Sunday, December 25, 2011

Calasanz performs katas

Calasanz performing Kata Ginsei-Shi. Balancing and plyometric exercises are incorporated tinto all exercises to maximize control over the body while in motion. Breathing techniques traditionally practiced in the martial arts are also taught for the purpose of bringing a fresh supply of oxygen to the body and helping the athlete remain calm under pressure. The program also offers other benefits such as developing concentration, stamina and hand-eye coordination. See more www.Calasanz.com and www.InterDojo.com

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Art In Motion Latin Dancers Promotional Video

Art in Motion Latin Dancers (AIM) was founded on the principles of unity, teamwork, and commitment to achieve world-class excellence of technique, form, and styling of salsa dance. AIM specializes in other Latin dance genres including bachata, mambo, merengue, cha-cha-cha, and more. Following its debut in February 2004, AIM has emerged as one of the leading salsa dance teams on the East Coast. Within their first two years the team became the top team based in the Philadelphia area and have respectfully earned recognition as "Philly's finest." The AIM team is overseen by World Salsa Dancer and Instructor Darlin Garcia, AIM's founder and artistic director. He has contributed his up-tempo, creativity, and innovative style helping the team shift to a new direction and exceed standards nationwide and worldwide. AIM members have traveled the world teaching workshops and performing in countries including Ireland, Panama, Tokyo, Holland, and United Kingdom. AIM's finest hold state, national, and worldwide championship titles. Members have showcased their talents in the music industry: performing as dancers for singer Gloria Allende, and featuring in music videos for artists like Jill Scott, Orquesta Lucena, and Orquesta La Romana. Members have also been featured in television shows like MTV's Real World: Philadelphia. If you would like to explore the world of dance, are looking for a challenging change or a test of endurance and stamina, AIM is your stepping stone. Speak with our ...

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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Learning Boxing The Hard Way

!±8± Learning Boxing The Hard Way

To struggle because of pain while training to gain stamina for boxing, is the hardest way to achieve boxing.

To first establish the mindset allowing time for understanding of methods for boxing. The enthusiast needs only then to state the level wishing to reach in boxing before starting to achieve, that goal required now to reach.

Why? To give incentive to the cause of action! The action being the many hours of training that shall have then to follow, in order to achieve the set goal. Mindset is in fact the source of origin to accomplishing to persist pursuing the now preset goal. Without the goal setting, so much harder is it to achieve states of fitness needed, to accomplish competent boxing abilities.

Through the hardest part of training for fitness to be a boxer is in fact the very beginning or if having been away from boxing for a time so beginning training again. When first starting out a body complaining of pains can quite easily overcome tolerances.

Worsening to that fact there is often a delay up to two days after training, a pain peak all over the body can usually appear resulting, from the extent of training. The more training exertion in the session previous, greater the pain two days later. Enough to easily sickened from getting into or continuing the sport of boxing completely.

How to avoid these predicaments is done simply by not over doing it. While in training or by the amount of times training is in fact carried out say, on a weekly basis. Use body pain and strains as a level of guidance for training. If in pain then forget training! Seriously there is no point at all going to training till the pain has gone.

Think about it for a minute, if training having just gone for the first time to do some physical exercise or since a long time passing.

How do you think you shall feel when stamina runs out during this event?

Answer: sickly, dizzy, ill, faint, hating where you are, why you are, what you have been doing with a desperately growing sense of needing to leave immediately. Only to peak in even more trauma felt through the two day pain delay.

So now you know, why go? Well if this describes boxing training for you then you have unfortunately being over doing it. If you have herd the phrase No Pain No Gain, you may not off herd of the disastrous never spoken term, Over Burn.

No I thought not, it is the hell of boxing that cannot be seen, till having been shown to be suffering from such a condition. By being on the night totally out classed and beaten. Often occurs in a bout, (a boxing match) especially with more experienced boxers having already accomplished a number of fights, where the need forever more fitness takes over completely.

Without ample recovery time to balance the exertion under gone, there is really no point doing that amount of training at all. Complete fitness will not be achieved for the body always in semi trauma, not being able to recover fully effectively as a result of over training. Basically injuring and re-injuring the body again and again through over demanding training.

Which is not necessarily just confined to boxing, any sport with very high stamina demands, shall run this risk to its members.

Caught liken to being semi fit while having trained like a madman, does to the mind set of a boxer something of devastating consequences. Ultimately leaving the sport completes and stops the potential to any possibilities, highly talented at the sport or not, no one will ever know.

Each person boxing will have a different body structure to another working a training schedule on certain days of the week, organised to proceed with training at that time. Basically working training schedules whether at the beginning learning boxing say, once or twice a week or advanced and are everyday training to box.

Using a calendar style training schedule, a must attend regardless style of order, which is good for discipline and tolerance. However not always as good for the body, especially when still in repair from the last training session. Quite the contrary, to strain while still in repair is with a very seriously over driven enthusiasm. Where it is very commonplace at the beginning of a boxing career, due to individuals often missing experience of boxing.

The common idea is to box with differences in style to achieve the dream, is it not? As I recall being a boxer myself, to make the style difference must be at the source considering over and over in thought. Outside the box thinking would be then to say. At the very style of training to make change, would mean calendar training was a thing of the past.

Strain and pain charting so achieving a stronger build, by simply not reaching the rip zone of muscle training. Avoiding two day pains only having then tightness and tenderness in muscles and tendons, rather than being almost unable to move. Able to train more often while using lighter punching impact actions, accomplishing greater speeds in motion and durable punching abilities.

While training longer to become stamina fit, instead doubling the length of time normally thought needed for the next up coming fight. Achieving greater stamina fitness's improving overall boxing abilities, by having less time spent in pain with body repair.


Learning Boxing The Hard Way

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