Wednesday 19 July 2023

Red Light Therapy Device Now at THP Total Health Performance

 

Red Light Therapy Device Now at THP Total Health Performance


Red light therapy total health performance Narellan Exercise physiology
Red light therapy panel

Red Light Therapy


We now have red light therapy devices at the gym.


There are many benefits to red light therapy such as reduced inflammation, improved circulation, reduced recovery time, increased cellular function/energy, improvement in skin health, improvement in hormonal health, improvement in gut health, and improvement in cognitive health.


So, you can use red light therapy to recover from sessions, speed up the healing of injuries, and optimize hormonal levels for example.


"Red light therapy, also known as photobiomodulation (PBM), is a natural and non-invasive therapy that uses specific wavelengths of red and near-infrared (NIR) light to deliver beneficial effects to the skin and cells. This therapy involves shining high-quality LED lights on the body to stimulate the mitochondria in the cells. The photons of red and NIR light interact with the mitochondria during cellular respiration, promoting the production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), an energy-carrying molecule. This process enhances the body's ability to reduce inflammation and support healing."


20 minutes of red light therapy per day can lead to these benefits. I will go into more detail on each of the benefits in coming weeks. If you want to do a session we have the full body panels up and running and we also have smaller devices to target specific areas. Contact us to book in for a session.

Monday 17 July 2023

Don't Use Phones During Training

 

Don't Use Phones During Training

"Don't use phones during training" - Charles Poliquin.


Many people are now starting to speak of this, but like many topics, Charles was way ahead of his time explaining the reasons as to why you shouldn't use your phone during training.


Don’t use your phone while you train. If you keep your phone in your pocket or in contact with your body while you train to listen to music then you could be lowering your androgens by as much as 31%. You do not want to be making 31% less testosterone. Most of us are already deficient so you want to optimize this as much as possible.


Close contact with your phone all day is bad for you anyway not just while you train, so you should try to limit the amount of time you spend on that device.


In Finland, where Nokia comes from, they have the most brain cancer in the world due to their use of mobile phones. There is a direct correlation between the time you spend beside your mobile phone and cancer.


Do not sleep with it next to your head. Put it on flight mode if you use it for an alarm and put it as far away from you as possible.


Another problem with phones is that the constant looking for updates, messages, likes or comments depletes your dopamine. Well, to lift big weights you need dopamine, so checking your phone constantly means you are wasting the most important neurotransmitter for neural drive.


Mobile phones are a training killer. You should stay away from them.


Related articles:

Limit radiation emitted by your phone

Friday 14 July 2023

3 Things for Continual Progress in the Gym

 

3 Things for Continual Progress in the Gym


Here are 3 more tips from the great Charles Poliquin on how to make continual progress in the gym.


3 Things for Continual Progress in the Gym


Tip 1 – never increase the quantity of training at the expense of quality


Some days your strength may be up but your work capacity is down. Don’t drop the intensity, drop the volume. For example, let’s say you did bench and got 100kg x 5 reps for all 5 sets on Monday. Then on Thursday you do the same workout and do 100kg x 5 reps for 2 sets, then the third set you only get 1 rep. Stop there, no garbage sets.


It won’t do you any good to lower the weight and then proceed for the next two sets. It will just tap into your recovery and make the next session a struggle as well.


Tip 2 2% rule of progress


You should be able to add 2% more to the bar or add an extra rep every workout. If you are unable to do this then you are not recovering properly between workouts. It could be from not sleeping well, not eating enough, eating poor quality foods, spending too much time in front of screens, to name a few things.


So if you squat 100kg for 5 reps in workout one then in the next workout you should be able to squat 102kg for 5 reps or 100kg for 6 reps. This is why it is important to record all your weights and reps correctly so we can monitor your progress and use the correct loads.


Tip 3 – you have to take the time to lay the foundation


Be patient and take your time getting strong. Everyone who decides they need to get stronger wants it immediately. This is not the way to go about it and will often lead to stagnation and injury. You are better off bringing up your weak points and then progressing from there. We do this in your programs but for those of you on distance programs the next thing is to ensure you have perfect technique on each rep and don’t “cheat” do lift a load that you aren’t capable of doing with correct technique. You want to work to technical failure not absolute failure.


Getting strong takes many years of consistent hard work. It isn’t something that will happen in 12 weeks. Sure you will improve from your starting point but to get really strong takes a long time.