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Tom
Venuto's Top 10 Travel Tips
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Title:Tom Venuto's Top 10
Travel Fitness Tips, Part 1
By line: By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
URL: www.burnthefat.com (replace with
your clickbank affiliate hoplink - click on "hoplink instructions in
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Word count: 1096 words
Related keywords: travel fitness, hotel
fitness, travel workouts
Tom Venuto's Top 10
Travel Fitness Tips
By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.burnthefat.com
I recently read two
articles about travel fitness. One said that while you're traveling,
you should keep up with 50% of your normal training and the other said
you should keep up with only one-third. Both were written by well known
fitness professionals and both said that you should NOT expect to keep
up your regular exercise program while you are traveling. That struck
me as kind of "lame" and I said to myself, “Why the heck not?
Why do people have such low standards and demand so little of
themselves? Why do they let themselves off the hook and scale
back?”
Sometimes, of course,
traveling is purely for a vacation – including a vacation
from training. Occasional time off from intense training is beneficial
and necessary to let your body recover and rejuvenate completely from
chronic training stress, just as time off from the office is needed to
disengage your mind for a while. It’s also true that it
really doesn’t take much to maintain fitness once it is
developed, and an abbreviated, but still effective, workout routine
could certainly be used, if you choose, when you’re on the
road.
However, you still have
healthy eating to think about and just because you’re
traveling doesn’t mean you can’t follow your
regular exercise regimen. Why settle? If you want to continue to
improve your physique while on the road, you can! Here are 10 ways that
I did it on my last extended business trip that you may find helpful as
well. It begins with a simple decision.
1. Decide to
improve while you’re traveling and to come home in better
shape than when you left
Nearly every time I travel
(the exception being if it’s a complete rest and relaxation
vacation), I set a goal to come home in better shape than when I left.
The only reason most people usually come home with lower fitness and a
few extra pounds than when they left is because they didn’t
make a decision to do otherwise. In fact, many people hold a belief
that it’s “impossible” to stay on their
eating and exercise program while they are traveling! Why not get in
better shape no matter where you are? The truth is, all it takes is a
decision and some planning. I find it a fun and exhilarating challenge
to improve myself no matter where I am in the world.
2. Write out your
workout schedule in advance
There’s nothing
like writing your goals down on paper to keep your mind focused and
keep yourself motivated. In addition to writing out goals regularly,
preferably every day, you should also commit your training schedule to
paper and especially when you are traveling. Write down the days, the
time of the day and the exact workout you plan to do and you will be
amazed at how easy you will find it is to get to the gym and have great
workouts.
3. Get a hotel
with a kitchen
The single most important
part of my travel arrangements was to book a hotel with a kitchen. For
me, not having a kitchen is not an option. If you don’t have
kitchen, you will be much more likely to skip meals, it’s
very difficult to eat 5 or 6 times a day (as required by any good fat
burning or muscle building nutrition program), and you may end up at
the mercy of restaurant, hotel or convenience store food. For my most
recent trip, I stayed at Homestead Studio Suites, one of several
national hotel chains in the USA which includes a full kitchen
including a refrigerator, microwave, stove – the whole works.
Exteneded Stay America and Marriot Residence Inn offer similar
accomodations
On previous trips, if there
wasn’t such a hotel with a kitchen in the vicinity, I
searched the internet for apartments for short term rental. You may be
surprised at the type of lodging you can find and often you will be
pleased with price as compared to hotels. I once booked a luxury condo
for 7 days and it ended up costing less than the hotel I was first
considering, and the hotel didn’t even have a kitchen.
Nothing beats a full kitchen, but you may also find that many hotels
will provide you with a microwave and mini-refrigerator if you ask for
them.
4. Go food
shopping immediately after checking in
The FIRST thing I did after
checking in was to make a beeline straight to the local grocery store.
I took a shopping list with me because on past trips I found that I
nearly always seemed to forget one or two small items if I
didn’t have the written grocery list. Once you have a fully
stocked refrigerator and kitchen, your meal planning and preparation is
NO DIFFERENT than it is when you are home.
5. check the local
restaurant locations and menus and commit in advance to making healthy
choices when dining out
Since I had a kitchen at my
disposal, the majority of my meals were just business as usual. I
cooked them right in my hotel room and brought them along with me
wherever I went. However, when traveling, it’s likely that
you will probably be having quite a few restaurant meals.
I make it a habit to scope
out the local restaurants in advance and even check their websites.
Most have their menus online these days. I make a decision in advance
whether it will be a regular meal or a “cheat
meal.” If it’s a cheat meal, I enjoy whatever I
want, but I always keep portion sizes in mind. For example, last time,
I split a slice of cheesecake with a friend. Was I guilty? Heck no, it
was my planned cheat day, I only ate half a slice and it was the first
cheesecake I had in 12 months!
If you walk into a
restaurant without having made a decision in advance whether you are
staying on your regular meals or having a cheat meal, you are much more
likely to have a “diet accident” and make a poor
choice on impulse, especially if you’re influenced by
non-healthy-eating companions (don’t under estimate the
negative peer pressure factor). All it takes is one unplanned cheat
meal and that can often lead to guilt. Then “all or none
thinking” tends to set in and you may tell yourself,
“Well, I blew it,” so the next meal and then the
rest of the week tends to completely fall apart as well.
Continued in Part 2
About the Author:
Tom Venuto is a natural bodybuilder and author of
the #1 best selling e-book, "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle,”
which teaches you how to burn fat without drugs or supplements using
the little-known secrets of the world's best bodybuilders and fitness
models. Learn how to get rid of stubborn fat and turbo-charge your
metabolism by visiting: www.burnthefat.com.
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