Fat Loss Factor

Tuesday 24 September 2013

Record weight loss at South Yorkshire summer camp


Youngsters shed a record amount of weight at a South Yorkshire summer camp.
Daniel Allen was one of 30 young people from Rotherham to have shed pounds after attending a four-week summer weight management camp at Rotherham Leisure Complex.
The group of youngsters, aged seven to 17, lost an impressive 11.8 stone – the equivalent of 75 bags of sugar – in total.
Health Living programme manager Hayley Mills said: “In its third year, this year’s camp has been our most successful, with more weight loss, and more inch loss achieved during the four weeks.
Daniel, aged 15, who lost 6.4kg, said: “I’ve really enjoyed camp, and had lots of fun trying new activities. I’ve loved the healthy food-making session and it’s made me think about the things I eat at home.”
The camp taught the children how to make tasty healthy food and gave them the opportunity to be active.
Hayley said: “They even got to make smoothies at the same time as riding an exercise bike!
“At first the kids were terrified of coming into an unfamiliar setting with people they didn’t know, but after the first day their confidence soared. It was a pleasure to watch.”

Amazing Weight Loss Products That Work... Just a Phone Call Away?

It's amazing what you learn when you cannot find the remote. Today I learnt how easy it is to get in the best shape of my life in just 60 seconds a day. Flick on one of the obscure freeview channels at breakfast time and you can see for yourself. At that time of the day, it's wall-to-wall infomercials. And, at this time of year, it's wall-to-wall infomercials for weight loss products, each more miraculous and each requiring less effort than the one before.
Rotating discs for the 'perfect push-ups'? It's here. Electronically operated rotating saddle that mimics the action of horse riding while you watch TV? You bet. Everything you need to get into the best shape of your life and, what's more, no discipline required. Plus, if you call now, you get a free weight loss poster!
Let me get one thing straight. If you are fat, or just a little bit wobbly, then you are not a lateral thigh trainer away from chiselled abs and slender pins. You are not just a pair of muscle-activating trainers away from a perfect derrier. You can use a Thigh Master daily, but your legs will not shrink at supernatural speed. You can use dumbells that shake, but you will not shed fat at an extraordinary rate.
You do not need gadgets to progress. Let me give you an example: Picture the average-sized guy that gets sent down for a couple of years, only to emerge from prison fully metamorphasized with a physique that is part gorilla, part Greek god. Do you think he used vibrating plates to get that way? Of course not. He used a bench and some weights, because that's all he had. Now, many of my female clients have different aims to our fictional lag, but the point remains valid.
Equally, let's take a look at our altogether-more-wholesome heroes from 2012. Thoughts turn instantly to our golden girl Jessica Ennis. Her stunning victory in the Olympics was down to natural talent, years of training and a cool head in the fever pitch of the Stratford stadium. Not down to a revolutionary new workout DVD that blended Zumba with high intensity somersaults in a 'patented blend proven to sculpt and tone'. And did you hear Mo Farah mention in interviews how his success was down to space-age cookware that allowed him to prepare chicken in less time and with less oil? Didn't think so.
None of my clients use gimmicks. They just do all the basics things exquisitely well. This means triggering the desired hormonal stimuli through stretch-induced damage, then delivering a tailored macronutrient intake and ensuring an appropriate state of metabolism to achieve their aims. Or, in layman's terms, they lift big, eat right and get to bed on time. And they achieve an average fat loss of 10.6kg in their first eight weeks (that's FAT loss, not weight loss).
If you have weights, a bench and the know-how, you already have enough tools. If you genuinely cannot lose weight or build muscle with effective training, then you need to take a look at your diet, hormone balance, sleeping patterns or digestion. You don't need new micro-fibre gymwear and you definitely don't need electronic pads that contract your abdominal muscles.
Your muscle fibres don't care whether you have loaded them with a dumbell or a small cow. Your fat cells don't care whether the workout you followed was eulogised by a washed-up celeb or endorsed by a random guy in the gym. What matters is the intensity, sets, tempo and rest periods. And what matters even more is the balance of protein/fat/carbohydrate that you introduce to your system afterwards.
It's very easy to laugh at the people that buy gimmicky products. But, while it's easy to dismiss the buyers as a naïve minority, the reality is that these ads would not keep on appearing on television if it were not for sufficient people buying! So, if you've ever bought a Thigh Glider, know that your purchase was responsible for sustaining this industry of fakes, frauds and phonies. And if you are ever tempted into ordering a 'revolutionary' gadget hawked by a botox-laden presenter, know that your bodyshape is as likely to change as her facial expression.

Bootcamp for Weight Loss: An Appraisal

It is somewhat tragic that, should you ask a member of the public to picture a personal trainer, they often think of a bulky figure in a tight vest, barking instructions at a sweating throng of neophytes. Yet this isn't personal training at all. It's bootcamp, something completely different.
It's influence on the workout community has been steadily growing for years, and this type of exercise is threatening to become the default choice for those looking to lose weight. Yet bootcamp itself is not new. The concept of group workouts has been around for decades. What's new is the format of these sessions; 20 years ago, we had camp aerobics with headbands and 8-counts. Now we have a gruelling test of character with blood, sweat and tears.
There have always been fitness professionals who tell their clients that more pain is actually good. Some are actually so stupid that they believe it themselves. Others, the personal trainer equivalents of dumb blondes, simply find thinking to difficult; instead of considering what type of loading may suit their clients, they just revert to their one-size-fits-all caricature. This normally involves shouting, growling and flexing.
This never seemed to be a problem in the industry before, where the wannabe-drill-sergeants were consigned to the corner of your local Fitness First, proudly counting reps and urging their subjects to "push push push". They were there to provide passing amusement to the members and, for the other trainers, an example of what not to do. But now these are the guys taking the sessions. Bootcamps are the result.
And the public is going mad for them. Fed up of weight loss solutions that promise easy results, disillusioned by high-tech fixes that claim to make fat burning effortless, they turn to good ol' fashioned hard work. Those bulges around their midriff are their Everest, and they're going to climb it if it kills them. Yes, it's torture, but they're stronger than that. They're Rocky for the day. And, what's more, they're doing it as part of a group. Strength in numbers. Salvation through perspiration.
Sounds great. The only problem is that bootcamp is hideously inefficient at burning fat. The format of near-constant workload means the heart rate of the average participant rarely drops below 140bpm. As I have explained in more depth here, less than 10% of people can effectively burn fats at this level of intensity. The rest are stuck burning carbohydrates. As, because the session is essentially aerobic, the muscular overload (and the increase in metabolism) that weight-lifters experience is also missing. Good for aerobic fitness, inefficient for weight loss. Just like running.
This is why, despite the occasional success story ("I know someone who lost 6lbs in a week doing bootcamp!"), the majority see no movement on the scales. They do get fitter and they do get stronger, but fat loss remains entirely elusive. I'm not saying bootcamp is worthless - it definitely improves aerobic conditioning plus many, understandably, enjoy the social aspect - only it is entirely unsuitable for the aims of most people that turn up.
The key message here is that hard work does not equal good results. Flogging yourself to the point where it's difficult to drive home afterwards is almost certainly a bad idea (this should be reserved for elite athletes only as part of a planned periodisation program). All this does is trigger the release of cortisol, the body's primary stress hormone, which induces weight gain. Many popular world religions have instilled in us the idea that the more we sacrifice now, the better the salvation later; sadly, when it comes to fat loss, hard work and blind faith cannot compete with strategic hormonal manipulation through diet and exercise.
Not convinced? Watch the Biggest Loser, that reality TV show, that takes super-obese individuals and challenge them to lose weight. They control their food intake and flog them 4 times a day, 7 days a week in some seriously sadistic workouts. No-one is working harder. Yet, when it comes to the weekly weigh in, it's not uncommon for competitors to have lost no weight. And, as any experienced trainer will tell you, it's almost impossible not to achieve serious weight loss with morbidly obese clients.
So am I predicting the death of bootcamp? Far from it. The popularity of fads in the gym world rarely correlate to their effectiveness. After all, you can still buy vibration machines now, several years after the public cottoned on to how useless they are. The weekly slimming clubs still exist, even though consistent slimming has been the one thing missing for the last 30 years. Internet health nuts are still alkalyzing themselves silly, despite seeing the same improvements as the rest of the messageboard users (none). And, while I admit that the demand for these once-popular approaches has dwindled, they are all still around. A lot of people still consider running as an effective way to lose weight.
Meanwhile, despite the increased effort, despite the lack of results, despite the difficulty they have in driving home afterwards, the public are loving it. They no longer need to climb Ben Nevis, they don't have to run a marathon. They can now itch this scratch in their own town. And be home for dinner. Bootcamp is good, bootcamp is pure, and they will not listen to anyone who says otherwise. Sadly, as we have learnt repeatedly with previous crazes, belief alone does not burn fat.

Danielle Lloyd reveals she's back to a size ten - just three weeks after giving birth

For the 95 per cent of us who just ate a cheese baguette for lunch and felt their shirt buttons pop off, you should probably look away now

Considering the fact that she's just given birth to her third son, George, Danielle Lloyd's weight should really be the least important thing in the world. After all, she's created a human being! From scratch!
But, ever the multitasker, Danielle isn't content with miracle acts of reproduction. Instead, she's focusing on squeezing back into her skinny jeans.
"People have been telling me George looks like me and have said I look slim," the model reveals, which sounds a lot like they're telling her that George looks slim too, but we're going to assume that's not the case.


Danielle Lloyd attends the European premiere of Oz: The Great And Powerful at The Empire Leicester Square
Similarly, distracting us from your weight with sequins is always a top tip

Getty
"I'm already back in my size 10 skinny jeans," she adds in her column for Closer magazine. "But I'm not on a fad diet of being a slave to the gym - I'm a busy mum and I don't have the time or the energy. I'm 5ft7 and I've lost 10lbs since giving birth and am 10st2lbs - a stone off my goal."
But while Danielle (who is friends with Katie Price and may have something to say about Alex Reid's latest shocking story) assures us that she isn't going to be taking her weight loss too seriously just yet - at least until George is six weeks old - she does admit that she considered liposuction as a quick fix.
"I was convinced I wouldn't ping back into shape - but after I had my DD-cup breast implants removed in February last year... I was put off going under the knife," she explains. "I wouldn't want to risk lipo when I can tone up naturally."
Which sounds like a healthy attitude to take. Now if you'll excuse us, it's time for our second lunch.


Check out all the latest News, Sport & Celeb gossip at Mirror.co.uk http://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/danielle-ohara-talks-diet-weight-2297236#ixzz2foeIr5qf

Monday 23 September 2013

A Safe Way To Lose Weight

Women will do anything to lose weight, and sometimes women do things that are not healthy like trying dangerous diet drugs and also special powders that can be added to water that can help burn fat. However, what women fail to realize is that the ingredients in diet drugs are not good for the body, and taking them can seriously jeopardize a woman's health. If a woman wants to lose weight then there are special paces she can go like a weight loss clinic, and at these clinics, a woman can lose all the weight she wants in a safe way.
Using a Weight Loss Clinic
The people who work at a weight loss clinic are experts when it comes to weight loss. The facilities that are designed to help people with weight issues have a lot of benefits to going to one. While at these specialized clinics, a woman can learn all about her own body and how to lose weight in a way that will not cause harm to her body. Here is more information on what a woman will learn about weight loss while at a clinic, and also what other lessons that those special clinics also teach:
• Information about the body: The first step to weight loss is to understand all about the human body. When a human being eats, the food goes into the stomach, and then the process of digestion begins. From digestion, the food that a human eats then gets broken down, and then used by the body, and fat gets stored in various places like the stomach, hips, and thighs. A woman who wants to lose weight, and goes to a weight loss clinic, is going to learn all about how the human body uses food, and how the body can process the food, turns it into fat, and then stores it.
• Information about nutrition: Not all food is the same, and the more a woman understands about food, the better she will eat. With the help of nutrition experts that work at a clinic, a woman can understand how food works in her body, and then together a woman and a food expert can come up with a nutrition plan that will include healthy meals, and how to prepare them so a woman can eat a good diet that will not only help her lose weight, but also keep her weight from going any higher once she has reached her goal weight.
• Information about exercise: One of the best ways to lose weight is to exercise. However, not every exercise is good for every woman and her body type. The people at the weight clinics can talk to a woman about what she does to exercise her body, and then help create an exercise regimen that will maximize her weight loss.
A woman who is tired of her weight problem can seek out a weight loss clinic to help her. While at one of these special clinics, a woman can learn about her body, learn about food, and learn how to exercise to help her get to her goal weight.
Phoenix resident may find the following local website informative:
weight loss clinics in Phoenix

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Robert_Fogarty