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Loud Fitness by Tanja Djelevic

Posts Tagged ‘life force’

Motivate Yourself!

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

This is an except from my book, Your Life Force.

Sometimes it can be a challenge to get started with exercise. After a long workday, you might just want to plop down on the couch and take it easy. But it is in these situations that training is most important. You need to recharge your batteries.

There are tricks to use when lethargy strikes. I usually try to muster enough energy to lace up my training shoes. Once I’ve done that, and left the sofa behind, it’s easier to get going.

Some lines I use to motivate myself go like this:

  • I will feel more energetic as soon as I start to exercise
  • My thoughts will become clearer even though I’ve had a hard day
  • With new strength – mental as well as physical – I will come to see myself as capable and attractive


Test it yourself. Think up some bracing arguments to use after a long, dismal workday when everything feels tough.

Image: Lady-bug

Boost Your Life Force!

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

loud_boost_20090731

Even if you are an avid fitness enthusiast who keeps a consistent training regimen, the likelihood of hitting a plateau with your progress and energy levels is a given. Your body’s energy systems work hard to adapt to your energy output. But the demands you put on your body, doing the same thing over and over again, will slowly make it seem as if your body is changing less and less frequently. It might show up as actual weight gain or lack of energy.

This stagnancy not only happens to your physical body, but to your mind and spirit, as well. Do you ever have the feeling that you’re standing still or stuck when it comes to certain situations in your life? That uncomfortable feeling starts growing inside, and perhaps you want to jump-start some kind of change.

The bottom line is: you need to change it up, shock your body, give it something new to chew on!

One of my favorite ways to break through a plateau is to do a plyo workout. Make sure you feel strong enough first, and thus safe, and then try adding a few jumps to your training schedule. It can be as easy as including 3×20 squat jumps, 3 times per week, in the middle of your regular workout. Not only are they energizing, but it’s also a great way to incorporate all that core work you have been working on. You will be amazed at how much energy you will gain after just one week, not to mention the boost in your metabolism!

Now transfer that process to real life. What needs a boost in your daily life for change to happen? Is there an area where you feel you want to improve? Which tools can you use? Do you long for more focus? Maybe a short daily meditation practice could be implemented. Do you feel a lack of motivation at present? Perhaps an inspiring book about someone’s true life story about overcoming hurdles is the tool to use. A few of my personal favorites: reading poetry for instant inspiration, listening mindfully to the lyrics of my favorite musical artist, or reading a new book. It isn’t difficult or complicated to create change in the status quo. It only takes action.

Here’s a quick energy-booster workout:

1. After a short warm-up, do 5 sun salutations in a row. Be mindful of breath and movement. Reach arms overhead, do a swan dive forward, stay in a forward bend for a few breaths, and the return to a standing position.

2. Squat deep and jump up in the air, landing back into another squat. Repeat for 20 if you can.

3. Do 3×30 second planks, in a push-up position.

4. Repeat the squat-jump sequence.

5. Do 10 slow roll-ups lying on the floor.

6. Repeat the squat-jump sequence a third time.

Repeat this short energy workout three times a week for two weeks, and experience an uplifting change in your energy, metabolism … and in your smile!

Live Life Loud!

Image: d’n'c

A Letter From Sweden

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

Reading your emails, blog comments, Facebook messages, and Tweets always brightens my day. Recently I received a really inspiring message from Malin Norgren in Skutskär, Sweden, and wanted to share it here. (Apologies to my non-Swedish readers!)

Hej Tanja!

Malin Norgren heter jag och bor i Skutskär i Norduppland.

Jag har nu lånat om din bok “Livskraft” x antal ggr och är helt frälst!

Efter mitt första barn -00 blev jag guldmedlem i Viktväktarna -01 och med ett BMI på 20. Jag mådde kanonbra och alla kläder satt som en smäck. Vid denna tidpunkt tränade jag löpning samt gick milslånga promenader varje dag med barnvagnen.

När jag ser på bilder från 2001 ser jag dock ut som en “guppy-fisk” med insjunkna kinder och minns också att huden kändes sladdrig mm.

Min resa med vikt har varit som en berg och dalbana tyvärr. Under hela min barndom/tonår var jag smal och har bara “smalisar” i släkten. Men i senare tonåren började krogliv samt mitt x-a jobb på en restaurang(med mkt småätande) synas och jag började bli rätt mullig. En egen diet på Nutrilett samt bara kokt mat och uteslutande av allt sött/skräpmat och stenhård träning gjorde att jag under 1994 rasade 25 kg i vikt på bara 3 mån.

Folk runt omkring beundrade mig utanpå och undrade hur jag lyckats…(från 88 ner till 63). Jag var då 19 och skulle fylla 20 senare samma år. Men inombords kände jag mig inte ett dugg lycklig och konsekvensen av min snabbantning blev att jag tappade hår, började frysa och fick hjärtsvikt flera ggr. Under sommaren började jag således hetsäta eftersom detta skrämde mig. Jag åt precis allt jag förbjudit mig själv och gick upp 10 kg på sommaren. Samma år reste jag till USA som au-pair och den onda cirkeln fortsatte tyvärr med ytterligare 20 kg viktuppgång.

En lång resa följde med “antingen” “eller” perioder. Antingen åt jag sunt och tränade eller hetsåt och var passiv. 1998 sökte jag hjälp via landstinget och hamnade i en självhjälps-grupp med likasinnade och blev frisk. 2002 fick jag tvillingar som vägde nästan 4 kg styck trots att jag blev igångsatt 3 veckor tidigare än beräknat datum.

Med hjälp av din bok har jag sen 14/6 följt boken och fått en helt annan kropp och ork. Jag mår bra både utanpå och innuti. På söndag springer jag Tjejmilen och vill bara tacka dig för att du skrev denna bok! Detta är rätt sätt att ta hand om sin kropp. Det fysiska och mentala hör ihop. Maten är bara en tårtbit i det hela.

Många kramar,
Malin Norgren

Are You An Emotional Eater?

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

All too often, we eat for reasons other than satisfying hunger. Food becomes a “remedy” that we turn to when we feel depressed, bored, angry, anxious, lonely, stressed, tired, or powerless.

This is emotional eating, and it often leads to weight-related illness. It is a problem for many of us. Generally speaking, all of the people I train who have serious weight issues have difficulty managing food on account of stress and anxiety. Rarely do their weight problems have to do with a lack of awareness about which foods are good or bad; that knowledge is widespread.

Are you an emotional eater? One way to answer this question is to carry a food diary. When hunger pangs set in, note how you feel. Are you stressed, have you argued with the kids or your partner, is there too much to do at work? Analyze whether your hunger is real, or if it was aroused by an emotional feeling.

***

One way to treat emotional eating is through cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), which helps you identify and change unhealthy thought patterns. For more information on CBT, visit the Mayo Clinic and Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies sites. I will also have some exercises for overcoming emotional eating my upcoming book, Your Life Force.

Image: ginnerobot

Loud Fitness by Tanja Djelevic
Loud Fitness by Tanja Djelevic
Loud Fitness by Tanja Djelevic
Loud Fitness by Tanja Djelevic

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Loud Fitness by Tanja Djelevic