benefits of barre workouts for women

benefits of barre workouts for women

We’re all stressed, overworked and over-trained. After months of home HIIT and incessant running, many of us have injuries and a general boredom with fitness. To get reenergised, you’ve got to switch up your fitness regime and there’s no better workout to pick up than barre.

Barre is the full-body, low-impact workout that’s designed to strengthen and lengthen through minute movements. It’s simple but brutal: those tiny lifts and tweaks target muscles that all those lockdown miles never touched. 

That’s what I thought, the first time I sidled up to a class with a running friend. Both of us were long-time gymmers and we decided to try a barre session out before work as a kind of ‘soothing’ way to start the day. Within a matter of minutes, I had to take off my vest because the sweat was pouring down my chest and the DOMS the next day were like I’d spent the previous morning pushing a static bus down the road. 

Barre for muscular endurance and low injury risk

Barre is all about low weights, high reps. Often, we talk about the power of lifting heavy – lifting as much as we can for only a handful of reps. Barre takes the opposite approach, limiting the injury risk and making movements more accessible. There’s plenty of evidence out there on the benefits of that kind of training.

We tend to think that in order to build muscle, you’ve got to use heavy weights… but that’s just not true. A study published in the Journal of Strength Conditioning Research found that lifting heavy for fewer reps and lifting lighter for higher reps both result in muscular hypertrophy (the process of building stronger muscle fibres).

Those high reps are designed to boost your muscular endurance rather than promote raw power.

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Handball federation changes uniform rules after pressure over ‘sexist’ bikini rule | Sport

Handball federation changes uniform rules after pressure over ‘sexist’ bikini rule | Sport

The International Handball Federation has responded to widespread accusations of sexism by changing its rules around women’s uniforms to allow bike shorts and tank tops instead of bikini bottoms and crop tops.

The sport’s global governing body has been the subject of international pressure since July, when the European Handball Federation made headlines for imposing a €1,500 fine on the Norwegian women’s beach handball team for wearing shorts like their male counterparts during the Euro 21 tournament in Bulgaria. At the time, the EHF described the shorts as “improper clothing”.

At some point over the past month the IHF has quietly altered its regulations for beach handball, which now stipulate that “female athletes must wear short tight pants with a close fit”. Male athletes can still wear regular shorts as long as 10cm above the knee “if not too baggy”.

It follows a campaign by Norway-based Australian activist Talitha Stone, whose petition – supported by gender equality organisation Collective Shout – attracted 61,000 signatures.

“I hope this is the beginning of the end of sexism and objectification of women and girls in sport,” said Stone, who led Collective Shout’s 2012 campaign against the Lingerie Football League. “And that in future all women and girls will be free to participate in sport without fear of wardrobe malfunctions and sexual harassment.”

Comparison of the former women’s beach handball uniform (left) and the current one.
Comparison of the former women’s beach handball uniform (left) and the current one. Photograph: International Handball Federation

In July, US pop star Pink threw her support behind the Norwegian team, tweeting her pride in them “protesting the very sexist rules” and offering to pay their fines. The country’s minister for culture and sport, Abid Raja, described the ruling as being “completely ridiculous” and women’s sports associations across Europe also called for the resignation of the presidents of both the IHF

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Exclusive Excerpt: How This Founder Closed the Deal That Changed Esports Forever

Exclusive Excerpt: How This Founder Closed the Deal That Changed Esports Forever

The child of a single mother, Delane Parnell grew up in an impoverished neighborhood off Detroit’s Seven Mile Road. His father was murdered a few months before he was born. His mother transported him from home to home as she bounced between jobs. Still, the young Parnell had a knack for business. By the time he was 17, he had parlayed a job mopping floors at a ­MetroPCS into co-owning three Detroit-area cellphone shops.

Seven years later, a chance meeting with a venture capitalist inspired Parnell to move to Los Angeles and found a gaming startup. His company had a name–PlayVS–but little else beyond office space at startup studio Science Inc. Still, he had no funding, no employees. Despite all that, his goal was nothing short of bringing esports to the highly lucrative and largely untapped high school market.

He was on the verge of fulfilling his lifelong dream–or failing miserably.

Delane Parnell strolled into the Santa Monica offices of Science for his first day in June 2017 and was led to his workstation: A small wooden desk in the corner of the second floor with a stack of Post-it notes on it. This was where he would begin to work on his new venture, which he’d decided to call PlayVS (as in “play versus”). To personalize his space, Parnell installed the oversize monitor he’d brought with him, and then printed out some photos and taped them above his desk. One was a screenshot of the original Google homepage–a reminder of the $700 billion company’s humble beginnings. Another was a photo of Jay-Z and Sean “Diddy” Combs. Their music had served as the soundtrack to Parnell’s childhood, and he’d hung their likenesses on the wall of his bedroom back in Detroit. Both had grown up without their fathers in drug-ridden

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AHA News: How Doctors Can Help Their Patients Make Heart-Healthy Lifestyle Changes | Health News

AHA News: How Doctors Can Help Their Patients Make Heart-Healthy Lifestyle Changes | Health News

By American Heart Association News, HealthDay Reporter

(HealthDay)

THURSDAY, Nov. 4, 2021 (American Heart Association News) — Lifestyle change is a powerful, proven way for a person to prevent heart disease. But to make healthy changes stick, people often need a little help.

Primary care doctors could offer crucial assistance in connecting patients with counseling that’s been shown to make a difference. But because of time constraints or other barriers, those doctors often don’t.

A new report offers guidance on how to change that.

The scientific statement, published Thursday in the American Heart Association journal Circulation, summarizes research showing the benefits of behavioral counseling. It also offers practical ways for busy health care professionals to help patients get that kind of care – care that goes beyond the typical 15-minute annual appointment.

Deepika Laddu, who led the group that wrote the statement, said it’s not usually enough for a patient to simply recognize the need to change their eating or exercise habits.

“It’s one thing to say, ‘I’m going to reduce the amount of fat in my diet.’ But they need support to say, ‘I’m going to maintain that as a lifestyle,'” said Laddu, an assistant professor of physical therapy in the College of Applied Health Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Such support might involve guidance on planning a healthy diet or setting realistic exercise goals. It also could involve checking in regularly to make sure those plans and goals stay on track.

But “providers don’t have time,” Laddu said. “They may not have the resources in place. There also are system-related factors,” such as the bureaucracies behind referral policies or reimbursement.

The report spells out the importance of overcoming such barriers by summarizing research on programs delivered in primary care or community settings that have been

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NFL Week 8 odds, picks, how to watch, streaming: Expert picks, teasers, survivor picks and more

NFL Week 8 odds, picks, how to watch, streaming: Expert picks, teasers, survivor picks and more

We are almost halfway through the 2021 NFL regular season. Pretty crazy isn’t it? Placing bets against the spread is getting a bit trickier due to injuries, but you’ve come to the right place if you’re looking for some expert advice on what sides to take in Week 8.

Each week, we’ll collect all of the best picks and gambling content from CBSSports.com and SportsLine in one place, so you can get picks against the spread from our CBS Sports experts as well as additional feature content for each game, including plays from top SportsLine experts and the SportsLine Projection Model, best bets from our staff, survivor picks and more. 

Let’s dive in.

All NFL odds via Caesars Sportsbook.

Which picks can you make with confidence in Week 8? And which Super Bowl contender goes down hard? Visit SportsLine, as its incredible model simulates every NFL game 10,000 times and is up almost $7,700 for $100 players on top-rated NFL picks since its inception six years ago.

Panthers at Falcons

Time: Sunday, 1 p.m. ET (Fox), stream on fuboTV (try for free
Open: Falcons -1, O/U 47.5
Current: Falcons -3, O/U 46.5

“This pick is more about fading the Panthers than it is riding the Falcons. Sam Darnold is flailing under center for Carolina and it’s hard to watch. He even got benched in the fourth quarter last week during the Panthers’ 25-3 loss to the New York Giants. I don’t think he’s going to be able to rebound. I was optimistic about Darnold coming to Carolina, and thought he could pull a “Ryan Tannehill.” Seven weeks in, and I’m out. It’s not all his fault, as the offensive line is atrocious. The offensive struggles have also negatively affected the defense. In Weeks 1-3, the Panthers ranked

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This Workout Can Help You Get Jacked Using Just Two Dumbbells

This Workout Can Help You Get Jacked Using Just Two Dumbbells

Strength coach Jeff Cavaliere C.S.C.S. regularly shares practical advice on how to build muscle on the Athlean-X channel, but in a new video he acknowledges that not everyone has access to a fully equipped gym, and offers a simple, total-body workout that can be performed using nothing but a set of dumbbells. He provides single dumbbell variations for anyone who only has the one weight, or for whom the two-dumbbell version is too heavy.

The first single dumbbell exercise is the clean up and over, an explosive move that works the shoulders, back, brachialis and legs. Clean the weight up to your shoulder, press it overhead, lower it to the other shoulder and then down to the floor, and repeat. If you’re working with two dumbbells, Cavaliere suggests the clean and press.

The second exercise is a goblet sequence that Cavaliere promises will “brutalize” your legs. Holding the dumbbell as you would during a goblet squat, do a reverse lunge on either side, then finish with a squat. “Maintain a slightly wider stance,” he advises. “Basically, start from your goblet squat stance, because you want a wider base of support when you go back into your reverse lunge.” If you have two dumbbells, do the same while holding them at either side.

The third exercise recreates the movement of the T-bar row with a dumbell in a crush grip. The two dumbbell version, the dead row, adds some extra engagement from the legs in the first portion of the move.

The fourth move is a pushing exercise which hits the chest, shoulders and triceps: the crush grip floor press. While squeezing the handle of the dumbbell with both hands with as much inward force as you can, press the weight while lying in a horizontal position. If you have two

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