Archive

Posts Tagged ‘female bodybuilder’

How Much Do You Really Know About Fitness- Take Our Quiz!

December 31st, 2009 Kevin Richardson 3 comments

The end of the year is upon us, and I thought, what better way to recap all the great health and fitness related articles covered in the blog this year than by having a bit of a quiz. I invite everyone to take the fitness test and see just how much you know about health and fitness.

 
How Did You Do?
90 to 100%- You are a tried and true expert in all things related to health and fitness
70 to 89%- You know your stuff, but could do with a little brushing up on your diet and exercise knowledge.
50% to 69%- You passed, but just barely. Lot’s of catching up to do.
49% or less- You didn’t pass, but don’t despair, keep reading our blogs and articles and you’ll be up to scratch in no time!
  
PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR THE ANSWERS TO THE QUIZ
  
  
  
  
  
 

1. Having a low body fat percentage means that you are healthy and at a lower risk of heart disease.

False- Where body fat is located can place a person at far greater risk for fat-related health conditions such as: cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, stroke, diabetes and even certain types of cancers.

Read more here: 

Body Fat Measurements Are A Poor Indication of Health.

 

2. Aerobic exercise is the only way to lose weight and build endurance.

False- Studies have shown that high intensity resistance workouts, such as the ten minute workouts of the Naturally Intense System of Diet & Exercise can help you lose weight and increase your endurance far better than conventional steady state aerobics.

Read more here:

High Intensity Workouts and Endurance

High Intensity Workouts And Weight Loss

 

3.Weight training is best suited for those interested in building big muscles and not for women or someone that needs to lose weight.

Absolutely false. Building really big muscles comes from years and years of specialized training and nutrition and in many cases today from the use of anabolic steroids. Women are the ones most affected by this myth as women that weight train always lose more weight and tone up better than those that do not. Without the use of anabolics, women cannot get big muscles from weight training, they will however get tighter and toned!

Read more: 

Female Bodybuilders- What Do They Look Like When They Don’t Use Drugs?

Should Women Train With Weights

 

4. If you exercise with a cold your performance will be impaired and you may get sicker.

False- A study published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise conducted at Ball University found that there was no decrease in lung function or exercise capacity in the test subjects exercising after being infected with the rhinovirus, even though they all reported feeling tired from their infection. In the same study, researchers found that there was no difference in overall symptoms between those that rested and those that continued to exercise with a cold.

Read more:

Should You Train With A Cold?

5. When is the best time to exercise?

It depends on what you are used to. While studies point to the late afternoon as a peak time for humans in general, the time that an individual usually trains at remains their bodies best time for optimal performance.

Read more:

When is the best time to exercise?

6. Cellulite is a specific form of fat found on women and is extra hard to get rid of.

False. There is no such thing as cellulite, it’s just plain old fat and has no different properties than any other form of fat. Skin appears lumpy in fatty areas of the body because of the strands on connective tissue that attach the skin to underlying muscle structures. These points of attachment may pull tight where the fat is thick, making lumps appear between them and is prevalent in women in the buttock region and back of the thigh. However the fat itself is not different from any excess fat in the stomach or anywhere else in the body.  That being said, if you reduce your overall body fat, you will begin to lose the lumps in the areas most affected.

7. Feeling guilty after eating the wrong foods helps you stay on your diet better.

False. The jury is in and guilt over eating the wrong foods actually reinforces the behavior and the potential to eat that food again.

Read more

Guilt over eating the wrong foods does more harm than good. 

 

8. After a short high intensity workout your metabolism remains elevated for hours afterwards.

True. High intensity workouts by nature are so intense that the metabolic rate remains elevated longer and studies have found that you burn more calories and at a higher rate long after the exercise session. This increased metabolism was thought to be an end result of steady state aerobic training

Read more here:

High Intensity Workouts and Endurance

 

9. Fasting is a great way to lose weight.

False.

Read more:

Fasting- A Bad Idea For Weight Loss 

 

10.  The majority of women prefer men with muscles.

Completely false. Research shows that women prefer the body type of their current mate, no matter what that may be. Sorry, guys.

Read more here:

Are Muscular Men More Attractive To The Opposite Sex?

11. In an anonymous poll of 198 Olympic athletes 98% said that they would use steroids if they were assured that they would not be caught.

Sad but true. 50% of them also said that they would use steroids if it would help them win every sports meet even if it would kill them in 5 years.

Read more here:

Why Steroids In Sports Won’t Go Away

12. The key to getting a six pack is to work your abs every day

False. If only it was that simple. A six pack comes more from diet than anything else.

Read more: The Truth About Getting A Six Pack

13. A low fat diet will help you lose fat and stay healthy.

False. Your body needs fat for proper function and for fat metabolism as well.

Read more here:

Fat Why We Need It

14. According to a recent university study by the year 2015 seventy-five percent of Americans will be overweight.

True. A review of studies by John Hopkins University issued this sobering fact several months ago.

15. Machines offer a safer way of working out than free weights.

False. A machine is just as potentially harmful to you if you don’t know what you are doing as you can make many mistakes with your form and incur a high risk of injury the same way that you can with free weights or even a callisthenic type workout. Another reason why it is always a good idea to have some form of professional instruction before beginning an exercise program.

 

16. To really have a great workout and burn calories you have to sweat.

False. Sweating is not an indicator of how many calories you burned, if that were the case everyone in the tropics would be eventually waste away. Sweating is just your body’s way of cooling itself and it is possible to burn a significant number of calories without breaking a sweat.

17. A healthy breakfast is the one of the most important factors in effective weight management.

True. Breakfast is the first step towards long term weight loss.

Get a copy of Kevin’s free weight loss Breakfast guide here.

18. You can lose fat, build muscle, increase your strength and your endurance with ten minute high intensity workouts.

True. The Naturally Intense System of Diet & Exercise has helped hundreds get better overall results in less time for the past 19 years and the ten minute workouts are a tried and true method of body transformation. You can learn more at www.naturallyintense.net. Contact Kevin at 1-800-798-8420.

  • Share/Bookmark

Steroids In Sports Are Here To Stay! Here’s Why…

October 13th, 2009 Kevin Richardson 6 comments

  

Steroids In Sports Are Here To Stay! 

 

98% of Olympians polled in 1995 said they would use drugs if they wouldn't be caught.
98% of Olympians polled in 1995 said they would use drugs if they wouldn’t be caught.

In 1995 a Chicago physician, Bob Goldman, asked 198 Olympic-level U.S. athletes whether they would be willing to take a banned substance if they were guaranteed to win and not get caught; 195 said yes. More than half of them went on to say that they would take the drug if it would enable them to win every competition for five years even if it would kill them.

As alarming as it may sound, it’s the truth and for all the hue and cry about the need to clean up the sporting arena of illegal drug use, it is really all a flimsy façade and one that has support from the highest levels downwards.
Take competitive bodybuilding for example, few people in the general public know that there are two completely different types of bodybuilding, drug tested contests- where the athletes are given either a polygraph test or their urine is tested to ensure that they are not using anabolic steroids and a list of other banned substances. Most of you probably have never seen a natural bodybuilder (besides me!) or even knew that there is a difference. (As an aside: Many make the mistake of seeing me and wondering whether or not I use drugs, but truth be told if you saw me standing next to a modern professional drug using bodybuilder there would be little question, since I would look like a anorexic girl in spite of all my 20 years of hard training and my accomplishmentes as a natural athlete!)

Steroids In Sports: The Public Side Of Steroid Use- Professional Bodybuilding

Yes, there is another other side of the coin, and the more popular version by far are the non drug tested shows. It might surprise you to learn that these are the bodybuilders that grace the covers of the muscle magazines (natural bodybuilding has its own magazine as well, but its readership is negligible when compared to the millions of reader of their drug using counterparts). The bodybuilders you occasionally see on television use steroids, as do the ones that cross over to the film industry- a certain California governor included.
These images of men and women inflated to almost comic book like proportions are what most people think of when they hear the word ‘bodybuilder’. Sadly for women in general, female drug bodybuilding, which essentially will masculinize the bodies of women using steroids has made most women shy away from the idea of lifting weights, as the misconception is there that they will end up looking like some of the girls with masculine features. This isn’t true, but since there is no real movement to define to the general public what a drug user looks like and what a natural athlete looks like, it is hard for them to think any other way.

Both are Top Female Bodybuilders- But Only One Is Natural- I Will Let You Decide Which One.

Both Are Hard Training Top Female Bodybuilders- One Competes In Drug Tested Contests & One Doesn't. See Any Difference?

 Now some may say that steroids are harmless when taken in moderate doses over a short period of time, but the fact of the matter is that to attain the size and definition required to stand on a national stage as a competitive male bodybuilder, you will need to use a combination of several different anabolic steroids, in addition to human growth hormone, insulin (yes, that’s right, insulin is  major part of the bodybuilder chemistry set) and diuretics. In the good Governor’s time, steroid use was rampant as well, but the doses were lower and even then the amounts that they used to look the way they did would be considered insane by clinical standards. As time went on, more and more athletes tried to push the envelope of inhuman size and definition and so more and more drugs kept being added to the cocktail.

Life At This Size Isn't A Walk In The Park!

Steroids In Sports- Professional Athlete or Professional Drug User?

Today’s professional bodybuilder can spend anywhere from $30,000 to as much as $100,000 or more to look the way they do. They don’t follow pristine diets and try to live as in as healthy a manner as possible, that is a myth that is used to sell magazines and questionable supplements, the bottom line is getting as big and as fat free as possible. Nothing else matters and to be honest, most of them eat no different from the way the general public does in terms of junk food and the like in the offseason.
Is it glamorous? Yes and no. The fan base, (small though it may be as the male athletes are now far too big to appeal to the tastes of most people in the general public and the female athletes are simply too scary for mainstream media to even look at) does exist and if you are at the very top of the sport you may be able to make some money from endorsements and guest appearances but there is a downside. At those doses, your life is pretty much centered around eating, sleeping and training and there is really no way for you to do the things that most people do. Climbing a flight of stairs at over 300lbs isn’t easy when nature would have had you at 175 lbs and I can tell you from personal experience as one that has worked with many of them, that the experience is pure misery.
From abscesses, to muscle tears, to strange fevers, the pain of the site injections, loss of energy, sex drive and so much more make up the lives of many of the athletes touted by many as the ultimate in human physical perfection. The numerous trips to the E.R. as well aren’t covered in the magazines, only when one of the troupe is unfortunate enough to die as a result of their use- at which point the industry as a whole is first to say that there is no proof that their drug use caused their death. As one that has worked with addicts over the past 14 years the similarities are considerable-  but at the end of the day, a professional bodybuilder today is really a professional drug user, and given the inability of so many of them to be able to stop- and the overall behavior, and culture as a whole, I would say professional addict.

Government Policy Towards Steroid In Sports 

Now, what does this have to do with sports, as bodybuilding is a fringe activity at best? Simple, if the most blatant use of drugs is not stopped by either the government or the upper echelon of the sport, why would they devote their time to stopping athletes whose use is almost undetectable to the average human eye? Take baseball for example. People pay money to see athletes throw the ball faster and hit the ball harder than they ever could. Mediocrity doesn’t sell, but record breaking performance does. The same applies for everything from boxing to American football to a host of other sports. In many cases, steroids are used in small amounts to help recovery so they can train more often and get better at what they do, or to help injuries heal faster- steroids are fantastic anti-inflammatory drugs. They don’t take drugs to the degree that say the bodybuilder does, nor do they train and consume an inhuman amount of food they way a bodybuilder would, so they don’t ‘jacked up’ as one would say. The crowd loves a winner and if you recall the statement by the Olympians at the top of the post that they would use drugs if they were sure they wouldn’t get caught, what would stop the boxer, baseball player or any other sportsman from thinking the same way?
Add to it the insane amounts of many given to athletes based on their performance and I would go out on a limb and say that over 90% of every sports fan would use drugs if it would make them able to play their game better and allow them to rake in millions of dollars. Wouldn’t you at least consider it? Especially since the amounts that are used in most sports are really not that much and are under the supervision of a physician in most cases? Be honest and you will find that the immorality of steroid use that the media portrays is nothing more than typical human behaviors. The powers that be know that their athletes are using drugs, but they also know that the crowd loves what they do and that they are making them very wealthy- thus there is no real incentive to put real testing in place. When an athlete is past their prime and the government and or media is on their backs they might ‘find’ a positive test or two from some of their athletes that happen to be on their way out of the game anyway- but those tests are almost always several years old. Why the delay? I will let you figure that our yourself.

The Governor Of California Is The Main Sponsor Of The Biggest Steroid Show In The World

Getting back to bodybuilding, Arnold Schwarzenegger did  a lot to influence so many impressionable young men to get into bodybuilding, and as they went on I the pursuit of looking like him many learned that Arnold had a little help and so got a little help of their own. Arnold Schwarzenegger almost single handedly made the steroid look publicly acceptable. He admitted his use very early on, and yet today as governor fo California and chief law enforcement officer of the state, he still sponsors and lends his name to the biggest convention of steroid users in the world, the Arnold Classic. A weekend of bodybuilding and other sports that the good Governor always attends. Do you really think that in a country where the Chief Officer of a state lends his name and image to a steroid rally that stopping drug use is a real priority. Perhaps more importantly, in a world where athletes make millions, we overlook the small detail that the team owners and sports officials that run and manage the games make billions, and that they are not going to give up their income anytime soon. Most telling is our own attitudes. We are a nation of winners, of great performers and we love our sportsmen to be the best. Add that to the thoughts of a young and upcoming teen athlete and his or her coach and you should understand that the drugs are not going anywhere unless we all change as a people.

Kevin Richardson is a lifetime drug free bodybuilder and founder of the Naturally Intense System of Diet & Exercise. You can visit his official website at www.naturallyintense.net

  • Share/Bookmark

Female Bodybuilders- What Do They Look Like When They Don’t Use Drugs?

March 25th, 2009 Kevin Richardson 5 comments

Team Naturally Intense Member & Lifetime Drug Free Female Bodybuilder, Mariya Mova

Team Naturally Intense Member & Lifetime Drug Free Female Bodybuilder, Mariya Mova

Female Bodybuilders That Don’t Use Drugs Don’t Look Like Men

 

Bodybuilding for women has in recent times been relegated to a freak show with most of the female athletes today that we see in the media resorting to the use of anabolic steroids and other illegal and potentially dangerous drugs to achieve their almost unworldly look. Sadly, this has cast a shadow over what a woman would really look like without the use of drugs, and makes many women fearful of lifting weights for fear of looking like the women they so often see in the magazines. The truth is that without drugs, women do not at all look like men, as Team Naturally Intense Member, Mariya Mova demonstrates. 

Female Bodybuilders- Then & Now

Women that lift weights don't look like men if they don't use drugs!It’s a sad state of affairs as in the 1980′s when female bodybuilding first came onto the scene it was an extremely popular sport. My friend Wayne DeMilia and I spoke once about the state of female bodybuilding today as opposed to when he helped organize the first Ms. Olympia contests and it is truly a night and day comparison. The original female bodybuilders like Rachel Mclish, Carla Dunlap, Cory Everson and the like were so popular that every Ms. Olympia contest was held separately from the men’s competitions and were popular enough to sell out even at Madison Square Garden! 

Before The Increase In Steroid Use Female Bodybuilders Were Once Very Much Part Of Popular Culture

Wayne told me that when Rachel Mclish was featured in the early Muscle Builder magazines (now Flex magazine) they sold more copies than ever- so much so that the Weiders felt that they should capitalize on the demand for female bodybuilders and the softer look with a whole new magazine and thus Muscle and Fitness was created- essentially due to the popularity of female bodybuilders. Female bodybuilders were also a part of the mainstream popular culture- Cory Everson had a regular workout program on television and Rachel Mclish went on to star in several action type movies. Today the Ms. Olympia contest is relegated to a second tier status as an aside to the men’s show. Attendance is low and even the hardcore bodybuilding magazines don’t cover female bodybuilding simply because there is little interest in the idea of women chemically enhanced to the point where they look more like their male counterparts as opposed to a highly feminine and attractive sculpted female physique. 

Female Bodybuilders Are Not Masculine

It does women a true disservice as well in that so many women don’t realize that the toned and sculpted physique that they are looking for comes from serious weight training and that they have little to fear from hard training. Even after years of hard work, women don’t get overly big as the pictures show and all the female bodybuilders pictured have been training for at least a decade or more! So ladies, if you really want to get into great shape- start lifting!
  

Related articles:

Female Bodybuilders & Steroid Use

Get a copy of Kevin’s free award winning weight loss ebook here! Kevin Richardson is one of New York City’s most sought after personal trainers and the creator of Naturally Intense High Intensity Training 10 Minute Workouts. Visit his official website at www.naturallyintense.net

  • Share/Bookmark