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Thursday, September 5, 2013

Want to learn to massage your friends or family?

Every now and then a client will ask me how they could learn to do massage on a friend or family member. My alma mater, Potomac Massage Training Institute, teaches a few courses specifically for the general public. I interned with one of these classes when I was student. I can comfortably recommend these classes for anyone.

TOUCH of MASSAGE (10 am-5pm for individuals)
Learn to share the gift of Touch on September 8!
COUPLES MASSAGE (1 to 4pm)
Bring your Sweetie on September 8!
HEART of TOUCH (6 evening classes)
A more in-depth taste of PMTI's training methods, begins Wednesdays starting October 9th!
Also, Save a Life with...
CPR and First Aid Training
September 15th and November 10th

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

How Much Water For Exercise?

From: The First 20 Minutes: Surprising Science Reveals How We Can Exercise Better, Train Smarter, Live Longer by Gretchen Reynolds

"So how much and what should you drink if you regularly exercise? 'That's what we'd all like to know,' Dr. Coyle says....

"The most widely accepted DIY method of deciding if you're drinking properly is 'to weigh yourself before and after a workout or race,' Dr. Coyle says.

"So weigh yourself before your next hour-long run, bike ride, or other exercise session, preferably without your shoes or shirt on. Drink as you normally do. Weigh yourself again at its conclusion. 'If you're not losing more than two pounds of body weight in the course of an hour due to sweating,' Dr. Coyle says, 'you're fine. Don't change anything. If you are losing more than two pounds in the course of an hour, you may need to drink more.' And if, as happens rarely, you actually gain weight, cut back dramatically on how much drink in subsequent sessions. Weight gain during exercise is the primary symptom of hyponatremia (which, perhaps thankfully, is very uncommon in exercise lasting less than three or four hours and conducted at a slow pace)."

Note:

Dr. Edward Coyle  Ph.D., is an exercise physiologist at the University of Texas at Austin who's studied this topic for decades and served for many years as a consultant to cyclist Lance Armstrong

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Water, Water Everywhere

"...about 55 to 60 percent of the human body is composed of water. Lean muscle tissue is nearly three-quarters water, and even solid-seeming bone contains more than 20 percent liquid. The stuff is essential for movement...Without water stores, the body can't produce the energy needed to propel it to a drinking fountain...

"'Plenty of people still believe that eight-glasses-a-day nonsense,' Dr. Noakes says, although a comprehensive 2005 report from the Institute of Medicine, based on years of study and scientific review, concluded that there was no credible evidence for the widespread belief that we need to drink eight glasses of water a day, especially since a large portion of a person's daily fluid needs can be met through food. Meat and vegetables contain water. So does milk. Even coffee counts toward your hydration intake, since, although it is a diuretic (meaning it promotes urination), you retain more of a latte's fluids than you lose. Drinking an additional eight full cups of water and other fluids 'is likely to be more than most people need,' Dr. Coyle says, 'even if they are quite active.'"

The First 20 Minutes: Surprising Science Reveals How We Can Exercise Better, Train Smarter, Live Longer by Gretchen Reynolds

I had heard that the "8 glasses a day" was de-bunked but now I've got the data to back it up.

Note:

Dr. Timothy Noakes, Ph.D. is a professor of exercise and sports science at the University of Cape Town in South Africa and a seminal if divisive figure in hydration science

Dr. Edward Coyle  Ph.D., is an exercise physiologist at the University of Texas at Austin who's studied the topic for decades and served for many years as a consultant to cyclist Lance Armstrong

I'm back!

I am back from a lovely vacation in California. Beautiful weather, good food, dear friends, massages.....

I will be gone one more week in September -- 23rd - 27th -- for a professional conference. Otherwise, I'm mostly here and open till Christmas.

My schedule is full this week but next week has some nice openings if you've missed me.