Integrating Strength Training within a Boxing Routine

Based in Staten Island, Hassam Khan guides a transit retail business and focuses on handling vacancies and development proposals at various transit hubs and terminals. Passionate about health and fitness, Hassam Khan regularly boxes in Staten Island and lifts weights in his free time.

While boxing and strength training would seem a natural fit, boxers tend to be extremely cautious about the weights they lift. This has to do with the way in which bulk can come at the expense of agility and speed, which are essential in evading and landing punches with minimal damage.

Judicious resistance training that emphasizes strength and conditioning does have a place in the boxer’s arsenal. One typical session could include squats or leg presses, bench presses, crunches, and deadlifts. In addition, the workout can integrate complementary machine exercises such as the overhead press, biceps curl, and triceps push, as well as the seated cable row.

Weights sessions should always be interspersed with aerobic fitness, with regular runs of three to five miles ideal for building the type of stamina necessary to make it through a full 12 rounds in the ring. As the competition phase nears, weight training should be scaled back to quick sessions that fulfill a maintenance role, with emphasis placed on ring work.

Proposed BQX Line Would Link Brooklyn and Queens

Hassam Khan Staten Island
Hassam Khan, Staten Island

Hassam Khan operates businesses in Staten Island, Queens, and Manhattan, including one that contracts with public transportation agencies. As a result, Hassam Khan takes an interest in upcoming improvements to the New York City transit system.

One such project is the proposed Brooklyn-Queens Connector, known colloquially as the BQX. The BQX would consist of a streetcar line running 16 miles through neighborhoods adjacent to the East River, starting at Sunset Park in Brooklyn and going north to Astoria in Queens. It would also offer a connection for commuters to the Long Island Rail Road.

Claiming the BQX would fill the transportation needs of underserved areas, supporters say it would carry 15.8 million passengers each year by 2035. They have estimated a construction cost of $2.73 billion, to be offset eventually by $30 billion in revenues.

The plan’s supporters say it would reduce travel time from Astoria to Long Island City by 30 minutes, spur economic growth in the outer boroughs, and lighten the load on overcrowded transit infrastructure.

However, opponents warn it would not attract enough riders to meet projections and would eliminate street parking. They suggest that renovating current bus and subway routes would be a better solution with less disruption to neighborhoods.

Assuming it passes these political hurdles, the BQX would open in 2029.

Elements of a Healthy Diet

Healthy Diet
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Seasoned business executive Hassam Khan concurrently serves a transit retail business, organic supermarket, and Staten Island-based gourmet deli as director, and a real estate division as property manager. Hassam Khan is also a health and wellness enthusiast, and an avid consumer of healthy foods and drinks from Staten Island and surrounding locations.

For a diet to be classified as healthy, it must have several food groups in balanced quantities, because no single food group can provide all the nutrients the body needs. To have a healthy diet, appropriate quantities of food — determined by factors such as activity level, gender, and age — must be chosen from the five main groups of food.

1. Vegetables and fruits are rich in vitamins and minerals. They are also good sources of fiber. According to the American Heart Association, at least eight servings of vegetables and fruits of constitutes a healthy daily intake, and can prevent cancers, type 2 diabetes, and heart disease.

2. A healthy diet includes wholemeal (containing both germ and bran) cereals, pasta, and bread.

3. Dairy is an excellent source of calcium for healthy teeth and bones. For a healthy intake of dairy, the most recommended calcium-rich foods are cheese, yogurt, and low-fat milk.

4. Protein is important for repair of tissues. Protein-rich foods have high levels of essential minerals such as iron, zinc, and magnesium. Protein-rich foods include eggs, fish, and meat.

5. Fats are necessary for energy, for brain health, for the absorption of certain vitamins, and for healthy skin, hair, and joints. Unsaturated fats are found in oily fish and avocado. Saturated fats are found in fried foods, fatty meat, and cream. Healthy fats should be less than three-tenths of total calories.

Buying Organic Food Can Help Slow Global Insect Decline

Hassam Khan Staten Island
Hassam Khan, Staten Island

As the director of a gourmet deli in Staten Island, Hassam Khan is responsible for overseeing financial statements, facilitating catering orders, and ensuring that the kitchen meets health and safety codes. Hassam Khan of Staten Island is also the director of an organic supermarket, where he maintains similar responsibilities.

A recent analysis published in the Biological Conservation journal warned of an impending extinction of insects, which could cause nature’s ecosystems to catastrophically collapse. The report noted that more than 40 percent of all insect species are on the decline, while one-third are already endangered. Dwindling as a whole by an annual rate of 2.5 percent, insects could be largely wiped out within 100 years.

Climate change and urbanization are listed as two factors contributing to this predicament, but the analysis identifies intensive agriculture and the use of pesticides as the main one. Because organic farms utilize only natural fertilizers and methods of crop protection from insects, they are much better for the continued survival of insects. Several leading scientists, including University of Sussex professor Dave Goulson, are proponents of buying organic food as a means of curbing the drastic decline of the global insect population.

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