男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
USEUROPEAFRICAASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Home / World

Tourists fight flab at kickboxing fitness camps in Thailand

By Agence France-Presse in Phuket, Thailand | China Daily | Updated: 2013-03-30 07:54

 Tourists fight flab at kickboxing fitness camps in Thailand

Thailand is home to a flourishing Muay Thai training industry that welcomes thousands of guests every year, thanks in part to the popularity of mixed martial arts. Provided to China Daily

In a sweltering training camp on a tropical Thai island, sweaty tourists wearing oversized gloves and baggy shorts slam their fists, knees, elbows and feet into a row of heavy bags.

Welcome to the latest craze in extreme fitness - Muay Thai boxing.

With worries growing about the world's bulging waistlines, many foreigners are flocking to Thailand to spend their holidays not on the beach, but following a punishing regime of training in Muay Thai and other martial arts.

Some are going to even more extreme lengths, quitting their jobs to spend weeks or months training in an effort to win their long battles with obesity or hone their skills in the hope of becoming professional fighters.

Jordan Henderson, 26, left behind his London lifestyle of long work days, parties and overeating after the doctors warned him that he faced looming heart problems due to his weight of nearly 184 kg.

After one month at a training camp in Phuket off Thailand's southern Andaman Coast, he had already shed about 20 kg.

"You're in an environment where it's hot all the time, surrounded by people doing fitness," he said after an early morning workout.

"It's about taking yourself out of the box that you live in and just focusing on one thing - and that's to train and lose weight."

The first few days were far from easy.

"It was horrible - the heat and the training, the aches you get and the dramatic diet change," Henderson said.

"I've gone from eating whatever I liked to grilled chicken, steamed vegetables and brown rice," Henderson added.

But despite the grueling regime, he never considered packing his bags and leaving early.

National sport

Thailand is home to a flourishing Muay Thai training industry that welcomes thousands of guests every year, thanks in part to the popularity of mixed martial arts, which combines striking and grappling techniques.

"Mixed martial arts is the fastest growing sport in the world, and Muay Thai is an integral part of that," said Will Elliot, director of Tiger Muay Thai, one of more than a dozen such training camps in Phuket.

"It's definitely extreme to travel halfway across the world," said Elliot, whose camp welcomes hundreds of guests each month paying up to about $100 per week for group training.

"But we're in the tropics. It's hot. We're in Thailand, the birthplace of Muay Thai, so it's about immersion," he said.

Muay Thai, Thailand's national sport, is known as the "Art of Eight Limbs" because it combines punches, kicks, elbows and knee strikes.

Anyone thinking about signing up should be prepared for the challenge.

"It's very physically intensive. At the end of a workout you're going to be exhausted. So if you can maintain that twice a day in combination with a diet, your fitness is going to increase rapidly," Elliot said.

It worked for James Mason, 29, a former used car salesman from Britain who weighed 200 kg when he arrived in Thailand a year and a half ago, but has since lost more than 100 kg.

"The doctor told me that if I didn't do something drastic to change my life in five years' time, I would be dead," he said.

"When I first got here I couldn't walk 200 meters without my back hurting. I had to sit down and take a breath. I'd be dripping with sweat because of the heat and the humidity."

Three months into his training in Thailand, he caught a flesh-eating bacteria and required three operations, narrowly avoiding having his leg amputated.

But he recovered and returned to his regime, and recently completed a 900 km charity bike ride from Phuket to Bangkok.

At the Tiger camp, about 20 students from countries including Australia, the United Kingdom, Egypt and Russia sweated their way through a recent beginners class under the close watch of muscular former Thai professionals.

"One, two, duck, body punch," shouted one of the instructors as the students, of varying levels of fitness, practiced their moves.

After warm-up exercises involving jogging, stretching, jumping jacks and shadow boxing, the students paired up to spar, punching the air within a whisker of their opponents' ears.

"You're meant to duck!" one girl reminded her friend after a near miss.

The main goal of most of the trainees is not to become a boxing champion but to lose weight, said instructor Phirop Chuaikaitum, better known as Ajarn (Master) Dang.

"They run for a long time, stretching, punching in the air for a long time. That makes it easy to lose weight," he said.

"But we don't make it hard, because they will get hurt. We do it slowly but non-stop for two-and-a-half hours. They only have a three-minute break."

There is no slacking off, even for royalty.

"There was one guy who was a prince from Dubai," Phirop said.

"He came for the beginners class. I hit him with a stick, and he told me that he was from a royal family. Whether you're a construction worker or member of a royal family, when you come for boxing training, you are all equal."

As the session neared an end, sweat dripped from the students' foreheads and they grimaced with pain. And for the knockout blow, 100 push-ups to finish, for those with the energy left.

"It does hurt. You're sore everywhere. Sometimes it's tough to walk," Henderson said. "You're dripping in sweat, but once you get back, have a shower, a swim in the pool - you can't buy that feeling."

(China Daily 03/30/2013 page6)

Today's Top News

Editor's picks

Most Viewed

Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 正阳县| 西和县| 利辛县| 乡宁县| 黔江区| 墨玉县| 麻栗坡县| 龙陵县| 巴中市| 武城县| 府谷县| 东山县| 西华县| 洛阳市| 军事| 通州市| 浙江省| 霍林郭勒市| 东丽区| 南充市| 崇州市| 永定县| 基隆市| 长岭县| 荆州市| 锡林郭勒盟| 安图县| 奎屯市| 黑龙江省| 汝南县| 个旧市| 商丘市| 米脂县| 镇平县| 乐山市| 安达市| 乐至县| 铁岭县| 温泉县| 旬阳县| 响水县| 尼木县| 连江县| 射洪县| 安国市| 江津市| 来宾市| 虹口区| 永登县| 连山| 正镶白旗| 巴林右旗| 恭城| 资源县| 甘肃省| 义马市| 福泉市| 荆州市| 山丹县| 沂南县| 建德市| 凤庆县| 疏附县| 庄河市| 江陵县| 枞阳县| 兖州市| 马公市| 高雄县| 泊头市| 灌云县| 垦利县| 集贤县| 淳安县| 凯里市| 开封县| 吉林市| 册亨县| 和田市| 彰武县| 三台县| 宁远县|