The Cyclical Science of Happiness

What makes us happy? I’m talking about a passionate, unequivocal sense of zest and love of life.

It’s not something you wake up one morning saying “You know what? I think I’m happy. I made it.”

No.

Happiness comes from within. Work your butt off to get the perfect beach body, but guess what? You’ll never feel like you have the “perfect” body if you aren’t happy with yourself. As humans, we always want more, but happiness isn’t an end point kind of deal.

It comes in many forms. Almost all of which can be traced back to self-confidence. When you are confident in yourself you see success in your actions, the progress, not results. You recognize your hard work towards these changes, credit your body with love, and express self-gratitude. You emanate inner strength; a testament of your relentless efforts.

We are always making changes, buying the next greatest technology, thinking, “This is IT. This will finally be what makes me happy.”

No, it has to come from you.

By now, most of us have been conditioned that if we start eating better and we will feel better.

It’s not that easy.

Ask anyone. I would be the first to advocate healthy eating. No matter how much I ramble on the life changing benefits and fear striking facts, why would someone make the effort to go through the troubles of eating healthy if they don’t have a deep respect for themselves to provide their body with the absolute best?

This is the brutal truth and unfortunate side to the awful, perpetuating cycle of an unhealthy lifestyle.

When was the last time you saw a sad, weak, and physically unhealthy person leaving the gym?

It’s not the bodybuilder who just maxed out at the gym or the ambitious 10 year old who just beat her mile time you see double-fisting chocolate cupcakes.

No. You see the fit, perky, lively can-doer speed walking out the gym with an apple in their hand (most likely pursuing the next big feat they are motivated to accomplish and spend their very productive day doing). They are all sorts of fueled – physically and mentally. These are the ones moving a mile a minute, getting work done, and loading up at the salad bar.

Go ahead and start a diet, but you’ll never be satisfied if you aren’t first happy with yourself. Let alone, if you don’t possess the tiniest ounce of faith that you are capable of so much more, how far are you really going to get? You’ll only crave results. Let’s be real – five pounds less is never enough. You got your a six-pack? I wanted an eight-pack!

It’s never enough.

No wonder we crave a cheat day, and even worse, straight up quit – this external, result derived happiness leaves us feeling even worse from when we set out begin this ambitious lifestyle change. Now you’re left feeling even more hopeless than when you started. I’ll take that second slice of cake for my piteous efforts…healthy eating and exercise just ain’t my thang (even worse, yo-yo dieting).

So then, where to begin?

First, find your place to derive motivation and confidence.  

For me – EXERCISE. WE ARE MADE TO MOVE – the benefits are endless and it’s something we should all be doing. I’m not saying that because I’m some fit, bias, endorphin addict athlete – these are the facts of human nature and any research can back me up. Being active works in our favor in more ways than one – increasing our sense of well being and pushing our body to its physical and mental limits.

The second we start being active, we start to care. We start to see changes – we don’t want to lose that hard work.

We respect ourselves.

Think about a person you really respect – you would do anything for them. They radiate strength and kindness. They’ve work hard to never let you down. They serve as a foundation, source of relentless dependency…c’mon, how could you ever do them wrong?

That’s the relationship you start to have with your body.

Exercise is an evolving process that brings enjoyment as we grow and continually strive for more. Not because we aren’t satisfied with what we’ve accomplished, but because we start to believe that we truly are capable of so much more. Along the way, maybe even discovered we posses a slight purpose beyond the daily rout of life?

Never mind all those happy hormones, social benefits, and physiological changes that come along for the ride – that’s a nice little bonus.

With that being said – when you feel good about yourself you eat better.

Why? It makes perfect sense. People who invest energy and time into their health and personal well-being care enough to not screw it up.

Not until we value ourselves do we care enough to treat our body with love. The funny thing is, when we start eating better we feel good about ourselves.

We don’t always make sense, but this is the way we function as ridiculous as it may seem.

Exercise is a way to push us to limits that before were unfathomable. We begin respecting ourselves a tad bit more – I mean hey, you did make the effort to get off the couch anyways – that’s at least worth something.

The person who is still in bed at 1pm, stayed out drinking all night, and just kicked off the day watching Netflix, cracking open a Coke for breakfast, doesn’t care because they are already unhealthy – why not just go all the way?

Yea, yea…we’ve all done this at one point or another *cough cough vacation season*

Society doesn’t help with the abundance of environmental triggers, media, lazy outlets, eating temptations – making it easier than ever to just go down the path of fast food, living vicariously through a digital screen, and never needing to walk a step again. Our expectations of “healthy” are often skewed – we assume it must be painful and require unnecessary disciple that we don’t have. Our day is ruined by a disgusted hour of suffering and we are deprived of any palatable foods.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Finding an activity you enjoy changes everything.

Exercise is no-doubt, always the highlight of my day. Except for when I encourage others to experience that too – that tops it off. No one can be controlled, whether it’s your spouse, kids, or a client. But if you work to be the the best you can possibly be – striving toward optimal health, expanding your knowledge, opening your perspective, learning from others– you can provide the best of yourself in a way that inspires changes in others.

Stay active, eat whole foods, drink water, get some shut-eye, and have a balanced lifestyle…I can promise you for the most part you will be just fine. If we care enough to treat ourselves the absolute best, (and if you want to take it this far – thus the world around us) we actually start acting on it.

I’m not saying the key is to start working out first and then eating better, or vice versa – I’m saying if you first and foremost do something that motivates you to be better and brings you joy then you will treat your body with respect, nourishment, and want to be healthy. You simply can’t have one without the other.

What comes first – exercise/dieting or self-confidence? People change their eating to lose weight so they feel better about themselves. But people who feel better about themselves usually are more active and eat better.

So where do you begin? I think that’s a question only you can answer.

The answer doesn’t reside in these outcomes but in yourself, which you find through the process of being better – whether it is by eating or exercising. It’s a cycle, not straight line with beginning to end. See your improvements in whatever it may be, build your confidence by recognizing your gains. Embrace that feeling. Let your body be inspired and driven toward improvements.

We want to be motivated! We want to be better!

Think about it, if you don’t respect your body and possess a sense of worthiness, why the hell would you take the effort to fuel it.

Start respecting yourself and all your potential. Start pushing your limits. Start working out. Start eating better. Start being happy.

Source: https://www.trainingcor.com/be-happy/

W.I.N.

W.I.N.

“You can’t TRY to do things, you must simply DO them” – Ray Bradbury

What’s Important NOW. W.I.N.

So many people desire greatness, but declaring a goal doesn’t mean it will automatically happen. Whatever “it” may be – you must always show up with the time, energy, heart and soul.

Don’t’ feel like it? What does “feeling” like doing it have to do with anything? So what if you don’t feel like it. Show up and do it. You made a promise. It is called discipline.

Discipline yourself to develop a sense of mastery and the ability to swap your inner dialogue when deciding what you need to do from “how do I feel” to “what’s important now” –  take the necessary actions right now to get the job done. You aren’t just going to “try”, you are going to “do”.

Take the action right now to DO IT!

When ‘you don’t feel like it’ this week, what is the one important action you can take right at that very moment to help you reach your goal?

Source: https://www.trainingcor.com/w-i-n/

COR Team Stability Ball Challenge

COR Team Stability Ball Challenge

When programming exercise, just as life, everything must have a purpose. You need to go about it with deliberate intentions –

  1. What is the goal/focus
  2. What did we accomplish
  3. What did we learn.

The focus:

Our last day of Kids Athletic Development Program was focused on three things

1. Stability/Balance

Balance is a component of fitness that is often overlooked. For a skill so critical to athletic development as well as everyday activities, it’s necessarywe educate its importance and role in proper functioning. This was the topic of Thursday’s lesson during our Kids Athletic Development Program. Many associate balance with wimpy exercises forcing you to stand on one leg and close your eyes. While yes, this is balance, it is far more extensive.

2. Teamwork

Kids need to be challenged. Actually, we all need to be challenged. Of course, I hoped to push their body to it’s limit, but more importantly I wanted to show them that the only way to do so is as a cohesive unit – as a team. This requires communication, constant feedback, and engagement at all times. The kids weren’t only challenged physically, they were also challenged mentally (#3).

3. Creativity

If we are creating a foundation of a life-long, healthy lifestyle it is necessary to be creative. We must teach kids to always challenge themselves to find a way, and then take it a step further.

We fished off our last workout at KADP with a challenge.

If we are creating a foundation of a life-long, healthy lifestyle it is necessary to be creative. We must teach kids to always challenge themselves to find a way, and then take it a step further.

There will be times when these kids can’t afford gym memberships. Five years from now school work will pile up. Put a job and social life on top of that – how are they going to find a way to still incorporate physical activity? Then there’s family and balancing a career, will they have the time to fit in a workout?

YES, they will.

In a world where we always seem to find excuses, we want them to see a way.

What we accomplished:

One piece of equipment. Two hours. Four kids.

While they discovered that a workout doesn’t have to mean running laps on a treadmill or lifting weights, they took away much more.

They were forced to maintain engagement and constant communication for two hours. However, it wasn’t myself forcing them. They saw the challenge at hand and discovered for themselves what was required to accomplish it. In order to challenge each other as a cohesive unit they were forced to use their imagination. Once instructed on the proper form and biomechanics, it was up to them to figure out how to work together to make the exercise work.

The moment I knew we accomplished the task at hand wasn’t when they started sweating, or even when they worked together. It was in the last 10 minutes of the workout.

We were running out of time and I told the kids we weren’t going to have enough time to finish. Without a second of hesitation the kids collectively grouped together and teamed up to find a way to finish the workout! Now, I gave them full permission to skip the last round…and they wanted to finish? Together they found a way to partner up on the piece of equipment for the last strength component round and combine the exercises

…this meant that they had no rest between sets.

As a unit these kids teamed together, used their imagination, and were intrinsically driven to find a way to challenge themselves. This exemplified everything that I hoped for them to gain. That is definition of accomplishment.

What we ALL can learn from this:

One of my favorite quotes comes from Mihaly Csiskzentmihalyi, he says –

“The pursuit of a goal brings order in awareness because a person must concentrate attention on the task at hand and momentarily forget everything else. These periods of struggling to overcome challenges are what people find to be the most enjoyable times of their lives” and “By stretching skills, by reaching toward higher challenges, such a person becomes an increasingly extraordinary individual.”

They knew three things going into this:

  1. The task (the focus)
  2. They possessed the skills and potential to accomplish this (this was emphasized!)
  3. The challenge presented (…this wasn’t going to be easy!)
  • I cannot emphasize more that these kids are the highlight and a perfect example of growing through conquering clear goals and tackling any challenge presented. However, I had my own goals and challenges when presented this opportunity to run the camp for the first time. There were goals I had for them and the structure, challenges in creativity and programing, and skills I had to employ. Not only were they accomplishing so much, but through them I was as well. We can all take learn something from any experience, even when we aren’t the ones directly involved.*
Source: https://www.trainingcor.com/cor-team-stabi...

Sweat, Sun and Fun Pt. 3

Sweat, Sun and Fun Pt. 3

What does water have to do with this anyway?

Water is something I hold near and dear to my heart…73% of it to be exact (1)…and my lungs, muscles, blood, skin…

Countless hours (years) spent swimming through the awe-inspiring open blue, the permanently attached water bottle at my hip and a rather unusual adoration of a quality sweat-sesh. This only begins to explain the depths of which my heartfelt conviction for water expands. Call me obsessed, but soon you’ll see why you should be as well.

Water makes up 60% of our body, 70% of this earth, 80% of our brain…and should be 100% by your side

Can you guess what the most popular beverage in the US is? I’ll give you a hint it’s not water! (9)

Water comes in second behind soft drinks. If we were meant to drink soda, then it would make up 2/3 of our body! Soda is not only a health hazard, but it contributes to our increasing stroke rate, heart issues and obesity epidemic. All of this could be avoided with a simple beverage swap.

Being that water influences every process in our body, the benefits are endless. Whether you are looking for commercial clear skin or maximal brainpower – water is the answer. Most importantly, you have nutrients to be transported, temperature to be regulated, and food to be digested. Water maintains all these processes.

Just a reminder of how smart we are – our body is one massive, synchronic army constantly sending cues for combat. The sensation of thirst is a concert of tiny, specific cues precisely timed together. Our brain, organs, hormones, kidneys, glands…EVERYTHING…work in tune to monitor the amount of water coming in verse going out (2).

Most of the time our body has it all under control. It’s only when we are losing more water than we can replace (think Part 1 with some super sweat sesh or Part 2 trapped in a full body suit running a marathon) that we are dehydrated and left completely helpless.

Let’s back up to Part 1 – when are body temperature rises from a butt-kicking workout, we cool it down a notch by sweating. Sweat evaporates from our skin and takes the heat with it. However, if you don’t have water, then blood can’t flow to the skin to make this possible (3).  Exercise and heat are the two big culprits in jacking up our sweat output. It’s easy for us to not realize how much we are sweating, and before we know it we aren’t matching that with water intake.

In efforts to reduce the risk of thermal injury and impairment of performance during exercise,

“fluid replacement should attempt to equal fluid loss” being that the “requirement for fluid replacement becomes greater with increased sweating during environment thermal stress” (4).

So what does this mean…

For those who don’t catch every exact ounce of individual sweat droplet and measure how much water they should consume, how do you know how much water to drink?

Many, many, MANY factors contribute to our water needs. Breathing, sweating, peeing, crying – water is leaving us all the time, at different rates through many ways. Most of the time we can rely on our simple thirst mechanism to keep us hydrated (5). However, the dangers of dehydration can be just as important as overhydration. I’m all about water…but in moderation of course!

In efforts to avoid or combat dehydration, hyponatremia can occur when people drink way too much water that it dilutes their blood. The kidneys have all the water, salts and other solutes under control. Start forcing water down our mouths and our kidneys won’t be able to flush it out fast enough. All this water has to go somewhere – so off it flows into any place that will take it (it won’t be the toilet) (6)!

Understand your optimal balance by paying attention to urine color, energy levels, satiety, and general feel. Only YOU know how your body handles special circumstances like exercise and heat. The invariability based on our individual factors and lifestyle make it impossible to prescribe a perfect number, but a daily water intake of 3.7 L for adult men and 2.7 L for adult women meets the needs of the vast majority of persons (2).

The multitude of factors, important symptoms and how we respond to dehydration (and even overhydration) is worthy of it’s own article – check back next week for the last article of this series!

References:

  1. The chemical composition of the adult human body and its bearing on the biochemistry of growth Mitchell, H.H. et al. 1945. The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 158: 625-637
  2. Water, Hydration and Health. Popkin, B. M., D’Anci, K. E., & Rosenberg, I. H. (2010). Nutrition Reviews68(8), 439–458.
  3. Hydration effects on thermoregulation and performance in the heat. M. N. Sawka, S. J. Montain, W. A. Latzka. Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol. 2001 April; 128(4): 679–690
  4. American College of Sports Medicine position stand. Exercise and fluid replacement. V. A. Convertino, L. E. Armstrong, E. F. Coyle, G. W. Mack, M. N. Sawka, L. C. Senay, Jr, W. M. Sherman. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1996 January; 28(1): i–vii.
  5. Human water needs.Michael N. Sawka, Samuel N. Cheuvront, Robert Carter, 3rd. Nutr Rev. 2005 June; 63(6 Pt 2): S30–S39. Fatal water intoxication. Farrell, D. J., & Bower, L. (2003). Journal of Clinical Pathology56(10), 803–804.
Source: https://www.trainingcor.com/sweat-sun-and-...

Sweat, Sun and Fun Pt. 2

Sweat, Sun and Fun Pt. 2

The peak summer heat and humidity is upon us. Workout intensity continues to increase. The AC at the office is broken. The ceiling fan is clicking on high.

As for maintaining thermoregulation, extreme environmental conditions bear an entire new level of difficulty (1). This is why we often hear of heat-

related illnesses during the summer (e.g. heat cramps, heat exhaustion, heat stroke).

As we discussed when busting last week’s sweat myth – our first adaptation to exercise is to sweat sooner.

Our bodies are pretty picky. They want to maintain a narrow homeostatic body temperature of 98.6 F.  When we exercise, several powerful physiological mechanisms of heat loss kick in to prevent an excessive rise in core body temperature (2)

Throw heat and humidity into the mix. This only adds to the challenge exercise already imposes on the human thermoregulatory system. Humidity is the equivalent of the skin’s worst sinus infection – congested with moisture from sweat with nowhere to go. With high temperatures present, the failure to dissipate internal heat causes the body temperature to rise even more. These conditions impair heat exchange between the body and environment. Pushing through the last set of prisoner push-ups is enough, now you’re forced to combat the heat too!

Good news – our body refuses to take ‘no’ for an answer. Give us heat, we take it on like a champ; adapting to deal with the environment wherever we go.

In just 10-14 days you’ve already adapted (most of which occurs in the first five days) (3)!

In the meantime, a few things happened making you better than ever …

  • Increase plasma volumes: No more hot temperatures taxing us as before (it’s hard work trying to stay at 98.6 F) AND we don’t require as much fluid (4)
  • Sweat earlier and faster: Less heat storage that would demand more fluid replacement (3)(6)
  • Reduce the amount of electrolytes lost in sweat: Remember, efficiency. We need these for other processes!
  • Reduce blood flow to the skin: Blood can go to other areas like your muscles…which trust me, you need (7)

The next brutal day when you’re hiking through the Pamulaklakin Forest, trapped in a house that feels like your college dorm from the ‘50s, and braving a lunch break power walk in a full suit – take your mind off the heat and embrace the changes your body is making.

You would feel much worse if you weren’t sweating…kind of like what happens when dehydrated…

Check back next week to see how it’s related!

References:

  1. International Olympic Committee consensus statement on thermoregulatory and altitude challenges for high-level athletes. M. F. Bergeron, R. Bahr, P. Bärtsch, L. Bourdon, J. A.. L. Calbet, K. H. Carlsen, O. Castagna, J. González-Alonso, C. Lundby, R. J. Maughan, et al. Br J Sports Med. 2012 September; 46(11): 770–779. Published online 2012 June 9. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2012-091296
  2. Temperature regulation during exercise. M. GleesonInt J Sports Med. 1998 June; 19 (Suppl 2): S96–S99. doi: 10.1055/s-2007-971967
  3. Acclimatization strategies–preparing for exercise in the heat. Y. Shapiro, D. Moran, Y. Epstein Int J Sports Med. 1998 June; 19 (Suppl 2): S161–S163. doi: 10.1055/s-2007-971986
  4. Powers, S. K, Howley, E. T  (2012). Exercise Physiology: Theory and Application to Fitness and Performance. New York: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages.
  5. Exercise in the heat: challenges and opportunities. Ron Maughan, Susan Shirreffs. Sports Sci. 2004 October; 22(10): 917–927. doi: 10.1080/02640410400005909
  6. Effects of training, environment, and host factors on the sweating response to exercise. L. E. Armstrong, C. M. Maresh. Int J Sports Med. 1998 June; 19 (Suppl 2): S103–S105. doi: 10.1055/s-2007-971969
  7. Control of skin circulation during exercise and heat stress. M. F. Roberts, C. B. Wenger. Med Sci Sports. 1979 Spring; 11(1): 36–41.
Source: https://www.trainingcor.com/sweat-sun-and-...

Sweat, Sun and Fun Pt. 1

Sweat, Sun and Fun Pt. 1

Myth: Unfit people sweat more

Many assume that sweating is a sign of exertion, failure to respond to exercise, or lack of fitness. In fact, it’s the exact opposite – what’s concerning is NOT sweating.

Sweating is our response to any physical demand – it says “Hey, this is hard, but it’s all good because I know how to deal with it!”

At rest, your metabolic rate (how fast your body uses energy, which produces heat) is low. You aren’t doing much and your body can easily get rid of heat. However, start movin’ and groovin’ and your metabolic rate spikes. You’re burnin’ more energy! …and it’s going to take more than radiation to get all this heat out of your body. You need to cool down fast!

While you can handle the heat, your body isn’t having it. You are forced to switch gears and rely on cooling down (thermoregulation) a bit differently than before – evaporation (1).

In other words, sweating.

Now, each individual responds differently. Training adaptations and fitness are both factors in the sufficiency of sweating mechanisms, and subsequent need for fluid replacement. However, one thing’s for sure – with some training, an athlete achieves a better maintenance of body temperature (2).

This is at the expense of an increased sweat rate.

Remember: More sweat, more evaporative heat loss (this is the way we get rid of heat when exercising or else we would burn up). Our first adaptation to exercise is to sweat sooner (3). We are forced to become more efficient, and as a result improve thermoregulation.

Faster sweat →  more sweat →  more sweat on your skin that can’t evaporate → and more sweat that drips wastefully from the skin…as you notice when exercising (4).

While this isn’t pretty, it’s a more efficient adaptation. We are always looking for ways to do everything better and faster. If sweating and burning energy is what it takes for me to work out stronger and not feel sick, I’ll take it!

What this really means is that fit people are just more efficient sweaters (5). In most cases, our body’s first physiological response to being more efficient is to sweat more. As always, this varies person to person – some will respond in other ways.

In some cases, you will have people who sweat a ton but are extremely inefficient. Regardless, if you are sweating you are doing something right. So next time you leave the gym looking like you just hopped out of the pool, give yourself a pat on the back and rock it!

Look out for Part 2 of this series next week to see what happens when we start to heat things up!

References

  1. Thermoregulation during exercise in the heat: strategies for maintaining health and performance. Daniël Wendt, Luc J. C. van Loon, Wouter D. van Marken Lichtenbelt.Sports Med. 2007; 37(8): 669–682.
  2. Long Distance Runners Present Upregulated Sweating Responses than Sedentary CounterpartsLee, J.-B., Kim, T.-W., Min, Y.-K., & Yang, H.-M. (2014). PLoS ONE9(4), e93976. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0093976
  3. Sex differences in the effects of physical training on sweat gland responses during a graded exercise.Ichinose-Kuwahara T1, Inoue Y, Iseki Y, Hara S, Ogura Y, Kondo N. Exp Physiol. 2010 Oct;95(10):1026-32. doi: 10.1113/expphysiol.2010.053710. Epub 2010 Aug 9.
  4. American College of Sports Medicine (1996). Position Stand on Exercise and Fluid Replacement. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc28(1): i–vii.
    Control of skin circulation during exercise and heat stress. M. F. Roberts, C. B. Wenger. Med Sci Sports. 1979 Spring; 11(1): 36–41.
Source: https://www.trainingcor.com/sweat-sun-and-...

Coconut Oil: The One Ingredient Solution to the Top 10 Swimmer Problems

The One Ingredient Solution to the Top 10 Swimmer Problems Coconut Oil!

*Features on About.com/Swimming*

Swimming is a sport that demands efficiency – in the water but also on land.

Efficient stroke mechanics, time management, space utilization...you name it.

EVERYTHING.

Forget caring bottles of lotion in your bag, making countless trips to the convenience store, and putting chemicals in your body that you can’t even pronounce. If there is one item that you should remember to pack for your meet (besides your suit, cap and goggles, of course) it’s this – Coconut Oil.

1.     Chlorine Hair

While shiny, green, dry hair is an emblem of our countless hours of dedication and hard work in the pool, there comes a time when we may actually need to comb through our hair or at least take it out of our permanent swimmer buns… (http://swimswam.com/missy-franklin-how-to-make-a-swimmer-bun/)…and when you do, you don’t want it looking like this (http://swimswam.com/swimmers-hair-the-facts/)

Adding coconut oil to your hair pre-swim will saturate the hair and keep it from absorbing the chlorinated water while also reducing protein loss (no more dead ends) due to its high affinity for hair proteins, low molecular weight and straight linear fatty chain (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12715094).  AKA our first grade science experiment -  water and oil don't mix…coconut oil repels the water.

This also works as a natural post-swim deep conditioning moisturizer. The small molecular structure of the oil allows for easy absorption through the hair while the fatty acids delivers a soft smooth texture which relieves that dry post-swim chlorine hair feel. This will also protect your hair from the damaging effects of the copper deposits giving your hair that lovely green hue.  

**Rubbing a small amount of oil in your hands and working through the hair before and after you swim will do wonders!

2.     Dry Skin

Chlorine, bromine, salt, you name it – exposure to these chemicals can be harsh on your skin, eventually depleting your skin of its natural oils. Water itself even removes oil that allows dryness to set in.

**Moisturize and even treat skin infections by using coconut oil in place of body lotion (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19134433) (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24320105

3.     Swimmer’s Ear

Every summer…we all know it’s coming. No matter how many Dry-n-Clear bottles and earplug packs we go through there is always the inevitable case of the dreaded swimmer’s ear.

Coconut oil has antifungal properties (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17651080), and I hate to break it to you but the cause of your ear infection is from swimming in bacteria and fungi. The oil is a great remedy by helping to drain the water out of the ears, thus reducing the pain.

**Warm 20ml of coconut oil and fill the ear using a dropper. Tilt your head to side of the filled ear to empty and drain.  (Note: if in a cold climate, avoid using this method due to the hardening of the oil at lower temperatures)

4.     Sunscreen

Coconut oil has a natural SPF of 3, however chances are with the amount of time spent at the pool this isn’t going to be enough. What you can do is add a dash of zinc oxide, the skin-protecting ingredient in sunscreen (http://tanacceleratorstore.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Zinc-oxide-on-face.jpg), which provides broad-spectrum UV protection (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9922017)

5.     Sun Burn

…and if you didn’t follow number 3, coconut oil can still help you!

The skin-nourishing fatty acids double as burn relief to calm that sting. Coconut oil also contains free-radical fighting compounds. These antioxidants have been shown to slow the aging of skin and reduce the harmful effects of sun damage which we put our bodies through each day. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21646825) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20523108, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19115123

6.     Chlorine Burn

If you don’t have it from swimming everyday, just wait until your championship meet when the pool chemicals spike. The repeated exposure to the harsh chemicals often triggers rashes. No worries, coconut oil works to combat redness, irritation and mild inflammation (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20645831).

7.     Razor Burn

You get to shave once a year, so make the most of it. Using coconut oil can be used in place shaving cream. The oil sets you up for a close shave while also hydrating your skin. Plus, this works wonders for those with sensitive skin (Boys with the painful post-taper meet razor burn, I’m talking to you).

8.     Nutrition

Coconut is extremely high in fat. BUT…this is good fat. YES. Good fat!  Fat gets a bad rep but as endurance athletes we need to make sure we are getting these essential fatty acids for proper cellular energy production, immunity and brain function…. and the right kind! (This isn’t an excuse to go out and eat cake, sorry)

MCFA’s (medium-chain fatty acids) are naturally found in coconut oil and these are digested a bit differently than most fats. Instead of chilling in the bloodstream like all the other fats, these triglycerides are absorbed and go straight to the liver. Since this is easily digested, the fat is utilized quickly as energy (like carbs!) and may even boost endurance performance. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19436137)

9.     Massage

Thanks to the increased research emerging (http://swimming.about.com/od/swimworkoutsandskills/tp/5-Reasons-you-Should-have-Swim-Meet-Massages.htm https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPRdjWQKZOA) on the benefits of massages for swimmers, we finally have a science-backed excuse! Not only does the coconut oil work as a great lotion for massage techniques, but its aromatherapy benefits will take you to your happy place on the beach in the middle of the high-stress, swim meet environment. If you can’t bring the trainer along for the ride this is easy for self-massage techniques (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zicY_g13jWk&list=PLYbTyTuxq2uhBQ7kqzp8YqYTR2PtlIohH&index=4)

 10.    Odor

And for the few spare moments when you are out of the water…           

You have five minutes to get from the pool to dryland and all you have are tennis shoes and coconut oil…well the good news is that’s all you need! Smooth some under you arms and the lauric acid (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24328700 ) will kill the stinky causing bacteria.

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Coconut is the true swimmer triple threat with its antifungal, antiviral, and antioxidant properties – killing pool thriving fungi, curing cracked skin and restoring our hair to normal. Here are a few things to remember: 1. Go for the organic, unrefined, extra-virgin products which are higher quality and less refined (Costco is fabulous) 2. A little goes a long way 3. It’s normal for coconut oil to solidify at cooler temps (melting point is 76 F) 4. And lastly, these are just tips that I’ve found to work and coconut oil may not be for everyone. Like all products, individuals can be irritated by all kinds of things. Make sure you stop use if any irritation occurs!