Tag Archives: centers

Men’s Health: Running the Bases

Let’s face it, men and women are different. It’s a fact. And when it comes to taking care of their bodies, men and women are very different.

Men drink more (alcohol), smoke more and see their doctors less than women do. They are less likely to wear a seat belt (22% of teen men say they rarely or never wear a seatbelt v. 15% of teen women). And they consume red meat at an alarming rate.

All that said, those facts refer to the “average” American male. There are plenty of men, who eat their vegetables, drink the requisite eight glasses of water a day, and kiss there wives and children before they go to bed precisely at 9:30p.m. every night. If you belong to this group, you are perfect, and you need not read a word more.

If you think you might belong to the first (average) group, though, read on. You might just get a peek at what the future holds for you.

The Wake Up Call – 7:00p Thursday

Whether you are a man or a woman, an average Joe or not, at some point, you need to decide to take your health seriously or you may just get an unwelcome wake up call.

Nothing pains me more than to visit my local city park on a week night in early spring. It is there where I will find many of aging brothers hitting the ball around for the first time after a long winter of sitting. It is usually Tuesday or Thursday when the over 40 recreation softball league has its games. It’s a bunch of guys from all walks of life. Some are business men taking a few hours away from the kids and the office to toss the ball around. There might be a high school baseball coach getting his playing time in. You might see the produce manager from your local grocery store and a fireman or a police officer or two.

Before the game starts, you see some stretching, some talking, and one or two having a beer. Then the game begins, and they get to work. The guys are chatting it up, laughing about nothing in particular and razzing the batter. Good clean guy fun. But inevitably at some point, one of those guys pulls something, tears something or pops something out of alignment. The game stops while they help him off the field. And once he’s on the bench (or on his way to the hospital), the game starts up again.

I always wonder what happened to that one guy. Was the injury serious? Or did he spring back in a couple of days? Did he wake up to the fact that he is 47 years old and start working out regularly and stretching before games? Or did he decide he was “suddenly” too old to play kids games anymore and quit?

Over 40 And Going it Alone

Now, if I were more of an opportunist, I would make a point of going to those first few games of spring. And I’d bring my business card and a sign up sheet for treatment. But I can’t bring myself to do it. And anyway, I would really rather get new patients BEFORE injury strikes.

Now, ask yourself, am I the guy on the bench or one of the guys still playing? Don’t know?  

Well, if it’s been awhile since regular exercise and stretching were a part of your routine, you might just be the guy on the bench. You see, within the human body, there is something called “Fascia”, a pliable, protective sheath that covers every cell. To your muscles and  joints, Fascia is like the elastic in your underwear. If it is kept intact and healthy, it holds them up and holds them together, giving them strength and stability. As it ages, though, and if not cared for properly, fascia loses its elasticity, and you lose range of motion and strength. Before you know it, you can’t bend down far enough to catch a ground ball, and throwing to first base feels like a hot poker in your shoulder.

If that is you, don’t walk to my office, run (or move as fast as your tight muscles will allow). I will work with throughout a 10-session series to soften and strengthen your fascia, and ultimately to bring back movement and muscle you forgot you had. By next softball season, you will be in game shape.

Information for this article came from these additional sources:

Test Your Knowledge about Men’s Health; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Department of Health and Human Services.
Found August 8, 2007 http://www2a.cdc.gov/od/menshealth/test.asp

Joseph Ackerman “Joe Ackerman of www.CoreStructuralTherapy.com specializes in Structural Integration which is a system wide process of deep bodywork and movement education. It is designed to improve the Structural and Functional abilities of the human body in its relationship to the field of gravity.

MMA Training Centers Learn Martial Arts

MMA Training Centers have a wide variety of different skills and disciplines of martial arts to offer someone interested in attending a training facility. MMA schools do a lot more than teach an individual how to beat up another person. Good Mixed Martial Arts Academies with great instructors will teach students the ART of being a true Mixed Martial Artist. As a student attending a Mixed Martial Arts school you will go through a life changing process of being a regular person then evolving and becoming a martial artist which forces you to focus the mind and train the body. When you transform into a mixed martial artist you will find that the journey is as much mental as it is physical which strengthens your brain and body. The many different disciplines of martial arts have come from all over the world with some of them dating back thousands of years.

The many different types of Mixed Martial Arts specialities include:

Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, which involves joint locks, submissions, and chokes. The Gracie family made Jiu Jitsu famous at UFC 1

Muay Thai, which is referred to as The Art of Eight Limbs because the hands, shins, elbows, and knees are all used extensively in the martial arts form. Muay Thai is very popular in Thailand and many Southeast Asian countries.

Kickboxing, which refers to the sport of combining the grace and style of boxing with kicking. Kickboxing is a standing sport and does not allow continuation of the fight once a combatant has reached the ground.

Grappling which refers to techniques, maneuvers, and counters applied to an opponent in order to gain a physical advantage or to escape a dangerous position.

Wrestling is one of the oldest forms of martial arts and it uses grappling type techniques such as clinch fighting, throws, takedowns, joint locks, pins and other grappling holds.

Self Defense which is the act of defending oneself, one’s property or the well-being of another from physical harm.

Fitness Boot Camp is a type physical training program that often combines running, interval training, and many other exercises using weights and/or body weight to lose body fat, increase cardiovascular efficiency, increase strength, and help people get into a routine of regular exercise.

The top mixed martial arts fighters in the world train at MMA training centers to learn new skills and touch up the skills they already posses. The majority of these top MMA training centers have coaches that specialize in all areas of mixed martial arts.

The best and most popular MMA Training centers and some of the fighters that train at them include:

Xtreme Couture in Las Vegas and fighters include Randy Couture, Forrest Griffin, and Gina Carano

American Top Team and fighters include Thiago Alves, Mike Brown, Kimbo Slice, Thiago Silva

Greg Jackson’s Mixed Martial Arts and fighters include Georges St. Pierre, Rashad Evans, and Keith Jardine

Team Quest and fighters include Dan Henderson, Matt Lindland, Chael Sonnen

It doesn’t matter if you want to fight in a cage or if you want to train in martial arts for the exercise and discipline there is something for the whole family at most MMA Training centers. MMA schools offer classes for all experience levels and all ages so there is no reason or excuse not to find the right school for you. The physical and mental results will speak for themselves so lookup a local school and give it a try and most MMA Training Centers offer first time students a free class so you can see if it is for you.

Josh Rafferty
Professional MMA Fighter and Coach
http://www.i-supplements.com
Josh Rafferty has been absorbing and learning about Mixed Martial Arts and Fitness since childhood. Josh has competed in Mixed Martial Arts for over ten years both in the ring and in the corner of some legendary fighters. His fighting career has made him famous, appearing in the hit television shows The Ultimate Fighter and Adrenalin and even made a cameo appearance in the major motion picture Redbelt. Find more from Josh at http://www.i-supplements.com
Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/mma-training-centers-learn-martial-arts-1550875.html

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