Posts Tagged ‘dotfit’

“New Age” creatine – not just for athletes anymore

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Wow – I just read a new study on creatine and it just keeps looking better and better as a supplement. Creatine is one of those naturally occurring substances that works so well as a supplement, scientists used to think it might be bad for you over the long term, like pharmaceutical drug use. After all, as the old saying goes, “for every action there must be a reaction”. When it comes to drugs or prescription medications, the reaction eventually becomes negative as continual use will, at some point, take its toll on certain organs and tissues. For example, the chronic use of NSAIDS (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) such as ibuprofen or other painkillers will have eventual negative side-effects on the kidneys or stomach lining. Well, the short- and long-term reaction for creatine appears to be nothing short of sensational. In other words, there’s no negative reaction — the action caused by supplementing creatine beyond what the diet can supply seems to cause a reaction of continual benefits – even in old age!

Creatine supplements have now been in play for almost 20 years and have been used safely by millions people. This very fact has prompted thousands of clinical studies that have looked further into creatine’s benefits as a supplement.

We have always known that athletes get stronger using creatine supplements, but scientists have recently found that older men and women can benefit also. In fact, in the study I just read, a group of men approximately 70 years of age did strength training for 12 weeks. Those who used 5 grams of creatine daily gained double the muscle size and lifted 40-60% more weight than those using the placebo. That’s amazing! Creatine supplementation also works for women. While younger women may not like the muscle-building effect, older women look forward to it for many reasons: 1) As you age you lose muscle and tone so adding it back can dramatically enhance your appearance; 2) bones weaken with age and stronger muscles mean stronger bones; 3) the more & stronger muscle you can keep, the better your body will function into old age, allowing you to live a longer, more productive life without assistance.

For those of you wondering how supplemental creatine works beyond just supplying the additional energy substrate to lift more weights, which in itself can lead to more muscle, here are a few things recently discovered: high levels of creatine appear to turn on your muscle-building genes and stimulate satellite cells, which are the stem cells found in muscle just waiting to wake up. These cells help repair and build more muscle. Also, creatine can help keep muscle from breaking down from age, injury or weightlifting, meaning your body can now spend more time making new muscle rather than repairing old or damaged tissues.

Wow again. Creatine sounds like a wonder drug (minus the negative side effects) for any of us in the older generation looking to stay young and spry as long as possible. Unfortunately when I was a bodybuilder, creatine wasn’t around and, ironically, it was long after retirement from competition that I started using it for the exact reasons listed above. I have been using it daily since I turned 50 and I am now 58. Yes sir, creatine mixed in my morning shake keeps me structurally healthy so I can drink scotch at night – now that’s a winning combo.

So if you are looking for the perfect gift for older relatives, get them some dotFIT Creatine Monohydrate and have them mix it with the dotFIT Pre/Post Workout Formula shake – and get of the way!

–Neal

AMAZING Weight Loss Story Unfolding Before My Eyes

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Meet Allan Hoffman, 35 years old, starting weight 555 lbs, uses a wheelchair to get around, has a fractured vertebrae in his lower back and it’s fair to say he had a very difficult childhood. He’s struggled with his weight forever, battles depression and over the past 10 years his weight has gone from 305 to 555 lbs. Talk about having to overcome some challenges! His doctor said he should have gastric bypass surgery to lose the weight. Enter the exerspy and the dotFIT team.

It must have been fate because Allan reunited with a half-brother he never knew he had, who happens to be one of dotFIT’s team members.  Allan gets an exerspy, a few phone coaching sessions and starts using the dotFIT Me program to shed the weight. With his physical limitations, we had to start slow. Fast forward three months and he’s dropped 62 pounds. Here’s the strategy we used:

  1. Identify WHY you want to lose so you stick to the process. Allan’s motivation was twofold – 1) meet his biological father face-to-face for the first time this summer and 2) see his 6 year old son graduate from high school. He keeps a picture of his son on his computer to keep him focused.
  2. Set realistic and achievable goals. Allan’s ultimate goal is to weigh 210 lbs so we set him up to lose 2-3 pounds a week.
  3. Give him visible targets to hit daily so he sees progress every day.  Using the dotFIT Me program an exerspy – his daily calorie burn target was approximately 4300 calories (remember, the heavier you are, the more you burn). His daily calorie intake goal was about 2800 calories. When he hits those targets, he loses weight. Period.
  4. Log everything you eat. Becoming conscious of what goes in your mouth is the first step towards making better decisions and Allan was prone to mindlessly eat.
  5. Increase physical activity. Do upper body exercises using cans for hand weights and leg lifts as he sits in his wheelchair. Work up to 5 minutes of physical activity per day. The exerspy tracks this so he knows whether he reaches this daily goal.
  6. Eat more fiber-rich foods. Get 25 grams a day to start and track in using the online food log.

As you can see – a few simple adjustments repeated over time has produced AMAZING results. No diets. No drastic workouts or magic cleanses. Just practical changes anyone can do and a bit of encouragement and guidance along the way. To follow Allan’s story go to our Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/fitnesshealth and check this blog for updates.

–Kat Barefield, MS, RD
Registered Dietitian for dotFIT

Transformation of a Figure Competitor — week 12

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Here we go! Only 19 days left and I heard the best words I could possibly hear from Warren: “This is the best I have ever seen you look.”

With these words I had the biggest smile that one could ever see and of course a whole lot more confidence came rushing in.  I have never trained harder and I have been focused, determined and motivated through out this journey.  Life itself is a journey but competing takes this journey to a whole new level.

Nothing has changed in my diet since last week and my cardio has also remained at an even 60 minutes.  Sometimes I divide that cardio into two segments but it depends on my schedule of clients and how time allows.  Some days my energy level is way low but the next day can be completely fine.  At this point I am weaning myself off of caffeine.  I no longer incorporate dotFIT NO7Rage, and I have cut my coffee in the morning to just one cup. I need something at 4:30 am to get my engine started.  Being the last few days I cut that and all other artificial sweetners out, I find it better to let go off the caffeine slowly to avoid a massive headache.  Two shows ago I stopped cold turkey and had a headache that would not subside until the morning after the competition when I had a cup of coffee.  I definitely learned my lesson!

So, with leaving my NO7 on the sidelines, I can really feel a difference when I lack some energy.  These are those times when I dig deep inside to make the workout count because every training day matters.  Even as close as we are to the show, dig deeper.

My legs at this point are always sore and burning between the plyos, the cardio and the interval training I have incorporated the last few weeks.  I love how light weight I feel now along with being quick on my feet.  With all of the sprinting and high intensity training, I feel at the top of my game.  My strength training has weakened but I still make sure I lift as heavy as possible even though in between sets I incorporate heart rate raising activities.

So in the next couple weeks to come the plan is tanning, practice posing, extreme training and of course I have to fill out my application!  I’m so ready to rock this!!!!!!!

-Jodi

Meet Harry Gaines: Guest blogger, retiree, and avid exerciser

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Scott Pullen of dotFIT here. I have been fortunate in my fitness career in that I have done a lot of travel all over the US. I visit gyms, fitness centers, personal training studios…the whole spectrum of health and fitness. I have in my 15 years doing this met easily tens of thousands of fitness fans, advocates, zealots and those representing every stripe, color and specialty of sport, fitness and health interests. Not long ago, I was a guest at a gorgeous community fitness center in Florida. Honestly, I think I found where I want to retire. While there working with the training staff, I was given the opportunity to present to interested members in an informal lunch time setting. Thirty or so active and vibrant mature club members showed up to learn and ask questions about health, nutrition and exercise. There was a lot of participation and questions and a great time was had by all, especially me.

During a brief break, a fellow by the name of Harry Gaines approached me and gave me an earful of his frustration with his peers and their lack of vigorous exercise, often fueled by a belief that they were too old to work out with intensity. Worse still, he saw some of the trainers give into this misplaced belief that their mature clients could not exert themselves. I could identify with this frustration. I have often taught never to judge a client based upon age or size, as I have been wowed countless times by clients that were in their 70s or considerably overweight. Harry shared with me his own training schedule, and honestly, he’d whoop my butt.

So impressed with Harry was I that I thought he would make a great contributor to the dotFIT blog. He has agreed to share his wisdom, philosophy and personality (probably the best part) in a series of blogs. So without further ado, I present to you Mr Harry Gaines:

Recently I was asked by the director of the fitness center in my Florida community to attend a seminar on fitness and nutrition.  She brought in the speaker, Scott Pullen from dotFIT, an exercise and nutrition company based in Westlake Village, CA, to train her trainers.  The seminar for interested residents was a bonus.

Scott was entertaining, interesting and educational, three of my hot buttons.  We talked during a break about proper strength training, something I see few residents doing. That led to his asking me to consider writing a column for dotFIT’s website on some regular basis.  So here’s the first pass.

I live in SW Florida, five months a year, Bucks County, PA the rest.  This combination allows me to exercise outdoors year-round.  I’ve been into exercise for at least forty years in various sports and at varying intensity levels.  There have been a few lapses due to high levels of work and lots of travel, but I’ve always returned.  Singles tennis, running, cycling, swimming laps, golf (walking and carrying where allowed) and strength training; all have had their turn.

I have not worked full time since 1995, but continued as chairman of the board of a small public company until late 2000.  Since then I’ve enjoyed being a mentor and coach to several people whose careers are flourishing.  The rest of the time is free.

My current passions are cycling, strength training (including general fitness) and golf, in that order.  Cycling is Sunday, Wednesday and Friday AM with a small group of serious cyclists; strength training and fitness Tuesday and Thursday AM; golf Monday and Saturday.  I will devote a column to golf, my addiction for too many years, later.  So many seniors are hooked on golf – and golf alone – that it deserves special treatment.

When people ask me how long I’ve been retired I say, “I stopped full-time work in 1995 but still have a part-time job.”  They, of course, ask what it is.  I respond, “Taking care of myself.  I work ten hours or a bit more per week doing stuff that will keep me fit through my eighties. Cycling gets seven hours, strength three; golf doesn’t count.”  (Actually, golf counts in Bucks County, where I can walk and carry my bag; that’s exercise.)  As long as I show up for my part-time job I will be healthy and happy.

At seventy two I weigh the same as forty years ago, am a stronger cyclist than five years ago and am working out with weights comparable to ones used fifteen years ago.  All because I’ve been showing up regularly for my part-time job.  And, guess what:  The job is fun!  I can’t wait to get on my bike three days a week or go to the gym two.  Golf is fun also, particularly now that I’ve learned not to measure my self-worth based upon the day’s game.

Five years ago we had two serious cyclists; now we have up to seven, including a man in his sixties who’s done five Hawaii Ironmans, the latest in 2009.  We’ve increased our average speed from about seventeen mph to a high of nineteen and a half recently, a huge jump for a bunch of old farts.  Several of us do intervals – more about that later – and, as a result, are stronger and faster.  We cycle forty to sixty miles three times a week, will do a century ride in early April where we’ll average about sixteen mph.

A few years ago I required a steroid shot in my left knee every six months, like clockwork, in order to walk.  Some problem with arthritis or a shortfall of cartilage.  We’ve increased our cycling speed and distance each year and, as a result, the knee is fine; no pain in three years!

All it takes is commitment.  Show up. There are two times when I should exercise – when I feel like it and when I don’t.  Nike’s slogan is right on. I look forward to sharing some specifics with you in future columns.

Transformation of a Figure Competitor – Week 8

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Now less than 7 weeks to go, I feel as if time is passing too quickly and I’m running out of time.  I always do this to myself, the worrying I mean.  Warren is never worried but I worry enough for the both of us.

Jodi Braun & Janet Fox

Jodi Braun & Janet Fox

That’s where my feelings are right now.  I know I am doing everything that I am supposed to and we can only control so much.  The rest is up to the body to cooperate.  So, I just keep moving along, taking one day at a time and one moment at a time.  This is why I consider every competition prep a journey because every time there are differences that take place.  The way your body adjusts, diet, workouts and don’t forget the mental aspect that can really start playing with your head.  With all of this going on I push through and still have other girls that I’m helping get ready for the same show I’m preparing for.  Like I have said before, helping out these women and being able to see everyone’s personality’s shine through is very exciting and it keeps me motivated!

I know for them it’s good to be able to discuss different aspects of this whole prep with someone like me who understands all of the physical and emotional aspects that take place.  They can vent and I can provide feedback , trying to keep their worries from taking over.

Cardio has increased to 45 min per day and workouts are becoming more intense as well.  Not sure what you all imagine as intense but an example would be flipping a 200-pund tire over,  40 times!  Ha! My arms felt the intensity for 3 days after! lol All of the box jumping and leaping jump squats seem to be effecting the soreness in my hip flexors (wow!) but it’s all worth it in the end right? I know it is and this is why I like pushing myself to the limit.

It’s an adrenaline rush for me and I always feel awesome when the workout is complete.

I am eating chicken now 4 times per day but I don’t mind.  I really like chicken anyway and even in my off season, chicken and fish are staples in my regimen.  At 11.9 % body fat, I am still holding my weight at 130 lbs.  This is the longest I have been able to hold it this high.

I keep crossing my fingers it will remain there.

Just so you can see the level at which all can be inspired by, the picture included this week is of myself and client Janet Fox.  About to turn 64, this coming April will be her 2nd figure show she is getting ready for.  I am truly inspired by her and feel blessed that I can train and prepare her once again.  She is also part of the dotFIT nutrition regimen with Warren’s expertise.

-Jodi

Transformation of a Figure Competitor – Week 7

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

I am only 8 weeks out now.  It’s crunch time!!!!!  At this point you cannot allow yourself to feel tired or unable to give your best with every workout.  With such little time, you have to make every workout count and give it your all.  It comes down to final moments to the day of the competition and all of the blood, sweat and tears leading up to it is what it’s all about.  Sounds dramatic right? It couldn’t be closer to the truth.

My calorie burn has increased to another couple hundred per day.

Jodi Braun doing plyometrics

Jodi Braun doing plyometrics

Now, with addition to another day of cardio for 40 minutes, my weekly calorie burn has increased as well. My average calorie burn per day before was 2600 and now it’s 3000.  Still performing my plyometrics at the end of my weight training, and things are becoming intense.  Although the plyos are a bit torturous the feeling of achievement afterwards is my high.  Just when I think to myself “I’m not going to make it”, Warren pushes me to the edge and I love every minute of it.  Well, it’s a love/hate relationship.

Not only has cardio changed, my diet has as well.  I was having two dotFIT Pre/post workout shakes a day but now it’s down to one.  One of them was replaced with chicken and sweet potato.  As of right now, I eat chicken 3 times per day.  My bodyfat percentage is 12.6 and I am still holding my weight at 130 lbs.  I am so happy with this.  I explain to my female clients that the number on the scale doesn’t mean as much as they think.

It’s odd to women to hear my joy when my weight increases or remains the same.  Go by how your clothes fit more so than looking at the numbers.  Of course when beginning a healthy lifestyle, your weight will decrease but at some point that slows down, don’t get so caught up in a specific number.  If you are gaining muscle, keep in mind muscle weighs more than fat.  These dotFIT supplements are helping me retain muscle as I decrease my body fat.  This is so important right now that my size remains and I just chizzle my body into a sculpture.  Exciting isn’t it??

I have just began some practice with my mandatory poses and it looks like my hamstrings have gained some size.  All I can hope for is that I have improved from the last time and I have given my best with the preparation and my performance.  There is only so much I can control and I am giving it my all!!!!

-Jodi

Can Supplements Help You Achieve Your Weight Loss Goals?

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

It’s possible.  Depending on what you categorize as supplements, they can be the difference between success and failure for many people. Just look at the success statistics of people using meal replacement bars and shakes to assist in weight loss compared to non-users, especially in long-term weight control.

Before we start down this road of dietary supplements and weight loss, let’s remember that supplements alone are NOT a weight loss program, whereas diet and exercise alone can be. But properly used and formulated supplements can accelerate progress and make the chore easier, giving users a greater chance of sticking with their chosen method of weight loss. And on that note, let’s look at dotFIT’s position on dietary supplements and weight loss. Click here to read more on dotFIT.com.

Transformation of a Figure Competitor — Week 3

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

This has been a very interesting week! One of my latest photo shoots with Tina Woods has landed a picture in the latest Fitness & Physique issue on stands now! Check your local stores that carry a large variety of fitness magazines to find it! I was thrilled to be sporting fitness wear with the dotFIT logo!!!!

I also became best friends with my Exerspy. I find it very interesting to see my calorie burn throughout the day. It seems on a normal day without teaching classes I burn about 2500 per day. The days I teach classes it’s around 3000 per day. When I say per day, it’s a 12 hour period. I also wear it while I sleep and after uploading the information, it actually shows at what time I got up during the night to go to the bathroom and how many steps it took me to get there!!! Pretty cool, right? I will try to give updates during the week to give you more
detailed readings. Now that my diet has changed a bit and my cardio has increased, there should be some changes. As of right now considering I take in 1600 calori

Jodi Braun

Jodi Braun, dotFIT Sponsored Athlete

es, I am burning almost twice that per day! WOW! I can’t wait to see the results as I get more intense with my activity closer to show time!

My body fat did not change much from last week. Yes, I was a bit disappointed but menses had to do with it along with the fact that at a certain point your body reaches a homeostasis and change is needed. The calipers cannot differentiate between holding water and fat tissue, so many times Warren makes changes by eye.  My calories remained the same but bread is out. My light English muffin changed to oatmeal for breakfast. I still have my egg whites but half of my banana was cut out as well. For lunch I was eating turkey on light whole wheat bread. This has now changed to 4 oz of chicken breast with small sweet potato and my whole apple became 1/2 as well. Between this change in my diet and my increase in cardio, there should be a change this week. I was doing 25 min of cardio 4 times a week. Now it’s 5 days at 30 minutes.

Changes in my body are very minimal but I can see some striations coming back to my shoulders and chest :) I love watching the changes take place. It’s so scientific!!!!  So, I’m sure some of you are wondering if I’m feeling tired yet?  No, not yet. I’m an even 15% body fat and I usually don’t start to feel it until 11% but each journey is different.

My dead lift this week was pretty good. 185 for 5 reps. My personal best is 200 lbs for 2 reps. I hope to surpass that by 50 lbs before the competition but we shall see. I squatted 205 for 7 repetitions and I have been feeling it the last 2 days!!! LOL  Usually on our leg day we will do leg press and hyperextensions as well.  I wanted to share with all of you that I was born with 2 hernias and have had them both repaired within the last 15 years. I am very careful with my lifting and concentrate on form and breathing all the time. It seems many athletes have had injuries in the past but can still push through with them. Just perform cautiously and you will be fine. For those of you that have had injuries or do now, I know it’s
frustrating but just know that muscle does have memory so whatever you think you have lost will come back stronger. Rest is good and we all need rest for us to improve. We don’t like to admit it but it is true.

So, I have reached the 12 week point! Let the games begin!!!!!! I’m focused and determined!

–Jodi

Weight Control – The Facts Make It Easy – Part II

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Visibility allows flexibility – do it your way

To reiterate, nowhere in Part 1 did we tell you what to eat or do to lose weight.  All we have said is “know how many calories you burn, what you want to weigh and when, and then you’ll know how many calories you get to eat.” And by now you know that the more you move, the more you can eat.

When it comes to accomplishing a weight or body fat goal, all that matters is that you start. What you eat and how you burn calories is no one’s concern but yours. So, on average, just burn more than you eat until you reach your goal. It’s not a program – it’s your life combined with the right tool to tell you all you need to know. That tool is the exerspy.

Here’s what one new user who’s struggled with thyroid disease and weight gain has to say about exerspy:

“I’ve used countless food logs, work out logs, and am an avid health freak.  I didn’t really like online programs I used and the fact that I needed to use multiple programs (one for calorie/nutrition facts, spreadsheets, work out logs, etc.) made it an arduous task.

“I started using the exerspy on Tuesday of this week and it has been such a blessing!  I LOVE IT! You have done an extraordinary job on the equipment, online program, food log, tracking mechanisms, etc.  I couldn’t be happier.  I wear it all the time and am thrilled about the prospect of what it can do to help me reach my goal/target weight and fitness level.”

What’s her motivation? It’s simple — she’s able to easily fit the program to her lifestyle.

Side note: Every adult knows the difference between good and not so good food – and of course your calories should be made up of better foods – but hey, you figure that one out because at the end of the day, only the difference between your burn and your consumption determines your weight loss – NOTHING else.

The same formula applies to all of us, including those who eat well and exercise religiously but still have that pesky little spot of body fat that just won’t go away. The answer is the same. Repeat after me, “Eat fewer calories on average than you burn (do it your way) until it goes away”. And always bear in mind, you CAN’T chose to lose fat in from a specific place on your body, like your thighs or stomach.

The Undeniable Facts of Weight Control:

  • Individual total calorie intake is determined by personal activity, body statistics and goal including desired timeframe. The foods that make up your allowed calories can be structured to improve health & performance.
  • One single fact determines the rate of weight/fat loss: the average daily calorie deficit. This is defined as the difference between how many calories you burn and how many calories you consume. Weight loss should proceed at a pace that does not compromise health or performance.
  • Exercise is intended to improve your body structure, function/performance, longevity, visual appearance, etc. Exercise also increases daily calorie burn and helps you maintain your desired weight.

You must be the creator of your program or you won’t be the master

The only way you will own a behavioral change is if you create it. Start anyway you can, sticking to this simple rule: burn more calories than you consume, on average, until you reach your goal. Just follow the number.

The good news is that “one good turn deserves another”, meaning, as your body changes and you start to look better, you will also do things better. BUT the first turn has to come easily and on your terms, or you’ll take a second step to failure. Square pegs don’t fit in round holes – you need to own your program because it fits the life you choose, not a life someone else chooses for you. You want to be lean but you need to get there your way. Want maximum visibility and complete flexibility? Welcome to dotFIT Me.

Ready for more? Join us for any of our free webinars and you’ll not only learn valuable information about weight control but you’ll also get a sneak peak at dotFIT Me and exerspy.  Just go to www.dotFIT.com/webinars to register for the next session.

Weight Control – The Facts Make It Easy – Part I

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

If you know what to do, then why CAN’T you control your weight?

The simple answer to the question is motivation, because everyone knows how to lower their weight – everyone. Yes, ALL adults know (albeit many are in denial) that their undesirable or oversized fat stores are a result of eating or drinking more than they need. Therefore, everyone knows the one and only answer is to eat less, move more or a combination of the two – hello!

I travel and lecture all over the world and I have yet to meet an adult who truly doesn’t know that they’re overweight because they eat or drink too much. Nor have I met a person who wants to become overweight. So why is the majority of the adult population overweight? The first part of the answer is that people can’t see or feel daily weight changes. The average adult gains 1-3LBS per year, or in daily numbers, ~1/365 -1/182LBS per day (or an average of 10 to 30 calories per day more than you burn). This leads to the second part. Body fat creeps up so slowly it’s easy to ignore it until you’re forced to put energy into losing weight – and the perceived effort, which is any weight loss program or method, requires motivation. Motivation to change your lifestyle means motivation to change your behavior, and it requires lots of thinking, planning, actions and sometimes counseling.  And the method you choose may not fit your lifestyle, which means you ultimately achieve weight regain. Yet, as previously mentioned, you DO know why you are overweight.

How do we lower the need for motivation?

Let’s go back to where we started. You are overweight because you ate more than you moved, meaning more than necessary. You also know that now you need to eat less and/or move more to fix it. Okay, nowhere in this conversation did anyone tell you what to eat or how to move, right? So what’s the simple answer to reversing the problem WITHOUT life-changing or threatening motivation?

You CAN eat ANYTHING you want – you just CAN’T eat EVERYTHING you want

Meaning, do what you do but just a little less and/or a little more. Reverse the behaviors that got you here. That’s right, no lifestyle change is required, just a minor adjustment. The rest will take care of itself. As soon as you make a big deal out of losing weight, you take your first step toward failure.

To succeed you only have to pay attention to a number, but you need to know what that number is.

You WON’T manage what you CAN’T see and you CAN’T manage what you DON’T know

To successfully achieve your goal weight YOUR way, you need to know how many calories you use every day so you know how many you can eat to lose weight or not get fat. Now you have something to manage that’s controllable daily: simple numbers.  And remember, numbers don’t lie.

Motivation will come from seeing body fat coming or going in real time at any time — hourly, daily, weekly, etc.  When you can SEE your daily body fat gains and losses, it’s simple to manage them because it doesn’t take much effort to eat one less bite or take 10 extra steps to stay on track. The “icing on the cake” is that you will actually be motivated by having visibility into real time changes in your body fat. When you use a flexible program like dotFIT Me, you can view hourly and daily changes in weight and body fat as opposed to waiting until they are confirmed by the scale or change in clothing size. Flexibility is critical to your success.  We’ll explain why and how in Part 2.