Hansie Louw

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Soft Suicide

January 11, 2017 by Hansie Louw 2 Comments

You are most likely busy with suicide

This is a shocking statement that you may discard at first, thinking, this is not what I am busy with, but think again. If you do not live a healthy active lifestyle, then you are busy with suicide. That means that you exercise at least five times a week, that you eat well balanced meals, that you sleep well and that you are at peace with yourself (and others around you).

Let me start with an easy test

Measure your waist just to make sure where you are at the moment. My waist is 104 cm at the day I am writing this. My waist is normally around 92 cm, but the past year I just let it slip (too much). My height (length) is 186 cm. According to the experts my waist should be a maximum of 50% of my height, so that is 93 cm. I am busy reducing it as we speak.

waistline
You will lose years of your life if you do not attend to your waist

 

If your waist is over the 50% mark like mine (56% at the moment), then you need to address this immediately. You are shortening your life span by doing this. Do you want to be around for longer? Then start to do something about it now!

Four things that you could do immediately to change your waistline!

Exercise: if your body is very heavy you should be cautious on how you approach this. I am not saying that you should not do it, but you may need to walk in stead of running or cycling in stead of walking. Swimming or walking in a pool is a softer option, but you need to start with some exercise routine. Get some walking buddies together and walk at a crazy time like 4 am or 9 pm. Just make a plan to start with exercise to stop the slow suicide.

Nutrition: cut the crazy carbohydrates immediately (by that I mean the white carbohydrates) and cut the fruit as well unless you eat that with protein. A protein snack is better than a fruit snack! Fruit juice is out. Change your alcohol drink if you want to drink to something that you don’t like.

Sleep: make sure you sleep enough over the course of 10 days. If you have to work harder sometime and sleep less you have to make up for it with power naps or longer stretches of sleep.

Measure: measure your waist now, make a record of that and commit to get the percentage down (unless your ratio is lower than 38% – then it must go up)!

Say goodbye to soft suicide and say hello to a new you! Contact us for more free information on +27827765462.

get rid of this

 

healthy body
this is where we are going

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Filed Under: health, Personal, waist loss Tagged With: bellville, bmi, boston, coach, eat, eating, exercise, Hansie, Hansie Louw, health, herbalife, living, Louw, loving, mentor, sleep, stress, suicide, waist, waist to height, weight, weight loss, wthtr

Comrades pacing chart for parkrunners (18 parkruns)

June 1, 2016 by Hansie Louw 1 Comment

One of my friends told this to me. “All you need to do to finish is to do 18 parkruns at 40 minutes per parkrun or slightly faster”. I did the calculation and it works. The race is run “down” or “up” which normally indicates the direction of the race which is point to point. So a down run is from Pietermaritzburg to Durban, South Africa.Do noit let the “down” deceive you – there are many “uphills” in this run. The Down is normally a bit longer, but almost always a maximum of 90 kilometers. So 18 x 5km (a parkrun is a standard five km run) is 90 km. For the “up”run, the road may be a kilometer or two shorter. For simplicity the parkrunner will stick with 5 km segments as that is what he knows.

So in May 2016 I set out to test this theory. It worked exceptionally well (almost a bit too close) as my finishing time was 11 hours 59 minutes and 16 seconds. So this is what your pacing chart will look like.

Pacing chart:

Duration – speed per parkrun segment (5km)

12 hours –  40 minutes per segment

9 hours –  30 minutes per segment

6 hours –  20 minutes per segment

Every five minutes faster or slower adds or subtracts 90 minutes from your projected time.

To fine tune this – for every minute faster or slower, you will subtract or add 18 minutes to your time.

so for a 8 hours 42 minutes you would want to run at 29 minutes per segment.

The top athletes will have to fine tune this a bit more as your last segment (no 18 ) is less than 5 km. By that time you are tired and the back runners will welcome the shorter last bit. My last 4 km in the 2016 race was just over 30 minutes. The back runners must also take into consideration that they may need about ten minutes to cross the starting line. So you need to make up that time gradually. You do not need to pick up all the time as the last segment is shorter and you will gain a fee minutes here.

The discipline of slowing down by walking

This is the challenge for most runners. So I started with a four – three strategy which could go to a four – one strategy later.

Let me explain – this means four minutes of walking and then three minutes of running or later four minutes of walking and one minute of running. I tested this on a treadmill to simulate the walk and the run. It worked out to 7 minutes 39 seconds per kilometer at the faster rate and just over 9 minutes per kilometer with one minute of running. I then tested this pacing on a hilly area in Bellville and it validated the a pace of 8 minutes per kilometer.

So when the race started I used ten minutes to cross the finish line, but I kept to the discipline of walking. My theory was that I should walk when my body was still fresh to walk stronger. When you walk the first time because you are too tired, then you are too late. Of course the four-three did not always work perfectly. Some hills I walked more than four minutes and on some down hills I ran more than three minutes at a time.

My preparation:

My average weekly mileage was just below 55 km per week in the eight weeks leading up to the race (including tapering weeks). My qualifier was Two Oceans Marathon (56 km). My longest run in the period since November last year apart from the Oceans was 36 km. I would normally do one run of about 25 kilometer once a month (PowerRun) and then I did lots of parkruns and six parkruns on one day (30 kilometer total) which I believe is better than all the long runs average athletes do.

I also did pushups, planks, squats and lunges. I will increase this for next time. I also do the Tabata protocol which is a fast four minute run on a treadmill with 20 seconds running and 10 seconds resting .

My conclusion: 

A parkrunner with good pacing and good nutrition will perform better than his over trained friends running al those unnecessary long ones.

 

parkrun Bellville
most of preparation at the park

 

 

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Bruce Fordyce, Comrades, Durban, Hansie Louw, marathon, run, speed, Tabata, ultra, walk

Do you want to be a coach or mentor?

May 27, 2016 by Hansie Louw Leave a Comment

You may be a coach and a mentor, but not in that role already.

Love and Passion for people?

Do you love to work with people? Would you love to challenge them to grow to whom they could be? Do you want to see positive results in the lives of other people? Does working one on one with people excite you? Do you encourage and inspire other people?

You may be the one I am looking for…

mentor
mentor of karate kid

If you are serious about contributing to the lives of others and to your community, then I would like to meet with you and talk. If you have that burning passion to make a difference for a few, but also in the process make a difference to many, then we must have a conversation.

Time and Commitment to train as coach

You are also going to need time. If your day is so packed now that you cannot fit anything else into your schedule we will have to find a way to re-arrange that tight schedule to allow time for this. You will have to be able to set aside time on a daily and weekly basis.

Commitment
Commit

You will have to commit to a period. Your commitment cannot be for a week or two. It needs to stretch for at least four periods of 90 days. It is like preparing for a long running race. You cannot decide today to run the race tomorrow. You need to get fit first. That takes time. For some races you need at least 18 months to get the body ready. For great coaching and mentoring you may need years of training and observation.

 

Earn an Income as Coach

Growing Income
Growing Income

The third aspect which is also important is that you would want to earn an income while you are being trained as a coach or mentor in our field. It is true that people do not always work for money as the most important thing, but then we all know that money does play a very important role in your life.

So if you are willing to take an exciting challenge with me, talk to me soon.

I am writing this two days before Comrades Marathon 2016 while I am at Ballito, north of Durban. You cannot prepare for Comrades in one day, but you could make the decision to run it in ten seconds. Talk to me soon.

 

Hansie

+27(0)82 776 5462

Hansie Louw pic
measure

to look at possible income, go here

 

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: anita, change, changing lives, coaches, community, Comrades, fitness, growth, Hansie, Hansie Louw, running, south africa, transformation, weight loss

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