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Belmont, Massachusetts
Personal Training Experts Serving Belmont, MA

Established in 1996, Fitness Together Franchise Corporation has led the industry for one-on-one personal fitness training. Whether you are looking to lose weight, tone and tighten muscles or simply work toward better health, Fitness Together pairs you with a personal trainer in a private setting equipped with a workout plan tailored just for you.
The reason why we are able to help you achieve sustained fitness results is very simple. We provide a private, personal and complete approach. No shortcuts. No gimmicks.

30 Church Street - Belmont, MA - 02478
ftbelmont@fitnesstogether.com
617-484-9048

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Brown Fat, Triggered by Cold or Exercise, May Yield a Key to Weight Control

Published: January 24, 2012

Fat people have less than thin people. Older people have less than younger people. Men have less than younger women.
It is brown fat, actually brown in color, and its great appeal is that it burns calories like a furnace. A new study finds that one form of it, which is turned on when people get cold, sucks fat out of the rest of the body to fuel itself. Another new study finds that a second form of brown fat can be created from ordinary white fat by exercise.

Of course, researchers say, they are not blind to the implications of their work. If they could turn on brown fat in people without putting them in cold rooms or making them exercise night and day, they might have a terrific weight loss treatment. And companies are getting to work.

But Dr. André Carpentier, an endocrinologist at the University of Sherbrooke in Quebec and lead author of one of the new papers, notes that much work lies ahead. It is entirely possible, for example, that people would be hungrier and eat more to make up for the calories their brown fat burns.

“We have proof that this tissue burns calories — yes, indeed it does,” Dr. Carpentier said. “But what happens over the long term is unknown.”

Until about three years ago, researchers thought brown fat was something found in rodents, which cannot shiver and use heat-generating brown fat as an alternate way to keep warm. Human infants also have it, for the same reason. But researchers expected that adults, who shiver, had no need for it and did not have it.

Then three groups, independently, reported that they had found brown fat in adults. They could see it in scans when subjects were kept in cold rooms, wearing light clothes like hospital gowns. The scans detected the fat by showing that it absorbed glucose.

There was not much brown fat, just a few ounces in the upper back, on the side of the neck, in the dip between the collarbone and the shoulder, and along the spine. Although mice and human babies have a lot more, and in different places, it seemed to be the same thing. So, generalizing from what they knew about mice, many researchers assumed the fat was burning calories.

But, notes Barbara Cannon, a researcher at Stockholm University, just because the brown fat in adults takes up glucose does not necessarily mean it burns calories.

“We did not know what the glucose actually did,” she said. “Glucose can be stored in our cells, but that does not mean that it can be combusted.”

A new paper in The Journal of Clinical Investigation by Dr. Carpentier and his colleagues answers that question and more. By doing a different type of scan, which shows the metabolism of fat, the group reports that brown fat can burn ordinary fat and that glucose is not a major source of fuel for these cells. When the cells run out of their own small repositories of fat, they suck fat out of the rest of the body.

In the study, the subjects — all men — were kept chilled, but not to the point of shivering, which itself burns calories. Their metabolic rates increased by 80 percent, all from the actions of a few ounces of cells. The brown fat also kept its subjects warm. The more brown fat a man had, the colder he could get before he started to shiver.

Brown fat, Dr. Carpentier and Jan Nedergaard, Dr. Cannon’s husband, wrote in an accompanying editorial, “is on fire.”

On average, Dr. Carpentier said, the brown fat burned about 250 calories over three hours.

But there is another type of brown fat. It has been harder to study because it often is interspersed in the white fat and does not occur in large masses. Investigators discovered it in mice years ago. Now, in a recent article, Bruce Spiegelman, professor of cell biology and medicine at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and his colleagues report that, in mice at least, exercise can make it appear, by turning ordinary white fat brown.

When mice exercise, their muscle cells release a newly discovered hormone that the researchers named irisin. Irisin, in turn, converts white fat cells into brown ones. Those brown fat cells burn extra calories.

Dr. Spiegelman said the brown fat he studies is different from the type that appears in large, distinct masses in rodents, the type Dr. Carpentier was examining in his subjects. That brown fat is derived from musclelike cells and not from white fat.

Dr. Spiegelman suspects that humans, like mice, make brown fat from white fat when they exercise, because humans also have irisin in their blood. And human irisin is identical to mouse irisin.

“What I would guess is that this is likely to be the explanation for some of the effects of exercise,” Dr. Spiegelman says. The calories burned during exercise exceed the number actually used to do the work of exercising. That may be an effect of some white fat cells turning brown.

Many questions remain. The only brown fat that can be easily seen in people is the muscle-derived fat that shows up in scans. And that brown fat, notes Dr. C. Ronald Kahn, chief academic officer at the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, is visible in people only when it is turned on by making them cold.

Almost everyone of normal weight or below shows this brown fat if they are chilled, although individuals vary greatly in how much they have. But this brown fat almost never shows up in obese people. Is that one reason they are obese, or is their extra body fat keeping them so warm that there is no reason to turn on their brown fat?

There is also an intriguing relationship between the brown fat that emerges under the skin and the density of bone. Dr. Clifford Rosen, a professor of medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, is studying mice that cannot make brown fat and was astonished by the state of their bones.

“The animals have the worst bone density we have ever seen,” Dr. Rosen said. “I see osteoporotic bones all the time,” he added, “but, oh my God, these are the extreme.”

And while exercise may induce brown fat in humans, it remains to be seen how important a source of calorie burning it is, researchers say.

As for deliberately making yourself cold if you want to lose weight, Dr. Carpentier said, “there is still a lot of research to do before this strategy can be exploited clinically and safely.”


This is a very cool article. I have never even heard of brown fat or the idea of fat burning energy before today. It’s very interesting but still has a lot investigation to be done. If it is found to be true and we could utilize it sounds like it could be promising for people that really need to lose weight. So lets corss our fingers.  

Brian Knowles

Friday, January 27, 2012

7 Ways to increase lower body flexibility!

Top 7 Tips To Stretch Your Back, Hip And Leg Flexibility

Tips


Top 7 Tips To Stretch Your Back, Hip And Leg Flexibility
How much time should you spend stretching? This is up to you. To do all the repetitions of all exercises in the following would take at least 30 minutes. It is encouraged to try all the stretches and then decide what works best for you. You may choose to do only a few exercises that seem most helpful for your back condition. Or you may decide to do fewer repetitions of each exercise. Or you may do everything. You are the best person to decide what works for you. The exercises do not all have to be done at once. You can do a little here and there over the course of your day. Here are some of the tips that you can consider to adopt.

1. Trunk Rotation

Lie on your back with your arms out to your sides. Bend your knees and either place your feet flat on the floor or pull your knees up toward your chest. Roll your legs to one side and then the other. Experiment with leg positions to find the one that is most comfortable for you. Move from side to side 20 times. Hold the last stretch to each side for 20 seconds while you relax and breathe easily.

2. Knees To Chest

While lying on your back, pull one leg at a time up to your chest. Then raise your knees and pull both toward your chest at the same time. Do 20 repetitions of each motion, holding the last repetition for 20 seconds.

3. Hamstring Stretch

Lie flat on your back in the neutral position. Keeping your left leg straight, bend your right leg, at a 90-degree angle so that the lower right leg is parallel to the ground. Clasp your hands behind your right knee, and begin to straighten your right leg. Do a gradual stretch three to five times, holding it for 20 to 30 seconds. Repeat the stretch with the opposite leg.

4. Hip Flexor Stretch

Kneel down on your right knee. Make sure that your upper body is straight and that your left leg is bent a 90-degree angle. Keeping your hips square and your upper body perpendicular to the ground, drive your hips forward. As you move forward, you should feel the stretch in your right hip. Hold the stretch for 20 to 30 seconds and repeat three to five times. Repeat with the other leg.

5. Quadriceps Stretch

While standing, reach back and grab your right foot or ankle with your right hand. Pull your foot up toward your buttock to stretch the muscles on the front of your thigh. Keep your knee pointing down and next to the other knee. Be sure to stand up straight and avoid twisting. Hold for 20 to 30 seconds and repeat three to five times. Repeat with the opposite leg.

6. Calf Stretch

Stand with one foot in front of the other or with your feet together. Keep your toes pointing forward and your heels on the floor. Lean forward to feel a stretch at the back of your ankle and calf. Hold it for 20 to 30 seconds. Relax and repeat three to five times.

7. Gluteal Stretch

Lie on your back with both legs flat on the floor. Grab your knee and ankle with your hands and pull it toward the opposite shoulder. Hold it for 20 to 30 seconds and repeat three to five times. Repeat with the other leg.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Pump Up the Jam!

So you thought listening to music while working out was only something to keep you moving on the treadmill, turns out, you're not the only one! According to BBC News, it not only keeps you moving, but also boosts your performance. Read the article below for more info...

Music boosts sporting performance
Image of joggers
Joggers could try Michael Jackson's "Don't stop til you get enough"

If you want to get the most out of your fitness regime think carefully about the type of music you listen to while exercising, a UK study suggests.

Dr Costas Karageorghis, of Brunel University, found listening to the right songs before and during training boosts performance by up to 20%.

He recommends fast tempo music for high intensity exercise and slower tracks to help with the warm up and cool down.
The speed of the music is the key, whether it be classical, rock or pop.

Music to sweat to
Dr Karageorghis says individuals need to create their own play list according to their personal music preferences and the intensity of activity in which they are engaged.

Image of James Brown
The Godfather of Soul is good for cyclists
Just before sport, loud, up-beat music can be used as a stimulant or slow, soft music can be used to calm pre-performance nerves.
For example, James Cracknell, who rowed to glory and into the record books at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, said that listening to the Red Hot Chilli Peppers' album "Blood Sugar Sex Magik" was an integral part of his pre-race preparation.

The Olympic super-heavyweight champion Audley Harrison listens to Japanese classical music before a fight to calm his nerves, said Dr Karageorghis.

As exercise begins, the music tempo can be synchronised to work rates to help regulate movement and prolong performance.

During this phase music can also help to narrow attention and divert your mind from sensations of fatigue.

The right tempo
Dr Karageorghis said: "It's no secret that music inspires superior performance.
"The sound of 'Swing Low Sweet Chariot' reverberating around a rugby stadium is an example of how music can provide great inspiration and instil pride in the players.

                           
 
 
 
"However, our recent research shows that there's no definitive play list for today's gym-goers or tomorrow's sporting heroes.

"Songs are particular to an individual - they are not prescriptive. So it's up to the individual to select songs that drive them and inspire them."

He said the athletes he trains had seen an 18% improvement in adherence to exercise regimes with the help of the right music.

He believes gyms and health clubs should offer a wide choice of music to suit their clients' needs.
For example, those on running machines should listen to music with a very fast tempo, whilst those who are weight training would benefit from medium tempo music coupled with inspirational lyrics.

"Rather than blasting out the same music loudly in all areas of the gym, it would be better to turn the volume down so those on the treadmills and bicycles can tune into personal music selections, while those in weight training rooms can hear the uplifting beat of the background music," he said.

John Brewer, director of the Lucozade Sports Science Academy, said: "This confirms what we have suspected and known anecdotally for years.

"Music does have an impact on physical performance.

"If you go into the dressing room of any premiership league football club on a Saturday afternoon you will certainly see the players in there listening to music to psyche them up and get them ready for the performance."

So what are some of your favorite tunes to workout to?

~AS

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

JoJo's Top 10 List

Just a little "shout out" to David Letterman, you're not the only one who knows how to rock a Top Ten List!!

Top 10 Exercises FT Clients "LOVE"!

10. Pushups
9. Plank
8. Mountain Climbers
7. Mountain Climbers-Plank-Pushups....all at the same time!
6. Lunges
5. Wall Sits
4. Jump Rope
3. Any exercise on the Fitness Assesment
2. Bicycle Crunchs
1. BURPEES!

Feel free to post your own Top 10 list on our Facebook page!

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Myths About Women and Strength Training

Myths About Women and Strength Training

1. Women can't get as strong. Not true. Women have a potential for developing muscular fitness (particularly in their upper bodies) that often remains untapped. In fact, the average woman gains strength at a slightly faster rate that the average man does.

2. Strength training de-feminizes women. Fortunately, the wide array of potential benefits of strength training (functional, physical, mental, and health) are just as appropriate and available to women as they are to men. Tight, firm, muscles have nothing to do with the objectionable term "de-feminize."

3. Lifting weights will cause women to develop relatively large muscles. In reality, women don't have the genetic potential to develop large muscles because, except in very rare instances, they don't have enough testosterone, which is needed for the development of muscle bulk.

4. Strength training will make a woman muscle-bound. Muscle-bound is a term that connotes lack of flexibility. Not only will proper strength training not make a woman less flexible, in most cases, it will make her more flexible.

5. A woman's muscles will turn to fat when she stops training. Muscles cannot turn into fat. Muscles simply don't have the physiological capacity to change from one type of tissue to another. Muscles have the property of "use it or lose it." If a woman doesn't use a particular muscle, that muscle will literally waste away (atrophy).

6. A woman can take protein supplements to enhance her physique. A woman cannot enhance how her body looks by using protein supplements, because her body can't use the extra protein. An excessive amount of protein is not used to build muscle tissue. Rather, it is converted to fat and stored in the body.

7. Rigorous strength training can help a woman rid her body of fat. Research shows that, although strength training can firm and tone muscles, it does not burn away fat.

8. Strength training increases a woman's need for vitamins. The vitamin needs of a physically active woman are generally no greater than those of a sedentary one. Because vitamins do not contribue significantly to a woman's body structure and do not provider her with a direct source of energy, a woman who engages in strength training receives no benefit from taking an excessive dose of vitamin supplements. Eating a variety of healthful foods will ensure that a woman's intake of vitamins is adequate.

9. Strength training is for young women. It's never too late for a woman to enhance the quality of her life by improving her level of muscular fitness. Proper strength training offers numerous benefits to women of all ages and fitness levels, including the fact that it can help extend a woman's functional life span.

10. Strength training is expensive for a woman. Not true. Muscles respond to the stress applied to them, not to the cost of the machine. All other factors being equal, muscles can't discern 50 pounds of stress on an inexpensive barbell from 50 pounds of stress imposed by a high-tech machine costing thousands of dollars.


James A. Peterson, Ph.D., FACSM, is a freelance writer and consultant in sports medicine. From 1990 until 1995, Dr. Peterson was director of sports medicine with StairMaster. Until that time, he was professor of physical education at the United States Military Academy.

http://www.fitness.com/articles/1352/myths_about_women_and_strength_training.php

This is a good article because it’s all true. Women get just as much of a benefit from strength training as men. The only big difference between men and women is testosterone, which means women’s muscles won’t get as bulky as men. What are your thoughts?

Brian Knowles   

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Personal Best: Workouts Have Their Limits, Recognized or Not


At the gym last week I saw a guy lifting weights, working out his shoulders while two friends urged him on. He alternated two similar exercises with heavy weights, repeating one exercise 10 times and then the other one 10 times, never resting between sets.

“We want to burn out his shoulders,” one of the man’s friends explained to me.

Exercise researchers would be appalled.

While public health officials bemoan the tendency of most people to do little exercise, if any, physiologists are fretting over the opposite trend: an increasing focus on extreme exercise among some recreational athletes. Weight lifting with no rest between sets and with no days off. Endurance training with no easy days or days off. Competitions that encourage excess.

To enter a recent race, my friend Joel Wilbur had to sign a waiver acknowledging he could die. Still, Joel was disappointed to find the race wasn’t all that dangerous. After signing a death waiver, he said, he expects some serious risks.

My workout partner Jen Davis once signed a race consent form that said: “There are sections of the trail that travel along cliffs. If you’re not careful you could fall to your death. Very few runners go the distance without taking one painful spill. Most runners take lots of them.”

She found the trail so arduous and dangerous that she never did it again.

And there is no shortage of commercial fitness programs promising to push people beyond their limits.

“People think a good workout is, ‘I am in a pile of sweat and puking,’ ” said William Kraemer, a professor of kinesiology at the University of Connecticut. But if that happens, he said, “it means you went much too quickly, and your body just can’t meet its demands.”

It’s not so easy to strike the right balance between exertion and rest, researchers say. Do too little, and the results may be disappointing.

That may be what happened to my colleague Jason Stallman. He wanted to avoid the usual consequences of marathon training: injuries from overuse. So he invented his own training program.

He exercised on weekdays but did not run. He ran just once a week, on the weekend, when he would do a long run.

Jason felt great, and the long runs went well. But when it came time to race, he said, his legs just didn’t have it. His time was slower than for most of his previous marathons.

Experienced athletes know that the only way to improve is to push yourself. Lift weights that are heavier than those you’ve tried before. Run or cycle at a fast pace on some days, but focus on increasing your distance on others. Work out enough that you may not fully recover between sessions.

You should feel tired, said John Raglin, a sports psychologist at Indiana University. But if you do too much with too little rest, your performance gets worse, not better.

“Serious athletes recognize these issues — whether they respond to them or not is another matter,” Dr. Raglin said. “A lot of recreational athletes really have no idea.”

When they train harder yet stop improving, even backslide, “they become alarmed and try to increase their training,” Dr. Raglin said.

He sees it over and over: An athlete will get into a training schedule and become very dogmatic, never taking a day off.

“The importance of recovery is a big topic in exercise science,” Dr. Raglin said. “It hasn’t filtered down to the serious recreational athlete.”

Muscles need to recover after they are stressed with heavy weights, Dr. Kraemer noted. Researchers have long known that the way to build strength is what they call periodization: Rest days and easier days and weeks are interspersed with periods when the weights are increased.

In endurance sports, muscles experience a different kind of stress, said Dr. Bengt Saltin, director of the Copenhagen Muscle Research Center at the University of Copenhagen. But the problem with intense exertion day after day is very similar.

Intense endurance exercise depletes muscles of their energy supply, glycogen. Muscles store enough glycogen only for an hour and a half to two hours of activity, Dr. Saltin said.

It takes a day for trained endurance athletes to replenish glycogen. Athletes with less training have less of the enzyme that restores glycogen — glycogen synthetase. It can take up to two days for them to restore this muscle fuel.

In addition, connective tissue in muscles can be damaged and needs time to recover. In a study of runners in an annual local race that is a bit longer than two marathons, Dr. Saltin and his colleagues found that the athletes’ muscles lost their elasticity as their connective tissues weakened.

Running got harder and harder, so much so that the energy required for a set pace at the end of the race was 50 percent higher than it had been at the start.

So how to avoid a self-defeating training program? There are no hard and fast rules, because individual athletes vary so much. A training program that one person thrives on will break another, equally talented athlete.

Dr. Raglin said even the experts, researchers like himself who study overtraining, had trouble defining the symptoms. Psychological changes are the most consistent signs of a problem, he said.

In the early stages of overtraining, athletes constantly feel tired; by the end stage, they may be nagged by depression.

Recreational athletes must be attuned to their fatigue, Dr. Raglin said. If it persists for several days, they should take a day off or simply do a lot less during workouts. A diary or notes on how they feel can help.

And that does not mean that difficult regimens are out of the question, Dr. Raglin said. He should know — he’s training for a contest in March, the Arnold 5K Pump and Run, in which competitors must bench press their body weight up to 30 times and then run a five-kilometer race.

“I don’t think it is very extreme,” Dr. Raglin said.

At least there is no death waiver.


http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/16/personal-best-workouts-have-their-limits-recognized-or-not/?ref=nutrition

This is an interesting article that really shows too little or to exercise can be bad for you. Just like always moderation is the key. What do you think?

Brian Knowles

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Get Ready to Hit the Slopes!

You don’t have to wait for the snow to start falling to get ready for ski season. Start your training now and you’ll be sailing past those other ski bums on your way down the mountain.

Dusting the competition or showing off to friends are not the only reasons to get in shape before ski season. Skiing is an activity that involves a variety of elements: strength, endurance, balance and coordination. Hit the slopes without developing these components and you may be in for more than a little embarrassment—you might even hurt yourself.

Sport-specific Training

This is where sport-specific training comes in. Generally speaking, sport-specific training programs involve focusing on the various skills associated with a particular activity.

Depending on the sport, this may include health-related fitness components such as cardiorespiratory endurance, muscular strength and endurance, and flexibility.

A sport-specific program may also take into account skill-related measures of fitness such as agility, balance, coordination, power, speed and reaction time. Most sports require a mixture of these components.

Skiing is a sport that relies heavily on skill-related fitness. A traditional fitness program, which includes a combination of weight training and cardiovascular exercise, will only take you so far.

A training program to develop specific skills for skiing will take you from the peaks to the valleys in record time.

Get Ready to Ski

There are several ways to begin a sport-specific training program. The simplest way is to add several new exercises to your regular workout schedule.

For example, performing wall sits that require you to “sit” against a wall will help build up the isometric strength needed for the tuck position in skiing. Squats and lunges will build lower-body strength for skiing tough terrain like moguls.

Exercises such as crunches to work your abdominals are essential in creating a solid “core” for balance and agility.
It is important to train your body to withstand and absorb the impact associated with skiing. Plyometric movements, such as hopping from side to side, develop muscle power and strength as well as improve agility.

Set Up Your Own Ski Circuit

A great way to integrate these elements into your existing routine is to create a circuit-training program, which involves rapidly moving from one exercise to the next. You can set up a circuit in any large room, or as part of a group at your club’s aerobic studio.

article provide by the American Council on Exercise (ACE)

JoJo's 2 Cents: You don't have to be a so-called athlete to do sport specific training; just doing the activity makes you an athlete in my book! Feel free to ask any of us trainers for help in anything you may do whether it's golf, skiing, biking, or even trail walking/hiking. These are all sports so if you're going to do it, why not train for it!

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

My workplace fitness resolution
I’m not saying my co-workers are fat. In fact, a fair number of them are toothpick skinny — including, unfairly, the guy who brings in his latest cupcake creation every other day. Many of them are also super-active, always running, biking and yoga-ing in their free time.

But at my office, we sit. We have instant-message conversations instead of crossing the room to talk face-to-face. We wait by our phones for that source to call. We stare at computer screens for hours.

Some of that sitting is necessary, or we’d never manage to put out a daily paper with a staff of less than two dozen. (I work at Express, the commuter tabloid owned by The Washington Post.) But there has to be wiggle room for at least a 10-minute break.

So that’s my new year’s resolution: I’m starting a daily activity that’ll get all my office mates out of their chairs, raise their heart rates and limber up stiff muscles.

If the concept sounds familiar, maybe you read my May 2010 column about Instant Recess, an accessible aerobics program developed by UCLA’s Toni Yancey to promote a culture of physical activity at workplaces. For the story, I stopped by the offices of the District’s Summit Health Institute for Research and Education, which had recently implemented the 10-minute stretching and strutting sessions. The scene was a little bit goofy but a lot of fun, and I left feeling downright jealous.

Although there are wellness offerings in the Post building where my office is located, there’s nothing like Instant Recess: something everyone could do without changing clothes or worrying that they couldn’t keep up.

As inspired as I was, I continued to sit and IM and wait and stare. That is, until I paid a visit to the D.C. Department of Health last month. The agency launched an elaborate workplace wellness program in May that included Instant Recess, walking clubs and other quick activity breaks. The one that has really caught on, especially as the weather has turned colder, is twice-daily line dancing.

It’s an informal diversion that has been popular among employees for years. “But it didn’t have the administration buy-in before,” explains Zaneta Brown, who’s the work site wellness committee chairwoman (as well as the chief of the Child, Adolescent and School Health Bureau).

Now it’s not only acceptable but encouraged to bust a move. So one afternoon I arrived at the Community Health Administration at 4, just in time for 50-year-old Brenda Anderson to turn on the tunes. Suddenly, there were nearly 30 folks gathered between the cubicles doing the Wobble — and teaching me the steps. They shouted out requests for the next number, and a country tune won out. I was grapevining, spinning and, soon, slipping out of my cardigan. “We all dress in layers now,” 51-year-old Georgette Carter-Smith told me.

They’ve started to take off a lot more than sweaters. “Doing this encourages you to do more,” says Anderson, who’s lost 23 pounds since May. For her, the line dancing led to Zumba, keeping a food diary and partnering with a co-worker to improve their eating habits.

Even if you have a medical condition that means you can’t easily stand up, you’re invited to come line dance. “We’ve had people in chairs moving their feet and arms,” says Karen Watts, chief of the Perinatal and Infant Health Bureau. “It fit what was going on with them.”

The plan is to eventually find what fits with every group of employees. Everything that’s happened over the past eight months has been something of a pilot program, Brown explains. Within the next couple of months, the agency expects to hire a full-time work site wellness coordinator. Brown predicts that by summer, the department will be able to help roll out similar programs at other D.C. agencies. (They’ll be mandatory if the Workplace Wellness Act, which council member Mary Cheh introduced last year, ever goes into effect.)

That sounds like a lot more Instant Recess and line dancing. Hopefully, by next year, we’ll all be taking a stand, even if it’s just for 10 minutes.

Hallett edits the Fit section of Express.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/wellness/my-workplace-fitness-resolution/2012/01/05/gIQA7KsCoP_story.html

I think this is a cool idea and I really hope it catches on. If people actually did this I believe it would really make a noticeable difference in their health and over all fitness.

What do you think?

Brian Knowles