The Three Types of Coaching Relationships REPOST (all credit goes to Carl Hardwick, OPEX Fitness)

OPEX

As fitness coaches, our role extends beyond designing training programs and nutrition plans. Our impact hinges on the relationships we cultivate with our clients.

To build effective relationships, it’s helpful to understand different types of relationships. These fall into three categories: careless, careful, and caring relationships.

  1. Careless Relationships: Here, the focus is primarily on the coach and their values, leaving the client’s needs in the shadows. This approach can result in an impersonal training routine that might not resonate with the client, leading to disinterest and subpar results.
  2. Careful Relationships: In contrast, a careful relationship sees the coach prioritizing the client’s values over their own. While this ensures personalized training, it could cause the coach to neglect their expertise, potentially compromising the quality of the workout plan.
  3. Caring Relationships: Striking a balance, caring relationships synergize both the coach’s and client’s highest values. This harmonious approach ensures a tailored, effective plan that aligns with the client’s aspirations while leveraging the coach’s expertise.
3 relationship types coaching

As professional coaches, we aim to foster caring relationships, striking a balance between understanding our own value system and comprehending our client’s values. Achieving this necessitates candid conversations about each client’s motivations, barriers, and goals. Our understanding of the client’s background enables us to offer nuanced advice that resonates with their specific circumstances.

In the OPEX Coaching Certificate Program (CCP), I teach coaches to deliver personalized fitness coaching that results in meaningful behavior change and more fulfilling and successful fitness journeys. 

Enrollment is now open for my next mentorship group. If you’re ready to join a network of professional fitness coaches and learn a repeatable and proven system to coach any client, anywhere, then click the link below and apply now.

Carl Hardwick

Carl Hardwick OPEX CEO
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OPEX Fitness

7645 E Evans Road Ste 140 Scottsdale Arizona 85260 United States

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Soda REPOST

https://www.eatingwell.com/article/8049673/what-soda-does-to-your-body/?hid=c3fac09e68b5726ee2a2d62731690c60a5acaeb1&did=9629856-20230713&utm_campaign=daily-nosh_newsletter&utm_source=etg&utm_medium=email&utm_content=071323&lctg=c3fac09e68b5726ee2a2d62731690c60a5acaeb1

Effective Food Relief Requires Nutrition Education By: Jessica Gustafson

Food. Our need for it is common to every human on the planet. It has the power to conjure up forgotten memories and awaken our tastes to the possibilities of the future. It nourishes, inspires, connects, heals, comforts, and celebrates. Yet for many, it eludes. Food, when joined with words like insecurity, access, and relief […]

Effective Food Relief Requires Nutrition Education By: Jessica Gustafson

What 3 Common Food Cravings may be telling You REPOST (all credit to livestrong.com)

What These 3 Common Food Cravings Are Trying to Tell You

By Kim Conte Updated February 3, 2020 Fact Checked

Sometimes listening to your food cravings is better than brushing them off. When you’re craving french fries, a chocolate shake or a juicy steak, that simply means you want to eat these delicious foods and you want them now, right? Not necessarily.

According to Tiffany Mendell, RDN, CDN, a New York-based registered dietitian-nutritionist, there are several physiological reasons behind your cravings. The severity and frequency of your food hankerings can be affected by a combination of unhealthy lifestyle factors, such as being dehydrated, lack of sleep and an unbalanced diet.Making sure that you get enough healthy fat, protein and complex carbohydrates to satisfy you is important for keeping cravings at bay. Stress can also play an important role: “It’s hypothesized that cortisol — one of the body’s stress hormones — may potentiate the reward system in the brain with food and cravings, making it more difficult for a person to resist a craving,” Mendell tells LIVESTRONG.com.

And, of course, insufficient sleep can also have an effect by altering the body’s hunger hormones and causing us to produce more of a hormone called ghrelin (which increases hunger and appetite) and less leptin (aka the satiety hormone), according to a March 2016 study published in the journal Sleep.

Read on to find out what’s possibly behind your cravings, and how you can honor them in a way that’s good for your body

1. If You’re Craving Salty Foods, You May Be DehydratedClose-up of friends eating during an outdoor dinnerBefore you reach for another chip, trying drinking a glass of water. Whether it’s because you drank too much alcohol last night, are on a long flight or another thirst-inducing situation — can come with some serious cravings for salt.”Sodium is a major electrolyte in the body; electrolytes (which are minerals) help to maintain fluid balance in the body,” Mendell says. “Dehydration is essentially a loss of electrolytes and fluid that can occur from excess sweating, heavy alcohol intake or vomiting/diarrhea. So a craving for salt could indicate dehydration as the body is looking to restore electrolyte and fluid balance. “Additionally, some research has shown that salt cravings can indicate mild calcium deficiency in the body, according to the Institute of Medicine. However, more research needs to be done in order to solidify the connection between salt cravings and a need for calcium-rich foods.A Healthy Way to Satisfy Your CravingGood choices for salty food cravings include dried seaweed, tomato juice, salted almonds or broth. 2. If You’re Craving Fatty Foods, You May Need More Sleepfish and chips fried cod, french friesGoing to sleep too late might cause you to crave fried foods. As Mendell explained, not catching enough zzzs can alter the body’s hunger hormones, ghrelin and leptin. There’s also research showing that sleep deprivation can cause a person to eat an average of 385 extra calories the next day, according to a November 2016 meta-analysis in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. What’s more, lack of sleep can have a direct effect on cravings — and one type of food in particular. “Insufficient sleep can also raise the blood level of chemical compounds called endocannabinoids,” Mendell says. “This increases the reward value of food and causes cravings for high-fat, calorie-dense foods.” If you typically struggle with intense food cravings, try to focus on improving your sleep habits and hygiene.

If you simply can’t resist your craving for your sweet treat of choice, try eating a small portion of it after eating a balanced meal first. And if you know you won’t be able to stick with a small piece, opt for some fresh fruit or a square of dark chocolate.

Read more: The 7 Best Sweet Snack Ideas to Beat Your Sugar CravingsThe Bottom Line on CravingsWhen it comes to resisting cravings, Mendell reminds us that it’s not always about willpower. In fact, foods that are high in sugar and salt — namely, processed foods — have a powerful effect on our brains and keep us wanting more. That’s why it’s so difficult for you to stop eating a bag of pretzels while a bag of carrots is an entirely different story. “Our taste buds are very malleable and repeated exposure tends to influence our taste buds to prefer certain foods,” she says.So if you want to stop craving processed foods high in sugar and salt, start with a diet of mostly unprocessed, whole foods, and your taste buds should adjust accordingly.

A Healthy Way to Satisfy Your CravingOpt for healthy fats such as avocado, nuts and nut butter, seeds and fish over fried foods.

3. If You’re Craving Sugary Foods, You May Need to Eat a More Balanced Diet. A diet too high in sugar and refined carbohydrates can cause intense cravings. Cravings can happen for a few reasons. “Repeated exposure to overly sweet foods skews people’s taste buds,” Mendell says. “It makes less sweet foods like fruit and vegetables seem less palatable.”This is particularly bad news for people who take in a lot of artificial sweeteners (think: diet sodas and sugar-free snack foods), which are 200 to 600 times sweeter than table sugar, per a June 2010 study in the Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.Additionally, if your diet is too high in refined carbohydrates — which can cause a rapid spike and drop in blood sugar levels — you’ll crave sugary foods to raise your blood sugar again.

A Healthy Way to Satisfy Your Craving

Supplements Touting Brain Benefits May Contain Unauthorized Ingredient REPOST THIS POST WAS ORIGINALLY SEEN ON cookwithkathy

 

Lisa Rapaport wrote . . . . . . . . .

Many supplements marketed for brain health may contain piracetam, an ingredient not proven effective for preventing or easing dementia or cognitive impairment and not approved for sale in the U.S., researchers say.

In an analysis of five products purchased online, researchers found that four contained piracetam, sometimes in dangerously high amounts. The fifth, which was labeled and sold as piracetam, contained no detectable amount of the drug.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warned last February that so-called cognitive enhancement supplements may be ineffective, unsafe and could prevent patients from getting the correct diagnosis and treatment.

“Any products making unproven drug claims could mislead consumers to believe that such therapies exist and keep them from accessing therapies that are known to help support the symptoms of the disease, or worse as some fraudulent treatments can cause serious or even fatal injuries,” then-FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb said in a statement.

While the FDA didn’t single out piracetam, it’s one of the more common and worrisome ingredients in unapproved cognitive enhancement supplements, researchers note in JAMA Internal Medicine.

For the study, Dr. Pieter Cohen of Somerville Hospital Primary Care in Massachusetts and colleagues searched online for supplements with piracetam in the description or ingredient list, then ordered samples to test in a lab and see how much of the ingredient they contained.

They tested a total of 10 samples from four manufacturers. The amount of piracetam contained in the recommended servings ranged from 831 mg to 1,542 mg. In the four products that contained the ingredient, the amount of piracetam ranged from 85% to 188% of the amount claimed on the label.

Following the manufacturers’ recommendations, consumers could be exposed to quantities ranging from 831 mg to 11,283 mg of piracetam per day, depending on the brand consumed, the researchers note.

In Europe, where piracetam is prescribed for disorders including dementia and cognitive impairment, tablets are typically 800 mg or 1,200 mg and daily dosing tends to be 2,400 mg to 4,800 mg, the study team notes.

At doses lower than researchers found in some supplements available for purchase in the U.S., side effects of piracetam include anxiety, insomnia, agitation, depression, drowsiness and weight gain, the authors write.

Side effects may be worse at higher doses, although the precise risks are unknown, they point out.

Beyond the small number of samples tested, other limitations of the study include the possibility that amounts of piracetam in the supplements might vary over time, the study authors note.

Even so, consumers should steer clear of piracetam supplements, given the lack of evidence that it helps cognition and the potential harmful side effects, the researchers conclude.

“Clinicians should advise patients that supplements marketed as cognitive enhancers may contain prohibited drugs at supratherapeutic doses,” the study authors warn.

Source: Reuters 

 

In closing…

As you well know, there’s a lot of scams, fraud out there when it comes to “this fitness thing of ours”. Do your due diligence. Research. Learn how your body works. Make good decisions in eating, training, stress management, etc. These are the basics.

THE BASICS ALWAYS WIN.

Top 13 Nootropic Supplements to Sharpen Mind & Mood — Dr. Eddy Bettermann MD REPOST

Source: Top 13 Nootropic Supplements to Sharpen Mind & Mood by Dr. Edward Group If you want a nutritional supplement to enhance your brain function — short-term memory, focus, creativity, mood, or motivation — look for a nootropic. The term nootropic comes from the Greek root words nóos (mind) and tropé (turning). Natural nootropics can help older adults stay sharp, […]

via Top 13 Nootropic Supplements to Sharpen Mind & Mood — Dr. Eddy Bettermann MD