Bayram Cigerli Blog

Bigger İnfo Center and Archive
  • Herşey Dahil Sadece 350 Tl'ye Web Site Sahibi Ol

    Hızlı ve kolay bir şekilde sende web site sahibi olmak istiyorsan tek yapman gereken sitenin aşağısında bulunan iletişim formu üzerinden gerekli bilgileri girmen. Hepsi bu kadar.

  • Web Siteye Reklam Ver

    Sende web sitemize reklam vermek veya ilan vermek istiyorsan. Tek yapman gereken sitenin en altında bulunan yere iletişim bilgilerini girmen yeterli olacaktır. Ekip arkadaşlarımız siziznle iletişime gececektir.

  • Web Sitemizin Yazarı Editörü OL

    Sende kalemine güveniyorsan web sitemizde bir şeyler paylaşmak yazmak istiyorsan siteinin en aşağısında bulunan iletişim formunu kullanarak bizimle iletişime gecebilirisni

Downfall: The Gradual Obliteration Of the German Army (1944-45)

Wounded German soldiers near Minsk, Belarus. 1944.

It was a painful process. The once mighty Wehrmacht was slowly disintegrating. It started with Moscow in 1941 and then Stalingrad in 1942-43. It was a slow downfall of a mighty fighting machine that the world will ever see again. Wrought by the obstinate stupid decisions of Hitler that made little military sense. His main weakness was that he did not give a free hand to his brilliant military commanders like Manstein and Guderian. (Unlike Stalin)

The years 1943-45 were years that saw a gradual obliteration of the German Army by the Red Army. The very fact that it took three years for the Russians to do it speaks volumes of the fighting quality of the German soldier.

Here it is. In images.


 Soviet officers interrogate a captured German general. 


Batov's 65th Army now fought their way into Babruysk street by street against stiff resistance from the German rearguard. Babruysk, in ruins and with much of its population killed during the German occupation, was liberated on June 29, 1944, the 383rd Infantry Division commencing withdrawal towards dawn: no further elements of Ninth Army would escape from east of the Berezina. The German breakout had allowed around 12,000 troops - mostly demoralised and without weapons - from the pocket east of Babruysk to get out, but the Soviets claimed 20,000 taken prisoner. A further 50,000 were dead: Soviet accounts speak of the area being carpeted with bodies and littered with abandonedmateriel. The Soviet writer, Vasily Grossman, entered Babruysk shortly after the end of the battle:
"Men are walking over German corpses. Corpses, hundreds and thousands of them, pave the road, lie in ditches, under the pines, in the green barley. In some places, vehicles have to drive over the corpses, so densely they lie upon the ground [...] A cauldron of death was boiling here, where the revenge was carried out"
Ninth Army had been decisively defeated, and the southern route to Minsk was open.
Destroyed German equipment in the Zhlobin highway. Belarus

Destroyed German tanks in Belarus

Russian warplanes attack a German convoy in Belarus, the summer of 1944.

Russian self-propelled guns SU-76M pass dead German soldiers. Belarus, Spring 1944.

Soviet soldiers in the battle on the streets of the city of Polotsk. July 1-4, 1944

Broken and abandoned German equipment in Bobruisk.


 Red Army soldiers are fighting in the streets of Belgrade. Picture was taken at the height of the battle for Belgrade. In the foreground, a machine gunner with the DP-27. October 19, 1944.

A Belgrade resident looks at a dead German soldier. Brothers Jugovic Street (city center). 19-20 October 1944. In the battle of Belgrade itself  the defending Germans, Italians, Chetniks  lost 18,000 (killed) men. The loss of the Red Army - about 900 men, People's Liberation Army of Yugoslavia lost (though they actually were in the second tier) - about 2,200 men.

A Dead German soldier on the road in a suburb of Belgrade Topchidere. October 16, 1944.

Soviet tanks shot this German armored convoy to pieces in Belgrade. In the foreground - the Italian ACS Semovente L6/40 da 47/32, in the background of the tank, which served as her base: L6/40. October 1944.

Soviet soldiers with captured German Panzer 4 tanks in Belgrade. 1944.

A destroyed German self-propelled gun StuG III on the Boulevard of Liberation in Belgrade. Picture taken on October 18, 1944 - at the height of the battle for the city. However, the street  is  full of curious civilians, including children. In the distance one can see the dome of the Cathedral of St. Mark.


German soldiers under cover of a Tiger tank from the 502th battalion of heavy tanks at Narva, Estonia. February 1944.

 Estonians in the Red Army pose against a German ACS

A column of German prisoners of war held near the railway station in Riga. In 1944. Some of them are smiling. Glad that the agony is over?

 German soldiers pass by an immobilised Soviet IS-2 tank, during the fighting in Jelgava (Mitau) central Latvia. In 1944.

German soldiers surrender in Vilnius. July 11, 1944.


 German snipers clean weapons and equipment in between battles. Romania, summer 1944. These guys are doing their job despite the fact that they knew the end was near.

Destroyed German military hardware lies strewn in Znojmo in Czechoslovakia. 1945

German tank destroyer Jagdpanzer 38, Hetzer lies abandoned in  Prague. May 1945.

The Germans were retreating from Czechoslovakia. Here they are seen leaving for Hrushky, a small Czech town. April 1945.
A German Stug 3 stands forlorn on the streets of Prague. 1945. The German soldiers were gone. They were dead or had retreated.


German military equipment lie broken in Znojmo, Czechoslovakia. May 1945. The Russians had given a hammering.


 Soviet troops with Hungarian POW on Debozy Street, Budapest. January 1945

 A dead German Waffen SS soldier on the street in Budapest. February 1945

A column of wrecked German armored cars and personnel carriers in Budapest

DFS-230 glider sergeant Filiusa George (Georg Filius), crashed into a building number 35 or 37 (according to different sources), Attila the street while trying to land on the Bloody Meadow in Budapest on February 4, 1945. Gliders were used to give ammunition to the soldiers fighting there. The pilot died in the crash.

 These Germans  in a Sonderkraftfahrzeug 251are still fighting on. Fighting Soviet troops in Hungary. January 1945

 German soldiers surrender in Budapest, Hungary. February, 1945

Russian troops in Budapest


 German POW are made to see the remains of the inmates of the Majdanek camp. Outskirts of the city of Lublin, Poland, 1944.

 July 30, 1944. Poland. German troops firing at the advancing Red Army with a Pak 40 anti-tank gun.

 German troops aboard a Sturmpanzer 43 play with a monkey in Warsaw, Poland. August-September 1944

Grenadiers  of the German SS Panzer Division "Totenkopf" change position during the battle of Warsaw, running past a burning Soviet T-34 tank. August 18, 1944.


 A dead German soldier lies in Vienna. April 1945

 Austrian children play near the remains of a heavy Panzer 4 tank outside Vienna

 This family of a Nazi official killed itself rather than fall into Russian hands. Vienna, Austria. 1945. Soviet officers stand watching the bodies.




Soviet soldiers march down a street of Vienna.






Top 8 Mistakes People Make in Trying To Get Fit and Lose Weight

ByMike A James

YOU HAVE A COMMENDABLE GOAL! HERE'S HELP FOR STICKING TO IT

So you've decided to lose some weight and get fitter! Great stuff! That is a commendable decision, but do you know how many people a year, a day, even a minute give up on that decision? Well I don't have the statistics but it is a lot. So I have listed here some of the main reasons people like yourself fall by the wayside of the road to a better, healthier, fitter body.

1. UNREALISTIC TARGETS AND TOO MANY CHANGES TOO SOON

Often people decide they're going to lose weight and get fitter and immediately slash their calorie intake, embark on a tough work out programme, give up drinking, give up smoking, cut out sweets and join a running club, all at once then wonder why they feel like hell! A little time passes then something happens and it all falls apart and they return to their old habits. They saw the article about the man who lost 100 pounds in six weeks and now looks like Adonis and thought they would achieve the same but then got disheartened when they couldn't lose the weight quickly enough and gave up.

We none of us live in a bubble unaffected by our surroundings, friends, family, work and circumstances and all these affect our resolve to see a goal through. If we could just cut ourselves off from everything else that is happening around us it would be much easier to stick to the decisions we make and goals we set, but all too often something outside of our control happens which upsets us and we revert to a default where we feel more comfortable.

We didn't get to where we are now, physically or mentally, in a few days or weeks or even months, for most of us it took years. So how do you expect to make such a big change in a fraction of that time? It can be done yes, but it is rare, usually triggered by something drastic happening, some kind of a wake up call like a heart attack or severe warning from a doctor, but if that hasn't happened, then if you try to do things too quickly the inner you will not accept the change and will look for an excuse to pull you back to your default that you have relied on for so long. It could be anything from some harsh criticism from someone close, to a catastrophe that affects you or your family, what ever it is it will seem like the perfect reason or excuse to discontinue your quest for a better healthier body. The thing is your body always wants to maintain the status quo, you have survived this long by doing what you've always done, sudden change for the unknown could be dangerous because it is unknown!

So one step at a time. One pound at a time. Set targets that you know are achievable at least until you get the ball rolling and show yourself that you CAN make a change also that your friends and family can accept. It is easier for you to turn down a fourth drink on your regular night out with your buddies than it is to resist their mocking when you say you're only going to drink orange juice!
Unless you have a will of iron, sooner or later you will give in to peer pressure or cravings. It's far better to reduce but still have the moments when you do indulge to look forward to. Then reduce some more and so on.

2. THE INEVITABLE PLATEAU

Many people have great success in losing a few pounds up to a couple of stone but then it all seems to a stop, usually after about two and a half to three and a half months. Then it seems that they stop losing weight and all the tricks and techniques they've been using don't seem to be working anymore. So they do one or both of two things. Start to think that their efforts are wasted and give in to their default desires or try even harder by eating less and or exercising more.

Don't! This is a crucial point both physically and psychologically. If you get it wrong now it will be a whole lot harder to get back to this weight again, what ever weight you have achieved or how ever much or little you have lost.

Physically your body is readjusting it's self. It's taking stock, thinking "Am I in danger here? My systems are telling me I'm losing my reserves and I'm changing shape, is that a good thing or not?" Your body needs to reassure it's self that what you're doing is good and that there is no need to panic and keep storing reserves.

If you try harder and exercise more and eat less your body's alarm bells will begin to ring resulting in a slowing of your metabolism and a cannibalising of muscle tissue leaving you soft and deflated! If you give in and go back to your old ways your body will revert very quickly to what it was and probably add some more poundage for good measure ready for a future emergency.

So what should you do? Well these two approaches may help.

Psychologically, own the new you! Look how far you have come, congratulate your self on what you have achieved. Even if you were to never lose another ounce or half inch (which is not going to be the case) you are so much better off than you were and wouldn't you rather be where you are now than where you were then? So enjoy it, live it, own it, brag about it and notice how good you feel.

Physically. Don't change anything for now. Just carry on doing what you have been doing. Maybe change your work out programme a little but no more than you normally would on a monthly basis, for now take some time out from measuring and monitoring yourself and just enjoy where you've got to.. Let your body get used to the new regime and let it know that all is ok and what you're doing is good. Enjoy the new way of eating that has brought you here. Enjoy the new physical activities you have involved yourself in, enjoy them because they are working but what ever you do, don't stop your programme or you may never get back into it again.

3. WRONG SELF IMAGE

This is very important. Ok so you are over weight! By how much will obviously vary from person to person but none the less, one thing that will be the same is the way you see yourself. You look in the mirror and you see the little belly or the spare tyre, the larger than you would like them thighs, the rolls of fat, or how ever your over weight state is distributed around your particular body. You see the way you currently are.

Now here's the thing. The more you look at yourself the way you are, the more you notice the fat and feel the fat and most important of all, the more you dislike it and feel bad about it, the more you are psychologically locking yourself into that body and the harder you are making it for yourself to change.

"But surely I can only see myself the way I am?" I here you say. Ah, there's the trick you see and it's quite a subtle one. You need to have in your mind's eye the picture of you that you want to achieve not the picture of how you are. We've all done it from time to time, stood in front of the mirror, sucked in our tummy, stretched our bodies up a bit too appear taller and slimmer and thought that's how I want to look. Great that's it, that's the trick, but then what do we do? We drop it all and look at ourselves and say "I don't want to look like this" then turn around and go and eat a packet of crisps or a desert to try and feel better while that last image of ourselves is imprinted indelibly on our mind.

Well you were part way there, but what you should have done is kept that posture THEN turned away from the mirror with that picture in your head and continued saying "Yes! That's how I want to look because it feels great". Hold onto that feeling of how much better you look and most importantly how much better it makes you FEEL seeing that new look.

This sets up a new process in your brain and your body of adjusting your status quo to accept a new "Normal". A new "Safe". A new "Default". If every time you look in the mirror you do this and make yourself feel good about the you, you see, the stronger the effect will be.

There are other things you can do too that have the same effect. Get a picture of a person whom has the body shape you desire to achieve, cut it out of a fitness magazine or something, and pin it up somewhere that you will see it often, on the fridge is a good place. Better still, if you can also get the same scale picture of yourself and swap the head of the other picture for your own so that it looks like a picture of you with that body.

Look at this picture often and imagine how it would feel to have that body. It's what you feel and think when you look at the picture that really matters. You must not look at the picture and think, "I really want to look like that but how the hell am I going to achieve it, look at me now I am far from looking like that and it feels awful". No! This will not work! All you are doing here is confirming how hard it is to achieve what you want and that you can never look like the picture!

What you need to do is look at the picture and smile, yes actually smile physically, then as you smile physically, which will already trigger some endorphins which make you feel better, say to your self "Wow! It will be amazing when I get to look like that, I can feel what it would be like right now, I feel fantastic, I feel younger, healthier, lighter and everyone will admire me for my great body and physique". That sort of thing, what ever feels good. Believe me this is powerful stuff and will make a huge difference to your success.

4. POOR NUTRITION

If you were trying to tune a Ferrari you wouldn't consider putting poor quality fuel in drained out of a breaker would you? So why would you try to tune your body and give it poor quality fuel? Nutrition is a big part of gaining a slimmer fitter body and it's not as difficult as you might think. You don't need to calculate everything by weighing it and counting each calorie etc. Most of it is common sense, trim all visible fat, don't eat deserts everyday, make sure you eat plenty of vegetables, salads and fruit along with lean protein and eat small meals four or five times a day. You can get more sophisticated and technical as you go along but for now this will be fine as a starting point, just use your common sense.

The flip side is to make sure you eat enough! It's no good just going on a starvation diet for this will give your body all the wrong messages similar to doing too much cardio as covered below. If you starve your body it will go into panic mode and simply try to store everything you eat and scavenge what it needs from unnecessary reserves such as muscle. So again, four or five small meals a day, maybe breakfast, lunch and dinner being a little larger meals with snacks between making up the other meals. But make sure the snacks are proper food like a wholemeal sandwich or a tasty salad with nuts, not a burger with fries or three candy bars and a soda!

5. TOO MUCH TIME IN THE GYM

Your work out should be no more than an hour if you're doing it twice to three times a week and the more often you go, the less muscle groups or even less muscles you should be working, though more intensely so the shorter your work out should be. If you're going everyday, then you should be working a different muscle or two each day for only about 20 to 30 minutes.

You MUST also have days off for recovery. These may be between work outs or at the end of the week. If you're working out daily then you must have two whole days off a week and three or four days once a month or so. If you don't get enough recovery time then you will be over training and your muscles will not have enough time to repair themselves and grow and all your efforts will be wasted. SEEMPLES!

6. NOT MAKING IT A LIFE CHANGE

Too many people see the methods of losing weight as temporary fix's which once they achieve their desired weight they will discard, returning to their former life style. This is absurd! The lifestyle you are living, the food you are eating, the lack of exercise you have got used to, is all how you arrived at this place of not being happy with your weight, so to think that once you have achieved your goal you can go back to all of that and maintain what you have worked so hard for is madness!

A healthier, fitter and slimmer body requires a change in the way you live your life, FOR LIFE! Not for a few weeks or months or even a year but FOR LIFE! That is why you need to make the changes slowly, one step at a time, so that you can own them, make them part of the way you live, not just some inconvenient thing you'll have to put up with for a while until you get what you want then relax back into your old habits.

If you suddenly found a great job you could walk right into that paid you a lot more money than you're getting now and would mean you could pay off all your debts or live a lifestyle you really enjoy, you wouldn't do it for a couple of months or until you'd paid your debts or enjoyed the lifestyle for a while then go back to your old job would you? So why do the same with your health?

7. THAT JOGGING THING!

Too much cardio
Many people think that the only way to really lose weight is through ours of cardio, on the treadmill or exercise bike or similar static stationary training machine or even by going out jogging.

Well yes hours spent doing cardio will burn calories and shed the pounds... BUT. Your body metabolism will actually decrease and it will try to hold onto fat and decrease your muscle mass. Why? Because it will think there is something wrong, that there is some kind of emergency or famine and because muscles use energy even at rest your body will decide that it is more important to use unnecessary muscle as fuel to feed what it detects as the necessary muscles. So if you do loads of running or cycling it will keep mainly keep your leg muscles going but will start to utilize resources from other muscles such as chest and arms for fuel whilst at the same time trying to preserve reserves such as the fat around your waste for use later.

Of course in time you will use this fat but as soon as you eat anything, especially when you give in to cravings, your body will store it straight away as fat. So you need a balance of cardio and weight training coupled with good nutrition at regular intervals. This way you trigger fat burning with your cardio work outs which kicks in at about 15 to 20 minutes, start to burn more calories at rest as your muscles grow and you metabolic rate increases from weight training and you educate your body that it doesn't need to store fat because there is plenty of food available by eating small meals four to five times a day.

8. OBSESSION WITH THE SCALES

This is one of my favourites and the most difficult to get across. The scales do lie! Ok, if you're very over weight and are shedding a lot of fat you will see your weight reducing on the scales but sooner or later there is going to come a time when what the scales are telling you has nothing to do with losing fat and when that moment comes, if you don't understand what is happening you're going to get very de-motivated and upset that your weight losing has stopped.

So what's going on? Ok, depending on how much fat you have to lose and how much muscle you already have this will vary from person to person but if you start out with very little muscle mass and a lot of surface fat, there comes a point when the muscle you are growing starts to out weigh or offset the fat you are losing, so though the scales may say you have stopped losing weight or slowed down, it isn't necessarily the case because you may have lost a pound of fat but gained half a pound over all in muscle.

The same goes for measuring. Yes you should see a decreasing in your stomach area but in arms for instance you may well see an increase even though they are not looking more muscular. This is because before you start to lose the fat, as muscle grows it will start to push up the fat, a bit like inflating a balloon under a thick blanket or Duvet, you can't see the shape of the balloon but the blanket or duvet lifts. Then as the muscles establish themselves they will add to your metabolic rate and then you will see the fat decrease revealing the muscle shape.

I sincerely hope this helps you to stay on track and keep motivated toward your goal of a better, fitter and healthier body. For more information on how to get the body you want why not go have a look at http://www.howdoigetfitter.com where I can help you further. All the best, Mike James

Article Source:http://EzineArticles.com/?expert

View the Original article

Tips for Racing and Running

The First Mile - How Fast To Go

How you set-off is really a matter of personal preference. You may be the hare or you may be the tortoise. Unlike the famous story, I know that both can result in a successful race.

So, to the Half Marathon and my most successful race to date...

I went out about 20% faster than my target pace. This would be race suicide for some people but I felt strong and had two serious runners out front to spur me on. Yes - it was probably the fastest mile of the 13 but I have read studies which show the same 5km runner finishes with a better time when they who go out fastest in the first km - I liked this claim and applied it to a half marathon, which worked for me!

Had I burnt out due to starting too fast, it would have been a different story. I was however overtaken at mile 10 by a runner who adopted more of the tortoise philosophy - a clear demonstration of both approaches working...

The best way for you to be sure of how fast to start your race is to try this out in a timed training session for a set distance. Go out 10-20% faster than your race pace for one session and at race pace in the other, trying to get the best overall time. See which yields the best time - you may be surprised!

Race Nutrition

Pages could be written about this topic alone but given its importance to a successful race, I want to cover some key points.

The most important thing to be said - whatever nutrition you are thinking of for your race, try it out in a training race environment. Not only is it important to try exactly the same nutrition but preferably replicate as many race conditions as you can, including time of day.

The Half Marathon - My race nutrition was....nothing! As Crazzzy as it may sound, I took on no fluid or food during the entire 13.2 mile race. This is not really advisable and only worked for me because I completed the race fairly quickly and got my pre-race nutrition correct. Just for an example, pre-race I made sure I was well hydrated and my energy levels were topped up (by eating my usual pre-race bowl of porridge with banana 3 hours before and drinking 500ml of water/sports drink up to 2 hours before the race).

Race nutrition is specific to the individual. Only you can decide. Of course loose rules can be put in place because we are all human. Dehydration will jeopardise your performance!

Setting Defined Goals

We enter races for a variety of reasons - charity, personal achievement, sacrifice...

These will always be great motivators but as I once read in a book by Sir Ranulph Fiennes, the great thing about races is that they immediately give your training (and maybe even life!) clarity and structure. Once you have entered, you have your defined goal! The race is the primary goal, time and speed of racing would be a sub-category of that goal and the reasons for entering would be your motivators.

It can be a very powerful (and tactical) tool to keep a brief list of your goal, sub-category goals and motivators any time you enter a race. That way you have a constant reminder and easy way of benchmarking your training. So your list may appear:

Goal: Run the London Marathon

Sub-goals: Complete race in under 4 hours / Maintain 7 minute per mile pace for this first 10 miles / Do not stop to walk

Motivations: Running for Charity X... In memory of.../ To improve weight loss and become fitter / To improve confidence

Races can go by like a flash but if you can recall your list during your race, you may be in for a mental boost!

During the Race

Decide before the race whether starting position is important to you and try to ask a marshall how crowded/narrow the start is likely to be. Personally, I have learnt to get myself close to the front because I aim to finish in the top 20% of runners and working my way through slower runners for the first few miles will slow me down! A massive race like the London Marathon of course makes this harder to do.

Once you have settled into your race, you may consider using other competitors as your own pace-makers. This can be very effective but also a bit dangerous. You need to remain controlled should they take you too far out of your comfort zone.

Good luck in any forthcoming event you may have and let me know if you have any great tips from personal experience!

Luke M-Davies - I am fitness enthusiast who has trained for over 14 years and I believe everyone should take ownership of their health and achieve their fitness goals - no excuses! By making healthy living more realistic, and for me that means 'rule free', I know how to stay lean and fit for life not just for summer!

By 'rule free', I do not mean, training without structure or not tracking progress of your gains. Instead, I mean being free from fitness rules that constrict your lifestyle and happiness. Go to LMD Fitness http://www.lmdfitness.com/welcome where I share all of these ideas - please keep reading and commenting because there is so much power in sharing with others, so don't hold back!

The views expressed in this article are my own and are intended for information purposes only. I only speak from personal experience and do not hold any health or fitness qualifications. Before putting into practice any exercise or nutrition tips or plans you should always consult the relevant qualified medical practitioner.

Article Source:http://EzineArticles.com/?expert

View the Original article

HTC CASUS TELEFON DİNLEME PROGRAMI


HTC cep telefonlarında kullanılan android işletim sistemi ile uyumlu olan cep telefonu casus program ları hakkında ayrıntılı bilgiye  casus telefon programı linkimizden ulaşabilirsiniz.

Proper Running Technique: What You're Doing Wrong, and How to Correct It

ByAaron Gee

Let's try a little science experiment. First, I want you to walk barefoot from one end of the room you're in to the other while walking on your heels. Next, I want you to walk back to where you began, but on the balls of your feet (the base of your foot right behind your toes). Now, repeat both walks, but add a little hop in your step each way.

Notice any differences? If you do this right, you'll notice how much more uncomfortable and painful each step was while landing on your heels. Think about it: what exactly is there to absorb the impact while landing on your heels?

It's basically up to the bones running from your ankle to your knee to absorb the impact of each step. This is how shin splints and knee problems happen: bones are not designed to take impact. Just imagine repeating each painful step over the course of several miles.

So what makes landing on the balls of your feet any different? Your calf muscle. Think of the calf muscle as nature's shock absorber.

The human body evolved (or was created, but we're not here to have that discussion) to run on the balls of the foot. This is how our barefoot ancestors had been doing it since the dawn of time. Somewhere in between then and now, the design of the modern running shoe has ruined proper running technique by adding extra cushioning to the heel of the foot.

The concept of adding extra cushioning is not completely dumbfounded: think of how you walk. Each step begins on the heels and ends on the toes, as it should be. But transferring this technology to modern running shoes has been extremely counterproductive, since using a walking shoe for running is like wearing briefs as a t-shirt. It was taught people to land on their heels while running, and has been the single greatest cause of running injuries.

Have you ever seen the spikes sprinters wear while running track? The metal spikes reside entirely on the front half of the shoe, and there is absolutely no cushion on the heel of the shoe. This is what you should imagine you're wearing while running.

I'm not talking about running on your tippie-toes. Rather, as you run, you should try to have your foot land just slightly past flat, with all of the pressure being focused on the balls of your feet.

Shin splints? Gone.

Knee tendonitis? Adios.

This can be uncomfortable at first, only because your Achilles tendon is not used to working this hard. The muscle running from the large part of your calf muscle to your heel will be sore for a day or two after a good jog. But, over time, this muscle will strengthen and adapt to your new running style.

But don't rush it. If your calves are sore, take a few days off from running, and try again once the muscle has fully recovered. Your knees and shins will thank you.

Check out EpicFit20.com for all of your free online personal fitness training needs, or visit our Free Blog for more free fitness and health articles, updated daily!

-A G

View the Original article

Tasty Tuesday! Chicken Breast with shaved Brussels Sprouts

Chicken Breast with shaved Brussels Sprouts
2 – 8 oz boneless, skinless chicken breast halves
¾ tsp kosher salt, divided
2 broccoli stems
2 Tbsp olive oil
2 Tbsp fresh lemon juice
¼ tsp fresh pepper
3 cups thinly sliced Brussels sprouts (about 12 medium)
2 celery stalks, thinly sliced
¼ cup toasted hazelnuts
¼ cup fresh, flat leaf parsley – coarsely chopped
1 oz Parmesan cheese – coarsely grated
 
Place chicken and ½ tsp salt in small saucepan and cover with water; bring to boil.  Immediately remove from heat, cover and let stand 15 minutes.  Drain chicken and run under cold water.  Cool completely; set aside.  Using a fork, shred into bite-sized pieces.
 
Use a Vegetable peeler to remove outer layer of broccoli stems and discard.  Continue peeling stems into long strips.  In large bowl, whisk together oil, lemon juice and 1/4 tsp each salt and pepper.  Add broccoli strips, brussels sprouts, celery, hazelnuts, parsley and reserved chicken to bowl with dressing and toss.  Divide into 4 shallow bowls.  Top with cheese.
 
Serving size – 1/2 cup slaw and 4 ounces chicken
Calories 309, Fat 17g, Protein 31g, Carbs 10g, Sugar 3g, Fiber 4g. 
 

The Art Institute of Chicago

A few weeks ago I made a visit to the Art Institute of Chicago. If you have never been, it is well worth the visit! Not only is there famous pictures, portraits, paintings and sketches by Degas, Renoir, van Gogh, Grant Wood and Edward Hooper; there is furniture, jewelry, pottery, glass and textiles. Of course, my favorite exhibits were the textiles and the Thorne Miniature rooms! We no where near made it through all the exhibits, there is so much to see. Today I have pictures of the textiles to share with you.
 This quilt was made between 1795-1820 by Mary Jones. This is one of my favorite patterns called "Bow-Tie". I love the fabric used in this quilt. Unfortunately my close up pictures didn't turn out very clear, as I was using my cousin's camera, which I had never used before.


A coverlet, made from three lengths of fabric woven on a hand loom. Beautiful! Cira 1800.

This one is called "Pincushion and Burrs" or "Square and Swallows", made about 1830. Don't you love the names?  I didn't know patchwork quilts have been around this long. Yes, I knew it was old and I knew it was American invented, but as old as these United States?! I just think that is really neat!

Trapunto quilting technique was used to quilt the flowers. This involves cutting small holes in the backing to add extra stuffing, making part of the design raised.
The colors are so vibrant! It is amazing it is from 1830!! This one is called Star of Bethlehem.
I love how it is filled with stars of all sizes.

From 1840s, this is "Cockscomb", "Rose Tree" or "Pineapple". This one is my favorite! Lots of Pink! I am not sure I would enjoy doing all that applique though......
 I am not sure if the security guard was just bored or if I was acting too excited and crazy. He followed me from room to room while I exclaimed and oohhed and ahhhed. I was in raptures!!
Part of the exhibit and other people enjoying the quilts.

The Dreaded Plateau: What Can Cause Them, and How to Overcome Them With Intensity

ByAaron Gee

It happens to all of us. We begin a training regimen, and after a few weeks we notice ourselves getting leaner, looking more toned and getting stronger. This continues for a while, but then sort of tapers off, until we hit the dreaded "plateau" in our training, where we feel like no matter what we do, there's nothing that can be done to improve our physical conditioning. We've hit the ceiling.

Can anything be done to reverse this trend? Of course. But first, let's take a look at a couple things that may be causing you to plateau.

The process of working out breaks down muscle. Over the course of the following days, the muscle rebuilds itself, becoming stronger and larger. From looking at this, one obvious culprit of stagnation is a lack of proper rest time. By breaking down the muscle even further rather than allowing it to fully recover and grow, you may actually be deteriorating the muscle.

A good rule of thumb is to only exercise a particular muscle or muscle group once or twice a week. If you are working out your chest by doing bench press one day, don't turn around and workout your triceps heavy the following day.

Another possible reason your training may have stalled is due to a lack of relative intensity. I use the term relative, rather than absolute, simply because of the fact that as your muscles grow stronger, the workouts you performed and weights you lifted as a beginner will not have the same effect as they once did. Your muscles can become accustomed to a certain routine, and, in turn, performing the same routine over and over again will break down the muscle less and less over time, allowing for less muscle growth.

So what can you do about overcoming plateaus in your training? All of these solutions revolve around one key theme: INTENSITY!

Try mixing up the style of lifting you do every two weeks or so. Used to doing bench presses every week with a barbell? Try it out with dumbbells for a few weeks. Experiment with doing squats in a wide stance and a narrow stance to target different areas of the thigh.

If you're comfortable doing a given weight for a desired repetition range, increase the weight. If you've been doing sets of 8 reps for the past few weeks, increase the weight incrementally and see how you do. You may also experiment with lower weights for a few weeks just to target the slow-twitch muscle fibers.

Probably the most important factor in overcoming training plateaus is pushing your muscles beyond failure. This is typically done by performing assisted reps or drop sets. With an assisted rep, a spotter can help you lift a small percentage of the weight so that you can perform a few more reps at a lighter weight. The concept of the drop set is the same, where you perform as many reps as you can at a given weight, drop the weight, and without any rest in between, continue pushing out a few more reps until failure.

Drop sets can be especially handy at the end of a workout. For my leg workouts, I like to get on a leg press machine and perform a drop set with 3 iterations. The first set I will do as heavy as possible for about 10 reps, the second set will be typically 50 pounds lighter for another 8-10 reps, and the third and final set will be about 50 pounds lighter for as many reps as I can push out until my legs can't move anymore.

You can also try lifts that use the same primary muscle but target different secondary muscle groups. For example, try performing a set of upright rows immediately followed by a set of military presses. In both cases, the primary muscle is the deltoid (shoulder), but the secondary muscles shift from the biceps to the triceps, allowing you to target your shoulders for just a little bit longer because the triceps are fresh. These are excellent at the end of a shoulder workout.

Try working in some of these into your workout regimen and say goodbye to your plateaus!

Check out EpicFit20.com for all of your free online personal fitness training needs, or visit our Free Blog for more free fitness and health articles, updated daily!

-A G

View the Original article