The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Powered up

Looking for a workout that truly sets your metabolism on fire? Gayle takes on the Metafit challenge

- With Gayle Ritchie

Metafit is a high-energy way to get fit and burn fat, Gayle Ritchie discovers.

My thighs are burning, my heart is attempting to burst out of my chest and I’m sweating buckets.

Welcome to Metafit – one of the most utterly brutal forms of workout I’ve ever experience­d.

Sessions are run across the country but this one takes place at Energie Fitness Dundee.

I’ve plumped for an after-work slot, at 5.30pm on a Tuesday – a brilliant way to de-stress after a day in the office.

For those who don’t have a clue what Metafit is (neither did I), it’s a highintens­ity interval training (HIIT) workout which gives you an all-out, 100% physical blast through quick, intense bursts of exercise, followed by short recovery periods.

It’s not choreograp­hed, so you don’t need to learn any cringewort­hy dance moves, but you do need to perform some simple bodyweight exercises designed to fry fat and sculpt muscle.

Yep, it includes burpees and pressups...

The technique keeps your heart rate up for hours after the session, meaning that you burn more fat in less time.

Metafit sessions last around 30 minutes, including a warm-up and cool down, and while that might sound like a walk in the park, believe me, it’s not.

Arriving at the studio, I admit to instructor Victoria Sheridan that I don’t know what to expect.

“Don’t worry – just follow the instructio­ns!” she smiles reassuring­ly.

Before pressing play on the prerecorde­d music and instructio­ns (which have timings and countdowns between reps of exercises), Victoria demonstrat­es each move.

“There are nine exercises in total and we go through them three times,” she explains.

“There are bear crawls (and reverse bear crawls), mountain climbers, hip hingers, squat walks, low travelling lunges, wide grip press-ups, explosive jumping jacks, frog jumps, and burpee hurdle jumps.” Arghh, is all I’m thinking.

There are mirrors around the studio which help you to see if you’re doing the moves correctly, although, to be honest, there’s not much time to think about perfecting anything – you just crack on and do it.

The accompanyi­ng music is dancey and upbeat, and a voice prompts participan­ts while Victoria, up front with the centre’s health and fitness manager Brad Thoms, shows us what to do.

While I consider myself pretty fit (regular readers will have heard me waxing on about how I run, walk, do yoga, pilates and ride horses), I’m not convinced I’m “Metafit-fit”, if that makes sense.

I battle my way through the first set of exercises, struggling with the burpee hurdle jumps (a burpee followed by a jump to the side) and almost collapse during the explosive jumping jacks.

What’s an explosive jumping jack, you may ask?

Other than hellish, it’s a move in which you squat, reach down and touch your feet, and then, with an explosive jump, rise up into a jumping jack – also known as a star jump.

You then come back down into a squat and touch your feet again. That’s just one rep.

After each interval – usually up to one minute or 45 seconds – you should be out of breath, drenched in sweat and begging for a rest.

Alas, the rest periods are minimal but they should give you just enough energy to get ready for the next mega blast. Believe me – you need that break!

Mountain climbers are do-able – and they’re supposed to set you on track for a six-pack.

How to do one? You drop to a press-up position and bring alternate knees up to your chest as fast as you can. Tough stuff.

The squat walks and low travelling lunges are fairly self-explanator­y.

I only manage a few wide grip pressups, because I’m utterly useless at any kind of press-ups, but it’s OK to hunker down on your knees for this one.

In fact, if you do struggle with any of the exercises, Victoria and Brad

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom