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I’m a fitness expert — do this 10-minute exercise daily to lose stubborn belly fat

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I’m a fitness expert — do this 10-minute exercise daily to lose stubborn belly fat

Feeling gutsy? A postmenopausal fitness enthusiast claims she’s got the 10-minute trick to reduce belly fat.

A TikToker who goes by Menopause With Siobhan often posts exercise and diet tips for women over the age of 40. One of the UK resident’s most popular videos is her 10-minute belly-fat-blasting demonstration.

“This beginner workout is great even if you haven’t exercised in years!” Siobhan insists.

In the 10-second clip, set to “Maniac,” Siobhan stands on a yoga mat with her feet apart. Her fingers are intertwined as she lifts her right knee toward her left elbow while twisting her torso.

She recommends doing both sides for 30 seconds and repeating the process three times.

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A TikToker who goes by Menopause With Siobhan claims she’s got the 10-minute trick to reduce belly fat: An exercise that involves lifting her knees and twisting her torso. tiktok.com/@menopausewithsiobhan

“This is amazing. Keep it up,” one TikToker enthused.

“Trying this,” another vowed.

“I did this once and I’m out of breath lol,” a third confessed.

“Well done you did it,” Siobhan replied. “It will get easier.”

Menopause is the end of a woman’s menstrual cycle — with the average age of onset in the US around 51 years old. You’re officially in menopause when your period has been absent for 12 consecutive months.

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Women in menopause often endure hot flashes, night sweats, vaginal dryness, depression, weight gain, and other frustrating conditions.

“Menopause belly” — when a woman packs on pounds around her abdomen, instead of her hips and thighs — has been attributed to hormonal changes, a loss of muscle mass, slowing metabolism, and genetics.

“This beginner workout is great even if you haven’t exercised in years!” Siobhan claims. tiktok.com/@menopausewithsiobhan

A registered dietitian going through menopause shared her experience last year — she recommends eating a Mediterranean-style diet, abstaining from alcohol, managing stress, and improving sleep quality to combat menopause belly.

“The lifestyle changes I’ve made to get my black pants back on have taken more time and hard work than they would have in my younger days. It’s slowly working, but the benefit to my health is worth it,” Kristin Kirkpatrick, founder and president of KAK Consulting, wrote for Today.com in August.

Nutrition experts, meanwhile, have been sharing the foods to avoid to prevent belly fat and the best times to eat to keep waistlines trim.

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Menopause — the end of a woman’s menstrual cycle — can threaten a woman’s abs thanks to hormonal changes. Sergey Nivens – stock.adobe.com

For his part, an obesity researcher argued that using exercise, diets, pills, and supplements to target certain parts of the body for weight loss is a waist of time.

“Spot reduction is a myth — we can’t control where our bodies lose fat,” Dr. Nick Fuller of the University of Sydney in Australia wrote for the Conversation last fall. “But we can achieve the results we’re seeking in specific areas by targeting overall fat loss.”

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How luxury gyms aim to reach the next wellness frontier

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How luxury gyms aim to reach the next wellness frontier
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Altea Ottawa occupies a former 129,000-square-foot Canadian Tire at the corner of Carling Avenue and Clyde Avenue North. The new fitness and wellness centre offers a variety of classes, including reformer pilates.Supplied/Altea Active

What was once an expansive garage is now home to a large swimming pool in Ottawa’s newest wellness destination – a members-only health and fitness sanctuary that merges self-care and sophistication.

Altea Active, a chain of new fitness and wellness centres, opened the pool at its 129,000-square-foot Ottawa outpost in early May, says chief executive officer Jeff York, a former executive at both Farm Boy and retailer Giant Tiger.

With high-class amenities such as aquatics facilities, recovery areas and multiple types of fitness classes, Altea Ottawa – which officially opened in November – is redefining how and when Canadians get their sweat on in a postpandemic world.

Renewed focus on fitness

In the year after June, 2022, almost 400 fitness and recreational sports centres opened across the country, according to Statistics Canada. At the same time, fitness industry revenue hit nearly $4.3-billion in 2022, up from $3-billion a year earlier as pandemic restrictions relaxed.

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It’s “a new day in fitness” across the country, says Sara Gilbert, president of the Fitness Industry Council of Canada. While Canadians once spent money on trips they had postponed during COVID, they’ve “turned to themselves again” with a renewed sense of urgency, she adds.

The renovation of an old Canadian Tire into arguably Ottawa’s most modern fitness facility reflects an industry that has “always been at the forefront of innovation,” Ms. Gilbert says.

“You look back in the 1980s and we had these huge step-aerobic studios, and that took up most of the space in gyms. The gym industry … our strength is the ability to innovate and always listen to what members need, and the ongoing transition of our facilities to meet those needs.”

Redefining Canadian workout culture

Altea Ottawa is now Canada’s largest fitness and wellness centre.

The $30-million facility boasts nine fitness studios (the spin room alone cost $1-million), six pickleball courts, exercise machines of all kinds and zones for emerging fitness-class concepts such as HyRox (the new CrossFit, Mr. York says). There’s also a postworkout recovery area with red-light therapy and Hyperice cold-therapy boots, a women-only exercise space, the new 25-metre pool, as well as a smoothie bar and a Starbucks in the lobby.

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The $30-million Altea Ottawa boasts nine fitness studios, including its iconic spin room, which alone cost $1-million.Supplied/Altea Active

There are four other Altea locations across the country. A fifth will arrive soon in the former 31,000-square-foot Nordstrom Rack in Toronto’s upscale Yorkville neighbourhood. The forthcoming location will open under the name of AVANT by Altea Active – the company’s ultrapremium offering that’s specific to urban areas such as Yorkville.

“We tend to look at real estate as a static thing, but it services a fluid world, and as that world ebbs and flows, change abounds,” says Shawn Hamilton, principal at Proveras Commercial Realty in Ottawa. “Spaces get occupied with uses we would never have dreamed of.”

Unlike other large-scale gyms, Altea’s facilities won’t be popping up everywhere.

“It’s the opposite of GoodLife. We want to be exclusive,” Mr. York explains. “We are going to [places] where the market is already there for people who want the best. But we want to deliver it at a competitive price where people are still getting value.”

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Standing out in a crowded market

Mr. York says Altea’s competition are mid-sized fitness studios. If you’re a regular at hot yoga, boot camps and spin classes, you could pay upward of $1,000 a month in fees, he explains. Altea offers all that and more in one place – something that is becoming more common across the country.

Altea is not the only fitness centre working to redefine exercise culture in Canada. At Toronto’s The Well, a mixed-use complex less than a kilometre from the CN Tower, sits the newest Sweat and Tonic – a cheekily-named boutique gym that offers more than a half-dozen classes, personal training, a spa with registered massage therapists, a pool and sauna. The city’s Yorkville neighbourhood is also saturated with fitness options, including luxury gym Equinox, Barry’s Bootcamp and three GoodLife gyms.

“You’ve got to be where people live, work and play. That’s the key for the future,” Mr. York says. “You upgrade your facility because that’s where the market is going. The murky middle is not where you want to be.”

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Altea Ottawa features a strength-training area and exercise machines of all kinds. CEO Jeff York says it’s unlike other gyms thanks to its exclusivity and to targeting a part of the market where people ‘want the best.’Supplied/Altea Active

Altea’s Ottawa plan was clear from the start, Mr. York explains, with 80 per cent of the original blueprint becoming reality. It eliminated a restaurant and members’ club from the plan – the same thing it did at the Liberty Village location in Toronto – because it wanted to focus on fitness.

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Challenges of renovation

Altea’s renovation in Canada’s capital took just over a year. A full month was needed just to remove shelves, nuts and bolts from the Canadian Tire for what would become the facility’s hotel-like lobby, Mr. York says.

The challenges also ranged from laughable – swapping the directions of the old escalators – to serious, such as installing individual HVAC systems in each room and studio. It was a hurdle, but it was a success. Despite the facility’s roughly 6,000 members and upward of 350 fitness classes per week, there’s a reduction in body odour because of the new system.

That work was all taking place on the inside.

“No one knew we were working on it because we never changed the physical structure,” Mr. York says. “The biggest question was, ‘When are you going to start construction?’ but we had already started for six months.

“Making a big building feel comfortable is hard to do.”

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Only 16 per cent of Canadians have a gym membership, according to the Health and Fitness Association, so it’s no surprise that fitness facilities in Canada would aim to strike a balance between value and choice.

“Many boutiques under one roof is the way fitness should be delivered,” Mr. York says.

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Planet Fitness invites teens to exercise for free all summer

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Planet Fitness invites teens to exercise for free all summer

(WTVM) – Summer break just got stronger! Planet Fitness is letting teens in for free with the return of its High School Summer Pass program.

Now in its fifth year, the initiative offers gym access to teens ages 14 to 19 at any Planet Fitness location across the U.S. and Canada.

Pre-registration is currently open and will close on May 31. Regular registration and club access are available for teens from June 1 through August 31.

To find your nearest Planet Fitness location, click here.

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Not keen on kegels? Pelvic tilts are the ‘gentle but powerful’ alternative to improve strength – here’s how to do them

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Not keen on kegels? Pelvic tilts are the ‘gentle but powerful’ alternative to improve strength – here’s how to do them

Along with the muscles deep in the core and the pelvic floor, the pelvic tilt exercise targets the glutes and lower back, making this simple exercise ideal for improving mobility and posture, and firing up the muscles at the start of a lower-body workout.

Alternatively, you could do them to wind down from your Pilates home workout or as a way to stretch out if you spend your days sitting at a desk. The movement is a “gentle but powerful way to reconnect with your core and realign the spine,” says Paola Di Lanzo, a personal trainer, Pilates instructor, and the founder of Paola’s Body Barre. “Pelvic tilts improve spinal mobility by encouraging articulation through the lower back and pelvis, which is great for people who sit for long periods.”

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