Guest guest Posted April 16, 2006 Report Share Posted April 16, 2006 I've read Body for Life (original and Women's) cover to cover! Eating for Life has a great first few chapters too. I was wondering what other books you'd all recommend? I'm finding that health/fitness is fast becoming my favourite topic and I'd love to know some other good sources of information! - Jacinta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2006 Report Share Posted April 16, 2006 None. I used to read fitness books all the time. Haven¹t touched a one since I bought Body for Life. > I've read Body for Life (original and Women's) cover to cover! Eating > for Life has a great first few chapters too. I was wondering what > other books you'd all recommend? I'm finding that health/fitness is > fast becoming my favourite topic and I'd love to know some other good > sources of information! > > - Jacinta > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2006 Report Share Posted April 17, 2006 I've found " Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle " by Tom Venuto to be informative and motivating. For me, reading health and fitness boosk and magazines keeps me geared up and excited about what I'm doing and where I'm going. I'm not saying I swallow and follow everything I read. I filter through information and figure out what works for me and what doesn't. I know BFL does, so I like to search for information that expands upon my current knowledge. > > I've read Body for Life (original and Women's) cover to cover! Eating > for Life has a great first few chapters too. I was wondering what > other books you'd all recommend? I'm finding that health/fitness is > fast becoming my favourite topic and I'd love to know some other good > sources of information! > > - Jacinta > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2006 Report Share Posted April 17, 2006 I've especially enjoyed reading: " Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle " by Tom Venuto http://www.burnthefat.com/ " AbSolution " by (Bill's brother) " Winning by Losing " by Jillian s (coach from The Biggest Loser) " A Week in the Zone " by Barry Sears (little paperback with a week of BFL-friendly meal ideas) " The Fat Fallacy " by Will Clower (crash course in eating like the French and avoiding processed food) I have those and quite a few others in my little store - http://www.skwigg.com/id71.html Ooh, and " The Quest for Peace, Love, and a 24 " Waist " by Deborah Low is a good one for dealing with emotions and motivation. Here's a little taste: ~~~~~ Remaining committed to self-improvement requires a level of discipline and motivation that is not always easy to attain, yet the effort taken to better ourselves most assuredly leads to satisfaction. Tapping into our intrinsic source of motivation is the most important factor in making this trip more successful. Remember when, as a child, you were absorbed by your favorite game for hours? It was rewarding on its own, without the need for parental coercion. You were playing. It was effortless. Your own curiosity, excitement and interest motivated you. You weren't focused on any particular reward; in fact, participating in the activity was in itself rewarding. You were intrinsically motivated to play. As adults we still want to be intrinsically motivated. Instead of being motivated to play, however, we want the effortlessness and passion to spill over into all areas of our life. Now, let's address the desire to lose weight. When we turn to personal trainers, exercise videos, diet support groups, fitness classes and weight-loss books, what are we primarily looking for? Motivation! Many of these external motivators can, in fact, help us reach our goals, under one condition: we must be able to associate intrinsic rewards to the actions we take. Here is a simple example: if a father pays his daughter to get good grades in school, she is extrinsically motivated by money. If during the process, she feels a sense of mastery and competence she is likely to continue doing well after her father has stopped paying her. At that point, she has become intrinsically motivated to study and learn. Therefore, if changing a specific behavior doesn't come naturally at first, using external motivation to jump-start our own infinite source of motivation is key. However we usually quit or drop out when we are unable to find anything intrinsically motivating about a certain behavior, and, in time, external motivators become ineffective. If you cannot find something enjoyable about exercising at your gym, at some point you'll stop going. If you feel deprived when eating a restrictive diet, one day you'll go off it. If each time you go running you experience pain, you'll eventually quit. At times, we all need encouragement and support to stay committed to our goals – the goals that will allow us to feel fit, light, healthy and energetic. But as long as we believe that the key to staying motivated lies outside of ourselves, we will endlessly look for the fix – jumping into new diets, trends, and trainers to keep us " pumped up. " It's as if we want someone else to direct us, someone else to plant the desire within us, someone else to expand our consciousness. Yet in order to achieve life-long weight loss, we must be intrinsically motivated to stick to a healthier diet and exercise plan. Our weight loss success actually hinges on our own ability to elicit those positive emotions within ourselves. Although, outside support can nurture our growth, it is ineffectual as long as we neglect to first plant our own seeds. ~~~~~ She then goes on with a series of exercises to help you get intrinsically motivated and discover your " soul food " (the emotional stuff you're really craving when you start wolfing down cookies). This woman is a personal trainer and a psychologist. She understands what makes emotional eaters and failed dieters tick. She's not all foofy doofy stupid about fitness and nutrition. She doesn't tell you to eat cookie dough to your heart's content like that idiot Geneen Roth. She talks about the importance of " high performance fuel " and getting enough protein. She wants to challenge your beliefs, and help you see things more clearly. She has lots of great exercises. I've been doing them all and making these big lists in my head. She asks you to think about the times in your life when you felt carefree, deeply connected, lost in the moment, energized, and happy to be alive. What were you doing? To help you come up with ideas, she asks you to take a minute to remember what you were doing when you last experienced each of the following words: freedom, excitement, joy, effortlessness, peace, gratitude, love, competence, creativity, serenity, elation, empowerment, bliss, inspiration, connectedness, happiness... I went ahead and did it for every word. Trust me, sitting and thinking about things like that shifts your whole focus. You start thinking in terms of how your fitness program can help you be happy and live fully, not how you're going to sacrifice and suffer. Cool stuff! > I've read Body for Life (original and Women's) cover to cover! Eating > for Life has a great first few chapters too. I was wondering what > other books you'd all recommend? I'm finding that health/fitness is > fast becoming my favourite topic and I'd love to know some other good > sources of information! > > - Jacinta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2006 Report Share Posted April 17, 2006 Thanks for that motivational moment - something to think deep about when the why do I bother moment hits you once in awhile. :-) One book I noticed on your list is Dr Shapiros Picture Perfect Weightloss - its a WONDERFUL visual book that I often refer back to (his recipe one is also good too)But the first one really puts into perspective how you really can eat more (much more) for the same calorie bang of different foods. Like they will compare an EIGHTH of a bagel is at whatever calories on one page (lonely on a small white plate)and on the opposite page they show like a five item meal you could be eating instead. Same calories - which would you choose? Its like a litebulb duh moment! It instantly shows you how ones thinking gets twisted by the 'dieting' mentality we all wrestle with. It shows you that you dont necessarily have to eat less, you really just need to make better choices, or the 'instead of this have that'. Its a GREAT book - you all MUST browse thru it the next time you are wandering in your local bookstore and I'm sure you will want to own a copy of it! Loved your other choices in both books/gadgets etc too. The Womens Strenth Training by Delavier is a keeper and I also recommend this one I have called 'Total Strength Training for Women' by Amazin Lethi - its got alot of anatomy stuff in it plus all the basic exercises with weights/machines and then some: http://tinyurl.com/nj2d9 joni ---------------------------------------------------- *altho I have alot of books on fitness/nutrition/alternative medicine etc I must confess that I am really am a magazine-aholic (but I do recycle them to work/friends/offices when I can part with them)* :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 22, 2006 Report Share Posted April 22, 2006 WOW! Thank you all so much for your replies. I will definitely check these out! I look forward reading up, and you're all right it is important to keep an open but sensible mind. Many thanks! xx > > I've read Body for Life (original and Women's) cover to cover! Eating > for Life has a great first few chapters too. I was wondering what > other books you'd all recommend? I'm finding that health/fitness is > fast becoming my favourite topic and I'd love to know some other good > sources of information! > > - Jacinta > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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