Posts Tagged Workouts

Brand New Shaun T’s Insanity Workout Deluxe Package 13DVDs

Insanity is a 60 day total body workout program.

The  Insanity ProgramrequiresNO weights,NO equipment.  It’s the latest creation byShaun T and Beachbody.  The only thing you need to bring with you is an Insane attitude!  Join me in my photo tour of the program.  I’m like a kid at Christmas!

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Since the program is based off the premise ofNO weightsandNO equipment.  The inside cover shows a gym floor.  The Plyo Cardio Circuit was done in this gym, and I have to assume the other workouts are as well.  Nice picture of the gym.  The page is actually a hard cover.

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The next several pictures show the pages throughout the book.  Each page has some DVDs, and a nice photo, “action shot” of the workouts.  Again, very professional.

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The man behind the program, Shaun T.

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Basketball jump shots.  Get ready to sweat to these DVDs!  Check out the artwork, puddles of sweat on the picture and dvd pages.  Nice.

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More Insanity.

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P90X Review Chest & Back (Day 22 - Phase 1)

I guess I was too rested on Tuesday since I overslept instead of getting up at the crack of dawn for P90X Chest and Back.  That was a first for me, I haven’t slept through the alarm and missed a workout yet.  Over course that meant I had to come home after work and complete the workout.

On the way home I stopped by Sears and bought a new pair of New Balance running shoes for my workouts.  The shoes I have been using, I am ashamed to admit, were about six or seven years old.  I’m sure you’re imagining some really ratty looking shoes.  They really look pretty good.  I rarely wore them outside so they look new.  However, most of the articles I have been reading about how to cure shin splints suggest replacing your gym shoes.  I found a pair with great heel padding so I’m ready to bring it with my new kicks.

I hate working with spectators around and my wife found great amusement in watching me do Dive Bomber Push-Ups.  She really exercised great self control and didn’t critique my form at all during the work-out.  She did show me that some of the Ab Ripper X exercises that I said were really hard, didn’t seem so hard for her.  She’s been doing the Hip Hop Abs workout while I’m at work and the kids at school and she’s getting great results.

Speaking of results, Tuesdays are weigh-in nights.  My wife and son are fans of the show Biggest Loser and they get a kick out of seeing dad stepping on the scale to check his progress.  I often have a hard time seeing the scale’s display because they want to see the numbers first.  A cheer went out when we saw that I had dropped 3.5 lbs since last week.  That has been the largest one week weight loss since I started P90X.  It was a great way to end the day.  Really got me motivated to keep pushing play!

 

Order  the p90x now at   www.ilaikeediscount.com at 34.99 $!!!!

 

this review is quoted from blogcatalog.com

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The P90X Fit Test

If you have seen the commercial, you know that the P90X Workout is an intense workout. They don’t call it an Extreme Home System for nothing.

They suggest you take their Fit Test just to make sure you are able to survive the workouts. In the Fit Test you test and record your heart rate; perform pull-ups, push-ups, vertical leaps, toe touches, wall squats, curls, and in/out ab exercises. After you take this test, you are able to determine whether you can start the P90X workout or not.

After looking over the test, I thought I would pass this with no problem. I was shocked with some of my results. Below is my recorded performance with the P90X Fit Test.

P90X Fit Test

  • Resting Heart Rate: 62 beats per minute.
  • Pull-Ups: 1 pull-up. (You should be able to do at least 3 if you are male.)
  • Vertical Leap: 15.5 inches. (A male should have a vertical of at least 5 inches.)
  • Push-Ups: 25 push-ups until failure. (You should be able to do at least 15 if you are male)
  • Toe Touch: I can stretch my fingers 1 inch past my toes. (The minimum should be at least 6 inches from your toes, or -6 inches.)
  • Wall Squat: I was able to wall squat for 1 minute and 10 seconds. (Minimum for a male is 1 minute.)
  • Bicep Curls: I performed 24 curls with 25lb. dumb bells. (You should be able to do at least 10 curls with 20 lbs.)
  • In and Outs: I performed 42 before failure. (They recommend you perform at least 25.)
  • The only part of the test I failed was with the pull-ups. While I was only able to perform 1, and they recommended at least 3 - they do say many cannot perform a single pull-up. I have made it a priority of mine to conquer that pull-up bar! I will beat that thing!

    It’s probably my competitive nature, but I thought I would have some bigger numbers with some of these tasks. The wall squat started hurting me about 30 seconds into it. I played basketball throughout college and was pretty embarrassed with my vertical number (15.5 inches). I knew my stretching would be poor, but only 1 inch past my toes is horrible.

    The good part about the Fit Test - I passed. There are more than a few things I have to work on improving, but I am very confident that the P90X workout videos will help me get more respectable numbers.

    Tomorrow I will be recording my initial body measurements and taking some photos of myself prior to beginning the workout. I’m sure not looking forward to posting those numbers and photos, but we all have to start somewhere, right? They say in the manual, they aren’t “before” photos, they are goodbye photos. Sure is a great way to look at it.

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P90X Extreme Home Fitness DONT’S

P90X Extreme Home Fitness Don’t #1 “Don’t eat junk food”

It’s really as simple as that. They call it junk food for a reason, it really is junk. You don’t want this stuff going into your body! Cookies, cakes, candy and processed meats all have to go. If you’re going to take the program seriously you need to eliminate this stuff from your daily diet all together.

P90X Extreme Home Fitness Don’t #2 “Don’t try to be a hero”

You’re getting ready to do an exercise, Tony asks you to set a goal, you say “25 reps” when in all reality you know that last week you could only do 8. It’s very important to push yourself, but you need to be realistic, other wise you set yourself up for failure.

P90X Extreme Home Fitness Don’t #3 “Don’t beat yourself up”

Likewise if you set a reasonable goal and happened to fall just short, don’t beat yourself up about it. You are involved in this program to allow yourself to grow and gradually meet your fitness goals, don’t worry you’ll get there. One of the most famous Tony Horton mantras is “Do your best, and forget the rest!”

P90X Extreme Home Fitness Don’t #4 “Don’t skip your workouts”

No one said P90X was going to be easy! It’s important to make sure that you make time for your new workout routine. The program requires a real commitment. There may be times when you’re tired from the daily grind, there may be engagements you must attend, so be sure to designate a time that works for your lifestyle. Skipping one makes it easy to skip another. Remember you’re doing this for you! Make it a point to do your scheduled workouts each and every day!

P90X Extreme Home Fitness Don’t #5 “Don’t starve yourself”

Withholding food isn’t going to help you! Eating next to nothing isn’t going to work! Starving yourself is NOT effective! Ok, I think we drilled that point home. You’re body needs fuel to operate and not eating is counter productive. As Tony so wisely says “Your body doesn’t run on exercise. It runs on the food you put in your mouth.
If you want the results that P90X can provide you need to have the energy to “Bring It” during your workouts.

P90X Extreme Home Fitness Don’t #6 “Don’t compromise your form”

You’ll learn the right and wrong ways to perform each P90X exercise. Proper form is extremely important! Never compromise form just to finish a set or to pump out a few sloppy reps. When the muscles you are working give out, it’s time to stop, don’t try to engage other muscles just to finish. Check your form and workout in a way that is kind to your structure. This will keep you healthy while you get strong.

P90X Extreme Home Fitness Don’t #7 “Don’t skip warm up”

There are those that feel like warm up isn’t important or seems like a waste of time. This couldn’t be further from the truth. NEVER skip warm up! Your body should feel limber and you should be breaking a light sweat before you dive into any full-out exercising.

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When are you ready for P90X Plus?

When are you ready for P90X Plus?

The newest addition  P90X Plus is not for beginners. These workouts are not for the faint of heart or anyone “not sure” about fitness. This system is for people who have completed the P90X and are serious about “bringing it”!
If you have achieved a respectable level of fitness and YOU HAVE COMPLETED P90X, you’re ready for P90X + (P90X Plus). It will enhance any athletic performance and is the perfect tool to quickly build on your fitness accomplishments while getting you ripped beyond belief.
if you are ready,order plus now at www.buy1mall.com at 33.99 $ free shipping

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P90X Plus Reviews

P90X Plus Review
As anyone who has used P90X for the full plan… and then some, you know that after a while you are just bored with exercise again. You probably thought that wasn’t likely to happen when you first started P90X, but suddenly there you were. I was there.

There are just so many times you can watch the same thing over and over. I had even gone to just popping in my iPod, and going through it that way for more entertainment, even after months and months break from the program (and on to custom ones designed for myself.) It’s not that I am being down on the original P90X, I’m not. I just get bored after a while. I will say that P90X took me longer than other programs to get bored with, so it’s still ahead of other DVDs in my opinion.

I was able to go through the P90X Plus routines, much like I did with the original P90X. So, I’m reviewing it. Many have asked me about it, from my earlier review of P90X (and no, I still haven’t done Power 90, aka P90. I’ve had three people ask me this week alone about the regular Power 90. I don’t have it yet, and I’m buried under life right now. When I do get it, I’ll review it as well.)

One important point to make to everyone: you must have the original P90X to put this P90X Plus program together. It’s set up to basically be additional DVDs to go with the P90X original set. You still incorporate lots of the original workouts with the new ones. You also need to have completed P90X. The reason for this is that the workouts are generally shorter, rely on you having already pretty much mastered a few things with resulting mechanical ability… and to be blunt, I felt like they were sort of a maintenance routine more than a “change everything!” kind of set up. But then, it would be if you had gone through the whole P90X program once… or twice… or six times. It’s not a program for newbies, even more so than the original program for that reason. As a newbie, you wouldn’t be able to do some of the more advanced moves and simply miss out, and thus get little benefit out of the new routines.

There is a saying “it’s harder to maintain than to change.” I used to apply that as “it’s harder to maintain than to be actively losing weight.” This is 100% true. I remember doubting this rather strongly, thinking I’d just like the opportunity to maintain. When you are 70 lbs from where you are suppose to be, and you just want to slap those “it’s haaaard to maintain” people upside the head. You would just be so grateful to be strong and healthy and look it, that it would NOT be hard to maintain. Those people just didn’t understand.

It turns out that those people are right. It is incredibly hard to maintain after you make dramatic changes. You work hard, you see these new results developing, and it’s easy and exciting to keep going. But once you are fit and healthy the changes are very small and you realize that you still have to keep working out hard. That’s where most people fall off the side of the mountain and lose a lot of their results along with their motivation.

So, what do you do? The answer is that you have to keep the actual activity interesting, and you have to find a way to use your newly fit body that isn’t about creating changes. That really is the key. Find exercise that you think is fun (or at least fairly tolerable on a permanent level) and find activities that you can use the strong body for that make it all worth it (take up rock climbing, join a soccer league, start running races, take up kayaking or rowing, whatever.) P90X Plus is not the rock-climbing-activity type purpose you are looking for. But it could be the “tolerable exercise” routine that you need after you have your results from the original program and are sort of hitting a wall, as long as you really love P90X.

P90X Plus consists of four new routines (interval, total body, kenpo, upper body), and just to torture everyone there is a new extra ab routine too. Because the first one wasn’t bad enough to have to do three times a week. *ahem* Alright, I know. I just loath doing abs. Not because I have some sort of belief that you shouldn’t… just because I don’t like doing them. (Hey, I’m human. I don’t like going to the dentist either, but I do that too.)

I call P90X Plus more of a maintenance routine because it has a shorter, more cardio kind of feel to it. It just seems… well, “lighter” for lack of a better word. Many of the moves incorporated are more advanced, but they’re fast, and you run through them quickly. Even the production is different, with a brighter feel. I have to be completely honest here, I was rather underwhelmed with it. I didn’t have that “wow, they did a really great job with this whole set” as I did with the original program. In their defense, this isn’t a whole program. It’s just a supplement to the other one.

What I did like was the intervals being incorporated. I’m a big harper on the intervals. I believe in them. I have personally seen what they can do for my physical results and abilities, as well as for clients I train. Interval training is generally hard, and people whine about it, but seriously you are hard pressed to get a bigger bang for your buck (invested time.) The intervals in P90X Plus are not as intense as I am used to working out when I do them, but the workout lasts a little longer than my normal interval training does, too.

My favorite of the original P90X workouts has always been the Kenpo, and P90X Plus has a new one. This felt more like an aerobics/kick boxing/peppy-class than the feel of the Kenpo from the first one. Not entirely… but the impression was there. Still, I did enjoy it. There are moves in the other workouts that I completely get a kick out of too.

In particular there is a move called the Gladiator. Now, maybe everyone has done this before in other classes or workouts, or maybe you were just seriously obsessed with the Russell Crow movie and were pretending you were fighting gilded warriors in your back yard. But, I am not someone who has done this before. If you don’t know me, let me say this: coordination with all four limbs at once is not my strong suit. I’m the woman who would take out the entire back section of a dance line or aerobics class tripping over my own feet. I sooth my ego by rationalizing that as an artist I am exceptionally right hand dominate, and all my coordination has gone there (don’t burst my delusional bubble, it works for me.)

Still, I was determined to do this Gladiator move. It just looks like fun, and well… I admit it just looks cool. Alright, when they do it, it looks cool. I am highly embarrassed to admit that the first time I tried it, in mid-air, my son came around the door with a “mommy?” and time seemed to slow. It was like something out of a spoof of the Matrix. I contorted, my head turning in his direction, my body clearly going another, and somehow I had gotten good air on my leap too… right into the toy box. Well, one foot anyway.

“Mommy, whatcha doing? Were you trying to jump into the toy box? Can I do that too? Oh please??!?!”

It occurs to me that while I will have many a story to embarrass my son with when he starts dating, that the moment he realizes he has just as many about me and thus fantastic blackmail material, I am in serious trouble.

Oh, another thing about the toy boxes (the only place for me to workout with DVDs is my basement living/toy room area) - they worked great for another of my favorite moves. In one of the workouts you need two chairs. You have to do a slanted push-up between them, then swing your legs through and into a dip, then back again. I love this move, but I don’t have two normal sized chairs. What I did have was two Fischer Price toy boxes, one blue and one pink. I have to tell you, those worked out perfectly for the move… even if I probably did look a little (a lot) silly swinging like George of the Jungle between them.

I may be uncoordinated, but I’m resourceful!

I found it interesting that the DVDs prominently featured Bow-Flex interchangeable dumbbells in the routines. As I had said in my original review of P90X, the timing was difficult with my standard plates (it’s even worse with P90X Plus now that they’ve caught on to swift-changing weights.) I recommended a set called Power Blocks (which I still don’t own, because I cannot afford them, but I have used them in a gym and love them), and it seems that the group over at P90X has teamed up with Bow-Flex. As a matter of fact, the ads for Bow-Flex on the new DVDs (including during workout pitching of them) were rather annoying. But in the end, this is a business for them and they’re partners with Bow-Flex for the quick change dumbbells. The only thing I have to say about that is that hopefully Bow-Flex has improved their design.

You see, I would love to have a set of dumbbells that I could quickly shift through the various weights with. I have spent years with my set of plates with a screw on lock at each end. I have sliced open my foot with that lock at least four times (sharp edges, heavy lock, dropped it.) I have dropped plates countless times on my feet (luckily not my head.) I just have your standard kind of set, with lots of different sized plates that can be rather big and bulky. Basically, I have the caveman equipment, but I just don’t have a lot of money to invest in these gadgets even though I may want to.

I was able to check out Power Blocks and the Bow-Flex version a long while back in a store. The Bow-Flex dumbbells were fine, and then suddenly it just released one of the plates, out of nowhere - Right onto my FOOT! One of the problems I was looking to avoid in the first place! I looked closer to see if it was operator error (very high probably with me involved.) I got the store involved in it, and Mr. Savy. Unfortunately, the only thing we discovered was that we were able to make the error happen repeatedly, and that it wasn’t me. So, I steered clear of them.

I don’t know if Bow-Flex has updated them or not. I sincerely hope so, but due to my experience with them I cannot recommend them. I need to know when I hold a weight over my head that it isn’t suddenly going to decide to drop a 20 lbs segment, because that is just the sort of thing that would happen to me. I’m superior at injuring myself all on my own, I don’t need any help in that department.

I’m sure people are going to come out of the woodwork to yell at me how much they disagree with something in this review. That they love Bow-Flex, or something else. That’s fine, because here is the thing: I don’t work for Beachbody, I don’t work for Power Blocks, and I have had no contact with Bow-Flex as a company at all. So, this is simply my opinion. I link to an online store which sells the P90X programs because they offered a savings to those looking for one, and were nice to me when Beachbody (a representative that emailed me and identified themselves as such, I believe the person was just an operator that took orders) took the time to be incredibly rude. And that is something else to consider: I am not particularly impressed with the Beachbody company as a whole. So, if I like one of the routines, it’s because I genuinely like it and would recommend it - even though I was treated as I was (and believe me, I tend to stew and hold grudges. It would be a lot easier if the products were just worthless, because then I wouldn’t have to temper my irritation with them while trying to give an honest review.)

So, bottom line: did I like P90X Plus? Once I adjusted my mental mind-set to categorizing it as “additions” and more of a “maintenance” kind of set-up, I think it’s good for that purpose IF you really like P90X. If you are looking for the “wow” of a whole new program, this just isn’t it. But then, it’s not advertised as that anyway. I’m not sure where my brain was with my expectations, or why - but once I adjusted, it makes sense. So, I’m not raving about it, but it’s not bad either. I think it’s a good option for those fit people who want to stick with P90X style workouts but are simply bogged down with the amount of time that goes into it (these routines are shorter, averaging around 40 minutes,) and just need something to liven up the monotony without shifting gears entirely.

Is it going to solve the long term dedication problem? No, because you need to find an active pursuit that you enjoy that puts that strong body of yours to use. Being healthy is about living your life healthy. You are not a hamster on a wheel, so don’t expect yourself to be thrilled with just DVDs for the rest of your life. Get out there! Go ride a bike! Go for a hike! Surf! Swim! Whatever!!! But go DO IT! Be that person who is envied by your friends because you are showing off your pictures from the weekend where you suddenly decided to climb to the top of a mountain just because.

You’ll never look back once you put all the pieces into place, and then you’ll finally be wondering why anyone thinks that maintaining a healthy lifestyle is hard. It isn’t, you simply have to learn to live first.

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Women and P90X: What Can a Woman Expect from p90x??

Women and P90X: What Can a Woman Expect from p90x??

quoted from http://www.fitlifesf.com/ by Smurf

Judging by the number of women coming to this site searching for a female-centric review of P90X , there are a lot of questions: “Can a woman do P90X? Is P90X effective for women? What kinds of success can women have with P90X?” Given that I recently completed 90 days and have been a woman most of my life, I thought I would weigh in on this one. (Multiple highhats!)

First, a little background: I’ve been active pretty much all of my life. My mom is a dyed-in-the-wool gymrat, and has been since I can remember (I totally remember sitting in the back of the Buick when Mrs Garber from church told my mom about this awesome new song for jazzercise, “Eye of the Tiger .” I remember being quite sure Jane Fonda was someone my mom actually knew in real life.) If I was looking pale or pasty, she would lock my brother and I outside to go run around until the sun went down. I was in ballet and gymnastics and all sorts of stuff as a kid. In highschool , I did cheer and dance and track. After highschool, I went to the gym regularly and watched Ms Fitness USA for hours on cable (though I never had the tenacity to actually train for it.) In 2000, I started cheering again with a competition-level charity squad called Cheer SF , while being concurrently addicted to spinning (studio cycling). After my stint with Cheer SF, I discovered Bikram and, after that, Ashtanga yoga…
Despite all that, as I get older it seems harder to keep my size down. I’m used to being the one who everyone thinks is “too skinny,” only it’s been a good 10 years since that’s been true. About a year ago, my boyfriend saw the P90X infomercial and we decided to embark on a 90-day fitness challenge. We would each do our own workouts and see who had the better results.
For me: walking to work (2 miles), doing 90 minutes of Ashtanga Yoga and then taking a cardio kickbox or weightlifting class, for a total of about 3 hours of activity, 5 days a week. I had pretty good results- my goal was to wear the 24” corset to Folsom Street Fair and not look spongy. I think I did an OK job of it. (This despite a very pricy-yet-assy trainer at the Van Ness 24 Hour Fitness… if you are thinking of getting one, please get in touch first so I can help you find a decent one!)
For him: Rob was no stranger to the concepts of P90X, so he put together his own P90X-esque plan and self-motivated at home.
I had better results that first 90 days and Rob realized he needed a little more structure. Knowing spending $100+ on P90X would force him to motivate, he began the program in November, and I started following along in December/January, but really hit my stride of six P90X workouts per week in January and registered for MillionDollarBody.com on February 13, 2008.
So, that brings me to spelling out what, for me, are the measures of success (these can– and probably SHOULD– be different for everyone):
- Size/measurements (and, yes, weight)

- Being able to do cool stuff like pull-ups, arm balances and whatnot (you may notice that “being able to do cool stuff” is the theme that runs through my fitness pursuits. I might be 34, but I can still do the splits.)

- Feeling good (including being confident in the way I look, how my clothes fit, having energy- I recently went off the anti-depressant Wellbutrin and knew that fitness would be a major component in my success there.)
I started at about 140 lbs; my “goal” for the past 10 years has been “about 127” (for no real reason other than it would be nice to get back to my post-highschool weight) So, that is where I started- here are my thoughts:
The Program: I started mid-cycle on P90X, so we switched to P90X+ midway through. When we did the first fitness test, I think I was able to .25 of a pullup, but was OK in other strength tests like push-ups and wall-sits from my yoga background. Cardiovascularly, I was lacking, despite that foray into the world of “cardio kickbox.”
P90X consists of six workouts per week, mostly strength training, two cardio workouts, and a yoga workout. I did P90X “classic,” but there are options that have you mix up the same workout DVDs into programs called “P90X Lean,” and “P90X Doubles.”
The strength workouts are really the core of this program. The workouts are really hardcore- I was one of those people who doubted you could get a good workout from a DVD. In fact, I get a better strength workout with these DVDs than I did with my last personal trainer. (Who really, truly, sucked. Wish I had that $600 back! See previous disparaging comments.) The workouts are very heavy on pull-ups and push-ups, which might be intimidating to some women. As I mentioned, I was able to do .25 of a pull-up. I started out with bands, and then progressed to the P90X Pull-up Bar. I am happy to say that I can now do 3 pull-ups in a row with just a little “body-English” cheating and can complete the whole workout with one foot on the back of a chair. Push-ups are easy enough to do on your knees, but you need to make a mental commitment to do as may as you can on your toes before going to your knees- For some reason, I find the psychological crutch of doing push-ups on my knees hard to overcome, so it really is a mental game to see progress here.
Note about P90X Plus: I really dislike the overuse of the Upper Plus program in P90X+. You do it twice per week. I notice a lot of people have concerns that P90X will feel repetitious. I’m here to tell you that it really doesn’t– unless you are doing P90X Plus as written, and then you might want to tear your eyes out vs. do Upper Plus again.
I do LOVE the Abs/Core Plus workout in P90X+. It has a lot of hanging ab work, which can take some building up to, but it is a great workout for those of us who hate crunches. (In fact, I hate crunches and some boat-type ab work because it makes the front of my legs go numb. This was a huge issue for me with Ab Ripper X. Numb legs suck.)
About the Cardio Workouts: The cardio workouts in P90X are Kenpo X and Plyometrics. Plyometrics will kick your ass and give you a great cardio workout. It will likely also take you several weeks to build up the confidence in getting through the whole thing, but you will.
It took me a REALLY long time to get to the point with Kenpo X where I felt like it was even worth my time cardio-wise. Emphasis on proper breathwork is essential. Do not watch the redhead; she is half-assing her way through the entire thing. I made the mistake of mimicking her for the first several times and literally had to flail like Fraggle on crack through the “breaks” to even get my heartrate in zone. Even with proper form, I still do use the “breaks” as an opportunity to really spike my heartrate with intense jumping jacks/running in place, etc.- this workout has a lot of downtime that you have to commit to fill.
A note about P90X Plus: The Kenpo Cardio Plus workout in P90X Plus is crap. Rob talked about it in his review from a “martial arts practitioner” point of view. I’m just talking about it from the perspective of someone who is looking for a good cardio workout. It has no flow, the moves go by so fast that is nearly impossible to do them with proper form… just not a well-thought out workout at all.
Interval X Plus:

Personally, I don’t feel like half the movements in this thing are true “interval” moves. Nor do I think that 30 second intervals are enough to feel intervals (in either the exertion or recovery sense of the word.) I am used to one minute all-out effort, 1-or-2-minute recovery. But, it’s like “slow jogging” and then “all-out Olympic sprinting.” I am not sure how I can kick some and then kick a little more and then LIKE TOTALLY REALLY KICK! All in one minute and feel the difference in between. My cardiovascular system doesn’t work like that. Plyo or a nice 150-min-188-max-BPM-max interval run for 50 minutes is better.
Yoga: Oh, you really want me to go there? I hate the yoga in the P90X system with a hatred that I can barely explain. I love yoga as much as I hate Yoga X. In fact, if I didn’t love yoga so much, I might not think Yoga X sucks as much ass as it sucks. And, it sucks a lot. Mucho. Many the ass. I won’t do it. I’ll pop in a different tape, do yoga on my own, or go for a jog. Yoga is supposed to be about exploring the flow in life and ending up places you never thought you could end up, not about doing “runner’s pose” 49 times in a row. Tony doesn’t even know the difference between “cow” and “camel.” He might be good at other stuff, but he is NOT a yoga instructor.
The Results: My boyfriend had great results firming up with P90X without changing his diet at all. For me—I got about 70 days into it and felt exactly the same. Scales and measurements concurred.
For me, having about 15 lbs of fat to lose, it really will come down to the diet. The months I spend doing P90X as written without severe diet changes didn’t produce results. In the past 3 weeks, I have changed my diet in a major way. I’ve did the 6-day express plan and a really structured food plan, and am down about 8 lbs. And- in more exciting news- I actually have a picture that I am willing to use as a “before!” Woop!
I am 100% off of Wellbutrin. I feel strong. I can do cool stuff. Now, I just need to lose the fat.
(Ladies, did you really think eating whatever you want and lifting heavy weights would solve all your problems? Me, too! Not the case, sadly.)

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P90X Results 60 Days,lose weight crazily!!!

P90X Results 60 Days weight loss results!!!

60 days of P90X, 30 more to go. I’m in the home stretch now and really giving it my all knowing that at the beginning of May will show the results of P90X. I’ve already decided that when I end this workout journey, I’ll probably do another round of this extreme workout. It will be warmer out by then and so I’ll be getting some extra cardio when I commute to work on my bike. It’s about a 13 mile ride each way, so it’s a nice little workout. I’ll also sub in something for Kenpo X,  that workout doesn’t quite do it for me.  For these first 90 days I’m following the program exactly as to not effect the results either way.

During the last 30 days since my P90X Results 30 Day post, I hit a weight loss plateau. It was so frustrating to work hard everyday, closely monitor my nutritional intake, and see no change on the scale. There wasn’t a noticeable change around my waist like I saw from Day 1 to Day 30. I was reading the book, “Burn the Fat - Feed the Muscle” and the author had several suggestion on how to break out of a plateau and the only one that didn’t change the P90X workout routines is to temporarily increase the caloric intake. I gave it a try and lost a pound and a half two weeks after that adjustment in my diet.

After the 30 day mark, the routines get a little more varied and as I was getting closer to the 60 day mark I was improving on all the workouts.  I’ve almost maxed out the weight plates I have now for the Shoulders and Arms workout.  I’ve really noticed my biceps and triceps getting bigger and better defined.

One habit that I’ve managed to be consistent with is tracking my caloric intake to analyze my diet.  It’s tedious, but just like recording the repetitions you perform during P90X, tracking your diet reveals areas that are on target or need improvement.  I’m using the desktop version of Fitday.com - it has a lot of great features.

I took my photos the other day and like they say, the camera doesn’t lie.  I really can’t see much of difference between Day 30 and Day 60. When I look at myself in the mirror, I look better than I do when I see my own photos on the computer screen.  Oh well, I’ll push play every day and how I look at 90 days.

Since day 1 I’ve lost 7 pounds and about 2% body fat.  Without further delay

Day 1
Weight: 185
Fat Percentage: 25.7%

Day 30
Weight: 180
Fat Percentage: 24.5%

Day 60
Weight: 178
Fat Percentage: 23.9%

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