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Before Rapid Results Fitness Boot Camp

Before Boot Camp

After only 8 Weeks

Only 8 Weeks and Down 16lbs.

Congratulations to Michelle Gumm! 12 weeks ago she joined our Rapid Results Boot Camp. She was that time at her heaviest weight ever and um…soft and doughy(her words not mine!). She told me she had  8 weeks to get  ready to walk down the aisle.

I explained what we would  need to do to get her there picture ready(wedding photos last forever!).  I told her a food journal would be the first step to cleaning up her eating habits and getting traction. When it came to exercise long steady-state cardio wasn’t the way to go. We’d use resistance and short-burst cardio in boot camp to get her visible results quickly.

Michelle  delivered on her promise to go all out and throw herself into the program. From Day 1 she wrote down all her food  and started to cut out junk and unsupportive diet habits. Michelle knew that the diet was key and really poured her efforts into eating lean and clean.

Just as important she never, never, never missed  a Boot Camp session.  This special-ed teacher has had perfect attendance…and it shows!

After 2 weeks she’d dropped 4 pounds! At 5 weeks she was down 10 pounds and 11 inches. We did this video at 5 weeks.  If you’ve seen it before watch it gain. She made the “gym membership that I never use”  and  “personal training with no nutrition so no results”  mistake so many people make. She also talks about keeping her food journal from the very beginning.

After we shot this video she lost another 6 pounds  and was 135 before she left for Florida. Total dropped  in 8 weeks was 16 pounds and went from an size 8 to a 4!

Now she’s in Florida putting the final touches on her July 4th Wedding. She’s in great shape and looks fantastic even after moving  half way across the country and planning a wedding!

Thanks to her  two of her fellow teachers have joined the Hurst-Colleyville camp and we’re expecting great results from them too!

Michelle showed what a person with a tight deadline,  a lot of desire and the right program can accomplish in a short amount of time.

So from Me, Kris, The Body Firm and your fellow Boot Campers Congratulations Michelle!

Have a Great Wedding Day!

Dedicated to Your Success,

Dave

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Everything you do either moves you closer to or further away from your goals.

-Alwyn Cosgrove

massage

A massage is a great, relaxing way to unwind, making most people think of it as a leisure activity, but massages might actually be a beneficial addition to your fitness routine.

Post- exercise soreness can be anywhere from uncomfortable to debilitating, and for a long time, professionals advised ice, heat, and anti-inflammatory meds to curb some of the pain, and to just suffer through the rest.  Now, massage is emerging as the most effective way to relieve muscle soreness.

Muscle become sore when you work out because overloading them causes the little, tiny fibers to tear apart, essentially injuring them.  The exact cause of pain is still up for debate: traditional thinking is that the muscle tears cause a release of lactic acid which causes the burning sensation, but new research is finding that it may be the tears themselves that are the source of the pain.  Either way, it hurts.

A British study showed that massaging the used muscles immediately after a workout decreased sorness and increased jumping ability at 48 and 72 hours of recovery.

So not only do massages feel incredible after an especially tiring workout, they may help you recover faster and decrease soreness, as well.  Sounds like a win, win to me!

In Good Health,

Kelly Turner

Kelly Turner is a Seattle area ACE Certified Personal Trainer, health and fitness writer and editor of the fitness website, PhysiqueSpeak.com. To contact Kelly with any questions, you can email her at kellycturner@hotmail.com.

Misc.May 5-2010 069

Week 12

Ryan Mordecai 003 before

Week 1

Week 12

Week 12

Ryan Mordecai 001 before

Week 1

Ryan Mordecai came to me with a goal of losing 40 pounds by the end of the summer getting rid of the gut and getting his life back. Well I think from these photos the belly  is history.

Over the last 10 years with a high pressure job in banking, a desk job and taking clients to lunch every day  had taken a toll on his body, mind and most of all his confidence. The weight gain made him physically tired and sluggish all the time. The fatigue and struggle really started to take it’s toll on his self-confidence. Hitting a high weight of 280lbs. Ryan got out of breath walking from his car to the house at night. His blood pressure was spiking every day and sleeping through the night was a distant memory. Ryan put it to me “I just don’t feel good. I don’t feel like myself. This isn’t who I am.”.

Ryan decided to join my Accelerator Program  and made some big moves with his eating from day 1. Those nutrition changes and his exercise consistency paid off big and fast. He revealed how he lost 23lbs in 8 weeks with these 3 tips in this blog post. Losing that 23 pounds and 8 inches in his waist the first 8 weeks gave him a lot of momentum and confidence in the program and his own potential.

Now after 12 weeks on the Accelerator Program he’s down a total of 35 pound and has lost 22 inches overall. He’s working with his trainer Heath 3 times a week and tightening his diet down.  Ryan through his hard work and dedication, hit the Body Transformation Trifecta- He looks better in the mirror and in his clothes, he feels better and has the energy of a teenager , and his health is better he’s sleeping through the night and his blood pressure is down. When you hit those three big movers you don’t just look better in a swimsuit you’re a new and improved version of yourself!

This has all been accomplished in 3 months. In February he was at his heaviest weight ever and now in June he weighs the same as he did in High School-Insane!

He might need a tailor

Get this man to a tailor

Right now Ryan is in his 4th month of Accelerator. His goal is to hit the 40 pound down mark by July.

Congratulations to Ryan for his incredible transformation and insane results!

Dedicated to Your Success,

Dave

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Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.
-Helen Keller

NealClean2.jgp

There is so much more to strength training than performing a certain number of reps to complete a set.  By manipulating the timing, grouping, and order of your exercises, you can change the results you will see and how fast you get them.  Depending on your goals, there are more effective forms of training for you.

If you happen to catch glimpses of other personal training sessions than your own, you may notice that the order and pattern of your exercises may be different from a fellow client, even if the exercises are the same.  This is because what is most effective for you and your goals is not the same for another person.

You may have heard some of the terms below in magazines or around the gym but I’m here to explain the most common weight lifting and strength training techniques (along with a few cardio-related ones) so even if you aren’t a bodybuilder, you are still educated in training vocabulary, and how each technique may be beneficial to you.

Circuit Training usually combines around 6-10 strength and cardio exercises that work all the major muscle groups of the body. You move quickly from one exercise to the next, with no to very little rest in between to keep your heart rate up and strength gains. The circuit is usually repeated 2-4 times.  Good for building endurance and overall strength, and is also a good way to cram in a lot of work to a short period of time.

Steady State is the form of cardio most people tend to do and either refers to a steady pace ( speed) or steady intensity (heart rate) throughout the course of the workout, with the exception of your warm up and cool down. An example of steady state cardio on the treadmill, is a warm up walk for 5 minutes, run at 6 mph for 20 minutes, then cool down with a walk for 5 minutes.

Interval Training alternates high intensity bursts of activity with periods of lower intensity activity, and usually is used for cardiovascular workouts. An example of a cardio interval training would be alternating 2 minutes of jogging at 5.5 mph and 1 minute of sprinting at 8 mph on the treadmill. If you usually do steady state cardio, interval training can get you the same results in less time, by spiking your heart rate higher than usual, which blasts more fat and calories with the same cardiovascular benefits.

Super Sets is a lifting term for performing 2-3 exercises back to back with minimal rest in between, and is then repeated. The exercises don’t have to be related.  Example: 10 weighted squats, 10 pushups, and 10 delt flyes, then repeat. Giving your muscles little time to rest before you use them again improves muscle endurance and allows you to shorten your workout without giving up any exercises.

Giant Sets are 4 or more exercises for one body part or muscle group performed successively with little rest in between. Example: 10 hammer curls, 10 bicep curls, 10 preacher curls, 10 close grip barbell curls. These shred (in a good way) the muscles (in our example, the biceps) and is a good technique to build size and strength.

Drop Sets are when you perform an exercise to failure at a certain weight, then drop the weight a few pounds and immediately repeat the exercise to failure. You can drop the weight two, three, or more times. This builds muscular endurance, size and strength- great for all around muscle building.

Active Rest is a term used to describe remaining active while resting the muscle group you just used. You can do this a few ways: If you do a set of bicep curls, then perform crunches, you are resting your biceps while staying active by performing your crunches- your crunches are active rest. You can also use cardio as your active rest by doing jumping jacks, hitting a cardio machine for a minute or two, or jumping rope before you go back to your curls. Active rest keeps the heart rate up to burn calories and build cardiovascular endurance, as well as allows you to cut down on your workout time instead of being inactive while you let your muscles recover.  Think multitasking.

These techniques are good to have in your back pocket, because no matter what your goals and what technique works best for you, cross training and routine changes are important to keep your results rolling.  Even if you keep your exercises the same, utilizing these different techniques can be a big enough change to smash through your plateau and jump start your results.

In Good Health,

Kelly Turner

Kelly Turner is a Seattle area ACE Certified Personal Trainer, health and fitness writer and editor of the fitness website, PhysiqueSpeak.com. To contact Kelly with any questions, you can email her at kellycturner@hotmail.com.

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The sterner the discipline, the greater the devotion.
– Pete Carill

Runners Squat

Runners Squat

Tuesday night with the unstoppable Fort Worth Running Company(FWRC) Marathon and Half-Marathon Training Group. Multiple Ironman Finisher Drew Tyler is leading. I’m timing and on the camera. The FWRC runners are kicking butt!

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Rock Hard Runners

Every week it gets hotter and the runners look stronger.

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Drew is spelling YMCA

Like Bodyweight exercise and Kettlebells  some of the old-school moves like Donkey-Kicks have been proven over time to be highly effective.

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The Finisher.

More development of the Bullet Proof Core and Running Man to come. Thanks to Jim and James at Fort Worth Running Company for inviting us out.

Dedicated to Your Success,

Dave

Take it-

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“You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” – Wayne Gretzky

Crossfit-Girls

People often say that motivation doesn’t last. Well, neither does bathing – that’s why we recommend it daily.

-Zig Ziglar

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