MOTIVATION

Why You Should Ditch the Scale and What You Should Do Instead

You know the feeling all too well. You did great last week. You worked out hard. Really hard. You worked out even when you didn't feel like it. Your food diary was glowing with good choices. You meal prepped like a boss. You skipped the lunch out with coworkers at the burger joint, packed a salad every day and ate a balanced healthy dinner every night. You skipped the candy jar and passed on the birthday cake. You killed it! But then you stepped on the scale and the number flashing up at you seemingly wasn't reflecting all your hard work from the week. Your heart sinks. What gives? 

 

IT TAKES TIME

A healthy weight loss goal is 1-2 pounds per week on average over time. Any more than two pounds per week and you are likely losing muscle along with fat which can be detrimental to your metabolism. 

A 1-2 pound per week goal doesn’t mean that you should expect to lose two pounds every single week. Weight loss rarely happens in a straight line. With exercise and a small reduction in calorie intake you can probably expect to lose between 12-20 pounds in 12 week period as an average. That doesn’t mean there won’t be weeks when you don’t lose any weight or even gain a pound on the scale. The important thing is to watch the downward trend over time rather than obsessing over the number week to week. 

Practice patience and consistency. Life is not a 12 week challenge. This isn’t the Biggest Loser, this is your life. (News stories were reporting that most of those contestants put the weight back on anyway due to the unhealthy way they lost it.)

DITCH THE SCALE IF:

You focus too much on the number on the scale from week to week.

WHAT YOU SHOULD DO INSTEAD:

Be consistent with your healthy habits and lifestyle changes. Focus on the process. Give it time.

 

WEIGHT LOSS VS. FAT LOSS

The problem with focusing too much on a goal weight is that the scale only tells one small piece of the story. A mistake that a lot of people make is that they focus on weight loss rather than fat loss. Muscle and fat weigh exactly the same, of course. One pound of fat = one pound of muscle. However, muscle is much more dense and takes up a lot less space in your body. If you are losing fat but gaining muscle, the number on the scale may stay the same, but you may wear a smaller pant size. Focus on fat loss and lean muscle gains. Alter your body compensation by exercising and eating healthful foods. 

If you lose too much weight too quickly, you are almost certainly losing lean muscle along with fat. Someone who is too focused on scale weight may be thrilled to see a lower number but the truth is that it could be a bad thing if they are also losing muscle. 

DITCH THE SCALE IF:

You are more worried about weight loss than fat loss.

WHAT YOU SHOULD DO INSTEAD:

Forget weight loss and focus on fat loss. Track your fat loss progress by measuring your body fat percentage and taking body measurements. Perform weight bearing exercises to build and preserve lean muscle and do a mixture of moderate and high intensity cardiovascular exercises to burn fat.

 

NON-SCALE VICTORIES

Some people decide on an arbitrary number they want to reach on the scale and won’t be satisfied until they reach it, but you can’t bully your body into cooperating with your unrealistic goals. If we focus on fat loss and other non-scale victories then we can find success regardless of the number on the scale. How do you feel? How well are you sleeping? How do your clothes fit? How are your energy levels? How has your athletic performance improved in sports and in life? Can you carry the groceries from the car to the house without trouble? Can you chase the kids (or dogs) around the back yard or climb the stairs without getting winded? These are all non-scale victories that deserve to be celebrated. What if you had positive responses to all the above questions but your scale weight stayed the same? That would be great because it would prove that your hard work is paying off. You are now healthier, more athletic with improved body composition. 

DITCH THE SCALE IF:

You can’t see past the scale to appreciate the successes in non-scale victories.

WHAT YOU SHOULD DO INSTEAD:

Keep track of non-scale improvements as diligently as you are watching your scale weight.

In the end the number doesn’t matter. It’s great to have fat loss goals and fitness goals, but picking a number that you think you should weigh and then going after it by any means necessary is unhealthy. A healthier alternative is to learn to love movement, healthy foods and find joy in the process and see where it takes you.

People who have a healthy relationship with the scale should continue to use it as one of the many tools they use to track progress. However, if you struggle with scale or become obsessed or discouraged with your scale weight, then I recommend you ditch the scale and never look back. 

Any of this sound familiar? Any questions? Let me know in the comments. 

Like this post? It helps me when you share!

 

Would you like help losing fat and building muscle? Check out my personal training services page. 

Coach Lea

I am a NASM personal trainer and RRCA adult distance running coach that specializes in strength training for runners. I offer in-person training in the Shredshed, online training and Fit to Run bootcamps. If you are interested in a more in-depth running or strength training plan, please contact me. Have questions? I'd love to help. 

While I am a certified personal trainer, I am not your personal trainer. Since I don't know your exercise abilities, injury background or medical history, please see your doctor before beginning any new exercise program.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BACK TO THE BASICS: RECOVERY AND FOUNDATION BUILDING PLAN

For workout Wednesday I have some bad news to share. I'm not perfect! Gasp! Shocking! I know. 

It happens to the best of us. I got injured. I know I talk a lot about injury prevention for runners here, but this wasn’t a running injury…but it is preventing me from running. If you’ve even been injured, you know it sucks.

I was working really hard on my pushups. I was progressing quickly. I was feeling so great and confident about it that I pushed my progression too quickly. I know better. Slow progression should always be the goal, but I got overconfident and pushed too far. I pulled a muscle.

This is real life and I am far from perfect. I made a mistake by pushing myself too hard but I was ready to take corrective action. After I realized I did some damage I immediately stopped lifting any weights. You don’t get better by pushing through, you get better by resting. After I hurt my arm, I started running more than usual. I still wanted to workout and instead of dwelling on what I couldn’t do, I decided to focus on what I could do. Besides I love to run, I didn’t think twice about it. 

But time had passed and it wasn’t getting any better, in fact, it seemed to be growing worse. My shoulders felt sore and tight all the time and that pain in my arm wasn’t going away. It occurred to me one day after a six mile morning run when I was in a lot of pain that the arm swinging motion from running was making the problem worse. If I was going to get better then I needed to rest it. Really rest it and that means no running. 

I spent about a week feeling sorry myself and not doing anything but my bare minimum goal of 10K steps day (which, by the way, is a lot harder when you don’t run). It's time to get over it. I decided that this is a great opportunity to get back to the basics. 

I will focus on what I can do, not what I can’t do.

 

What does that mean when you can’t lift weights or run? It means focusing on lower body, core exercises, balance, mobility and flexibility. It is a great opportunity to return to the basics and rebuild a strong foundation while my arm and shoulder heels. 

It will be frustrating to eliminate weights even from my lower body exercises. Lifting a water bottle with my left arm hurts so I have to be careful not to put any unnecessary pressure on it. Even holding a weight while performing lunges or squats will be too much. I am mentally prepared that this will feel like a giant physical step backwards, but to stay positive as to how consistent work on the basics will propel me forward in the future.

I am breaking out the BOSU ball to work on balance, foam rolling to work on mobility and flexibility and bodyweight exercises for hip, ab and glute strength. 

Who knows? Maybe this was a good thing. It is forcing me to take a step back and rebuild my foundation. Once my base is strong and balanced again and my arm is fully healed, and I will be in a better position to get stronger than ever. 

Stay positive, right? 

So what does that plan look like? It looks like a lot of exercise plans I have shared with you here, so I thought I would round up my best recovery and foundation building exercises.

FOAM ROLLING

Foam rolling plays an important role in muscle balance, injury prevention, mobility and flexibility.

PREHAB

I will need to regress some of these exercises as to not put any pressure on my arm or shoulders, but many of these will work in my recovery plan. Back to the basics of clam shells, hip raises and glute bridges for me.

LOWER BODY STRENGTH

There is always benefit in working on lower body strength and this is a great opportunity for me to focus on balance and unilateral strength since heavy weights are not an option.

CARDIO

Since running is not an option, I will continue to walk on the streets with hubby, but will also work on treadmill hills to increase the intensity of my walks. I think I should be able to do it without much arm motion. I will let you know how it goes. 

I know I can't push recovery any more than I could push progression, but I am hoping to be able to run again by the end of September. I am running the rock 'n' roll half marathon in Vegas in November and I will need the time to get back up to speed with my training. We'll see how it goes.

Next week for workout Wednesday, I will break out the BOSU ball to show you some fantastic effective balance and stability exercises. Despite my injury, I am looking forward to rebuilding and coming back stronger than ever. 

Have you ever felt my pain? Wish me well in the comments. Stay tuned next week for some fun on the BOSU ball.

Like this post? Please consider sharing.

 

Coach Lea

I am a NASM personal trainer and RRCA adult distance running coach that specializes in strength training for runners. I offer in-person training in the Shredshed, online training and Fit to Run bootcamps. If you are interested in a more in-depth running or strength training plan, please contact me. Have questions? I'd love to help. 

While I am a certified personal trainer, I am not your personal trainer. Since I don't know your exercise abilities, injury background or medical history, please see your doctor before beginning any new exercise program.

 

 

 

7 Reasons Runners are Awesome

Last week I wrote a blog post called Runners are Gross: 7 Things We Don't Tell You. My best friend read the article and said "You're not doing a good job in convincing me to become a runner!" She was kidding, of course, since she recently met her personal running goal of running one mile without stopping. Sounds like she doesn't realize I convinced her afterall. I'm sneaky like that, become my friend and I'll figure out a way to get you to run. 

But her comment gave me an idea. Yeah, runners can be gross, but we're also pretty awesome. So in case it wasn't abundantly clear, being a runner is amazing! Here are seven reasons runners are awesome. 

7 reasons runners are awesome

7 reasons runners are awesome

We are goal setters

Runners have an amazing ability to set goals and then smash them. I remember when it was a great accomplishment to run one mile. Then I wanted to run a 5K. Then a 10K. A half marathon seemed impossible, but I trained for it and achieved it. Runners keep setting bigger and bigger goals. Even if we don't achieve our goals in the timeline we expected we keep trying. 

We overcome obstacles

Sometimes we get injured or deal with life issues that get in the way of our running, but we always seem to bounce back. Once we make running a priority in our lives almost nothing can stop us long term. We find a way. If I could apply one characteristic to runners it would be tenacity. We don't give up when the going gets tough. We all have good and bad days, but over the long term we keep going. We are a persistent bunch.

We have mental toughness

Running teaches us to deal with the hard times and work through them in running and in life. I'm not gonna lie, sometimes running sucks, but it is hard parts that make us great. 

We are supportive and uplifting

I can honestly say that in all my years of running I have never come across a significantly negative or unsupportive runner or running group. Runners by large are welcoming, accepting, encouraging and supportive. It doesn't matter who you are, where you come from, how old you are, how much money you have or how many friends you have, chances are if you find a running group they will accept you with open arms. I have yet to see otherwise. 

We have fun

Runners take fun to the next level. Why else would you dress in costumes and tutus to run a race? Runners may be focused and dedicated but they also have a knack for not taking themselves too seriously. 

WE'RE HUMBLE

Just because I am listing 7 reasons why we're awesome doesn't mean we are not humble. Running gives us a ton of opportunities to practice humility. We fail, we fall, we cry, we stink, we crap our pants (wait. just me?) and we get hurt. That's just a few ways running humbles us.

We're Happy

Maybe it is the endorphins, but runners are generally a happy bunch. I think we make our own happiness by goal setting, overcoming obstacles and having fun! The same things that make runners awesome makes us happy. 

Did I miss any? How else are runners awesome? 

 

Like this post? It helps me when you share!

 

Coach Lea

I am a NASM personal trainer and RRCA adult distance running coach that specializes in strength training for runners. I offer in-person training in the Shredshed, online training and Fit to Run bootcamps. If you are interested in a more in-depth running or strength training plan, please contact me. Have questions? I'd love to help. 

While I am a certified personal trainer, I am not your personal trainer. Since I don't know your exercise abilities, injury background or medical history, please see your doctor before beginning any new exercise program.

 

 


 

 

Warm up, Cool Down & Stretching

In this day and age we are often short on time so we look at ways to make things more efficient. What can we do faster? What can we do in less time? Sometimes that means that we do interval workouts instead of ones that take more time with long rest periods. Sometimes it means we increase the intensity but spend less time working out overall. These are great solutions to working out more efficiently but one thing you should never do to save time is skip the warm up, cool down or stretching portions of your workout. Skipping your warm up, cool down and stretching will not get you to your goals faster and may lead to injury, hinder your results and performance. 

FOAM ROLLING

foam rolling in the SHREDSHED

foam rolling in the SHREDSHED

Foam rolling is called self-myofascial release. It is similar to a massage in that it releases muscle tension in overactive or shortened muscles. Use a foam roller (or similar device) before exercise to apply pressure to break up the knots within the muscle to release muscle tightness or tension. Foam rolling is suggested before stretching to potentially improve flexibility. I go into more detail on foam rolling in this post about foam rolling for runners. Foam rolling is appropriate before or after exercise.

WARM UP

GENERAL WARM UP

An example of a general warm up is walking for 5-10 minutes before running or lifting weights. A general warm up is not necessarily specific to the movements that will be performed during the workout, but it prepares your body for the workout by increasing heart rate, raising your body temperature, increasing blood flow to your muscles and mentally preparing you for higher intensities. 

SPECIFIC WARM UP

A specific warm up mimics the motions of the activity that will be performed during the workout. An example of a specific warm up is body weight squats before doing back squats with a weighted bar in the gym or high knees/butt kicks before a run. 

STRETCHING

Stretching before exercise warms up your muscles, improves flexibility and can help correct muscle imbalances. 

ACTIVE-ISOLATED STRETCHING

Active-isolated stretching is moving the joint through the full range of motion and holding the stretch for only 2-3 seconds. This is often considered superior to static stretching (holding the stretch for 30 seconds) because there is some evidence that static stretching before a workout can hinder performance in athletes performing explosive or power exercises. Consider the type of exercise you will be performing when choosing your stretch.

DYNAMIC STRETCHING

Dynamic (or functional) stretches are ideal for reasonably healthy and fit individuals. Dynamic stretches use momentum to take the joint through the full range of motion repeatedly. Hip swings, high knees, butt kicks and skips are examples of dynamic stretches.

COOL DOWN

The goal of the cool down is to gradually cool body temperature, reduce heart rate and slowly transition the body from exercise back to rest. You can reduce soreness and stiffness with a cool down after you exercise.

STATIC STRETCHING

Static stretching is holding the muscle in a stretched position for a minimum of 30 seconds. It allows your body to cool down after intense exercise and relaxes the muscles you worked. Exercise shortens and tightens the muscle, stretching it after exercise returns the muscles to their normal state, beginning the recovery process and improving flexibility.

Repeat after me: "I will never skip my warm and cool down again and I will foam roll and/or stretch before/after every workout." Your body will thank you for it!

Like this post? Please consider sharing.

Coach Lea

I am a NASM personal trainer and RRCA adult distance running coach that specializes in strength training for runners. I offer in-person training in the Shredshed, online training and Fit to Run boot camps. If you are interested in a more in-depth running or strength training plan please contact me. Have questions? I'd love to help. 

 

While I am a certified personal trainer, I am not your personal trainer. Since I don't know your exercise abilities, injury background or medical history, please see your doctor before beginning any new exercise program.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How to Wake Up Early to Work Out

Happy Friday, friends! I am thrilled you are here with me to kick off the weekend. Today on the blog we are talking about tips to wake up early to work out. I know it's hard. It is something that I personally struggle with on and off.

I've been getting back on that early morning workout train. The 5am train. You know the one. It comes barreling down the tracks, waking you up out of a deep sleep. Your alarm clock is like an air horn at an intersection. Morning workouts can be like jumping on a moving train, but once you are rolling steadily on those tracks, it's well worth the effort. 

To the people that know me best, I may seem grossly unqualified to share tips on how to get up early. As a teenager, I would often sleep through my blaring radio alarm clock...and smoke alarms. Getting up early was non-existent in my early life, it was quite a miracle if I managed to get up in time to make it to the school bus. To say that I’ve never been a morning person is the understatement of the year.

As I got older I had more responsibilities that hinged on me getting places on time, for example, my first real job. I would somehow manage to get up on time, but would never get up one second earlier than was required. I would hit hit snooze on the alarm for an hour and a half (that bad habit promptly ended once I got married) before finally rolling out of bed. I often would negotiate with myself for more sleep.

  • If I don’t wash my hair today, I can sleep for an extra 30 minutes.
  • If I skip breakfast, I can sleep for 15 more minutes
  • Speed limit? What speed limit?

I’m just kidding about that last one.

So how did I, a self-proclaimed sleeping queen, transition from a night owl to a morning bird? I'll tell you what works for me, but before we get started let's discuss the potential benefits of early morning workouts. 

The Benefits of Early Morning Workouts

When you workout first thing in the morning you have less of a chance that something will come up that takes priority. How many times have you had a workout planned for the evening but then something came up at work, with your kids or family and you had to miss it? That sort of thing rarely happens at 5am.

You start the day on a positive note. No matter how stressful your day may turn out to be, it is a great feeling to have that workout behind you. It is one less thing to think about during the day. Working out in the morning often leads to a better mood and clearer thinking throughout the day. 

You free up time in the evening to tend to other responsibilities or enjoyable activities. I love to workout, but I love a lot of other things too. I like to have my evenings free to spend time with my husband or teach my exercise classes. 

There's a certain feeling of peace in those early morning hours. My phone is not ringing, no one is demanding my time, the world is still asleep. I love the quiet time to myself.

It's important to note that there is no best time to workout. If you prefer evening workouts, if that is what works best for your preferences and schedule, then by all means, keep doing what you are doing! If you have established a workout habit, you are doing everything right. This post is for people who want to workout in the morning, but are struggling to wake up to do it.

There are plenty of acceptable reasons to sleep in: It is your rest day, you slept considerably less than 7 hours the night before, your baby spent the better part of the night decorating the walls with vomit. “I don’t feel like it,” is not a good reason.


To Get up or Not to Get up, That is NOT the Question

Stop thinking of getting up early as a choice. If you are anything like me, you probably have to work a day job. I haven’t found anyone yet willing to pay me a decent salary to write and run all day, so I will likely punch the proverbial time clock until my blog starts to make millions (read: for the rest of my adult life). There are many mornings when the alarm goes off and I think, “I don’t feel like going to work today.” But I do it anyway, because like most people, I have to. I don’t have a choice. My boss wouldn’t take too kindly with me staying home from work every time I didn’t feel like going into the office. In fact, I would probably never go to the office if I only based my decision on how I felt.

I go to work because I need the money. The job requires me to arrive at a certain hour. You can apply the same principle to getting up early to work out. Working out isn’t a choice. It is for your health. It is for your body. It is for your mental sanity. It’s for you. 
 

Don’t Lose Sleep Over it

Shoot for 7-8 hours of sleep. If you are going to bed at midnight and getting up at 5am every day, you are not doing yourself any favors. Losing precious sleep to get up early to work out is counterproductive. The more rested you are, the easier it will be to get up early. One of the first things you need to do is get used to going to bed early at the exact same time every night. 
 

Don’t Negotiate with the Enemy

You are probably your own worst enemy. Only you can talk yourself out of getting out of bed. Stop the negotiating. I have learned to turn my brain on autopilot. Don’t think about it, just do it. If you listen to your thoughts at 5am, you almost will always go back to bed. Sometimes I turn on my headphones to upbeat music shortly after waking to distract from my own self-sabotaging thoughts.
 

Be Prepared

I learned in the Girl Scouts many moons ago that Thin Mints are delicious and also to be prepared. Wait. Isn't that the Boy Scout's Motto? Regardless, the best way to ensure success in the mornings is to be prepared. If you are fighting dust bunnies under your bed in the dark, scrambling for your missing running shoe, all while trying unsuccessfully not to wake your spouse, you’re more likely to get frustrated and go back to bed.

To ensure that no brain power will be required in the wee hours of the morning, lay out your workout clothes the night before. I’ve even heard people say that they sleep in their workout clothes so that in the morning, they just have to slip on their shoes and they are out the door. 

Plan your workout the night before. Know exactly what you want to accomplish. Write it down. Don’t rely on your 5am brain to think clearly enough to come up with a workout.


Waking up is Hard to Do

Isn’t that a song? Waking Up is Hard to Do? Oh no, that is breaking up. Well, getting up is hard too. Getting out of bed is often the hardest part. Once I’m up, I usually feel fine enough to keep going. Try setting the alarm clock in another room so that when it goes off, you have to get up and turn it off. You’re up, you might as well stay up. Don’t talk yourself out of it. 
 

If You Snooze, You Lose

I was the snoozing queen until I got married. Turns out hubby didn’t really enjoy waking up every nine minutes for no apparent reason, who knew? That snooze button isn’t helping. You will never be more rested from nine more minutes of sleep. The interrupted sleep actually makes it worse. Just get up. 
 

Love it or Leave it

I am willing to bet that most kids don’t have any trouble waking up super early on Christmas morning. They are genuinely excited about starting their day. I’m not suggesting that the gym is like Christmas morning to an 8 year old, I’m just saying that it is all perspective. If you are generally happy to get up and do something you enjoy, you are more likely to do it. 

Do you dread the treadmill? Well, by no means should you drag yourself out of bed to run for an hour on the treadmill, especially not in the beginning while you are still adjusting. Find something that you genuinely enjoy to do while you are making the transition into an early bird.
 

Misery Loves Company

Getting up in the morning doesn’t have to be miserable, but if you are going to be miserable, it is better to do it with good company. I have found that having an early morning running partner got me up and going every time. It is not right, but we often feel more accountable to others than we do ourselves. 

I'm lucky that my husband wants to run or workout early with me. He is the one hopping out of bed before the alarm and standing in the street waiting for me while I'm still tying my shoes. It really helps to have an accountability partner. I know he would be disappointed in me if I left him out there to run alone. 

If you don’t have a friend crazy or motivated enough to want to get up before the sun to work out, try joining a morning spin class, boot camp, or run club. Other members and trainers will keep you accountable, plus nothing is more motivating than knowing that if you sleep in and miss a class you are flushing perfectly good money down the toilet.
 

Fake it ‘til You Make it


You hate the mornings? Keep telling yourself that and you it will always be hard for you. The trick is to lie to yourself. Tell yourself how much you love to work out in the morning. Get an index card and try writing down some positive thoughts, even if you don’t believe them at first.
 

  • I love to get up early to work out.
  • Morning workouts set the tone for my whole day.
  • I totally rock!
  • While most people are sleeping, I am making myself a better person, inside and out.
  • I love the time to myself in the mornings.
  • I can’t wait to get my workout started today.
  • I will feel so amazing when I am done.


Put your index card by your alarm clock. When the alarm goes off, read your positive thoughts, even say them out loud. Since I can’t rely on my brain at 5am to remember anything positive, it helps to have them written down. Your mind believes what you tell it, so if you tell yourself you are tired, miserable, and you hate morning workouts, that will always be true for you. If you tell yourself repeatedly that you love morning workouts, you also eventually will believe it. It becomes true! So much of this is a mental battle. It may sound a little hokey, but it really works for me.
 

Tell me Lies (Tell Me Sweet Little Lies)

I tell myself a series of lies every morning to get myself out of bed and it works like a charm.

  • The first lie is I tell myself I just have to get up, that's all I have to do. No workout. Just get up. 
  • Then once I'm up, I tell myself I only have to do my warm up and if I am really not feeling it, then I can quit when the warmup is done. 
  • After I warm up, I tell myself I can just do an abbreviated workout, maybe just 15-20 minutes.

99.9% of the time, once I am in my workout, I don't want to stop early. It works like a charm. I always get up and I hardly ever quit after the warmup. What about those off days, where you really do want to quit after 15 minutes? Don't be too hard on yourself, as these days are likely few and far between, and a 15 minute workout is still better than a zero minute workout.

Consistency is Key

Working at consistency is the single most important thing you can do to transition to morning workouts. At first it might be hard while you are adjusting, but you have to be consistent with your new habit. Make an effort to go to bed at the same time every night. Get up the same time each morning, even if you are not working out. Maybe Thursday is your rest day or you would normally sleep later on the weekends. Stay on schedule by getting up early anyway to get a head start on your day. You will be amazed at how much you can accomplish while everyone else is sleeping. You could spend the time to get caught up on personal bills, paperwork, a cleaning project, school assignment, or a blog post. Maybe you just want to spend some alone time reading, relaxing, or meditating before the kids get up. The idea is that you get used to getting up early, even when it is not to workout. The more routine it is, the easier it becomes. The goal is to establish morning workouts as part of your everyday routine. 
 

Remember the 99% Rule

I can tell you that no matter how crappy I feel when I get out of bed, 99% of the time I feel better once I get going. 100% of the time, when it is over, I am glad I did it. That feeling you get after completing a morning workout is way better than the feeling you get from sleeping an extra hour. 

Are you ready to do this? What time is your alarm set for tomorrow? What works for you? Do you have any tips to share?

Like this post? It helps me when you share!

Coach Lea

I am a NASM personal trainer and RRCA adult distance running coach that specializes in strength training for runners. I offer in-person training in the Shredshed, as well as online training. If you are interested in a more in-depth running or strength training plan, please contact me. Have questions? I'd love to help. 

While I am a certified personal trainer, I am not your personal trainer. Since I don't know your exercise abilities, injury background or medical history, please see your doctor before beginning any new exercise program.