Tag Archive: class

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Barre workouts creating a buzz

December 16th, 2011 / tags:, , , , , / categories: Uncategorized /

MINNEAPOLIS — A ballet-inspired “barre” workout has been sweeping the nation.

Its popularity is driven by women wanting to achieve a dancer’s physique and strength — with or without tutus and ballet slippers.

At Align Pilates in Minneapolis, noses drip with sweat, muscles quiver with exhaustion, and Beyonce blares from the speakers as class instructor Adrienne Fitzmaurice affirms what everyone is thinking:

“Yes, this is hard!” she hollers, encouraging the women to pulse — or make tiny movements — and hold each pose for just three, five or 10 more seconds. “Especially if this is your first class … you probably think this is crazy!”

Crazy hard, anyway. That’s the verdict reached in the dressing room following the 60-minute class where a combination of Pilates, yoga and ballet movements, along with bursts of cardio and the use of a ballet barre for support and resistance provides a high-energy, full-body workout.

“Everyone’s been talking about getting their butts kicked in barre class,” said Sarah Pepin, 35, Minneapolis. “I’ve never worked every muscle that way before. I could hardly walk the next day.”

Barre is abuzz in the U.S., but the idea originated in London 50 years ago with famous German dancer Lotte Berk. The method was refined in the United States in the 1970s, and since then, fitness enthusiasts on the East and West Coasts, as well as celebrities like Madonna have caught on.

In the last year alone, at least a half-dozen barre programs have launched in the Twin Cities, mostly by women who experienced the workout elsewhere. Rachel Warford wanted to move back to the Midwest, but was unable to find the barre classes she had loved in New York. So in November, she and sister-in-law Paula Warford opened the Barre in downtown Wayzata, Minn.

The same month, Tina Dunlap opened Balanced Barre and Pilates just a block away.

“I always said it would be a matter of time before barre came to Minnesota,” said Dunlap. “It just so happens it hit at the same time and now it’s really booming.”

Dunlap, an avid marathoner and triathlete, had her first barre experience last January in California and became “addicted.”

“It was the most challenging exercise I’ve ever done in my life,” she said. “I’d planned on running home from class and had to have my husband pick me up because I was so exhausted.”

Several national franchises have formulated barre workouts, but independent studios often follow the original Lotte Berk Method or create their own. Some are more cardio-based, while others focus more on dance elements, but the principles are the same.

Barre class typically starts with stretching and a warm-up on a yoga mat to get the heart rate up, then incorporates a combination of Pilates, yoga and ballet movements to sculpt and tone every muscle in the body. It’s basically a series of tiny isometric movements that cause the muscles to shake to the point of exhaustion.

Oh, yeah, and close attention must be paid to your posture and alignment, which the instructor often checks during class.

At Align Pilates, cardio is added to the barre workout, making it the most rigorous class offered, and the most popular. The classes are heavily populated with women in their 20s and 30s, but the men who show up are usually surprised by how challenging the workout is.

“I was a sweaty mess by the end,” said Ryan Brown, 32, Minneapolis. “Pro athletes use ballet to work on their strength, balance and core, so I thought I’d give it a try.”

For people who are less fit, it’s easy to make modifications while keeping up with the class. Participants are encouraged to work at their own pace.

Yoga attire is suggested for barre class, or other form-fitting clothes so that the class instructor can check for correct body position. Class participants wear socks or go barefoot, but serious dancers prefer to wear ballet slippers and leotards in some classes.

Ballet Royale in Lakeville, Minn., has added barre fitness classes to cross-train ballet students and adults — mostly moms of students — who want to learn the basics of ballet. The classes incorporate core Pilates exercises, but the focus is on proper ballet techniques. Classical music plays and everyone wears ballet slippers.

The YWCA-Uptown also offers a dance-centric barre class. Participants range from 18 to 70 years old and many are former dancers.

“I used to dance as a kid and I get to relive those days in barre class,” said Tivi Radder, 35, Minneapolis. “It makes me nostalgic for my childhood. It’s a really great workout, too. That’s the icing on the cake.”

Article source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/health/Barre+workouts+creating+buzz/5871611/story.html

ScienceDaily (Nov. 2, 2011) — A new national study of eating out and income shows that fast-food dining becomes more common as earnings increase from low to middle incomes, weakening the popular notion that fast food should be blamed for higher rates of obesity among the poor.

“There is a correlation between obesity and lower income, but it cannot be solely attributed to restaurant choice,” said J. Paul Leigh, professor of public health sciences at UC Davis and senior author of the study, which is published online in Population Health Management. “Fast-food dining is most popular among the middle class, who are less likely to be obese.”

In conducting the study, Leigh and co-author DaeHwan Kim, specialists in health economics, used data from the 1994 to 1996 Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals and the accompanying Diet and Health Knowledge Survey. The nationally representative sample of nearly 5,000 people in the U.S. included data about food consumption patterns, including restaurant visits, over two nonconsecutive days, which was compared with demographic variables such as household income, race, gender, age and education.

They found that eating at full-service restaurants, which involve a range of food choices and sit-down service, followed an expected pattern: as income rose, visits increased. In contrast, eating at fast-food restaurants, characterized by minimal table service and food preparation time, followed a different pattern. Fast-food restaurant visits rose along with annual household income up to $60,000. As income increased beyond that level, fast-food visits decreased.

Leigh noted that the fast-food industry attracts the middle class by locating restaurants right off freeways in middle-income areas and by offering products that appeal to a large proportion of Americans.

“Low prices, convenience and free toys target the middle class — especially budget-conscious, hurried parents — very well,” said Leigh.

Additional correlations revealed in the study included:

  • Men were more likely than women to go to both fast-food and full-service restaurants.
  • People with more education were more likely to go to full-service restaurants.
  • People who worked more hours were more likely to go to both fast-food and full-service restaurants.
  • Smokers were more likely to go to fast-food rather than full-service restaurants.

The study was limited by the fact that the data came from the mid-1990s, the most recent information available on this subject. Although incomes have changed considerably since then, Leigh believes that the eating-out patterns found in this study would still hold if more up-to-date data were available.

“It has traditionally been difficult to define patterns of restaurant consumption for Americans according to their incomes,” said Leigh. “By using a very large, nationally representative database that includes detailed information on income, we have solved that puzzle.”

Based on his findings, Leigh, who is affiliated with the UC Davis Center for Healthcare Policy and Research, suggests that policymakers and researchers look beyond restaurant type for reasons for and solutions to the obesity epidemic. He will study the effects of food pricing on food choices.

“Pricing is critical to low-income families, and over the past 30 years the costs of less healthy options have dropped compared to healthier fare,” said Leigh. “One potential way to encourage healthier eating could be to charge taxes that increase based on the number of calories in food. Proceeds from the taxes could then be used to subsidize and reduce the costs of healthy foods.”

Co-author DaeHwan Kim, who earned his doctorate in economics at UC Davis, is currently with the Korea Insurance Research Institutes in Seoul.

The research was funded in part by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California – Davis Health System.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. J. Paul Leigh and DaeHwan Kim,. Are Meals at Full-Service and Fast-Food Restaurants ‘Normal’ or ‘Inferior’? Population Health Management, 2011

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Article source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111102125656.htm

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Bollyrobics burns off the pounds

December 10th, 2011 / tags:, , , , / categories: Uncategorized /

Bollyrobics: Bollywood for Wellness.

Rated: A for Adult. I for Intense. Cardio dance workout that will make you sweat — a lot.

Catchphrase: Pet the dog, Light the bulb.

Starring: Instructor Deepti Sami and a supporting cast of students including Barb Riemann, Payal Sahay and Rakhi Bhargava.

Storyline: Financial adviser turned full-time Bollywood dance instructor, introduces bollyrobics to help people lose weight, work their hearts, tone up and have fun doing it to a Bollywood beat.

Reviews: “My main purpose for taking bollyrobics is to lose weight — after kids, it’s hard. The first class was a little bit challenging, I was like, how would I follow the steps? But the second class, I was having fun, enjoying the class, because like (Deepti Sami) said, you don’t have to follow the steps exactly. I feel the workout, and at the end of the class, the sweet part, is you get time to relax (with yoga).

— Payal Sahay

“I’ve had two Bollyrobics classes. I’m (taking the classes) to exercise and get in shape and it’s great music. I like the relaxation, the yoga at the end, too. Bollyrobics involves coordinating the movements of the hands, shoulders and the legs. It’s surprising, each class, I’m picking up the steps. I think everybody should give it a shot.

— Barb Riemann

“This is my first bollyrobics class. I do Bollywood dance. Bollyrobics is more about the exercise. It’s more rhythmic and you just don’t stop. It’s definitely more difficult, more intense than Bollywood dancing. It was a little tiring at the end, but it was a really great feeling.

— Rakhi Bhargava

Bollywood music booms out of a speaker in an activity room at the Edmonton’s Terwillegar Community Rec Centre, daring all within earshot to just try to stop their bodies from moving to the hypnotic beats.

They can’t, of course, so guiding them to get the most out of their movements is Deepti Sami.

“Do what you know and follow me,” says the Bollyrobics instructor, her arms fluidly moving through the air.

After a quick warm-up, the music becomes faster and Sami instructs the nine people taking part in the demonstration class to anchor their arms at their sides and move only their lower body.

“This is not that easy, guys,” she warns, although she makes it look that way. Faces begin to flush red and sweat appears.

Sami quickly gathers her long black hair into a ponytail signalling the workout is about to go into high gear. The music speeds up and so do the movements accompanying it. Everyone starts to shimmy as they rock forward and back on their feet to Chaiyya Chaiyya (Walk in Shade), the catchy song from the 1998 Hindi film Dil Se (From the Heart).

Sami then introduces the signature Bollywood arm moves, pet the dog; light the bulb. As the hand of one raised arm twists as if screwing in a light bulb, the hand of the lowered arm moves back and forth as if petting a dog. Every body part is in motion.

People are really sweating now, but the choreography makes them still look sexy.

Sami takes everything down several notches and starts a cool down that lasts several minutes before she warns: “Now is the worst part guys.” For five heart-pounding minutes everyone is petting the dog and lighting the bulb to Jai Ho (May Victory be Yours), the dance song at the end of the movie Slumdog Millionaire.

The workout looks to have reached the final cool down, but it hasn’t, Sami says. “It’s going to be fast — give it your best. Pet the dog, light the bulb!” she tells them. “Pet the dog, light the bulb!”

Five minutes later, it really is the final cool down, and Sami leads the group through several relaxing yoga moves done with controlled breathing. Everyone leaves spent, but happy.

Bollyrobics is a relatively new kind of high intensity workout similar to Zumba. Sami believes she is the first bollyrobics instructor in Edmonton; that’s why so many people have signed up for classes in the four short months since she started running them, she says.

“I introduced it to take away from the monotony of regular cardio. When you ask people what kind of cardio they do, most say they go on a treadmill, jog, walk briskly or swim, but that can get very monotonous,” Sami explains. Bollyrobics is a high impact cardio workout, but it’s a fun way to get cardio. That’s what motivates people to come back a second time.”

Sami’s version of bollyrobics combines moves from the Indian dance form bharatnatyam, which she studied from when she was 3 1/2 years old until she was 18, with Bollywood-movie-style dancing. But where Bollywood dancing is rigid, bollyrobics is all fluid motion, she explains.

“You need no prior training or knowledge in Indian dancing at all. Anyone can pick it up.” Twenty-per-cent of the money Sami makes she donates to the Akshya Trust which provides healthy food, love and opportunity to rehabilitate the helpless, forsaken, mentally ill, old, sick and roadside destitute living and dying in the streets of Madurai, India.

Her bollyrobics make her look good on the outside and feel good on the inside.

czdeb@edmontonjournal.com

Article source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/health/Bollyrobics+burns+pounds/5610804/story.html