I do. Talk to us about – except for the lunge right now because of my knee but let’s talk about these. Because what’s nice is none of these, need equipment except if you want to do it on a bench with the plank or if you want to us a ball on the squat, except for the lat pull down. But the other ones you can do without equipment. I’m a big fan of body weight exercises so that is where there are no excuses.
Jim: Well, that’s funny, we are on the same wavelength. I’m the same way. I walk into a gym and there’s a big line of machines and you know who put the machines in there? The folks that sell the machines. Oh, I didn’t realize that. Sure, they design the gym and nobody uses half of them. And if they did; it’s a mistake. Because it can lead to repetitive stress and so I’m a big believer in dumb bells, love the TRX, there is a lot of body weight stuff. So, my – the one that turned my life around was the plank.
And I didn’t know what core meant to be honest with you. And I thought core referred to your six pack. And the more I read I said wow, no the core is comes from your lower part of your body that’s your thighs up through your chest, front and back. And so, if your core is weak, and that was my problem, I had a weak core; you have aches and pains. It’s that simple. And so, I would guess, for the first year or so, maybe two, a third of my workouts with core, so plank – and it is only takes Lisa as you know, it only take ten minutes of core work and more than that just diminishing returns. If you can just do core work three days a week for ten minutes, that’s all it takes. You will be surprised as time goes by, how much stronger your core is. And so all of the sudden; my core – I’ll compete with somebody who is 30 years old in my core. Not my upper body strength; but in the core. That’s because I have worked on it so long.
Lisa: Yeah, it’s true and that’s going to enable you to do the other things that you want to do.
Jim: Yeah, exactly, a weak core, you are not going to be able to do any of the other stuff. You can’t do strength training or anything else. Then of course, this flexibility; and the older you get, the tighter you get and so when I started out Lisa, what I did was for the first three or four months; I simply did walking and stretching. And I can remember it like it was yesterday, on day one Lisa, I walked maybe five minutes. That’s all I could do. I was hurting. And the next day, maybe I walked three minutes. And then the next day ten. But over about a month or so; this became a habit and one of the keys of sticking with an exercise program is making it into a habit.
If you try and rely upon willpower or discipline or say I’m only going to work out when I feel good. Me, I work-out if I feel like crap, pardon my French. And I have never once, not once in seven years have I left the gym that I didn’t feel better than when I started out. Say well, I’ll just do twenty minutes today. Twenty minutes go by, well maybe I’ll do another five minutes, what the heck. Then all of the sudden, it’s another ten minutes. It is just amazing how your body reacts when you move and so I did it with walking and stretching and then after about three or four months; I said gosh I feel so much better. What’s the next step?
And so, I got into some strength training. And that to me, doesn’t equate to Arnold Schwarzenegger lifting you know, trying to bench press three or four hundred pounds. Can you imagine even thinking that way? To me it meant doing stuff like pushups. Okay. I’m a big pushups fan. And I don’t think there is any exercise that is going to be more beneficial to more people than doing a pushup. They say, I hate pushups. Well, there is a reason why you hate them. It’s because you are putting your body in positions that are not comfortable. It’s because you have got imbalances and weaknesses. So, again, I could not do one pushup on my first day with the trainer. And it just took time. And I’m not saying it was easy, but just you know in week three or four I was doing maybe three of them and over time I got to about twenty-five. And then I started progressing and adding difficulty and so. I think a pushup is critical. And the neat thing about this is as you well-know, you can regress. You can do them on your knees at first if you need to.
Lisa: Yeah, exactly. I mean, that’s how I had to do them at first as well and still sometimes.
Jim: Sure, there is nothing wrong with that.
Lisa: Like if I over-swam or did something else. You know what I recently started doing, which I used to do a lot if yoga. That’s another wonderful thing. I mean that is intense.
Jim: My trainer, after about two years of working out with my trainer, said Jim, you need to do yoga. And maybe check out Pilates. So, I do a combination of yoga, Pilates and what I call movement one afternoon a week. No big deal, but yoga I would recommend everyone who is over 50 needs to do some kind of yoga. Tai Chi, yoga, whatever. You and your husband can do it together. It is so much fun. So, I make exercise fun. This for me has never been a chore. I just look for the fun part. The fun for me is working out with my wife, do be honest about it.
Lisa: Oh, that’s good. So, you got her – now was she into it at all before you?
Jim: No, no.
Lisa: Okay, so it’s new to both of you.
Jim: Not at all. And my wife of 49 years whose name is Stanya, S-T-A-N-Y-A. She would be embarrassed if I told you this. She grew up and her parents and her grand mom said it’s not lady like to exercise.
Lisa: Ah, boy.
Jim: So, they would not, literally, they would not let Stanya do any of this stuff. And I mean now of course we have a daughter now who is 33 and she is one of the most athletic kids you have ever seen in your life and was from day one. But it’s just so funny, so her family, you know kind of old-fashioned, traditional said this is not lady-like. They would say horses sweat and women shine. That is what she used to say in the old days.
Lisa: Oh my goodness.
Jim: Oh yeah, it was terrible.
Lisa: Well your daughter must be so thrilled that you are doing this great work.
Jim: Oh, she is thrilled and she is 5 feet tall and from the time she was three or four years old; she could compete against boys in anything. And the boys you know huffed and puffed, oh I’m out of breath and she said come on. Don’t be a sissy. So, she – she would try anything.
Lisa: Oh that is so great.
Jim: Isn’t that neat? She is such an example. I’m so proud of her and just a good young lady and she has kept at this stuff and she loves the gym. She also loves to run, which I don’t do anymore. But she loves it. And she’ll go on 6, 7, 8 mile run and I said, I feel sorry for the poor boy who ends up with you. He better be an athlete.
Lisa: Yeah.
Jim: And she said darn right. I wouldn’t date a boy who is out of shape.
Lisa: Well it is good that she started young, right. But again, the big message, the takeaway is it is never too late to start. You know I want to jump back in the book, because I’m really impressed. So, in part one, you have what everyone over 50 should know. Part two, you have a flexible step by step fitness program and that’s what is so great, because you have the building strength and then eventually you have the advanced to a full body workout. Which is great. Talk to us a little bit about that.
Jim: Well, and the thing I want to stress Lisa, to your audience is that nobody says you have to go through all four steps. So, if all you want to do is walk and stretch; your body is going to thank you, you are going to feel better and you are going to look better over time. I would encourage you to check out doing the other stuff, but you don’t really have to. In my case, I felt so much better from doing walking and stretching, I was just drawn to the next thing and I could have stopped there. There’s a big difference between getting fit and staying fit. It took me Lisa, I don’t know how long it took you, but it took me probably three or four years to actually get fit. And it was hard work. Staying fit is a lot of fun and one of the keys to staying fit, is good nutrition. And so, I would tell you that right now given my body type will I be any stronger in two or three years? I don’t think that’s realistic. If I can just stay where I am as long as I watch what I eat, and I’m careful about it; I’m going to be okay. And so, this eating stuff, I cannot stress too much. You cannot out exercise a bad diet is what it comes down to.
Lisa: Oh, that is so true.
Jim: So, I think people who get into weight lifting, one of the reason people are strength training and resistance training, Lisa one reason that they hesitate is they have an image of “killing themselves” or gee that’s just not me. And it’s not about how much you can lift, it’s not about whatever Lisa, you can do and your husband can do, I’m going to compete. No, you are competing against yourself, not against anybody else. So, when I say I can do 50 pushups, I don’t really care what someone else does. I’m sure that there are people that can do 100, not me because I don’t want to hurt my shoulders.
So, it’s a journey and not a destination. There is no finish line to it. But once you get into it and you see how much better you feel; I just cannot imagine somebody saying okay, that’s it, I’m good enough, I’m going to go back in my old ways. I cannot conceive of that. But again, I was in terrible shape when I started out. So, that’s it. So, I’m just grateful for what live has dealt me so far and my goal is to again is to fight off old age. I have said many times, to my wife Stanya, there are people who are 80 who look 60 and people who are 60 who look 80. I want to be in that first group.
Lisa: Yes, that is true.
Jim: I want to be 80 years young like I think your father-in-law is.
Lisa: Yeah. You look incredible. I’m looking in the book and you have this great, the workout and you say intent in capital letters is a good word to describe the hour I spent working out with Josh Biard in the Four Seasons functional fitness studio. We did the bridge, plank, lunge, pushup, wide grip pull-up, one-legged squat. You got some great triceps going on there. You are doing your pushup on the BOSU ball.
You look great.
Jim: The one I’m the most proud of Lisa, is that Swiss ball doing the plank and that’s not with your ankles, that’s easier. It is your toes on the Swiss ball and your hands on a small rubber ball. And it’s hard. And I have been doing this now for I guess about five years and it’s still hard. But that’s one of the primary core exercises I do and I don’t recommend that you listeners try it. But and I’m probably getting carried away, but it’s – this whole thing has been a fun experience and it’s finding the fun that really kind of keeps you going. I’m always asked about Jim, how do you stay motivated month after month, year after year? And for me, it’s easy. And what I realized Lisa early on, is that motivation follows action and that’s what people get wrong. It’s the action comes before the motivation. Not afterwards. And so, if you work out, doesn’t matter the intensity, you’re gonna get motivated because you work out. That’s the message. That’s been my experience.
Lisa: That makes so much sense. Jim, tell us all the ways we can find this fantastic book of yours.
Jim: Well, I’m a big fan of the independent bookstores, in fact one of my clients in the old days was the National Booksellers’ Association. I’m a big fan of independent bookstores. But, the truth is, we live in a world where dominated by some of the big guys and so I have to say check out your – the best bookstore whether it is Barnes and Noble, independent guys, but at the end of the day, a lot of the book sales in my case are coming from Amazon and Lisa if I can just brag for a second, okay.
This book came out September 12th and would you believe, on Amazon, we are the number one best-selling book in its category. And the category that we wanted be in, by the way and this is played by National Geographic, if you have never done a book anything like this. And they are the ones that got us in the right category. The category is exercise and fitness for aging. This is not a book aimed at 20, 30 or even 40-year olds. What’s interesting is a lot of book sales are coming from people who are buying it for their parents or grandparents. And I hear this every day, Jim I just bought a copy of your book Just Move! for my mother, who is not doing very well, who sits around all day. And I said Mom you gotta do something. Just Move! And so, I love that and that’s what gets me inspired. So, the books doing great and I just urge people to look at it and I’ll tell you one more thing. National Geographic would never have done this unless it was sourced, so they would not accept any opinion, any fact without saying okay Jim, that’s great, experts say this or that. What experts? So, we had to source every single sentence, every single paragraph.
Lisa: Jim, this has been such thrill. I’m so glad you came on the program. Again, the book is Just Move! A New Approach to Fitness After 50. Give us your website.
Jim: And the website which I am very proud of is www.justmoveforlife.com . Lisa, thank you so much and I really felt so compatible with you because of your own experiences and I hope your knee gets better.
Lisa: Yeah, me too. But it will. I just have bursitis. I know, I really miss – I haven’t been able to do as much and it has been really hard. But I know I will get back to it.
Jim: Thanks Lisa. Thank you so much.
This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to www.vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs. - Length (mins) 28:21
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
If you've fallen out of your routine or are new to exercise, having a little time to yourself can get you on the right track to health and fitness.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft007.mp3
- Featured Speaker Chris & Heidi Powell
- Book Title Extreme Transformation: Lifelong Weight Loss in 21 Days
- Guest Website TRANSFORM with Chris + Heidi
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/TheTransformApp
- Guest Twitter Account @TheTransformApp
-
Guest Bio
Chris Powell is the trainer and transformation specialist from ABC’s highly rated documentary style series Extreme Weight Loss. With an unyielding dedication to helping others, Chris traveled the country using his innovative techniques, education and expertise to guide extremely overweight individuals as they shed hundreds of pounds over the course of a year. Season 5 premiered to high ratings on May 26, 2015. In addition, their special spin-off series entitled Extreme Weight Loss: Love Can’t Weight, premiered last June, where Chris and his wife Heidi helped transform real-life couples in the months leading up to their weddings. Currently, EWL is in syndication, airing all seasons on TLC and OWN.
Adding best-selling author to his list of accolades, Chris has written two books that have soared to the top of the New York Times Best Seller list. He and his wife Heidi just released their newest book entitled, Extreme Transformation: Lifelong Weight Loss in 21 Days, published by Hachette, provides a comprehensive blueprint for changing your body—and life—in just 21 days. His first book Choose to Lose, was released by Hyperion in December 2011 and provides motivation, nutrition, exercise, tips, and tricks to help anyone lose those last twenty pounds. His second book, Choose More Lose More, For Life, hit stands last May and offers readers four different carb cycles, and twenty workouts called Nine-Minute Missions that pack maximum results into minimum time.
Chris holds a degree in Exercise Science, with concentrations in biomechanics and physiology and the training accreditation: The Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS). He has written numerous articles for publication, and is a regular contributor to Good Morning America and The Doctor Oz Show. Additionally, Chris frequently appears as a fitness expert for nationally syndicated shows including The View, Live with Kelly, and 20/20.
“Behind every great man, there is a great woman,” and Heidi Powell, wife of transformation specialist Chris Powell, is no exception. Empowering thousands across the globe, Heidi works side by side with Chris to carry out their vision of transforming lives from the inside out. A co-host of Extreme Weight Loss, Heidi has been the matriarch and tour de force for the often-struggling participants, serving as their daily fitness coach, voice of reason and biggest cheerleader. Season 5 premiered to high ratings on May 26, 2015. In addition their special spin-off series entitled Extreme Weight Loss: Love Can’t Weight, premiered on June 23rd, where she and Chris helped transform real-life couples in the months leading up to their weddings. Currently, EWL is in syndication, airing all seasons on TLC and OWN.
Adding best-selling author to her list of accolades, she coauthored Chris’ second book, Choose More Lose More, for Life, which immediately soared to the top of the New York Times Best Seller list. The book offers readers four different carb cycles, and twenty new workouts called Nine-Minute Missions that pack maximum results into minimum time. Additionally, she and Chris just released their newest book entitled, Extreme Transformation: Lifelong Weight Loss in 21 Days, published by Hachette, that provides a comprehensive blueprint for changing your body—and life—in just 21 days.
In 2013, Heidi welcomed America into her home on the ABC.com web series Meet the Powell Pack. Each episode followed the Powells as they managed hectic schedules, weeks away from home and the difficult balance between work and family life.
Heidi writes a very successful blog, where her daily posts include workout tips, recipes, as well as advice on parenting, marriage and how to balance it all. This past year, Heidi became a NPC bikini competitor in the body-building world, after experiencing a transformation of her own. Training for these competitions has ignited a new passion within Heidi to empower women and teach them that you don’t have to starve yourself to achieve the body you want.
While simultaneously filming and coaching private clients and participants from Extreme Weight Loss, Heidi travels the country with Chris for speaking engagements and television appearances on such shows as Good Morning America and The Dr. Oz Show, sharing vital tips and innovative solutions, transforming lives along the way. She is also part of the Women’s Health Magazine Advisory Board, where she offers expert advice on a regular basis.
Heidi has more than a decade of experience as a personal trainer, and holds both ACE and Crossfit certifications. As a coach, mother of four, and manager of their family business, Heidi brings a whole new perspective and level of compassion to the Powell’s approach, helping others overcome many of life’s challenges to create effective, long-lasting success. When not traveling, she resides in Phoenix with Chris and their four children. -
Transcription
Back to School, Back to ME with Chris and Heidi Powell
This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.
Lisa Davis (Host): It is back to school time and back to school, back to me and I have a funny little story to start this with. I don’t know how funny it is, but so my daughter is on the autism spectrum and I found her this amazing school, but it is like an hour away. So, I’m thinking holy crud, how am I going to maintain my sanity, my workouts, my health, everything, driving back and forth and back and forth. So, what I did is I thought okay, I’m going to have to put all my tapings on one day and then stay in town the rest of the week. So, I thought what can I do while I’m here. Well I can bring my laptop. I can work. But I know what I’ll do, I’m going to find a really kick ass gym and I’m going to work out. So, I walk in this gym, it has the most beautiful pool I have ever seen and so I have been swimming laps and then I took some yoga classes. I have been meaning to go back to yoga. So, now even though it is still two hours a day of driving, and it has to do with bringing her to school; I’m able to actually get a lot done and get some work outs in, so I’m really glad that I came up with this solution because otherwise, I would just be sitting at Whole Foods all day looking at my computer. So, anyway, it’s so nice that we could find and that is a wonderful laugh of the gorgeous Heidi Powell. We have got Chris and Heidi Powell here with us. You know them from ABCs highly rated documentary style series Extreme Weightloss and so much more. So, I wanted to tell that story because I found a creative way to not just give in and be like oh well, I guess I’m just a chauffeur forever but to say no, I’m going to still find time and make this work. So, Chris and Heidi, welcome to Talk Fitness Today.
Chris and Heidi Powell (Guests): Thank you so much Lisa. Great to talk to you again. Yeah it is really great. We love being on here. Thank you for having us.
Lisa: We have so much fun. So, what do you think of my idea?
Chris: Right off the bat, absolutely brilliant.
Heidi: Well, and it is so funny because most people – I would say most moms or dads, when their kids go back to school, it’s like they have time to breath so you are kind of shedding some light on a situation that most people don’t even think about. Yeah, the drive to school, and having to maybe wait for your child, it can be a little bit daunting and you definitely took a situation, you took a lemon and you made lemonade out of it. One hundred percent.
Chris: And you know oh go ahead.
Lisa: Oh no I was just saying it feels really good because I have been wanting – I have been a Pilates gal for like six years. I have to admit, I miss my Pilates. I think they have it but it is like the one time I have to pick her up, I can’t do it, but the yoga has been really good for me and it is nice to try something I haven’t done for a long time.
Chris: Yeah, absolutely and we are all about switching it up. You know it is so funny, but Heidi and I like whenever we are working with people and just kind of getting them into moving and exploring fitness, we always encourage people to kind of “date” every aspect of fitness that they possibly can from Pilates to yoga to kick boxing, to MMA to weigh training to whatever, to cross fit, whatever it might be and “date around” find something that you love and marry it for a little while and then whenever you are ready, it’s one of the few things that you can actually separate from and everyone is going to give you the good nod right there. So, but yeah, just keep “dating around” because there’s an athlete in all of us and we always end up finding something that we really enjoy to do; so, and its fun to kind of switch gears and find passion in something else for a little bit.
Lisa: Oh, it really is. Well Chris what are you passionate about when it comes to going to the gym?
Chris: Well, right now, we have definitely got this Physique bug going on. Now, we of course came up, I came up in sports and performance as my formal education and then I found cross fit way back when in like 2008. Dove in for like seven years and had a blast with it. I did a handful of competitions and all that and in fact the cross fit workout was actually me and Heidi’s first date, believe it or not. How is that?
Heidi: it was so romantic, right?
Chris: It was a test to see if she could hang.
Heidi: And I think I passed.
Chris: Yeah. I told her, I told her I didn’t know I was going to marry her until I saw her dead lift and her form was so perfect I was like, that’s the one, right there. But so, we were into cross fit for a while and then a couple of years ago, we had a couple of the participants on the show who had gone through transformation, they ended up when the show was over, there is something that we always challenge everybody to, because the thing is the journey is never over. So, one our main requirements in transformation is that whenever they hit their end goal as far as their ideal weight; they have to have something else planned. Some other event. Something that they are constantly working towards. So, two of our participants, actually decided when they hit their ideal weight that they wanted to do a Physique competition like a bikini and a men’s Physique competition and then they actually challenged Heidi and I to do the same and you know we are not going to tell anybody to do anything that we are not willing to do ourselves and so we stepped up and this is like two and a half years ago. We got the bug and we are loving it. So, I’m having a blast just doing old school body building. You know it is something that Heidi and I will head out to the gym in the mornings and we will do it together and we really have a lot of fun doing it. So, we are doing that, but then maybe we will go back to cross fit, maybe we will score some endurance training. I did a half Iron Man a while back and so whenever you do a half, there is always that well I wonder what a full would be like. So, who knows what will go in the future but right now the body building things is a lot of fun for us.
Lisa: Oh, that’s great and Heidi, it sounds like you are enjoying it too?
Heidi: Well, I’m listening to Chris and I’m like yeah, it is true, we have been doing it for a couple of years. I actually though, I just like two months ago to kind of be completely honest, I reached my goal, my body building goal which was – I set a goal a couple of years ago to get my Pro Card after the first show that I did. Because I did horribly in my first show, didn’t even place. I was probably closer to last than I was to first. So, I set a goal and really worked so hard. I made it just as much a priority in my life as I did work and kids and like I was just running at 200% every single day. I am not kidding you. Two months ago, I ended up competing and finally winning a national show, getting my Pro Card and I don’t know if you can tell right now, but I’m fighting something in my chest, and like I have a little bit of a cold going on or something and I swear from the moment I got my Pro Card and I just kind of relaxed a little bit, my body just felt – I think I worked a little too hard for too long.
Chris: You have been sick on and off ever since.
Heidi: It’s true. It is something I have been fighting it about two weeks ago, a week and a half ago, this thing really like hit me hard. So, what I have been doing, I did – I am doing body building a couple of times a week, but for the most part; these days Lisa, I am getting ten minutes in at my house of body weight exercise because like you, when school started I feel like my work load or my load just got heavier, maybe it is running the kids around, whatever it is and so for me, getting to the gym should be easier when kids are in school. It is actually a little bit more difficult for me. I think I might be feeling like I’m without things and work and so I have eased down and gone to more at home training. It’s like if I have 12 minutes, I know I can do three rounds of Tabata, which is, I think we might have talked about that in one of the things. It’s the 20 seconds on 10 seconds off for eight rounds. So, I’ll do Tabata burpees and Tabata squats and I just have to know that that’s enough and it really is enough like whatever I have time for, as long as I’m getting out there and I’m doing something; I know I’m doing my body good and more than anything, I’m doing my mind good. I’m not killing myself in the gym for an hour and a half which I wasn’t before either, I was only doing about 45 minutes to an hour. But so, we go through phases. I went through a two-and-a-half-year phase of Physique. Right now, I’m taking a little bit of an at home training break.
Chris: A little maintenance training here.
Heidi: While I’m healing, yes, let’s let this sickness pass. Let’s let our life ease out or ease up a little bit and I think I will say this, before I started the body building thing as well; I actually stayed in great shape just doing what I’m doing now. Sometimes it’s ten minutes at home, sometimes its only five, sometimes its thirty minutes. It’s like whatever I have time for; that’s what I’m going to do and to the moms and dads out there that are finding themselves busier now than when – I think everyone should have this goal, they are like gosh, kids are going to go back to school, I am going to get back in shape and then back to school happens and they find their selves busier than they ever were before because now they have to run lunches to their kids at lunchtime and go show up at this committee at 1 p.m. and it really is. There is so much going on with school and with kids but the fact of the matter is, you can get your health back. You can get your fitness back. But it’s about making time and knowing that whatever time you have; it’s enough and we can maximize it with certain types of exercise.
Lisa: Oh, I think so too. And you know what’s funny, with the yoga, like my husband does yoga every day. He has been telling me for years, Hon, you got to get back to yoga, it will be really good for your mind because you know having a child on the spectrum is very stressful and so he is more centered than I am and I need to do this. So, just even taking a few classes, now at home, when I have ten minutes, I’ll be like oh yeah, I can do that little routine I did in class. So, even if you can’t get back to the class, you don’t want to throw in the whole towel, whereas I could have just put on something online and just did some yoga, but for me I needed to have like the on-hands in the class kind of thing to sort of get my engine revved up to be like whoo-hoo. Let’s do some yoga. Speaking of getting revved up, I want to talk about your Transform with Chris and Heidi, Start Your Journey. This is a transform – you have an app and I want to hear all about it because it is so nice when you can be guided by experienced wonderful people like yourselves. So, Chris, jump in and tell us about this.
Chris: Yeah, my gosh, so we – for everyone who is listening who actually watched our show; it was amazing and we were blessed to have the opportunity to be able to train these people, these amazing 15-19 people a year through a yearlong journey of transformation, but the only thing that was really painful for Heidi and myself is that when the show starts off with these individuals writing us a letter and asking for help and when it’s aired in 148 countries around the world; you can imagine the letters that came pouring in from the most lovely people around the world asking for help. And we could only pick 15-19 of them and that hurt. Because like who are we to choose who gets to transform and who doesn’t and it was incredible working with our people for five years but we promised ourselves after season one we said as soon as we can, we need to create a platform so that we are not just working with 15-19 people; we are working with 15 million people because there are millions- tens of millions of people out there that really need this, that genuinely want this. So, two years ago when ABC ended up selling the show into syndication to TLC, the Oprah Whinfrey Network and everything like that we said okay, we have the time now; let’s build a team.
So, we built this incredible development team. We spent two years in production and we shot over a thousand videos. We spent literally two years developing the most robust transformation app ever created and it is – it will take everyone through that journey of transformation from beginning to end, step by step, day by day. There is a video where we engage you every single day that you are working out with us and we are talking you through the workout. We are having fun. There is a community – it is so cool because when you onboard, it is the process that we used exactly with all of our people on the show. So, when you onboard, it is going to take all of your biometrics and then it’s going to create a whole custom nutrition program specifically for you. We have got over 350 recipes there in the app as well from quick to grab and go menus to full gourmet menus.
And with all of them though, it’s like when, say Lisa, when you log in and when you enter your biometrics; it will scale all of those 350 recipes specifically to your goal. If I log in, it can scale them up to my goal. And so, your meals will be very different from mine and as you are going through the process, because documentation is so important in the journey of transformation. For a lot of reasons, for bragging rights, for trouble shooting, for all kinds of different things. But the app recognizes that you are not getting results as fast as you want it will automatically adjust your portions and adjust your plan to keep you going. So, there are no more plateaus anymore. So, it will take you all the way to your goal.
So, so much thought has gone into this, that’s why I mean it was two years in the making but and a team of about 35 of us to make this thing happen. But we just launched it a few months ago and the best part about it now is that we have got tens of thousands of people now following this app and we are. Let’s see we launched it early April and the testimonials and the images that are coming through now of people who have been doing this for just four months – it is mind blowing. I mean it is the coolest thing in the world because these people like that we have never even met before but we’re connecting with them every single day. They are sending us pictures and they have lost 50 pounds, 65 pounds, they have lost 5% body fat and they are shredded now. I mean it’s just – it’s the coolest thing for us to be able to see that so and we developed transformation not just weight loss transformation but women’s Physique transformation, men’s Physique, cross training transformation because everyone’s goals are different.
So, we just pulled from our resources and for our Physique and cross training, we actually teamed up with our coaches to offer those different programs. So, we teamed up with Pro Physique who they put more people on stage at the Olympia than anybody else. They helped create all of our Physique programs. And then Brute Strength who has put more athletes in the cross fit games than anybody; we teamed up with them for cross training. And so, it has been so much fun because offering transformation to the masses and really guiding people through with integrity.
Lisa: Yeah, see that’s it and you guys have such integrity. Now let’s say somebody is 350 pounds and because I know you have worked with people who are overweight; how does it work in terms of the workouts or someone like me who I’d like to maybe lose 10 pounds and have a little more muscle mass. So, it is going to be a totally different situation obviously, so talk to us about that.
Chris: There is no one size fits all approach.
Heidi: But one of the best things about the way that we train is every single workout we do is completely 100% scalable for anyone from beginner like someone that is maybe four or five hundred pounds to an elite athlete. People don’t – I don’t think that they understand how every move really can be modified even something as intimidating, Lisa as a burpee for example.
Lisa: Oh, that’s right. Yeah, we talked about that. Right, yes, because I’m afraid.
Heidi: We told you our piece on the show the very first workout we do with them is that seven minutes of burpees and they feel so like we talked about, they feel so empowered that they are able to do a move that even the most elite athletes can do and granted they are doing it at a fraction of the pace and even a modified version but it gives them something to feel proud of and something to work toward and work forward to. So, now I will say this too, while we have all of the workouts that are completely scalable, no matter if you are 150 pounds or you are 550 pounds. They really are completely scalable and it is like if you have a knee issue, the app will show you a modification so you can do a move that won’t affect your knee, etc.
But weight loss doesn’t necessarily happen with the squats, the burpees, the pushups, the pull ups. That’s not where weight loss happens. Weight loss happens number one in the kitchen. But how we accelerate the rate at which we burn fat is just by moving with walking, or running or elliptical, maybe its bike, maybe a Zumba class, whatever it is, just – it’s a little bit boring, but just get up and start walking. That is the hands down the very first thing aside from the seven minutes of burpees to show people how powerful they are. But that’s what we have them start doing every single day. Just get up and for some individuals, it is just walks from your house to that light pole and back and that’s enough for them to just get them moving, get their bodies moving, do something that they haven’t done in a really long time. And then as they become fitter and they start to drop a little bit of weight; they are able to go from your house to the next light pole and back and then your house down the entire street and back and then around the block and then before they know it, they are picking up the pace and they might be doing a slight jog for a little bit of it. And I’m not kidding, that is how we have gotten people that are completely sedentary to do marathons within six months of meeting us. Full marathons where they run.
Chris: Yup but for anybody that is looking to complete one of our workouts; we’ll put it this way, there are over 450 exercises in the app alone and each exercise there is a full video, we are explaining it and there’s also text tool description for every single one of those movements, there is an alternate or modifier. So, there is nothing. There is no workout that people cannot complete, no matter what your situation.
Heidi: And then I want to say this too because we had one woman in particular, she was part of our beta testing. So, she started the app, the actual app before it was even released to the general public and she was about 68 years old. She had been doing Weight Watchers for 32 years, I believe, 32 years and she had been stuck at whatever weight she was at, she was completely stuck at. She still had about 35 pounds to lose. Started the app, did not even do the exercise component, just followed the nutrition component, dropped all of her weight within how many months did Barb lose her weight in?
Chris: Well, it was about four months. Four months to lose 35 pounds.
Heidi: Four month, the weight she couldn’t lose in 32 years she had lost not even doing any of the exercises, just following the nutrition plan. That goes to show you how important nutrition is in the transformation equation.
Lisa: Wow, yeah, isn’t it huge? And so, you mentioned that you have the recipes, right and so that helps people. That’s huge.
Heidi: Absolutely. Absolutely. Did you tell her about the fast food locator?
Chris: No, I didn’t mention that part. Go ahead.
Heidi: See this is probably right thing because I am not.
Chris: Well, let’s get real.
Heidi: Well, I am not mom. Most of us are. We are so busy. We are out and about. We planned on being home at 3 o’clock but something came up and it’s 7:30 at night and we are still not home. So, we never had a chance to go grab healthy food. Chances are in those situations; the average person is just going to stop by the nearest drive through because we need something. So, we actually took that excuse out of the equation and we have a not only a fast food locator, but a guide. So, we will actually guide you to the nearest fast food restaurant around you, click on it and say you want to go to Arby’s or Arby’s is around you. Click on Arby’s, we actually give you a list of approved items that you can eat at Arby’s. We teach you how to build a high carb meal and a low carb meal at the most popular fast food chains.
Lisa: Oh wow, I didn’t think it could be done, like I’m stunned.
Chris: And a lot of people, especially like other trainers and nutritionists are like why would you do that? And we are like guys, we have been doing this for 20 years, let’s get real. We have been making meal plans and so have you for how long and 9 out of 10 people take the meal plan and go thanks so much and then they drive to Chick Fil A. So, you know what I would rather do is let’s get real with them because the thing is, a lot of your fast food restaurants; they are opening up their eyes to the fact that people are wanting healthier food and they are offering healthier options and even if they are not; we can manipulate the foods that they do offer and we can make them healthier options and we can make sure they fit into our macros and they can get us where we want to go. And so, we said, you know what, if you can’t beat em, join em and then and we can totally take this and we can manipulate it to get you where you want to go. So, let’s create a whole fast food menu and a locator so when you are on the go and you are like oh shoot I have to stop at MacDonald’s, okay where’s the closest MacDonald’s. Just hit the locator, it’s going to pull up the closest one to you and it’s going to tell you what to eat when you are there so you can still stay on track. Because now you are hitting the drive through, it doesn’t mean you are off plan anymore. It doesn’t mean just throw your arms up, you give up. No, you can go to MacDonald’s, and you can stay right on track and your one meal closer to your goal.
Lisa: Wow, see I’m totally shocked, but you’re right, I mean we have to live in the real world, right and it kind of reminds me of something I learned when I got my Master’s in Public Health. There is something called harm reduction and it’s sort of like looking at what you’re doing, right like we don’t want people to eat fast food but they are going to, so let’s make it less harmful, right so it’s like engaging in behaviors that people are going to do that you are not necessarily thrilled with or that might lead to danger so like with hep C, people let’s make sure people have access to condoms or because otherwise you are going to spread disease, so it’s like a public health thing. And that is immediately what I thought of. And I never thought of that with the fast food.
Chris: Now, ultimately would we like people to not eat so much fast food? Absolutely, if we can pull them off of that and getting them eating real whole natural foods, guess what, you are just going to be that much happier and healthier. And so, but the thing is, I mean, we’re at point A, in order to get people to point B, you don’t make a quantum leap. You just take them to B and then to C and then to D. It’s baby steps. So, ease them into this lifestyle, show everybody that transformation is amazing. It’s enjoyable. It’s fun. It’s not deprivation and restriction and we can truly make a lifestyle of this and you know what, if you hit step K or L or M and you are like you know what, I’m at my ideal weight, I did it eating fast food, I did it drinking a diet soda here and there, this is totally enjoyable for me, guess what, more power to you because you have come a long way since you were at point A and that’s transformation and we couldn’t be happier for you.
Lisa: Yeah, I think that makes a lot of sense. You know in the last few minutes, I’m curious about some of the workouts. Are these more body weigh exercises that you take people to? Are they HIT exercises, high intensity interval training? What is it? Or is it a combo of a bunch of stuff?
Chris: Great question. It’s all of the above. And so, when I said we took two years to develop this thing and over 1000 videos. It’s because we know that some people want and all they have access to is just body weight exercises so we built a whole library of body weight exercises. But then there are some people out there they want an Iron Gym. They want to focus on Physique transformation, so we have got a whole library of Iron Gym exercises that you are going to do when you go to any commercial big box gym. And then we even have cross training exercises for people who have all functional training equipment like you are going to find at a Cross Fit gym. So, there is a whole library of exercises there. So, we created all of the above depending on whichever transformation that you want to follow.
Heidi: And I will say, we are very involved with our community, very involved so as people give feedback and they tell us what they want, what kind of workouts they want to see; we actually incorporate them into the app. So, we are coming out with the new program within the next few months that I’m really excited about that basically takes body sculpting and brings it home because so many moms don’t just want to lose weight but they want to sculpt their bodies as well. So, we are always listening and always modifying based on what our fans and our supporters and our clients really need.
Chris: Yeah, tell us what you want and we will film it and we will structure it and we will build it into program for you.
Lisa: Oh, you guys could do some yoga.
Chris: Yes you are spot on.
Lisa: I would love that.
Chris: Yoga is phenomenal. I must say that, not to talk about myself here, but one of the greatest experiences of my life, I bought a yoga
Heidi: No it was marrying me. The greatest experience of his life was marrying me and then the second greatest experience was buying a yoga package.
Chris: I did a yoga package for three months and oh my gosh, I have never felt so good physically. My strength went up. My power went up. I mean basically, I started doing yoga and it improved my fitness across the spectrum. It was incredible. I mean huge fans and believers in yoga.
Lisa: Oh, it is. I can’t wait for you guys to come on again. The time goes by too quickly. Chris and Heidi, tell us all the ways we can follow you on social media and how we can get this great transform app.
Heidi: Yes, of course. So, the app you would go to www.thetransformapp.com and on social media it is @thetransformapp and then Chris and I both are it is @realHeidiPowell and @realChrisPowell on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.
Lisa: Wonderful. I love having you guys on the show. I can’t wait to have you back. I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can follow us on social media on Twitter and Snap Chat @TalkFitness2Day. Thanks for listening everyone and stay well.
This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to www.vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs. - Length (mins) 26:19
- Waiver Received Yes
- Host Lisa Davis
Drew Manning expected physical challenges in his "fit-to-fat-to-fit" experiment. What he wasn't prepared for were the mental and emotional struggles he faced.
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File talk_fitness/tft006.mp3
- Featured Speaker Drew Manning
- Organization A&E Fit to Fat to Fit
- Book Title Fit2Fat2Fit: The Unexpected Lessons from Gaining and Losing 75 lbs on Purpose
- Guest Website Fit2Fat2Fit
- Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/fit2fat2fit/
-
Guest Bio
Drew Manning is the NY Times Best Selling Author of the book, Fit2Fat2Fit and is best known for his Fit2Fat2Fit.com experiment that went viral online.
He's been featured on shows like Dr. Oz, Good Morning America, The View and many more.
His experiment has become a hit TV show, called Fit to Fat to Fit, airing on A&E. -
Transcription
The Mental & Emotional Side of Physical Transformation with Drew Manning
This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.
Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you are listening to Talk Fitness Today. if I sound familiar, you have probably heard me on Talk Healthy Today or Naturally Savvy Radio and I am so excited to be doing this show. I think it is so important to talk about fitness, ways to get fit, how to be your best, your strongest, but also how to look at the emotional and mental side of things. So, I’m so glad to be joined again by the wonderful Drew Manning. Drew is a New York Times best-selling author of the book Fit 2 Fat 2 Fit and he had to take quite a toll – or it took a toll on him for his transformation and we are going to talk about the mental and emotional side of things when we are getting fit, making changes in our life and in our diets. Hello there Drew. Welcome back.
Drew Manning (Guest): Lisa, thank you so much for having me again. I appreciate it.
Lisa: Oh Drew, I love having you on my shows. I think you are a fantastic guy. I mean look at you, you are drop dead gorgeous, you are in amazing shape. You are this really cool personal trainer. You are smart. It is all the keto stuff, which if people missed a show, they should go back and check out the show I did recently on keto with Drew on Talk Fitness Today. But seriously, I mean you had it all, right and then you decided, you know what, I’m going to put on like eighty pounds and see what it feels like to be overweight and to deal with the stress and the sadness and the difficulty that comes with it and so for people who aren’t familiar; this is something that you did and that is why you are fit to fat back to fit and so that must have been such a transformation. Talk to us about this experience, especially the mental and emotional side.
Drew: Yeah, so it was very, very humbling doing what I did and I don’t recommend just anybody to do it. But I learned so many valuable lessons and I needed it, though because I couldn’t understand why it was so hard for my clients just to do what I was telling them to do. I was giving them meal plans, I was giving them workouts and they would tell me they were struggling with addictions or cravings and they would give in, like they would be “Oh Drew I had soda, even though you told me not to” or “you know what, you gave me the workouts, but I didn’t get to the gym this week and I just got tired and I just didn’t do it.” And I’m like, “Well why don’t you just do it. It’s not that hard. You just stop eating junk food. You go to the gym, boom, you see results. It is that easy.”
But, I couldn’t understand why it was so hard for so many of my clients just to live this lifestyle. And so, I thought if of ideas of how I could better relate and the idea of getting fat on purpose, I know it sounds crazy, but it made sense in my mind. Like okay, I need to do this and so I decided to do it. And it was crazy and I learned so many valuable lessons, especially on the mental and emotional side because here’s the thing, physically, I knew I was going to get some man boobs and a big butt and a big gut. I knew that was going to happen. What I wasn’t prepared for was how much the journey was going to be a mental and emotional struggle. So, going out in public, I had suffered with self-esteem and low confidence. I wanted to go up to complete strangers and tell them heh, I’m not really overweight, this is just an experiment. Here is my before picture. This isn’t normally what I look like, because I was so self-conscious. I lost my identity and so it was very, very humbling and but the biggest lesson I learned was how much of this transformation was mental and emotional and this is we are going to get into and this is why it is so important.
As a trainer, or someone in the fitness industry, you could give someone the best meal plans, the best workouts, the best trainer you could provide them all the physical tools that they need to be successful when it comes to being healthy. But none of that matters if that person doesn’t understand how to overcome their mental and emotional challenges. It will just be another diet that they do for a little while and they lose weight but then they gain it back. The key to making it a true lifestyle change is on the mental and emotional side and that is what I preach now.
Lisa: Yeah and I think that makes so much sense. So, if you are looking – if you are working with someone and they are really struggling staying with the plan that you gave them, you are like what the heck, it is all written out. Well, you don’t say that anymore obviously, because you have gone through this huge transformation yourself. But it gives you not only empathy, but does it help you approach them in a way, I’m guessing obviously, that they will be more responsive to you, that maybe there is a kinder way of saying or be like dude, I totally see where you are coming from – I don’t know if you say dude but you know what I mean. You know that kind of thing.
Drew: Yeah, exactly. It’s helping to understand what their mental and emotional struggles are because each person is different. Some people eat out of laziness, some people eat junk food because of emotional trauma from an early age, find out what their mental and emotional issues are and help them overcome them, rather than just focus on the physical. Like oh this change will be macros of counting your calories. That stuff helps, it’s a piece of the puzzle, but it is not the most important piece of the puzzle. So, now what I do and how I have changed this as a trainer, is by focusing more on the mental and emotional sides of people’s transformation and so the top three things that I have noticed that help people out with this are 1: Is to help people to be more vocal about their goals. So, talk to their friends, their family to discuss what their goals, what they are trying to achieve because what that does is it makes you accountable by telling people what your goals are, and people are like, “Oh, you’re trying to change your lifestyle, trying to be healthy, okay, I’ll help you out. Like I’ll support you, like I’ll help you meal prep or I’ll go to the gym with you. I’ll be your gym partner.” And you – what it does is it helps you find who your support system is. And sometimes your support system isn’t always the people you think it is going to be, like your friends and family. Sometimes your friends and family are the ones who are sabotaging you, but at least get it out there in the open. Post about it on social media, just get it out there in the open, I know it is scary for some people to stay accountable but people need that accountability no matter who they are and you need to find out who your support system is, whether it’s a friend or whether it is an online community and you’re going to need that no matter who you are when you are trying to make a true lifestyle change.
Lisa: Yeah, that is really true. You know one of the things I saw recently, I forget what magazine it was, but it was showing like pictures of real like big amounts of weight loss, like big numbers, I’m trying to say and the saggy skin, right, you don’t see that and that’s really, really hard for people, right I mean you kind of see like before and after, you see them to be like 300 pounds or 500 pounds and then you are 150 and yet you look all trim and wonderful, but it is like, well wait a second, where did all that skin go and I thought is was so nice when people are like look, this is what it really looks like, and this is really emotionally hard for me and do you know what I’m talking about? Have you experienced that with people and how they deal with that and their body changes, but you are like but I don’t like all this loose skin, I didn’t like the fat, but this isn’t working for me either and I can’t afford to maybe get the surgery that I need to take care of it.
Drew: One hundred percent and the problem with our society is we put so much value on expectations or the outcome of what we are trying to achieve and the reason people are so upset about that or not happy is because they see images all over the media, on social media and magazines, TV, movies, of what they think they are supposed to look like when they are healthy. When in reality, it doesn’t happen that way and so, if you put so much value on the outcome or the expectations of what is supposed to happen, and then you get there and it is not what – it didn’t meet your expectations, they you will disappointed your entire life and so if you can learn to not put value on the outcome or the results, but put value on the habit that you are creating, throughout the process and you put value on the process and don’t worry about the results or the outcome; then you’ll be able to be more grateful and be in the moment with the way things are instead of how they should be. And so, it’s hard for people, I get it, like we all want to look a certain way. I get that, but when we let go of that, and realize that we are the best version of ourselves that we can be with what we have, then you let go of those types of unrealistic expectations sometimes and you will find that your life will be so much more fulfilling if you can place value on the process instead of just outcome.
Lisa: Now when you lost all the weight, when you gained all the weight and lost all the weight, you were able to get right back to where you were. I mean it must have taken some hard – was it like harder work I’m guessing or you might have just felt more tired. Say harder to get up.
Drew: You make it sound like it was so easy. It was not easy.
Lisa: I was like snap, right like overnight.
Drew: Yeah, the next day I had a six pack. No, people think that because they see my photos online and they are like oh yeah for sure it was easy. No, it was a struggle. It was very humbling. So, it was really, really hard. So the way I have kind of talked about this in my book is my entire life I have been on top of this mountain of fitness at the very top and my clients were at the bottom and I was yelling at them from the top like “heh, keep coming, it’s not that hard, just one foot in front of the other, stop falling back down, stop quitting” and then for the first time in my life; here I was at the bottom of the mountain at my heaviest looking up and it was a totally different perspective. It was so humbling that climb up, it was so much harder than what I thought it would be from the top looking down. But it was so valuable for me to learn that and so it was by no means was it easy. It was a very, very hard slow process where I hit plateaus, I gained weight some weeks, even though I was a trainer and I was eating right, and I would have my clients who used to tell me, “you know I’m following the meal plans, I’m following the workouts, but I gained weight this week.” Before, I used to think, well, you must have done something wrong or you are lying to me, but then here I was, the trainer doing everything I was supposed to do and the weight didn’t reflect what I wanted it to. And I was the trainer. So, I was like, okay I need to realize that it is not black and white all the time and even though you are doing everything right, it doesn’t always reflect on the scale.
Lisa: Well, what is your advice to trainers then, in terms of the way to meet people where they are at and to be more in touch with their emotional side and allowing them to express what they are feeling and also if it seems too heavy for them to be able to recognize that and say, you know, you might want to go talk to somebody, like what if somebody shares they had been sexually abused as a child and so they use food as a way to protect them and that is why they are overweight and that’s something that might be too big for someone who isn’t skilled in that area or trained. Does that make sense? Have you ever come across that?
Drew: One hundred percent. And one option for these trainers is to try out for the TV show and do a fit to fat to fit journey, but I know that’s not for everybody and a lot of the trainers end up hating it but they learn so many valuable lessons but the other thing is yeah, like increase the tools you have on your toolbelt. That doesn’t mean you need to become a licensed therapist or anything like that, but just understand the basics, rather than just staying in the fitness industry and focusing on that and only knowing that part of it; you are not going to be able to help people out so, I think just being able to- being open to reading a self-help book and personal progress and overcoming emotional challenges. There is a lot of info out there. There are podcasts out there, there are books out there, go see a therapist yourself just to better equip yourself with how to deal with situations, not that you need to become a therapist or a psychologist or anything like that; but at least you can understand where your clients are coming from and just realize that this for them, for the client is so much more of a mental and emotional journey. It is not just a physical one.
So, if you take a step back and realize that, you don’t need to freak out about the little things that maybe they are not counting their calories or maybe they went over on a certain amount of macros or they are not pushing themselves hard enough in the gym that you perceive. You need to really come down to their level and have more, in my opinion, more valuable talking instead of just doing, working out. So that way they feel understood before they can take action in the gym, in my opinion. So, you can connect with them on a deeper level, even though it is not possible for everybody, where they are like, “look, we have an hour together, I don’t want to spend twenty minutes talking to them, I just want to spend the whole hour working out.” And I get that, but there is so much more to it than just that hour in the gym. So, I think clients would appreciate that more, trying to understand where they are coming from.
Lisa: You know one of the things I love about your show Fit 2 Fat 2 Fit that is on A & E is that there was a client and a trainer that really didn’t get on that well and he ended up quitting working with her and I was like what. Because you know, you are watching a TV show, and you are like well of course you are going to come together. Because they came back together to try to work it out and it just didn’t work. And I am hoping that guy went ahead and made the changes on his own, but he felt like she was pushing him too fast and she might have felt like he wasn’t working hard enough or and how do you mend that or if you can’t mend it, sometimes you just can’t; but then how could a trainer say okay, maybe I am pushing you too hard even though I don’t feel like I am, what works best for you. But then if the person, if the client is like well, I only want to lift five-pound weights for the next three months and you are like – you see what I’m saying? Like where do you find that middle ground?
Drew: Yeah, it’s just, in my opinion, it is just like any other relationship, so it is just like in a marriage for example; you can’t have one person giving so much like 100% of themselves and the other person is only giving 10% to the relationship. So, in the episode if you remember they had a very frank conversation saying okay, here’s your chance to show me that you are ready for this and here’s what you need to do. You need to show up tomorrow at this time and if you are not there, then that says that you are not ready for this and then we need to go our own separate ways. And that is what ended up happening. And so, those frank conversations are important and I think she did give him a lot of chances to understand where he is coming from and at the end of the day, yeah, you do have to be ready and realize that it is going to take hard work. It’s not like you just are going to sit there and expect your trainer to do all the work for you, you have to put in the work as well. And so, just like any other relationship; it has to be 100% on both sides, not 50-50, 100% on both sides and if someone is not giving their 100% then at some point there needs to be a sit down frank conversation with okay, here’s my expectations for you and if you can’t do those things, we need to go our separate ways.
Lisa: Well, you know, speaking of the mental and emotional side, part of it was this guy went to the doctor and he was like basically told all these horrendous things that were going to happen if he didn’t change and so of course it is the trainer is like holy crap, let’s change, let’s do this like I’m here and he wasn’t I think he was in denial and that’s hard when that comes up because for the trainer it is so incredibly frustrating. I mean I wanted to cry. I wanted to shake this guy and be like, what are you doing. You are about to have a heart attack, would you flippin work with this woman. You know, I’m like yelling at the TV. But if people aren’t there, so your show really moves me, then they are not there and sometimes you have to let go and that’s hard.
Drew: Yeah, and it’s hard to see that. Especially if it was someone you love, like a sibling or a spouse or someone you know like a good friend to know that they don’t believe they are worth it to make any changes, even if a doctor is telling them all these bad things. For some people it registers like okay, I need to make a change but some people’s self-worth is so low you can’t create that self-worth for them. They have to believe that they are worth it to make a change. And no matter how much you do, and push them and yell at them or shake them, or try and empathize with them; it has to be their decision at the end of the day. Something at some point, hopefully will trigger it in them, but some people just aren’t ready to make that change yet even though they know it’s better for them, it’s healthier for them. Some people just aren’t ready for change yet and so. But the best thing you can do in my opinion, is just to be the example and not try and push it on them. Just be the example and if when they are ready, you are there to pick them up.
Lisa: Yeah, that is really good. Yeah, because I think there could be overly tough love where you are like you know what, if you don’t do it now then forget it, but if they come back to you and you give them another chance, because this is their life you are talking about. You know, I am curious too about the mental emotional side for people making the transformation and if they have always relied on food for their comfort and they you know, suddenly that’s taken away and even though their bodies are looking better, it is sort of like, okay I’m going to feel better, I’m going to look better, but I don’t know how to cope without this thing I have always relied on. It is sort of like breaking an addiction right and you were very open on your show talking about something that you dealt with. I’ve talked about stuff like that on my show as well and it is hard, but so you let go of something but then you gain so much; but in the moment, you can feel a lot of panic.
Drew: Yeah. For sure. Because that’s part of your identity in a way and you don’t know how to cope with – if that is gone, then what am I going to – like how am I going to move forward without this and so it does take some time. It is a transition, but just I think at the end of the day, just being willing to and being open to working with whether it is new techniques or seeing a counselor or meditation or positive affirmations or breathing. Just being open to these other things that you might – maybe you don’t believe is going to work at first, just being consistent with it and see if it makes any changes and just being open to trying your best to improve and it’s going to take some time. Just being patient with yourself, realizing that you are not – it is not all about perfection, it is about progress and so, but if you stay consistent with it, for the most part, over time, you look back and you like you will see how far you have come, right, with whatever the addiction is or the coping mechanism is that you used to have, you have to learn to rewire your brain which is totally possible. We don’t think we can change but if you look at science, you can rewire your brain with things like meditation and positive affirmations and breathing and different techniques that are out there nowadays. It is called biohacking and it’s really popular nowadays and so people are kind of the mainstream media is kind of getting more into this and so just being open to I think new things that you have never tried before.
Lisa: Yeah, and then you are going to have healthy behaviors to take place of the unhealthy behaviors. And you are going to move in a good direction. What about plateaus? Because that can be frustrating. Like let’s say somebody is making a lot of strides in their transformation and then suddenly it is like nothing is moving. The scale is not moving, they are not feeling any stronger. Their measurements haven’t changed. What advice do you have for that and are there ways to overcome plateaus through mixing up your workouts or trying something new, you know stuff like that?
Drew: Yeah, so I think we all hit plateaus in life and I think it is essential for us because it kind of is a reality check for us like okay I need to change something up. But our definition of plateaus is different and I kind of challenge people to look at plateaus differently. Because people think oh, I haven’t lost weight in a couple of weeks therefore I am hitting a plateau, right, so, I don’t like that mentality because just because you are weight isn’t changing doesn’t mean that you are hitting a plateau. So, that’s why I recommend taking measurements, getting your body fat tested, tracking performance in the gym, timing certain workouts or certain weights that you use and seeing if there is any progress there, because if there is progress in other areas, like your body fat percentage or your measurements or your performance in the gym; that’s not a plateau. Right. But the traditional thought or definition of a plateau for most people in the fitness industry is like oh I’m just not losing weight. So, if you are not losing weight, you are not losing inches or body fat percentage and you are kind of stuck at the same performance; be open to new ideas when it comes to health and fitness. So, if you never tried high intensity interval training, feel free to try that out or if you have never done cross fit or if you have never done Zumba, I don’t know, anything just be open to changing up your routine because your body might need to be challenged in a different way. And then also, look into changing up your nutrition as well. So, for example you never tried the keto diet, maybe it is something for you that you maybe your body will be optimal and feel optimal or veganism or vegetarianism. It doesn’t matter. Like be open to trying new things and its fun if you think about it from scientific perspective like I get to become my own self experiment to find what’s best for my body. Like experiment with your body. See what works best for it. Don’t just stay in the same old routine that you have been doing for years and years and years and eating the same thing over and over and over again. Try something new and be open to it and give it a good 30 or 60 days of consistency before you make a judgement. Right. Don’t just say well I tried veganism for a day and I didn’t like it. You know it’s like you have to give your body time to adjust. Same thing with keto. You can’t just do it for a couple of days and be like I didn’t feel good, like well, of course, you have to give it at least 30 or 60 days of consistency before making a judgment.
Lisa: Yeah, I agree. Now when it comes to people who haven’t worked out in a long time, and are starting their transformation; what are things that they should do first? Because some of the things I worry about not on your show, but on some of the shows, I’m sure people know, they will take someone who is really overweight and hasn’t worked out in years or ever and make them like run on a beach or something and I’m like what are they doing. This is not good. So, what are some sensible starting workouts for people?
Drew: Yeah, so something that I did that worked for me, because if you think about it, my Fit to Fat to Fit journey, I stopped exercising for about 6 months and I wasn’t just going to go right back into the gym and risk injuring myself with the same workouts I was doing before, so what I did first was actually just focus on nutritional changes first and becoming consistent with those, because those are harder for people in my opinion, than going to the gym and so I didn’t exercise. All I did was I walked every day which is doable for everyone just getting started, for the most part and then doing stretching and core. Just preparing my body for working out at some point. So, for 30 days, I just changed up my nutrition, I walked every day and I stretched every day and those three things right there helped prepare my body for actual working out the next month. So, I only worked out for five months on my fat to fit journey, losing 75 pounds in six months and just doing those things initially in the first 30 days, I lost 19 pounds in the first month.
So, that’s what I recommend at first and then once you do start working out, start a very slow with body weight exercises. You don’t need to try and kill yourself right away with heavy weights, initially, in my opinion. Just use your own body as resistance and I think if you have your nutrition down, it is going to be so much easier. You will see so many more results from that anyways that I think that’s a good starting point for most people.
Lisa: You know I still chuckle about your cinnamon toast crunch. You said that was like, I never even had that, isn’t that funny. But I was just watching this thing on Netflix, there’s this new Jerry Seinfeld, I think it is called Before Seinfeld or something Jerry Before Seinfeld and he was talking about growing up in the 60s and how it was so great that they like all the people ate were all these sugary cereals. Well it wasn’t so great, but he was making a joke about it and he said then cookie crisps came along. Come on. They finally like made people realize oh holy crap, we are eating cookies for breakfast and I was just watching that earlier and it made me think of you and that. It’s addictive, right. All that stuff. That’s the bottom line. It’s funny but it is addictive.
Drew: It is. It is so addictive but the problem is, that our society is backwards. We make those foods so much more affordable and convenient and tasty and the marketing is great and I get it. I get why we give in to those foods all the time. It is an uphill battle or you have to make more of an effort to go for the healthier foods just because of the way our society is set up, right and so, I get why people get stuck in that situation with eating those foods all the time because yes, it does become addictive and it signals- or it triggers signals in your brain to crave those foods over and over and over again and then it creates like an emotional response. And there is an emotional attachment to food, you know like a sentimental feeling when you eat cookie crisps or cinnamon toast crunch like oh man I remember this as a kid, this was so life changing and so.
Lisa: Yeah, it does. Sometimes you will bite into something and I will be like, oh my God it totally reminds me of my grandmother such and such or something and then you are like I want more and it is it is not even about being satiated, it’s about memories and emotions and so that’s why when we are training ourselves, if you are a trainer training other people; you have to look at the big picture not just what exercises are best for the biceps and the triceps. I mean you can look at that too, but you have got to take a more holistic view which why I’m such a fan of yours, Drew.
Drew: Well, thank you so much Lisa. I appreciate that.
Lisa: Well Drew, tell us all the ways that we can find you and I definitely want to have you back.
Drew: Yeah for sure. So, my website is www.fit2fat2fit.com , fit number 2, fat number 2 fit and then that’s the name of my book. It’s the name of all my social media handles as well, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram. If you want to follow me and I will try and keep you entertained on social media as much as possible.
Lisa: You’re great. I just, like I said, I’m such a fan. Drew, I want to thank you so much. This has been really, really great. I just am such a big fan of talking about our mental and emotional sides of our lives and really delving into that. So, this has been such a joy for me. I hope you have enjoyed it too. You can check us out on Talk Fitness Today on iTunes and Stitcher and iHeart. And please on iTunes, leave a review, rate and review, it really helps the show and check us out on social media, on Twitter and Snap Chat at Talk Fitness 2day. Thanks for listening and stay well.
This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to www.vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs. - Length (mins) 25:03
- Waiver Received No
- Host Lisa Davis, MPH