Gulf News

Colour code your way to fitness

Dubai’s latest gym Orangetheo­ry Fitness uses an exercise programme that focuses on your heart rate to help you burn those calories

- — Cecelia Jyrwa is a senior secretary at Gulf News. She’s a mother of two and a fitness fanatic who enjoys doing squats carrying one of her sons. She’s currently on a quest to find the courage to climb a monkey bar.

My heart is orange. I was inside this hip gym in Times Square Mall along Dubai’s Shaikh Zayed Road, with a heart rate monitor strapped on my arm, participat­ing in a 60-minute workout. We were told by head trainer Nelita Villezon that the goal of the class was to spend a combined minimum time of 12 minutes or more between heart rate Zones 4 Orange [84-91 per cent] and Zone 5 Red [92100 per cent]. This is how we would maximise our results and reach the Epoc (excess post-exercise oxygen consumptio­n) effect. A majority of our time in class should be spent in Zone 3 Green [71-83 per cent].

As you step inside Orangetheo­ry Fitness gym, you’ll see screens everywhere with names on them. Under each of the names will be a circle that represents your heart rate. By doing intense exercises, you have to keep your heart rate at 84-91 per cent, this should keep you on the orange zone. Orange heart, that is. So when your heart rate is at 92-100 per cent, it means you are a pro. At 71-83 per cent, it means you have to keep going.

“Heart rate-based interval training is more effective than longer bouts of exercise,” Villezon explained. “Because of the effort you have to put in, post workout your

“Each class is a total body workout and each day the workout changes in order to keep the body guessing.” NELITA VILLEZON | Head trainer

body must work harder to recover. This is when we experience Epoc effect which Orangetheo­ry Fitness calls the ‘afterburn’.

“Using a variety of exercises that can be used during heart rate-based interval training, you will burn fat, gain muscle, and increase metabolism. Cardiovasc­ular benefits includes making your heart stronger, more efficient, lower your risk for heart disease and high blood pressure. Besides the physical results, using heart rate-based training teaches you to work smarter, not harder. It can

show you where you are overworkin­g or underworki­ng. That way you can maximise your results in each workout.”

To reach the orange zone and maximise the afterburn or Epoc effect, we did various exercises on the treadmill, water rowers, free weights and TRX straps. Different classes have different exercises concentrat­ed on power, strength and endurance, Villezon said.

“At Orangetheo­ry Fitness we go through a variety of exercises,” she said. “Each class is a total body workout and each day the workout changes in order to keep the body guessing. The focus of classes can either be endurance-, strength- or power-based.”

After the rigorous workout, I was thinking of pizza. Trying to be smart, I asked the head trainer if there was a list of food that can lengthen afterburns.

“It is more about having an all-around healthy lifestyle and maintainin­g a balanced nutrition regime,” Villezon politely replied. “You want to accompany your workout efforts by fuelling your body properly and not counteract­ing all of the hard work you do in your exercise routine. Everyone’s body is different in what it needs, so there is no one set list for everyone.”

Of course, you can do all this at home. But with the beats, names flashing, lighting to fit the mood and people to go at it with, it’s way cooler in a gym.

 ?? Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News ?? Coach Jalila at The Orangetheo­ry Fitness Centre.
Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News Coach Jalila at The Orangetheo­ry Fitness Centre.
 ??  ?? Orangetheo­ry Fitness’ heart ratebased interval training helps burn fat, gain muscle and increase metabolism.
Orangetheo­ry Fitness’ heart ratebased interval training helps burn fat, gain muscle and increase metabolism.
 ??  ??
 ?? Cecelia Jyrwa. ?? Your guide to keeping yourself healthy and strong in the UAE by
Cecelia Jyrwa. Your guide to keeping yourself healthy and strong in the UAE by

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates