Sencbcc.org - Loans, Finance, Real Estate and Small Business

 Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Starting a Business » General AAS » Hyper Fitness: 12 Weeks to Conquering Your Inner Everest and Getting Into the Best Shape ofYour LifeNovember 22, 2008  


Categories
Loans
Finance
Mortgages
Real Estate
Buying a House
Selling a House
Foreclosures
Small Business
Starting a Business
Making Money
Hyper Fitness: 12 Weeks to Conquering Your Inner Everest and Getting Into the Best Shape ofYour Life
Hyper Fitness: 12 Weeks to Conquering Your Inner Everest and Getting Into the Best Shape ofYour Life
enlarge
Author: Sean Burch
Publisher: Avery
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $0.98
You Save: $23.97 (96%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $0.98

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(21 reviews)
Sales Rank: 464560

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 8 x 1.2

ISBN: 1583332693
Dewey Decimal Number: 613.7
EAN: 9781583332696
ASIN: 1583332693

Publication Date: April 20, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A revolutionary, twelve-week program to take you to the top level of fitness and wellness from "one of the fittest men on earth" (CNN International).

Sean Burch started out with a lofty goal: to climb Mount Everest solo and without supplementary oxygen. To accomplish this, Sean developed a training regimen that incorporated cardio and strength elements, nutrition, and mental conditioning. That program took him to Everest's summit and helped launch his career as one of the world's premier athletes. He is now considered an "American Fitness Guru" (Men's Journal) and sought after for his unique techniques and his contagious enthusiasm.

Hyperfitness means learning to test and challenge yourself every day. It means setting short-term and long-range goals and achieving them. It means pushing yourself and discovering that you are stronger, tougher, and more capable than you ever dreamed. With Sean's three building blocks to success-hyperstrength (exercise), hyperfare (nutrition), and hypermind (mental conditioning)-you can accomplish any physical and mental goal you can imagine in twelve short weeks.

But what sets this fitness book apart is Sean Burch's incredible personal story and his encouraging, no-holds-barred motivational approach. With such creative daily exercises as speed skater drills, aerial spins, scale the whale, and ski-mogul master jumps clearly illustrated throughout, the workouts are more like obstacle courses-challenging, varied, and fun. Whether you are preparing for a marathon or another event, or are just ready to dedicate yourself to getting in the best shape of your life physically and mentally, Hyperfitness will inspire you to reach the highest level of yourself possible.



Customer Reviews:   Read 16 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars totally ineffective   September 25, 2008
I buy, read, and collect these type of books going back to Arnold's bk. in the 60's. I also was PT(Phys. Trng.) Instruct. in the Army. I'm a lifelong fitness(semi)fanatic. I have more time and money now and the bks. are cheap. The author is tremendous athlete for sure. But, 95+% of us are not. We need something safe and effective....very basic; like in the military. And what can also be done in limited space w/o equip. This is not it. Try "Ropesport," by Marty Winkler; or "Bootcamp," by Stew Smith. He does a series of very good, cheap, effective bks. for all. Even really cheap on i/net this bk. won't serve the purpose.


5 out of 5 stars Excellent Book   August 28, 2008
This book is full of unique workouts. I am 6 weeks into the program and I can really feel an increase in endurance and muscle strength in everything I do. I look forward to getting my workouts in and haven't experienced any "workout burnout" or boredom with them. I've never sweat like this before, and that's because I've never had a workout that works every muscle in a single workout. I like the structure Sean lays out in his workouts instead of walking into the gym and trying to figure out what muscle groups I'm going to work that day. I didn't think I would ever be in this good of shape again, and can't wait to see the results at the end of the 12 weeks.


2 out of 5 stars Would be a good book if..   July 1, 2008
This would be a great book if it showed you how to do the exercises. Some ( about 1/3) of the exercises are given a description in the book but you need pictures to see how you are supposed to do them which the book does not provide. Strange, the author stresses you need to use proper form to do the exercises but does not show you the exercises!!
He will sell you a DVD of each different level on his website for 29 bucks plus shipping. Isn't that wonderful? If the author really cared he would at least provide a short video of each exercise on his website free of charge or would put them on youtube but he DOES NOT DO THIS. I feel ripped off.... If you knew how to do the exercises this would be a good book. The book lacks organization for sure, but it would be worth the cost of the book if you knew how to do the exercises. It does appear to be a great plan overall but without the ability to properly do the exercises, it is simply not worth the money. I feel cheated.



1 out of 5 stars OK program, poor organization.   June 3, 2008
I am a personal trainer and I am constantly actively learning and seeking out new programs for myself and my clients.

The HyperFitness program looked interesting and promising. But as a started to dig through the material, I was struck by a major flaw... The program is spread out throughout the book, across many pages and as a user of the program you do not get a clear and concise view of the entire plan, making it difficult to follow.

I am looking forward to an updated version of this book, with a section specifically dedicated to the training program, with a clearly laid out and organized grid of the training plan.

Until than, the material is so poorly organized, that it is extremely difficult to understand and follow. If I gave such a poorly organized plan to my clients, I would be fired.



1 out of 5 stars dangerous and poorly written   January 21, 2008
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

i purchased this book because it sounded great according to the reviewers. however, it is so poorly written that one might actually get injured. i work with a personal trainer and i know something about exercise and how important proper form is. this book does a poor job of describing the exercises- and don't get fooled into buying the video- it's horrible too. save your money.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic