Top 8 Fitness Training Blogs by a Woman

I love the Top 8 Fitness Training Blogs by a Woman compiled by Physical Therapy Assistant Schools! All the blogs have great content, including Her Fitness Hut (which is written by me, a man!)…what an honor!

So, here you go….bookmark and enjoy these blogs often:

1. Everyday Fitness: Pamela Peeke, MD, MPH, FACP, is an internationally renowned expert and speaker in women’s health, fitness, and nutrition. She blogs regularly for WebMD on how to achieve a full life through fitness. WebMD also has loads of other blogs on other health topics.

2. Workout Box: Shauna Edwards mostly blogs here to make workouts simple. Recent entries are on how much of weight loss is in diet and the most important part of your workout program. There is also information on workout programs, videos, a community, and even training logs.

3. Fit Bottomed Girls: Jenn is a certified personal trainer, a lifestyle and weight management consultant, and a group exercise instructor. Her blogging partner, Erin, has years of workout experience and is well versed in fitness news and trends. The blog offers loads of help on the traditional and less formal aspects of working out. They also offer tools, features, and tons more help.

4. Melinda’s Fitness Blog: She is currently studying to be a certified personal trainer and lets you follow along. Her blog documents her workouts, along with what she is eating and which supplements are worth their price tag. Read the latest entries or choose from many personal training categories.

5. Cranky Fitness: Although not a certified personal trainer, Jamie Graham has made such a splash on the blog scene with her unique take on fitness, the blog has been featured on many leading sites. Top posts include worst diet/exercise mistake and re-motivating.

6. Stroller Strides: Women who want a personal trainer who specializes in helping mothers should visit here. Stroller Strides was created by Lisa Druxman and is the country’s largest fitness program for new moms with over 600 locations nationwide. The blog is full of tips on products, getting lean, and even entrepreneurs.

7. Exercise Blog: Paige Waehner is a certified personal trainer through the American Council on Exercise and a freelance writer with more than 13 years of exercise experience. She blogs for About.com on exercise, weight loss, strength and cardio workouts, and how to get started. Recent entries are on stretching and fast eating.

8. Her Fitness Hut: Okay so Mark Dilworth isn’t a woman, but his blog is specifically for them. He is a certified personal trainer and top health blogger at Stanford University. Top entries include sculpt a sexy body and butt blasters. He also has a blog for both genders.

Start burning body fat today—no more excuses or wasting time! Start shaping your body and losing fat and weight for good! Do 14 days of hard training and disciplined eating and you will have the jumpstart you need to continue changing your body……this is not a quick weight loss gimmick…..you must keep working…….

Download my FREE 14-Day Accelerated Fat Loss Program and get started changing your body today!

Mark Dilworth, BA, PES
Your Fitness University
My Fitness Hut
Her Fitness Hut
Sports Fitness Hut
Rapid Fat Loss and Six Pack Abs

7 Ways Testosterone Improves Womens’ Quality of Life

Testosterone, androgenic hormone, male sex hormone, etc. Testosterone is good for women too. Sure, you will need it if you’re trying to “lean and tone” your body. But, research has revealed much more about the “so-called male hormone.”

Here are 7 Ways Testosterone Improves Womens’ Quality of Life:

1. According to the research, heavy weight lifting gives you exercise-induced testosterone increases. This will help you build muscle mass without fear of “bulking up” like a man! Couples who workout together report having improved sex lives due to this type of exercise…..makes sense.

To lift heavy enough, your repetition range for exercises should be between 3-5 (you would have a difficult time lifting these repetitions). You would typically do 4-5 sets of each exercise.

Rotate heavy lifting days with light lifting days (10-12 reps per exercise, 3-4 sets). Do circuit weight training with the lighter weights (little or no rest between sets). You will need more rest between sets when you lift heavy (1-2 minutes rest between sets).

Women can also burn more fat by increasing exercise-induced growth hormone. Growth hormone is also important for building muscle. Intense circuit weight training and interval cardio workouts will increase your body’s growth hormone.

Women need testosterone for other uses too:

Paul Carpenter, M.D., is a consultant in endocrinology and health informatics research at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. He has practiced in endocrinology, with a special interest in hormone replacement, for 25 years. Here he addresses questions about the role of testosterone in women (items 2 through 6 based on Mayo Clinic research).

Testosterone production is substantially lower in women than it is in men. After puberty, a woman begins to produce a constant, adult level of testosterone. The production is split about 50:50 between the ovaries and the adrenal glands. In men, the testes produce testosterone. Women produce just a fraction of the amount of testosterone each day that men do.

2. Studies show that it helps maintain muscle and bone and contributes to sex drive, or libido. There are also quality-of-life issues. If you give testosterone replacement to testosterone-deficient women, they often say they feel better, but they’re not specific as to how.

One of the tough things about research in this area is what has been measured and what hasn’t. Testosterone levels, muscle mass and bone strength have been measured. When testosterone levels in the blood increase, bone density generally improves. Although a few researchers have attempted to measure changes in sex drive and overall quality of life, these important effects are much more difficult to assess.

A study in the New England Journal of Medicine evaluated sexuality and quality of life in women with low blood levels of testosterone. After raising their blood levels of testosterone using a medicated skin patch, health and sexuality seemed to improve.

3. Which women should have their testosterone levels checked?

It’s a complicated answer. After menopause, testosterone production drops, but not as sharply as estrogen does. For women who’ve had their ovaries removed, testosterone production drops by roughly one-half, sometimes resulting in less-than-normal testosterone blood levels.

Generally, the women who have too little testosterone are those who may go to their doctor with concerns like, “Ever since I had my ovaries removed, I don’t feel like the same person. I’m not as strong, I don’t have as much energy and I don’t have the same sex drive.” Should we measure testosterone in all women who’ve had their ovaries removed? I don’t know. If a woman says her sex life has diminished since her hysterectomy, her doctor may check her testosterone level. If it’s low, she can consider testosterone replacement.

Another group at risk of low testosterone is women who have lost pituitary gland function because of a medical condition or past surgery. The pituitary sends hormone messages to the adrenal glands and ovaries. Without the pituitary signal, hormones aren’t manufactured. These women require estrogen and cortisone replacement, and they’re also testosterone deficient. This isn’t a common problem, however.

4. How important is it for women with low testosterone to have it replaced?

It isn’t an imminent health danger per se. However, think about the older woman with osteoporosis who has fallen and fractured her hip. If her testosterone is low, would replacement have helped prevent her hip fracture? It’s possible. Testosterone has the potential to strengthen her bones. Additionally, she might have been able to prevent the fall if her muscle mass had been better.

If a postmenopausal woman is on hormone replacement therapy (HRT), does that affect her need for testosterone?

Yes. Estrogen therapy — with or without progesterone — can further suppress residual testosterone production by the ovaries. That’s because hormone signals from the pituitary gland drive ovarian hormone production. Taking estrogen partially reduces the pituitary hormone signal to the ovaries and potentially reduces testosterone production. The pituitary senses there’s enough estrogen, so it doesn’t send the signal for more estrogen and testosterone.

5. What are the side effects of testosterone replacement?

When given in appropriate doses, there are no negative side effects. Today we can measure blood levels, so it’s easier to monitor the dose. Excessive testosterone can cause acne, body hair growth and scalp hair loss in women. Excessive testosterone supplementation, such as you’ll find with anabolic steroids used by athletes, also tends to drop high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels. That’s the “good” cholesterol. Lower HDL levels increase the risk of heart disease.

6. What about other androgens, such as dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA)?

DHEA is a weak androgen or male hormone. Although it’s true that DHEA levels decline with age, very few well-designed research studies show benefit from replacement. Another New England Journal of Medicine study says DHEA treatment improves sexual function in women who have underactive adrenal glands, but not many people are using the supplement for that reason. In addition, many people are taking DHEA in very large quantities. Again, excessive amounts of synthetic androgens drive down HDL cholesterol levels, which is considered a cardiovascular risk. People who are ill often have lower-than-normal DHEA or testosterone levels. This appears to be a normal physiologic response to illness and not the cause of the illness.

Barbara L. Minton is a school psychologist, a published author in the area of personal finance, a breast cancer survivor using “alternative” treatments, a born existentialist, and a student of nature and all things natura. This excerpt is published on www.naturalnews.com

7. Testosterone conveys powerful anti-aging effects. It turns fat into muscle, keeps skin supple, increases bone mineral density, gives us positive mood, and boosts our ability to handle stress. It supports cognitive functioning, and keeps the liver and blood vessels clean. Low testosterone levels have been associated with heart attack, Alzheimer’s disease, osteoporosis, and depression. If you are freezing cold all the time and your thyroid levels are adequate, you are probably low on testosterone. For women, a little bit of testosterone can go a long way in improving looks, figure, energy level, outlook on life, enjoyment of living, sex appeal and sexual fulfillment.

Women produce increased amounts of testosterone during puberty. Levels of testosterone peak for women in their early twenties. The decrease in sex drive through the twenties, thirties and forties is often exacerbated by oral contraceptives which suppress all sex hormone production (testosterone, estrogens and progesterone). By the time a woman has reached natural menopause, she may have only half of the level of testosterone she once had.

To get exercise-induced testosterone increases, download my FREE 14-Day Accelerated Fat Loss Program and get started changing your body!

Mark Dilworth, BA, PES
Your Fitness University
My Fitness Hut
Her Fitness Hut
Sports Fitness Hut
Rapid Fat Loss and Six Pack Abs

Don’t Try to Lose Weight

Try to change your body’s composition—that’s the key to keeping the weight loss away for good! Try to burn fat, lose inches and shrink your body. You will have to be more patient but the results will give you good health and you will look great in the mirror.

A program based on “weight loss only” has a major flaw–your body fat will still be high. And, its the body fat that poses a danger to your health. And, when you don’t build muscle mass and burn fat, the weight gain will come back eventually. I have seen it happen to people again and again. Companies continue to rake in the bucks selling fad diets and quick weight loss programs. Don’t buy them. Start transforming your body for good this time!

Regular strength training builds muscle mass, burns fat and helps you to increase range of movement, strengthen bones, tendons, ligaments, improve your ability to do everyday activities, improve health, help prevent accidents, injuries, and sickness. “Weight loss only” programs won’t give you these benefits. And, you must continue to build muscle mass or you will lose muscle mass (atrophy because of inactivity).

Do you want to tone and shape your muscle fibers and minimize the fatty marbling that’s found in flabby, weak muscles? Do regular strength training. You will not only increase muscle mass and overall body tone, but your metabolic rate will improve.

Women who exercise on a regular basis with both strength training and cardio exercise are able to perform more work without tiring and are less likely to sustain fractures resulting from osteoporotic conditions. This also helps you slow down the aging process. A healthy, lean body gives you the best chance to live a longer, quality life. So, stop trying to lose weight and start transforming your body!

Numerous studies indicate that muscle mass may decline by 20% to 40% between age 20 and age 65. So, it is critical to continue a regular strength training program throughout your life.

How have you been eating lately? Don’t starve yourself trying to lose weight. If you are going to strength train and have it be effective, you must eat enough to feed your muscles.
Eat right and often. Eating small meals every 3-4 hours will keep your metabolism humming and your energy up.

If you have some bad eating habits, don’t try to change them all in 2-3 days. You may have had bad eating habits most of your life. Don’t set yourself up for failure by thinking all your bad eating habits will be gone in 2-3 days. You will be more successful by taking steps such as severely limiting fast foods and sugars. These two steps will slash tons of calories and make you healthier. Meanwhile, replace these foods with the whole, healthy foods on your meal plan. The substitution method works.

You physically depend on your body to work, live an active life and exercise regularly. And, its been proven that you won’t be mentally sharp if you take in unhealthy food.

Get the nutrition you need from food. Don’t depend on supplements to significantly build your body up, burn body fat or lose weight. It won’t work long-term.

Write down what you eat and compare it to your meal plan until you get good at knowing what, how much and when to eat.

Get lasting weight loss by not trying to “just lose weight.”

Be sure and download my FREE 14-Day Accelerated Fat Loss Program and get started changing your body!

“Exercise is not my life…..exercise makes my life better!”

Her Fitness Hut is featured on EmpowHER, a great health issues website for women! Her Fitness Hut has also been named in the Top 50 Personal Training Blogs by Physical Therapy Assistant Schools!

Check out my other great blogs:

My Fitness Hut Blog has been recognized by Stanford University Wellsphere as a Top Health Blogger! Quite an honor coming from that institution!

Sports Fitness Hut Blog has been recognized by Stanford University Wellsphere as the #1 Sports Fitness Blog and NursingDegree.net as one of the Best 100 Health and Nutrition Blogs for Athletes! The blog has also been named one of the 50 Best Sports Medicine Blogs by Masters In Healthcare! It is an honor to be recognized by those in the health and academic fields! Afterall, health is number one for everybody—including athletes!