Unhealthy Habits You Need To Ditch

These tendencies are derailing your best efforts at living better and longer.

We all have them: Those less-than-healthy or downright dangerous habits that can subtract years from our lives. Most of these harmful tendencies--like smoking and eating poorly--are well-known thanks to the constant finger-wagging of physicians and public-health officials. Others, like taking chances with safety and skipping immunizations, are less obvious.

While circumstance, low motivation or even lack of support can derail our best attempts at being healthy, there is hope: According to a recent study published in the American Journal of Medicine, a sizable percentage of people can successfully adopt a range of healthy activities or habits in middle age.

The study looked at 15,708 adults between the ages of 45 and 64. More than 8% of the participants began eating at least five fruits and vegetables daily, exercised a minimum of 2.5 hours per week, maintained healthy weights and refrained from smoking.

Dr. Dana E. King, a co-author of the study and vice chair in the department of family medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina, considers these four habits to be the pillars of good health. And the study proved as much: Those who changed their lifestyles experienced lower total mortality and fewer cardiovascular disease events.

"These changes are not easy to make and our environment is not encouraging," King says. "But making them is very beneficial."

The Cost of Bad Habits

Smoking and excessive weight gain are particularly pernicious since they've been linked to a range of bad health outcomes, including cancer and heart disease. They're also expensive habits when it comes to the cost of health care. Expenditures related to smoking reach as much as $96 billion annually. Obesity is estimated to cost $90 billion, and it may get pricier. A report published this month by the Trust for America's Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation found that adult obesity rates had increased in 23 states from 2006 and 2008.

While smoking and obesity are prime targets for public-health officials, patients can improve their health in other ways. Mary Jean Schumann, a registered nurse and chief programs officer for the American Nurses Association, says that routine immunizations are cost-effective and promote excellent health. More than 20 diseases can be prevented by vaccines, including Hepatitis B, diphtheria, mumps and influenza.

Yet survey results published last year by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, a non-profit organization, found that few Americans know which vaccines are recommended for adults--and more than half are unconcerned about contracting a vaccine-preventable disease.

Simple high-risk behaviors, like not wearing a helmet while riding a bike or not buckling up while driving or riding in a car, are other, less-scrutinized bad habits.

"People don't look at those as health behaviors, but they are," says Schumann, who has treated countless patients in the emergency room with injuries from accidents that could have been prevented.

Changing Behaviors

Even though common sense says unhealthy choices result in poor outcomes, people tend to have difficulty connecting the two. And even when they do, it can be a long-term struggle to end the pattern.

"[People] have good intentions but can't seem to pull off the changes," says Suzanne Havala Hobbs, a clinical associate professor of health policy and management and nutrition at the University of North Carolina's Gillings School of Global Public Health.

She attributes that dynamic to a combination of factors: suburban and urban infrastructures that don't promote physical activity; a sense of fatalism that sets in when people tire of fighting what can seem like a losing battle; and a lack of support from friends and family.

While individuals have no power over city planning, they can tackle the other two issues. Waning motivation to lose weight, for instance, can be remedied by doing enjoyable physical activities instead of committing to a rigid and joyless routine at the gym. Enlisting the support of loved ones is another essential strategy since it can turn smoking cessation or healthier eating into a family affair as opposed to an individual struggle.

Despite these tactics, some people face greater health-improvement challenges than others. In Dr. King's study, those who were at risk for chronic conditions were no more likely to make changes.

"We have to find out what the real motivators are for people," he says, mostly because improved health is within the reach of most. "Turning back the clock can be done."

Medical Center Diets That Aren’t

Fast and Easy Weight Loss Secrets? Don't Count on It

The Internet is rife with diets that claim to provide the secret to quick and substantial weight loss. If you assume that any diet attributed to world famous medical centers must be trustworthy, think again. Top-rated medical centers encourage weight loss through intensive multidisciplinary programs based on balanced diets that meet nutritional needs. If you see a diet espousing rapid weight loss by sticking to just a few foods over and over, go directly to the Web site of the hospital that supposedly endorses the diet and you’ll probably find that the diet claim is a hoax.

The “Cleveland Clinic Diet,” for example, claims to produce weight loss of up to 10 pounds in three days. The three-day program includes meals of specific foods, such as hot dogs, vanilla ice cream, cabbage and eggs, which supposedly increase metabolism to burn fat. Actually, it promotes short-term weight loss through an extremely low calorie level and a low carbohydrate content that leads to water loss. The three-day program is followed by four to five days of “normal” (not extreme) eating and then restarting the three-day plan. This cycle makes long-term weight loss unlikely. After a few runs through the cycle, there’s a good chance those “normal” days may get even less normal, since studies show that the greater the rigidity of dieting rules, the greater the likelihood of binge-eating when the rules end.

The Cleveland Clinic expressly denies any support for this diet. The center’s Web site includes a statement denying the diet, saying its restricted calories and rules of allowed versus forbidden foods are “not the way to long-term, sustained weight loss and health.” The Cleveland Clinic does not recommend any rigid diet. Instead, it recommends a mostly plant-based Mediterranean-style pattern of eating with abundant vegetables and fruits, limited animal protein and moderate amounts of healthy fats like olive and canola oil, nuts, seeds, olives and fatty fish.

A diet circulating for decades purportedly from the prestigious Mayo Clinic is another hoax. The plan allows unlimited meat, fish and poultry, plus daily eggs and limited vegetables, and adds grapefruit at each meal “to burn up fat.” By eliminating sugar, starch, fruit and “white vegetables,” this diet ends up high-fat, low carbohydrate and moderate to high in protein. It’s nutritionally inadequate and the direct opposite of dietary recommendations to reduce risk of cancer and heart disease. Furthermore, specifically saying you can “eat until you’re so full you can’t eat any more” is exactly the opposite of the skill most people need to learn—to stop eating at a satiation point well before “stuffed.”

The Mayo Clinic’s Web site denies any support for this diet. Its approach to weight loss involves a balanced diet with plenty of vegetables and fruits, as well as physical activity and goal-setting. There is a Mayo Clinic eating plan, called the Mayo Clinic Healthy Weight Pyramid, but far from the rigid, limited diet circulating the Internet, it includes a wide range of healthy foods, including up to 75 calories per day of sweets.

State-of-the-art nutrition care doesn’t mean highly restricted, rigid plans, at least not without intense medical supervision. Premier medical centers employ registered dietitians to create individualized plans that lead to weight loss and also meet nutritional needs, fit personal preferences and lifestyle, and work long-term. But like the Duke Diet from the Duke Diet and Fitness Center, these world-class centers all emphasize an approach that also includes re-learning skills like grocery shopping and cooking, daily physical activity, behavioral change and record-keeping (such as food and activity logs).

The Secret the Food Industry Doesn't Want You to Know

What's replacing the trans fats in your food?

Trans fats, those inflammation boosting, heart-disease-promoting nutritional nightmares, are rapidly disappearing from store shelves and restaurant menus as health-minded consumers become increasingly savvy about what's in their food. The poster children for bad nutrition, trans fats are banned from use in restaurants from New York City to the state of California, and food manufacturers are reformulating packaged foods and labeling them "trans-fat free" in response to popular demand. Sounds like a win for consumers, right?

Not so fast, says Sonja Connor, M.S., R.D., L.D., because while food manufacturers have been reducing or removing trans fats from their products, they've replaced them with equally harmful but less vilified saturated fats. "The popular media have de-emphasized the roll of saturated fat and cholesterol as being important in coronary artery disease," saysid Conner, a research associate professor in the School of Medicine at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland.
The emphasis in the media and popular culture on the dangers of trans fats has directed attention away from the ill effects of saturated fats, which has allowed food manufacturers to quietly introduce them into formerly trans-fat-filled foods. And while saturated fats get little airtime, "100 years of scientific studies … provide the crucial evidence for implicating dietary saturated fat and cholesterol as the major cause of coronary disease," said Connor in a presentation this week to the Washington State Dietetic Association.

While both types of fat are harmful, Americans eat about five times more saturated fat that trans fat. To manage your fat intake and safeguard your health, get in the habit of reading nutrition labels. The American Heart Association recommends that limiting the amount of saturated fats you eat to less than 7 percent of total daily calories. That means, for example, if you need about 2,000 calories a day, no more than 140 of them should come from saturated fats. That's about 16 grams of saturated fats a day.

In addition, the Food and Drug Administration offers these tips you can use every day to keep your consumption of saturated fat, trans fat, and cholesterol low while consuming a nutritionally adequate diet:.

• Check the Nutrition Facts panel to compare foods because the serving sizes are generally consistent in similar types of foods. Choose foods lower in saturated fat, trans fat, and cholesterol. For saturated fat and cholesterol, keep in mind that 5 percent of the Daily Value (%DV) or less is low and 20 percent or more is high. (There is no %DV for trans fat.)

• Choose alternative fats. Replace saturated and trans fats in your diet with monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats. These fats do not raise LDL cholesterol levels and have health benefits when eaten in moderation. Sources of monounsaturated fats include olive and canola oils. Sources of polyunsaturated fats include soybean oil, corn oil, sunflower oil and foods like nuts.

• Choose vegetable oils (except coconut and palm kernel oils) and soft margarines (liquid, tub, or spray) more often because the combined amount of saturated fat and trans fat is lower than the amount in solid shortenings, hard margarines, and animal fats, including butter.

• Consider fish. Most fish are lower in saturated fat than meat. Some fish, such as mackerel, sardines, and salmon, contain omega-3 fatty acids, which are being studied to determine if they offer protection against heart disease.

• Choose lean meats, such as poultry without the skin and not fried and lean beef and pork, not fried, with visible fat trimmed.

• Ask before you order when eating out. A good tip to remember when eating or ordering out is to ask which fats are being used in the preparation of your food when eating or ordering out.

• Limit foods high in cholesterol such as liver and other organ meats, egg yolks, and full-fat dairy products, like whole milk.

• Choose foods low in saturated fat such as fat- free or 1 percent% dairy products, lean meats, fish, skinless poultry, whole grain foods, and fruits and vegetables.

5 Sleep Myths Busted

It accounts for a third of your life and a big chunk of your health and longevity. So why aren't you sleeping enough?

What a night. The woman of your dreams appeared. Your pulse raced. Heavy breathing ensued. You do remember it, right? Oh, wait, you were asleep. And that's not all you missed. Under cover of night, sleep floods your veins with age-defying human growth hormone. Sleep raises an army of T cells and sends them into battle against colds and infection. Sleep resets the appetite controls that tell you to not hit the turn signal when you pass a McDonald's. And, of course, sleep helps you above the neck as well as below the belt.

"It stabilizes your waking brain, makes you more alert, and allows you to process information faster," says David Dinges, Ph.D., who studies shut-eye at the University of Pennsylvania. "It helps you remember things and consolidate those memories." You won't get that from a Red Bull. So then why are we engaged in a society-wide experiment in sleep deprivation? Average nightly sleep time during the workweek in the United States is down nearly 20 minutes in the last decade, to six hours and 40 minutes. And men ages 30 to 44 are the worst offenders: Thirty percent of them say they log less than six hours of sleep at night, according to a survey from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The price you pay for this sleep deficit is more than just lost productivity—your health can suffer too. So wake up! It's time to shed some light on this dark territory.

Successful, driven guys should be good to go on five hours a night: MYTH

True, Napoleon slept four to five hours a night, and Thomas Edison got by on four. But world domination and the lightbulb might have been mere warm-ups had these guys slept more. Sleep scientists estimate that only 10 percent of adults are hardwired to need appreciably less (or more) sleep than the recommended seven to eight hours. And by cheating on sleep, you're limping through life with the cranial equivalent of a torn calf muscle. Scarier still, people who are sleep-deprived often don't even know they've turned into zombies. After dividing 48 volunteers into four sleep regimens—eight, six, four and zero hours a night (a.k.a. torture)—University of Pennsylvania researchers found that the six-hours-a-night group fared as poorly on measures of alertness and memory after two weeks as the no-sleep crew did after 24 hours. But participants in the six-hour group didn't feel very sleepy even when they were performing at their worst. Accumulating a sleep deficit also leads to "microsleeps" while you're awake. "Your brain becomes unstable and will go 'off-line' for half a second," Dinges says. The more sleep-deprived you are, the more frequent and longer the lapses.

Snooze strategy: If you didn't sleep seven to eight hours every night this past week, go to bed this weekend at your regular weekday time, but don't set your alarm clock. Did you rise on Saturday and Sunday at the same time you would have on, say, a Tuesday? Then you may be one of those few people who can sleep less yet remain healthy. The rest of us mere mortals can begin to repay our sleep debt by dozing 10 hours a night on weekends and then sticking to seven to eight hours during the week. Your brain will use this strategy whenever you accumulate a sleep debt, says Ruth Benca, M.D., Ph.D., medical director of the Wisconsin Sleep Center. Otherwise, you want to stay consistent with your sleeping.

Frequently needing to pee in the middle of the night might indicate a health problem: TRUTH

That first stumble to the bathroom in the dark can be chalked up to the beer you drank watching the Knicks game. The second one can spell trouble. "If you habitually take two or more bathroom trips a night, you probably have obstructive sleep apnea," says Alex Chediak, M.D., medical director of the Miami Sleep Disorders Center. With sleep apnea, the soft tissue at the back of your throat blocks your upper airway during sleep, stopping your breathing for anywhere from 10 seconds to a minute or even longer. This can occur hundreds of times in a night, depriving you of restorative deep sleep and starving your vital organs of oxygen. No wonder sleep apnea has been linked to heart disease, hypertension, and mood disorders.

But why does it wake you up to pee? Because those mini-suffocations result in lower circulating oxygen levels, your heart pumps harder, raising your blood pressure. As excess fluid builds up in your veins, a feedback loop triggers the release of a pressure-relieving diuretic, making you need to pee. An enlarged prostate and high blood sugar can also prompt middle-of-the-night bowl breaks. But with those conditions, says Dr. Chediak, you'll pee a lot day and night.

Snooze strategy: Raising the pillow end of your bed by a few inches can help prevent that tissue from blocking your throat. Snoring could also be waking you in the middle of the night, and one major cause is nasal obstruction. Wash out mucus and irritants by mixing 1/4 teaspoon of table salt in 2 cups of warm water and flushing your nose twice a day using a medical or bulb syringe. Japanese researchers found that people with nasal obstruction were twice as likely to experience daytime fatigue as people with clear passageways. For video instruction on the technique, visit mayoclinic.com and search "nasal irrigation." If the peeing persists around the clock, schedule a prostate exam and have your blood-sugar level checked by your doctor after an overnight fast.

The post-lunch bonk can't be avoided: MYTH

Many Europeans scarf down a carb-loaded lunch and then shut down from 1 to 4 in the afternoon. But with unemployment soaring, let's assume a three-hour nap won't play well at the office. If you find yourself entering what amounts to a food coma after lunch, you're probably eating too many carbohydrates in the morning. And what you're not getting enough of is making it worse. "A postlunch crash is a telltale sign of poor nighttime sleep, as is dozing in meetings, theater performances, or similar environments," says Dr. Benca. Not sure if you're experiencing a modest dip or a true crash? Take a minute or two to fill out the Epworth Sleepiness Scale. This online questionnaire is the same one sleep docs use on their new patients.

Snooze strategy: Along with improving your nightly sleep pattern, eat three small meals spaced two hours apart in the morning. Try a protein shake at 7 a.m., two eggs and a small cup of oatmeal at 9, and an apple and a handful of almonds at 11. You'll consume fewer carbohydrates, and you won't be as likely to overeat at lunchtime. In fact, a salad with grilled chicken and avocado on top should be enough to keep your mind focused and your head off the desk all afternoon, says Keith Berkowitz, M. D., medical director of the Center for Balanced Health in New York City.

Waking up at 4 a. m. every day just means I'm an early riser: MYTH

More likely, you—along with 60 million other Americans—have insomnia, an inability to fall or stay asleep. "Insomniacs wake at the slightest disturbance and feel unrefreshed in the morning," says Dr. Benca. Insufficient sleep exposes the sufferer to a litany of performance and health problems. In a study published in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research, researchers found insomniacs were more than twice as likely as normal sleepers to call in sick for long periods.

Snooze strategy: Let's assume that you've already cut back on caffeine. What you want to do is make your sleep more efficient, says W. Christopher Winter, M.D., medical director of the sleep medicine center at Martha Jefferson Hospital in Charlottesville, Va. Dr. Winter likens poor sleep to a bookcase missing a few volumes, representing gaps in your sleep. By going to bed an hour or so later, those gaps won't be as long as or frequent. Soon enough, you should be waking up after the roosters, not before them.

A tiring workout before bed will help me sleep more soundly: MYTH

Regular exercise is one of the best sleep-promoting remedies, but working out late at night risks leaving you wide-eyed in bed. "It's easiest to fall asleep when your core body temperature goes relatively quickly from very warm to very cold," says Dr. Chediak. "After exercise, that cooling process takes four to six hours." It's better to take a hot bath or sauna session close to bedtime. "Anything that raises core body temperature will help get you started on sleep," says Dr. Chediak. He says the cooldown period into the sleep zone following a bath takes just two hours—half that of an exercise session.

Snooze strategy: Work out—but do it first thing in the morning for all-day energy and a quick drift into deep, restful sleep. Studies show that exercise improves sleep as effectively as a class of sleeping pills that includes Restoril and Halcion.

Alcohol can help me sleep at night: MYTH

Only if you equate a good night's sleep with passing out drunk on your girlfriend's sofa. Alcohol messes with the normal sleep cycle, especially the back end of the cycle. "Four hours into sleep, alcohol wears off and leaves you in an excitable state," says Dr. Chediak. You'll sleep lighter, wake more easily, and be hung over when you do wake. After three nights of intoxicated slumber, even the initial knockout punch begins to wane. Dr. Chediak warns of another drawback to using a six-pack as a sleep aid. "Being a muscle relaxant as well as sedative, alcohol can even create sleep apnea symptoms in snorers who don't otherwise have the condition," he says. Unfortunately, liquor is a go-to therapy for many sheep counters, used as often as over-the-counter sleeping pills and more often than prescription sleep meds.

Snooze strategy: Be consistent with your overall schedule and you won't need booze. "Your internal clock is a structure in your brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus," says Dr. Winter. "To set this clock, eat your breakfast, lunch, and dinner at exactly the same time every day for a week."

Melt Away Calories in Half the Time

Running hard is good.

Running smart is better. By focusing on small but important movements and body alignment, you'll save energy, avoid injury, and sprint past your competition.

Feet: Running injuries are made worse whenever your heel strikes the ground. "It acts like a brake, slowing you and creating stress," says Rick Fishell, a running coach at Athletes' Perfor mance in Carson, Calif. To prevent this, pull your toes up toward your shins as soon as they leave the ground, and aim to land on the balls of your feet.

Hips: The correct stride length is shorter than you may think. Your feet should land beneath your hips, says Fishell. Any longer and you're "reaching," which adds destructive force. Strong glutes (butt muscles) will pull your legs back under your hips as your feet hit the ground and safely propel you forward.

Abs: Contract your abs so they can help you maintain good form (chest up, shoulders over hips). But don't flex consciously, Fishell says. By doing that, you could distract yourself. Instead, activate your core by performing a dynamic warmup (jump squats, for example) prior to running.

Shoulders: Keep your shoulders back and shoulder blades pulled down toward your back pockets. Move your arms from your shoulders to save energy. Swinging your arms improperly can throw off your alignment and increase your risk of injury.

Hands: They should be lightly cupped. If you make a fist, your forearms will tense up and impede proper shoulder motion. Don't carry your iPod or water bottle in your hand, because that could cause your torso to rotate instead of remaining straight and rigid.

Elbows: Swing them at about 90 degrees, pulled close to your body. If your elbows flare out, your arm action will be less efficient and your upper-body mechanics will suffer.

Small Strides, Big Finish

Running hard is good.

Running smart is better. By focusing on small but important movements and body alignment, you'll save energy, avoid injury, and sprint past your competition.

Feet: Running injuries are made worse whenever your heel strikes the ground. "It acts like a brake, slowing you and creating stress," says Rick Fishell, a running coach at Athletes' Perfor mance in Carson, Calif. To prevent this, pull your toes up toward your shins as soon as they leave the ground, and aim to land on the balls of your feet.

Hips: The correct stride length is shorter than you may think. Your feet should land beneath your hips, says Fishell. Any longer and you're "reaching," which adds destructive force. Strong glutes (butt muscles) will pull your legs back under your hips as your feet hit the ground and safely propel you forward.

Abs: Contract your abs so they can help you maintain good form (chest up, shoulders over hips). But don't flex consciously, Fishell says. By doing that, you could distract yourself. Instead, activate your core by performing a dynamic warmup (jump squats, for example) prior to running.

Shoulders: Keep your shoulders back and shoulder blades pulled down toward your back pockets. Move your arms from your shoulders to save energy. Swinging your arms improperly can throw off your alignment and increase your risk of injury.

Hands: They should be lightly cupped. If you make a fist, your forearms will tense up and impede proper shoulder motion. Don't carry your iPod or water bottle in your hand, because that could cause your torso to rotate instead of remaining straight and rigid.

Elbows: Swing them at about 90 degrees, pulled close to your body. If your elbows flare out, your arm action will be less efficient and your upper-body mechanics will suffer.

A Six-Pack By Summer

The Payoff:

  • Faster fat loss: The Traveling Deadlift and Turkish Getup, featured below, force your body to engage more muscles than typical bodybuilding exercises do. And that means you'll burn more calories than ever before.
  • Greater stamina: The fast pace of this workout plan not only melts fat, but also improves your overall endurance. So, as you progress, you'll be able to go harder and longer in each subsequent workout. The end result: You'll get leaner, faster.
  • Extra muscle: Because this workout plan incorporates power exercises—such as the Hang Clean and Jump Squat—it targets your fast-twitch muscle fibers. And since these fibers have the greatest potential for size and strength, that leads to bigger, stronger muscles.

Your goal: A chiseled body

Your time: 24 minutes

Some beliefs are painfully slow to perish, like the one that declares intense aerobic exercise is the best method for burning fat. "This misconception could be what's keeping you from a lean physique," says Michael Mejia, M.S., C.S.C.S., a Men's Healthexercise advisor. The reason is simple: "Most men invest their energy in exercise that boosts their caloric expenditure only while they're working out," says Mejia, for example, a 45-minute spin on a stationary bike or a moderate jog through a park.

Resistance training, on the other hand, elevates your metabolism for up to 48 hours afterward, so it pays fat-loss dividends long after your workout ends. And, turns out, lifting weights is highly underrated for burning calories during your session, too. A recent study from the University of Southern Maine found that an intense weight-training session burns as many as 71 percent more calories than previously thought—putting it on par with aerobic exercise.

Mejia's workout plan creates an enormous metabolic demand on your body by blending explosive exercises and combination lifts in a fast-paced circuit. Alternate between Workout A and Workout B, performing three workouts a week and resting a day between sessions. In the first two weeks, do three sets of each exercise, resting 60 seconds between sets. In weeks three and four, perform each routine as a circuit. That is, do one set of each exercise without resting between moves, then rest 90 seconds between circuits. Complete a total of three circuits.

Benchmark of success: How do you measure up?

Most men judge weight-loss success by their waistlines. And that's fine, but it doesn't measure your ability to burn fat. In this test, you'll sprint as fast and as far as you can. The farther you can run at your fastest pace, the better prepared your body is to last through high-intensity fat-burning workouts like this one.

Lace up your running shoes and head to an open stretch of road or track. After a 2- to 3-minute warmup jog, sprint at your top speed for as long as possible. Stop as soon as you feel yourself slowing down and record either your time or your distance—whichever is more convenient.

Hang Clean to Front Squat to Push Press

Grab a barbell with a shoulder-width grip and dip your knees, as if you were about to jump. Quickly reverse the motion and shrug your shoulders as you pull the bar straight up and rise onto your toes. As the bar approaches chest height, bend your knees and swing your elbows forward to "catch" the bar in the crooks of your fingers. Now lower your body until your thighs are parallel to the floor.

Push back up to a standing position, then press the bar overhead. Lower the bar to the starting position. That's one repetition.

The plan: Do six repetitions with a weight you would typically use to push-press six times. Perform three sets in weeks one and two; do the move as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.

Dumbbell Double Wood Chop

Hold a light dumbbell with a hand-over-hand grip, your arms extended above your right shoulder. Keeping your arms straight but not locked, bend at the knees and forcefully rotate your torso to the left as you draw your arms down and across your body. When your hands reach the outside of your left ankle, pause, then quickly reverse the movement with the same intensity, pausing at the top. That's one repetition. Do eight, then hold the weight over your left shoulder and repeat the move, this time chopping to your right.

The plan: Complete eight repetitions on each side. Perform three sets in weeks one and two; do the move as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.

Piston Bent-Over Row

Holding dumbbells, stand with your feet shoulder-width apart. Bend forward until your torso is almost parallel to the floor and your arms hang straight down, palms facing each other. Pull the weights to the sides of your chest. This is the starting position. Keeping your right arm as still as possible, lower the weight in your left hand until your arm is straight. Lift the dumbbell back up to the side of your chest, then lower your right hand. Continue alternating.

The plan: Complete eight repetitions with each arm. Perform three sets in weeks one and two; do the move as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.

Turkish Getup

Lie on your back with your legs straight. Hold a dumbbell in your right hand with your arm straight above you. Keeping your elbow locked and the weight above you at all times, stand up. (Move your legs and left arm underneath you to push yourself up.) Still keeping your right arm straight and the weight above you, reverse the motion to return to the starting position.

The plan: Complete eight repetitions on each side. Perform three sets in weeks one and two; do the move as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.



Pushup/Pullup Ladder

Stand next to a pullup bar and get into pushup position. Do two pushups, then stand up and grasp the bar with your hands slightly more than shoulder-width apart. Pull yourself up until the bar is at shoulder height, then lower yourself.

The plan: Add two pushups and one pullup each time you repeat the pair. So you'll start by doing two pushups and one pullup. Next, you'll do four and two, then six and three, and so on. Stop when you can do 10 pushups and five pullups or when you reach technical failure—that is, when your form falters or you can no longer control the speed of your repetitions. Perform three ladders in weeks one and two; do the ladder as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.

Dumbbell Jump Squat to Squat Thrust

Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and hold a pair of dumbbells at your sides. Lower your body about 6 inches, then jump as high as you can. Land softly on the balls of your feet and immediately sink into a squat, lowering your body until you touch the dumbbells to the floor. Kick your legs out behind you so you're in pushup position, with your hands on top of the dumbbells.

Reverse the motion, bringing your legs forward so your feet are under your shoulders, then pushing back up to a standing position. That's one repetition.

The plan: Do eight repetitions. Perform three sets in weeks one and two; do the move as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.

Traveling Deadlift

Stand with a light barbell on the floor in front of you, your feet shoulder-width apart and the bar directly over your toes. Bend your knees and grasp the bar with an overhand grip with your hands just outside your knees. Keeping your head and back straight and the bar close to your body, stand up. Next, step forward with your left foot and then with your right so your feet come together. Lower the bar to the floor and repeat the move, this time stepping forward with your right foot.

The plan: Do eight to 10 repetitions. Perform three sets in weeks one and two; do the move as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.

Medicine-Ball Bicycle Maneuver

Lie on your back holding a medicine ball in front of your chest, elbows flared out to the sides. Bend your knees 90 degrees and raise your legs so your thighs are perpendicular to the floor. Next, curl your torso up so your upper body is at a 45-degree angle. This is the starting position. Bring your left knee toward your chest as you straighten your right leg, and simultaneously twist your upper body to the left until your right elbow meets your left knee. Reverse the move, drawing your right knee to your left elbow.

The plan: Do 10 repetitions on each side. Perform three sets in weeks one and two; do the move as part of a circuit in weeks three and four.