Showing posts with label sauna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sauna. Show all posts

When you’re looking for fitness advice, it’s best to go straight to the top. Therefore, we’ve spoken to leading wellness experts and sports starts to bring you all the advice you could ever need to help you get fit and take care of your wellbeing.


 


1. Visualise Success: Sports psychologist Michael Sachs instructs, ‘Use all five senses. Don’t only see things, but hear what’s going on, smell, taste the sweat in your mouth and feel the steel bar and what’s it’s like to go through the movements. This benefits ordinary people lifting weights as much as it helps elite sportsmen.’


 


2. Power Up: ‘When most people work on their fitness they only really do one part – the endurance part,’ says former Olympic champion Daley Thompson. ‘They spend maybe 30-40 minutes on a running machine but would get much more benefit if they mixed it with some really high-intensity work. The crucial bits in sport come down to how you perform in short bursts – those half-seconds and milliseconds. But few of us actually work on those.’


 


3. Shoot like Thierry Henry: The Arsenal star notes, ‘Strikers rarely get more than one touch to find the back of the net. Practise with a friend, and get him to knock balls to you at different heights and speed. ‘Try attacking the ball and hitting the target first time without the extra touch.’ Not only does this hone your football skills; it also provides a cardio workout that boosts your explosive power and flexibility.


 


4. Improve Your Breaststroke: ‘The straight-arm pull comes from your fingertips,’ explains Olympic gold medallist Duncan Goodhew. ‘Recreational swimmers often allow their pull to continue too long, rather than quitting while ahead. With a long pull it’s difficult to get the hands back to their starting position. Practise very short strokes, keeping the pull completely in front of the body.’


 


5. Breathe Properly: Former Olympic cyclist John Howard warns, ‘Most people don’t think about breathing and consequently end up inhaling and exhaling rapidly. This stimulates the flight-fight mechanism and is very inefficient. If you can elongate and control each exhalation, you can improve your cardiovascular conditioning.’


 


6. Score like Ronaldo: Brazilian football legend and World Cup winner Ronaldo asserts, ‘Sex a couple of hours before the match is the key to success.’ Well, if you insist!


 


7. Get in the Sauna: Ella Winter, Cannons Retreat manager, details, ‘Saunas are a great way to unwind after a workout as the dry heat relaxes tired muscles and helps to flush out toxins and impurities, such as lactic acid, that have built up during exercise.’


 


8. Stick with It: While your fitness regimen can seem like a new and exciting venture in the beginning, it only takes a few weeks for the hobby to become a chore. This is especially the case if you don’t see instant results but this is completely normal. Persevere and you will make the gains you want. On average, it takes around three months for training to become a habit, and by that time you will start to look and feel better. While you’re waiting for those three months to pass, make sure you constantly remind yourself why you’re doing this and give yourself healthy rewards.


 


9. Be SMARTER: You may not want to set yourself rigid goals, but giving yourself too much leeway won’t help you to succeed. You’re more likely to achieve your goals if they are Specific, Measurable, Agreed, Realistic, Time-framed, Exciting and Recorded. This is the same for any goal or achievement, be it in the gym, home or office.

For women, the concept of a sauna is both intriguing and, to some extent, supposedly useful. You find yourself walking into a room that immediately surrounds you with a blistering, dry heat – your body is on fire and your skin suddenly feels alive.


Not to be confused with a steam room, a sauna is a room heated up to 70-90 degrees Centigrade, which is often kept heated by open coal or electricity. Steam rises from the same place to create a hot, but dry atmosphere that causes you to sweat and your pores to open up. In doing so, the body also releases toxins, hence why it is encouraged that you take a bath before and/or after to wipe away the remains of body oils that could ultimately slow this process.


If you suffer from breathing problems such as asthma or simply clogged sinuses from a cold, then it is said that the steam can help you to breathe easier.


In theory, at least, it seems like a good idea.


The myth that it can help you lose weight or cure skin problems however, is unfounded.


When entering a sauna, you need to be aware of a few things.


You’re walking into a room that’s deliberately set to a high, varying temperature. If you suffer from blood pressure, open wounds, diabetes or heart disease, you must consult your doctor. A sauna may only prolong the pain, rather than keep it down. A sauna is not a healthy alternative to a heating pack.


If you are pregnant, then it is highly advised that you don’t enter a sauna, as it can become unsafe for your baby.


Ideally, a sauna is not recommended for anyone below 20 years old nor for anyone over 50, as it can lead to harsh conditions such as heat stroke. Heat stroke occurs when the body is unable to regulate the body’s core temperature, the symptoms of which mean that the body will be unable to sweat or for the heart to beat rapidly. Ideally, you shouldn’t drink alcohol prior to entering the sauna – alcohol dehydrates you, which can encourage heat stroke and induce urine, which can lead to similar heat issues.


Former Health Club owner Rodrick Kakuba suggests that anyone entering a sauna must be careful about what they are wearing. “It is always better to wrap something light around one’s body; probably a bed sheet. While in there, breaks are encouraged as staying in for long might cause dizziness or even fainting. Two–three minute breaks accompanied by drinking water is advisable.”


Furthermore, wearing sandals or rubber shoes can stop you from slipping on a sweaty, damp floor. The last thing you want is to tumble whilst half-naked, after all.


In terms of weight loss, Kakuba notes that “One does not lose weight when in sauna or steam bath no matter how many times one goes in but rather, they help one become healthy.”


Whilst it does help you to sweat out toxins, your body is not sweating out fat; your body burns this through exercise, whether it is a 30-minute brisk walk three times a week or two hours in the gym each day.



The Sauna is Not the Way to Weight-Loss