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Showing posts with label workout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label workout. Show all posts

This Simple Workout Can Shave Inches Off Your Waist in Just 3 Weeks



Having a baby is one of the most beautiful, miraculous and incredible things a woman can do, but there’s no denying the physical toll it can take on the body — especially the abs.
“Mummy tummy” and “mommy pooch” refers to that soft, smooshy postpartum belly that most women end up with after giving birth. A recent study by BabyCenter.com showed 86 percent of moms felt their stomachs still hadn’t returned to normal two years after having a baby.
If you think you’re suffering from the separation of abdominal muscles that doctors call diastasis recti, personal trainer Leah Keller might have the solution. Keller, who has studios in New York and San Francisco, maintains she has devised a scientifically supported workout called The Dia Method that can shave several inches off the waist in just three weeks’ time. And get this: It only takes 10 minutes a day. Hallelujah!
“We will see a dramatic change,” Keller promised to NPR’s Michaeleen Doucleff, who committed to three weeks of the class. “You can easily expect to see two inches off your waist in three weeks of time,” Keller says. “That’s not an unrealistic expectation.”
Keller and Dr. Geeta Sharma, M.D., an OB-GYN at Weill Cornell Medicine, did a pilot study on the program — finding 100 percent of the 63 women who took part in the daily exercise had fixed their diastasis recti after 12 weeks. And that is pretty incredible.




“We had patients that were even one year out from giving birth, and they still had such great benefit from the exercises,” Dr. Sharma says. “We love to see that there is something we can do to help women.”
Dr. Linda Brubaker, M.D., an OB-GYN at the University of California, San Diego, tells NPR that the rectus abdominal muscles — the ones that give you that much desired six-pack — should be directly next to each other on each side of the belly button with very little gap. “People think these muscles go horizontal across the belly. But they actually go vertical from head to toe,” she explains.
But what happens during pregnancy is a gap forms between the muscles and around the belly button. Sometimes it will close on its own postpartum, but not always. Left behind is a spot in the belly, sometimes one to two inches wide, with almost no muscle. This is what causes that mommy pooch. To get these muscles to realign, exercise is crucial, but Brubaker warns that most of the information available online isn’t good and can even be “potentially harmful.” Bicycle crunches and crossover crunches can “splay your abs apart in so many ways,” she warns.
Keller’s method is one of the few that doctors and physical therapists support — and it’s actually quite simple. “The exercise is a very small, very intense movement that’s almost imperceptible,” she explains.
Here’s what she says to do: Sitting on the floor with crossed legs and hands on the belly, take a deep breath, letting the belly expand fully. On the exhale, pull in the belly muscles as far back toward the spine as they will go. “Now we’re going to stay here near the spine. Hold this position,” she says. Then take tiny breaths, and with every exhale you pull the stomach back further and further, “tighter and tighter.” And then repeat for 10 minutes.
According to NPR, all the moms in the class succeeded in either completely closing off their abdominal separations or losing inches from their bellies. One even shed almost four inches from her midsection. Doucleff didn’t completely close hers up, but she did drop more than an inch from her belly circumference.
“And I am quite happy with the results,” she wrote. “My abs are definitely firmer. And regularly doing this exercise brought a bonus benefit: My lower-back pain has almost completely gone away.”
You don’t need to be in New York to sign up for Keller’s class. All workouts are available online for a monthly fee. Also, here are some other great postpartum exercises to get you back on the road to fitness!

What Do YOU Think?

Did you have “mummy tummy” after having kids? How did you deal with it? Would you try Keller’s class?















What Treat Your Hair Need Immediately After a Workout




When you work out, sweat seeps into your hair, and can make it look greasy and dirty. That's no big deal when you're headed home for the evening. If your day isn't over yet, find ways to make your locks look fresh. A shower and shampoo is the best post-workout cleanup, but you can wipe away the sweat without lathering up. Dry shampoo, astringent hair tonics and a blow dryer help to degrease your tresses without the suds.

Step 1

Rinse your hair under warm water if you have time to shampoo in the shower. Lather a nickel-sized amount of shampoo between your hands, then massage it into your hair from the roots to the ends. Pay particular attention to areas where sweat collects, such as around your hairline and at the nape of your neck. Rinse thoroughly.

Step 2

Spritz your hair with an astringent hair tonic if you have time to shower but don't want to get your locks wet. Allow the steam and heat in the shower to help the tonic penetrate your hair, without the need for rinsing. The tonic works by breaking down excess sebum and sweat without water. Opt for a tonic that contains peppermint or tea tree oil -- they're potent astringents that also have a nice scent. Once you're done in the shower, blow-dry your hair until it's completely dry, then curl, iron or style as usual.

Step 3

Spray your hair with a dry shampoo if you can't get in the shower. Shake a can of dry shampoo a few times, then hold it about 10 inches away from your head. Slowly move the can back and forth as you spray the shampoo on the roots. Don't use too much product in one spot; if you see a buildup of white powder, you've used too much. Wait a few minutes, then brush the powder through your hair to help it soak up oil and dirt from your scalp. Check for remaining white residue and brush it out. If any spots still feel oily, add a bit more shampoo and brush it in.

Step 4

Use a blow dryer to refresh your hair if you can't shampoo. After working out, direct the warm air at the nape of your neck, then move it around your hairline for three to five minutes to dry up sweat. Rub a few drops of silicone styling serum or cream into the hair that frames your face, then aim the warm air at those strands to ease frizz and give hair luster.















See Kim Kardashian Intense Workout Routine That Gave Her That Incredible Body After Giving Birth (VIDEO)




If you're alive on this planet, you know that Kim Kardashian prizes her 2010 weight above all else. In an attempt to force her post-baby body down to 120 pounds, our girl has been ATTACKING it at the gym. Just how hard is she praying to the  healthy body Gods? Well, she just revealed it on Snapchat:





Kim is doing a a 4-mile run, planks, pushups, some ab work and 1,000 jump ropes (Yes, ONE THOUSAND JUMP ROPES) and, as you know, that hard work is paying off in the form of an increasingly slender figure and drastically lower weight. Just imagine if she took all the energy she puts into losing weight and applied it to world peace—we'd be singing Kumbaya across the world in two days flat. 
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