Sunday, January 24, 2010

Get Flat Abs Fast: Core Sculpting CORE TRANSFORMER Resistance Workout from Fitness Magazine February 2010


Here's a great article from Fitness Magazine February 2010 featuring my total body CORE TRANSFORMER written by my friend, Nicole Dorsey Straff; Workout created by Linda LaRue, creator of the CORE TRANSFORMER class at Equinox Fitness Clubs.

Dump the crunches! These 8 belly-flattening ab exercises will take you from squishy to sexy in just 14 days.

How It Works

If you envy A-list abs like Kate Beckinsale's, we've got one word for you: rubber. "Using a resistance tube boosts the firming power of any ab move," says instructor Linda LaRue, who created the CORE TRANSFORMER class at
Equinox Fitness Clubs in Los Angeles and has a list of devoted Hollywood fans including Beckinsale. LaRue put together her best new belly flatteners using this secret-weapon shaper exclusively for FITNESS Magazine. Do two sets of each move, working your way up to three sets, on three nonconsecutive days a week. Mix the order every time to really whittle your middle.

What You'll Need: A CORE TRANSFORMER exercise tube and a sturdy chair.

Do the Twist! When crossing the CORE TRANSFORMER into an X shape for each move, twist it around twice before grasping the handles, so the point of intersection is solid. "Twisting the tube increases the pull and resistance on your core," LaRue says, giving your abs maximum toning from every angle. You can aim to start with the X at belly-button level, but "it doesn't matter if the intersection moves around a bit," she adds.

Rowboat
Targets: Back, triceps, biceps, and abs
-- Sit on floor with knees slightly bent, feet hip-width apart, and heels planted.
-- Loop center of tube around arches of feet, cross it once or twice in front of you, then grasp a handle in each hand, elbows bent 90 degrees and tucked by sides, palms facing up.
-- Keeping abs tight throughout, lean torso back about 45 degrees and slowly curl handles to shoulders. Make it harder: Hold for 3 seconds.
-- Hinge forward at hips slightly as you extend both arms behind you, keeping elbows close to body, to complete one rep. (Exercise pros can hold here for another 3 seconds.)
-- Do 16 reps.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Crouching Tiger
Targets: Back, arms, abs, and quads
-- Stand with feet hip-width apart on center of tube, cross it once or twice in front of you, then grasp a handle in each hand, arms by sides.
-- Crouch down and walk hands forward until you are in full push-up position, arms extended with palms directly under shoulders, legs directly behind you so that you form a straight line from head to heels. (Hold handles lightly by thumbs so that palms can lie flat on floor.)
-- Keeping palms planted and abs tight throughout, press hips back toward heels, bending knees so that they hover just above floor.
-- Straighten legs to return to full push-up position and complete rep.
-- Do 16 reps.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Baseball Swing
Targets: Shoulders, back, arms, abs, and obliques
-- Stand with feet hip-width apart on center of tube, cross it once or twice in front of you, then grasp a handle in each hand, arms by sides.
-- Bend knees slightly in a half squat and bring both handles together in front of you, elbows slightly bent, palms nearly touching. Make it easier: Cup both hands around both handles as if they were fused together.
-- Keeping elbows bent, bring both hands together over right shoulder as you rotate torso to right, pivoting on left toes and straightening both legs.
-- Slowly return to half-squat position.
-- Do 8 reps. Switch sides; repeat.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Hooray Squat
Targets: Chest, arms, abs, butt, and quads
-- Stand with feet hip-width apart and your back to a sturdy chair; place feet through tube handles (like stirrups) so that soles press handles to floor.
-- Cross tube once or twice in front of you, then hold center of tube with both hands in front of chest, elbows bent by sides, palms facing forward. (Either grasp tube or notch it between thumb and forefinger and keep hands open, as shown.)
-- Squat to sit in chair, then immediately stand up, pressing arms directly overhead to stretch tube.
-- Return to seated squat, lowering hands to chest level again, and repeat.
-- Do 16 reps.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Upstream Swim
Targets: Shoulders, back, arms, and abs
-- Stand with feet close together on center of tube, cross it once or twice in front of you, then grasp a handle in each hand, arms by sides.
-- Squat, hinging forward at hips so that back is nearly parallel to floor with arms extended down.
-- Simultaneously lift left arm in front of you and right arm behind you until both are parallel to floor, palms facing down.
-- Hold for 1 to 3 counts, then lower.
-- Do 16 reps, alternating sides.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Tubing Half-Teaser
Target: Abs
-- Lie faceup on floor with right knee bent, foot flat, and left leg extended toward ceiling. Fold tube in half, then loop it around left arch and grasp ends together with both hands.
-- Roll torso off floor slowly to sit up; try to use abs, rather than pulling with arms, by drawing navel into spine.
-- Hold for 1 to 3 counts, then engage abs to roll slowly back down to start.
-- Do 8 reps. Switch legs; repeat.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Cat's Cradle
Targets: Abs and obliques
-- Stand with feet hip-width apart and your back to a chair; put feet through tube handles.
-- Cross tube once or twice in front of you, then hold its center with both hands in front of chest, elbows bent by sides, palms facing forward. (Grasp tube or notch it as shown.)
-- Sit near edge of seat and lean torso back 45 degrees as you lift legs off floor, knees bent 90 degrees, until feet are at seat level.
-- Extend right leg forward as you rotate torso left to bring right elbow toward left knee.
-- Switch sides, bringing left elbow to right knee to complete 1 rep. Do 8 reps.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Resistance Side Plank
Targets: Shoulders, chest, back, abs, and obliques
-- Stand with feet hip-width apart on center of tube, cross it once or twice in front of you, then grasp a handle in each hand, arms by sides.
-- Crouch down and walk hands forward to get in full push-up position.
-- Shift body weight into left hand and rotate extended right arm to reach for ceiling while keeping shoulders down.
-- Hold for 1 to 3 counts, then return to full push-up.
-- Do 16 reps, alternating arms.
Watch a
video demonstration of this move!

Originally published in
FITNESS Magazine, February 2010.





Thursday, January 21, 2010

Win a FREE CORE TRANSFORMER Exertube: $25 Value!


1st 5 ppl who email me @info@lindalarue.com & sign up for my FREE digital magazine, Make Healthy A Lifestyle win a FREE CORE TRANSFORMER Exertube valued at $25 dollars! U must pick up my CORE TRANSFORMER at the Equinox Woodland Hills open house this Saturday, January 23rd where Stephanie Vitorino, Ilyse Baker & me, Linda LaRue, will be giving CORE TRANSFOMER demos from 12:30 to 3 PM. Plus, we'll have a raffle to win a 1:1 CORE TRANSFORMER training session w/me.

My new CORE TRANSFORMER is the next evolution of total body crunchless core training. This device will sculpt your entire core from the inside out 3 dimensionally. From side-to-side, front-to-back, and top-to-bottom, it trains your entire core to act as a natural abdominal girdle helping to banish that lower belly pooch. Best of all Linda's CORE TRANSFORMER time saving exercise tube trains your ENTIRE body too—great if you’re time “crunched”.

Pumping Rubber is the most affordable way to reshape your ENTIRE body (beginning first and always from your core). Make sure you sign up for Make Healthy A Lifestyle’s FREE digital magazine to get all your CORE TRANSFORMER exercise tube workout videos FREE.

*This eco-friendly product is made from sustainable rubber trees.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Born to Run? No, But This Former 'Butterball' Does Now


Reprint from LA Times Health Section 1/11/10 By Carrie Luger Slayback

Last night at dinner, my 6-foot-tall husband looked down at my plate and said, "You eat more than I do." It's true, and it's odd, considering I'm nearly a foot shorter than he.

In my 20s, my dad referred to me lovingly as "Butterball." Headed for size 12 at 36, I wear size 2 at age 66. So what's the secret? I'd say run -- don't walk -- away from fad diets and phony diet foods. In fact -- just run. Start slowly. Jog for five little minutes, then walk back. Next day, run 6 minutes, then walk back. Work up to a 15-minute jog, then walk back.

Here's my guarantee: In time, your body will command you to run back, not walk.

During a recent holiday visit, my brother asked, "Carrie, what happened to you? In high school, you hated any kind of exercise." True. In the 1950s, way before Title IX, my friends and I looked down at athletic girls. Now I'm 66, and I've run a marathon every year since I turned 55.

When I first started running, every step hurt. I gasped for breath. If my partner stopped mid-run to walk, the pain of resuming the run made me miserable. Still, I stuck with the early morning jogs, pleased with the gradual weight loss.

Note that I said "partner." A running partner is not necessary but is helpful. Running alongside a pleasant conversationalist distracts from discomfort. Besides, having a partner was safer, since I ran at 5:30 a.m., before work. Just as important, the obligation to meet my partner pulled me out of bed. Early running had other advantages. My husband and children slept, and I didn't need a sitter. In fact, I didn't need a club, a fancy outfit or any equipment except running shoes -- which I bought on sale.

So here's my simple formula for weight control:

1. Wake early enough for a half-hour workout on the street or treadmill, five to six days a week.

2. Ease into it gradually, but never give up.

3. Find a partner, if that helps you.

4. If you miss one day, get back. If you experience a muscle ache, walk or ride a bike -- but don't stop moving for that half-hour before breakfast.

My extra pounds came off gradually. Eating is still a big part of my day but no longer my major preoccupation. As I continued my runs, another great pleasure revealed itself. It feels fantastic to move through the morning air.

Luger Slayback recently placed 10th in the age 65-to-69 group at the New York City Marathon. She writes on issues of fitness and running. Read her blog at lazyracer.blogspot .com. She lives in Newport Beach with her husband and a house full of dogs.