Posts Tagged ‘pilates for men’

Pilates and Los Angeles

Friday, July 30th, 2010

This is Hard!

I think I understand why Pilates is so popular in Los Angeles.  It isn’t because we have the greatest studio in the world, although I am partial to the warmth, cleanliness and space of our studio in Encino, CA. Talk to most good Pilates operators in and around the Los Angeles area and by and large you will hear them say that their business is very good!  We hear that business has been growing in a down economy.  Part of the reason for the growth is the huge number of Baby Boomers that are aging, and retiring. In order to keep their bodies functioning at a high level, they turn to the low impact, huge results of Pilates as part of their fitness regiment.  They also turn to Pilates to help them after they’ve finished their physical therapy for rehabbing injuries.  However, I realized why more and more people are turning to Pilates each day here in Los Angeles while on my daily bike ride home from the studio.  Now mind you, I ride home along Ventura Blvd, which is very very busy…and I do break the rules a bit and ride on the sidewalk for most of it.  BUT…I see everything! I notice everything and I can smell everything, from the stores that you’d never notice while driving, to the plethora of restaurants, to the crazy drivers, and their antics inside the sanctity of their cars.

Since I ride on the sidewalk for most of the route, I’m careful, I ride slowly and I give the right of way to pedestrians. It also gives me time to relax, gather my thoughts for the day. Mostly, however, I get to see the insanity of what drivers go through every single day. I started to think we don’t just live in the city of Angels, but at times we live in the city of something else that kind of rhymes with angels, but also sounds a bit like brass and holes.  Yup…and I bet out of their cars, they are extremely nice people…but man, I saw nearly five nasty accidents on an 8 mile ride home last night.  Oh, and the horns…holy mackerel, the horns!  It was a cacophony of brass – hole instruments emanating from under the hoods of their Toyotas, Nissans and BMW’s.

So it all brings me back to the big exhale that our clients breathe the moment they walk through our doors.  We offer that sanctuary where they can not only exercise, but they can detox and feel good if only for an hour of their day.  And that, is why our businesses our growing.  The more we give our clients and future clients the ability to have a safe haven, the more we’ll help them preserve, lengthen and enjoy their lives.

Until next time!

-Art A.

The Epiphany of How to Eat

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Do I really weigh that much?

I went on vacation last week, and I never expected to have the epiphany that I had. I learned how food consumption and exercise really work.  I went through the Pilates For Men 10-20-30 Challenge and I understood that while I was exercising vigorously, that eating only 1500 calories per day was really effective in helping me ditch those extra 20 pounds.  BUT…what I learned on my cruise to the Bahamas last week was so much more meaningful in learning what NOT to do and why.  I went on this beautiful Norwegian Epic ship leery of what could happen with 20 gourmet restaurants to choose from and my crazy appetite. I was prepared mentally long before I ever passed over the gangway and onto the ship. I’ve been down this road before and I know that in 7 days a schmuck like me can gain 10 pounds.  It wasn’t going to happen this time.  I was a rock I tell you.  My first stop was to the fitness center, which of course, was state of the art.  It was equipped with everything (sans a scale…gee I wonder why?).  Now, I was still going to eat – that’s what I paid for afterall, but I was also going to work out every single day.  Pilates, weights, cardio…all of it.  And for 7 days, that is what I did.  I ate, I worked out, I swam in the Atlantic Ocean, ate some more, worked out some more, sweated, ate, drank…I did it all.  After about my fifth day I knew I put on weight.  I hadn’t a clue how much because they smartly don’t have scales on board these ships.  I would say my ‘activity level’ had been extremely high, yet I knew that familiar bulge forming around my middle.  I could see a little extra puffy skin under my jaw line, and I feared I’d put on about five or gasp seven pounds.

Here’s what’s frustrating…I was watching myself at the buffet table!  I was careful about what I was eating. It was on the forefront of my mind, and I didn’t go all out like I’d done in the past. So, sweating it out in the steam room, it came to me.  It’s so simple. Humans weren’t meant to consume 4,000 calories per day. Think about it.  As little as a couple of thousand years ago we were meant to hunt and gather our food.  Our bodies are still accustomed to that. If we could consume 1500 calories per day in nuts, fruits and meat that we’d hunted, our bodies were thrilled, and gave us boundless energy to continue to hunt and gather. Soooo, when we stuff 4,000 calories per day down our gullet, our body does what it was built to do, it saves it, stores it, and turns it into big walls of sticky, icky fat! Let’s go back to our few thousand years ago scenario. We consume veggies, fruits, meat (about 1500 calories) and we can run, hike, gather, move our bodies for an entire day. If we have a day where the pickings were slim and we only took in 1,000 calories, no problemo, our bodies went into conservation mode, and we functioned perfectly well.  Now, back in present day and we add all the processed goop that we eat and we fool ourselves into thinking that 40 minutes on the bike, or treadmill is going to right all those wrongs, and we’ve got another thing coming.  It’s virtually impossible to burn it all off because we are conditioned to conserve energy and be extremely efficient.  Our wonderful and perfect bodies are saving all of that glorious energy waiting for the famine that will never come.  Instead what comes is tomorrow, which brings another 4,000 calorie day of consumption, then another, and another and so on, until we are unhealthy, immobile heart diseased, diabetics in big big trouble wondering how this happened to us.

The scariest thing I learned on the cruise was that it doesn’t take much.  I definitely ate, and sadly nearly everything “good” is rich on the ship.  So, in the spirit of honesty, I’m going to give you my before cruise weight, and my after cruise weight.  Don’t get too attached to the after number, because I’m going to lose every last stinking, filthy (delicious) ounce that I gained.

Ready?

You sure?

Okay.  Here it is…Before cruise – Art’s weight = 193 pounds.

After cruise – Art’s weight = 201 pounds.

I worked out every single day and was only gone for 7 days.  Scary isn’t it? Remember friends, our bodies were designed to function extremely efficiently.  Food is for fuel.  That’s how the biology of our bodies function.  We stuff crap into it, and we’re in trouble and it doesn’t take long.  I got home from the cruise on Saturday and immediately went for a 35 mile bike ride.  I will follow that up with an hour of vigorous Pilates every day until my “after” picture is securely hanging nicely on my bones.  I’ll keep you posted, and I won’t let ya down!

Pilates and Gaining Muscle? You Bet!

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Day 1 for Mike on his 30 session journey

Before you get nervous about this photograph, let me assure you this is the DAY 1 photograph!  Mike is more than halfway through his 30 sessions to his new body.  I see Mike around the studio these days and his arms are HUGE!  He has come so far and he’s not at the end of his 30 sessions of Pilates for Men journey yet. During my 10-20-30 Challenge at the studio my goal was to drop weight, lose my flabby belly, tone up and lean out. Mike is trying to do essentially the opposite of that and he’s looking for huge results – pun intended. Mike is eating massive amounts of calories in the form of protein supplements and healthy diet choices combined with eating every two to three hours.  His caloric intake is greater than normal, however he’s not partaking in eating bad foods (i.e. McFatty burgers etc.)

We have to remember that Pilates by itself will help us gain flexibility and strength, but unless we adopt a great eating regiment, or at least a focused eating regiment for what we are trying to do, we are not giving ourself the optimum benefit to the amount of work we are putting in.  I find myself saying that over and over again to some of the clients I see here on a regular basis.  If you are a guy, like I was, who weighed roughly 220 (pre diet) pounds, and you expect that you can consume 3,000 to 4,000 calories per day while you work out 4 days per week, you’ve got a problem on your hands.  You won’t see the results you’re hoping for, and that I can guarantee.  Make an appointment with your doctor, or a nutritionist, or in my case, my Jenny Craig counselor, and find out what diet will work with the amount of work you are doing.  A great tool out there to help you gauge what’s going in your mouth and what you are burning each day is www.myfitnesspal.com.

We will be checking in with Mike here shortly while we wait for those awesome “AFTER” photos representing the completion of his 10-20-30 sessions to a new body taught by Pilates Sports Center’s Master Trainer, Josh Smith.  If you can’t get yourself to a studio near you, we’d like to propose bringing the studio to you so you can do Pilates Sports Center’s “Pilates for Men 10-20-30 Challenge” in the comfort of your home.  You will sweat, you will feel the burn, and most importantly you will love it!

Mike, keep adding on that spring resistance while keeping your form picture perfect.