Saturday, 8 December 2012

Homemade Protein Bars


Do you find protein bars to be too expensive? Do you find protein bars to taste like dirt? Here is your solution to both of these problems. Shown below is a recipe for how to make homemade protein bars. These homemade protein bars are not only healthy, but less expensive and delicious as well. The ingredients listed will be enough for about 15 great-tasting and cheap protein bars, each containing approximately 300 calories and 30 g of protein.

Ingredients For 15 Homemade Protein Bars:
Protein Powder- about 200 g
Rolled oats- about 200 g
Fat free milk or milk substitute like almond milk or soy milk- 3/4 cup
Peanut butter- 100 g
Honey- 100g
Cocoa Powder- 30 g
Flax Seed- as needed
Directions For Making Homemade Protein Bars:
So what you do is mix all of the ingredients listed above into a big bowl (except the flax seed). You then take the mix and roll them evenly into 15 protein bars. After you separate them into 15 even bars, roll them in flax seed and then set them in the fridge overnight.
One last thing. For the ingredients, use organic ingredients if possible and try to use the purest, most natural form of protein powder…. Enjoy your delicious, healthy, and cheap homemade protein bars! :)
myphenomfitness.com/homemade-protein-bars
Learn how to make delicious, healthy homemade protein bars for a fraction of the price you find in stores and that taste better.

Wednesday, 14 November 2012

The Importance of Squats

There is simply no other exercise, and certainly no machine, that provides the level of central nervous activity, improved balance and coordination, skeletal loading and bone density enhancement, muscular stimulation and growth, connective tissue stress and strength, psychological demand and toughness, and overall systemic conditioning than the correctly performed full squat.

Saturday, 3 November 2012

Inspirational Fitness Quotes


Bodybuilding is much like any other sport. To be successful, you must dedicate yourself 100% to your training, diet and mental approach. 
Arnold Schwarzenegger 


It is health that is real wealth and not pieces of gold and silver. 
Mahatma Gandhi 

The best activities for your health are pumping and humping. 
Arnold Schwarzenegger

Physical fitness is not only one of the most important keys to a healthy body, it is the basis of dynamic and creative intellectual activity. 
John F. Kennedy 

http://www.vigour.co.uk



Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Abs are Made in the Kitchen and not the Gym


Sculpting a body that we a proud of is an arduous although rewarding constant task.
For most, a well defined and flat stomach is the pinnacle of achievement whether you are a man or a woman.  
Whilst there is no substitute for hard work in the gym, it is not everything when we look at our abdominal area.  
I am sure you have all read numerous articles that all include a balanced healthy diet alongside regular exercise.  These time honoured and proven statements will not be disgreed with here, but only endorsed further when we look at the topic at hand.
The adominal area is a magnet for fatty deposits, particarly in men, and no matter how hard you work on it in the gym, this key area will improve only slowly unless an extremly well calculated diet is observed.  Only once all of the offending fat is removed from a careful and complimentary diet to your intensive workout can we then create envious great abs.

Losing Weight With Minimal Effort

The desire to lose unwanted weight or fat is a requirement for most of us during some or most of our lives.

The media will periodically expose the latest celebrity diet that miraculously sheds weight with minimal effort other than drinking a strange concoction, using sports supplements only or devouring baby food.

Many of us lead hectic lives and naturally look for a quick fix to an age long problem.  The solution however, which applies to most bodily issues and function, is the application or regular exercise and a balanced diet.

For most, our personal knowledge and willingness to learn of what we consume and its nutritional value is lacking.

Once certain dietary habits are broken, or at least limited and understood, then effective weight management can be achieved.  
A strong diet would include protein (either from supplements or as grilled chicken or fish) alongside fruit, vegetables and small portions of complex carbohydrates.  As with all fat loss diets, a negative caloric intake is required for the body to burn excess fat.  
Intense work in the gym including abdominal focused exercises such as sit ups and subsequently weighted sit ups will quickly provide excellent results once the work in the kitchen is put into effect.  
Following a simple dietary regime doesnt not mean eating boring or tasteless food, or even denying yourself anything, its means just being more mindful and understanding what you consume and its resulting effect.  
Eat well, train hard and you will have the abs you have always dreamed of showing off.

Monday, 15 October 2012

How to Make the Most of Your Exercise Regime


Constructing an efficient and time managed workout in the most effective way to benefit fully physically but also in a mental capacity.

During the course of a regular exercise regime it is evident that motivation before and during exercise can diminish, resulting in a sub standard performance which subsequently compounds the motivational issue. This problem can occur when exercise lacks either variety, a performance enhancing environment, complimenting/core exercises, poor diet and sufficient recovery. These problems are clearly evident when we consider the influx of gym memberships during the post Christmas period and the significant drop of those early participants after only a few weeks.

In order to combat these issues it is initially important to begin with constantly evolving and achievable targets mixed with a variety of well planned and executed exercises. Constructing a nutritional diet is paramount but should still provide rewards and flexibility to fit in with social and working schedules. It is also important to consume additional supplements to compliment a well balanced diet in order to reduce deficiencies and promote rapid improvements to meet your weight loss, muscle gain, endurance or muscle toning targets. Engaging in regular exercise will predominately require additional protein, among other essential supplements, to promote muscle synthesis and recovery.

Time spent in the gym should be efficient and well planned with an intense workout around 45 mins-1hr being optimal. Those spending more time than required are often leaving unnecessary long gaps between exercises or not performing at an intense level which is not conducive to improvement. This approach not only leads to unsatisfactory results but also leads to future motivational loss and the likelihood of missing a session due to the time requirements being used.

Adhering to the optimal timeframe, a workout session becomes simple to merge into a busy schedule, becomes less likely to miss, and results in more improvement and subsequent enjoyment. At least 1-2 days per week should be allowed (dependant on performance factors) in order for the body to fully recover so following sessions are able to benefit from the maximum energy and muscle capacity available. A mixture or weight based and cardiovascular exercises will assist this process and result in further strength, mobility and oxygen rich muscle tissue to aid recovery.

When aiming to improve your body shape or performance, the most important part is to be able to enjoy every facet and session you participate in. If you discover that motivation or enjoyment is lost, then evaluating the reasons why will enable correcting changes to occur.

http://www.vigour.co.uk/

Friday, 12 October 2012

Use of Dietary Supplements May Raise Cancer Risk


Dietary supplements have little to no effect in preventing cancer and may actually increase cancer risk, according to a review published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute(Martínez ME et al. 2012;104:732-739).

Restricting their review to supplements that have been researched in sufficiently powered clinical trials or large observational studies, the authors focused on antioxidants, folate and folic acid, vitamin D and calcium.

Despite early evidence suggesting an anticancer benefit from antioxidants, clinical studies have not borne out that promise, the authors said. For example, b-carotene does not prevent recurrence of non-melanoma skin cancer (Greenberg ER et al. N Engl J Med 1990;323:789-795); b-carotene and vitamin A do not protect against lung cancer (Omenn GS et al. N Engl J Med1996;334:1150-1155); vitamins C and E do not protect against total cancer incidence (Gaziano JM et al. JAMA 2009;301:52-62); and a-tocopherol, vitamin C, and b-carotene do not protect against total cancer or cancer mortality (Lin J et al. J Natl Cancer Inst 2009;101:14-23).

However, several trials have shown evidence of an increased cancer risk from antioxidants, the review authors, led by María Elena Martínez, PhD, at the University of California, San Diego, reported. One such study, conducted in a population at high risk for lung cancer, found a 39% increase in lung cancer incidence in the b-carotene arm compared with the placebo arm (Omenn GS et al. N Engl J Med 1996;334:1150-1155).

Similarly, the authors did not find evidence that folic acid and folate protect against cancer, whereas they did note evidence of increased risk for cancer from long-term folic acid supplementation. They found insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about vitamin D, and “diverse results” regarding calcium.

Many expert groups have reached a “general consensus” that “nutritional supplements have little to no benefit in preventing cancer,” the authors wrote.

Even so, much of the public continues to use dietary supplements, a fact that the authors attribute in large part to the marketing influence of supplement manufacturers. The authors call for “efforts by scientists and government officials to encourage the public to make prudent decisions based on sound evidence with respect to the use of dietary supplements for cancer prevention.”

Article source - gastroendonews.com


Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Olympic legacy sees more than five million British adults take up sports this summer


A summer of sport has already resulted in a positive legacy with over five million more GB adults inspired to take up exercise, of which almost a fifth (907,000) of these people are aged 45 or over, according to a study commissioned by Tissue Regenix Group.

The study follows suggestions by Lord Coe,  chairman of the London 2012 organising committee, that the current generation of parents are likely to be the first to be fitter than their children.  But Tissue Regenix is warning the quest to remain healthy comes with its own risks with a fifth of those who have taken up sport over the summer having already suffered an injury – a potentially unwanted legacy of the Olympics.

Likewise, over the last 12 months almost one in ten of GB adults have suffered an injury as a direct result of taking part in sport and other activity and of these, 1.15 million are people aged 45 or over.  According to the NHS, the rise in middle-aged sportsmen and women is likely to result in a 20 per cent increase in knee replacement surgery within ten years, with around 7,000 knee replacements currently undertaken. 

But Tissue Regenix says that a serious injury is not the end of the sporting career for many of these so-called MASTERS (‘Middle Aged Sports, Training & Exercise Re-Starters’).
Antony Odell, Managing Director, Tissue Regenix said: “Whilst it’s fantastic that so many people have been inspired to take up sport this summer, inevitably some will injure themselves, but this need not sound the end of their sporting renaissance.  Medical advances are coming such that damaged knees and shoulders can be easily repaired or replaced without the need for repetitive invasive surgery.”


The top five sports/activities that British adults have been inspired to take up this summer are:
RankSport/activityNumber of GB adults taking up each sportRankSport/activityNumber of ‘MASTERS’ taking up each sport
1Walking1.9 million1Walking537,000
2Swimming1.7 million2Swimming206,000
3Running1.6 million3Cycling171,000
4Football1.4 million4Gym159,000
5Gym1.2 million5Football102,000
Unsurprisingly, those adults who have taken up running over this summer are the most likely to have suffered an injury, followed by football and swimming.  But “budding Bradleys” should also beware as 7 per cent of those who have taken up cycling over the summer have suffered an injury, according to Tissue Regenix.

*News Source Femalefirst.co.uk