No Gimmicks, Plenty of Fat Loss Treats

I'm not a big fan of gimmicks…gimmicky diet pills, infomercial “ab belts” and the like.

The real results start when you get serious and lose the “miracle fixes”.

However, some of our camp members were featured on FOX 10 using a little workout gimmick, sort of…we changed things up a little and came up with this. Here’s the video clip from FOX:

Freaky Fat Loss Pumpkin Workout

So what’s the point?

First, effective exercise can be done most anywhere, using most anything (obviously, a pumpkin is being used like a medicine ball here. However, you can still grab a quick 4 minute workout using bodyweight only).

Second, I’m not talking about little walks around the neighborhood (although not bad, just not as effective for accelerated fat loss and strength gain). I am talking about full body movements to burn a lot of calories in a short period of time.

Look, I get it. You’re busy. I’m busy. Everyone is busy, but the bottom line is that excuses are becoming harder and harder to come by. Don't spend your energy trying to find an excuse, instead direct your energy to getting in a quick and intense workout in the pockets of your busy day.

Make the decision. Stop the excuses.

Remember, greater fitness and fat loss are possible with quick, intense calorie burners throughout your day.

Get moving and have a great day!

Horray for New York!

Check this out from http://www.KTAR.com:

NYC takes calorie-counting
campaign to the rails

October 7th, 2008

By KAREN MATTHEWS
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - Craving a burrito with sour cream and guacamole? What if you knew it had more than half the calories you should eat in a day?

The city Health Department is expanding its healthy-eating campaign with subway ads that say most adults should limit themselves to 2,000 calories day.

Posters that appeared Monday in about 1,000 subway cars provide calorie counts for several menu items _ like 470 for a giant apple bran muffin or 1,170 for a chicken burrito with toppings.

The three-month ad campaign is intended to build on the city's new regulation requiring chain restaurants to post calorie counts on their menus. Officials are betting people will eat fewer calories if they know how many they should consume.

"Small changes in your choices can make a big difference in your calorie intake," assistant health commissioner Dr. Lynn Silver said.

The ads are in 20 percent of city subway cars.

The calorie-posting rule applies to chain restaurants that have 15 or more locations nationwide. It took effect in May, but legal action delayed enforcement until July.

The 2,000-calorie figure is an average. Federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations vary by age, gender and level of activity. Men can consume more calories than women without gaining weight, and 20-year-olds more than 60-year-olds.

New York City's calorie-count regulation has paved the way for similar laws elsewhere. California last week became the first state to require restaurant chains to reveal how many calories are in their standard menu items.

Natalia Kaplan, of Queens, said she hadn't noticed the poster directly behind her on an E train featuring that 1,170-calorie burrito, but she approved of the campaign.

"It makes you aware," said Kaplan, who said she pays close attention to the calorie information fast-food chains are now required to provide.

"If I go to Dunkin' Donuts, I look at the calories, and I try to take the least-calorie doughnut," she said.

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