BodiMechanix LLC

BodiMechanix LLC Jeremy Gunderson, is a certified Personal Trainer through the American Council on Exercise.

It’s true, I am officially open for kicking butts in my new Kenosha private studio. Let’s get you back on track with you...
06/27/2023

It’s true, I am officially open for kicking butts in my new Kenosha private studio. Let’s get you back on track with your fitness goals. Give me a call.

Some days are harder to find the motivation, but there’s no regrets when it’s done!  Keep moving forward!
11/23/2022

Some days are harder to find the motivation, but there’s no regrets when it’s done! Keep moving forward!

Don’t wait for another Monday to come and go or for a New Years resolution!  Be stronger than your strongest excuse!
11/19/2022

Don’t wait for another Monday to come and go or for a New Years resolution! Be stronger than your strongest excuse!

Push harder than yesterday if you want a different tomorrow!
11/19/2022

Push harder than yesterday if you want a different tomorrow!

A little progress each day adds up to big results!  Stay focused and keep at it!
11/15/2022

A little progress each day adds up to big results! Stay focused and keep at it!

Many people struggle to maintain weight loss long-term. While fad-diets and four-week bikini-body boot camps might help ...
11/07/2022

Many people struggle to maintain weight loss long-term. While fad-diets and four-week bikini-body boot camps might help you drop pounds, keeping weight off is challenging. Research shows that 95% of dieters regain lost weight within one to five years, with up to two-thirds of dieters gaining more weight than they lost dieting (Mann, et al., 2007).

Fortunately, researchers have uncovered some of the traits and strategies that can help increase your chances of successfully maintaining a healthy weight. The National Weight Control Registry (NWCR) has tracked more than 10,000 people over the last 23 years who’ve been successful in maintaining long-term weight loss. These “successful losers” share some common characteristics that have helped them keep weight off over time. These and other long-term strategies discussed below can help you achieve and maintain a healthy weight.

Ditch Diets for Lifestyle Change
Diets don’t work and can even be harmful in long-term weight loss maintenance (Mann, et al., 2007). For sustainable weight loss, focus on healthier alternatives and lifestyle changes. Diets often represent a black-and-white, all-or-nothing approach. Lifestyle changes are more broad, generalizable and adaptable to your situations and needs. Some examples of long-term lifestyle changes you might adopt include eating vegetables with every meal and snack, or pairing carbohydrates with protein or fat to manage blood sugar levels. You can also integrate mindful eating as a sustainable strategy to keep weight regain at bay. While these may not seem extreme enough to promote dramatic weight loss, the power lies in their sustainability over time.

Move it or Gain it
The NWCR reports that 90% of successful losers exercise an average of one hour a day. Similarly, the American College of Sports Medicine suggests a minimum of 250 minutes of moderate-intensity activity (50 minutes, five days a week) to maintain weight loss. These guidelines may seem daunting, but activity doesn’t need to be strenuous or extreme to yield weight-related benefits. The most commonly reported form of exercise in the NWCR is walking. Walking and other moderate-intensity activities can help you maintain a healthy weight and produce many other health-improving outcomes.

Build Up Your Strength
Strength training helps build and preserve muscle mass, which is typically lost with age and calorically restricted diets. Muscle is expensive tissue—it costs the body a lot of calories to maintain. Thus, the more muscle you have, the more calories you’ll burn through the day, even while at rest.

Focus on working all major muscle groups two or more days a week. If you're unsure where to begin, seek out a qualified personal trainer to help you build a strength-training regimen that can be performed in the gym, outdoors or at home.

Self-monitor
You can’t change a behavior unless you know what, when and why it’s happening. Monitoring your eating and exercise behaviors helps raise your awareness around the antecedents (what causes a behavior) and consequences (thoughts, feelings, rewards or drawbacks) of engaging in a particular behavior. Food or activity logs can be useful tools for self-monitoring. A sample food log might include the following:

What you ate
How much you ate
Where you were
What you were thinking or feeling before you ate
How much time it took you to eat
What you were doing while you ate (e.g., watching television, answering emails)
What you were thinking or feeling after you ate (physically and emotionally)
Level of fullness or satiation after eating
Self-monitoring can be used regularly to keep track of eating and exercise, or it can be a strategy employed when maintaining your healthy behaviors becomes challenging.

Seek Support
Social support is critical for long-term behavior change. With supportive friends and family, healthy eating and exercise become fun group activities that foster adherence and enjoyment. If your inner circle finds carrots distasteful and exercise a bore, maintaining your healthy habits will be more challenging. Find a group of health-minded individuals (in person or online) with whom you can identify problems, brainstorm solutions, and offer and receive support. Long-term guidance from a health and fitness professional also improves weight-related outcomes. Maintaining contact with a qualified health coach can help you plan and prepare for success and overcome obstacles that may arise.

Don’t let Lapses become Relapses
Setbacks are normal. Planning for them can help you overcome setbacks when they occur. Consider possible barriers that may hinder your ability to be active or eat well (e.g., busy schedule, stress, financial issues) and brainstorm solutions to these barriers in advance. Rather than berating yourself for “falling off the wagon,” view setbacks as opportunities for learning and growth. “Ugh, I ate so much ice cream last night. I knew I couldn’t do this!” instead becomes, “I wonder why I ate so much ice cream last night? Was I bored? Lonely? Stressed? Did I get enough to eat during the day?” With this, nothing is a failure and every “setback” is an opportunity to learn more about yourself and your needs.

Remember your Why
Weight loss is never truly about weight—it’s about reducing some physical or emotional discomfort you feel. Once you’ve lost weight and feel better, it’s easy to fall back into old habits. Whether it’s being able to play with your grandkids, reduce your risk for heart disease, or feel more comfortable and confident in a swimsuit, figure out the “why” behind your weight loss and write it down. Place this note in plain view where you’ll see it frequently. This constant reminder can help you stick with healthy behaviors when the going gets tough.

A Recipe for Success
There’s no magic pill when it comes to weight-loss maintenance; rather, multiple lifestyle factors work together to preserve your weight and health. Focusing on sustainable eating changes, regular activity, social support and self-compassion in the face of setbacks is your best bet for achieving a healthy weight that lasts a lifetime.

It’s never too late to start, but the sooner you do, the better you’ll feel.  It just depends on the quality of life you...
11/06/2022

It’s never too late to start, but the sooner you do, the better you’ll feel. It just depends on the quality of life you want to have!

Keep the flexibility you have!Stretching is a crucial part of a well rounded fitness routine.  It takes little effort an...
11/04/2022

Keep the flexibility you have!
Stretching is a crucial part of a well rounded fitness routine. It takes little effort and can be done just about anywhere!

Most people take part in aerobic activity to improve their cardiovascular endurance and burn fat. People weight-train to...
11/04/2022

Most people take part in aerobic activity to improve their cardiovascular endurance and burn fat. People weight-train to maintain lean muscle tissue and build strength. Those are the two most important elements of a fitness program, right?

Actually, there are three important elements. Regrettably, flexibility training is often neglected.

Benefits of flexibility training include:

Allows greater freedom of movement and improved posture
Increases physical and mental relaxation
Releases muscle tension and soreness
Reduces the risk of injury

Some people are naturally more flexible. Flexibility is primarily due to one’s genetics, gender, age, body shape and level of physical activity. As people grow older, they tend to lose flexibility, usually as a result of inactivity, but partially because of the aging process itself. The less active you are, the less flexible you are likely to be. As with cardiovascular endurance and muscle strength, flexibility will improve with regular training.
Stretch for Success

Before stretching, take a few minutes to warm up, as stretching cold muscles may increase your chances for injury. Begin with a simple, low-intensity warm-up, such as easy walking while swinging the arms in a wide circle. Spend at least five to 10 minutes warming up prior to stretching. The general recommendation for people starting an exercise program is to perform gentle dynamic-type stretches before a workout and static stretches after exercise.

When performing a static stretch:

Take a deep breath and slowly exhale as you gently stretch the muscle to a point of tension
Hold the stretch for 15 to 30 seconds, relax and then repeat the stretch two to four more times
Dynamic stretches are more advanced and should be instructed by a qualified professional
Avoid these stretching mistakes:
Don’t bounce a stretch. Holding a stretch is more effective and there is less risk of injury.
Don’t stretch a muscle that is not warmed up.
Don’t strain or push a muscle too far. If a stretch hurts, ease up.
Don’t hold your breath during the stretch. Continue to breathe normally.

Fitting Stretching Into a Compressed Schedule:

Time constraints keep many people from stretching. Some complain they just don’t have time to stretch; others hurry out of their fitness classes before the cool-down exercises are completed.

Ideally, at least 30 minutes, three times per week, should be spent on flexibility training. But even a mere five minutes of stretching at the end of an exercise session is better than nothing to reduce potential muscle soreness. And all aerobic activity should be followed by at least a few minutes of stretching.

Here are some tips for fitting stretching into an overbooked schedule:

If you don’t have time to sufficiently warm-up before stretching, try doing a few stretches immediately after a shower or while soaking in a hot tub. The hot water elevates body and muscle temperature enough to make them more receptive to stretching.
Try a few simple stretches before getting out of bed in the morning. Wake yourself up with a few full-body stretches by gently pointing the toes and reaching your arms above your head. This can clear your mind and help jump-start your morning.
Take a stretching class.

Results happen over time, not overnight.  Work hard, stay consistent, and be patient!  Once you start to see the results...
11/04/2022

Results happen over time, not overnight. Work hard, stay consistent, and be patient! Once you start to see the results, it will be even harder to take a day off!

Exercise, proper nutrition, and rest are the keys to longevity!
11/02/2022

Exercise, proper nutrition, and rest are the keys to longevity!

THE KEY TO HEALTHY AGING:There may not be a tangible fountain of youth that promises eternal life and continuous health,...
10/26/2022

THE KEY TO HEALTHY AGING:

There may not be a tangible fountain of youth that promises eternal life and continuous health, but we hold more power than we may realize in the daily choices we make and the habits we adopt and maintain throughout our lives.

Living an active and balanced lifestyle that includes a combination of aerobic, muscular strength, and flexibility exercises helps ward off a range of diseases, slows the rate of muscle tissue loss and improves activities of daily living. Here are some of the cardiovascular and cognitive benefits that come with living a healthy lifestyle.

-The Cardiovascular Benefits-
The heart and lungs naturally experience a reduction in efficiency and strength over time; this is especially true in sedentary populations. With advancing age, the heart must work harder to accomplish the same amount of work, both at rest and during activity. Resting heart rate also declines at a rate of one beat per minute each year (Murray and Kenney, 206). Similarly, the lungs lose some of their ability to supply adequate amounts of oxygen to the working tissues and organ systems. Regular exercise, however, helps increase systemic blood flow and oxygen supply.

Becoming and remaining physically active and incorporating aerobic exercise (walking, aquatics, cycling, etc.) can lower and control blood pressure, which reduces the overall stress on the heart. Activity also can help lower cholesterol levels and prevent atherosclerotic build up in the arteries. Further, individuals who remain active reduce their risk of all-cause mortality and premature death from preventable diseases. So, while you may not be able to outlast Father Time, you can certainly walk far enough ahead that it makes it difficult for him to catch you.

-The Cognitive Benefits-
The brain is a truly remarkable puzzle. In fact, modern medicine could study the brain indefinitely and still not learn everything there is to know about its mysterious network. The brain is continually changing in size and functionality. Typical age-related changes include a decrease in brain weight and size (not significant, but still a reduction), network size and blood supply. The aging brain also experiences memory loss, a decrease in inductive reasoning skills and mental acuity, a decrease in spatial awareness and the development of balance issues.

No one is immune to changes in the brain, but exercise and physical activity (along with proper diet) significantly slows the rate of cognitive dysfunction. Think about it in these terms—what’s good for the heart, is also good for the brain.

Overall, exercise improves memory, enhances thinking and problem-solving skills, boosts brain supporting hormones, enhances blood and oxygen flow to the brain, acts as a natural anti-depressant and stress reliever, and it improves focus, allowing you to concentrate on difficult or challenging tasks. In short, keep on your toes to keep the mind sharp.

-The Truth of the Matter-
Exercise is and will always be one of the primary keys to living well across the lifespan. We cannot stop or reverse the circle of life, but we can influence how we experience that journey. And it’s never too late to start making healthy choices to better your future!

References
Murray, R. and Kenney, W.L. (2016). Practical Guide to Exercise Physiology . Champaign, Ill.: Human Kinetics.

All progress takes place outside your comfort zone!  You just need a little willpower to break past those barriers!
10/25/2022

All progress takes place outside your comfort zone! You just need a little willpower to break past those barriers!

For those who find it hard to take the time to exercise, this article may be helpful.  Splitting it up, for some, might ...
10/19/2022

For those who find it hard to take the time to exercise, this article may be helpful. Splitting it up, for some, might be the answer to getting it done. Do what works best for you!

Do short mini-workouts throughout the day provide the same benefit as one long, continuous workout? Find out now on the ACE Fitness blog.

Address

Kenosha, WI

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when BodiMechanix LLC posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to BodiMechanix LLC:

Share

Jeremy Gunderson - Certified Personal Trainer - Wautoma, WI

In 1996 Jeremy was involved in a cliff jumping accident that left him with a compression fracture of the lower back and partially paralyzed for over 3 months.

Doctors informed him he would most likely never regain the ability to live the lifestyle that he was passionate about including sports and outdoor activities.

Jeremy decided he would not give up. He was determined to get his life back. He received Chiropractic and Acupuncture treatments which relieved his pain and then started exercising and weightlifting and before long was in better shape than prior to his accident.

That’s when he decided to change careers and become a Certified Personal Trainer. He wanted to make sure that he could help other people reach their fitness goals or to overcome decreased strength and flexibility that is often a part of aging or injury.