You can make your bed…
You can update your Facebook status…
You can cook 3 batches of Minute Rice…
OK maybe there is a lot of things you can do in 3 minutes.
But one of the biggest obstacles we have as busy dads is finding the time to stick with our workout routine.
But in reality we all have the same amount of time in a day, so it’s really about how we MANAGE our time.
No matter what your situation, there are other dads out there juggling a lot more than you when it comes to family and fitness.
So for those days when you are about to write your scheduled workout off because of no time, I got you covered.
The 3 Minute Workout.
This bodyweight workout can be done anywhere at anytime without any equipment.
No, this shouldn’t replace your regular workout, despite what the TV infomercials want you to believe, you won’t get abs in 7 minutes!
But for a quick metabolic boost that will give you some energy and burn up some calories, put this workout in your training toolbox as an Emergency Workout.
So you now have NO EXCUSES. But you do have 3 minutes…
Do you have an Emergency Workout? Let me know by posting a comment below.

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It’s what EVERYONE uses to be successful to lose weight and gain lean muscle in the shortest amount of time…
Athletes use it…
Bodybuilders use it…
Brides to be use it…
and busy dads like us, use it to get that beach body for summer…
It’s a DEADLINE.
If YOU want to be successful with anything in life you need a deadline to keep you accountable to your goals.
Changing your body is no different.
So that’s why I am excited to announce the Dad Fitness 60 Day Challenge!
The deadline to enter is this Monday, October 26th at midnight so you better hurry.
I am looking forward to seeing your Dad Fitness success story!
It cost’s nothing to get started and you can check out the rules and prizes in the link below.
Just think… you can be leaner, stronger and $1000 richer before Christmas Eve.
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I am really excited to share with you a Dad Fitness exclusive interview with best selling fitness author, Lou Schuler.
As a fitness book worm I personally get every book Lou puts out because they are always top notch and full of the latest information in regards to effective workouts and healthy eating.
Lou has been in the game a long time and seen a lot of the fitness fads come and go.
So I asked him to give me his thoughts on fitness, family and fatherhood…
SB. For people who don’t know, tell us a little about yourself Lou, and how you got started in the fitness industry?
LS. I’m a journalist who’s also a fitness professional. Before I started at Men’s Fitness in 1992, I’d had a fairly conventional journalism career, working at daily and weekly newspapers and regional magazines. I worked at MF for six years, the last three as fitness editor, and then moved to Men’s Health for the next six years, first as fitness editor, then as fitness director.
The Testosterone Advantage Plan, my first book as an author, came out in December 2001. That was followed by Home Workout Bible, Book of Muscle, The New Rules of Lifting, and The New Rules of Lifting for Women. The third book in the New Rules of Lifting series will come out in January 2011.
SB. I hear you are also a busy dad and husband as well. How many kids do you have and what is your favorite part of being a dad?
LS. I have three kids, who are 13, 11, and 9. My favorite part of being a dad is not being anything like my own dad, who was a wreck physically and disengaged emotionally.
SB. Lou, how did your fitness philosophy change once you became a father?
LS. Most of the changes in my approach came about because of the research I was doing for the books I wrote. My diet changed from low-fat to one with balanced macronutrients while writing Testosterone Advantage Plan. I also got my CSCS in 2001, and that coincided with more of an emphasis on training for strength and performance. Coincidentally, I found it was more efficient to train that way.
SB. As a fitness author, what are the 3 biggest mistakes you see busy dads trying to staying fit make with their workouts?
LS. I can’t really say what other guys do or don’t do. I really just see the guys in my own gym, and most of them seem to have pretty solid workout programs. And I also hate to criticize the minority of adults who’re actually making an effort to stay in shape. I could find ways to improve most of the routines I see, but I’m sure at least a few of those guys are thinking the same thing about my workouts.
SB. What do your workouts currently look like?
LS. I do full-body workouts every time in the gym, so if I have to miss a workout because of an unforeseen problem, I don’t have to worry about unbalanced training.
Ninety-nine percent of the time, I’ll start with a lower-body exercise — a squat variation one workout, a deadlift variation the next, and a lunge variation the next. My upper-body work alternates between bilateral and unilateral movements. I like to do almost every exercise from a standing or kneeling position, to keep the core muscles engaged.
I also move pretty quickly from one exercise to the next. I’m not trying to add size — in fact, I’ve lost a few pounds in the past year — so I minimize rest periods and aim for more of a conditioning effect.
SB. What are some of your favorite healthy meals and snacks?
LS. My favorite is one I got from TC Luoma of TMUSCLE: natural peanut butter mixed in a bowl with low-carb chocolate protein powder and low-fat milk. Really hits the spot, and satisfies my hunger for hours.
SB. Why do you think it’s important for us dads to stay fit?
LS. Our kids should see that fitness is a lifelong pursuit. If they see us make time for it, and invest energy in it, they’ll understand that it’s an important part of life.
In our parents’ generation, there wasn’t much of an organized structure for fitness activities. You played outside as a kid, then maybe you played on sports teams through high school or even college, if you were one of the lucky ones. Many of our dads also did physical training in the military, where it was used as a punishment as much as a tool for activity-specific performance. Once you were out of the military, and presumably finished with sports, there wasn’t really any structure in place to encourage lifelong fitness.
But with our kids, everything is structured. There’s almost no such thing as backyard sports, or neighborhood games. If you play something, you play it on a team. If you do pure exercise, it happens in gym class. So it’s important for them to see their parents using those same structures to pursue lifelong fitness, and doing it voluntarily.
We all know as parents how important it is to read to our kids, and to have lots of books around the house. But it’s also important for kids to see their parents reading books for pleasure. That helps them understand that they aren’t just reading because adults say they have to. They’re reading because it’s such an important part of a fulfilling life.
Now we apply that to sports and fitness. At a certain point, I think kids start to ask themselves if they’re playing sports because they enjoy it, or because their parents expect them to play. If Dad is still playing something in middle age — golf, bowling, slow-pitch softball, or anything else that involves competition and some degree of coordination and focus — it reinforces the idea that sports are something you do for yourself.
If they understand that Dad goes to the gym three times a week because he enjoys it and considers it important, it sends the message that structured exercise isn’t just something you do in gym class because the school says you have to.
SB. Anything you would like to add? Any favorite tips you learned from other experts over the years?
One thing I’ve learned from experience is that you have to place as much importance on your wife’s fitness program as you do on your own. That is, you make sure she has as much opportunity to get to the gym or get outside for a run as you do. You can’t pressure her to train if she doesn’t want to — I think that’s obvious. But you have to make sure there’s equal opportunity within your household. Sometimes that means skipping your own workout when something comes up, rather than forcing her to miss hers.
During those times when you simply need to train more often than she needs or wants to train, you have to negotiate the opportunity to do that, rather than just assuming you deserve it by virtue of the fact you’re more ambitious or disciplined.
The benefits come back to you in two major ways. First, of course, is the health and stability of your relationship. You don’t want your wife resenting your desire to be healthy and fit, or to see it as a wedge you use to shift the priorities of the marriage in your direction. Second, your kids see that fitness isn’t just a priority for one individual in their house, but for everyone. If Mom and Dad have fitness pursuits that make them happier, that’s the most positive message we could possibly send to our kids.
SB. Where can people find out more about you and your books?
New Rules of Lifting Books
SB.Thanks Lou for showing us that as a busy dad and fitness author you also practice what you preach!
LS. My pleasure.
Lou Schuler is an award-winning journalist, certified strength and conditioning specialist, author or coauthor of many popular books about diet and strength training. His books include The New Rules of Lifting for Women (with coauthors Cassandra Forsythe and Alwyn Cosgrove), The New Rules of Lifting (with Alwyn Cosgrove), The Book of Muscle (with Ian King), The Home Workout Bible (with Mike Mejia and many other contributors), and The Testosterone Advantage Plan (with Jeff Volek, Mike Mejia, and Adam Campbell).
Would you like to see more interviews like this? Let me know who you would like to see by leaving a comment below!

I am on vacation from work for a couple weeks so I thought it would be a great time to get some household projects completed.
…What I didn’t expect was to run into more problems!
Read on to find out what happened at our house and how I lost 8lbs without trying..(and no I didn’t saw off my arm if that’s what your thinking)
After repairing some boards in our patio deck and installing a new heater in our hallway, my dad and I tore down an old greenhouse in the backyard (that was falling down on it’s own anyway) so we can have more room in the yard for Matea to run around and play.

…7 trips to the town dump later, we had things cleaned up, raked and seeded.
Then the ice maker in our freezer gives out, and a couple days after that… our dryer stops working!
Both appliances are only a couple years old, so I guess the saying is true, “They REALLY Don’t Make Things Like They Used To”

We are still trying to get hold of a repairman…
The current project we are working on is installing a new shower kit downstairs in place of the old one which was all cracked up. Luckily we have another shower and tub upstairs so we don’t become the Smelly Barker’s during these renovations.
Anyway, lets hope the roof don’t fall down on me while I write this, even though it was redone 2 years ago.
…But maintaining a home is a lot like maintaining your health and fitness.
If you don’t take care of yourself and maintain a strong and fit body, you will eventually break down and need some major repairs; arthritis, obesity, heart disease, diabetes, stroke, and cancer, ring a bell?
So make sure you know your numbers and get at least a complete medical checkup once a year. I had mine last week and everything was “perfect” as the nurse said, EXCEPT
…I am 8lbs lighter than last year. (175lbs) Maybe my workouts for dads is working too good!
Eating REAL naturals foods 90% of the time, and doing SHORT high intensity workouts 3 times a week is all it takes for me to stay in great shape all year long.
I even had a dental cleaning and checkup the same day and at 31 years old kept my streak alive, still NO cavities or fillings!
So make sure YOU keep your body finely tuned by getting a regular checkup, eating right and exercising, or you just might end up with some major repairs that the doctor won’t be able to fix…

Your family is depending on you.
Get Started TODAY at ==>http://www.DadFitness.com
How are YOUR numbers? Is there something you would like to improve? Blood pressure, Cholesterol, Weight, Waist Size?
Let me know by leaving a comment below so I can help you get the numbers you want.

15-Minute Bodyweight Workouts For Busy Dads
One of the most common requests I get from busy dads is for short bodyweight workouts that they can do anywhere at anytime.
So I dug into my training “tickle truck” and created Muscles In Minutes, 15 Minute Bodyweight Workouts For Busy Dads.

The envy of every Canadian kid growing up: Mr. Dress Up's "Tickle Trunk"
Finally you have no more excuses for skipping workouts and getting in great shape!
With The Dad Fitness Muscles In Minutes workouts you can lose that gut and build rock hard muscle anywhere at anytime.
Whether it’s before work, after work or even during work! (it’s better than coffee and donuts during your break)
You can always find 15 minutes to squeeze in a quick workout so you can start looking better and feeling better.
• You don’t need an expensive gym membership.
• You don’t need crappy home workout equipment.
• You don’t need a lot of time.
Thanks to a marvel of science we call gravity all you need is your bodyweight to get fitter and stronger despite being a time-crunched dad.
Here is a sneak peak at Day 1 of Muscles In Minutes.
Muscles In Minutes is now available and is included for FREE when you get the Dad Fitness System.
Click Here To Get Started TODAY!==>http://www.DadFitness.com









