Contributor's Corner

New ideas and thoughts from some of our very favorite health and wellness experts.

Experience Life Magazine

Getting Better All The Time

We crave simple solutions. Could be because the world gets more complex each day. Or it could be because simple solutions feel easier to approach. Either way, when simple solutions work, life is good.

Simple solutions have a way of tapping into the basic human truths we lose sight of as our daily lives spin faster. In the spirit of getting better, here are few of my favorites for creating positive, sustainable changes. They’ve helped me transform the way I view and experience the world.

 #1. Goals about getting better work better. When your goals are wrapped in a desire to get better you value what you learn as much as the achievement. This growth mindset also delivers the whole enjoy the journey aspect of life and arms you loads of wisdom for your next goal. Set one goal that is focused upon getting better in some way and you’ll experience difference. It’s practically tangible.

#2. Give yourself a daily dose of inspiration. Inspiration ignites the human spirit. It also taps the richest areas within your brain. Combined, they keep you connected to higher wisdom, deeper insights and fresh solutions. Cultivate a daily inspiration practice to strengthen your energy on every level – physical, emotional and metal. It’s life changing.

#3. Surround yourself with positive people. If you’re like most people, you underestimate (or ignore) the impact that your closest relationships have in your life. The people you spend the most time with dramatically influence your motivation, health, growth and development. Build a positive community that brings out the best in you. (This also makes tip #2 far easier to live on a daily basis).

Now, all you need to do is simply pick one solution. Put it into action. Repeat daily until it’s a way of living. And then enjoy all of the benefits that flow from living in a state of continual improvement.

 

 

Never been better,

Maryanne

Maryanne O’Brien is the founder of Live Dynamite, a life skills program that inspires, empowers and supports people to bring the best of who they are to everything they do.

Experience Life Magazine

15 Questions to Ask When Your Doctor Prescribes a Drug

As you probably know by now, I am a huge proponent of becoming an active participant in your healthcare. This can begin with asking the following questions when your doctor recommends a drug:

  1. What does this medication do?
  2. How, when and for how long should I take it?
  3. Is this drug intended to cure my underlying condition or is it intended to give me relief from my symptoms?
  4. What are the side effects? Are they minor or major? Common or rare?
  5. Is it safe take while pregnant or breastfeeding? (If appropriate to you.)
  6. Have long-term studies been done on this drug? Have studies been done for this drug on the elderly or women? (If appropriate to you.) Ask this especially if you are going to take the drug long-term.
  7. Do the benefits outweigh the risks?
  8. Is this dosage individualized for me, or is this a one-dose-fits-all dosage?
  9. Would it be possible to start me at a lower dose and adjust it according to my response?
  10. What herbs, supplements, foods, drinks, or activities should I avoid while taking this medication?
  11. Is it safe for me to take this medication with other drugs or supplements I am taking?
  12. Will any tests be necessary while I am taking this medication?
  13. What should I do if I miss a dose of this medication? Take it immediately when I remember, or wait until my next regularly scheduled dose?
  14. Is there a generic version of the medication?
  15. What are my non-drug alternatives?

Frank Lipman, MD is  an internationally recognized expert in the fields of Integrative and Functional Medicine. This blog is re-posted from his Web site.

 

Experience Life Magazine

Green Cleaning

CHEMICAL OVERLOAD
A study by the New Scientist (1999) found that moms in homes where aerosol sprays and air fresheners were used were 25% more like to suffer from headaches and 19% more likely to suffer from depression.

Babies less than six months old in the same environment had 30% more ear infections and had 22% higher rates of diarrhea.

Toxic chemicals can create toxic results. It’s much better to steer clear of these harsh products and favor natural alternatives instead.

 

ANTIBACTERIAL OVERLOAD
Antibacterial products make up 75% of the cleaning product market. They are the only cleaning agents under regulation by the Environmental Protection Agency because their active ingredients are classified as pesticides.

It may be because we rely so heavily on these “pesticides” to keep us clean, that the bacteria around us are getting stronger, and our bodies are getting less and less able to fight them off on their own. Today scientists and studies are pointing to the abundant use of antibacterial products in our homes for the rise in resistant microorganisms. In short, our bodies are finding it difficult to cope with the germs they come into contact with.

DISPOSING OF OLD PRODUCTS
It’s generally ok to pour old products that you no longer want to use down the drain. Just don’t pour anything containing bleach or ammonia together because the mixture creates toxic fumes.

Contact your sanitation department for heavier duty product disposal.

1. Beware of Product Overload
These days we have such an overabundance of products with a different product (with disposable pads and such) necessary for each different job. It’s expensive and an overwhelming waste of materials.

Opt for multi-purpose products and, overall, take a “less is more” approach to cleaning. Simple dish soap and vinegar, each mixed with water, could clean almost anything.

2. Opt for Recycled and Multi-Use Products
Look for recycled paper towels, toilet paper, tissues and napkins.
Recycle old t’shirts and socks into cleaning rags.

And try reusable sponges, cloths or a shammy for your everyday cleaning.

3. Skip the “Fragrance”
Though it may only say “fragrance” on the ingredients list of a product, that single word could stand for up to 200 chemical ingredients, leading to a variety of reactions and disorders ranging from dizziness to skin irritation, rash and other cold like symptoms.

The Institute of Medicine placed “fragrance” in the same category as second hand smoke when it comes to triggering asthma in adults and kids.

Fragrances also contain phthalates, a class of chemicals that have been linked to cancer and reproductive disorders.

Instead choose fragrance-free products or those scented with plant extracts and essential oils, like citrus oils, peppermint, eucalyptus, lemon, orange or magnolia.

4. Steer Clear of Bleach
Chlorine bleach, also called sodium hypochlorite, is a highly corrosive agent. It can irritate your skin, your eyes, and your airways. When chlorine is mixed with other cleaners, such as those containing ammonia or acids (as is the case in some toilet bowl cleaners) it creates a lung-damaging gas.

But perhaps the most concerning is what happens when chlorine bleached is rinsed down our drains into our waterways where it can create organochlorines, compounds that are suspected carcinogens as well as reproductive and neurological toxins.

Choose products with non-chlorine bleach, like those containing percarbonate, which is primarily oxygenated water.

5. Look Outside the Cleaning Isle
Vinegar inhibits mold and bacteria growth, and will cut through grease and soap scum in your kitchen, bathroom or anywhere else in the house.

It last forever and it’s cheap!

Use distilled white vinegar instead of apple cider to avoid staining surfaces, the smell dissipates as it dries.

  • For a basic all over the house cleaner, mix together equal parts of vinegar and water in a spray bottle. Use on countertops, glass and floors.
  • Clean your floors with a mixture of ½ cup white distilled vinegar and a ½ gallon of warm water. No need to rinse. Just wipe and go.
  • For windows, fill a spray bottle with water and a quarter cup of white vinegar or lemon juice. A great way to recycle your newspapers is to use them in place of paper towels for a streak-free finish.
  • Clean your disposal and drains by pouring 1 cup of white distilled vinegar down the drain. Let it sit and flush.
  • A ½ cup of distilled white vinegar added in to the rinse cycle of your washing machine will act as a natural fabric softener and will rinse clothes cleaner, getting out excess soap and detergent.
  • To freshen a toilet bowl, pour two to three cups of white vinegar into the toilet bowl, let sit for a few hours then scrub and flush.

A basic liquid soap (non-petroleum based and free of dyes – castile and other plant-based soaps are a great choice) will clean anything.

  • Use a touch of soap and warm water to wash down countertops.
  • Clean wood floors using a large bowl of warm water and a tablespoon of soap with rags.
  • Sprinkle a grimy surface with baking soda and follow up with a soapy sponge

Olive oil is great for moisturizing and conditioning.

  • Mix two parts olive oil to one part lemon juice for an all natural furniture polish.
  • To keep brash from tarnishing, rub with olive oil after cleaning.
  • Rub olive oil onto stainless steel surfaces to remove streaks and prints.

Baking Soda is a fantastic scouring agent and an odor neutralizer

  • Get rid of carpet odor: sprinkle them with baking soda before you vacuum.
  • Mix a small amount of baking soda with liquid castile soap to get your countertops, sinks and tubs shiny. For a ‘fresh smell’ try adding a few drops of rosemary, orange or lavender essential oils.
  • To clean your oven mix together three parts baking soda with one part salt and one part water. Spread the mixture across the oven surface and allow it to sit up to eight hours. Scrape and wipe clean.
  • To clean your toilet, pour 1 part baking soda to 4 parts vinegar into the toilet basin. Let it sit 15-30 minutes, then scrub and flush.
  • For a clogged drain, pour ½ cup of baking soda down the drain, followed by ½ cup of white vinegar. Allow the mixture to fizz then flush with hot water.
  • Add a ¼ cup of baking soda to the wash cycle of your laundry machine to soften fabrics naturally, eliminating the need for chemical, and often highly fragranced, fabric softeners.

Lemon Juice cuts through grease naturally so it works well for kitchen cleaning especially.

  • For a healthful alternative to common aerosol air-fresheners, combine ½ quart of hot water with equal parts baking soda and lemon juice (about a teaspoon each).
  • Mix together a mild liquid soap and lemon juice for an excellent dish soap. (not to be used on silver)
  • To brighten whites in the wash, add a small amount of lemon juice to your machine’s rinse cycle.
  • A spray bottled filled with water and a quarter cup of lemon juice will get greasy windows and mirrors clean.
  • Place dried lemon peels into small cloth pouches or tea bags to keep out-of-season clothes fresh and to deter moths and other rodents.

BONUS: Tea Tree Oil is naturally a fungicide, germicide, antibacterial agent and antiseptic. It can treat mold and mildew and even freshen the air in your house.

  • To treat household areas with mold and mildew, mix tea tree oil into your white vinegar and water mixture, then spray and wipe.
  • Help shower doors and tile stay cleaner by wiping them with a mixture of tea tree oil and water.
  • To spot treat your carpets, mix together equal parts of borax, salt and white vinegar. Apply the paste to the stains and allow to dry, then vacuum up the paste.

Sara Snow is a mom, TV host, anchor, author, and guru trying to help you live a greener, healthier, more natural life.

Experience Life Magazine

Live Like a Gypsy!

Take a minute and think of the times in your life when you’ve felt your most free, elated, and adoring of who you are. Can you imagine stepping onto a path where times like these arise abundantly, not as dots in the landscape of your past, but as the foundation from which you live and radiate out into the world?

I am talking full on, full out vibrancy, magic, and delight; to the point at which we overflow with kindness, and where we love so vigorously our hearts can’t help but burst.

My first profound example of this comes from my summers as a child at a sleep away camp on Orcas Island in Washington State. It was a camp rooted in what they called Gypsy Spirit, which in hindsight was all about evoking the qualities of living a colorful, festive, and free life. We had a gypsy wagon with ice cream cones, gypsy dances, gypsy days devoted to camp-wide scavenger hunts, gypsy rings and bracelets, a gypsy tree house, gypsy kings and queens wearing gypsy wreaths of wildflowers, gypsy everything.

There was nothing this pure and life-loving spirit failed to touch. We were simply allowed the space to live in harmony within, with each other, and with the staggering natural beauty around us. In essence, camp gave us permission to abandon the burdens and biases of who and how we were during the school year. Our only job was to be ourselves, explore the world as a playground, and to see what happened from there.

Fast forward 20 plus years and I tell my 7-year-old about gypsy spirit all the time and watch him dream. What joy! What sparkle! What a fearless way of being! And, furthermore, what a crazy flowing peace this yields!

Here’s where your creative vision comes in. Can you soak yourself in gypsy spirit, right now, in the middle of your demanding, impassioned, difficult, and surprising world? How does it manifest in you? What kinds of changes do you need to make to animate and revive yourself to the fullest? People to see or not to see? Places to go or not to go? Jobs to do or not to do? Attitudes to dump, or not?

I’m not giving you an exercise in exploring the past, but rather opening a doorway for you to embrace the wild and beaming gypsy present. Nor am I suggesting you leave your life behind, become a vagabond, hermit, or escapee. What I am suggesting is that you shape your life to live this joyfully. Dare to put your intention out there in popping rainbow colors, to thrive with the same vibrant energy as your most gypsy you, bright bandannas, bold baubles, and all.

Start now. Close your eyes. Hear Stevie Nicks singing, “Well, lightning strikes, maybe once, maybe twice. Ah, and it lights up the night, And you see your gypsy,
You see your gypsy.” Make the commitment and go for it. Take that spirited leap. Feel yourself so spectacularly free. See your gypsy. Come on. Be your gypsy.

Maggie Lyon is a writer on wellness and spirituality, a motivational speaker, and a holistic lifestyle consultant. 

Experience Life Magazine

How to Know If You’re an Emotional Eater

“Emotional eating” means to eat large quantities of food (usually comfort foods) due to feelings rather than hunger.

On occasion, this can be in response to feelings of happiness (i.e. when celebrating) but most often emotional eating is triggered by feelings of stress, boredom, anger, sadness, loneliness, anger, resentment, and anxiety.

Here are my top 8 ways to know if you are an emotional eater:

  1. You feel stressed about a particular issue or something going on in your life but instead of dealing with it directly, you delay by heading off to find your favorite snack food.
  2. You find that you eat larger portions and/or foods that you believe are “naughty” when you are alone.
  3.  You get cravings that feel out of control — you literally can’t think of anything else until you eat what you are craving.
  4.  You eat until you feel stuffed often.
  5.  You aren’t hungry enough to eat an apple, but you are definitely interested in diving into your favorite treat.
  6.  You feel guilty about or ashamed of your eating habits and of blowing your healthy eating plan once again.
  7.  When you do something good, you celebrate with a food related treat because you feel like you deserve it.
  8.  You turn to foods or beverages when you feel fatigued and need energy.

If you can relate to any of these, you are an emotional eater. Before, you freak out… keep reading.

The truth is, most people can relate to at least a few of the scenarios listed above.

This is one of the biggest myths that I see in the world of healthy eating. Often we are told that our eating habits are the culprit behind all of our problems… that it’s the emotional eating or the overeating that is bad or wrong behavior.

I teach something very different.

Emotional eating is not a bad thing. Food is a very emotional thing and it stems back all the way to when we were babies and our mother or parents would nourish us with breast milk or a bottle while holding us and giving us comfort and love.

In many cultures, food is used as an integral part of celebration and this is not a big deal, in fact many of those cultures have a healthier relationship with food than we do.

The problem isn’t eating out of emotion. The problem is when you continue to ignore the emotion that is causing you to turn to food for comfort. When you eat to make yourself feel better, you are eating in order to fill a void.

But the thing is, food only temporarily fills that void. You will never be truly satisfied until you learn that what you really need is to fill the void with what you really want, not with food.

So you see, emotional eating really isn’t even about food at all. Instead, the unhealthy sort of emotional eating is about things like a lack of:

  • Pleasure and happiness
  • Control over your life
  • Awareness and attention to what you really want

Emotional eating is simply a signal for you to begin paying more attention to what is really going on in your life that is causing you to practice these behaviors.

Eating to comfort yourself is not inappropriate. It has served a purpose for you. It had to have otherwise you wouldn’t have done it.

YOU are not inappropriate. This is not something to feel guilty about or judge yourself over. You haven’t done anything wrong. Like I said, we all have eaten out of emotion. Even I still eat out of a need for comfort versus hunger sometimes, even knowing what I know. The key is to:

  • Understand what you are doing and why.
  • Understand what you actually need—i.e. how you can take care of yourself and fill the void that needs to be filled.

When you understand and can take action on these two things, then the emotional eating will end with a few cookies or a single serving of chips rather than the whole bag. In other words, when you learn how to take care of the root issue, the emotional eating will naturally go away on its own.

What do you think? I’d love to hear your thoughts on emotional eating in the comment section below.

Sheila Viers is an Emotional Eating Expert, Holistic Life Coach and co-founder of Live Well 360.

 

Experience Life Magazine

Hide or Seek?

Hiding from the truth is easy. We do it all the time when we don’t want to look at what’s really going on. We ignore the signals, avoid reflection and pretend all is fine in paradise.

However, the truth has a way of catching up with us. And when it does, it’s rarely pretty.

 I don’t remember exactly when I shifted from hiding from the truth to seeking it, but I am grateful I did. Hiding creates nothing but fear, while seeking leads to all kinds of positive changes. Seeking is how you see things more clearly. And once you see the truth there’s no going back.

It’s amazing how fast the truth surfaces when you’re willing to look. Shine a little light on any area of your life and suddenly you can see the impact of your choices. You can quickly connect the dots and get a clear picture of what’s going on.

Clarity is a beautiful thing. Clarity brings everything into focus. It creates a path for advancing. And it allows you to concentrate your actions so you can more easily achieve the results you want.

However, clarity has a price. Clarity requires that you are honest with yourself. It asks you to open up to new perspectives, suspend judgment and be objective. It’s not always easy, but the insights you gain are well worth the price.

Experience how these simple questions can help you to gain more clarity, insights and ideas for advancing.

1. What are you ignoring or pretending not to know?

2. What impact is this having in your life?

3. What would you rather be experiencing?

4. What action can you take today to get started?

Get good at living®,
Maryanne

 

Maryanne O’Brien is the founder of Live Dynamite, a life skills program that inspires, empowers and supports people to bring the best of who they are to everything they do.


Experience Life Magazine

Train Your Brain for Fitness

Even with the motivation the New Year brings, starting a fitness routine still isn’t easy — especially for busy moms. Developing the mental strength to get you moving has to be step number one before fitness can become a lifelong habit.

Training your brain for fitness means identifying your values, then prioritizing your time so you are living your life according to your priorities. If you’re reading this, we’re assuming health and fitness are on your list of family values, or you want them to be. Keeping those values top of mind–even posting them someplace visible–will help ward off Mother Guilt when you’re iffy about working up a sweat. Being motivated by your values is essential if you want to make fitness a habit in your life. It isn’t, however, the only ingredient. In order to turn fitness from a dreaded task to a habit, you need it to be:

Happy inducing,
You don’t have to hate exercise. Find what brings you joy and makes you smile. Set and accomplish goals to enhance that workout high.

Authentic activity,
Pursue fitness as a mission to find activity that is an extension of yourself. Don’t be afraid to try new things. 

make you Better off than before
Sure you’ll feel better after a workout–physically and mentally–but also empowered, which spills over into other areas of your life.

Integrate easily into your life
Workouts should be neither too burdensome to pursue nor too time consuming. Choose activity that fits in with everything else you’re already doing.

and be a Time valued activity.
There will come a point when you value the time you spend exercising–not just the positive side effects like losing weight or a stronger core–but the very act of exercising, because you want to not because you have to.

Every fit mom has to keep training her brain right along with her body. Even when exercise is a priority, clingy toddlers, surprise pediatrician visits, and carpool can interfere with the best intentions. But when fitness is a habit she’ll at least have the mental strength to get moving when the next fitness opportunity strikes.

Kara Douglass Thom and Laurie Lethert Kocanda are co-authors of Hot (Sweaty) Mamas: Five Secrets to Life as a Fit Mom.


Experience Life Magazine

Access Your Inner Wisdom

One of the most important relationships you’ll ever have is with yourself. By connecting with that wise being that dwells within you, you tap into your full power, energy and insight. You learn to access your higher self, move beyond rational thought and create with clarity.

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Your inner wisdom is innate and always present. When you learn to listen to your inner guidance you’ll find it is much easier to create positive changes in your life. It simply takes a willingness to slow down, move beyond your conscious mind and connect to your inner guidance.

We’ve all experienced it. Think for a minute. How many times have you wished you’d trusted your initial instincts? How often have you said to yourself something along the lines of, “I knew better,” or “When will I learn to listen to myself?”

Now, think of the situations where you did listen to your intuition. The times where you felt a strong, clear direction and followed it, despite what your mind was telling you. Remember how everything seemed to fall right into place? This is when you said, “I had a feeling.”

Through a simple daily practice, you’ll learn to quiet your personality, create space and open to your intuitive mind. You’ll experience consciously connecting your whole mind and personal energy with all of the fields of information available to you. You’ll discover how to listen within and discern what actions are in your best interest. And you’ll begin to recognize your higher guidance in all of its form – thoughts, emotions, impressions, words and images.

Here’s a daily practice that will help you to tune in and establish a connection with your higher self. As you practice this connection technique, you will gradually find your inner wisdom is with you more and more of the time.

• Get in a comfortable position. You can sit or lie down. Keep your spine straight. Close your eyes and relax your body. Take several deep breaths through your nose – gently and slowly. Feel the air move as it moves through your nostrils and fills your lungs. As you exhale, feel all of the tension and stress flow out of your body.

• Now, imagine that your breath is flowing in and out of your heart. Think of a time when you felt great happiness, love or peace. With each breath, feel those positive emotions grow and spread throughout your body. Keep visualizing and breathing this way for about a minute.

• Silently say, “I am connected to all of my inner wisdom. I am so grateful for this guidance that is always there to assist me.”

• Take a few more deep breaths, in and out of your heart, and establish a strong connection with your higher self.

• Consciously tune in throughout the day to strengthen your discernment and make decisions using all of your inner-knowing.

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Get good at living®,
Maryanne

Maryanne O’Brien is the founder of Live Dynamite, a life skills program that inspires, empowers and supports people to bring the best of who they are to everything they do.

Experience Life Magazine

Goodbye, Mother Guilt: The Secret to Staying Committed is Letting Go

If you’re like most moms, it takes more than good intentions to stay committed a fitness routine. Don’t let that occasional cookie get you down. What’s really standing in your way is an overdose of something much more toxic: Mother Guilt.

Overcoming Mother Guilt–maybe just locking her in the closet for an hour at a time–is essential if you want to carve out time to get fit. First you need to free up a little mental space so you are strong enough to make the appropriate compromises.

Lose the Preconceptions and Misconceptions
Start by identifying your preconceptions of motherhood; you’ll probably realize what you thought were parenting no-no’s might actually have a place in your life. For example, maybe it’s not so bad to let your kids watch television if it means you can jump on the treadmill or tune into FitTV for an hour. Junk food might be okay if it gets your kids into the jogging stroller. Perhaps you can miss a soccer practice to go for a quick power walk or run. The point is to challenge what you’ve accepted as parenting truths and get realistic about what life is really like.

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Take Inventory
Take some time to write down what’s important to you, what values you want to impart on your children (hopefully health and fitness are near the top of the list). Then, take inventory of one or two typical days and see where you’re actually spending your time. Like it or not, top entries for your day translate into your top priorities. Work to make health and fitness an actual, not just perceived, priority. Then, remember who is watching because, like it or not, we lead by example.

Protect Your Priorities
Once you’ve established what your actual priorities are, it’s easier to fight to protect them. Allocating the right amount of time to each of your priorities leads to a certain type of contentment; the alternatives are resentment and (you guessed it) guilt. Saying “no” to something that isn’t a priority starts to feel good when you use the time freed to attend to something that is. You’ve likely fine-tuned your ability to say “no” walking the aisles of Target with your kids. It’s time to put those skills to good use and clear a little clutter from your life.

Remember it’s a Balancing Act
Learning to say “no” is important because sometimes we have to say it to something that is a priority–including fitness. When life throws you a curve ball, make a decision on how you will react. If fitness doesn’t fit in during a particularly hard week, let it go. In making that decision, you stay in control–there is no resentment, no anger, no feeling like the victim. Keep those priorities in check and realize it’s okay to experience temporary imbalances. Sooner or later, you’ll find equilibrium again and your fitness will return.

If you’ve had a hard time maintaining a regular fitness routine in the past, try focusing some attention on the mental components first. Physical fitness requires mental training; knock Mother Guilt out of the picture and the possibilities are endless.

Laurie Lethert Kocanda is an endurance athlete, mom and co-author of Hot (Sweaty) Mamas: Five Secrets to Life as a Fit Mom.

Experience Life Magazine

Time Crunch Christmas Workouts

Tis the season to scramble for last minute Christmas gifts, put up the remaining decorations, plan a big family dinner, attend parties, and engage in the other festivities that come along with Christmas and the fast approaching New Year.

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Because people are busier than ever during this time of year, they have trouble sticking with their training program or worse yet, they skip the gym all together. Just because you have minimum time available during the busy Christmas season does not mean you should stop working out. What you need are some Time Crunch Christmas Workouts that get you in and out of the gym in 20 minutes while still allowing you to make progress.

Yes, you only need 20 minutes to get in a great strength training workout.

Time Crunch Workout Tips

Before you get to the time crunch workouts, you must understand a few important tips if you want your training sessions to be effective.

1) Just get to the gym! The hardest part of sticking to a training program during a busy time is just getting to the gym. Schedule a time to train, and just get there. It’s not about “having time” to train, it’s about making time. Do it!

2) Make the most of your time in the gym. Once you’re there, make the most of every second. You can do that by performing big compound movements that work the greatest amount of muscle possible. And, please, lift something heavy while you’re there. Strength training for 20 minutes will provide better results than spending 30 or more minutes on a cardio machine.

3) Work hard. If you’re only going to train for 15 to 20 minutes, you better work hard. Just so there is no confusion, my definition of work hard means you will train with intensiveness. For example, if you are going to perform five reps on the deadlift, you better use a heavy enough weight that allows you to perform five perfect reps, and no more. Using a weight you could perform for 10 reps but only doing five is not training with intensiveness.

Yes, this means you will have to really focus on what you’re doing and push yourself. However, if you work hard and stay focused, you’ll get more out of a 20 minute workout than most people do from a 60 minute workout.

Sample Time Crunch Christmas Workouts

Workout 1 – Barbell & Bodyweight
1a) Deadlifts 3×5
1b) 1 Arm DB Push Press or Parallel Bar Dips 3×8

This workout is very simple because it contains only two exercises. After a warm-up for the deadlift and push press/dips, select a weight that allows you to complete the prescribed number of repetitions with perfect form, but no more. As an example, you should use a weight for the deadlift that allows you to complete five reps without your form breaking down, but another rep should be almost impossible. This is working hard.

Do the same for the push press or parallel bar dips.

You will superset the exercises, meaning you will perform a set of deadlifts, rest 90 seconds, and then perform a set of push presses or parallel bar dips. Rest for about 90 seconds and go back to the deadlifts. You will repeat this format until you complete three sets of each exercise.

Workout 2 – Barbell & Bodyweight
1a) Squat 3×8
1b) Neutral Chin-ups (or pull-downs) 3×8

The same guidelines from Workout 1 apply to this training session. Remember to train with intensiveness!

Workout 3 – Dumbbells Only
1a) Dumbbell Goblet Squat 3×8
1b) 1 Arm DB Row 3×8
1c) 1 Arm DB Bench Press 3×8

This workout uses dumbbells only and contains three exercises. Perform a set of exercise one, rest 60 seconds, perform a set of exercise two, rest 60 seconds, and then perform a set of exercise three. Rest 60 seconds and repeat until you complete a total of three sets per exercise.

So there you have it; three time crunch workouts you can use during the busy season that will get you in and out of the gym in minimum time while still allowing you to get results.

Remember – train hard!

Nia Shanks is a personal trainer and author of Fat Loss Detour and Beautiful Badass, which includes 16 different training program and no-nonsense, stress-free nutrition guidelines.

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