Archive for February, 2010

Do You Think and Act Like an Olympian?

Since the Winter Olympics began I’ve been mesmerized by these world class athletes. It’s not only the incredible skills they possess that I’m in awe of but the sheer dedication to their sport, the intensity of their focus, the willingness to challenge themselves, the commitment to their rigorous training schedules, their ability to recover from a dissapointing performance as well as their ability to envision their dreams of achieving an Olympic medal manifest into reality that’s been so inspiring to watch.

When you take a closer look at the characteristics these athletes all share, it’s easy to see that these are the ingredients necessary for success-not just as an Olympian but for anything worth achieving in life. Wouldn’t these same qualities be necessary if you wanted to achieve success in losing weight, becoming fit, improving your relationships, beginning a new career or even just trying to change some old habits that weren’t working for you anymore? Think about it, if any of these Olympic atheles didn’t push themselves past their comfort zones, if they let their negative self talk take over or allow a setback to derail them we wouldn’t be watching them today.

Watching them has inspired me to take my training and my business to another level. If you’ve been reading the last few newsletters and posts, you already know (and may be sick of hearing about it already!) about my first upcoming half marathon (13.1 miles). Call me crazy but this experience inspired me to submit my application for the New York City Marathon (26.2 miles.) Participants run based on a lottery drawing so I entered and if I get chosen…let the training begin!

As far as business goes, things are “movin’ and shakin’ “ there too. I realized how much I missed connecting face to face with clients so I’ve been busy creating an exciting new live, face to face, group coaching program for Long Island, NYC women which will be rolled out this May (details coming soon).

What can you take away from the Olympic spirit and apply to your life so you can finally live the life you crave? Remember this-it’s not that anyone who’s achieved anything significant or spectacular has anything different from you. They’ve just tapped into their passion, envisioned a goal and choose to relentlessly pursue it until their dreams become reality.

What’s next for you? Leave a comment,  I’d love to read it!

What Training for My First Half Marathon Has Taught Me…

So about a month ago, I was invited to Disney’s Magic Kingdom. It sounded incredible, complete VIP treatment from start to finish. As I continued to hear what these few days would include, it sounded like a dream come true (but then again, it’s Disney, right?) But there was a catch. I was invited to be a part of this exciting opportunity if…I ran the Disney Princess Half Marathon!

Up to this point, I’d never run more than 7 miles. How was I going to go from 7 miles to 13.1 miles in less than 6 weeks? As my head started spinning with ways to politely say “no thanks”, I did what I always do…I said yes before I could successfully talk myself out it!

I’ve come to learn that opportunities present themselves to us constantly and within those opportunities lies the capacity for us to learn, grow and become stronger, better and wiser. They also require us to burst right past our warm, safe and cushy comfort zones but I’ve also learned that right past our comfort zone is where all the great stuff is. So, trusting my instinct that this too will be an exciting adventure leading to who knows what, I made the decision to let the training begin.

First I ran a solid 7 miles, just to make sure I felt strong and secure with a solid place for my training to start. Sweaty, tired but confident, I challenged myself to run 8 miles and loaded up my ipod with songs to power me through.

Success! Ok, so I stopped a few times but I still did it.

Now I’m really starting to get into the whole running thing so I did what I always do when I want to learn something new-I went to the pros. I went to a specialty running store nearby and loaded up on new running shoes, some other fun running gear and even spoke to one of the salespeople who was a track coach. He generously mapped out a training schedule for me which seemed challenging but realistic. Armed and ready with my new gear I felt completely equipped to take my training to the next level.

I don’t know if it was the new running shoes or new mindset but I ran 10 miles on my next run. Woo hoo! I think I may have been doing a geeky victory dance because all 4 kids gave me that look like “wow, mom’s really lost it now.”

So now I’m thinking that 13.1 miles will be a breeze until…it wasn’t. I was having trouble getting past the 10 mile mark so I decided to hire the toughest, meanest and most demanding personal trainer/coach I could find…me. I mean, my clients said I was brutal at times so I hired myself based on their recommendation. :)

On the next run, I set a goal of running 11 miles and promised myself a manicure/pedicure as a reward for reaching my goal. Success! Off to the nail salon I went.

Now, new running shoes, new gear, new mindset, pretty hands and feet, it was time to run my first 13.1 miles. Success! I’m not saying it was easy, but I did it.

With a new record of 13.1 under my running belt, I’ve run 13.1 miles 3 more times. Every run has been different. Some where I thought I wouldn’t finish, others where I was completely distracted and one where I was completely “in the zone” and didn’t know how the time went by so fast! It was just after that run that I had a quick flash of what it must be like to run the New York City Marathon (26.2 miles). Knowing that runners are selected by lottery and aren’t immediately accepted just by registering, I registered and decided that if I’m randomly chosen in the lottery, then I’ll train for that too! (is that bad that I’m secretly hoping I’m not picked?!)

So here’s my latest challenge. Every run I’ve done has only been on a treadmill. I’m in New York and honestly, the thought of running in 30 degree temperature just isn’t that appealing. But it’s time to take it outside and see if I can run anywhere close to that amount on the streets. I’m sure once I do I’ll be celebrating again. If you can’t celebrate your accomplishments, what fun is that?!

Here’s what this training has taught me:

  • Opportunities are everywhere and you don’t know where they lead. Look for them and say “yes” before your fear can stop you.
  • Of course challenges are hard and that’s why the success is so sweet! Take them on and appreciate whatever results emerge as a result of them.
  • Get the support you need-get the right gear, get help from people who’ve been there, learn from everyone you can. People feel great when they can help you-don’t let your pride deprive them of giving you their gift!
  • While conditioning is important, mindset is crucial. Negative thoughts, feelings and distractions feel like you’ve added 100 pounds to your legs when you’re trying to run. Get your head in the right place and the body will follow.
  • Don’t be hard on yourself, judge yourself and don’t compare yourself to anyone else. Speak and treat yourself how you’d speak or treat your best friend-with compassion, love and kindness.
  • Celebrate any and all success! Whether you’re giving yourself a pat on the back, a gold star, a new song for your ipod or a mani/pedi, rewarding yourself for a job well done (or even done ok under the circumstances!) deserves a reward. It also motivates you to continue.
  • Have fun! Stop taking yourself so seriously. That stress alone can cause physical, mental and emotional wear and tear. Think, act and behave like a kid-why should kids have all the fun?!
  • Parents-your kids are watching you. The qualities for success in fitness are the same qualities for success in life. Patience, determination, perseverance, courage, commitment, vision and consistency among others. Your kids are learning so much by watching how you react and respond to challenges you take on and achieve so be the role model you’d want them to have. And, it’s ok to do a geeky victory dance. It gives your kids another reason to strive to be different…and much cooler than you!
Time to bundle up and go for that run outside. I have no idea how it will go but I do plan on thinking up a fun reward just for heading out there! I’d love to hear your thoughts, comment and share!

It’s All About You…

OK, so usually I’m writing about the six areas that I’ve found women struggle with most. Those are the areas that are covered within my book: The Lifestyle Fitness Program: A Six Part Plan So Every Mom Can Look, Feel and Live Her Best (recommended by Parenting Magazine) and they’re also the areas I focus on when speaking and coaching. Those six areas are:

  • Nutrition/Weight Loss
  • Fitness
  • Stress Control
  • Emotional Health
  • Relationship Wellness
  • Spirituality
This week, it’s all about you. Instead of me offering information I think you want to learn about, comment and share what’s on your mind and let’s get a dialogue going!
Feel free to submit your questions in any of these areas and I’ll do my best to answer. If too many questions come in and I can’t type the answers quickly enough, I’ll schedule a FREE teleseminar where I can answer your questions there. Fair enough?
OK, fire away!
Looking forward to hearing what’s on your mind!
Here’s to looking, feeling and living your best,
Debi

What to Expect

One of the questions I’m asked on a regular basis is, “What’s it like to work with you as a personal coach?” And of course, the answer is that the experience will be different for everyone, because coaching, especially the way I do it, is a highly personalized experience.

But recently I was interviewed on this very topic and I thought it might be helpful to share the article so you can learn a little more about what it’s like to work with me.

Is a Personal Coach the Answer? An Interview with Debi Silber, The Mojo Coach®

by Kristen Bassick

If you are looking for help losing weight and improving your health, there are an endless array of programs available to you. From DVDs to video games, from exercise machines to meals delivered to your door, all of them promise to turn your life around and deliver a new you in the comfort of your own home.

But if you are like most women, you have probably tried many of these options and found that they didn’t work for you as you had hoped. The programs and products may be great, but unless you have the right encouragement and the right mindset, there may be lots of things standing in the way of your success.

This is where working with a personal trainer might be the answer for you. In order to understand the benefits of working with a personal trainer, I interviewed Debi Silber, known as The Mojo Coach®.Debi is a certified personal trainer, a Registered Dietitian with a master’s degree in nutrition and a certified Whole Health Coach. She is also the author of The Lifestyle Fitness Program: A Six Part Plan So Every Mom Can Look, Feel and Live Her Best, which has received high praise from Newsday and a recommendation from Parenting Magazine.

Debi, when a client starts working with you, what is the first meeting like?

When someone starts working with me, I try to find out as much about them as they’re ready to share. Because I’ve found that in seeing hundreds of clients over almost 20 years, issues fall within one of six key areas, I try to uncover as much as I can within those six areas so we can see where that specific client’s greatest struggles lie.

The six areas that I cover are nutrition/weight loss, fitness, stress control, emotional health, relationship wellness and spirituality. These areas are also the basis of my book.

Often, someone will come to me wanting to lose weight. Once we get to talking, she often finds that the weight issue has little to do with the food she’s eating but may have to do with her relationships, stress level, lack of sleep, etc. So, often the clients are not aware of the key issue that needs to be addressed until we discover it during our conversation. Only when I know what’s really going on and through mindfully and deeply listening and asking questions do I create a plan based on where they are, where they want to go, their readiness, what they were ready to share with me and other factors.

So diet and fitness aren’t always the focus of your work with your clients?

For many of my clients, beginning with diet or fitness is the easiest place to begin because it’s often the least personal. It’s easier for them to talk about which healthy snacks to choose or put them through a workout than it is to address something that’s really holding them back such as their levels or stress or toxic relationships that have done severe damage to their emotional health and self esteem. While clients still achieve great success when they focus on diet and fitness, lasting success occurs when we focus on where their greatest struggles are and what’s holding a client back the most. So yes, typically diet and fitness are areas of focus but clients who’ve achieved long term health, wellness and happiness focus on other lifestyle issues we cover in depth as well.

Once they are able to address the areas that are holding them back, they feel such success and pride in their ability to form new habits. The improvement in self esteem and confidence leads them to want to pursue the other areas to keep getting better!

Wow, it sounds like you really take the time to figure out what your clients need. What kind of guidance can a client expect from you in terms of diet/nutrition?

The information I offer depends on what their obstacles are and what would work for them based on their personalities, preferences, lifestyles, and goals. Some clients prefer a very structured program, so we’ll work together to create specific recommendations with a food diary including emotions/hunger level while eating.

Others don’t work well with structure, but are looking for strategies to handle situations like late night or late afternoon eating. Some with a history of emotional eating need to understand why they’ve chosen that behavior and learn what need it’s fulfilled and how to stop.

I’ve found that most women want to leave with something in their hands so if they don’t leave with a personalized food diary around their obstacles we’ll often create a schedule that may involve things like when to fit in a workout, when to plan meals, even when to take time for business planning and their own self care!

So the nutritional advice is very personalized. Do you also make specific recommendations for what type of exercise each client should be doing?

My fitness recommendations depend on how often I’m seeing someone and what they’re (hopefully) doing without me. I see clients anywhere from 1-3 times per week. I have a fully equipped gym and I personalize every program around the specific needs of that particular client. Before we even begin though, it’s crucial for me to know their fitness and health level before suggesting anything!

Some do all of their exercise during their time with me. Often, while I am coaching someone and talking about how to handle their stress, relationships, and emotional health, I’ll put them on the treadmill while they talk so they get as much out of me and their time as possible!

Some clients may be getting in all of their strength training work with me, so I’ll suggest cardio and other workouts to do on their own. I also teach my clients how to monitor their workout routines so they get the most out of each session on their own. I also have 2 certifications in pre/post natal fitness so pregnant clients can work out safely and effectively with me too. After all, labor and delivery are endurance events!

I’ll push someone as much as they want and as much as they’re ready for without turning them off to exercise. Some want to be sore the next day, some want to just feel like they’ve worked out a little bit. Some just want to know that they’re creating a new, healthy habit and haven taken the time for their own self-care. Some want to set and achieve a certain goal so I’ll often set one with them so they can see that I’m invested in it, too.

For example, I once had a client who was in remission from cancer. As her strength improved she wanted to prove she was back in the game so she signed up for a 5K race and we used a walk/run approach to slowly get her up to speed. Determined and ready, she vowed to finish and I signed up with her and vowed to win to show my commitment and support for her efforts. My clients know that I take our commitment seriously and I try do all I can to get them where they want to go.

You sound so committed to the success of your clients. What kind of commitment do they have to make?

I generally meet with clients anywhere from 1-3 times/week and I’ve seen some clients 3 times/week for 10 years! Programs are all different based on how often we see each other, and whether we are meeting in person or over the phone. If they’re not committed it’s best for both of us to not work together. I’ve actually dropped a few clients in the past because they hired me based on their spouse wanting them to lose weight or they weren’t willing to try. I’m not in this for the money but for their success so if they’re not ready or if the motivation isn’t there it’s best to wait.

I loved the story about the woman who built up the strength to run a 5K, what other success stories are you especially proud of?

One of my favorite stories is one I included in my book The Lifestyle Fitness Program, I love it and it shows the different levels of fitness and how milestones are unique from person to person.

I had a client who was morbidly obese. She was at least 100 pounds overweight and couldn’t come to me so I went to her. She wanted lose enough weight and become fit enough to comfortably walk to her mailbox at the end of her driveway.

We put a timer on her son’s ping pong table and she walked “laps” around the table. When we first met, she could walk for one minute and had to sit down because she was exhausted. We worked up minute by minute, week by week. Weeks later, not only did she get to her mailbox, but she saw her neighbor’s newspaper across the street. She crossed the street, picked up the paper and rang her neighbor’s doorbell to deliver the “news!”

And this is another story that shows that sometimes the initial challenge is not diet or exercise. A client came to me to lose 30 pounds. She had a history of losing around 10 pounds and then somehow sabotaged her weight loss. Through our talks, we uncovered marital issues which were leading her to subconsciously keep the weight on. I told her that until those issues were addressed and dealt with, seeing me was a waste of her time and money. She came back one year later and experienced a steady weight loss of 1-2 pounds/week. It turns out that she took the year to address her marriage, came to conclusions, made decisions and when we began this time, the weight practically fell off.

I have many more stories like this.

You have a new on-line program, The Mega Mojo Membership program. Does this on-line program include the same elements of personalization as a one-on-one coaching relationship?

Once a client signs up for the Mega Mojo Membership program, I will contact them to set up a time for their initial “Discover Your Fitness Personality” session. I’ll ask questions to find out where they are, what they want and see how I can help them.

Mega Mojo clients will be participating in a one-hour telesession with me each month, and can submit specific questions so that I’m sure to hit on the right topics each time. The online program will require someone who’s a little more self-motivated and able to keep herself moving forward between our sessions. But all of the tips and advice will be there, just like they are for my in-person clients.

After the monthly calls, they’ll walk away with their next steps – which could be a plan for their eating, strategies to combat emotional eating, a plan for fitness, a strategy to identify and reduce overwhelm, a plan for handling certain toxic relationships, a way for them to gain more clarity for why they’re doing what they’re doing or accepting something that doesn’t work.

The more honest clients are with me, the better my recommendations can be. I let them know that I don’t judge anything they say, I’ve probably heard it all before so don’t be embarrassed, and even if I were working with their best friend, they’ll never know unless it’s their friend who tells them. I am committed to 100% confidentiality and trust.

There are so many on-line fitness programs, how does yours differ? And how does the personal coaching element carry through in the on-going online program?

Because it’s me (as opposed to a huge network or service) I may give a quick call, send an email or find another way to let my clients know I’m thinking about them and their success. It helps them stay accountable and on track as well as building rapport and trust.

Of course, it’s more personalized if I see someone face to face, but even over the phone I listen for their mood, voice, tone and even facial expressions! I listen for all of it to know how my client is feeling, how they’re interpreting and receiving what I’m saying and how things are going with them.

I also encourage clients to “brag” to me. Often they feel uncomfortable sharing success with their friends because they don’t want to brag or fear their friends are jealous. I love hearing about their successes! I’ve had clients call me from restaurant rest rooms when they were proud of how they ate, called from vacation to tell me they actually used the sneakers they packed and had clients text me from work, asking me to remind them of how we discussed confronting an annoying coworker! I’m pretty sure you can’t get that kind of service from just anyone!

So, if you want to make positive changes in any area of your life, maybe working with a Personal Coach is the way to make the changes happen. It costs a little more than one of the cookie-cutter programs, but the personal attention and degree of customization just may be the key to changing that dream of a better lifestyle into a reality.

And to quote a famous commercial, “You’re worth it!”

Kristen Bassick is a freelance writer who submits articles to numerous on-line outlets.

The Cost of Conserving Energy

We talked about this before, but as the winter winds are whipping around, it bears repeating.  While it’s great to conserve energy, make sure you aren’t conserving YOUR energy, especially during these cold months.

You probably have put some effort into making sure to keep your energy bills down this season.  You may have put some extra weather-stripping around the windows, or added some insulation.  You put the storm windows up and made sure that everything is sealed up tight.

But, as tempting as it is to wrap up in a blanket on the couch, hibernate and wait for Spring, don’t do it!  Even now, when walking across the parking lot sounds like the last think you would want to do, do it!  Invest in some warm gloves and a nice toasty hat and scarf and walk across that lot.  And walk up those stairs.  And get off that couch!

And here’s an extra bonus for you – shivering burns calories!  So let yourself be a little cold.  Get out and walk around the block, even when the wind is blowing and the snow is falling.  You won’t melt.  I promise.

Conserve the energy on your electric bill, but when it comes to your own personal energy, use it.  The beauty of it is, the more you use, the more you’ll have.  You can be your own personal power plant!  An Energy Star!

Burn baby, burn!




View Debi Silber, MS, RD, WHC





Fitness Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory