Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The beauty of perseverance

View for me, if you will...




From this point forward we will be at http://www.prosportconditioning.com/ a twice weekly e-magazine that will have plenty of other contributors.







Determination, desperation, realization, dedication and heck even hospitalization, are all words that can be used to describe what finally made you make the move to finally start you off on your path to fitness.

The two biggest players in all successful physique transformations are “Inspiration” and “Motivation” and they’re two intrinsically intertwined forces. One begets the other.

Finding your Inspiration is a usually the trigger which flips the switch and can a powerful tool to focus your efforts on your ultimate task at hand. A mere 14 years ago, I sat on my lazy boy rocker a whopping 308 pounds, and saw a commercial that changed my life forever. It was the Nike “I CAN” commercial.

This literally set a goose-bump rampage throughout my body and a cascade of tingles down the back of my neck.

The mere thought of it this day, brings on the same effect. And it’s the reason I have kept this 108 pounds off for this long.

If you rely on your inspiration to be the fuel for your motivation, then chances are, you won’t ever be running on empty. It’s a limitless reserve and one heck of a kick in the pants when complacency rears its ugly head.


Take Kerri Strug for example, she was a member of the “Magnificent Seven” the gymnastics team that represented the United States at the Atlanta Olympics in 1996, and at gut check time, when the odds were stacked against her, performed the vault despite having seriously injured her ankle.

She did a spectacular vault, and amazingly landed on one foot before collapsing in pain and clinched a gold medal in the women's team competition…as well as every heart of the Nation.

Overcoming all odds and challenging yourself to get better every day, to break and establish
personal bests is a daily personal battle.


But when done -the powerful feeling of accomplishment and "known ability" allows women in particular a secondary confidence that is remarkable and a wonder to behold.

Grab on, you're in for a ride.
















Overcoming all odds, and challenging yourself to get better every day, to break and establish personal bests is a daily personal battle.

So what’s it going to take for you?


Chris, after slapping away a helping hand....

The workout was 30 Cleans, 10 pushups – 20 cleans, 20 pushups, 10 cleans, 30 pushups

As I sat watching Chris attempt to complete his last 10 pushups, it occurred to me that he was on the verge of an all out collapse… Eric, the Crossfit Trainer stepped in


“Chris, that’s ok, switch to “Pushups on your knees”

He looked up, gasping and said… “BUT I ONLY HAVE 8 LEFT!”

(astonished faces)

“Fine then, get down there a grind out them damn pushups!”

It was a great scene to behold. A newbie trainee who after losing twenty pounds via on-line support ( in 8 weeks) was now laying in his own very own sweat angel.

Even more impressive, was, given the opportunity to take an olive branch to the easy way out, he declined and slapped it right out of his hand. This, to all of us there, is an amazing thing.

Cause, well, we’ve been there.

And when someone gets “THAT” for the very first time, it is an overwhelmingly empowering feeling.


My shock came about an hour later when I received a text message..

“Man, I feel kind of lame with those pushups

I explained that what had happened was not a bad thing, but an amazing display of courage and perseverance.

Willingly taking the hard road and smashing through that barrier is truly an amazing thing.

It’s the gutty performances like the one above that tend to build the most character in the gym, and help you along further in your quest for ultimate fitness.


I have been inspired on more than one occasion in the last week. By the grueling and mind numbing performances within the confines of the 4 walls, we know as CFM.

The workout was…

“Badger”
800 meter Run
30 Cleans
30 Pullups

3 rounds

It was hot and sweaty. And this ball buster of a workout is one shitty workout ( that means it’s good and hard).

I watched a girl destroy her personal best, and put in one of the most courageous workouts I’ve ever been witness to…

During the grueling second round, she obliterates her left hand and a callous near her ring finger for lack of a better term "explodes:…. Yet...She continued to rep out by using only three fingers on her left hand! ( this was determination at it’s finest)…and left her hand a bloody mess.

Towards the end of THAT 30 pullups, she tears another callous off her right hand!

Battered and brutalized… she kept on going. Squealing in pain every time she remounted the pull up bar…

Most people would have given up at the end of the round…

Not her.


She did the whole last round and beat her personal best

Absolutely Amazing.

In the end, she laid in a “stigmata” like heap on the ground….


Beaten and Bloody,

but Victorious ....





The third time I was left slack jawed and in awe… The workout was

“Two Four”

24 Burpees
24 Clean and Press
24 Burpees
24 Power Snatch



To witness this tiny person, do 24 Power Snatches of a new one rep max was….well….

Breathtaking…

It took her 34 minutes to get it done… and some of the snatches were shades and views of pure unadulterated effort and determination…
Literally…. A snatch should take about 1 second…
She had battles of 4 and 5 seconds trying to get that bar up….and sometimes failing completely….
But she soldiered on, determined not to fail..

She actually smiled when she went to do the burpees….
And well… nobody does that.
It's all within us, there comes a point where you actually choose not to perform or push through.
It's those times, when you stop negotiating with your internal terrorist and push through, that you will feel invincible, empowered and accomplished... if but for a brief moment.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Taking off the Blinders.





Taking a look at the bigger picture….


A lot of times, I try to express that in my years of doing this, that there rarely is a black and white answer to any given task, problem or challenge in the way of fitness. I mean, yes, it’s ALWAYS diet, but that varies person to person and goal to goal… so to speak.

Shade’s o Grey.

Nowadays many people blindly follow one thing or another and turn a blind eye to the science staring them right in the face. I will start with Paleo types, which, I preface by saying is an absolutely amazing way to eat for health and longevity and the diet I recommend the most. But even the authors of “The Paleo Diet” realized that they were kinda missing the beat with regards to human performance and went back years later to write “the paleo diet for athletes”

In one book…..

No dairy, no sugar, no beans, no lentils, no grains, no potatoes, no nightshades


In the next book, they realize that “IF” performance is the goal, that the studies provided show a true barometer of what is needed.

It’s simply too hard to get in enough carbs/quality proteins to fuel and recover from the types of exercise we do today than it was in the caveman era…




in which, surprisingly you will be shocked to learn , that the average lifespan was THIRTY…. Yep 30.

If body composition ( fat loss) is the key goal then I skip the PWO Carbs and simply try to get protein and maybe some glutamine,( which has been shown to do not much of anything even in excessive doses*) but may help replace muscle glycogen and help you with a “calorie free” recovery.
Different Strokes for Different Folks, Andrew thrived on a dextrose/bcaa concoction, wheras Bianca thrived on dried fruits... .Same results, different routes to get the the goal.


*In a 2001 study by Candow et al, they concluded that 0.9g of supplemental glutamine/kg/day during resistance training had no significant effect on muscle performance, body composition or muscle protein degradation in healthy adults. At my current weight, that is 75g of glutamine a day!


Not exactly worth it your supplement dollar, however.


The other theory is the Fat Adaptation Theory, one, that I had some opinions on, as I can thrive on fats as an energy source. But not when intensities rise into the upper echelon.

The Studies are many…

http://www.ausport.gov.au/ais/nutrition/research/fat_adaptation


So,



Yes, fat is wonderful for health and for ultra endurance events as a heavy duty fuel source

First, let's use "more than 120 minutes" to define the beginning of "endurance" and leave the duration beyond that open.








For the purpose of this post I restrict the effort to a single, steady-state event of two to 24-hour duration.
Endurance efforts are largely fueled by fat oxidation.








To be sure, fats require the background catabolism of carbohydrates for conversion but (in well-trained, endurance-adapted athletes) at levels of work 70% of MVO2 or below the predominant source of energy is fat.




Those less adapted to endurance will fuel mainly with fat up to about 50% of MVO2.




For efforts at greater than 70% of MVO2 the primary source of fuel is carbohydrates. Many mixed, circuit workouts force the athlete to operate at 100% of MVO2, and even higher during interval sessions. The body naturally chooses the fuel source most appropriate to the level of effort demanded by the brain with no regard for how long the supply will last.




This is why; I still give performance types, a healthy dose of fats during the day, but not around training times at all.




Carbohydrates are supplied immediately before and after training. It’s the hope that your diet has you adapted enough to switch through each fuel as necessary… The typical ratios I like are 40-40-20 (protein, fat, then carbs)

This will usually help keep the athlete full and performing at a high level, and still help keep/get lean, cause the calories can still be balanced. And enough fats are supplied to allow the body to use them for some energy when the glycogen runs out at lower intensities.


So…

In conclusion.

IT DEPENDS!

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Who holds you accountable?


What a ridiculous verticle jump looks like.


As I "stood" there hunched over.....trying to catch what little breath I had.... I hear from a distance....


"LETS GO JAMIE! GET IT GOING"

Argh! FINE!! I got up and finished it off.

Workout was:


5 reps - 155 pound jerks
7 Reps pushups
Sprint 40 yards (there and back)


As many as possible in 15 minutes.... I got...6... and paid the ultimate price of tossing ones cookies on the way to work.

Now, as I have always said, training is the easy part. It's fun, people like to do it. But put a stop watch on you and things get a little...intense. And, well, flat out hard.


Humans are, as we know, inclined to take the absolute least path of resistance in any walk of life.

From what I see, there are only a few true atheletes who can "push themselves" to true and honest maximal effort.

The same goes for diets.... Client 069 had a ridiculous 11 pound drop in a week and a half. She's in constant contact with me throughout the day and sometimes for just a one word answer.

She claims that she's never had this much success before this fast, and that "knowing I had to report to you every day is holding me in check"

People who have failed in diets and losing weight, almost invariably try to do it on their own.

Thing is, you can't, or you wouldn't have got big in the first place. Sorry, and I'm not trying to be a jerk, even though I can be quite good at it.

Hire someone. Ask a buddy to do a weight loss challenge with you. Get a kick ass training partner.... Anything that has built in accountability.

Belive it or not, this is the very foundation of Jenny Craig, Weight Watchers and Dr. Bernsteins....

They hold you accountable, albeit in different ways. But all of them are successful.... all of them.

It's when these people "quit" the above groups that they go back right to where they started.
I personally witnessed a former boss lose in excess of 60 pounds on Bernsteins, only to quit because "it's expensive and I will just eat the exact same way and won't break the diet!"

At this point, I knew she was destined to fail.


You see, the weekly "urine sample" that you had to give would show two things without fail.

Ketones or No Ketones.

(ketones are a by-product of fat being used for fuel)

If you had Ketones in your urine, it meant you were sticking to the diet. If you didn't, well they would call you on your crap.

And fail she did...Within months she gained all her weight back.


Thing that most people don't realize is... MOST OF YOU ALREADY KNOW HOW TO LOSE WEIGHT.

You just choose not to - or are helpless to overcome the food cycle.

It wasn't the eating that lead to her diet success; it was someone checking up on her.

This is why the top figure contestants in the world all have trainers. They know what they are doing, but need someone there to call them on their bullshit.

Who doesn't know ... Chicken... Broccoli....Egg Whites.... repeat?

Eat that for 3 days and tell me about the double digit weight loss you have.


Anyway....


With weight watchers, it's the same thing as Biggest Loser, where you have to weigh in infront of everybody. And the group cheers in your successes...


A VERY powerful motivator non?




Self motivated...




VS






Being cheered on and being held accountable..

EGGS ARE A SUPERFOOD!

Protein > carbs for hunger, what a novel discovery***

Nutr Res. 2010 Feb;30(2):96-103.Consuming eggs for breakfast influences plasma glucose and ghrelin, while reducing energy intake during the next 24 hours in adult men.

Ratliff J, Leite JO, de Ogburn R, Puglisi MJ, Vanheest J, Fernandez ML.Department of Nutritional Sciences University of Connecticut Storrs, CT 06269, USA.We hypothesized that consuming eggs for breakfast would significantly lower postprandial satiety and energy intake throughout the day. Using a crossover design, 21 men, 20 to 70 years old, consumed 2 isoenergetic test breakfasts, in a random order separated by 1 week.

The macronutrient composition of the test breakfasts were as follows: (EGG, % CHO/fat/protein = 22:55:23) and (BAGEL, % CHO/fat/protein = 72:12:16). Fasting blood samples were drawn at baseline before the test breakfast and at 30, 60, 120, and 180 minutes after breakfast.

After 180 minutes, subjects were given a buffet lunch and asked to eat until satisfied. Subjects filled out Visual Analog Scales (VAS) during each blood draw and recorded food intake the days before and after the test breakfasts. Plasma glucose, insulin, and appetite hormones were analyzed at each time point.

Subjects consumed fewer kilocalories after the EGG breakfast compared with the BAGEL breakfast (P< .01). In addition, subjects consumed more kilocalories in the 24-hour period after the BAGEL compared with the EGG breakfast (P < .05). Based on VAS, subjects were hungrier and less satisfied 3 hours after the BAGEL breakfast compared with the EGG breakfast (P < .01). Participants had higher plasma glucose area under the curve (P < .05) as well as an increased ghrelin and insulin area under the curve with BAGEL (P < .05).

These findings suggest that consumption of eggs for breakfast results in less variation of plasma glucose and insulin, a suppressed ghrelin response, and reduced energy intake.

Shocking.... I know.....:)



































Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Your Own Lent...

Proof that a diet of Ravioli and Beer did not pay off for this man!

Sometimes you can be your own best friend -if- you acknowledge your known weaknesses ahead of time.

NOTE: I have just opened comments section up. Have been closed for a year, without knowing.



Give yourself some time.


40 days, and 40 nights.



When’s the last time you dedicated yourself to anything fully? I mean really immersed yourself into in and made it your driving force behind all that you do?


When you do catch that fire, it’s a beautiful thing to behold. Focus and intensity are two HUGE factors in your success. And when you are dedicated – those are the inevitable traits that follow.

Dedication comes in many forms, as I have written before.

My current crop of trainees - are all at different points in their life. But, each came to me with a different request and goal, per se. Before I take on any new client, I need to know that it won’t waste my time or their time. I don’t do this for my main source of income;

I do this to help people, so I deserve to be picky.


Client 067 - Already in great shape, but is finally ready to take her final stab at getting abs and maybe getting her beach photos that will last a lifetime. Her physique looks very good already, surprisingly, given her protein sparse - yet grain heavy diet. Dedication and Focus are already there, and you can see it as plain as day.

Being a successful endurance athlete showed me that those two needed traits are there. So I've decided to take her on.


Client 068

A man, nearing his mid 30’s father of two – was horrified to see a picture of himself - and realized that he needed help. His diet was an atrocity and he knew this. Also, a recent visit to the doctor helped him to realize that he was in piss-poor shape.

And most of all, his comment to me sealed the deal.

“Look I just don’t want to wear a t-shirt at Disney land when I’m in the pool with my kids :(”

This hit me right in the heart, and being formally so overweight, I know and feel his pain.


So in response to his plea for help… I stated

"Ok. I will help.

The good news is...

You have a great family.

The bad news is...your diet is horrible.

The good news is, you can only go up from here.
Let’s get started "

( a very successful 4 lbs in the first week)


" Maybe Nobody will notice my Man Boobs is I wear plaid in the water!"





Client 069

When a Classic Cardio compensator, who exercises like a freak, finally realizes she can’t outwork a crappy diet, well then, I’m there to help. Having the wherewithal to go to the gym an hour sometimes two a day and bust your butt only to gain (I promised not to mention the exact number here.. so lets say more than 15 and less than 35 pounds) in two years can be quite demoralizing.

And a living testament to putting the wrong efforts in the wrong places…



I don't care how long you're on there for, you did NOT earn that Big Mac Combo!




Client 070

Former fitness competitor and actually a fitness professional has fallen off the wagon and suffered from burnout (simply by training too many other people) has forgotten the importance of having a “third party” take a look at her goals and diet. As a fitness professional, this can happen to the best of them.



The point is - four people, four different goals, all four failing in the same location.

DIET

DIET IS EVERYTHING



I cannot express it enough. And have said it countless times to countless people.

It’s my first goal, when working with new people to impress the importance of having a phase shift mentality regarding what the gym is for and what diet is for.


Your DIET is THE KEY to weight/fat loss. 100%. Not 90/10 Not 50/50

100%

The gym is where you go – To get in good cardiovascular shape and to Build and Maintain Muscle.

Diet = Fat Loss
Gym = Condition + Muscle

Read it again. And then again.


Once we get that impression cemented into their foreheads, only then can we really begin to help them understand the philosophy.

When Studies show, that resistance training as little as twice a week can yield all the health benefits of improved strength and blood lipid profiles, only then can you start asking the right questions.

What is more important?

Well, without question, diet.

If you had to skip one for the day, I would say skip the exercise.

Don’t get me wrong. Exercise is an absolute MUST. And I recommend it 4-6 times per week given the goals.

The emphasis is always predominantly on strength training with a mix of metabolic conditioning.


SOOOO…..


The original point is, find your goal, and make manageable, tangible and attainable. Don’t be afraid to set the bar high.

My personal lent is on day 3, as I try to whittle myself down to a paltry 185 lbs for football season, and I have been absolutely training with vigor and reckless abandon. My diet has been exceptional and the Barley and Grape concoctions that made up the bulk of my diet this winter has been eliminated. J



So have at it! And dive in head first. 40 days to a new you.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Lift Heavy and Eat Light!

The importance of low rep strength work is often underappreciated
Especially it's effect on your physique and it's appearance of "tone"


Lift Heavy, Eat Light.

In my now 10+ years experience and helping people (mostly women) get ready for physique contests and transformations, there has always been an underlying current to the different successes had and missed. But if I had to put a definite finger on the usual culprit for short circuiting success it would be not paying enough attention to the lower rep ranges, and getting caught up in the “lifting weights to lose weight” routine (reps of 15 etc) .

This is a huge error, and usually ends up leaving the competitor frustrated with their lack of progress.


You lift weights to maintain/gain muscle!













Michelle and Megan were unique cases, that really started to take off once we added in the heavier weights. Megan is super ripped here and that's why she looks "bigger" She was about 110lbs. haha.

You do cardio/intervals/complexes/calisthenics for your conditioning (cardio respiratory)
You DIET to lose weight.

If you keep these things top of mind when designing your current routine, you won’t fail.


I’ll give you an example.

Take a 130 pound woman. Have her run 6.0 mph (ten minute mile) for a full hour.

Calories Burned 590. Not too bad. But look.



1 measly cup of peanuts
828 Calories.

3 cans of Ginger Ale
750 Calories.

5 tablespoons of Peanut Butter
500 Calories


It’s ridiculous to think that working out is a key to anything other than “physical” and Mental fitness. Which is GREAT, don’t get me wrong!

But it’s not ideal for losing that last little bit of fat on your tummy, or getting your ass a little tighter!

I roll back to people that I speak to often, that say things like

“I’m joining a boot camp so I can lose weight”

Heavy Cleans do more for your upper back and shoulders than most isolation excercies. Bianca was an expert!


I cringe.

Nowadays I usually bite my tongue, because it’s this type of mentality that has plagued these people forever, and yes, they will be healthier and may lose a few pounds, but over and over again they will fail when the diet fails.

You can’t bootcamp your way to ultimate fitness, if your diet is wrought with poor decisions, or even worse, if your cardio compensating…. Trying to out exercise your diet.

This is a colossal fail. You never will. EVER!

I worked at a company for a decade, where we had a private gym, with 24/7 access and healthy options everywhere, free supplements etc… Yet these same people, who trained as much as 10 times a week, would only start to get in real shape when their diet was made their priority.

Granted, most were in better shape than the average bear, but even those people who worked out like fiends, still had to keep their diet in check, or that pesky little muffin top would start creeping out the sides again.


So when you are designing your program, be sure to include the following variables

Some low rep work – heavy in the 3-5 rep ranges a couple of times per week.
Some moderate rep work – in the 6-10 ranges a couple of times per week
Some conditioning work-3-5 times per week

A good base program would to start every day with a heavy movement as recovery allows – 3-5 reps

Move to something with a little more volume – one or two movements in the 6-10 range ( 2-3 sets)

Then on to your Crossfit/metcon/circuit training etc…


The strength movement should not interfere with the conditioning movement.





How heavy is too heavy?

No such thing .





Sunday, March 7, 2010

Surrounding yourself with a great community.






Not exaclty your ordinary gym...


Surrounding yourself with a strong community….

Workout
Heavy Snatches 8x2 reps

Then 185 Bench + Sprints

10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 Reps for 185 pound bench press
1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 50 yard sprints

So, you do 10 reps, then 1 sprint, 9 reps then 2 sprints, 8 reps then 3 sprints….etc.


They say in life, you become the friends you surround yourself with and the people that you choose to have in your life. This can be a very powerful influence, either positive or negative.
The same can be said about who and where you train....

I can say that over the last 2 years, this is something that I have realized was happening to myself...
The Ymca is no place for me.

This last two months, I have been rejuvenated by an enthusiastic training partner and the community at the local Crossfit.
It truly is an exceptional and encouraging environment that cannot be explained...
It can only witnessed.
I have my fundamental problems with their programming, as I have said before, and say to them – but – you simply cannot deny the impact of people with common goals.

Nobody goes there and simply “goes through the motions”….There is simply too much effort going on around you to sit idly bye and wade your way through a softie workout.


I love the community, but the book above shows you my feelings about "SOME" of the programming at Crossfit - A la 315 pounds..."for time"

Workout for Saturday
10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1

Power Cleans @135 pounds
Pullups
KB Swings 50lbs


Diet Philosophy.
"I don't undestand, I NEVER eat anything dirty!"
Best quote ever..
"if you put fat people in a cage and feed them what they SAY they eat, you would end obesity"
Anyway....

It’s easy to tell people what to eat, but when they hear “Eat what your grandma told you” they kind of turn a deaf ear. That’s usually not catchy enough. But if I called it “Ultimate Amazing South Shredded P90!!!” they would certainly perk up in a hurry!

I also realize, that most people need an actual plan, as opposed to “free-range” lean eating – so….. for one rarified occasion I will leave a cookie cutter plan on the table here.


Breakfast
3 eggs mixed, scrambled, cooked with olive oil and peppers/onions/mushrooms
1 Cup of mixed berries


Snack
1 apple + 12 almonds

Lunch
Chicken Salad, no croutons, use full fat dressing ( olive oil is best)


Optional Snack
Orange or Apple + nuts


Dinner
Chicken or Beef or Fish
3 cups cooked spinach + onions+ mushrooms ( or ANY other mix)

SNACK
Protein Pudding

"SRX PROPUD"Ingredients:3/4 cup of fat free yogurt1 scoop of Butterscotch Maple Fudge AllWhey, from ALLMAX1 tsp of fat free/sugar jello pudding chocolate mix.8 Walnut halves/pecan or AlmondsPut in one bowl, stir, and until fluffy...Put in the freezer for 10 minutes...

Plenty of protein, fruit and vegetables..... kinda....like....grandma.....used....to....say.... :)

Workout

JACKET OF PAIN

500 Meter row
100 push press @ 75 lbs
500 Meter row
75 push press @ 75 lbs
500 Meter row
50 push press @ 75 lbs
500 Meter row
25 pushpress @ 75

21:39

Favorite Quote:


The Iron is the best antidepressant I have ever found. There is no better way to fight weakness than with strength.

Once the mind and body have been awakened to their true potential, it’s impossible to turn back.


The Iron never lies to you. You can walk outside and listen to all kinds of talk, get told that you’re a god or a total bastard.

The Iron will always kick you the real deal.

The Iron is the great reference point, the all-knowing perspective giver. Always there like a beacon in the pitch black.

I have found the Iron to be my greatest friend. It never freaks out on me, never runs.

Friends may come and go.......

But two hundred pounds is always two hundred pounds. –

Henry Rollins.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

The cost of effort..


Ron let me hold him accountable last year... and in the suffering lies the salvation.


As I went head-to-head against a very formidable opponent in a workout that can only be described as "lower back hell"

50-40-30-20-10 Reps of

30lb wall Ball
20 pound sledge hammer hits

I realized I was in for a tougher than normal match-up. As I pounded out the first 50 ( or so I thought) wall balls..... I went to move over to the tire, when I heard...

"50>? You did 50?.... ok bro.... if that's how this is gonna play out!"

I realized at that point, I was at 40 and miscalculated....

It brought me back to a conversation I had. As you train, and gain knowledge you invariably become a "Crafty Veteran" and sometimes you can't help but cheat to win. It's an bread-in mentality.


So basically, I'm like Orel Hershiser..... The man who played so many games past his prime by learning the system, doctoring the baseball and using the infamous "spit ball"

The point is...

Hold youreself accountable, and, if that's too much to ask.... Have a cognizant training partner.




Yeah, just like me.... The Crafty(shady)vet....

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The 43 things I learned in 2009..


Well to say that I have been on a writing hiatus, would be an understatement of biblical proportions. That said, I have still been very much in the game, and have taken a much different look at training over the last year… in the end though, it all goes back to the Original SRX programming, as trial and error (and injury) show me things over and over again. So without further adu… here is my list of 43 things I learned in 2009…


1> Treadmills are a useful tool. At the same time, they are useless.

AHH....The ole side shuffle.....That'll get you plenty of dirty looks!

So, after leaving the confines of a private gym, with the luxury of sauna, Tv’s on every treadmill, I ended up at Crossfit Mississauga. A “treadmillless” and practically cardioless establishment. The only cardio equipment there are the rattiest Concept 2 Rowers you’ll ever see. Complete with non-working screens.

The clientelle, however, don’t seem worse for ware. In fact, most are very lean and muscular. So the hours on the dreadmill, aren’t absolutely necessary. I myself, although chunked a little lately, am no worse for ware either.

That said… There is something that is deep seeding within me that misses the 40 minutes of “insurance” that the treadmill afforded me. Cause, I can stay and get lean, but my diet must be meticulous. When I added that extra work in, it allowed me, I feel, a little buffer zone with regards to food intake. Furthermore, I find that those who add in some steady state cardio tend to have a little less subcutaneous fat ( and a little more definition)… Call me crazy, but, it’s what I see.

Take home message… Do it, or don’t do it – diet is everything.




2> High Rep Olympic Lifts are Dumb

Yep, high rep Olympic lifts are guaranteed to get you eventually...

So being a 465 pound dead lifter, I scoffed when I read the workout of the day at Crossfit..

275 Pound Deadlift 5 Reps
95 Pound Thruster 10 Reps

5 rounds for time.

Now, god bless em; but probably the worst written workout in the history of the world…

A quarter ton, being moved for TIME?!

Round 1, destroyed it… Deads were easy…. As I coasted along under the watchful eye of 8 or so people, cheering me on, something happened that would change my view of lifting forever.

Rep 4 on the 4th round, I pulled my back so bad, that I fainted, twice. I was also rendered useless for the two weeks ( and two hospital visits later)

This had been my first lifting injury ever. And it scared the living bejeezuz right out of me.

And time the load you are working with exceeds 200 pounds, “TIME” should not be your bench mark. Too many things can happen. Fatigue, form break down, etc…


3> Nike Free’s are the best training shoe in the world.

Flexible much?
Really, if you don’t have a pair, and you do Olympic lifts/agility work, you don’t know what you are missing.


4> The Paleo Diet is about the easiest and healthiest diet in the world.

Read about it. Cordain and Robb Wolf have some great writing on it.

5> Intermittent Fasting does have its place in the real world

It has shown real world results. It’s really the simplest “diet” out there. Eat, stop, Eat ( a’la Brad Pilon) has been shown over and over again to have positive results on health markers, fat mass and longevity.

To take this point further, if you could somehow manage the balls and well, obsession to combine the Zone Diet + Paleo Diet + Intermittent Fasting, you would probably be staring at the FASTEST way to lose weight and be health.

Example Sunday – Fast
Monday – Wednesday ( Zone Diet Rations with Paleolithic Foods)
Thurs – Fast
Fri/Sat (Zone Diet Rations with Paleolithic Foods)

The ZONE
The theory behind the Zone diet is all in the numbers: 40-30-30. Zone dieters balance their meals and snacks so that their calories come from a mix of 40 percent carbohydrates, 30 percent protein and 30 percent “friendly” fats. Sears theorizes that this caloric framework keeps your mind and body working most efficiently. Additionally, on his website, Sears talks about how his diet can reduce inflammation in your body, which, in turn, can help stave off serious illness (heart disease, cancer, diabetes, etc.) while curbing weight gain.
Sweet diet.... NO food. How much easier can it get?
PALEO
Often called cave-man diets or Neanderthal diets, Paleo diet principles implore us to return to hunter-gatherer practices of the Paleolithic period of human evolution more than 10,000 years ago. This requires that we refrain from eating grain foods, potatoes, beans, milk, and refined sugars -- foods only eaten within the last 10,000 years and which are deemed to be unsuitable for consumption because of an insufficient time for Homo sapiens to adapt to these foods. The Paleo diet is high in meats, vegetables and fruit.

Put those together, and your pretty much heading towards HEALTH NIRVANA


6> When injuries happen, look to your diet and sleep. Really.



7> Overstretching
Not really complaining here...


I’ve come to realize that over stretching and area causes instability in me personally. This is more of a trial and error thing. I prefer a general warm up such as jogging to heavy duty static stretching. Don’t know what it is, or why, best answer… Just Cause.



7. Lift Heavy, almost always. Women Especially.

Crossfit Mississauga - 505lbs

When dieting to lose weight, it is imperative to continue to lift heavy to help maintain and/or prevent any possible muscle loss. Also, reps in and around the 5 range have far reaching benefits with regards to strength/keeping/gaining muscle and being functionally strong.


8. Don’t forget what got you here.

You started training to look good naked. Don’t forget that. Add in some “beach work” and cardio and Train for Vain baby.

9. Crossfit is not THE answer. Only another tool.

Nicole and Eva T - the original crossfit girls...


Crossfit draws a lot of attention and merely mentioning the word in cyberspace is bound to spark an internet debate that will leave you scratching your head. So, my opinion….

It’s a great community. Really, some of the nicest people you will ever meet. Everyone talks to everyone and it’s a SUPER supportive atmosphere. Everyone knows your name, kinda like cheers. “Ah….Normie”

It’s programming is retarded. Plain and simple. A little tweak and it would almost be perfect.

High Rep Olympic Lifts over 60% of your 1 rm is simply the dumbest thing anyone can do.

They are kinda of snobbish at any traditional “bodybuilding” move, however they find no issue in having you perform overhead squats for 5 minutes straight.

It all comes down to a fine line between perfection and practicality.

Each Day should look like to original SRX

>5 mins: General Warm Up

>20 mins - Strength Movements ( 5 reps or less)
(on any given day – Squat/Deadlift/Press/Snatch/Power Clean/Chin up)

This can be a max effort, dynamic or explosive work.

>15 minutes – Metabolic Conditioning.

Something that makes your heart go REALLY FAST…. Intervals, Kb Swings…or as an example

Row 250 Meters, Max pushups, Max Chin Ups as many rounds as possible in 15 minutes.

Basically throughout this, you should be sucking wind… hard…

Finish Up with a focus on a bodypart or two and never forget your CORE muscles.




10. NEVER neglect your core.

After a hernia, and now an additional sports hernia and various strains, I will never ever ever, neglect core work again.


11. Sledgehammers are fun


Really, a tire and a sledgehammer have produced some of the most fun and intimidating workouts.



12. You should be scared before your METCON work ( Metabolic Conditioning)


If you aren’t anxious, chances are it’s not a taxing enough workout to produce the effect you are looking for.

I myself can tell when I am in for a battle….. You procrastinate, you get more water, you take time to psyche yourself up…


These are the days you know you are in for something special…




13. Good Words to live by…

· Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and NO sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat.

· Practice and train major lifts: deadlift, clean, squat, presses, C&J, and snatch. Similarly, master the basics of gymnastics:pull-ups, dips, rope climb, push-ups, sit-ups, presses to handstands, pirouettes, flips, splits, and holds. Bike, run, swim, row, etc, hard and fast.

· Five or six days per week mix these elements in as many combinations and patterns as creativity will allow. ROUTINE IS THE ENEMY. Keep workouts short and intense.

· Regularly learn and play new sports!


14. Alcohol really doesn’t help anything with regards to your training. I learned this a lot in the last year.



15. Have a Plan

Have a plan, write it out before you go to the gym, otherwise you end up listless and without direction. Trust me, look at the week and draw it up. Keep a journal and update it daily.

16. Nothing beats a quality training partner.

Training alone is great for the driven, and for the serious competitive athlete.

That said, it’s amazing what a great training partner brings to the table. The accountability to meet someone on a Sunday morning when you’ve been out partying to the wee hours is enough to help you stay in the “moderation” department the night before.

When your partner is as driven as you, it keeps you in line.


17. Training at home simply doesn’t work
The road to fitness failure is paved with home workout videos

Yes, I think P90X is a great program, probably the best one out there for home training. It takes into account many things
(strength/flexibility/intensity/nutrition/muscle confusion).

That said, I know of 5 people that have, and purchased the program… and exactly ZERO of them are doing it right now, and are back at the gym.

A: It’s hard

B: There is no motivation for most people to A: Train alone or B: Train at home alone.

Go to the gym, if people got in shape at home, then your Tony Little Glider wouldn’t be a NEW AGE Clothes Hanger.

I have seen exactly ZERO people get in shape from home training ( unless they have a FULL gym in the garage or basement)

Tae-Bo, P90X, Seven Minute Abs…. etc…. Pony up the $40 people and join the Y.



18. Chin Ups are the first thing to go

When you don’t do them, you lose your mojo quick on them.


19. Rest

You’ve heard it a million times, and yes, even I realize the importance of rest nowadays. If you’ve been at the gym 5 days straight… you either A: Aren’t training hard enough or B: Exercise Bulimic. Either way, slow down – sunshine.


20. Diet is king

You know this. Just like reiterating it.


21> Calories Earned

This is a troubling trend I hear lately. I’ve always said all along that you cannot out work a shitty diet, it simply cannot be done. Yet almost everyone at every party I go to can be overheard…. “well, I’ll have to get on the treadmill and burn this off” or “that’s ok, I worked out today, so pass the cheeto’s”

Earning your calories is a bad way of thinking.


22> Ripped Freak is the best pre-cardio supplement. Talk about AMPED UP!



23> There are some GREAT tasting protein powders out there lately.

1> All-Whey Maple Fudge
2> Six Star Whey Protein Isolate ( Really my old peeps from Iovate did good here)
3> IsoFlex Peanut Butter Chocolate from ALL-MAXX


24. BCAA Powder gets my choice as the new “MUST HAVE”

Branched Chain Amino Acid powder is the first thing I recommend as a peri(during) workout drink. I’ve seen first hand what it can do.

There is a company that makes a great product called “EXTEND”, but it’s pricey.
(and shitty marketing, but hey, it’s great when a product stands on it’s own for quality).


25. I now love burpees


26. I hate thrusters


27. Women often underestimate their protein needs

If you are in the gym, on the treadmill, chucking weights around 5-7 times a week, you need .8 gram of protein per pound at the VERY minimum.

28. If you are older than 30 – You don’t need to lift more than 3-4 times per week.


29. Have a goal. Really.

No goal? No end zone? No Finish>?

I relate to a story of mine of 7 years ago, and my very first 5k race…..

I was trailing my then training partner for the better part of 4k…

I honestly never thought it would end!

She had me beat and I was on the verge of giving up…..

Then A funny thing happened… I saw the end….there it was with cameras, balloons and people cheering your name!

I was electrified! I transformed from a guy about to quit, to an animal….. A man possessed.

Michelle who was 200 yards ahead of me had no idea what was coming… when I proceeded to sprint past her and turn around with just enough gumption to flip her the bird while running through the finish line... backwards…. :)


Needless to say, it’s still up on the old internet today…


8153
James Nugent
Mississauga
23:51.7
15 M30-34
90
5:11
121
8159
Michelle Lima
Mississauga
23:53.3
13 F20-24
29
5:11

The 1.4 second victory is MINE forever and a serious argument starter whenever I bring it up.


The point being… Have a real, attainable and tangible goal. Seeing the end-zone can turn help not only guide you, but push you along to the finish.

(Sorry Michelle)


30. I really like Creemore Beer


31. Almond Flour is great

Almond Flour can be used in place of bread crumbs to make the same comfort food that you know and love ( chicken parmigana/chicken strips) etc.


32. Snatches Are Great Delt Builders

Some moderate weight snatches will blow you shoulders up real good….

Try “gordie” 75 pounds, for 75 Power snatches ( for time) and tell me how sore you delts are.

33. I don’t love kettlebells as much as I used to.


34. I don’t love Tilapia as much as I used to.

http://videos.howstuffworks.com/discovery/30832-dirty-jobs-striped-bass-farm-video.htm

AND THEY EAT POOP :/



35. Read Mark Twight’s work.

http://www.gymjones.com/


36. I don’t love the back squat as much as I used to

Heavy Back squats for low reps, is something that as I get older I am moving away from. I can certainly justify adding them as much as I can moving away from back squats to front squats. Similar movement, less spinal compression.


37. I will never ever ever lift with bad form again.

After my back injury, I had to go back and relearn the actual lifting movement. Having got to a 465 deadlift with my haphazard form, I had to check my ego at the door and go back and slowly build it back up safely and effectively.


http://www.tmuscle.com/free_online_article/sports_body_training_performance_repair/deadlift_diagnosis


38. Cabernet Sauvignon is not an ideal post-workout beverage

39. Gary Taubes is a brilliant idiot


Yes Gary, your book “good calories bad calories” is a remarkably well written and you provide many substantial studies but in the end, it’s not a metabolic advantage. It’s cause you eat less. Not because of magic.

If you drop all carbs, you invariably lower your calories. That’s a simple fact. AND - You’re just not as hungry.

Now, I am a firm believer that lower carb diets are good keys for weight loss; it’s just that I realize the mechanism is caloric restriction and not some fantastic metabolic magic!

That said, the book does have some great insights.



40. I miss training my biceps

41. Nothing will make you work harder than a stop-watch and people cheering you on.


42. Women should dedicate one day a week to their lower body.

43. That’s my first post in the last few months; hopefully it sparks a new tirade of things that I learn along the way.




Workout for Monday

Bench Press 5x3
Rope Chin Up 5x5

Clean and Jerk 5-5-5-3-3-1-1-1

Met Con
Row 250 meters
Max Pushups
5 KB Snatches Per Arm
As many rounds as possible in 15 minutes ( 9 rounds)

Core and Flexibility Work.