Royal Canadian Air Force-Exercise Plans for Physical Fitness

by RCAF

1972

Description

This tried and true method for improving and maintaining your overall physical fitness has been enthusiastically endorsed by the public since its initial release in 1961. Originally designed for use by Royal Canadian Air Force pilots stationed in remote, confined bases in the far north, the 5BX and XBX fitness plans (for men and women respectively) don't require access to complicated gym equipment or even the outdoors. To be in the best shape of your life, all you need is this slim book, a few minutes a day, an average-sized living room, and a little determination. The fitness plans presented in this volume are unique in their simplicity and effectiveness. With clear-cut fitness "targets" and tools for measuring your progress, the 5BX and XBX programs are designed to let you develop your physical fitness at your own pace, adjusting for your age, body type, baseline fitness, and schedule. The XBX and 5BX plans are balanced to target the muscles of your entire body as well as your cardiovascular system. There's no need to mix and match with other exercises or routines. These simple 10-15 minute workouts are all you need to feel fitter and healthier than ever!… (more)

Library's review

Two books in one, two famous basic plans

XBX 12-minute-a-day plan for women.
5BX 11-minute-a-day plan for men.

'Physical fitness makes us work better, look better, and feel better. All of us should have enough self-discipline to spend a few minutes each day exercising. The RCAF program is an excellent
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method of attaining and maintaining fitness.'-Charles B. Wilkenson, Special Consultant, President's Council on Physical Fitness.

Contents

The XBX plan for women
Physical fitness-what it means
Why you should be fit
Your appearance
Weight control
Diet
What you can do about fitness
How yo ucan use XBX Why XBX was developed
Why XBX was developed
How XBX was developed
What the XBX plan is
How XBX works
What the exercises are for
What the charts mean
Your fitness goal
Live to be fit and be fit to live
Rest, relaxation, and revitalization
Exercise and the heart
Exercise, strength, and endurance
The 5BX plan for men
The 5BX plan
5BX means five basic exercises
Why should you be so concerned about physical fitness?
You can collect valuable dividends of physical efficiency from your daily activities
Physical fitness
How fit should you be?
The contribution of sports and other activities to basic physical efficiency
Common sense about exercise
Warming up
Weight control-exercise
What is it?
How to begin
How to progress
Your physical capacity level
Here are a few tips
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User reviews

LibraryThing member edwin.gleaves
Old but still useful, from one who has used it for 30 years.
LibraryThing member Muscogulus
When I decided to get back on a regular exercise plan in 2003, I went to a used bookstore and sought out the RCAF exercises that my father and I used to do back in the ’70s. Talk about a blast from the past. The two gender-specific exercise plans have experimental-sounding Space Age names — XBX
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for women, 5BX for men — and the campy cartoons are also typical of the period. The women’s program has some quaintly sexist touches, like charts for keeping track of one’s hip, waist, and bust measurements. Despite this, my sister decided to track down a copy of these exercises after I told her about mine. In its day, this program caused a sensation throughout the English-speaking world. I remember reading about a political prisoner in South Africa who kept her morale up by doing the RCAF exercises in her cell. Years later, in 1989, I got to know an evangelical minister from Poland who had mastered all the men’s exercises, including the commando-style push-ups where you lift your hands from the floor and clap. I don’t know whether he followed the RCAF exercises or an identical Warsaw Pact knock-off. (Or could it be that the RCAF copied a plan designed by the Poles? The truth is out there somewhere.) Anyway, in case I doubted his skills, he did a quick run-through of all the exercises on the spot. I was impressed.
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LibraryThing member mykl-s
My go-to physical exercise book for many years. Programs structured by age and physical shape, simple programs that were doable, and measurable. I never progressed very far, but the book helped me stay in a better shape.

ISBN

671416618

Publication

Pocket Books New York

Original publication date

1962 (copyright)
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