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How to Look Healthy, Fit and Strong and Outlast Anyone on the Dance Floor.

...continued (3/4)


How much Protein do you need
The body uses protein for muscle growth and repair. During intense training and competition muscle tissue can be severely broken down. Therefore the competitive athlete must consume enough protein for repairing damaged muscle fibers and growing new ones.

Remember that muscle tissue is made up of 22% protein and 78% water. Without adequate protein intake damaged muscle tissue cannot be properly repaired and your body cannot build new fibers. This will in turn limit your dancing and eventually lead to injury.


Endurance athletes need approximately 1.4 to 1.7 grams of protein per kilogram bodyweight [BW], (1 kg is approximately 2.2 pounds). Some good sources of protein include lean meat, poultry, fish, eggs, tofu, nuts and dried beans. Approximately 15-20% of your daily calories should come from protein.


How much fat do you need?
Fat is the body’s primary energy source during low to moderate intensity endurance activities. This does not mean that extreme athletes don’t need fat in their diets, just the opposite. The body needs Essential Fatty Acids (EFA’s--––omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids) that assist with almost all bodily functions, including the transport of vital nutrients across the cell membrane for energy production.

These fats are called essential because your body cannot produce them; they must be supplied by your diet. Some good sources of EFA’s are cold water fish (like salmon and trout) and flaxseed oil. Approximately 10-15% of your daily calories should come from fat.
What about the micronutrients?


Dancers, runners, cyclists, bodybuilders, martial artists, these are athletes whose bodies require a great deal of energy to sustain the level of intense activities they perform—to name a few. Unfortunately, I find that the average exerciser is far more nutrition conscious than most athletes. If you are an athlete or very active person, take note. Extreme athletes experience more strokes and heart attacks than the average non-exercising individual. Shocking isn’t it?


If you are a very active person, your body requires a great deal more nutrients for the energy production cycle. Energy for your working muscles come only from the foods you eat. And if you only eat one or two meals per day, which for most athletes is junk food, your body is nutrition starved.

Every time you dance, run, jump, kick, bike, or swim without proper nutrition, your body has to draw upon its reserves. In many cases, it has to pull nutrients from other important body functions…like getting rid of toxic waste build-up, making sure enough blood and oxygen is supplied to your heart and working muscles, keeping internal body temperatures at a safe level, and a host of other critical functions.


In short, to engage in athletic activity without proper nutrition is not only stupid, over the long run it will also prove to be deadly. When you burn wood in a fireplace you get fire and ashes. Likewise, when your body converts food into usable cellular energy (ATP), you not only get energy, but you also get cellular waste…those deadly free radicals you’ve heard about that bounce around your body and burn holes into the membrane of healthy cells.

If free radicals continue to build up in your body, which is the case with very active people with poor nutrition habits, eventually this build up may lead to a stroke or heart attack even in a seemingly healthy individual.


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