Benefits of A Good Night’s Sleep


by: James Pendergraft

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Sleep is a luxury for busy people, but everybody loves sleep. Sleep contributes to the overall health and well-being of an individual. It rejuvenates the body, mind, and spirit. There are many benefits of eight hours of sleep each night. Body tissues are repaired at the cellular level, and this helps to reduce stress, pollution, and infection. Sleep also helps us learn new skills. Research done by the Harvard Medical School students concluded that REM sleep is essential for learning new things. Waking up from a good night’s sleep normally puts you in a good mood and your mind is cleared from negative thoughts so you can think and study well when you have adequate sleep.

The Advantages of Getting Enough Sleep

Here are other ways in which a good night’s sleep can help you.

1) A good sleep keeps your heart healthy and strong and lowers high levels of stress ad inflammation in your body which leads to chronic diseases such as heart disease, strokes, diabetes, arthritis, hypertension, and cancer.

2) Sleep lowers stress hormone levels in the body. This will help the body fight aging and promote regeneration of the cells and organs.

3) Sleep also improves memory and cognitive function. When you sleep, your memory and organization skills are maintained properly. When you lack sleep, your memory function will suffer greatly. A study done in Germany found that people who obtained a good night’s sleep and full rest were three times likely to perform well on cognitive tasks, creativity, and problem solving skills than those who lack sleep.

4) Sleep can also control body weight because it can regulate the hormones that affect you appetite. A person that has proper sleep has a lower body mass index than those who sleep less. The appetite regulating hormone leptin decreases with lack of sleep and this signals fullness when we eat, while the hormone ghrelin that stimulates hunger increases when we lack sleep.

5) Sleep helps reduce disease risks. With just eight hours of sleep each night, the levels of the hormones melatonin and cortisol stay at a healthy range. Cortisol helps in preventing cell damage that can lead to cancer. With the help of cortisol, the immune system helps fight off potential infections.

These advantages are just a few of the many benefits that we can get as long as we have a good night’s sleep. It is crucial that we get enough sleep because if we don’t, we pay a price both physically and mentally. People around us are also affected when we lack sleep. We get emotional, short tempered and aggressive. Our reactions are slower and the chances of becoming involved in an accident increases. We all need to make the best effort to sleep appropriate.

Phobias And Anxiety Attacks


by: Ian Spencer

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Phobias are often considered as an integral part of anxiety disorders as they represent intense and illogical fears about things, places or specific situations. These fears often trigger serious anxiety attacks, which if left unattended might escalate into serious health problems. Unfortunately, the most common “treatment" people rely upon for phobias is avoidance. People understand their fear is unfounded, but cannot help themselves. Phobias are classified in five major categories:

1. Fear of animals - this includes fear of spiders, dogs, snakes, lizards, cockroaches and the like.

2. Fear of natural environment - this particular type of phobia covers fear of heights, fear of rain, fear of lightning, fear of sea, and so on

3. Fear of injections and blood - this covers all medical procedures and sight of blood and injury

4. Fear of particular situations and places - this phobia includes fear of closed spaces, darkness, elevators, tunnels, crowds, and the like

5. Fear of being out of control - this category covers things that leave the person helpless such as illness, accidents, vomiting, and so on.

A very thin line differentiates phobias from any type of anxiety disorder. You need to be able to see and understand this difference so you would know when and how to get help. Here are a few points that would help you identify the difference:

1. Difference between panic disorder and phobia - When you suffer from panic disorder, you would fear the onset of the anxiety attack that is generated when you are facing certain situations - such as flying, crowds, and the like. When you suffer from phobias, you would imagine yourself as a victim of such situations. For example, you fear flying because you see your airplane crashing, or you fear heights because you see yourself falling and so on.

2. Difference between post traumatic stress disorder and phobia - When you suffer from PTSD you would relive the trauma that inspires your fear. With phobias, the fear is generated by your imagination; you would imagine the worst type scenario and see yourself so vividly in it that it would trigger an anxiety attack.

3. Difference between social anxiety disorder and phobia - People suffering from SAD fear the possibility of embarrassing themselves by their own behavior in front of a crowd or audience; those suffering from phobias are scared of the situation itself as they imagine themselves being crushed or in mortal danger when surrounded by crowds.

If you suspect that you suffer from any type of phobia, it is very important that you seek medical help, as this can become a very powerful trigger for anxiety and panic attack when left unattended.

The Best Age Spots Treatment - No Pain, Just Younger-Looking and Healthy Skin


by: Marcia Kruger

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Just imagine if the best age spots treatment doesn't hurt. No acids, freezing, lasers or skin sanding but a proven effective skin care cream.

People in the Western world consider a tan beautiful and sexy. However, if you're thinking those are reasons to get one...think again. Here's why, too much sun exposure comes with consequences. The sun's UV rays are dangerous and can cause premature wrinkling, awful age spots and even skin cancers.

You could go cold turkey and practice prevention as a best age spots treatment. You'll have to stay out of the sun, use a good sun block and cover up though. But, if it's too late for preventative measures, you'll be looking for a way to get rid of the unsightly age spots.

First, you can opt for a not so skin healthy procedure. Take a look at some common treatments available for removing age spots:

• Bleaching -- a very common procedure. But, one main ingredient used is a chemical called hydroquinone which can cause irritation, redness and may not even be effective on your skin type.

• Skin Sanding -- also called dermabrasion. Used to: minimize the appearance of fine wrinkles, scars and sun damage. The procedure requires the careful scraping away of the top layers of the skin.

• Chemical Peels -- vary depending on the concentration of the acid used. Performed at a doctor's office, a peel will firm up skin and fade age spots. You'll need them on an ongoing basis and you won't notice an improvement for a few months.

• Freezing -- also called cryotherapy. The procedure involves using liquid nitrogen, or another freezing agent, and apply it to the age spots destroying the extra pigment.

• Laser -- they can produce amazing results, however, it's the most expensive put of the options.

Or, the skin healthy way which includes nourishing, rejuvenating and boosting your own body's collagen and elastin. The best age spots treatment is the natural whitening cream skin care product. A procedure that does not inflict pain!

Here's the secret, natural ingredients proven to work. Their names, Extrapone Nutgrass Root and Functional Keratin.

These ingredients are amazing, because they can enhance the overall health of your skin and make you look younger. Extrapone nutgrass root is a natural substance native to India. An ingredient shown to dramatically reduce melanin. And, in studies has shown it's able to reduce the melanin up to 40%.

Another awesome ingredient is the functional keratin. Say goodbye to the signs of aging, because functional keratin boosts your body's own regrowth of collagen and elastin. A safe substance that promotes firmness and elasticity, fewer wrinkles, and more youthful, healthier looking skin!

This is the easiest, safest and best age spots treatment plan for removing unwanted skin lesions.

Visit my website today where I cover more of the incredible natural ingredients that most people aren't aware of but can give you a huge edge in looking younger.

Using Essential Oils


by: Kathryn Caywood

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Many people find that they are always suffering from a sore back or from sore joints. Others find that they simply cannot get the relief they need from the day-to-day stress that they are dealing with. A break is needed and a sort of restart. But how can a person achieve such a thing? The best thing to do is to take advantage of someone from nature that was designed to be able to give you all of the benefits you need and desire the most. When you use essential oils, you are able to maintain a healthy body and a healthy mind.

The essential oils are concentrated oils that are derived from various plants. The seeds, leaves, flowers, and other parts of the plants are generally used in the making of the essential oils. There an extremely long list of various oils out there that can be used for a person's general well being. The exact essential oils that you would want to use would depend based on the exact problem or situation that you are trying to deal with. If you are having problems with sore muscles then you will want a particular kind of essential oil. If you are dealing with depression or anxiety, then there is a particular kind of essential oil that is perfect for that.

With all of the various uses for the oils, it is hard to imagine that you will be stuck with not being able to find something that will suit your personal needs. Just make sure that you are taking your time when selecting the oils to use to make sure that you are getting the best ones for you. With so many out there, it can be a little confusing. But this is why there are professionals out there to help you. Talk with someone who has great knowledge of essential oils. Stay away from the drug store oils as they are cheap and there will not be anyone there that will be able to assist you.

Instead, check out a reputable company that can assist you will not only the purchasing of your oils, but with any questions you have during and after your purchase. When you work with professionals that truly understand essential oils and everything that they can and cannot do for a person, you are going to see the most benefits. It is important to make sure that you truly understand all of the various ways that you can put some essential oils to work for you. The company you purchase your oils from should have a lot of detailed information for you to read through and their site should be easy to navigate. This is extremely important to make sure that you are getting the service that you deserve.

Once you have seen all of the wonders and magic that comes from the essential oils, make sure that you are advising your friends and family on what they too can do to change their lives. Everyone deserves to be free from physical and mental pain and frustration and essential oils can surely help.

Aromatherapy Oils and Their Uses


by: Kathryn Caywood

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Aromatherapy is the use of essential oils from various kinds of plants to heal the body, relieve physical pain, and to stable a person's mood. The essential oils that are used are concentrated extracts from the different parts of the plant. The concentrated oil can come from the roots, the bark, the leaves, seeds, and even the flowers. Aromatherapy using these oils can be applied through a massage, facial, bath, or complete body treatment. But there is not just one oil used in an aromatherapy massage.

A massage therapist will typically use about five oils combined into a mixture. The different oils that are used will depend on what the person seeking the treatment is looking to achieve from the massage. Someone who is struggling with sore muscles will probably be given an oil mixture that contains eucalyptus and peppermint. Someone else who simply wants a relaxing massage may get bergamot or lavender in the oil mix. When someone comes in for an aromatherapy massage, what he or she is trying to achieve or get relief from will be discussed. It is then that the various oils placed into the mix will be decided upon.

Even though some people may not fully know the benefits that come from aromatherapy uses, they will once they give it one chance. It takes just a few moments with the oils to see and feel a difference. And aromatherapy oils are not to be confused with perfumes. Perfumes contain chemicals where aromatherapy oils are natural oils from plants. This is not to say though that all of the various oils are non-toxin. There are a lot of them that are not for human consumption but there are a couple that can be as they have some dietary benefits to them.

The best thing to do is to not use any in your foods unless you have been clearly instructed to do so by a professional. It is also important to make sure that you are purchasing only high quality aromatherapy oils. If you are purchasing weak oils then you are not going to get all of the benefits that you want. You will also find that you are wasting your money so make sure that the oils you get are not watered down.

When you are looking for a place to buy your oils from, make sure that it is a company that focuses on the types of products that you need. These are the companies that know what they are doing and will be able to assist you with any questions should any come up. The oils from the drug stores or the department stores are the oils that you want to avoid. They are cheap and if you have questions, there is not going to be anyone there suitable to answer your concerns. In order to make sure that you are not wasting your time or money, make sure that you are doing business with a company that you can trust such as a company that takes their line of work seriously.

Scientific Wrestling: A New Dawn for an Old Styleh


by: Jake Shannon

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The Golden Age of Professional Wrestling is often thought of as the era of Frank Gotch, however the golden age, in terms of "technical" wrestling, occurred thereafter.

During the early 20th Century, namely the period of the teens to the late 20's, many of the best professionals began to excel with the use of their legs on the mat. These shooters were able to use their legs like another set of arms and were experts at controlling the legs and arms of their opponents. These talented grapplers were commonly called "leg" wrestlers and leg wrestling became part of the trade of the old time catch-as-catch-can masters. Famous names among them included Joe Stecher, Earl Caddock, "Tigerman" John Pesek, George Tragos, Ad Santel, and Clarence Eklund.

These men coupled brutal submissions (double wristlocks, neck cranks, and toeholds) with an ability to twist their opponents into pretzels. Not surprisingly, it was during this era when the term "stretch him out" came into existence. The foundational ride employed by the old time leg wrestler was the crossbody ride (commonly called the "single leg grapevine"). It was from here that they maneuvered their opponents into all sorts of positions that the human body was not meant to go.

They used the guillotine (abdominal stretch), banana split, crossfaces and reverse crossfaces off the crossbody ride, inside toeholds, the top scissor with a crossface (commonly called the "back mount"). They were also adept at scissoring the arms with their legs and using various nelson holds and double arm stretches to bring their opponents to the point where they felt as though their muscles were actually ripping apart.

Arguably the greatest among the old time leg wrestlers, pound for pound, was Clarence Eklund. Known as wrestling's Octopus, Eklund emerged as one of the most technical grapplers at the end of wrestling's shooting days. Barnstorming all over the United States, Eklund developed his leg wrestling style onto a plane all it's own. Sports writer Bill Sopris had this to say about the Octopus, "(Ek had) a knack to use the grapevine and hinder progress of an opponent with his legs&his forte was his legs&with this uncanny power, he was able to break leverages and wear down a man, finally beating him with a half-body scissor and bar arm."

Eklund weighed in at 175 lbs. and claimed the world light-heavyweight title from 1916 on. He solidified his claim at the age of 42 by defeating the best light-heavyweight wrestlers in the world to claim the undisputed world title in an Australian tournament in 1928. Among those he defeated were Clete Kauffman, the infamous Ad Santel, and Ted Thye. The story of Eklund's dominance of Ad Santel in their tournament shoot match has become the stuff of legend and solidified Eklund's claim that no man in the world could match him at 175lbs.

I spoke with with Dick Cardinal, one of the last old time shooters and a master of hook wresting, about Eklund. Dick had known Ted Thye (one of Eklund's opponents in the 1928 tournament). Thye commented to Dick that Eklund's performance against Santel was pure wrestling mastery. Thye's words about the event, according to Dick, were awe inspiring in and of themselves& Eklund dominated his foe in every phase of the game.

Another story that has become legendary is Eklund's visit several years after retirement to a workout in Oklahoma with the NCAA national wrestling championship team (Oklahoma A & M) for that year. The coach had invited Eklund down to review the team's progress.

Eklund walked around nodding appropriately when he saw something he liked. After awhile the Coach asked him if he'd like to have a workout. "Sure" Eklund said, "Line them up". The coach was astonished at this for he had only been suggesting a workout for Eklund with one of his lighter wrestlers; after all Eklund was in mid-40's and had been retired for years. Nevertheless he did as Eklund asked.

In the space of 15 minutes, 45 year old Clarence Eklund pinned every member of the national championship team, from the lightest to the heaviest. The heavyweight last the longest taking Eklund around 2 minutes to pin. Now, imagine a wrestler walking in today and pinning every member of the Oklahoma State wrestling team, or Iowa, or Minnesota, and you'll begin to get an idea of the technical mastery of wrestling's Octopus. Eklund was the king of scientific wrestling.

I had long feared that the technical style of the old time leg wrestlers had been forgotten over the years, since professional shooting really died out in the pro ranks after the late 20's. Then I stumbled across something that almost made me weep with joy. I came across an instructional video tape set called "LEGAL PAIN" by one of the greatest wrestlers of all time - Wade Schalles.

The leg riding/pinning style of Wade Schalles is the closest thing I have ever seen to the style of the Old Time Leg Wrestlers. Wade is a 4 time NCAA champion, and has pinned more World and National champions than any man in history. I have seen very few current amateur wrestlers who have the technical efficiency of the old time shooters, but Schalles takes leg riding, cradling, and pinning to a new level.

It is in the Schalles style of wrestling where you can see a bridge between the Old and the New. When I watch Wade's material it is very easy for me to visualize what men like Eklund, John Pesek, and Earl Caddock must have looked like on the mat. Everything is there: leverage, fulcrum, speed, technique, and most of all AGGRESSION.

If you were to add toeholds, neck cranks, and double wristlocks to the material that Wade presents and master it thoroughly, you would be a very dangerous person in a very short time, & that is no joke. I give this material 5 stars, but I would like to give it 10 (it is that good). It is, quite simply, the best leg riding and pinning material I have every seen.

For more on Clarence Eklund, see Wyoming's Wrestling Rancher: Life and History Of Clarence Eklund Champion Wrestler

For more on Wade Schalles, see below:

Jake Shannon is the author and creator of scientific wrestling. Have a look now at: http://www.scientificwrestling.com

Scientific Wrestling: Strength Training for the Eons


by: Jake Shannon

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I was first introduced to the traditional Indian gada (aka the mace) by my friend Karl Gotch a few years ago. As gracefully as Karl swung it, I was equally clumsy. I nearly knocked myself unconscious with it the first time I swung it. It was the toughest and most awkward exercise implement I had ever held. It was then and there that I challenged to master this bad boy.

This killer training implement was preferred by legendary wrestlers for centuries, from the Pehlwans of India to 'God of Wrestling' Karl Gotch. Historically, the mace has had both strong spiritual and combative connotations in folklore. Robert L. O'Connell, on page 119 of his book Ride of the Second Horseman: The Birth and Death of War points to the mace as the first weapon made specifically for use against other human beings (as opposed to a modified hunting weapon). In the Hindu religion, the mace of Vishnu is named "Kaumodaki" and represents the elemental force from which all other powers (both physical and mental) are derived.

Anyone that owns a genuine Macebell will find it fitting that mace-work is associated with the Indian god of strength, Hanuman. Hanuman is traditionally depicted in the form of monkey brandishing a mace, and this Mace is generally understood to symbolize bravery. Hanuman serves to remind the faithful that there is limitless power within each individual. In folklore, Hanuman focused all his energy into the worship of Lord Rama. This devotion freed him from all physical fatigue.

The mace is recognized as the main tool of the Pehlwans (the Hindu wrestlers of India). Competition trophies (symbolizing significant achievement) are made in the shape of gold and silver maces.

I have recently taken it upon myself to re-introduce mace-work to the West (with the wonderful help of Torque Athletic) with the development of the Macebell.

This brutal kettlebell/indian club hybrid actually originated in ancient Persia where they were known as "Meels". These "Meels" were utilized by the Pahlavan (ancient Persian grapplers and strongmen) to increase their strength, endurance, and health. The lighter version generally weighed in the range of ten to fifteen pounds and were used in high rep sets to build stamina while the heavier class weighed from anywhere between twenty-five to sixty pounds and were used to build great strength.

According to longtime Pahlavani researcher Farzad Nekoogar, Meels first made their way to India as late as the thirteenth century by Persian grapplers fleeing the Mongols. Indian mace swinging is derivative of ancient war club practice. Nearly every depiction of the gods and goddesses in Hindu religious art finds the deity brandishing a war mace of some kind.

Probably the most famous and feared embodiment of the Mace Swinging athlete was a man known as The Lion of the Punjab, "The Great Gama" Baksh. He was born into a famous family of grapplers from the northwestern part of India.

To give you the scope of his commanding physical presence, Gama had thirty inch thighs and a fifty-six inch chest. At only six years old, Gama's father died and this event, in many ways, drove him to excel in grappling. Gama's first feat of physicality came at a national physical culture competition held sometime around 1888. Despite the fact that Gama was a mere ten years old, permission was granted for him to compete when the powers that be learned that he was the son of the great wrestler Aziz Baksh.

As Joseph Alter, Ph.D. tells the story of Gama's abilities (see his article entitled GAMA THE WORLD CHAMPION: WRESTLING AND PHYSICAL CULTURE IN COLONIAL INDIA in the October 1995 edition of the journal Iron Game History for more);

"the main contest in the competition was to see who could do the highest number of repetitions of free squats called "bethaks". Indian wrestlers regularly do hundreds if not thousands every day, and even at ten years old Gama's daily routine included five hundred. Over four hundred wrestlers from around the country had gathered for the contest. after a number of hours had passed, only fifteen wrestlers were left exercising. At this point Jaswant Singh ended the contest saying that the ten year old boy was clearly the winner in such a field of stalwart national champions. Later, upon being asked how many (bethaks) he had done, Gama replied that he could not remember, but probably several thousand. In any event he was bed-ridden for a week.

1928: World Champion wrestler Stanislaus Zybysco with Gama before their match. Despite being 50 years old and outweighed by 50 lbs, Gama prevailed decidedly in an amazing 42 seconds.

Starting at the age of ten, Gama's daily exercise routine included not only five hundred bethaks, but five hundred dands (jack-knifing push-ups) as well. He is said to have regularly done three thousand bethaks and fifteen hundred dands and run one mile every day with a 120 pound stone ring around his neck.

In 1908, two years before he went to London to compete for the world championship belt, Gama's regimen was increased to five thousand bethaks and three thousand dands. Every morning he would also work out by wrestling with forty compatriot wrestlers in the royal court. Added to this, he began weight-lifting with a one hundred pound grind stone and a santola (wooden bar-bell made from a tree trunk).

His phenomenal diet and regimen of exercise was meant to develop a kind of pervasive subtle energy rather than just the kinetic power of particular muscle groups. Even at the age of fifty, Gama was still doing 6000 bethaks and 4000 dands every day, and wrestling with eighty compatriots in the royal court."

Clearly Gama's regimen encompassed much more than just the Mace but nonetheless they were a big part of every Indian wrestler's training.

During the nineteenth century, while stationed in India, the British army, utilized Indian-club exercises as part of its own military PT (physical training) regimen. In 1861, an American fitness enthusiast and businessman by the name of Sim D. Kehoe observed the art of Indian-club swinging while visiting England. Soon thereafter he began to produce and sell clubs on the American market in 1862.

Indian Clubs were used in the Olympic Games in 1904 in St. Louis under the auspices of "Rhythmic Gymnastics" and remained an Olympic sport until 1932. These days it seems like everything old is new again and certainly mace swinging should be no exception.

Today there is a resurgence of interest in Indian Clubs among modern physical culturists, especially combat athletes. The non-linear motions work the shoulder girdle and core like nothing else. The grip also benefits from mace-work. If you are interested in changing up your routine and challenging yourself with the Macebell, it is a brutal strength training implement that will earn your respect.

Scientific Wrestling: What's Your Attitude


by: Jake Shannon

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What is attitude?

Your attitude, when speaking of English Pugilism, is the posture you adopt when coming in to box. It is made up of your stance and guard. It's how you held yourself. Pugilism doesn't have a real "fighting stance" per say.

How you stood was more personal. It was based on a combination of things like your height, weight, reach, type of fighter, etc. While there were some that were more popular and commonly used, like the one used by Richard Humphries, there was at one time as many different attitudes as there were boxers.

Many top boxers were actually known by their attitude. Daniel Mendoza, considered to be the "Father of Scientific Boxing", was known for the refinements he added to the art, in particular his attitude. Let me explain first what exactly stance and guard are. Your stance is how you position your lower body, from the waist down. Your guard is how you position your body from the waist up. It's a little more then just your hands and feet. Let's start by looking at your stance.

Stance: First let's discuss the oldest question concerning stance, left foot forward or right foot forward. Strong side or weak side forward. Well here's what I have to say, it shouldn't matter which foot is forward. You want to be comfortable with both. Learn how to fight and strike effectively from both sides.

In fact, there are certain techniques which require this, such as switch step punching. Not to mention some attitudes have opposite hand and foot forward, meaning that if your left foot is forward you right hand is in the lead. So whatever stance you adopt, you want to be comfortable on both sides.

Now with that being said, let's move on. There are three basic stances; slim profile, medium profile, and square profile. This refers more to your hips then feet. Modern sport boxing uses an extremely slim profile. Pankration uses a square stance, meaning the hips are almost facing straight forward.

Next is height. Your can stand in a high, almost standing straight up manner, a semi-crouch, or a deep crouch. The taller you stand, the slimmer your profile usually is. Adversely, the deeper the crouch, the more square your stance.

What you want is to always have a secure base. Your balance is very important. You want to keep proper distance between your feet for the height you stand at. If you are in a high, slim stance, you want your feet to be about shoulder's width apart. In a deep crouch, you want them about one and a half the width of your shoulders.

Guard:

Now onto your guard. Some guards are dependent upon your stance. meaning that it is only good to adopt certain guards with certain stances. Not all the guards are this way. Some can be used with more then one stance.

Your guard is dependent upon the type of fighter you are. Arms held extended out is preferred by defensive fighters who like distance. Arms held tight in are used by those who like to close in for inside fighting and clinch fighting.

The main thing about your guard is that your guard should be defensive while still allowing for effective striking. What you want to do is hold your arms in such a position that they cover as many of your weak and vulnerable spots as possible, while still being able to reach and hit your opponent. While some of these will appear to you to be odd and not good for fighting, once you see how to strike in Pugilism plus what you just read, they will make more sense.

Attitude:

Modern High and Tight:

This attitude is popular today with Olympic boxing and now in MMA. It is a slim, high profiled stance. The guard is high up and tight in protecting the jaw.

Pankration/Pygmachia:

This is an ancient attitude from the Greek sports of Pankration and Pygmachia. The stance is a high, almost semi-crouch with a square profile. The Guard has the arms held extended to keep distance. This protects from the clinch and wrestling, while allowing for powerful forward kicking.

Philadelphia:

This is an attitude made popular with fighters from Philadelphia around the turn of the 20th century. It is a slim semi-crouch stance. The guard is held in tight to protect the jaw and body.

Shield:

This is an attitude developed by the author. It is a semi-crouch, with a slim profile. The guard is held tight in to protect the jaw and body. The rear hand is held across the solar plexus, ready to strike.

Dempsey:

This is the attitude used by the Heavyweight Champ, Jack Dempsey. This is a medium profile with a semi-crouch. The guard is held in front of the face. The rear hand is held about three inches in front of the chin. The lead hand about four inches in front of the rear hand.

Mendoza:

The attitude used by the "Father of Scientific Boxing", Daniel Mendoza. It is a semi-to deep-crouch, with a square profile. The guard is held extended in front of the chin. This promotes having two equal leads instead of one rear.

Humphries:

Attitude used by English Heavyweight Champ, Richard Humphries. It is a high, medium profile. The guard is held extended out, one hand in front of the chin, the other over the solar plexus.

Figg:

Attitude used by the "Father of Boxing", James Figg, in a portrait. A high, slim profiled stance. The hands are held extended in front of the body.

Carpentier:

Attitude used by French Heavyweight Champ, Georges Carpentier. It is what he called his "Adaptable" guard. It is a medium profile, with a high stance. The hands are held extended in front of the body. From here Carpentier could change his attitude to adapt to his opponent.

Carpentier's Crouch:

This attitude was used by Carpentier when he came in for inside fighting. It is a squared, deep-crouch. The guard is held in tight to protect the head, and to counter with tight hooks.

Remember, this is just a short list of different attitudes used throughout history. I teach these, plus others, to my students. I have them get a feel for each one. Find what works best for them. Everyone is different. What works for some, may not work for you. Personally, I take the advice of Georges Carpentier. Be adaptable. I like to change attitudes according to what my opponent does.

Once you have learned to properly generate power, throw a proper punch, and the basic strikes, try cycling through the different attitudes. Either shadow box or strike the bag, or both. Get a feel for each one. Are you comfortable? Can you get a solid strike from there? Are you able to move around easily? If you aren't comfortable, you won't fight well.

Is Sleep Really Necessary?


by: Sandra Prior

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What if I offered you the chance to extend your life by 10 years? I'm talking about extra time throughout your life, starting now. This offer affords you a whopping 25 percent more time to excel at your job, bond with the people you love, indulge in your dreams or just chill.

Is that something that might interest you? If it's not, stop reading and go to bed. You see, sweet slumber is the dead zone from which you'll reclaim that valuable time. I'd been adding items to my to-do list at a much faster rate than I was checking them off when I heard about the Uberman sleep cycle. This extreme form of polyphasic sleeping involves 20-minute naps every four hours. (A monophasic sleep pattern would be your typical eight-hour block of sleep every 24 hours.)

Some converts to Uberman claim that after an adjustment period, usually lasting anywhere from a week to three weeks, they feel no less alert than they would have if they'd been clocking eight hours a night. Leonardo da Vinci is said to have followed a sleep pattern akin to Uberman. Maybe that's what allowed him sufficient time to design prototypical versions of the helicopter, hang-glider, parachute and submarine, and paint the Mono Lisa and Last Supper. In fact, geniuses and military leaders throughout history have been linked with polyphasic and unconventional sleeping habits - Napoleon, Thomas Edison and Winston Churchill, to name a few. Who knows how different our world would be today if these men had bunked down at sunset?

I wasn't looking to invade Prussia, but I thought I could at least use some extra time to renew my driver's license and figure out my taxes. I was encouraged in this pursuit by Dr Claudio Stampi, the editor of Why We Nap: Evolution, Chronobiology, and Functions of Polyphasic and Ultrashort Sleep. In the early Eighties, Stampi began researching polyphasic sleep after he noticed his fellow long-distance sailboat-racing comrades adopting a polyphasic sleep pattern with minimal impairment. Since then, the elusive Stampi has been dodging interviewers (like me) and seeking ways to reduce sleep. I asked Dr Christopher Winter, a board-certified sleep-medicine specialist if he considered any of this to be a good idea.

He didn't. ‘All kinds of things could happen to individuals who are sleep deprived,’ he told me. ‘Changes in blood pressure, heart rate, hormones, glucose metabolism, temperature regulation and appetite can be seen quite quickly.’ And to boot, Winter says, certain theories even tack death onto that laundry list of results: ‘The sleepless individual is probably cold [due to increased energy expenditure], so hypothermia could be an eventual cause of death. So could catabolism - that is, an increased metabolic rate and protein breakdown - and susceptibility to disease from a weakened immune system.’

I kept on calling experts until I found one who would at least offer some measure of support for this plan. Dr Sara Mednick, author of Take a Nap Change Your Life, stopped far short of a rubber stamp, but she at least found an analogy that gave comfort. ‘As infants we were all vociferous proponents of polyphasic sleep,’ she noted, ‘and in late adulthood we're prone to more frequent napping. It leads me to think that the only reason we don't check out for refreshing 20-minute naps in the 60 years in-between is because we've learnt not to.’ It was a lesson I would try to unlearn.

I'm a pretty good candidate for an unconventional sleep schedule. I live alone, I have flexible work hours and I'm in good health. I also had a ton of television to catch up on. So I scheduled any appointments or meetings around my naps (at 2am, 6am, 10am, 2pm, 6pm and 10pm). I beefed up my DVD contract and bought a ‘learn Spanish’ CD-ROM, along with sheet music to Eddie Van Halen's most blistering guitar solos. In my suddenly overflowing spare time, I would become a culture-vulture Uberman in the flesh.

The first night, I crawled into bed at my usual time and left it 20 minutes later without having slept at all. So I kicked things off with a 2.30am screening of Raging Bull. The movie's final 20 minutes were accompanied by birdsong. I took a dawn stroll around the neighborhood (a first while sober) and returned to my apartment just in time for my 6am Ubernap. I dropped off quickly, though the buzz of my alarm just 20 minutes later drove murderous urges throughout my exhausted body. But relief was only a bath, a breakfast and two Sopranos episodes away.

Scientific data on the Uberman cycle is in scant supply, which makes it open season for the sleep docs to criticize it. ‘Getting a total of two hours of sleep per 24 on a chronic basis would seem to me to be impossible,’ says Winter. ‘My guess is that the anecdotal reports fail to include sleeping in which the individual is not aware he slept, or periods during which he slept beyond his 20- to 30-minute window.’

I didn't let that bug me, though, because I was also in touch with Puredoxyk, a prolific polyphasic blogger who began writing about her experiences with Uberman in 2000. She'd adhered to the cycle for six months until a job change knocked her off. Via email, she suggested that fiddly guitar solos, a second language and all things concentration-heavy were a little ambitious for my initial adaptation period.

‘You also need tasks where you don't have to be functioning at a high level,’ she wrote. Her suggestions: cleaning my apartment or darning socks. By all accounts, the initial adaptation period is by far the most arduous and critical time of the Uberman cycle. My body seemed to be yelling ‘What the f-ck?’ at me. A feeling of slight nausea was ever present. But this background hum of queasy fatigue was lightened by fleeting moments of euphoria. Nap proponent Mednick was happy to point out that ‘a broken clock is correct at least once a day. Your natural circadian cycles will still be pushing for you to be awake and alert at specific times, so you are just hitting a good high cycle at that point, regardless of what you do the rest of the time. The contrast to how bad you felt makes feeling good even better."

By the fourth day, I was cursing myself for signing on to the project. It was about this time that I began to get ulcers in my mouth, the beginnings of a cold and an outbreak of pimples. Meanwhile, my circle of friends agreed that I was edgy and irritable, and looked like death.

I was certainly in no state to write the Great American Novel or learn Spanish. I joylessly stared off into space for hours on end. As Winter theorizes, I might have been sleeping during those floaty periods without even realizing it. ‘When you think you are awake, you are probably having numerous microsleeps that you are consciously unaware of,’ he says. ‘The mind can be painfully unaware of sleep. Which is why self-reporting can be frankly incorrect.’

So maybe you shouldn't trust me on this one, but in the third week of Uberman, I swear I achieved a level of alertness and physical wellbeing that was not that much different from the good old monophasic days. It was at this critical juncture, I hoped, that I could really start reaping the benefits of this madness.

I referred back to the list of tasks I'd promised myself I'd tackle once I emerged from the ‘pain and suffering’ phase of Uberman. But sleeplessness robs me of the last five to 10 percent of my mental acuity, which is where I find the motivation to actually accomplish things. So instead of pushing my new agenda, I watched lots and lots of television and was frequently mistaken for a junkie in my local park. I doubt Da Vinci faced that problem.

Though I'd begun to retrieve my faculties, I found it very difficult to keep track of what day it was, and after abandoning my circadian routine, I was never sure when to shower, change clothes or brush my teeth. I did, however, establish a pattern whereby I ate a meal or snack immediately after a nap. On the six-meals-a-day plan, I was eating about 30 percent more food, but by the end of the third week, I discovered that I'd lost three kilograms, or about five percent of my body weight.

This was no surprise to Winter. ‘Rats deprived of sleep dramatically increased their eating despite losing weight before they died, in about 11 to 22 days,’ he said. ‘It is thought that much of the rats' weight loss came via increased activity to maintain body temperature.’

Week four saw the return of my ulcers and cold. This physical downturn coincided with my realization that on the Uberman plan, I had more time than I knew what to do with. Working for myself on my own schedule meant that I was able to commit to a month of Uberman, and ironically, it was the reason I had little use for those extra six hours a day. The white flag (in the form of an unused pillowcase) was about to go up. I'm no Uberman, it turns out.

Not even the French have enjoyed surrender as much as I did at 5pm on my final day. I relished brushing my teeth, turning off my phone and donning the sleep mask I'd kept from a long-haul flight. So amazing was the feeling of my body hitting the mattress that I couldn't stop myself from laughing. Within 30 seconds it seemed, I was out. I awoke at 8.30 the following morning with more than 15 hours of sweet slumber behind me. My close friends could see that I had thrown in the towel before I even announced it. ‘Thank God for that,’ said one friend as he saw me striding purposefully towards him. ‘You looked like shit for a month.’

Would I follow Uberman again? Absolutely not. Science aside, I know in my weary bones how critical sleep is. That's one lesson I take from the experience. I also learnt that my favorite Spanish word is siesta - but as a sleep supplement, not a substitute.

Why Fad Diets Are Never A Good Thing


by: Ted Bass

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The truth about diets is that they do not work. If you have struggled with weight loss in the past like I have, getting rid of the fat permanently, I know you too have been through too many diet fads.

Why Diets Do Not Work

75% of why we over eat is mental, but diet programs never take this fact into account. And what about the bad eating habits we have developed over years and years. And even the emotional attachment some of us have to food. The truth about diets is that losing weight is one thing, but unless the root cause of the weight gain is dealt with, the weight will come back

Temporary dieting is just that, temporary. 85% of people that engage in these "Fad" diets gain back their weight within 6 months of ending the diet and usually surpass their original weight within a year.

The diet and fitness business is a trillion dollar a year business now you know why. Most people are always on the lookout for a "magic weight loss pill" so they try new fads hoping they will find it.

Decide to make a change in your lifestyle starting today. This is easier said than done, and it will not be smooth sailing all the way!

It's Time For a Mind Transplant

Changing the way we look at food and how we relate to eating, is the fist step in any lasting weight loss plan. The brothers Bill and Jim from The Biggest Loser talk about this in there "http://www.shockingfatlosssecret.com/weight-loss/truth-about-diets-reviewis-this-just-another-dieting-fad" Program and I agree with them Because it took years to develop these bad eating habits, this will not be "cured" overnight. Look at food as you source of nourishment, do not use food as a comforter.

You may need some professional help in dealing with any depression or emotional imbalance, before you start your weight loss program this should be dealt with.

Get rid of all junk food and all other refined, overly processed foods. Do not allow any snacks, candy bars or non-nutritious food of any type into your home. Plan a list of foods that are healthy, wholesome and nourishing that you can prepare. Get in the habit of buying most of your foods fresh.

Commit to Doing This for Life.

Keep in mind that this is lifetime makeover in your eating habits, not a fad diet. Therefore, instead of cooking white rice, use brown rice; in place of refined, white pasta, eat whole-wheat pasta; instead of snacking on a candy bar, grab a piece of fruit; instead of a sugary beverage, drink water; instead of ice cream, have some non-sweetened, chilled applesauce.

After 6 p.m., do not eat anything or hang out in your kitchen. Leave the kitchen and if you get "snackish," have some fruit or water. Be consistent and repetitive, this is how we replace bad habits with good ones. Do not beat yourself up if you fall off the wagon! Doing so will make you depressed and lead you to eat more. Just get up and resume where you left off before you dropped off the wagon.

Do Not Stuff Yourself!.

You should also pair eating healthy foods with restricting the amount of food you at any given time. Eating less should be done, but you do not want to starve yourself. The body goes into a famine mode if it thinks you are keeping it from food by skipping meals. If you do this, it will become an uphill battle to lose weight, the opposite of what we want.

To lose weight, you should eat two or three meals a day. Eat your meals at the same time everyday and try never to skip breakfast. To keep your portion sizes under control, you should eat breakfast like a king, between 6:30 a.m. - 7:00 a.m. (or earlier), lunch like a queen, around 11:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. and dinner like a pauper, no later than 6 p.m. This approach trains you to eat smaller portions as you get later in the day

Try to get a baseline of the portion sizes when you first get started, measure the weight of your food and record it. Then over the course of 6 weeks, reduce the amount you eat by 40%. This must be done gradually over the 6 weeks. Most Americans eat over 100% more than they really need, so cut back on those portion sizes

We will not forget exercise, which is a must for keeping weight off. Exercise is a great big topic all by itself and I will talk about this in my nest article.

Proper Nutrition consistent Exercise, adequate Water, Sunshine, Temperance (everything in moderation) fresh Air, enough Rest and most importantly, Trust in God, is your ticket to a NEW START.

Benefits of Blood Pressure Monitoring


by: Victor Battles, M.D.

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It is becoming increasingly apparent among healthcare professionals and researchers in the field of hypertension, that the traditional practice of relying on arbitrary blood pressure measurements obtained in the clinic or a doctor's office setting, is not representative of one’s true pressure within the arteries and is not a reliable predictor of the risk of damage to the blood vessels and related organs, known as target organ damage, caused by the elevated pressure. This is partly due to the fact that the traditional approach has been to perform arbitrary reading once per month or even once every 3 months in a doctor's office or clinic, which is too small a number of readings to be representative of one's arterial pressure on a whole.

There are also many factors that can affect one's arterial pressure reading in a doctor’s office that are not operative outside of the doctor’s office. One illustration of this is the white-coat hypertension, a phenomenon in which a patient’s pressure is high in the doctor’s office but not elevated when measured outside of the doctor’s office, particularly at home. Conversely, there is another group of patients, usually younger patients, who tend have normal readings in the doctor’s office but elevated readings outside of the doctor's office. This is known as masked hypertension. It is estimated that 12 million people exhibit white coat hypertension and 20 million people have masked hypertension. This is important because, although doctors generally follow patients that have white coat hypertension, they don't usually treat the condition since arterial pressure is normal outside the office. On the other hand people with masked hypertension normally would not be treated because of normal readings in the doctor’s office, but obviously need to be treated since their arterial pressure is elevated outside of the doctor’s office which is where they spend most of their time.

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring with a machine which is worn on the arm and connected to a box worn on the belt that records reading every 15-30 minutes for the 24 hour period is considered to be most representative of one’s true arterial pressure and risk for vessel and related organ damage, but because of the expense of these machines measuring readings several times per day with wrist and cuff machines is an acceptable alternative. Although many of the monitoring-machine manufactures recommend performing readings at the same time each day and waiting at least five minutes in between readings if multiple readings are taking, experts in the field of hypertension recommend performing three readings in rapid succession in the morning and three readings in rapid succession at night and don't necessarily restrict the timing of the readings. The multiplicity of readings allows calculation of an average reading and recognition of significant variability of readings in some individuals. Variation in the timing of readings allows one to determine the effect that variable such as exercise, watching television, or consuming caffeine or alcohol has on readings.

In addition to increasing the diagnosis of hypertension, the data obtained from home monitoring can better enable doctors and other healthcare professionals make more rational and appropriate treatment decisions to improve blood pressure control. For example, if a patient is taking anti-hypertensive medication once daily at 8:00 AM but readings are consistently higher than target between 6:00 AM and 8:00 PM but normal at other times and perhaps somewhat low at night, it might be indicative of the fact that most of the medication has cleared the body two to three hours prior to the next scheduled dose, in which case the doctor might decide that night-time dosing or twice daily dosing is more appropriate.

For healthcare professionals to make optimal use of one's home monitoring endeavors the data must be presented to them in an organized and interpretable format. Although charts with hand-written data indicating the date, time and readings are generally acceptable, an ideal format would be have the charted information printed out from computer-generated entries with graphs generated based on the charted data. This is all performed by the ambulatory blood pressure monitors, but again, they are fairly expensive (ranging from $500.00 - $2,000.00). A very workable alternative however, is to use a desktop-based or Internet-based blood pressure tracker program which allows the manual input of data from the home monitor. The blood pressure tracker program saves the charted data and generates a time graph which can be presented to one's doctor at the time of an office visit or transmitted via the Internet prior to a visit. Microsoft provides a free Internet-based program known as Microsoft Healthvault Beta at the time of the writing of this article. Another free program which I highly recommend is a desktop application, Blood Pressure Tracker by SoundTells - Software for Health. In addition performing all of the aforementioned functions, it affords greater privacy because it is not Internet-based.

In summary, home blood pressure monitoring is more representative of one's true arterial pressure because several readings at different times of the day can be taken. Because of the multiplicity of readings, home monitoring is a better predictor of risk of target organ damage caused by elevated pressure. The frequency of readings also allows healthcare professionals to observe trends and variables which affect one's blood pressure and thus make better and informed treatment decisions to improve control. Better control in principle should reduce the frequency of doctor's visits and target organ damage, both of which should curtail medical expenses.