S
SweatPea
Guest
Good luck on that painful challenge!

Then stepped on this morning for the heck of it and saw a 191. I stopped short of celebrating, though, because I figure that'll go back up a couple of pounds (as in an inaccurate reading). I get those sometimes...but it was good to see.
I just hope it all survives his return home, when I'm not there this afternoon.



Check out women's health magazine's website - they usually have suggested programs that you can use to kick ulp your cardio routine to make it more effective and more fun for yourself... generally it's a specific time at a specific interval...So a couple of days ago I began an elliptical "routine" of sorts where I spend two minutes going forward, then one minute backward. I watch the clock on the machine when I'm doing it, which used to bother me, but this way it gives me some type of change to look forward to so it goes by so much faster. It'll improve even more, I think, after I get an Ipod or something to let me listen to some music.
Elliptical Trainer
Your Comfort Zone
Gliding along at a medium pace, your legs are on autopilot. And, if the machine has arms, your upper body is too.
Blast More Fat
Never stop working. To maximize fat burning, don't let the machine's gliding momentum dictate your pace. Your leg muscles should push the pedals around. If there are rails, lightly rest your hands on them — but no white-knuckling, since you may end up supporting your body weight that way.
Use intervals. During every third song on your MP3 player or every commercial break, ramp up the intensity and go as hard as you can. "A steady pace at a sustainable speed burns calories consistently, but intervals blast up the count," Peterson says.
Use your whole body. Every other minute, concentrate on strengthening your arms or core — you'll recruit more muscles and incinerate more fat. For example, if you're on a full-body machine, consciously engage your arms; push and pull with the same intensity as you're using for your legs. If it's a lower-body machine, put your arms in an athletic position — elbows bent, upper arms close to your ribs — to strengthen your core.
**WEB EXCLUSIVE: Form Fix
Make sure your knees are pointing in the same direction as your toes. "Don't let your knees fall inward," says Mark Nutting, CSCS, NSCA-CPT, fitness director at Saco Sports & Fitness in Saco, Maine, "That puts severe stress on your ligaments."