Monday, 28th October

Monday is a recurring theme in terms of the need to get off to a good start in your week, especially on here when we always like to discover what it takes to be in your best shape.

The need for a big workout is obvious.

What we don’t always talk about are those snacks or meals that can give you a bundle of energy that will power you through a workout.

That time of day when you may need it the most is around the 4 o’clock time when you may have just finished work, you are rushing around everywhere, and the last thing you need is going into your workout with zero carbs inside you.

For instance, don’t worry about eating a second bowl of porridge at this time too, even if you have had one for breakfast earlier in the day.

Porridge is the ultimate slow release energy provider, giving you real energy just when you need it.

If you don’t get enough energy in at this time, not only will you have a poor workout, but you are very likely to overeat in your evening meal, because just think of the time you have left it without a meal. Lunch at say 1pm, then an evening meal at 730pm is far too much of a gap!

4PM has become a crucial time for many people I have found in your 7 day eating diaries, so start filling in the gaps and you will perform far better, and lose more body fat in the meantime!

Thursday, 24th October

Carb up or get left behind

In the minds of many athletes, carbohydrates often plays second fiddle to protein. This is partly due to misinformation about how truly important carbohydrate is to the athletic endeavor, but also may be due to common misunderstandings about what carbohydrate is.

Although protein is critically important to health and certainly plays a role in sustaining and enlarging muscle mass, reducing muscle soreness, and improving muscle recovery, consuming excessively large amounts of protein does little to improve athletic performance when it replaces carbohydrate.

Carbohydrate is needed to fuel almost every type of activity, and the amount of glycogen (which is what carbs turn into in the body) stored in your muscles and liver has a direct effect on your exercise performance. Over the years carbs have had a bad rap what with all the low carb high protein diets making an appearance in the media. It is true that you do lose a lot of weight fast on a high protein diet sometimes within days, however what you lose is not fat. The body loses its glycogen stores and water, making you drop weight quickly. The result is you look leaner however you have depleted your body of its muscular energy source.

The truth is that the human body’s preferred choice of fuel is carbs and this is most critical at higher levels of exercise intensity, where there is a greater reliance on carbs as a source of muscular fuel. Like filling a car up before a long journey, you should be stocking your glycogen stores up before, during and after a workout (depending on duration and intensity of the workout).

There have been scientific experiments conducted in this area to determine the importance of carbohydrates in relation to exercise performance. In a pioneering study, three groups of athletes were given a low-carbohydrate diet, a high-carbohydrate diet and a moderate-carbohydrate diet (Bergstrom et al.,1967). The scientists then measured the concentration of glycogen in their leg muscles. The high carb athletes had twice as much as the moderate-carb athletes and seven times more glycogen than the low-carb diet athletes. They were then asked to cycle to exhaustion on a stationary bike. The high-carb athletes managed 170 minutes, the moderate carb diet 115 minutes but the low carb diet athletes only managed a mere 60 minutes.

This experiment shows how quickly you fatigue on a low carb diet. What’s more, athletes who train in a glycogen-depleted state tend to choose a lower workload or intensity because the exercise just feels harder.

Many are scared of loading up the carbs for fear of putting weight on however if you rely on protein as your main source of fuel you will fatigue much sooner or drop your exercise intensity and therefore end up burning fewer calories – and less body fat! It should be noted that when muscle glycogen and blood glucose levels are low, your muscles will burn more protein for fuel. So you end up losing your hard-earned muscle along with a reduction in your endurance levels. You will ultimately stay a certain level of fitness where your time in the gym is not particularly enjoyable and your training average to say the least.

If you are a sportsperson who is involved in a sport that requires endurance and explosive strength, this would include rugby, football and hockey, getting your training to the next level would be advantageous.

Serious exercisers who train at a high intensity at the gym 3 times a week or more would benefit from a carb rich diet, especially if you take part in the prowler sessions with Keri. Also people who enjoy endurance sports such as running, cycling and swimming need to fuel with carbs on a daily basis.

A good guide as to whether you are eating enough carbs or not is to notice how energetic you feel during your workouts. If you feel easily fatigued, this suggests low glycogen levels and an insufficient carb intake. Try upping your carb intake a little at a time, a fistful of pasta or rice in the evening meal to see how you feel during training sessions. Fruit and vegetables are also made of carbohydrate so include plenty of these in your daily diet. We recommend that some form of carbs be eaten during every mealtime.

However on the other hand, over-eating carbs won’t increase your energy levels. This is due to the fact that the human body only has relatively small amounts of storage in the muscles and liver for glycogen and excess carbs will indeed get stored as fat. You will feel heavy and lethargic with over-consumption and so portion control is hugely important. Little and often is key throughout the day.

The best advice we can give you is to listen to your own body. You will know when you have sufficiently carbed up as you will have increased energy levels and explosive power and strength during training sessions. Ultimately as far as I’m concerned, there is no better feeling than knowing you can finish the session and still have enough petrol left in the tank…

Eat to train
Nicola.

Monday, 21st October

The purpose of being here is to educate people on how they can improve their results physically, and with their health in general. The reality is that most people never get to seem It right, and I try to take the guesswork out of this tough process (at times).

You know by now that is Monday, and how much I emphasise the vital importance of training sometime today, to kick your week off in the right way, to give your week fresh energy and to get your mind focused on having a strong, active week.

The first Monday workout will work wonders for your enthusiasm to eat well too. There’s NO WAY you will want to waste your hard earned efforts on eating junk food afterwards. You should know by now the importance of eating well, and how well your training efforts go with nourishing yourself properly on training days.

This is why we have come up with so many recipes, so many of you receive emails on their food habits, and the new ideas for meals and snacks, all of this effort is very worthwhile because its great to see you all improve-and very quickly for many of you!

The feedback I am having right now is that most of you are very positive about the 22 page email, even if takes some days to read! At least a lot of those ideas are permanently in front of you now on you computer, and you can look them up at any time.

The succession of food ideas will keep on coming, and even if just use half of them and are beneficial, then the progress you will be making will be worth it, because you will have changed your eating habits, you will be much more focused on eating much more natural food, but the great thing about it all is that all the recipes taste great and are GOOD FOR YOU!!!!

So we are off to a good start and make sure Monday is a massive start to the week!

Thursday, 17th October

The importance of food is a message that never gets forgotten on here, as you may have noticed. The thing that keeps this message going, is the feedback that comes from the people who read this every day, the ones who receive emails from me through their normal everyday training, and the questions I have almost every day from people who haven’t trained with me yet, or have and are in another part of the country or continent even!

So the questions and conversations I have daily are what shape this blog in the first place, and this is why the conversation always goes from topic to topic very quickly indeed.

Its great to hear that a huge number of you are taking advantage of our new emphasis on recipes, and how to make food from scratch that will fill you up, be really good for your body, is easy to make and perhaps is the solution to the helplessness that many of you feel when it comes to making good quality healthy food on a regular basis.

The journey that many of you have taken when it comes to re-discovering food again, and how good it can ACTUALLY taste has been inspiring, and inspired us to comes up with regular new recipes that we use in our everyday life, and especially the challenging times when it comes to juggling the responsibilities of raising a family, running a full time business and all of the other stress of modern day life.

So this blog is shaped by you, and please keep the ever-increasing comments coming to fitness@kerimckibbin.co.uk. Register on this site if you want and ask a question directly so everyone can see it, or simply call me on 07968 980 808.

Look forward to the ever increasing variety of questions too, however simple or complicated you may think they are!

Wednesday, 16th October

Since the weather is turning obviously, its time to talk about any potential restrictions the weather may put on your training.

I know lots of individuals who rely on the weather to dictate what they do on a particular day. I have tried getting the people I train away from making excuses solely on the weather affecting their participation in training.

1. Some people won’t go out of their house for instance just because its raining (like today as it happens!).

Remedy-it rains pretty much 9 months of the year in this country, if you didn’t train the days it was raining, you would never get fit and healthy!

2. Some people won’t go out of their house because its too cold, and like to stay “in the warm”!

Remedy-you get warm through exercising, you feel a lot better and you won’t have to have the heating on when you get back in the house, because your body’s temperature will be much more comfortable after you have exercised!

3. Some people won’t want to train when its too hot! Another excuse to stay in the house and do absolutely nothing!

Remedy would be to train first thing in morning or in the evening when it is a lot cooler. Drink plenty of water throughout the day, and regularly throughout your workout. Don’t work quite as hard on the really hot days.

4. Some people won’t go out because its snowing, and you can totally understand that because it is plainly dangerous to drive in particular in such dangerous weather!

Remedy-the only reason that I cancel workouts in the snow if I cannot drive to a client, but if I can get to them we can workout inside, or if people can get to me in the gym, we always have a great workout again inside!

You can see the weather really doesn’t have to cause you to stop training, its only a case of adapting to the different situations and working the weather to suit you!