What area would you like to focus on?” a fitness professional asks her client.

“My hips, thighs and butt!” the woman replies with desperation. As personal-fitness professionals ourselves, we hear this reply from our clients, expectantly and almost without exception. No wonder: Most women gain weight and store bodyfat easily in these areas. Which also means these are the areas where most women lose weight last, making the hips, thighs and glutes the most challenging areas to firm and shape.

If your butt is a problem area, you’re at the right place at the right time. Two top IFBB pro fitness competitors, Cynthia Bridges and Stacy Simons, have helped us compile a listing of the 10 best glute exercises, with tips and suggestions on how you can shape and tone yours. You’ll also learn how to perform them correctly (and most effectively), and the best way to integrate them into your regular workout routine. If you’re ready to improve your own “bottom line,” you need to take action and stick with a plan. Soon enough, your glutes will be one of your best assets!

Developing great glutes requires performing mostly compound, multijoint exercises that involve hip extension (straightening your body from a bent-hip position). You most likely include some compound exercises like squats, leg presses or lunges in your current workout. To shift their focus from quads to glutes, you just need to adjust the way you perform them. We’ve included exercises you’re probably used to doing (plus some new ones), but incorporated some subtle variations to help emphasize your glutes. Try incorporating one or all of our three sample workouts into your routine to start shaping up your rear view today.

“Jiu-jitsu for me is the hardest thing I’ve done,” said newcomer Diana Sparkman. “I’m claustrophobic. Jiu-jitsu was about conquering my fears. I feel more grounded as a person, emotionally. I overcame so much.”

Brazilian jiu-jitsu is a martial art that uses leverage and ground-position techniques to control an opponent, regardless of that opponent’s size or physical strength. These distinctions are among the reasons why jiu-jitsu is a prized form of self defense.

More than 50 percent of jiu-jitsu is mental. You have to think,” he said.

Because of the close contact involved in Jiu-Jitsu and martial arts training, many women prefer to learn in a female only environment. In this class, you will work exclusively with female students with no contact from male instructors. Our school has an atmosphere of positivity and mutual respect. There are no thug mentalities or giant egos to contend with. Controlled, live grappling and sparring is conducted with an emphasis on safety and technical proficiency. OUR CLASSES RELIEVE STRESS: Martial arts classes are well known for their stress relieving benefits. The emphasis of mind-body training goes far beyond the benefits of standard, healthclub type exercise programs.

OUR CLASSROOM PRACTICE SESSIONS GIVE YOU CONFIDENCE: The confidence building part of our program is what students appreciate the most. Nothing can take the place of the security in knowing that you can defend yourself, if you have to.

Sometimes the Universe brings you to your knees, not to punish you, but to help you rise in the RIGHT direction!

Life is too ironic. It takes sadness to know what happiness is, noise to appreciate silence, and absence to value presence. As I sit here writing I think about this statement and how it applies to my life and me. I have been through sadness; but now can truly understand what happiness feels like. The noise I experienced was the negativity surrounding me. I didn’t realize how loud the noise was until I was no longer around the negative and began to have peace in my life and appreciate the silence. The absence I felt was being alone for the first time in my adult life but the absence was necessary to help me appreciate my friends and family that were always by my side.

There have been many sacrifices in my life, but they were all necessary in order for me to achieve the goals I had set. Cardio on a Friday night, not eating at family functions or choosing not to be involved in certain social events because I needed to rest all served a purpose for the NOW in my life. Sacrifices are sometimes necessary to bring you to your overall goals.

But life can’t be all sacrifice. Sometimes you must sit back and enjoy what you work so hard for…..slow down a bit! As my mom would say, “you work so hard but you aren’t slowing down enough to enjoy it.” This is great advice from a woman who set the example for me. When I was at my lowest low she pulled me out of bed, shook some sense into me and reminded me that no one controls my happiness but me; that was the Universe (and my mom) helping me rise in the right direction!

Work hard and learn to enjoy it!

Fitness pros Adela Garcia and Heidi Fletcher use every trick in the book to build stage worthy legs

1 GOOD START
“Make sure you warm up before doing leg exercises,” Adela says. “For instance, you can walk briskly on the treadmill for 5—10 minutes. I also like stretching between each set of the workout.”

2 ON THE RUN
“If you want nice legs, you have to train them like you mean it,” Adela says. “But you also have to have a good eating plan and do cardio.” Heidi agrees: “Especially for shorter girls like myself, five extra pounds can look like 10 or 15 onstage, so it’s important to incorporate fat-burning cardio.”

3 VARIETY SHOW
“When doing leg extensions, I use different foot positions—toes pointed in or out—and I squeeze at the top to isolate my quads,” Heidi explains.

4 EXTRA POINTS
“If I do cardio on a treadmill, I’ll jump off every three, five or 10 minutes, for instance, and do 30 seconds of pop squats or jump lunges,” Heidi says. Adela, meanwhile, may add calf work to her plié squats. “Push up onto the balls of your feet at the top of the move,” she suggests.

© 2011 Maryland Fitness for Women Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha