Friday, May 27, 2016
The Perfect Workout Featured in the Washington Post
http://goo.gl/9PSXIN We would like to thank the Washington Post for choosing us to be featured in an amazing article that helps spread the message about Slow Motion Strength Training and the amazing results associated with this scientifically proven method. http://ift.tt/1WNSaEi The Perfect Workout Redondo Beach 220 S Pacific Coast Hwy #102, Redondo Beach, CA 90277, United States +1 310-697-1238
Monday, May 23, 2016
Washington Post Features The Perfect Workout
Thanks to The Washington Post for featuring us in an article that helps spread the message about Slow Motion Strength Training and its amazing results.
Here's the original article:
Slow-motion strength training is
hard — and fast
By Rachel
Pomerance Berl
One of
the newest fitness studios in the D.C. area feels less like a gym and more like
a physical therapist’s office. The Perfect
Workout, which opened in August in Bethesda and Falls Church, offers
clients personal training in a quiet, no-frills space filled with Nautilus
equipment and framed testimonials (many from clients of an advanced age). It
promises a complete workout in just two short sessions per week.
The
drill: A high-intensity, low-impact program known as slow-motion strength training, in which gradually lifting and releasing weights without the aid of
rest or momentum brings muscles to exhaustion. It’s extremely difficult. It’s
also only 20 minutes.
Though
The Perfect Workout, a California-based outfit founded in 1999, is new to the
East Coast, the concept isn’t.
The
Perfect Workout and other slow-motion training companies such as SuperSlow
Zone, which has a location in Sterling, Va., and InForm Fitness, which has
a studio in Leesburg, Va., cite principles outlined just over 30 years ago by
fitness professional Ken Hutchins. In slowing down movements to safely train
women with osteoporosis, Hutchins concluded that the technique builds muscle
more effectively than conventional weight training, although others have
contested this assertion.
The
effectiveness of slow-motion strength training depends on the individual,
according to Lee Jordan, a Florida trainer and spokesman for the American
Council on Exercise, but it offers a broad range of people a safe and viable
program.
Like
high-intensity interval training, Jordan says, it seeks to remove the top barrier
to exercise: time. But unlike high-intensity interval training (“by its very
nature, it’s extreme,” he says), slow-motion strength training is accessible to
anyone.
While
advocates of slow-motion strength training claim it satisfies the need for cardiovascular
activity, Jordan and other fitness experts argue that people require a mix of
aerobic activity and strength training.
Still,
the key to an exercise routine is sticking to that routine. And some clients
say this program works.
“People
love to hate this place,” says Nicole Gustavson, owner of Leesburg’s InForm
Fitness. “But they keep coming back because they get results.”
At
SuperSlow Zone in Sterling, Jannet Anmahian, 83, makes a show of exhaustion
from her weight machine — sticking out her tongue and clasping her hands
together in a sarcastic plea for help.
“I
always complain,” she says, calling it “part of the game.”
Anmahian
adds that “there are no words” to describe the value of this program, which
she’s followed for more than 30 years and has no intention of stopping.
Mark
Ello, 51, of Leesburg, began training at SuperSlow Zone in 2002 to shape up for
his 20-year high school reunion. Since then, he reports better body composition
plus lower blood sugar and cholesterol.
“It’s
like a Chevy,” he says of the workout. “It’s not sexy, but it gets you from
point A to point B.”
Click Here to read the original Washington post article:
What do you think of the article? Share your thoughts below!
Monday, May 16, 2016
Personal Trainer Redondo Beach
The Perfect Workout Redondo Beach
220 S Pacific Coast Hwy #102,
Redondo Beach, CA 90277, United States
+1 310-697-1238
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