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Week 1 - Weekly Wrap-Up

Ok, week one is done.  I worked out 5 days this week.  My goal was for 6, so I came up a little short.  I missed the strength workouts for Power 90, but I did additional cardio on those days.  I'm considering the first week a transition week.

This coming week, the plan is:

Monday: Sculpt I/II in the AM, Turbo Kick @ Lunch

Tuesday: Cardio I/II & Ab Ripper 100 in the AM, Round 28 PM

Wednesday: Sculpt I/II in the AM, Turbo Kick @ Lunch, Bowling PM

Thursday: Cardio I/II & Ab Ripper 100 in the AM

Friday: Sculpt I/II in the AM

Saturday: Cardio I/II & Ab Ripper 100

Sunday: Yoga & Turbo Round 28 practice

I also need to get my eating back on track this week.  Will follow-up with progress.

-Caitlin*

My Goals & Plan of Action!

OK, I need to get moving!  I've been plateaued since basically July.  And it's no fault except my own!  I haven't been eating well again and I really need to focus on that.  Diet is really, like, 95% of my weight-loss solution.  So I need to re-focus.  I have a plan of action that is going to take me through the next year.  It is as follows:

- 60 days of Power 90

- ChaLean Extreme for all 4 phases

- P90X for the 90 days

- Insanity

- Turbo Fire

I will be adding in some Turbo Jam/Turbo Kick to the mix as I'm teaching it twice a week at the moment and more in the future.  I'm also adding additional stretching and yoga in and perhaps some running, as I'd like to work towards being able to run 5 miles.

So with my workouts in place, I really REALLY need to make eating healthy my priority.  If I have my daily deficit of 1050 calories (eating 500 calories less and burning 500 calories more!) I would be at my goal of 135 lbs. (the best shape of MY LIFE!) by memorial day.  Talk about starting the summer off right!

So I've stated my goals, made them public, now I just need to be accountable.  I will be using this blog as more of a diary now, so that I can look back at my journey and see where I started!  I'm going to try to post at least once a week as a summary, if not more.

How Social Support Can Help with Motivation

I found this article on ThatsFit.com.  I found it to be really informative.  I've always liked having support when working out, whether in the form of a workout buddy, or just reading articles and success stories.  After reading this article, I realized how much this Beachbody website fulfills that part of me.  There are so many success stories that inspire me on here.  There's diet tips, fitness tips from the instructors I know and love, and friends.  I've made some amazing friends on here that are on the same journey to fitness that I am.  We share our struggles, our ups and downs, and support each other through it all.  When I tell them I'm going to do something, they hold me to it.  If I don't follow through, I feel more guilty about it than if I hadn't told them.  Support comes in many different forms.  What type of support do you use?  Please read the article, and put it to use!

Workout Motivation for Solo Exercisers: by Amber Greviskes

We all know we need to workout, but the distractions are so tempting -- a few extra minutes of sleep in the morning or a glass of wine after a long day of work.

Getting people to forgo their extra shuteye or skip the happy hour might seem nearly impossible, but there's a growing body of research that shows that a little positive encouragement can help.

A Stanford University study showed that a small amount of social support can make a big difference in whether people exercise. During the year-long study, participants were divided into three groups. The members of one group were contacted by a health educator every three weeks to check on his or her progress. In other groups, the members were either contacted by a computer or did not receive calls.

Both the computerized voice and the health educator asked similar questions, like which exercises they performed and how often. They were also asked how they saw themselves improving in the coming weeks. When exercisers had lapses in their workout routines, the caller encouraged them to resume their workout as soon as possible.

The results leave little room for debate. After a year, those who received calls exercised about one half-hour more than the recommended 30 minutes per day, five days per week. Those who received calls from the computerized improved their fitness levels by exercising for just more than the weekly recommendations. The others worked out far less, falling more than 30 minutes short of the national recommendations.

"It appears from a lot of research that stating your goals public provides a certain amount of perceived accountability," said Abby King, a Stanford professor of medicine and health research and policy who conducted the study. "It helps them stay on course because when they are going to skip a workout, they think back to what they told someone else. Public commitments have been used a lot to motivate people -- whether they're trying to exercise, quit smoking or stop drinking -- and they really do seem to help. When they say it out loud, it makes it real. You don't want to let yourself down or disappoint others."

If you love working out solo because it gives you the time to think through work or personal problems, don't stress. You can still incorporate the accountability factor without getting a permanent exercise buddy.

Here are some tips to get you motivated:

1. Hire a personal trainer. Once you pay for your sessions, you're much less likely to skip out on your gym time. You're also much more likely to keep exercising if you have someone to create innovative workouts that target your trouble zones and promise results.

2. Sign up for a new class. Even if you swear that solo workouts are the way to go, certain group classes, especially cycling and mind-body classes during which you'll have your own space without the risk of an uncoordinated dancer kicking into you, might be worth a try. You will have classmates who you'll grow to recognize and become friendly with. If anything, having a friendly instructor can be a bonus when you're feeling unmotivated. Most gyms will let you try out classes if they're not included in your membership before you join them. Good group instructors, King said, will remember the class participants names and faces. They'll also tell them they were missed when they weren't in class whether via an email check in or when they see them the next week.

3. Set a phone or calendar reminder. Add your favorite class to your calendar, then set up a weekly reminder. Depending on your schedule, King said, you can also set your phone alarm for the time when you're most likely to skip the gym. If you know that you're going to choose between going straight home from work or hitting the gym, you can program your phone to sound 10 minutes before you leave work. That way, you're not tempted to work too late or find a work-related happy hour to use as an excuse.

4. Find a "workout" buddy. Even if you don't want to sweat with someone else, you can find a co-worker or friend who will ask you about your workout. If you have another friend who's trying to lose weight, you can also send text message reminders back and forth. You can also start an email chain with a group of friends. Chances are you already have an email chain that's dedicated to the latest great or awful thing your boyfriend/husband/roommate/kids/mother did. King likes this idea because it takes people "less than 10 seconds to shoot a text message to a friend."

5) Use social networking to keep you responsible. According to Time magazine, marathon running has surged in popularity thanks to Facebook. You can post status updates about your goals or challenge yourself to complete a 5K, announce it on Facebook and feel like a champion when your friends start asking you how the event went. Some Twitter users, who are much more willing to disclose their weights than I'll ever be, tweet their weight loss results.

6. Make a card that lists why you started working out. There are many people who start program to lose weight, but they have to have a reason why losing weight is important to stick to their goals. Those who are losing weight because of personal reasons like being able to play with their children or avoiding their family history of heart disease tend to have more success, said Paul Estabrooks, associate professor of Human Nutrition, Foods and Exercise at Virginia Tech.

7) Connect with people on message boards. There are few people who better understand the commitment and struggles with reaching a fitness goal than those who are in the same situation. If you don't have friends who are willing to support you, you can find message boards dedicated to weight loss and exercise. Some programs, like Weight Watchers have plans attached to them, but there are sites without programs that people can use.

Hope you found the article as interesting as I did!

Caitlin*

Is it HOT in here?? It is thanks to Turbo Fire!!!

Have YOU ordered Turbo Fire yet???  I ordered it as soon as I realized it was available, and let me just say how incredible the package I received was.  I got the super-deluxe-ultimate-amazing package, with all things Turbo Fire in it!!  Happy Birthday to me :)

I'm reading the fitness and nutrition guides, and am planning to start fully July 1st.  This should put me in better condition for camp--which is EXACTLY ONE MONTH AWAAY!!!  AAAAAAAH!!!  I'm so excited for Camp Turbo Kick 2010!

I digress!  So I am going to do Turbo Fire for these four weeks leading up to camp, go to camp (get my Turbo/Hustle/PiYo/hopefully Fire on), come home for two weeks and continue with Fire, and then take a trip to Virginia.  After Virginia, I'd like to mix P90X and Turbo Fire to get some serious results!  Big changes are coming!!   Join me!

Goals, Goals, Goals for June

Well, here we are.  The start of a new month.  Full of promise and hopes.  At the end of this month I will be turning 26.  Yikes!  Turbo Fire will be out this month as well, so that's going to be AMAZING!!!

Some goals I have for the month are:

~ Lose 10 pounds by my birthday.  I know I can do this if I stick to my reduced-calorie diet and keep my activity high.

~ Post a new blog at least twice a week, if not more.

~ Stick to my diet 97% of the time--the 3% being Phil's birthday, our birthday party, & my birthday.

~ Move into our new room--and when moving reorganize and de-clutter my life!

~ Get 4 people signed up for the free Beachbody membership--there's so many great resources on here and people are just missing out!

~ Order business cards--people don't know I'm a coach if I don't tell them!

~ Keep Bodybugg updated 100% of the time--this is my biggest tool for losing weight.

I've reached on of the goals I had set for myself from Camp Turbo last year.  I'm a Turbo Kick Instructor!!!!!!!  It's very exciting--I've been teaching classes with my friend at our job and it's been great.  We're going to keep teaching, so hopefully I'll get very comfortable doing it.

That leads me to other goals:

~ Have Turbo 101 memorized (no notes required)

~ Have Round 28 memorized (no notes required)

~ Start working on a new round!

 

I think those are some good goals for the month.  What are your goals?

I hope you achieve your goals this month.  Keep working on them!  It's all about progress, not perfection ;)

Caitlin*

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