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Getting Off The Wagon

by Sean Barker. http://dadfitnessblog.com/

Here is my 3 step quick start guide to getting back to clean living after your vacation.

1. Fitness

Workout, don’t wait! Get that fat burning furnace going again with your workouts. Even though we still weren’t unpacked, the next morning after we got home I pulled some workout clothes out of my luggage and hit the gym for a Dad Fitness workout. If you take up to 2 weeks off from training like I did for summer vacation, ease back into your workouts slowly. Cut your weight and reps in half for the first week or so to avoid debilitating soreness.

2. Food

Shop and Chop. Even before I hit the gym the next morning my wife and I hit the supermarket to restock our house with REAL food. I like to call it Easy Eating. 3 meals and 2 snacks a day and nothing out of a box or can except maybe beans and oatmeal. Lots of lean meats, nuts, fruits and veggies. I was so sick of restaurant food after vacation, so I use that extra motivation to get started right away and not only shop for lots of good healthy food, but chop it to make meals in minutes.

3. Fasting

Fast for Fat Loss. My good friend Brad Pilon and the author of the popular book Eat Stop Eat turned me on to the health benefits of intermittent fasting a few years ago. I was highly IMPRESSED with the physical and mental benefits of fasting for just 24 hours once a week or periodically like after letting your diet go during vacation. So after having my final vacation meal for lunch at a restaurant on the drive home I decided my stomach could use a break from food after the pounding it got on vacation. So I fasted for 24 hours, drank lots of cold clean water and broke the fast after my mid-morning workout starting with a Super Shake of whey protein, mixed berries,spinach, greens powder, plain yogurt, and a banana. Then had a veggie omelette with an orange shortly after.

Remember a weekly caloric reduction through diet and exercise, no matter how you do it is still the only proven way to lose fat.

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Avoid Xenoestrogens

by Mike Westerdal of http://leanhybridmuscle.com

We know that testosterone is the male hormone and estrogen is the female hormone. But have you ever heard of xenoestrogens? Probably not, so that’s what we’re going to discuss. We’ll talk about what they are, why you should avoid them, and most importantly–how you can avoid them.

“Xeno” is a prefix based on the Greek word “Xenos”, meaning stranger. Estrogen of course refers to the female hormone. So put the two together and you literally have “stranger estrogen,” which in reality, isn’t far from the truth. Xenoestrogens are in fact, novel, industrially made compounds that in the body, have effects similar to those of estrogen. In men, testosterone is of course the dominant hormone but we actually have estrogen in our bodies as well. In women, it’s just the opposite–they are dominant in estrogen but have testosterone as well.

In men, high levels of estrogen can cause reduced levels of testosterone, fatigue, loss of muscle tone, increased body fat, loss of libido and sexual function and an enlarged prostate. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to grasp that high levels of estrogen in a man are not a good thing. And if you think about the literal meaning of the word “xeno” (stranger), combined with the fact that they’re “industrially made,” then a guy could logically make the assumption that xenoestrogens are not going to be something you want in your body.

In our bodies, naturally-produced estrogens interact with larger molecules known as receptors. This interaction between the two effectively “switching on” the hormone associated with the receptor molecule. Basically, “hormone A” is cruising along in the body not doing much of anything at all. But once it encounters estrogen, the function (whatever that may be) of “hormone a” is turned on, becoming active. When the estrogen is natural and in balance, this is a good thing because  that’s the way things are supposed to happen and functions that we want–the ones that lower our risk of prostate cancer or osteoporosis–are activated and we live our lives happy and healthy.

In contrast, when xenoestrogens enter the body, because they look and act just like estrogen, they interact with the same larger receptor molecules, activating the same functions as natural estrogen. But the xenoestrogens don’t stop there. They often times activate other receptors and are thought to work synergistically, effectively making the impact of the xenoestrogen far more profound than that of naturally-produced estrogen. And this of course can lead to all sorts of troubles.

In fact, xenoestrogens have been implicated in a range of medical problems and conditions. Unfortunately, little research has been done to actually measure the risk–at least in humans. There have been a number of studies done that document changes that have occurred in wildlife resulting from their exposure to xenoestrogens from sources such as runoff.

There have been a number of studies done on animals in places where levels of xenoestrogens are thought to be high. Among the animals they have studied, they’ve found: emasculated males, decreasing sperm counts, very low levels of testosterone and high levels of estrogens in both sexes. There have also been reports of sexually-related birth defects such as unusually small or non-functioning gonads and in some cases, total reproductive failure.

You can see very clearly that xenoestrogens are something to avoid. Below is just a partial list of some of the places you’re most likely to encounter them and run the risk of ingesting them in one form or another:

  • Organ chlorines, which are used to manufacture pesticides, in dry cleaning, the bleaching of feminine-hygiene products and in manufacturing plastic;
  • BHS A (butylated hydroxyanisole), a preservative used in processed foods;
  • Parabens, phenoxyethanol and stearal konium chloride, all of which are found in many skin creams and lotions as well as in some soaps and shampoos;
  • Bisphenol-A, a breakdown of polycarbonate, is used in many plastic bottles. It’s found in the lining of many food cans and juice containers;
  • Benzophenone-3, homosalate, 4-methyl-benzylidene camphor, octal-methoxycinnamate, octal-dimethyl-PABA, which can be found in many sunscreen lotions; and
  • Just about any pesticide, herbicide or fungicide.

Again, this is just a partial list of products that contain xenoestrogens. In this day and age it’s difficult to avoid them entirely, but there are plenty of steps you can take to minimize your exposure. Steer clear of industrial chemicals, solutions, preservatives and artificial ingredients as much as possible. Avoid processed foods, vegetables treated with pesticides and meat from hormone-enhanced animals.

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Jack up your STRENGTH with “instability”

This is something we at ALIVE push all the time. This article written by Scott Shannon goes into great detail from a military stand point, but can help you with everyday living.

Today we’d like to share an incredibly effective way of building high levels of strength that immediately transfers to real-world operational needs.

And remember, “operational needs” are self-defined. For soldiers in
the field they may involve combat applications, but for our
Commandos on the home front, “operational” could just as easily
refer to sport, work, or home life. Your training should focus on making your life better, rather than make you a slave to a program.

When it comes to building a killer physique using simple tools and the weight of your own body, few have equaled the sinewy power and raw strength of a gymnast. Those guys and gals are absolutely incredible! They control their bodies with effortless grace,
bursting explosively into leaps and turns and suddenly stopping on
a dime with the utmost control.

Incorporating aspects of gymnastic style training into your bodyweight routine can take your strength gains to entirely new levels. And you don’t even need a gym to do this — plenty can be done using portable tools.

One tool commonly associated with gymnasts has been part of the
full equipment-based TACFIT program from its inception: portable
gym rings.

The instability of the rings forces you to focus on achieving
stability before you can perform any movement.  Focused
concentration engages the nervous system throughout every second of
the exercise, and THAT is what builds strength quickly. Ring
training taps into this like no other tool.

The opposite of this is a “motor set.” Motor sets happen when
training becomes rote. They’re the precursor to the dreaded
“plateau,” where gains stop, progress stagnates, and people fall
off the exercise wagon.

When you practice many repetitions of a movement, that movement
becomes much easier to perform, to a point where it becomes
automatic. The simpler the movement, the quicker this adaptation.
It’s simply how the body adapts to imposed demand, and exercise is
designed to take advantage of that.

The thing is, your body is really good at adapting to stimuli, and
if you want constant gains you’ve gotta stay one step ahead of it.
When the nervous system is not challenged enough, it dials ‘effort’
down to a lower level. In essence, it gets bored. And that’s when
your progress grinds to a halt.

That’s one of the great benefits of introducing gymnastic-style
ring training to your personal TACFIT program. It’s tough enough to
keep your nervous system focused on the task at hand. That means
incredible strength gains in a short period of time. And it also
means a hell of a fun workout!

Portions of TACFIT are done at ALIVE.

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