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Photo blog: my 6-month bump (thanks to Belly Bootcamp…)

August 3rd, 2009

I’m not huge on posting photos of myself.  I tend to use photos of clients for most aspects of my promotions.  I think it speaks more to my clients and potential clients to see that they are also capable of “modeling” - you don’t have to be a personal trainer to do a great squat or push up

But… I’m PREGNANT!  And pregnant photos are fun.  So, here, for your inspection, is a photo of my 6-month bump.  Forgive the shoddy camera work (it took me about 20 minutes to figure out the self-timer and get this one, measly photo…).

My 6 month (bootcamp) belly!

My 6 month (bootcamp) belly!

During my last pregnancy I gained over 50 pounds - I wasn’t very well, wasn’t able to exercise constistently and… let’s just say I made friends with my local Pizza Hut delivery guy… It was an enormous amount of work to lose that weight.

Here’s a very powerful statistic for all you mommies out there, struggling to lose the baby weight or pregnant for the first (or second, or third) time: the number one predictor of postnatal fitness is prenatal fitness. In other words, all other things equal, a fit pregnant lady will probably be a fit mommy.  An overweight and/or unfit pregnant lady will probably be an overweight and/or unfit mommy.

I HAD to lose my baby weight after delivering Caden.  It’s my job, after all, to be in shape.  But it wasn’t easy.  Or quick.  I breastfed for 23 months with Caden until I became pregnant again and weaned her for fear I wouldn’t consume enough calories to nurse, grow baby #2 and live the life of a personal trainer and business owner.  Funnily (but not out of the ordinary), I actually lost about my last 5 baby pounds as I weaned Caden when I was about 2 months pregnant.  (For more information about the relationship between breastfeeding & fat loss, check out this earlier post.)

I have since been gaining healthily and steadily and I feel fit, limber and pretty light on my feet for 6 months pregnant.  I credit it to my toddler and to the Belly Bootcamp classes I lead several times per week.

How did/do you stay fit while pregnant?  What worked?  What didn’t?

Let Go & Lose Weight

July 27th, 2009

Meet your new workout partner

Meet your new workout partner

Last week I saw a client (let’s call her “J”) who has just had her second son.  She’s just 6 weeks postpartum but very serious about getting back into fighting shape and losing the baby weight.  Before her second son she weighed about 140 pounds.  I was quizzing her about her pregnancy weight gain and her current versus ideal weight.

“So, how much did you gain with this pregnancy?”

J’s eyes roll upward and you can practically SEE mommy brain setting in… “57 pounds.”

My eyes bulge out of my head.  Not because it’s so much weight.  It is a lot of weight to gain in pregnancy but not more than I’ve heard before.  I can’t help my reaction because J doesn’t look to me like she’s got more than 10-15 pounds to lose, max.  Where did all that weight go in 6 weeks?  I envision horrible crash dieting.  “So you got up to…”   I wait for J to fill in the blank.

“177 pounds,” J says, a little embarrassed.

A bit of quick math: “So you gained 37 pounds!  Not 57 pounds.”

J is astonished but relieved.  All this time she thought she had gone completely overboard and gained 57 pounds in this pregnancy.   Mommy brain is a powerful thing; J works in business and deals with numbers all the time.  Not even a PhD in Quantum Physics can protect you from mommy brain.  A few weeks of sleeplessness and you’re lucky if you can remember your own name.  But now she realizes, if she only gained 37 pounds, maybe it hasn’t quite been melting off her as quickly as she thought.  About 20 are gone and the other 15-20 are clinging, as they always do, to her tummy and especially to her hips and thighs.

J and I worked on a number of things that day, especially how to work with her son in his carrier or in her arms through her workout, something we deal with during our Belly Bootcamp classes.  There were also intermittent breaks for nursing, cuddling, jiggles, bounces and burps.  Sound frustrating?  It can be.  But what’s more frustrating is not making the time at all.  Sure, an uninterrupted workout would be wonderful!  Blissful, even!  (If a workout can be blissful.)  But an interrupted workout is better than no workout at all.

Let go of your idea of a “workout.”  I guarantee you will actually get more exercise if you do.

Think you can’t stop moving the entire time? Not true.  Break your cardio into 5- or 10-minute chunks with nursing, cuddling and chatting breaks as needed.  Do half your cardio in the morning and half in the afternoon.  Do what you can!  The heart has no stopwatch.

Think there’s no point in exercising if you can’t do cardio? Not so.  Strength training burns lots of calories and revs your metabolism for up to 72 hours after, working for you long after you stop exercising.  Strength training can be done at home with very little or no equipment.

Think you can’t get in a good workout without your equipment, gym, trainer or class? Doing the same workout over and over can cause you to stop getting results; when you can’t do your usual thing, take advantage of the opportunity to shock your body by doing something new. 

Think you won’t get any results if you don’t do a whole 30 (or 40, or 60) minutes? Study after study have shown that even 10-minute workouts produce results - plus, if you are exercising for just 10-20 minutes you can probably exercise every day without having to schedule rest days as you would with longer workouts (not to mention you don’t have to schedule childcare or naps around a 10-minute workout; even the fussiest baby will lay happily for 10 minutes and watch you do jumping jacks and squats).

Kids are great workout partners - just keep it interesting!

Kids are great workout partners - just keep it interesting!

Stop thinking of exercise as a black-and-white part of your life.  Not every workout has to be long, organized or planned.  Turn your walk into a workout. Pop in a DVD you haven’t tried in a while and exercise your heart out until the baby (or kids) start fussing.  Plop baby in his carrier or corral the kids into doing squats and lunges with you.  Invite a friend to try a new class. Or just run up and down your stairs for a few minutes, a few times a day.  No exercise is wasted. Each little bit adds up.

And did I mention it helps clear up mommy brain?

How do you squeeze exercise into your day?  Share your tricks with everyone!

No excuses - work out on the go

July 20th, 2009

I unexpectedly had to be out of town last week and missed a couple of my usual workouts.

Right now, since I’m 6 months pregnant, I’ve tapered my exercise routine a bit.  It is totally normal and healthy to exercise during pregnancy - in fact, it is one of the only times in your life where it is not recommended just for fitness but recommended for your safety that you exercise at least 3 times per week.  If you’ve been pregnant and fallen off the wagon, you know just… how… difficult… it can be to get back on.  Changes are occurring so frequently in pregnancy that you really must stay constantly active to allow your muscle and cardiorespiratory systems to stay caught up.  I teach at least 4 Belly Bootcamp classes per week and those provide me with ample exercise - in addition, I chase around my 2 year old, walk my errands when I can and I am looking forward to hooking up my new Wii Fit later this week - more on that in a later blog…

This could be your gym...

This could be your gym...

Anyway, so I needed to get in a workout while I was away.  My mom has never been much of a fitness buff but secretly joined a kickboxing gym last month (WHAT?!) and was eager to keep up with her workouts while she was away from home as well.  My sister, also in Vancouver with us, is an off-and-on exerciser but very strong and capable.  What she lacks in commitment she makes up for in effort when she does work out.

We headed out for a walk - in Tsawassen, B.C. - in a beachy, rocky area with a wide graveled path.  We were in B.C. for a family funeral and needed a bit of a pick-me-up.  Sometimes cardio alone won’t cut it.  You need some tough, sweaty work to alleviate real stress… like, funeral stress...

Here’s what we did!  You can turn your usual walk, either tonight around the block or on that family trip you have planned, into a full-body work out. Try these ideas:

  • We came across a small wooden staircase and a wheelchair ramp both leading up to a small observation deck (maybe 5-6 stairs total).  We alternated one set of push-ups (8-15) with one set of walking lunges (up and down the ramp twice).  We did two sets of each.
  • Up on the observation deck where we could be out of the way of other walkers, we did some modified burpees: we squatted down as low as possible, with heels flat on the floor; placed our hands down on the ground and stepped one foot, then the other, back until we were in a plank position.  Then we returned our feet to a squat position, lifted our hands and stood up.  We did one set of 10.
  • While we walked we did burst of lunges and squats.  One would do a set of walking lunges while the others continued walking, then another would begin lunging while the other two walked; so on and so on.  We did 4-5 short sets of 6 walking lunges each.
  • We found a bench here or there to work our upper bodies with bench dips.  We sat on the edge of the bench with our hands tucked in next to our hips, fingers pointing downward.  We lifted our bums off the bench and - keeping our weight on our arms and staying close to the bench - we bent our arms to lower ourselves until our elbows were at 90-degree angles, then pressed up and back to straighten our arms.  Great toning for the flabby upper arm area - my mom’s favourite part to work right now!  We did 2 sets of 10-15.
  • Near the end we stopped at a staircase with about 12 steps and wrapped our workout up with one big burst of cardio.  We ran up the stairs and jogged down the nearby hill10-15 times each.  No stairs?  Just run up and down a small hill (or partway up a big hill).
  • We got right down in the dirt and did some caterpillars for full-body strengthening and stretching.  We stood with feet together and bent down to place our hands on the ground; then we walked our hands out until our bodies were stretched out in plank position (on hands and toes with body in a straight line).  Then we walked our feet in and stood up.  We did 1 set of 6.  You can do more - we had a gravel road to move on and it was a bit too tough on our hands…

… that’s the beauty of an outdoor workout.  You can modify anything according to how you’re feeling, the terrain you encounter or the equipment you find.  Just because you don’t have a gym doesn’t mean you can’t have a work out!

Remember, if you have any questions about the advice above (or any exercise-related questions) please ask first, shoot later.  Email me at dara(at)fitfamily(dot)ca or visit me at www.fitfamily.ca or www.bellybootcamp.ca for more information about exercise for pregnancy, postpartum and every stage of life.  Be well!

Your Lose-the-Baby-Weight Timeline

June 25th, 2009

In Belly Bootcamp classes, losing the baby weight is a daily topic of discussion for me.

It’s also one of the media’s favourite topics of discussion.  They seem especially excited to display photos of anatomical monsters like Heidi Klum, 8 weeks postpartum and strutting her stuff in a bikini for millions to see.

What the...?!

Okay, I may have just perpetrated this ridiculous obsession by posting the photo myself but it’s being displayed here as a spectacle and not a model for emulation.  Tons of articles feature “Lose the Baby Weight” secrets from celebrity trainers and nutritionists.  Here’s one secret they never mention: I am wiling to bet very few of these women are actually breastfeeding. They also don’t talk about the fact that these women have personal trainers, nutritionists, nannies and assistants to help them devote hours and hours to exercise and deliver lean, prepared meals for their consumption.

Breastfeeding or not, 8 weeks is a ridiculously short postpartum weight loss timeline.  The Society of Obstetricians & Gynecologists of Canada recommends a light walking program to commence approximately 2-6 weeks postpartum, depending on the type of delivery (vaginal or cesarean) and the degree of healing required for each individual mom.  You cannot follow these instructions, eat healthily and normally and lose the baby weight in 8 weeks.

A good rule I recommend to pregnant and postpartum clients is to expect an approximately equivalent amount of time to lose the pregnancy weight as it took to put it on.  In other words, 9 months to get that big and 9 months to shrink back again.  Most experts recommend a 6-12 month timeline for postpartum weight loss. Breastfeeding requires lots of calories, which means nursing mommies have to be even more diligent about eating adequately and healthily and even more patient about dieting.

Here’s one thing we know for sure: if you go overboard in pregnancy, your chances of staying overweight after delivery are very high.  “Eating for two” is no longer the mantra it used to be.  A developing baby really only requires 300-500 extra calories per day on top of what you would normally eat. That’s the equivalent of a few glasses of milk with your meals each day or a late afternoon peanut butter sandwich to help you avoid that end-of-day crash.  Putting back a large pizza every Friday night will catch up with you.  You might not notice until you’ve given birth but those extra pounds are not going on baby… they’re going on you.  A woman of healthy weight should aim to gain about 25-35 pounds during a healthy pregnancy, according to the SOGC. Most women lose 10-15 pounds immediately upon giving birth as the baby, placenta and fluid are released, and work to lose an additional 10-20 pounds of maternal fat stores which are healthy and normal but need to be lost nonetheless once pregnancy and the immediate postpartum period have ended.  That’s already a substantial amount of weight to lose.  Why add more work?

With my first pregnancy, I was foolish.  I went BONKERS enjoying foods I would normally never eat and when mild illness kept me from exercising for several months late in pregnancy, I gave birth to a big healthy baby and was left with 45 pounds of fat to lose.  Despite all my knowledge of fat loss and fitness, those were no easy 45 pounds.

After giving birth, take the first few weeks easy, stay away from the celebrity mags and work on getting your body up and moving again.  Eat well and be sure to include an additional 500 calories for baby’s milk if you are breastfeeding.

Most importantly, shift your mental timeline from the unattainable few weeks you might be hoping for to the safe and achievable 6-9 months you will probably need to lose the weight you’ve gained.

As I say to all my clients, if your goal is realistic you actually stand a chance of achieving it!

Jon & Kate Plus a Tummy Tuck

June 8th, 2009

No matter what you think of them – whether you are a fan, used to be a fan, or have never seen the show and don’t know what all the

Let me tell you, that's not shrinking back on its own.

Let me tell you, that's not shrinking back on its own.

fuss is about – they are a couple with a family and they are obviously undergoing some major changes if not completely falling apart. So why do we need to talk about Kate’s tummy tuck? I was reading a mom blog online and there were photos of Kate Gosselin on the beach with her kids (for prying eyes who want to see the results of her surgery, I assume). The worst part? They were interspersed with ads for diet supplements! Why are we so hard on ourselves? It’s wrong to stay fat. It’s wrong to get too skinny. It’s wrong to have plastic surgery. Or is it?

I have had clients who have undergone plastic surgery. One client had both a breast augmentation and tummy tuck a few years after having her son. She had anorexic tendencies and I was sorrowed to hear she was planning the tummy tuck after seeing her go through the frustrations of a boob job.

Another client, whom I currently see, is considering some mini-liposuction. She works extremely hard, trains with me weekly (and has for 3 years) and exercises on her own an additional 4-5 times/week. She takes great care of herself, takes pride in her appearance and, at 52, is considering having a plastic surgeon do what exercise, diet and genetics won’t do. If she decides to have the procedure, I will support her decision. I think she is a great candidate for plastic surgery as she is dedicated to taking care of her body and is at an age where she has the confidence and maturity to make the decision rationally and expect realistic results.

I would not have liposuction. I would not have a boob job. Someone suggested to me a few years ago (before I had my first kid) that I was a good candidate for early Botox because I had the beginnings of lines on my forehead. I didn’t know whether to hit her or laugh. Now I have some REAL beginnings of lines and I still can’t imagine having Botox. But I would never judge a woman who does. Several of my clients have Botox regularly. It’s just not for me. Or not yet, anyway…

The jury is still out on the tummy tuck. I gained A LOT of weight with my first baby. With my current pregnancy I’m on my way to a much saner weight gain and I expect to have no problem taking it off after delivering. Postpartum weight loss (like every other kind of weight loss) is really just a combination of diligence and patience. Plus it’s my job to lose the weight! But the skin… the skin does not go away. So maybe I won’t rule out a tummy tuck just yet.

Back to Kate Gosselin. Why should we care that she has had a tummy tuck? Besides, the woman has had 8 children – 6 of them in one shot! Doesn’t this woman deserve a tummy tuck? I think she deserves a congressional medal of honour. If she’s willing to settle for $75,000 a week and a free tummy tuck, what do I care?

But people do care. Maybe you care. Do you care? Is there something wrong with a woman having a tummy tuck? Is a tummy tuck different from other types of plastic surgery; is it more forgivable? Have you had plastic surgery? Would you?

The truth about breastfeeding and fat loss

May 28th, 2009

You’ve heard it before, probably even from your OB-GYN or your midwife when she was listing the benefits of breastfeeding to you.  Your mom, sister, aunt, girlfriend or coworker might have told you.  Maybe you googled “baby weight” or “benefits of breastfeeding” and read it there.

hello baby, bye-bye treadmill?

hello baby, bye-bye treadmill?

Breastfeeding an infant burns about 500 calories per day. Wow!  500 calories a day!  That’s like jogging an entire hour.  Or doing two back-to-back bootcamp classes!

Only… it doesn’t quite work that way.  It’s true that maintaining a supply of breastmilk requires a woman to eat approximately 500 calories more than she normally would to maintain her own healthy bodyweight.  BUT… that’s the key - it requires you to EAT those calories.  If you don’t eat enough calories, you might not make the same quantity or quality of breastmilk.  So dieting is not really an option when you’re breastfeeding.  The LaLeche League recommends you consume a minimum of 1500-1800 calories per day in order to safely lose a healthy amount of baby weight while still providing quality milk for your little one.

The female body is an enigma.  No matter how much we learn about dieting, fitness and fat loss, we are still at the mercy of Mother Nature.

I breastfed my first child for 23 months.  That’s right.  When I found out I was pregnant with #2 I was concerned about being active, nursing my toddler and providing enough calories for my growing baby, so I decided to wean my toddler.  After weaning, I actually LOST about 5 pounds that had, despite all my efforts and all my knowledge about fitness and weight loss, been clinging to me for 2 years since giving birth.  And it’s not just me.  Friends, clients, acquaintances have all told me they’ve experienced the same sudden weight loss during and after weaning.

So what gives?  If nursing burns calories, why do you LOSE weight when you wean?  Shouldn’t the weight melt off while you’re nursing instead?

The truth is that a breastfeeding body is in many ways like a pregnant body.  Hormones produced during the breastfeeding stages help a woman (without asking her opinion, mind you…) maintain fat stores to help feed her and baby in the event of a famine.  Once baby is weaned, many women see a weight loss as hormone levels return to normal.

The best formula for losing that baby weight is to eat according to your hunger (read: not your cravings, your hunger), drink according to your thirst and exercise at least 3-4 days per week with a combination of strength training to boost your metabolism and cardiovascular exercise to burn off extra calories.

And patience.  The other part of that formula is patience.

How have your postpartum weight loss efforts worked?  Did you find you lost weight at certain stages more easily than others?  Tell me!


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