Category Archives: The Exercise Books

The World’s Fittest You

The World’s Fittest You

The World’s Fittest You: Harness the Power of Interval Training-and Get On the Road to Fitness in Just One Month

Joe Decker

ISBN 0-451-21401-3

Amazon link

Joe Decker’s The World’s Fittest You is my favorite guide for weight loss/exercise. He includes the following ten steps to healthy eating:

(1) Follow a schedule for eating, (5 times daily),

(2) Downsize everything and follow the allotted portions,

(3) Drink water–don’t substitute water for food,

(4) Read the label for all foods (especially pay attention to the size of the portion that is chosen to list the calories, etc.),

(5) Give your refrigerator a make-over,

(6) Substitute the good for the bad,

(7) Keep track of your emotion triggers (food is often used to comfort and ease our emotional pains–Joe recommends keeping an eating log),

(8) Take control of all your eating–think before every time you
eat to make the right choices,

(9) Plan ahead–”A kitchen without food is a fattening one”,

(10) Reward yourself–he suggests Sundays for little treats.

The largest part of the book is devoted to his FIT equation. He doesn’t like the word “exercise” so he calls them activities. These routines fight the biggest reason that we quit working out–sheer boredom. FIT is included in many other exercise books and stands for F (frequency), I (intensity) and T (time). The three types of activities are cardio exercises, strength training and stretching (flexibility).

One of the workouts he includes is a workout at the playground which includes warm up, strength, and cardio which is varied and fun to do. He includes recipes and activities–all types–for 30 days and recommends doing an activity log as well as food log.

Move Your Body Tone Your Mood

Move Your Body Tone Your Mood

Move Your Body Tone Your Mood

Kate F. Hayes

ISBN 1-57224-275-2

Amazon link

Kate Hays has created what she called “the workout therapy wookbook”. In the introduction she requests that you adopt two actions from the beginning: 1) thinking of yourself as an investigator or searcher for truth, and 2) making a commitment to one form of sedentary activity—wring out your thoughts.

The table of contents reveals what this book suggests:

“But I thought therapy was all talk.” How exercise can be your

therapy

1) Starting on your path

2) Why exercise is good for your head as well as your heart

3) “What’s in it for me? Getting started doing exercise

4) Designing your exercise plan

How to be therapeutic to yourself through exercise

5) Stress busing and mind calming

6) Getting up when you’re feeling down: overcoming inertia and

And changing your mood

7) Feeling strong and capable: self-esteem and competence

8) The poetry of the sunrise: clear and creative thinking

“Now what?” Maintaining your gains

9) Keeping going….and getting going again

10)“But it felt so good!”: Overcoming exercise

11)Is food eating you?

12)Being female, being active

Taking a “fearless inventory”: review and reflection

13)When exercise isn’t enough: exercise and therapy

14)A final exercise

The 7 Secrets of Slim People

The 7 Secrets of Slim People

The 7 Secrets of Slim People

Vikki Hansen and Shawn Goodman

ISBN 0-06-101338-2

Amazon link

Chapter 1: How Does Weight Control Damage You?

Chapter 2: Dieting Can Make You Fatter!

Chapter 3: Weight is Not Your Proble

The secrets:

Chapter 4: Secret #1 Listen to your body, not your mind

Chapter 5: Secret #2 Eat with awareness and without judgment

Chapter 6: Secret #3 Eat only when you are physically hungry

Chapter 7: Secret #4 Stop eating when you are stisfied, not full

Chapter 8: Secret #5 Eat what you want most

Chapter 9: Secret #6 Notice how your body feels after eating

Chapter 10:Secret #7 Honor your feelings; don’t bury them under food

Chapter 11:To be slim for life, you must adopt the attitudes of the

naturally slim

Chapter 12: Questions and answers

Excerpt from the book:

“Why is this book different?

First, the book treats the causes of overeating. Most other diets treat only the superficial symptom of excess weight. You do not want to lose weight again. You want to lose weight permanently. By simply and gently attacking the cause of ovreating, you permanently solve the problem of excess weight. Our strategy is time-tested and proven. You will lose weight permanently—simply and gently.”

“Second, this way is simple. We take all of the mystery out of eating normally, like slim people. You will truly be enjoying eating, and at the same time achieve your optimum health and most beautiful body. And you will do this without scales, calorie-or fat-gram counting, complicated food combining, or fanatical exercise regimens. The best part is that you are already know how to eat, according to The Seven Secrets, without realizing it. This method is natural and automatic—you just need a refresher course.”

“Third, this approach gives you total freedom. Diets give you restictive rules that may help you temporarily lose weight, so long as you continue to restrict your eating according to the diet. At some point, though (when you lose the weight or when the diet fails), you always go off the diet. However, this approach gives you permanent weight loss without any restrictive eating. There’s no diet to “go off of”. This method not only permanently frees you from your excess weight, but also frees you to enjoy eating whatever you want.”

The Complete Guide to Pilates, Yoga, Meditation Stress Relief

The Complete Guide to Pilates, Yoga, Meditation Stress Relief

Complete Guide to Pilates, Yoga, Meditation Stress Relief

Parragon Publishing

ISBN 1-4542-216-5

This guide has four main sections: pilates, yoga, meditation and stress relief. Following are an excerpt from each section: 1) Pilates: “Pilates exercises have been designed to work the muscles of the body as efficiency as possible in the minimum time. These low-impact exercises treat the body as a whole and are very effective. There is therefore no need to spend hours each day at the gym: you need to practice only two to three times a week, and can start with 10-minute sessions and build up to longer ones slowly.” Included in the pilates section are guidance in correct breathing, how pilates works, what to wear, learning how to centr the body, the importance of good posture, getting into motion exercises, standing and sitting exercises, and exercises on a mat.

2) Yoga: “By allocating time every day to a sequence of yoga postures, you can help to purge the mind and body, and achieve a state of deep relaxation. This can result in greater self-esteem, because you will have a sense of achievement and an inner calm that will help to dispel the worries of the day. The deep breathing and physical exercise required for yoga will help you to deal with a raft of complaints, such as pain of the joints and muscles, anxiety, stress, postural problesm, and bowel tone and function problems.” Included in the yoga section are the five principles of yoga (relaxation, exercise, breath control, a nourishing diet, and positive thinking and meditation. Also added are guidelines for practicing yoga, the seven chakras of the astral body, yogic breathing, warming up exercises, the standing postures, seated exercises, improving focus with the balancing postures, opening the heart and strengthiening the back, and the inverted postures.

3) Meditation: “There is no doubt that the mind’s ability to analyze, discriminate, plan and communicate has helped us reach where we are today. Yet it can be a double-edged sword. Although the brain may help us to reason, to think creatively, and to relate to others, if we don not learn to switch it off it can overwhelm us. It can persecute us with fears about failure, our appearance, or the opinions others may have of us. Meditation can bring relief from those anxieties by helping us to silence inner chatter, to recognize and dismiss negative thoughts, and to create a feeling of peace and serenity.” Included in the meditation section are suggestions for finding time to meditate, preparing to meditate, postures and breathing, relaxation, affirmations, mantras, standing and walking meditation, the chakras, visualization, meditation for healing, color and light, the power of sound, and meditations for stressful situations.

4) Stress relief: “For long-term stress relief and optimum well-being you need periods of mental and physical relaxation throughout the day. Relaxation is a set of easily learned skills that will teach you how to combat the effects of stress and restore the balance between body and mind to enable healthy, happy living.” Included in the stress relief section are a strategy for relaxation, relaxing your body, breathing, reducing muscle tension, massage, restoring vital energy, relaxing mind and spirit, meditation, visualization, hypnotherapy, self-hypnosis, autogenic training, biofeedback, improving self-worth, setting goals, going with the flow, living for the moment, positive commuting, freedo frm fear, relationships, diet, exercise, the world of work, relaxing at home, the world around you, getting a good night’s sleep, and natural remedies for relaxation.