National Athlete of the Month | Charles Essig | July 2011

A “quintessential student leader” is what Charles Essig has been during his tenure at St. Joseph’s College (Patchogue, New York), but that phrase still does not do justice to his list of accomplishments. Add that to his impressive career on the golf course and you have the model of the perfect student-athlete.

During Essig’s career on the golf course, he served as a team captain during the 2010-11 campaign, was a member of the 2007 Skyline Conference Champion team that went to the NCAA Division III Golf Championship Tournament, contributed to three second place Skyline Championship finishes, and was a three-time All-Skyline Conference member. His athletic achievements also resulted in honors as a four-time All-Academic team member, a team Golden Eagle Award, being honored twice with the Virginia Therese Callahan Award for academic excellence (presented to the athlete with the highest GPA in their junior or senior year), and a four-year stint as the golf team’s representative on the Student Athlete Advisory Committee.

In the classroom and on campus, Essig shined even brighter as a Math Secondary Education major with a minor in Business Administration. Academically, he was a member of the Dean’s List each semester maintaining a GPA of 3.91, was a member of the Sigma Iota Chi (the College’s honor society), Delta Epsilon Sigma (the national scholastic honor society for undergraduates, faculty and alumni of colleges and universities with a Catholic tradition), and the Kappa Mu Epsilon Math Honor Society on which he served terms as vice president and treasurer.

Essig always found time in his busy schedule to contribute to the betterment of his fellow students, including this past year as the president of the Student Government Association and a three-year stint as treasurer, managing over $1 million in student activities funding. He was also as a member of the Dean’s Service Circle, the College Advisory Council, the Food Committee, served as the chairperson of the Budget Committee, and was a member and officer of the Sigma Xi Epsilon fraternity.

Essig also served as an active and contributing member of 11 different community service projects on and around the Patchogue campus. Amazingly enough, he found time to work as a golf caddy at the Bridgehampton Golf Club for four years and complete his student teaching in the Sachem School District.

Essig lives in Medford, New York with his parents, Ed and Marie, and sister, Kimberly, 20, a junior soccer player at St. Joseph’s College.

Exercise of the Month | Swimming | July 2011

Swimming is an excellent exercise that incorporates multiple muscle groups, is generally easily accessible, and is most importantly ... fun! Swimming offers both cardiovascular and strength benefits, as movement through water is 12 times more resistive than movement through air. Swimming is a total body exercise that strengthens the core, shoulders, arms, hips and legs in one easy exercise. Swimming is also a great low-impact exercise for the active population with physical impairments, such as arthritis and other musculoskelatal complications.

Before getting wet, make sure you know the basics. If you are new to the water, take a swimming class. This is to ensure proper saftey in the water and also allows one to get the most out of their excercise by utilizing proper form. Once you're comfortable, begin in the controlled enviornment of a pool, covered by a lifeguard for saftey. Once you have mastered swimming laps in the calm pool enviornment, it's time to take your exercise into the great outdoors. Advancing to lakes -- and eventually the ocean and surf -- will add a level of difficulty to your exercise by introducing currents and waves. Only progress to these levels if you are a competent swimmer and under the watchful eye of a lifeguard.

Swimming is the perfect exercise in the summer. Not only do you get a full body workout, you also get to enjoy the nice weather. As with all exercise, make sure you are medically cleared by a doctor beforehand, and always properly stretch and warm-up to reduce the chance of injury.

Weekly Training Article | Why Body Fat Testing is Important | 7/25/11-7/31/11

By Kevin Sinclair

One of the most overlooked aspects of any diet and fitness program is getting proper body fat testing assessments. This goes far beyond just looking at a weight scale and checking out how much you weigh. Taking the time to get regular body fat tests done will definitely help you make faster progress towards you goal.

If you're on a weight loss program and have dropped some pounds, how do you know that the loss is from losing fat? The three main components of weight change come from water, muscle and fat. So which one, or combination of the three, caused the weight loss? If you have regular body fat tests done, then you would know what kind of weight was lost.

Here is a key point: If you want to be successful in your weight management or fitness goals, then do what successful fitness people do. -- All the successful dieters and fitness pros will take measurements, track their results and adjust it accordingly to keep progressing towards their personal goal. If the results of a test show that a total of 15 pounds of body weight was lost, a few calculations will break down what component (water, muscle, or fat) had the majority of the weight change.

Here is an example to clarify how body fat testing and your weight loss goal goes hand in hand.

It's the first week of your diet and fitness program, and you want to make sure that you start it correctly. The local fitness center does physical assessments and body fat testing, so you go to get checked and see where your levels are at. Six weeks later, committing to a good diet and fitness program has resulted in a 15- pound weight loss. Now, it's time for another assessment to see the hard facts on how you're progressing.

The results of the assessment will show how much of that 15 pounds was fat. Generally, if only 1 to 4 pounds of weight loss is water and muscle but the rest was fat, then the diet and fitness program is a success and you should continue on the program you're on. If only 5 pounds of weight from the 15 is fat according to the body fat test, then there is a problem with the diet or fitness program you're on. It would be wise to make some changes, as this may indicate that some dehydration or muscle wasting may be occurring. Continuing with the same program may cause a problem with your health if followed too long. In this case, a change in your program and another assessment 4 to 6 weeks later will determine if the new program is getting better results in fat loss, instead of water or muscle loss.

If you are truly committed to lose fat and achieve good health/fitness, then you need to distinguish between just overall weight loss and true fat loss. As you continue your weight loss program, each body fat test gives you the chance to make small changes in diet or exercise routines to see if the next assessment produces better results. Not only does this get you closer to what the ideal program is for you, but it also helps keep you focused on staying with the program and not give up or quit.

Now that we see the importance of body fat testing, your first step is to decide if you want a professional assessment person to test you, or if you want to learn to do it yourself. There are advantages and disadvantages to each decision.

A professional body fat tester can usually be found in most fitness centers and gyms. They have the experience, knowledge and tools to make accurate tests and can suggest a course of action to improve the results of the next test. It takes on the average of about 15 to 30 minutes to complete and you will get a copy of the test to keep. The cost can range between twenty to fifty dollars per test and should be done every 4 to 6 weeks. Some disadvantages are the costs to having it done, searching out a qualified assessment professional and perhaps the slight embarrassment you may feel to have test done.

If you decide to do the test yourself, you will need to learn how to take proper body fat measurements, purchase the tools or equipment for accurate assessments and keep testing many times in order to learn how to do it correctly. An advantage to doing your own test is that you can have the privacy and convenience of testing as many times and often as you want in your own home.

Most people will want someone else to do it because of the learning curve involved to take accurate assessments. Another valid reason is to have the option of some suggestions by the professional on what you can do tweak your current program and make solid improvements for the next test.

Now that you know the importance of body fat testing, you should do a little research and get more details on how to incorporate it into your program. This may be the key ingredient for you to make real progress towards your weight loss and fitness goals.

Source: physicalfitnessarticles.net

Weekly Training Article | Seasonal Allergies: What You Need to Know | 7/18/11-7/24/11

By Jason Uvios

Allergic symptoms occurring due to weather changes are known as seasonal allergies. They are most common in the summer or spring seasons. The cause of this type of allergy is the immune system's sensitivity to pollen grains and dust.

Allergies could be hereditary in nature. The chance of developing an allergy is 75 to 80 percent if both parents are allergic, and it reduces to 40 percent if only one of them is allergic.

Symptoms of Seasonal Allergies

The common symptoms include runny nose, watery or itchy eyes, stuffy nose, sneezing, and an itchy nose-palate. The symptoms of asthma allergies are difficulty breathing, and at times a cough may be the only symptom.

Seasonal Allergy Causes

Weather changes affect the amount of pollen in the air. The level of pollen varies daily and is highest during humid weather. Grass pollen (June-July), tree pollen (May-June), and ragweed pollen (August-October) are common causes of allergies.

Ways to Reduce Allergies

1. Keeping doors and windows closed prevent pollen and molds from entering your house. Instead, use air conditioners to filter out pollen.

2. Do not hang laundry outside for drying because it will bring pollen inside.

3. While driving, keep the windows closed.

4. You can find out whether you are allergic to seasonal variations through a blood radioallergosorbent test (RAST) or skin prick allergy test. Once you know the pollen you are allergic to you can take preventive measures.

5. You should take medications regularly as recommended by your allergist.

6. Taking a shower is advisable after spending time outdoors, as pollen may collect on your skin and cause allergies.

7. People suffering from mold allergies should not grow indoor plants, as wet soil encourages its growth. You should not rake leaves or mow lawns, as it may cause a ragweed allergy.

Treatment for Seasonal Allergies

Antihistamine medication taken orally is helpful for certain allergic symptoms but is not recommended to children, as it may cause the child to become sleepy or drowsy during the day.

You can get relief by using anti-allergic eye drops that contain antihistamine.

Children suffering from nasal allergies can get relief from inhalers containing steroids. These are safe and effective if used regularly. You can also use over-the-counter decongestant sprays to get relief. Hence, to take proper treatment you should firstly identify its cause.

If you are thinking that an allergy is only a simple disease, you may be quite wrong. You may be afflicted by only one or two types of allergies. This may lead you to feel that allergies are limited to only those types. However, if you take a look around and see other people suffering from various other allergies you will soon realize that allergies are definitely not as simple as they sound. You will be flabbergasted to know the variety of the types of allergies that occur.

Source: physicalfitnessarticles.net

Weekly Training Article | Benefits and Dangers of Deep Breathing | 7/11/11-7/17/11

By Michael White

Optimal deep breathing increases our vitality and promotes relaxation. Unfortunately, when we try to take a so-called deep breath, most of us do the exact opposite: we "take a breath" suck in our bellies and raise our shoulders. This is shallow breathing as measured by volume as it tries to access air from the high chest where there is to little to no lung volume.

When our breathing is full and deep, and mostly in the lower thorax, the belly, lower ribcage and lower back where most of the lung volume resides, should all expand in a full circle on inhalation, thus allowing the diaphragm to drop down deeper into the abdomen, front, side and back. Then it retracts on exhalation, allowing the massaging action of the diaphragm to move fully upward toward the heart. This is healthy deep breathing.

Most so called deep abdominal breathing results in deep effortful breathing and is not always really breathing deeply. It can actually be harmful or exacerbate existing, undetected, unbalanced, dysfunctional breathing. Deep breathing when done incorrectly will cause accessory breathing muscles to engage. These muscles should not be anything but supportive. Like the shaft of an elevator should guide the elevator but not cause it to go up and down.

The key to deep breathing is to begin to learn to sense unnecessary tension in our bodies and to learn how to release this tension. Work with deep breathing begins with and requires internal awareness. Without sufficient awareness and heightened sensitivity to what is happening inside our bodies, efforts to change breathing will have little to no effect, often creates more tension and stress and undermine our health and well-being.

The way we use "breathing exercises" has reference to breathing patterns (holding, gasping, sighing), breathing rate, breathing depth (volume), locus of breathing (chest and diaphragm), breathing coordination, sequencing and balance (relationship of upper and lower aspects of the breathing wave), breathing resistance (nose and mouth), and collateral muscle activity for breathing regulation (muscles other than the diaphragm such as those in the rib cage as well as supporting posture).

The downward and upward movements of the diaphragm, combined with the outward and inward movements of the belly, ribcage, and release of lower back musculature, allow for movement, "massage" , detoxifying nearby organs, and helps stimulate blood flow and peristalsis as well as pump the lymph more efficiently for our lymphatic system. The lymphatic system has no pump other than muscular movements of human activity including the movements of the rib cage and diaphragm.

Deep Breathing for Relaxation

Many of us do not take enough time to breathe. This is very stressful to the nervous system. This shallow breathing causes an under-energized state and for muscles to shorten and invite unbalanced breathing.

When our breathing is deep and easy involving the respiratory muscles of the chest and belly, lower ribcage, and lower back our breathing naturally slows down, but due to no vasoconstriction it stays deeper where it needs to be even during severe challenges including survival. This slower, deeper lower breathing, combined with the rhythmical pumping of our diaphragm, abdomen, and belly, helps modulate our parasympathetic nervous system--our "relaxation response". Such breathing helps to harmonize our nervous system and reduce the amount of stress in our lives. It also supports states of what might be called "courage under fire".

Breathing mechanics for relaxation, though a major marker for therapeutic process, is too often the exclusive focus of breathing training and learning. Ease is more important than relaxation, as ease and flow facilitate relaxation, but relaxation does not necessarily foster ease and flow.

Though slower breathing is most often better than faster breathing, many therapists and trainers who teach breathing can deregulate respiratory chemistry by inducing over breathing/unbalanced breathing with their "relaxation" instructions to trainees, i.e. slowing down the breathing without balancing it and not ensuring it has become parasympathetically dominant.

This often results in worsening respiratory faults (rib cage distortions), or hindering optimal breathing balance and coordination, as well as confusing the client/patient by inducing system-wide psycho-spiritual and psycho-physiological stresses.

Overbreathing

To think of breathing more than usual as being all bad is to suppress elements of passion and purpose inherent in the way we breathe. Overbreathing may be too broad a term and not allow for what I call healthy hyper-inhalation (breathing more than usual but staying parasympathetically based).

This way of breathing more but staying parasympathetically based may account for phenomena called the Law of Mass Action whereby the extra oxygen can be "packed" into the body tissues for later recovery and usage. This is not taken into account with most definitions of overbreathing. Overbreathing to me is more about chest breathing that causes or worsens vasoconstriction including excessive nerve enervation and muscle tensions.

That said, Optimal Breathing School faculty member Dr. Peter Litchfield helps clarify facts to remember that may well apply to the correct applications of what is called overbreathing:

The wrong combination of breathing rate, depth and balance can lead to "over breathing." Over breathing means losing too much carbon dioxide. ... CO2 deficit means blood alkalosis, and alkalosis means smooth muscle constriction. Smooth muscle constriction means blood vessel, bronchiole, coronary and gut constriction. Over breathing can reduce mental and physical performance, and trigger emotional and physical symptoms.

* Myth: Good breathing means relaxation.
* Fact: No. Good breathing is important in all circumstances, whether relaxed or not.

* Myth: Learning good breathing requires relaxation.
* Fact: No. This would mean that during most life circumstances, breathing is maladaptive. There still must often be a window of balanced breathing within the ranges of life's circumstances and that often has the look and feel of being "centered" or "grounded" or both.

* Myth: Diaphragmatic breathing is synonymous with good breathing.
* Fact: No. In many instances one may begin to over-breathe as a result of switching from chest to diaphragm.

* Myth: Good respiration is all about the mechanics of breathing.
* Fact: No. Good breathing means ventilating in accordance with metabolic requirements.

* Myth: Diaphragmatic, deep, slow breathing means better distribution of oxygen.
* Fact: No. Mechanics may look letter perfect, but oxygen distribution may be poor.

* Myth: Under breathing/shallow breathing, with the result of oxygen deficit or loss of personal power is common.
* Fact: Yes but also to the contrary, over breathing is common.

Good breathing translates into optimizing respiratory psychophysiology, and contrary to popular thinking, learning to breathe well does not simply mean deep, slow, diaphragmatic breathing in the context of learning how to relax.

Adaptive breathing mostly means regulating blood chemistry, through proper ventilation of carbon dioxide, in accordance with metabolic and other physiologic requirements associated with all life activities and circumstances. Deregulated, unbalanced breathing chemistry, i.e., hypoScapnia (CO2 deficiency) as a result of over breathing means serious physiological crisis involving system-wide compromises that involve physical and mental consequences of all kinds.

Evaluating, establishing, maintaining, and promoting good respiratory chemistry is extremely important in any professional practice involving breathing training.

Monitoring good breathing chemistry establishes a system-wide context conducive to help optimize health and maximize performance.

Breathing training is invariably included as an important component of relaxation training, but does not in of itself constitute optimal relaxation or optimal respiration. Optimal breathing implies ALL factors are in place in any moment in time.

At least 9 factors must be addressed to ensure optimal deep breathing. Priority is dependant upon the condition and situation.

1. Breathing chemistry includes exchange from lungs to blood, blood to lungs and oxygen transport to all other cells of body.

2. Diaphragm excursion.

3. Rib expansion.

4. Ease of the natural breathing reflexive action including breathing coordination.

5. Nutrition.

6. Posture.

7. Attitude & Emotions.

8. Tasks at hand such as resting, walking, talking, running, feeling or expressing joy and fear.

9. Dominant parasympathetic balance

Each one influences the others.

One may be more necessary at any given moment depending upon several circumstances such as stress and or the task at hand. Optimal breathing can present itself during times of stress and challenge even where relaxation is neither possible nor adaptive. Training for various tasks alters the ratios and needs for each of the 9 basic influences, as it inputs a conditioning factor that changes mechanical and cellular needs.

Source: physicalfitnessarticles.net

Weekly Training Article | Killer Quads for Women | 7/4/11-7/10/11

By Karen Sessions

A nice set of legs is what really makes a bodybuilder outstanding! Leg training is very popular and knowing how to effectively train your legs will bring you to greater heights.

While many bodybuilders focus on quality leg training, all too many are either overtraining, undertraining, or keeping their leg training stagnant, in turn, halting their potential leg development.

Building a nice pair of legs takes work from the mind and the body, as well as proper training and adequate rest. While minimal sets and repetitions will build muscular legs, many are stuck in a rut and need a shock.

Note: This article is not about "ripping" or "cutting" your legs. You have to build a foundation before you can sculpt the muscle. Focus on building mass now and sculpting later.

Overtraining the Legs

I have seen many ladies training in the gym who had awesome potential to build muscular legs, but all I saw them doing was over taxing them. Overtrained legs will never produce desired results.

If you are among those who take part in leg training for mass, then you should limit your cardio to only three times a week for 20 minutes at most. Excessive biking, the elliptical, and other such high-impact cardio techniques will not allow your leg muscles to rest properly. A muscle can only grow when it is allowed to rest.

Intensity, stimulation, proper form, and rest will build muscular legs. Save the extra cardio after you have built your legs and when you begin to diet down.

For best results, keep your leg training limited to only once a week. More training does not produce faster results or larger muscles. You are not growing in the gym. Growth takes place outside of the gym when you feed your body nutrients and allow it to rest.

Keep your training time in the gym limited to an hour. Training over 60 minutes can do more damage than good. Any training you need to do can be done in a relatively short amount of time. Remember, less is more.

Focus on the mass-building exercises (compound movements) for the bulk of your training. This includes primarily squats, leg press, Romanian deadlifts, and stiff-legged deadlifts. Add one or two auxiliary movements, but don't over do it. When you do compound exercises for mass, all the areas of the legs are targeted simultaneously.

The key to building the legs lies in variety. Vary your poundage and repetitions. -- It's good to keep these in rotation and shock the lower body often to produce results. Don't get stuck in one mode of training your legs. Venture out and keep the body off-guard.

Undertraining the Legs

Just as I have seen many ladies overtraining their legs, I do witness many undertraining their lower body, leaving the last few minutes in the gym dedicated to a 10-minute leg routine.

You may be undertraining your legs if you engage in only a few sets of light squats or leg presses, or totally neglect these mass-building exercises completely. There is a certain amount of effort and determination that goes into leg training to provide desired results. However, too much exercise can lead to overtraining, so you need to find a happy medium.

Don't expect to build a nice set of legs by skimping on leg training or thinking a lot of light squats and lunges will do the trick. Legs require work. This is why the majority of lifters don't have legs that are balanced with their upper body. ... It's just plain hard work and you have to make the decision to do it constantly!

While many people focus on quality leg training, all too many are either overtraining, under training, or keeping their leg training stagnant, and in turn, halting their potential development.

Source: physicalfitnessarticles.net