My Nutrition Coach Certification

NAFC-Logo-05
Despite the fact that I am a fully licensed and board-certified physician, and also hold a Bachelor’s Degree in Exercise Science, I realize that some people get hung up on specific certifications. My education covered nutrition in exhausting detail, which is why I am able to customize meal plans for clients and patients based on a myriad of factors. However, I also obtained a Nutrition Coach certification from NAFC to fortify the credentials I already had.

For those of you who are curious about the course, here are some details:

NAFC’s Nutrition Coach Foundations delivers scientifically-based nutrition education so health and fitness professionals can better serve their clients.

Develop the skills, knowledge and abilities to successfully work with clients seeking goal-based nutritional guidance.
Gain an occupational advantage with enhanced education and a credential to differentiate you from your competition!

NAFC’s Certified Health & Fitness Coaching course blends sound basic science with the latest in nutritional science along with proven coaching skills to help you successfully guide your clients toward better health, better performance, and a better body!

In Section I of this course, you’ll get a strong introduction to the basic sciences; in Section II you’ll become immersed in the field of nutritional science; in Section III you’ll learn about the art & science of being an effective coach; and finally in Section IV you’ll go through a step-by-step set of instructions on how to implement nutritional coaching competently & profitably (including over 30 pages of questionnaires and assessment tools to use with your clients).

No other nutrition certification puts all of these components together. No other nutrition certification was written by a physician with over 35 years of experience in the areas of nutrition, fitness, personal training, anti-aging medicine, and performance enhancement.

The National Association for Fitness Certification was established in 1992 to provide scientifically-based, standards-focused education and training for Group Fitness Instructors, Personal Trainers, and Wellness Consultants. The NAFC’s combination of demanding standards, practical application of scientific principles, and affordable program pricing have defined it as the most rapidly-expanding certifying organization in the industry today.

The NAFC was established by a forward-thinking group of fitness professionals, representing expertise in fields including Exercise Physiology, Adaptive Physical Education, Medicine and Nursing, and Professional Coaching. Their desire was to enhance current fitness certification standards by providing access to convenient and comprehensive – yet practical and affordable – education and skills.

The NAFC follows guidelines established by the American College of Sports Medicine, emphasizing practical information with respect to a comprehensive knowledge base.

Royal Sport Ltd. Ultra Clean 100 Whey Protein

royalwhey
From the makers of Cellucor comes Royal Sport Ltd., a sports supplement line which is sold exclusively through GNC. Royal Sport Ltd. has a number of products in their lineup, but the newest product is the Ultra Clean 100 Whey Protein. Ultra Clean 100 is gluten free, and contains NO Yeast, NO Wheat, NO Preservatives, NO Added Sugars, NO Hydrogenated Oil, and NO Artificial Colors, Dyes, or Fillers. One scoop of this clean whey protein delivers 20 grams of protein and 100 calories per scoop. This protein mixes so beautifully well that I have NEVER had an issue with shaking it up in a mixer cup. You will never need to use a blender with this protein!

I have tried all of the flavors and truly love them all. They are:

Chocolate Cupcake – This is a very rich chocolate, and I absolutely love it. All you chocolate fiends out there will be very happy with this flavor!

Cinnamon Bun – I love the subtle hint of cinnamon which comes forth in this flavor. It’s not over the top, but you will definitely be able to taste the cinnamon as you drink this.

Vanilla Cream – This is a great vanilla, very creamy with excellent and true vanilla flavor.

Ice Cream Sandwich – This is my favorite flavor in the lineup. It reminds me exactly of the slow churned, super creamy, almost frothy consistency of the ice cream which is found in a really good, old-fashioned style ice cream sandwich. The mouth feel on this one is outstanding and definitely tricks your palate into believing that this is a decadent, fat laden ice cream shake.

I encourage you to try this fantastic protein!

I Finally Tried Quest Pasta

When I heard about the new pasta from Quest Nutrition, I became quite excited because I love everything this company comes out with. It took me a while to get my hands on a package of these guilt-free noodles, but I finally did a couple of months ago.
I was given the spinach fettucine variety, which contains 20 calories per serving (2 servings in a bag). The noodles are very low carb and gluten free, comprised of 100% soluble fiber from the Konjac root, which is also known as glucomannan. I kept waiting for a time when I would finally feel compelled to try it, and that time coincided with a day in which I was constantly ravenous. I walked into the kitchen and figured that consuming Quest noodles would be an excellent way to fill me up and would also give me an opportunity to finally try them.

I hadn’t heard about the odor imparted by the alkaline water that is used to pack the noodles in, so I was a bit alarmed when I opened the package and was assaulted by a strong, SALTY (weird how it actually smelled salty!), ocean smell, kind of like strong seaweed. I thought maybe the noodles had already gone bad! My cream Burmese Kazu, who by the way is a FREAK for seaweed, jogged into the kitchen to investigate and was convinced that I had opened a package of seaweed, so we did a little dance in which she kept jumping on the counter and I kept removing her from it. Once I rinsed the noodles, the smell went away and so did my little seaweed fanatic.

The noodles are very slippery, and have a chewy, slightly rubbery consistency when you eat them, but they hold sauces very well, and they cook up lightning fast. A minute in the microwave does the trick. I added shredded chicken breast, fresh garlic, black pepper, onions and 2 tablespoons of spaghetti sauce and was very happy with the outcome. I honestly tried to restrain myself and have one serving, but these noodles are so guilt free that I had 2 servings and was satisfied for over two hours. After trying these noodles, I think I might have to keep a supply on hand for those times when I am starving and need to throw some food bulk into a meal. Thank goodness for Quest Pastabilities!

You can order direct from Quest Nutrition:

Quest_pasta

http://www.questnutrition.com/quest-pasta/quest-pasta-spinach-fettuccine-12-pack/?type=box

Traveling Is Hard For Fitness People

flex gym
Ever since I began competing in 2009, I have become a high maintenance traveler. It’s almost impossible to avoid becoming high maintenance when things like finding a gym and locating clean food are foremost in one’s mind. I’m not saying that it’s not possible to stay on track with workouts and food while traveling, but foraging for certain “fitness” resources becomes an essential part of prepping for a trip in a fitness person’s life.

I honestly believe that it is always possible to create intense workouts in any location by performing plyometrics, calisthenics, climbing stairs, running on the beach, etc. However, I also know that those of us who love lifting weights go through iron withdrawals when a gym is not available during travels. My first question when a trip is being booked is, “Where is the closest gym, and how is it equipped?”, rather than what sights there are to check out. No hotel room routine or outdoor workout will ever feel as good to me as weightlifting.

Road trips are the easiest since a car can be loaded up with meals and water, but I am always concerned about whether there is a refrigerator in the hotel room at my destination. Though I am resourceful and can put my food on ice, food spoilage is almost inevitable after a couple of days. Packing food when traveling by plane is much trickier since certain food items either travel poorly or are not allowed by TSA. If you need to bring a lot of food and decide to check in your food bag, be prepared for the possibility of lost luggage. My food bag was lost for 24 hours on one trip when I was traveling to a national contest, all because the airline had cancelled a flight, yet had neglected to reroute my food after they booked me on a replacement flight! I also had to spend the night in a freezing cold airport terminal during that trip, so by the time I got to my final destination, I was exhausted and frustrated. When I discovered that my food had been lost, I literally began crying. Eventually my bag was found and delivered to me, but 7 pounds of chicken and beef were on the verge of spoiling by the time the bag was back in my possession.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Traveling abroad holds even more challenges for the fitness person, since many countries don’t offer clean meal prep services. Even if a local market is located, how will food be prepped if your hotel room lacks a kitchen? I am currently facing this challenge as I prepare for a trip to Hungary. I will make sure to pack a bunch of whey protein, Quest bars and nuts to at least ensure that I meet my body’s daily protein needs. I have also looked into purchasing prepped meals and having them shipped to the hotel on the day of my arrival. Thank goodness I will be staying in a room with a kitchenette when I travel to Sydney, and can cook up a bunch of fish and chicken once I arrive there.

I know that those of you who are not involved in the fitness industry must be reading this and thinking that I am nuts, while those of you in fitness will be able to relate to what I have been saying in this article. The thing is, I don’t want my body to rebel from radically different eating habits or food choices, so I will uphold my high maintenance perspective and do everything in my power to eat clean. Most countries tend to consume whole foods and aren’t in the habit of eating copious amounts of fast foods, a fact which I am thankful for. I look forward to consuming the local produce and trying new foods while staying clean.

Too Many Cooks

Adult female with personal trainer at gym.I am getting pretty tired of clients who think they are suddenly fitness authorities, or who think nothing of following the advice of 52 different people on what to do about diet, exercise after signing up for a comprehensive training and meal plan which I customize for them. Honestly, why hire me if you’re just going to follow whatever your whim decides is cool at the moment? I don’t get easily insulted, but it’s more that I put time into customizing plans and don’t appreciate it when a client reads some silly excerpt in Shape magazine and decides that it must be better than my advice because it was in a women’s magazine.

I deal with know-it-all attitudes as a fitness professional and as a physician. Let me be very clear. I have a four year college degree in Exercise Science from a well respected college. I have over twenty years of experience with weight training, and have done contest prep coaching since 2010. I am a professional athlete.

As a physician I have over a decade of experience, am board-certified and fully licensed. Yet I am challenged on a regular basis by people who think that because they looked up something on WebMD that they are suddenly more knowledgeable than I am. In fact I am not sure which bothers me more: the disrespect I get as a doctor, or the disrespect I get as a fitness professional?

The BEST advice I can give to anyone who is looking for a comprehensive plan in fitness, nutrition, or hormone balancing is to pick ONE expert and stick with that person’s knowledge instead of second guessing the individual by throwing other mostly uneducated opinions on what to do. While I give people a lot of credit for knowing their own bodies. I think it is important to remember that contradicting your coach, physician or mentor is a study in animosity that will pitch you in poor stead with that person who is trying to help you.

Food Network: Food I Can Never Eat

Food Network LogoThe Food Network is my favorite television channel, and I watch it regularly. I appreciate the chemistry and creativity behind culinary efforts and enjoy the visual appeal of dishes that are prepared and served. Perhaps my favorite show on the Food Network is Guy Fieri’s “Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives”, in which Guy travels all over the United States in pursuit of the best reasonably priced eats around. What is so sad is the fact that I can virtually never indulge in the featured dishes at the restaurants Guy visits, because they are so laden with everything I am NOT supposed to eat!

You would think that not being able to eat the foods that are featured on the Food Network would be enough to deter me from watching it regularly, but I get great pleasure from watching it. I must get some vicarious pleasure out of watching others eat forbidden dishes or something. My interest in this channel is so extreme that whenever I travel for IFBB Pro competitions (incidentally, I used to do this when I was an amateur in the NPC as well), I will turn the television on, find the Food Network, then leave it on 24/7 while staying at a hotel. This strange habit of keeping the t.v. on in a hotel room is one I have had for many years, but it wasn’t until 2011 when I began tuning into the Food Network while traveling. I have had fellow competitors come up to my room and remark on how tortuous it is to see shows about food on t.v, and only then does it hit me that this quirk of mine is a bit strange.

To a certain extent I miss the days when I was a foodie, indulging in gustatory delights with some frequency. However, on the rare occasions when I HAVE indulged, I usually pay the price for the next several days as my body tries to figure out what attacked it! The only thing my body can handle is a moderate cheat meal which does not consist of eating at more than one restaurant in an evening. Though this has only happened a handful of times over the years, I have had post-contest cheat meals in which I have visited one restaurant for a specific food craving, then another for a fellow competitor’s food craving, then a third place for dessert. After such gluttony, my belly is distended, my digestive tract is angry, and I pool subcutaneous water into the backs of my legs.

Since decadent foods make my body angry, I would much prefer to watch a television show which features those foods so that I can enjoy a calorie-free fantasy. This way I can indulge in hot fudge sundaes, mile-high burgers, heaping piles of pasta, and rich sauces without guilt!

The Iodine Deficiency Epidemic

This is a GREAT article on iodine deficiency. I did NOT write this, but thought it was so well-written that I am displaying the entire article as it is found on T-nation.com Original post can be found here:

http://www.t-nation.com/readArticle.do?id=5559634

16Fir06.qxp

Few organs have been so misunderstood and mistreated as the human thyroid gland. Why, if it had any self-respect, it’d seek asylum in Russia along with Gerard Depardieu.

Unfortunately, the thyroid has chosen a more vengeful tactic – it’s wreaking havoc by playing a part in a silent epidemic that may be affecting the overall health of as much as 74% of U.S. adults.

When the thyroid is happy and functioning normally, it determines how your body uses energy (i.e., controls your metabolism), makes proteins affecting growth and development, plays a part in glucose consumption, helps regulate levels of blood lipids, and it even controls body temperature.

When you’re not giving it what it needs – when it’s not happy and functioning normally – it can cause fatigue and rampant weight gain, along with a host of problems including cancer.

It’s highly likely that you might have an unhappy thyroid, and if you do, it’s pathetic because the problem is oh-so-easy to remedy.

Before we get to the specific problem and the cure, though, let’s look at one of the fascinating stories that make up the medical history of this oft-ignored endocrine gland, one that shows that medicine is often myopic and causes other problems as bad or worse than the ones it was attempting to cure.

Shrink That Sucker With Radiation

In the 1920’s, doctors started focusing on the problem of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS. This is the phenomenon whereby infants suddenly die in their cribs for no readily apparent reason.

Doctors began doing autopsies on babies that had died of SIDS and compared the findings with anatomy-book drawings to see if there were any physiological discrepancies.

Lo and behold, the babies who’d died of SIDS had grossly enlarged thyroid glands. Doctors theorized that these humungous glands put pressure on the infants’ tracheas during sleep, resulting in suffocation.

Now it was known that radiation could shrink the thyroid gland, so doctors around the country leapt into action and began irradiating the thyroids of every infant that they could lure through their clinic door. It was easy because they employed the old guilt game – parents who ignored the warning were deemed irresponsible.

Enlarged thyroids were a thing of the past! Chalk one up for medical research! SIDS was conquered! No longer would parents lie awake at night fearing the worst. They could rest ea…huh? What’s that you say? They were wrong???

You bet.

To find out how they screwed up, we have to take the Hot Tub Time Machine back to Revolutionary War times, which was when doctors and scientists were starting to establish medical schools. Then, as is the case now, medical schools needed bodies for dissection, and there were plenty of bodies almost literally lying around for the picking, especially since poor people were buried close to the surface of the ground. (Rich people had nice waterproof, Tupperware-esque caskets that were buried six feet under.)

These dissections and the resultant descriptions and drawings, along with body parts stored in pickle jars, formed a huge database that served as the basis of medical knowledge for the next couple of hundred years.

Now there’s a particular thing you need to know about the thyroid before we can tie all these links together. Since it’s part of the body’s immune system, the thyroid is especially prone to stress, regardless of whether that stress be caused by financial problems or poor nutrition, both of which are things that pretty much define being poor.

As a result, these cadavers – these cadavers that served as the reference point for doctors in the early 20th century – had small, shrunken, stressed-out thyroids.

Are you starting to figure it out yet? When the doctors from the 1920’s were looking at the thyroid glands of the autopsied SIDS babies, they weren’t looking at enlarged glands at all! It was the opposite! For the first time, they were looking at normal, healthy thyroid glands! It’s only when they compared them to the Revolutionary War-era cadavers that they looked enlarged.

The atrophied glands of the long-dead cadavers were an anomaly, a direct result of stress and poor nutrition. As a result, doctors made the wrong assumption and began needlessly irradiating healthy thyroid glands in children to shrink them.

So what happened to the children who received radiation treatments?

Years later many of them developed thyroid cancer, most likely as a direct result of being irradiated by uranium ions during childhood. Over 30,000 of them died in young adulthood. Meanwhile, SIDS continues to be the major cause of death in infants between one month and one year old.

So it goes.

Right around the same time that docs began irradiating healthy thyroid glands, they began successfully treating another thyroid problem: goiters.

When it Rains it Pours

The thyroid does its magic through the production of thyroid hormones, the main ones being triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4). These hormones are synthesized from the amino acid tyrosine and iodine.

Without iodine, which needs to be provided through the diet, the thyroid freaks out. It cries for help by signaling the pituitary to release Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH), which tells the thyroid gland to get busy making more hormones.

However, if there’s no iodine in the diet, the thyroid gland either forms nodules or it just gets bigger and bigger, forming what’s known as a goiter. These growths ranged from barely visible to huge bulges that made victims look like some of those bullfrogs that are part of the background on TV’s Swamp People.

Unfortunately, iodine isn’t as ubiquitous as other minerals. The farther away you get from the sea (the source of most earthly iodine) and its bounty, the harder it is to get iodine. Soil contains some, but amounts vary hugely, so vegetables grown in that soil provide an iffy source of iodine.

Luckily for goiter-necked people everywhere, the Morton Salt Company, in 1924, got the brilliant idea of adding iodine to its salt. With the birth of iodized table salt, the age of the goiter disappeared almost overnight.

Zip forward to modern times, though, and we’re in the midst of another thyroid crisis, again, at least partially, brought about by myopic doctors who’d no doubt do poorly in games of 3D chess.

Enter the Damned Doctors… Again

Despite its importance, dietary intake of iodine has decreased by about 50% from 1971 to 2001, the latest dates for which I could find research.

Why did that happen?

Several reasons. For one, the other main source of dietary iodine (other than iodized salt) used to be wheat flour, as iodine was used in its processing. However, much of wheat is now processed with bromide, a chemical cousin of iodine.

However, bromide doesn’t function like iodine in the thyroid. What’s more, it actually block iodine’s activity. (Add to that the trend of food-phobics fearing all things gluten and you can pretty much scratch bread off as a source of iodine.)

Other chemicals block iodine, too, among them chlorine and fluoride, found in drinking water. Another chemical, perchlorate, which is found in ground water and food supplies (it’s even used as a flavor enhancer in certain foods), also interferes with iodine absorption.

Then there’s the lack of consistency in the iodized table salt industry itself. A 2008 study found that of 88 samples of iodized table salt, less than half contained sufficient amounts to thwart off iodine deficiencies.

And then came the doctors. They first advised heart patients to restrict their salt intake, and then in a classic case of what must be good for the goose with congestive heart failure must be good for the gander with a healthy ticker, they told everyone to cut down on salt.

People took heed of their warnings and the saltshaker and its iodine stayed in cupboards and gradually turned into crystallized blocks that could have been mistaken for Lot’s wife.

Then there’s the exercise factor – men and women who exercise a lot excrete precious iodine through their sweat.

What you’re left with is a society where, by some estimates, 74% of its adults are deficient in this vital mineral. You’re also seeing a concomitant rise in benign (and malignant) thyroid growths and nodules, just like in the old days.

(Paradoxically, these low-iodine manufactured nodules can actually give someone hyperthyroidism, as the nodules that grow overproduce thyroid hormones.)

Many of you no doubt think that you’re not included in this dire statistic. You think you’re fine because you don’t restrict your salt intake at all; you eat out at restaurants, eat canned foods without so much as considering the salt content, and you even eat Cheetos.

Well guess again, my orange-fingered friend, processed foods don’t generally use iodized salt. Neither do restaurants. And that pinkish Himalayan salt that some Whole Foods employee in Birkenstocks told you to use? It’s piss-poor in iodine. So is sea salt because a lot of the iodine is lost during crystallization.

Testing is Simple

Chances are you have an iodine deficiency.

How do you know, and why should you care?

The effects are sometimes subtle or insidious, but consider this statement by Dr. David Brownstein, author of Iodine – Why You Need It And Why You Can’t Live Without It:

“Iodine is the most misunderstood nutrient. After 12 years of practicing medicine, I can say that it is impossible to achieve your optimal health if you do not have adequate iodine levels. I have yet to see any item that is more important for promoting health than iodine.”

On one dry-skinned hand, you might have overt symptoms. You may have trouble staying lean, which might be a direct result of thyroid inefficiency. You might have mysterious fatigue. You may suffer from unexplained autoimmune diseases, or have the aforementioned dry skin, be constipated, or suffer from depression.

A malfunctioning thyroid, courtesy of a lack of iodine, might also play a role in heart disease, psychiatric disorders, and various forms of cancer, including breast cancer.

(Consider that Japanese women, who have very high intakes of iodine, have 65% fewer cases of breast cancer. Consider also that there are more centegenarians on the Japanese island of Okinawa than anywhere else, and their daily iodine intake – mostly through kelp-derived products – is very high.)

Or it could be that you’re functioning reasonably well, at least for the time being, while still being deficient.

If you have one or more of the above symptoms or suspicions, blood tests for TSH, fT3 and fT4 (the “free,” or unbound versions of the hormones) might be in order. However, there’s a lot we don’t understand about the thyroid. “Normal” ranges, like “normal” Testosterone ranges, are way too broad for any kind of accurate assessment.

A much easier way to test for thyroid function – one that would be advisable for anyone to take, even if you’re without overt symptoms – would be to take your temperature first thing in the morning before you get out of bed. The normal temp is 98.6 degrees, but you probably won’t see that unless you’re sticking the thermometer someplace else other than your mouth, you sick puppy.

The perfect body temp taken by mouth is right around 98.2 degrees. Consider too, that body temp drops at night and starts to warm up as the day progresses, with the peak occurring between 4 and 6 PM. A variance of about .9 degrees throughout the day is perfectly normal.

That means that a morning body temp of about 97.6 or 97.7 or above is ideal, and anything substantially less is probably a strong indicator that you have hypothyroidism.

Just to give yourself more data, though, it’d probably be a good idea to add a second thermometer reading later on in the day during those peak hours of between 4 and 6 PM to see if you’re even close to 98.2 degrees.

What To Do About It

Luckily, iodine, in the form of supplements, is pretty inexpensive. However, dosages per pill vary widely between manufacturers. Some companies supply the mineral in tiny, RDA-sized dosages of 150 micrograms, whereas others supply it in milligram-sized capsules. (The largest I found was 12.5 mg. per capsule.)

Unfortunately, it’s difficult to say how much you’d need to remedy a deficiency. Simply taking the RDA would be like refilling a bucket with water by adding one drop a day.

A more functional approach would be to take between 6 mg. and 12 mg. for a period of weeks or months (up to three). If and when your body temp returns to its normal 98.6, you would transition to smaller doses closer to the RDA.

While some experts recommend much higher doses to alleviate deficiencies, there are some risks. On the minor side are problems such as acne, loose stools, or iodine allergies. On the severe side are worsening of thyroid problems or atrial fibrillation.

As always, play it smart if you try the supplement approach.

Other, more conservative approaches include simply eating more seafood or seaweed products, eliminating soy products from the diet (if you haven’t already) as they can block iodine absorption, and getting a water filter to take fluoride and chlorine from your drinking water.

Of course, these small-bore remedies, if they even work, would take much, much longer to show results.

At the very least, check your morning body temp to see if you’ve got anything to be concerned about, you goiter-neck, you.

References
Griffin, James, Ojeda, Sergio, Textbook of Endocrine Physiology, Oxford University Press, 3rd edition, 1996

Luoma, TC, “Luoma’s Big Damn Book of Knowledge,” Harper Collins, 12th edition, 2012.

Piccone, Nancy, “The Silent Epidemic of Iodine Deficiency,” Life Extension Magazine, October 2011

Tellebaum, Jacob, M.D., “Iodine Deficiency – An Old Epidemic is Back,” Psychology Today, August 17, 2011

Daily Maintenance…On Your Body?

SN 2014-0303LH1762-XLpostI bet most of you keep up to date with scheduled maintenance on your vehicles in order to keep them running as smoothly as possible. I also know that many of you insist on using a certain brand or grade of gasoline to optimize your car’s performance. Do you take care of your body in the same way, putting healthy, nutritious food into your gullet every day? Do you exercise regularly? If the answer to either or both of those questions is no, then you are neglecting your body’s needs for optimal function, fitness and health. Over time, such bad habits have a cumulative effect and can manifest in countless diseases and dysfunctions, including potential killers like hypertension, heart disease, diabetes and cancer.

Just as additives in gasoline can hinder the performance of a car, processed foods will interfere with optimal body functions, and your body must deal with breaking down, eliminating, or storing the chemicals found in packaged meats and other junk foods. The preservatives and artificial colors and flavors which are added to packaged foods trigger production of free radicals in the body. Free radicals are unstable molecules which damage the cells of the body and contribute to the development of cancer, atherosclerosis, and aging in general. In contrast, foods which are rich in antioxidants offset this harmful cascade. If your meals regularly consist of fresh vegetables, fresh fruit, nuts, beans and lean meats, you will be filling your body with clean fuel, providing nutrients which will optimize your health.

Another important component of optimal daily body maintenance is regular exercise. If you can commit to a consistent exercise schedule (and you CAN), you will reap a myriad of benefits, including improved circulation, better cardiac output, improved muscle tone, better concentration, and more energy. Regular exercise can be compared to running the engine in your car regularly to keep the pistons and gears running smoothly. Your body is an amazing machine, and just like any machine, will begin to malfunction if it is mishandled or neglected.

Classic-Car--Red-Corvette-Hood_art