Thursday, February 25, 2010

Victoria checks in with GREAT Results!!

I started working with Victoria in April 2008. At the time she was 205lbs and barely keeping herself in a size 16. Her goal was to reach 175 lbs and get down to a size 8 again while making exercise a part of her life's habit.

We worked out twice a week for some time with slow steady progress. It wasn't until Victoria took my advice and began "doing her homework" that the results really popped. Her homework was to add two additional workouts per week when I was not there, workouts which I provided to her based on exercises and intensity levels we used in our one-on-one sessions.

Where is she now? 162lbs and into a size 6. She just came back from 7 weeks away in Houston and not only kept up her workout routine but lost additional pounds. Awesome results, Victoria!!

Before - 205lbs, size 16


After - 162lbs, size 6-8




Do you want to remake your body, improve your health, feel better and more energetic? Contact me at 267.626.7478. More picture testimonials on the way.
Paul
Paul Dziewisz
Active Personal Fitness
267.626.7478
"You give us the effort...we'll get you the results."

Saturday, February 6, 2010

An Approach to Achievement - Will Smith

Enjoy this video compliation of Will Smith's thoughts on dedication and skill development. Pay particular attention to what he says about running on a treadmill.

Monday, February 1, 2010

February Lunge Challenge

It's time for our monthly fitness challenge. Determining this month's challenge as a tug-o-war between jumping rope and lunges. Read below to see which one won out.

But first, I relaunched www.ActivePersonalFitness.com last weekend. The new look and feel will make it easier to find information about all of our programs from in-home personal training to Elevation Boot Camp to our new Central Bucks Challenge for weight loss to our brand new Central Bucks Runners club. Take a look at the new layout and let me know what you think. You can always reach me at 267.626.7478 or at paul@activepersonalfitness.com.

February Lunge Challenge

Ok, here goes....

Mondays - Stationary Lunges
Tuesdays - Reverse Lunges
Wednesdays - Walking Lunges
Thursdays - Lateral Lunges
Fridays - Squats

Week of Feb 1 thru Feb 5 - Do 30 of each exercise on each leg.
Week of Feb 8 thru Feb 12 - Do 50 of each exercise on each leg.
Week of Feb 15 thru Feb 19 - Do 70 of each exercise on each leg.

Then.....

The week of Feb 22 thru Feb 26 do the following:
Monday - 100 walking lunges
Tuesday - rest
Wednesday - 200 walking lunges
Thursday - rest
Friday - 300 walking lunges

What are you waiting for? Go!!

Paul

Paul Dziewisz
Active Personal Fitness
www.ActivePersonalFitness.com
267.626.7478
"You give us the effort...we'll get you the results."

Monday, January 4, 2010

Active Personal Fitness Pushup Challenge

Join us for our first fitness challenge of the year.

Every day in January do a number of pushups related to the day of the month. You do not need to do them all at one time. Break them up throughout the day as you need to.

Beginners (new to doing pushups)
The number of pushups equals the day of the month. For example, January 5th is 5 pushups.

Restarters (have done pushups before but it has been a while)
The number of pushups equals 2x the day of the month.

Former jocks (it has been a while but you think it hasn't)
The number of pushups equals 3x the day of the month.

Avid Exercisers ("I do pushups while I brush my teeth")
Add a "0" after the single digit days and do 4x on the two-digit days. For example, January 5th is 50. January 17 is 68.

Personal Trainers ("You call this a challenge")
Do the following using the avid exercisers prescription above.
Pushups
Body Weight Squats
Dips
Walking Lunges

Ready, Set, Go!!

Paul

Paul Dziewisz
Active Personal Fitness
www.ActivePersonalFitness.com
Elevation Boot Camp
www.ElevationBootCamp.com
267.626.7478
"You give us the effort...we'll get you the results."

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Set Your Fitness Goals for 2010 -- A Call to Action

One of the keys to accomplishing anything in life is to set goals and hold yourself accountable to them. The goals could involve career, relationships, travel, education and, yes, fitness. Exercising more and losing weight are a close second and third to spending more time with family as the top New Years resolutions for Americans. Recent surveys have found that more than half of all Americans made resolutions involving exercise and weight loss.

Setting a specific goal and communicating it to family, friends, co-workers and peers will help hold you accountable to achieveing the goal. It will also inspire many of them to see you accomplish what you set out to do.

I've been telling my clients this for years. This time I am the one that needs to be held accountable. And I am asking you to join me. Below are my fitness goals for 2010. Several of the items are brand new territory for me (rowing competitions and marathons), they are agressive and the times will all be personal bests for me. But I will do them. If you hold me accountable.

And I want to hold you accountable to yours. Post your fitness goals in comments and update us throughout the year as you achieve them. Don't worry if you think they are not challenging goals. If they are a challenge for you then they are the right goals. Remember, I am a trainer, it's my job to be able to do this stuff.

Center City Sprints (Indoor Rowing) - Saturday, January 30 -- Drexel University (Philly)
Goal time: 7:00 for 2000m Previous Best: 6:47

The Main Line Slide (Indoor Rowing) - Saturday, February 6 -- Villanova University (Philly)
Goal time: 6:45 for 2000m Previous Best : 6:47

Tour of the Battenkill Bike Race Pro/Am - Saturday, April 10 -- Salem, NY
Goal time: Just finish respectably Previous Best: First attempt at this race
http://www.tourofthebattenkill.com/

Bucks County 5K Series - 7 race series March through June -- Bucks County, PA
Goal: Finish in top 10 in my age group (40-44) for the series as a whole. Best four out of seven races count toward overall standings. Previous Best: 17th

Broad Street Run (10 miles) -- Sunday, May 2nd -- Philadelphia, PA
Goal time: 1:11:00 Previous Best: 1:15:18
www.broadstreetrun.com

Univest Cyclosportif Pro/Am Bike Race (60 miles) - Saturday, Sept 10 -- Doylestown, PA
Goal time: TBD Previous Best: First Attempt

-or-

Patriot Games (run/canoe/bike/run two-person team triathlon) - Saturday, Sept 10 -- Chalfont, PA
Goal: Top 5 overall team, Win either Master Division or Coed Division Championship

Philadelphia Distance Run (13.1 miles) --Sunday, Sept 19 -- Philadelphia, PA
Goal time: 1:35:00 Previous Best: 1:40:41

Philadelphia Marathon (26.2 miles) -- November 2010 -- Philadelphia, PA
Goal time: 3:45:00 (8:30/mile pace) Previous Best: This will be my first marathon

Buffalo-Niagara Turkey Trot 8K (4.97 miles) -- Thanksgiving Day -- Buffalo, NY
Goal time: 35 minutes Previous Best: 35:42

CrossFit Goals (This will only make sense to my CrossFit friends)
Complete an uninterupted "Fran"
21 full pullups
21 95# thrusters
15 full pullups
15 95# thrusters
9 full pullups
9 95# thrusters

CrossFit Total (Back Squat + Shoulder Press + Deadlift)
Goal: 750 lbs (Don't laugh Steve)

Filthy Fifty
Goal: 23 minutes (the pullups will kill me) Previous Best: roughly 35 minutes
50 Box jump
24 inch box
50 Jumping pull-ups
50 Kettlebell swings (35 lbs)
Walking Lunge
50 steps
50 Knees to elbows
50 Push press (45lbs)
50 Back extensions
50 Wall ball shots (20 lbs med ball)
50 Burpees
50 Double under jump ropes

"Cindy"
Goal: 18 rounds
As many rounds as possible in 20 minutes of:
5 Pullups
10 Pushups
15 Body Weight squats

Max rep pushups (full range of motion)
Goal: 65

That's it. I better get my butt to the gym.

Paul

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Developing Your Healthy Holiday Plan

Having a Healthy Holiday Plan is more than just about avoiding weight gain. For most of us this coming month is about avoiding bad habits. Bad exercise habits and bad nutritional habits. There are several studies that suggest creating a habit and making it stick as part of your life can be done in 21 days; just 3 simple weeks of repeating a behavior and it will be part of you. The sad thing is that those studies are talking about how to create a positive behavior (things like doing weekly and daily planning, getting into an exercise routine, or quitting smoking). Those are habits that take some effort to establish.

Bad habits are much easier to establish. From now until January 1st we have about 5 weeks of time. And for a lot of us it is a time where we typically create bad habits. You know what they are; eating too much, eating too often, skipping exercise, making bad food choices.

Five weeks. 35 days of temptation. 35 days of people not judging you for taking a second piece of pie. 35 days of there being a second piece of pie just hanging around.

For many people it is that time between now and New Years Day where they not only disrupt their healthy lifestyles for a month but they set themselves up for continued struggle into the New Year. And we all know that once you have taken a step back in your progress it becomes very difficult to get your healthy habits back. The key is to set yourself up for a healthy holiday by having a plan, not a plan that prevents you from enjoying time with family and friends or a piece or two of pie. I am talking about a realistic, sensible, simple plan for approaching the holidays. You need to establish a mindset that will guide you into the New Year.

I need you to start by asking yourself 4 simple questions.
- Are you having company to your house or are you travelling?
- How many people will be at your destination?
- What is on the menu?
- Where will everyone be exercising?

It is not unusual to have no answer to that last question. You know where you will be, who will be there and what you will be eating. But you have not thought at all about where you will exercise. Most of us want to avoid weight gain and loss of energy over the holiday season. But what happens is we spend hours planning all the details about how we WILL gain weight and no time planning the details of how we will AVOID weight gain. If you have a plan for gaining weight and no plan for not gaining weight, guess what is going to happen. You’re going to execute on your plan and your going to gain weight.

Keep an eye open over the next week for the remainder of my Healthy Holiday Plan series. The next blog posting talks about setting realistic expectations, determining your “cheat days,” and creating the PLAN. Stay tuned….

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Why I Like P90X and Why I Don't (Part 2)

Last week in ActiveBlog I walked you through some of the benefits of the P90X workout system. We talked about providing the convenience of working out at home, a structured program that provides significant variety to your workouts, and measurable, documented results that are posted all over the internet and in numerous "look at me now" YouTube videos.

This week we look at some of the downsides of the program so you can determine if it will work for you.

The Downside of P90X
There are no “off days” in P90X.
The 90-day program requires 6 days of intense workouts and 7 days a week of rigid adherence to their nutrition plan. The workouts are not only intense but long. They are typically 60 to 90 minutes in length. Darrell remarked, “At first it seems like an hour a day for 90 days isn’t bad. For someone that hasn’t exercised in years it started to get pretty intense. I worked very hard the first 30 and felt great.”

The nutritional plan is heavy on supplements. If you read back in my blog you will see my thoughts on supplementation. It should be possible for everyone who follows a sensible eating plan to get all the macronutrients, vitamins and minerals they need from a well balanced diet. I have been in the fitness industry long enough to realize that pushing supplements is simply a profit machine for the companies and trainers who do it. P90X is no different. When I met the founder of Beach Body last year at a small fitness industry meeting it was clear to me that their next profit line was the development of more supplements. In fact, that was the essence of the presentation about what was “coming up” for P90X.

P90X requires additional investment. To do the workouts properly at home requires about $500 worth of dumbbells, bands, balls, etc. Unless you have equipment at your home already you will need to outfit yourself with a mini-gym. In addition, you will need to invest in the supplements that go along with the nutrition program.

P90X is not sustainable. Deirdre points out, “This is not a program that you can sustain for a lifetime.” Having worked with many people who have done specific exercise programs and rigid eating patterns it eventually isn’t able to be sustained. There are some program options beyond the first 90 day transformation but maintaining the results will be challenging. For most people their lives are not setup for long term high intensity training like this. It is similar to The Biggest Loser in that it becomes very hard for the losers to keep the weight off when they stop working out for 4 hours a day at a fitness ranch and have to go back to their jobs, families, and daily stresses.

In part III of my P90X blog I will discuss in-home personal training and how it can be used to supplement/compliment a program like P90X or vice versa. Stay tuned for next week's blog.

Paul

Paul Dziewisz
Active Personal Fitness
www.ActivePersonalFitness.com
Elevation Boot Camp
www.ElevationBootCamp.com
267.626.7478
"You give us the effort...we'll get you the results."