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School Run Mums: Back to Fitness!

September 6th, 2010

Here we are, at the start of another school year and the autumn term. Maybe you loved the long summer break, the rest from making packed lunches, the break from rounding up your offspring and cajoling, coaxing and threatening them out of the door each the morning. Chances are, by the end of the six week break you’ve run out of entertaining ideas, offers of childcare help (if you’re working), money and patience, and will be certifiable if you hear “I’m bored” one more time!

So you’ve sorted out the new uniform, polished the shoes, packed the lunchbox and waved a teary eyed goodbye to your little ones. Well, what are you waiting for? Now’s the time to focus on you!

Here are some top fitness tips for school run mums!

1. Invest in some fabulous fitness fashion

New uniforms aren’t just for the kids. Remember “Mr Motivator”, the “Green Goddess” or Jane Fonda? These 80’s fitness gurus have been consigned to history – as should one piece lycra suits and shiny thongs!

New sportswear will not only help you feel more confident but the latest fabrics wick away perspiration so you’ll feel more comfortable too. Don’t forget new trainers as well. If you’re new, or returning, to exercise don’t dust off an old pair of trainers you’ve found lurking in the back of your wardrobe. If you spend money on nothing else, be sure to invest in a properly fitted pair of trainers. If you visit a specialist sports shop they will be able to advise you on the type of shoe you need for the activity you intend to carry out.

2. Be brave – everyone was the “new girl” once upon a time

Whether you’re joining a gym for the first time, a new exercise class or a sports club you’re bound to feel a little apprehensive at first. Just like your children starting school, or moving into a new class, it can be daunting when you start something new. If you can enlist the support of a friend this could work really well for both of you as research has shown that people who exercise with a friend have higher levels of adherence than those who do so alone.

3. Book your fitness sessions as appointments on your diary

As a busy mum you’re already used to planning your week with military precision! In the same way your family wall planner shows when school friends are coming to tea, swimming class times, dentist appointments and football matches take place, you need to book in your exercise sessions. Preferably written in PERMANENT BLACK MARKER!

4. Learn to move like your children

Take the focus away from wanting to “lose a bit here”, “toning”, “inch loss” or thinking in terms of aesthetics. Instead consider movement and training your body to function better; then the body you have always wanted will follow. If you need a reminder about how your body should be able to function and move watch your children play. You’ll see them squatting down to play, swinging on monkey bars, climbing up play equipment, running, jumping,, bending, pushing and pulling. In short, all the movements your body was designed to perform. So your training should include plenty of whole body moves based around squatting, lunging, pushing, pulling and rotating.

5. Don’t be a slave to the treadmill/cross-trainer/stepper

One of the biggest errors people make is spending too long on cardiovascular machines at too low an intensity. Unless you are pregnant, have recently had a baby or have an underlying medical condition or injury you need to incorporate interval training to both improve your cardiovascular fitness and burn excess body fat. If you’re new to interval training a simple approach is to increase your speed or pace beyond your normal steady state for 1, 2 or 3 minutes and then follow this by decreasing your speed to recover for a similar period of time. As you become accustomed to pushing yourself harder you will need longer to recover particularly once you start hitting 30 second or 1 minute sprints. Yes, it will be hard work but you gave birth – right? You can handle hard work!

6. Enlist the help of an expert

Would you let your partner/best friend cut your hair?! Well assuming they’re not a hairdresser the answer is, probably, no! So be cautious about their exercise advice. I’ve seen plenty of partners take their girlfriends/wives around the gym and either successfully train them in poor technique or train their other halves like they train themselves. Chances are your needs are going to be quite different to your friends or partners.  So why not invest in a few sessions with a Personal Trainer, or qualified instructor, to show you how to get the very best from your time spent exercising?

7. Inject more activity into your daily life

Stop thinking that exercise is something you “do” at a certain time of day – 9.30 on a Monday morning or 6pm on a Wednesday evening – instead start thinking about making opportunities to be more active in your day-to-day life. It might be walking the children to school, or riding the bike with them, you might decide to swim a few lengths whilst your children’s swimming lessons are taking place or you could simply decide, here and now, to never use a lift or an escalator again! There are many ways to be more active every day and small changes can have a significant impact on your general health and fitness and help with weight management.

8. Banish the guilt

A mother’s lot in life is to carry a permanent burden of guilt! Whether you agonise over working, not working, sharing your attention equally amongst all your off-spring, the food you serve your family, the food you throw away – you name it, we feel guilty every day! When it comes to exercise this can become a vicious circle of guilt – guilt if you spend time away from the home exercising – guilt if you fall of the exercise band wagon – guilt, guilt guilt! So cast your mind back to the last time you were ill and ask yourself what impact it have on the rest of the family. Chances are the washing piled up, no-one could find any clean underwear, school books went unread, and baked beans were eaten cold from the tin! Well maybe it wasn’t as bad as that, but you get my point. The efficient functioning of your family and the health, well-being and happiness of your children is intrinsically linked with yours. So tell yourself it’s not selfish to want time for yourself to exercise and that ultimately your family benefit from you being in tip-top condition!

Go on, reclaim a little bit of  “you time” – you’ve earned it!

Boxing Clever

August 23rd, 2010


As a trainer I am always ready to push my own physical fitness by taking on new challenges and trying new activities. In common with most trainers I’ve been on numerous courses in my quest to embrace new information, techniques and training methods. Ultimately I hope the time and financial investment I make in attending such courses directly benefits my clients and improves the service I offer.

So this weekend I attended the Boxercise Instructor Course. The Boxercise website describes their training method as “Combining boxing and exercise in a great fun, stress busting activity to suit everyone who wants to enjoy boxing training without getting hit or the elitism of some so called purists.”

Let’s be honest; I consider myself pretty fit. I train hard, I eat right (most of the time) I incorporate a healthy balance of high intensity cardiovascular training with longer endurance work. I include power and explosive exercises and strength work. I work with free weights, kettlebells, TRX, my own bodyweight and I think about functionality. So you might be forgiven for thinking I’ve got it covered. Nope, I missed something, and this is a shining example of the adage “You only get what you train for”. So whilst I incorporate lots of different approaches with my own training I don’t “kick” and I don’t “punch”. Now after a weekend of both my body is in a state of shock!

During the first day we were taught the eight punches, accompanying footwork and movement which form the foundation for a Boxercise session or class. Once we’d grasped the basics of correct and safe technique we moved on to working with the focus pads. Most of the instructors on the course were in the same position as me with little or no prior boxing experience. This wasn’t a problem and, as the course tutors explained, this is sometimes better; experienced boxers often find it difficult to re-learn Boxercise techniques which are primarily aimed at beginners. After a full and long day with several hours working on the pads learning how to punch correctly, spot faults and coach effectively the moment of truth arrived – assessment time. We were split into pairs and observed on our ability to demonstrate, coach, teach and instruct correct Boxercise technique. The tutors kept the results to themselves whilst they then put us through a pretty hardcore Boxercise class. The tutors showcased their own unique approaches and incorporated circuits and coaching on pads alongside some tough boxaerobics. Whilst I do not intend to teach Boxercise in a class format this sample class gave me plenty of ideas about how to deliver a really effective and fun session to my PT clients incorporating Boxercise. Finally we were given the outcome of our assessments and, to my relief, I passed!

I decided to go back for more punishment, the second day, to take the KickBoxercise course which focuses on elbow, knee strikes and kicks. The format of the day was pretty similar to the previous day with several hours practising and perfecting techniques working on the pads and strike shields before taking part in another assessment. Again, I was delighted that I passed.

So, can all my clients expect to see Boxercise creeping into their one-to-one sessions? No, not yet. You’d have to be stupid, arrogant or have a total disregard for a client’s welfare to think you can go on a one day course – or in this case, two days – master a new technical skill and then introduce it to them. Whilst I may have passed the assessment I now need to practice, perfect and refine my own technique so that I can be a credible coach. This is pretty much the approach I have taken with any course I have attended. This is also the same advice I give to new fitness students on courses I tutor.

Overall, it was a great training weekend and one I was pleased to have had the opportunity to attend. My gloves, pads and shields are on order and a couple of long suffering family members are on stand-by as “guinea-pigs” to hone my coaching skills on. I’m anxious to get going, whilst the course if fresh in my mind, but first I have to let my body get over the shock and trauma unleashed from the training weekend!

Is “fat” the new black?

August 14th, 2010


I am beginning to think we are becoming immune to images of obesity. We are no longer shocked to see very overweight people. It would appear that “fat” is the new black and everybody is wearing it!
Too many of us are failing to take responsibility for our ever increasing waist lines and are refusing to take action before it’s too late; harsh words? I don’t think so.

I have just returned from a two week holiday, in Majorca, in a resort popular with fellow British tourists. Looking around my countrymen, sunbathing and swimming in the Spanish sunshine, I felt something approaching despair to see so many overweight people. In fact, I would go so far as to say that those who are a healthy body weight are fast becoming the minority. I’m not referring to those who would probably like to lose a couple of lbs but the vast number of adults, I saw on the beaches, who are 2-3 stone, and considerably more, over their ideal body weight. Whilst my observations are simply casual, and in no way scientific, my overwhelming feeling was why are we becoming so “fat” as a nation and doesn’t anybody care?

Latest figures, released from the Office for National Statistics, reveal an alarming jump in levels of obesity with one in four British adults now considered obese, an increase from one in six in the mid nineties. So that’s a staggering quarter of all British adults classified as obese! This worrying trend has also been highlighted by the National Heart Forum, from an analysis of the Health Survey for England, which states “The number of normal weight individuals is inexorably falling, those overweight remaining broadly steady and those obese rising”. Referring to my opening statement I believe at least part of the problem lies in our perception. Similar to the phenomena know as “compassion fatigue”- where over exposure to harrowing images no longer elicits a sympathetic response – are we now experiencing “obesity fatigue” and failing to respond appropriately?

Again, this is hardly scientific, but when I was at school it was highly unusual for children to be overweight. It was so rare that the occasional overweight child would stick out like a sore thumb and be cruelly taunted for it. Now, I’m not suggesting for one minute that we all start shouting “fatty” at passing strangers, or subject overweight children to name calling and bullying, but I do think we need to be brutally honest with ourselves and those we love. We need to take a long hard look and acknowledge that we, as a nation, need to get a grip.

Obesity, excess body fat and being overweight are not simply aesthetic issues. Maintaining a healthy body weight is not about fitting into a certain size dress or a pair of skinny jeans. Carrying excess body fat is a health issue; it affects the quality and quantity of your life and ultimately is a matter of life and death. Being overweight carries numerous health risks including increasing the risk of coronary heart disease, cardiovascular diseases, high blood pressure, diabetes, and stroke to name a few. Being overweight is not just an individual concern, but a national issue threatening to overwhelm N.H.S. resources and has far reaching wider social consequences.

There are no easy solutions. Rising levels of national obesity need to be tackled through education, local and national Government, the N.H.S., the food industry, the fitness industry, schools and parents. If we don’t want today’s generation of children to be the first generation to die before their parents we need to act and act now, re-doubling our efforts to get the message across before it’s too late.

If your idea of a summer holiday is two weeks lazing on a beach, sipping sangria and eating ice-creams, fair enough! Just make sure the other fifty weeks of the year you are as active as possible, eat a healthy well balanced diet and encourage your family and friends to do the same.

Fairies flock to Fontwell!

June 13th, 2010

Race for Life is the largest women-only fundraising event in the UK and is Cancer Research UK’s flagship event. Since 1994, thousands of women of all ages and fitness levels across the UK have come together at these inspiring events to walk, jog or run 5k to help beat cancer. So far, an incredible 4.7 million women have raised over £370 million to fund Cancer Research UK’s life-saving work.

It is a wonderful event and for the second year running my two daughters have taken part with me. Last year our local event took place at the Weald and Downland Open Air Museum. This year the venue was moved to Fontwell Race Course, in order to accommodate the ever increasing number of women who want to take part, which resulted in an amazing 2500 runners, joggers and walkers lining up on the start line!

The first thing that greets you at a Race for Life event is a sea of pink! Everywhere you look girls and women of all ages are dressed in pink t-shirts, pink leggings, pink tutus and pink hats. In fact, if you want to stand out from the crowd, so your family or supporters can spot you, you’ll need to wear yellow, green, and blue – anything but pink! But being part of the crowd, a member of the army of women who are fighting cancer and raising funds to beat it is the whole point of Race for Life. So standing in solidarity and donning fairy wings and a pink tutu is the order of the day; my daughters wouldn’t have let me get away with anything less!

Prior to the race all entrants are sent a race number along with a blank sign to complete and wear on their back. Participants then fill in the sign with details of the person/people they are running the race for. Reading these dedications is incredibly moving and it quickly becomes apparent how many peoples lives are blighted by cancer. Some are running in memory of a loved one who has sadly lost their battle, others are celebrating survival and many are simply supporting those who are affected. Whatever their reasons everyone is ready to have a good time and make it round the course as best they can, whether it be running, jogging walking or a bit of everything!

As well as raising much need funds for Cancer Research the event promotes and encourages women of all ages to be active. It is particularly unique in that girls are allowed to run with their mothers (most large races are for adults only). My daughters have enjoyed taking part in Race for Life, two years running, and now view it as a regular and welcome fixture on our annual calendar. It’s worth reinforcing that whilst the event is called “Race for Life” it isn’t a race – there are no winners and losers and the event isn’t timed. So if you’ve never taken part in a race event, and want a good place to start, be sure to sign up for next years Race for Life. You’ll have a fabulous day, help raise funds for a very worthy charity and have a very good reason to wear a fairy costume regardless of how old you are!

Bognor 10k Road Race 2010

May 13th, 2010

This weekend sees the return of the Bognor 10k road race to my home town. Now in its 16th year the fast flat course provides a perfect opportunity for serious runners to achieve an elusive PB (personal best for the uninitiated!). The out and back route leaves West Park, takes runners in an Easterly direction on the seafront, leaving the prom to weave past Butlins and through Felpham village before rejoining the seafront for the last 5km. The race attracts runners from numerous running clubs in the South as well as local runners. A strong presence from local clubs, including Tone Zone Runners, Chichester Runners and Athletic Club and Sixth Dimension, can be expected along with terrific support from the home crowd. I love this local race and have taken part many times but my Tutoring commitments, with Future fit Training, will keep me from this year’s race. However I’ll be eagerly awaiting news of race times from clients, friends and running partners who will be taking part.

This year runners will be able to see the newly installed outdoor fitness equipment, known as “Flex on the Beach”, which covers a 5km trail on the seafront. It is hoped the fitness trail will encourage local residents, and visitors to the town, to be more physically active and take full advantage of the seafront.

Local running events, such as the Bognor 10k, are vital in promoting healthy activity within our communities. Involving the wider community through participation, support or sponsorship does much to encourage would-be exercisers. Children are not left out either but encouraged to participate in race day with two “fun run” events which take place before the main race. These runs are not races –no winners and losers – just an opportunity for the youngsters to get involved and enjoy the atmosphere.

I’m a regular runner on this route throughout the year and it is always noticeable, in the weeks following the Bognor 10k race, how many newcomers are out there running. So I’d like to take this opportunity to applaud those new to running. Many will be approaching this distance with the same trepidation experienced runners feel when undertaking a Marathon. Completing this distance for the first time will be a fantastic achievement for those runners and one they can justifiably feel proud of.

So “Good luck” to all runners, whether you are seasoned vets or recently inspired novices, for this year’s Bognor 10k road race. If you’re going along to watch the race be sure to cheer the runners on; it means so much to them and will really motivate them!