Saturday, November 24, 2007

America's Most Obese City: Memphis, TN

America's Most Obese Cities
By Rebecca Ruiz, Forbes.com
Nov. 14, 2007

We are heavier than ever.

Once considered an affliction of the lazy and indulgent, obesity now affects about one-third of Americans. The epidemic has swept up the wealthy, middle class and the poor; city dwellers, suburbanites and those in rural areas; and people of all races and ethnicities.

The causes, researchers say, are numerous. These include a diet of calorie-dense but nutrient-deficient food found in grocery and convenience stores, public planning strategies that favor motorists over walkers and cyclists, and simply bad habits.

And while the causes are many, the costs are enormous. Obesity's associated costs add $93 billion to the nation's medical bill annually. Each year, 112,000 people die from obesity-related causes, and the condition is responsible for an increased risk of chronic diseases like Type 2 diabetes, cancer and heart disease.

To better understand the local and state implications of the obesity epidemic, we ranked the nation's heaviest cities. In doing so, we discovered states with multiple offenders, metropolitan areas with expanding waistlines and a high representation of Southern cities. Worse yet, after claiming the title of the most sedentary city, Memphis, Tenn., ranked first as the country's most obese.

To determine which cities were the most obese, we looked at 2006 data on body mass index, or BMI, collected by the Centers for Disease Control's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, which conducts phone interviews with residents of metropolitan areas about health issues, including obesity, diabetes and exercise.

In this case, participants report their height and weight, which survey analysts use to calculate a BMI. Those with a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 are considered at a healthy weight, those with a BMI between 25 and 29.9 are considered overweight, and those with a BMI of 30 or higher are considered obese. About 32 percent of the nation is obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control; Memphis ranked above the national average at 34 percent.

Though data is collected for roughly 145 metropolitan statistical areas, we looked only at the country's 50 most populated cities and ranked the top 20. Because of an insufficient number of survey responses, data from some cities, including Sacramento, Calif., Columbus, Ohio, and Buffalo, N.Y., was not included. Had we included every area on the list, the smaller cities of Huntington, W.V., and Ashland, Ohio, on the West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio state borders, would have far outpaced every city on the list with obesity rates of 45 percent. Of the 50 cities we did rank, Boston entered last, with only 19 percent.

Many of the cities on the list have high poverty rates and high frequencies of fast-food consumption. In the city of Memphis, which does not include the outlying areas surveyed by the CDC, 24 percent of residents live below the poverty line. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the national average is 13 percent. The same trend was noticeable in the cities of Milwaukee (No. 17), Detroit (No. 5), and San Antonio, Texas, (No. 3) where 26 percent, 33 percent, and 18 percent of residents, respectively, live beneath the poverty line.

While fast-food consumption is a minor factor influencing obesity rates, purchasing patterns often reflect larger health issues and habits in certain communities. The average American had purchased fast food 16 days of the month between January and September of this year, according to Quick-Track research conducted by the consumer tracking group Sandelman & Associates. Thirteen cities on our list, including Memphis, Austin, Texas, and Indianapolis, met the national average or higher. Residents of San Antonio eat fast food 20 days of the month, and had the highest frequency of the cities on our list.

Despite public health warnings about maintaining a frequent exercise regimen, limiting fast-food consumption and avoiding weight gain, there is no single cause of obesity, a fact that often frustrates experts, legislators - and obese people. Other factors contributing to our ballooning waistlines, says Marian Levy, director of the master's of public health program at the University of Memphis, include enormous food portions, declining exercise rates and cheaper, unhealthy food. When asked about Memphis, however, Levy emphasizes a local culture built around Southern hospitality.

"We express our caring about people through food," she says, describing generous helpings of fried fish, chicken and okra often shared with neighbors and friends. "We have to realize that if we truly care about people, we want them to be healthful."

In Memphis, as in other cities on our list, reversing the obesity crisis can seem like trying to plug a thousand holes in a sinking ship. Public health campaigns are a start. Healthy Memphis Common Table, a nonprofit organization trying to promote better fitness and nutrition choices, provides residents with a list of exercise facilities and walking paths in addition to health tips and testimonials about the benefits of weight loss.

Another tactic, notes Levy, is vending machine legislation that will require schools pre-K through eighth grade to replace unhealthy foods and beverages in vending machines, on school store shelves, at fundraisers and a la carte cafeteria items with more nutritious alternatives. She hopes the legislation, which is being implemented for the current school year, will improve the diets of Memphis-area school children, 71 percent of whom receive a free lunch from school cafeterias.

Still, "there's not going to be a silver bullet," Levy says. "There has to be a simultaneous change at the environmental level, in schools, communities and families."
The Solutions

It's that community-wide change in lifestyle that experts say will result in fewer cases of obesity.

"You see cities taking this on in a range of different ways," says Leon Andrews, the project director of the Institute for Youth, Education and Families at the National League of Cities. Andrews is currently overseeing a one-year project in which six cities, including our third most obese, San Antonio, receive assistance in combating childhood obesity and promoting community wellness.

Andrews identified five ways cities could specifically address childhood obesity, as well as larger community health issues. These included improving public space and utilizing parks and recreation areas to encourage physical activity, as well as pursuing healthy food alternatives through community gardens and farmer's markets.

"More cities are becoming aware of [obesity] and looking to play a role in improving the situation," Andrews says. He also pointed out that city leaders often preferred to follow a successful example as opposed to chart a new course: "They definitely want to be the second, but may not want to be the first," he says. Regardless, it's clear that rising rates of childhood obesity - 17 percent of children and adolescents ages 12 to 19 are overweight - has prompted cities like Birmingham, Ala., San Diego and Richmond, Va., all on our list, to become more proactive in terms of obesity prevention.

Others, such as Walter Willett, a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, believe our salvation lies mainly in ridding the grocery store of food he calls "not fit for human consumption." Among the items he would like to see purged, he says, are the "shelves of sugar water, the breakfast cereal section, dominated by refined starch and sugar, and white bread and rolls."

According to Willett, a healthier diet, in combination with increased levels of physical activity and environments that promote exercise, would drastically improve the country's obesity problem. "If we do this right," he says, "we'll improve our quality of life in many different ways."

Sunday, November 4, 2007

*** Start Training Today ***

Mick Stewart CFT BST trains a client
at his home gym in Houston, Texas.
---------------------------


WHAT ARE YOUR GOALS FOR 2008?
If you want to gain LEAN MUSCLE or LOSE FAT, call us today...

New Year's is approaching and the time is ripe to begin weight training. If you have never used a personal trainer before - take the time to educate yourself on what type of trainer you want, the price your willing to pay and write down your physical fitness goals. We offer a free, two hour meeting, one (1) free session, free protein smoothie after your workout and a host of nutritional and fitness objectives tailer to your height, weight and bodytype as well as a (real) fitness education to help you make the best nutritional choices while you train. REMEMBER: It is 95% diet, 5% fitness!

If you are willing to sweat (and sweat you will)
to earn muscle the HARD WAY - call us.
If you want to train with the best - call Mike Stewart Fitness today.

Mike Stewart Fitness
713.683.0399
eat healthy * lift heavy

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER .... now...


One of my bodybuilding friends (who worships the ground Arnold Schwarzennegger walks on) told me that the picture making the rounds of the Governator on the beach at Cannes in 2005 was a hoax or at best, photoshopped. I found the pic on the net (I used to have it up on my old blog). As you can see ... this is what 35 years of weight lifting + steroid use will produce. This is why diet is so vitally necessary to maintaining your body weight, free of drugs and a proper body mass index (BMI) as you get older. Remember: You must take your body into retirement! (Yeah I know, he should have worn shorts, not a speedo!)
eat healthy * lift heavy

GREAT TASTING BEEF JERKY (thanks to Kevin H.)...


To most people, beef jerky looks horrible and tastes like cardboard. There are a hundred brands of beef jerky on the market today and most contain an inordinate amount of sugar and fat to sweeten the taste of what many consider to be chewing on a papersack. Properly manufactured, beef jerky can not only be healthy but taste pretty good. However, a nutritionally packed beef jerky is hard to find. Most jerkies manufactured in the U.S. and Canada are covered in "crap" (sugar, cinnamon, molasses, bar-b-que sauce, louisiana hot sauce, teriyaki, etc.) which completely changes the overall taste and consistency while others are overcooked, undercooked or manufactured with animal hormones (which precipitated a 2006 food recall of some brands in California). Simply put, finding a good tasting and nutritionally efficient beef jerky is hard to find.

Never say never. One of our clients found such a beef jerky.

A new item appeared at his local H-E-B Store: HILL COUNTRY FAIR BEEF JERKY manufactured in plastic, 3 oz. packages. When we took a closer look at this brand of beef jerky (which I had never heard of before) we were amazed at the information contained on the back of the Nutritional Facts:


HILL COUNTRY FAIR BEEF JERKY
( 3 oz. packet )
Nutritional Facts:
Servings: 3
Serving Size: 1 oz.
Protein: 16 gr.
Fat: 0 gr.
Carb.: 0 gr.
Price: $2.99


My client brought the packet of jerky to training with him and gave me the entire packet to try out. I ripped open the safety zip and undid the plastic seal and ... tasted some damn good beef jerky!

There are no artificial preservatives, animal hormones or additives, just seasoned jerky that is quite pliable and easy to chew. The taste is not overpowering. The best part is the protein content. With a 3 oz. package (1 serving = 1 oz.) providing over 16gr protein, you can easily down one entire packet (if your a glutton like me) and get 48 solid grams of protein nearly half or a third or our required protein intake per day. High Protein Beef Jerky. Who knew?

Thanks to client Kevin H. for this tip.

EAT HEALTHY * LIFT HEAVY

Sunday, October 21, 2007

MSF Client Party a Success!

Our first "client get together" last night was a blast! Thanks to everyone who participated (photo left: to see a LARGE PIC, click on the photo (left) and GO HERE ). Thanks to Mitch J. for foregoing his workout and helping me set up.

The food was plentiful and very nutritious. Kevin H. brought an enormous vegetable plate and grilled squash ; Jaime M. brought a very tasty white wine; Mike P. - humus; Janet and Allen G. brought homemade edamame and humus with pita bread; Jesse A. brought a large vegetable platter; Mitch J. made an enormous fresh fruit platter garnished with raspberries and dewberries; Glenn M. brought tasty vegetable chips. Jay A. (fresh from Hawaii!) brought a souffle. Much appreciated to all clients who came and had a great time.

Thanks also to Tony Elsinga - the "Iron Sommelier" for providing us with four bottles of fantastic wine from the Tasting Room. We welcome into our family Kimberly J. - a new client, who came on short notice! Thanks for coming Kimberly. It was also great to sit back and talk war stories with Senior Master Chief Allen Grothe USAF (Ret'd)! Much appreciated Chief. And thanks to my neighbor Karen for coming on short notice, taking pics and having a great time! Thanks to all clients who came.

We are now planning a December party - so start thinking about a dish you want to bring. The "Iron Sommelier" will supply the wine. With the weather getting cooler we can use the cobble stone deck out back. Thanks guys.

-Mick
www.mikestewartfitness.com
Eat Healthy * Lift Heavy

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

THE HOMEMADE PROTEIN SHAKES ARE BACK!

Hey guys: The homemade protein shakes are coming back. Earlier this week, after running out of the Labrada LEAN BODY, the MetrX RTD 51, I realized that after talking with everyone, the tastes of these corporate-sponsored, mass-produced, fake-sugary based protein drinks were not to everyone's liking. In fact, most prefer the homemade ones in the kitchen.

Securing these drinks was a pain. The only place I could get the protein shakes from ( Nutrition Depot, Richmond Avenue and Fountainview ) was haphazard: sometimes they had the good shakes in stock, sometimes not, sometimes new staff would not let me mix-and-match chocolate, vanilla and strawberry (it depends upon who is working the front desk that day) and the taste was probably more sweeter than anyone could stand. Sometimes the store would be closed in the middle of the day for no reason. It was never about price.

Stand it you did, as one client, smiling through one LEAN BODY I handed to her said, "Sheesh, Mike" < fake smile > "...these taste wonderful." We laughed and I realized that we need to go back to homemade shakes with fresh non-fat milk (or low cal soy), milk-and-egg based protein powder and lots of fresh, organic blueberries, strawberries and banana's.

I tasted one homemade shake I made for Janet G. last night after her workout and realized how much better the taste truly was. However, its all about 'freshness.' It's made right here in the kitchen, we only use organic fruit and they taste pretty damn good. And its about having something made to your liking that tastes good.

Mike's Original Afterwork Smoothies are now back in b'ness...

www.mikestewartfitness.com
EAT HEALTHY * LIFT HEAVY

MSF GYM UPDATE: Fresh towels now on hand (***NEW***)



MSF Gym Update

We have fresh towels now on hand for clients to use. They will be in the gym and the client bathroom. When you come in, just grab one and go!

Thanks.
Mick
EAT HEALTHY * LIFT HEAVY

MY PICS ARE NOW UP...


I posted all of my physique photos from 1992 until current on this page:



PHOTOS or type in:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/18176393@N00/

...and by doing so, you can see how fat I was in September 2005.

As many of you know, I have offered "before and after" photos as part of your training at no cost to you. Feel free to take advantage of this. Or, we can use your camera so your photos remain with you. Photographs allow you to go back and say, "holy crap - was that me?" and use that excitement and sense of accomplishment to push you closer to your fitness goals.

Remember guys: You have to take YOUR BODY into retirement.

Thanks, Mick
---------------------------
Michael W. (Mick) Stewart CFT BST
www.mikestewartfitness.com
EAT HEALTHY * LIFT HEAVY


FROM THE CLIENTS ... thanks to Jay H.


Client Jay H. sent me an email about this, but I decided to post it, since it has so much damn good information! Here we go:


The 10 BEST and 10 WORST Foods you should / should not eat:




Thanks Jay!

FROM THE CLIENTS ... thanks to Janet G.


Hardee's Gets 'Country Breakfast Bomb'
AP / ST. LOUIS, Missouri (Oct. 15) -

The people who brought you the Monster Thickburger and the 1,100-calorie salad are at it again -- this time for breakfast. Hardee's new Country Breakfast Burrito contains 920 calories and 60 grams of fat. Jayne Hurley, senior nutritionist at The Center for Science in the Public Interest, has called it the "country breakfast bomb."

Hardee's on Monday rolled out its new Country Breakfast Burrito -- two egg omelets filled with bacon, sausage, diced ham, cheddar cheese, hash browns and sausage gravy, all wrapped inside a flour tortilla. The burrito contains 920 calories and 60 grams of fat. Brad Haley, marketing chief for the St. Louis-based fast-food chain, said the burrito offers the sort of big breakfast item normally found in sit-down restaurants with an added advantage. "It makes this big country breakfast portable," he said.

In 2003 the chain introduced a line of big sandwiches, including the Monster Thickburger. The 1,420-calorie sandwich is made up of two 1/3-pound slabs of beef, four strips of bacon, three slices of cheese and mayonnaise on a buttered bun. Even Hardees' chicken salad -- topped with onion rings and crispy chicken -- has 1,100 calories and 83 grams of fat. The chain does offer some low-calorie options, including roast beef and chicken sandwiches. The Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington-based advocate for nutrition and health, has called the Hardee's line of Thickburgers "food porn." The group's senior nutritionist, Jayne Hurley, said Monday that the burrito was "another lousy invention by a fast-food company." The "country breakfast bomb," as she called it, represents half a day's calories and a full day's worth of saturated fat and salt, to say nothing of cholesterol. "That's all before 10 o'clock in the morning," she said. Haley makes no apologies. We don't try to hide what these are," he said. "When consumers go to other fast-food places they feel like they've got to buy two of their breakfast sandwiches or burritos to fill up. This is really designed to fill you up."


The government's Center for Nutritional Policy and Promotion recommends a daily caloric intake ranging from 1,600 calories for sedentary women and older adults to 2,800 calories for teenage boys and active adults. Hardee's sees its core customers as young men ages 18 to 34, Haley said, though it expects a wider range for breakfast items. The Country Breakfast Burrito is generally available for $2.69 by itself or $4.09 for a combo that includes hash rounds and coffee.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.


[ This is very typical of the corporate (and very much the market itself) playing to the obese and morbidly obese client or what McDonald's calls their "heavy users" because of the need for something fast that will fill you up, rather than for something nutritious thats designed to provide your body energy for the morning. I like the play on words: food porn. I almost had to cover my eyes. -Mick ].

Saturday, October 6, 2007

FROM THE CLIENTS .... thanks to Dana H.


Okay female clients, heads up .... here is a superb link sent to me from client Dana H. that she gleaned from Dr. Miriam Nelson's book STRONG WOMEN STAY SLIM and the resultant website:


Dana also pulled the following two paragraphs from the website (along with here remarks) that gives a slim jeans version of Dr. Nelson's book, thats worth noting:

"The women in my JAMA study all agreed not to lose weight [Dana adds: I think she means through diet and cardio]. Nevertheless, many of them dropped one to three sizes because their bodies were more toned..."" "Strength training makes all the difference. The stronger your muscles, the easier it is to get moving. All the women in my JAMA study, as I've mentioned, previously were sedentary and had actually been directed not to begin an exercise program [Dana adds: other than the strength-training they were doing for the study]. Nevertheless, these revitalized women spontaneously began walking more, climbing more steps, and selecting more active leisure activities like dancing, hiking, and gardening. When we added it all up, after a year of strength training they had become 27 percent more active! We've now seen similar results in three other studies." [ bold emphasis by Mick Stewart ].

Thanks Dana!


Monday, October 1, 2007

THE "300" WORKOUT ...

Now that the movie is on DVD and at Blockbuster, here's some of cuts of the exercise routines that Jim Jones and his personal training crew at CROSSFIT performed to get the "300" actors into shape:

300 Workout Video 1 [ here ]
300 Workout Video 2 [ here ]
300 Workout Video 3 [ here ] - take a close look at the "crossover pushups."

...and here is the goober from www.IWantSixPackAbs.com doing the 300 workout.

...and a final video based upon the 300-workout [ here ].

If there is any interest out there in getting a "300" style workout together - let me know!

I WILL BE JOINING YOU! ...

....please be advised that I will be working out with all of you this month for at least a minimum of one (1) workout. Currently, I work out with one of my clients for thirty minutes of his workout, which is a combination of cardio / weight-lifting. It's great. I get a free workout (woohoo) but my client gets a chance to see me in action in order to understand the full range of motion, correct procedure and engaged emotion. However, its my policy to work out with everyone for at least one workout. I do this for several reasons:

First, proper execution. I want to actively engage with you during the exercise routines by exercising through an entire set, as opposed to just telling you what to do: "...okay, you do this here, now lift this up there. Got it? Great. Go!" I have found out that its best to work out with my clients at least once during their tenure with me so that they can benefit by watching the exercise being fully executed through ten sets ... properly. Form is proper execution (as Vince Gironda once said) but the key to this is watching how a full set is executed.

Second, emotion. If you show no emotion during exercise, you need to. However, this doesnt mean that your doing the exercise wrong, it just means that I can provide a bit of encouragement so you can see my emotions (fully engaged) during the exercise. Emotion is a combination of several things: its gut instinct, its "fake-it-till-you-make-it" (if you've had a bad day at work, don't fret about it but pretend your engaged ... eventually your body will engage with you) and its creating a link with your inner emotions. Forget your inner child. Find your inner barbarian! Tap into those internal emotional depths and open up. Also, dont forget that music plays a big role here as well ( see the study here, but you already knew that). As most of you know, when I work out, I turn the music UP ... ALL THE WAY. It's not vanity, but rather a chance to harness a bit more emotion to make heavy lifts.

Third, to sweat with you. Thats pretty simple, right?

So, some time this month, I will join in a workout with you.

FITNESS IDEAS WHEN YOU TRAVEL...

Fitness Ideas When You Travel
By Michael W. (Mick) Stewart CFT BST
www.mikestewartfitness.com

I've been asked several times (by many of you) what's the best way to work out when I am on a business trip or extended vacation. My first answer has always been: FIND THE HOTEL GYM. If your staying at a 3, 4 or 5 star, they have them; its a matter of following the little signs down at the end of the hallway. The 5-star's will even have a personal trainer on staff for free. Don't ever tell me you returned from a business trip and didn't make use of the hotel gym! It's free!

But ... if you stay in a hotel/motel, Bed and Breakfast, in the wilderness or someone's house and there is no gym (or local access to one), here are some ideas:

1. PUSH UPS. There are a million variations of push ups, but they remain the ultimate "stand by" for road trips, extended vacations or business trips. You can do them in your hotel room or a friends house, at a B&B or anywhere. You can do standard pushups (feet together, feet apart, hands close together, hands far apart), wall push ups (leaning against a wall with hands close together or far apart) or Ranger push ups (feet on bed and hands on floor, decline). Do at least 100 a day in groups of ten or twenty. You can also purchase push up bars and stick those in your suitcase or splurge and buy Perfect Pushups (rotating pushup handles) if you have money to burn. Or if you have several chairs in the room - pull two together (facing each other) and with your legs off the bed and hands bracing each chair - do 10 reps for 10 sets.

2. PULL UPS. Go to Academy and for $10 purchase an extendable pull up bar which will fit in your suitcase. You can do pullups anywhere there is a doorway. Just make sure your not doing pullups when housecleaning comes in.

3. ANKLE WEIGHTS. If your on an extended business trip and you'll be sight seeing, pack a set of 5-10 lb. ankle weights. However, wear long pants with cuffs that cover them (especially if your overseas), otherwise foreigners will think your weird ("blimey, there goes those bloody American tourists again!")

4. SQUATS. The exercise most of you have come to hate. However, its a main stay for fitness in the hotel room. There are the five variations: Marine Corps, "Y" Squat, Prisoner, hands-on-hips and arms folded. Do 100 in sets of 10-20 in the morning.

5. CRUNCHES. Crunches can be done anywhere at anytime and you can never do too many, just make sure that when you do them you LIMIT the range of motion, otherwise you'll get back spasms!

6. RUBBER BANDS. You can find fitness bands at Academy or any sports store between $5 and $10. There are a good dozen exercises you can do from bicep curls, presses and if you put the attachable edge inside a doorstop, a standing bench press.

7. RUNNING IN PLACE. IN 1944-45, General George Patton remained in top physical condition by running in place in his tent and aboard ship prior to invasion. It was the only time he could find alone to work out. How do I know? I read his memoirs! His staff would usually catch him in his quarters (before his army would land), sweating from head to toe, while running in place. If its good enough for old Blood and Guts, its good enough for you. Stretch for five minutes and then take off. Remember to start out by marching in place and then gradually build up to a run. You can run in place in stages of 45 seconds for ten (10) sets.

8. DIPS. These can be done off the edge of your bed, or pull together two chairs from the hotel living room. Dips work the triceps (primary), deltoids (secondary) and lats (tertiary).

9. NUTRITION. REMEMBER: When your on the road - use it as an excuse to EAT GOOD and take a carb blocker or appetite suppressant if your doing touristy things (walking all over hell and back) and you want to lose weight. The great thing about sight seeing on vacation is that its a superb time to lose weight! My old trainer told me years ago, "...the only good thing about appetite suppressants [ like Hydroxcut and Jet Fuel ] is that they do wonders during road trips." He used to give these to his bodybuilders prior to competition, especially the ones that had a tendancy to overeat and pack on bodyfat. The key to nutrition on the road is the same as at home: three standard squares a day that are NUTRITIONALLY edible, with good snacks. Don't overeat while your out of town. You'll only have to work harder when you return home.

10. EXERCISE. Don't go back to your hotel room and watch t.v. You already do this at home! Make use of that free gym, the swimming pool, treadmill and other amenities (if offered). Walk around. Go sight-seeing. To hell with the tram or bus, take off on a day hike in the city and don't return until you've done five miles. And don't tell me you didnt work out when you get back from vacation!!

Saturday, September 15, 2007

270 vs. 250

John can lift 270. Mike can only lift 250. Poor, poor Mike.

This is a test posting

Mike Stewart is a dork, but he makes great protein shakes!