Wednesday, June 30, 2021

The After Effects Of Hill Sprinting

Can we just have a decent amount of weather FOR THE LOVE OF GOD!!!!! Sorry, had to channel my inner Chris Farley for a moment. Training in this heat can be a real bitch and if you have a routine going and it's outside, be careful out there. It was already in the 90's by the time I did my Hill Sprints today. Couldn't do my normal speed but managed to kick my ass. 

All in all, Hill Sprints are still one of the best methods for burning fat and increasing your metabolism while putting on muscle at the same time. When you're resting the majority of the time, that's just one of the perks but also the work itself is so damn short it's ridiculous. Today I did a total of 100 seconds of work on the Hill and especially in this sun, that was more than enough.

One of the best after effects from Hill Sprinting is the endorphin high where negative stress just gets kicked to the curb and you just feel happy and feeling like a million bucks. It feels peaceful and the relaxation feels like you never want it to go away. Those moments where the world is just right and life is at its finest. 

When I finish a session and walking back home, it seems like I'm walking faster going back than I was getting there. Maybe that's the endorphin high kicking in or my body just naturally has that extra pep in my step. Sweat is pouring and I can't help but smile and have that emotional and mental clarity. My stride is perfect and naturally breathing deeply as possible is just awesome.

The calorie burn is another perk I would think many would love and the continuation throughout the day is the cherry on top of a killer ice cream sundae. Food tastes better and at times it'll feel like you can eat a wild elephant, Hill Sprints is for sure the GOAT when it comes to body composition and the transition rom shedding unwanted fat and developing natural muscle.

All this gets the job done no more than 3x a week and never needing more than a 30 second burst. People tend to find that some sprints should be up to 45-60 seconds which in my eyes is pretty unrealistic because for one, you're not even going as fast as you would on flat ground and two, your level of speed can only sustain for so long before you feel like you end up jogging instead of sprinting. 

The last big perk, the cold shower you feel after coming back from a workout feels like you can take on the world and having that feeling of thinking you're having the best shower of your life. Cold showers help burn even calories and increasing brown fat while decreasing white fat (look up the difference and you'll know what I mean. 

For more after effects, research on Hill Sprint Benefits and see for yourself why this method is incredible for a lot of things. Be safe, drink plenty of water and keep having an amazingly awesome summer. 

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Cold Showers Can Be Your Best Friend


 


Still hearing that song from Beverly Hills Cop 2 "The Heat Is On" in my head as this heatwave continues throughout the Pacific Northwest. This particular heat is meant for people who live in freaking Arizona, not those who're near the ocean or live near mountains in these specific areas. Hell I don't know how people survived the Ironman that went on here this weekend. 

When it's this hot out, you need to know how to stay safe and hydrated along with not turning into a stop light at an intersection. Our body temperatures can only sustain certain levels of heat for so long before we have heat strokes. One of the best I know of is Cold Showers. For me in my experiences, they're a lifesaver and can prevent skin from peeling after a rough sunburn. I don't particularly wear sunscreen for certain reasons but one of them is because I get burnt even faster when I have it on it doesn't matter what brand. After a cold shower, it balances everything out and gives me a natural tan from being in the sun.

As you know or may have read, taking a cold shower can help regulate body temperature and keeps the skin smooth, when it gets really hot out and you've taken hot showers beforehand, it can develop dry skin and potentially cause you to sunburn much faster which in turn can be very painful. Finding that balance isn't easy to work on but when you know how to keep yourself from overheating and regulating temperature even on the hottest days of the year, it feels quite nice. I'm not saying you should go out and get so much sun, that can only last so long before you need shade and/or need to jump into a lake or the ocean. 

Take it upon yourself to take cold showers whenever possible and keep your Core Temperature at a level that can be sustained throughout the day and depending on your body's intake of water, drink it as much as you can and stay hydrated. It is an important time this summer to be ready for the unexpected and be safe, take care of each other and let's not get to a point where we ask ourselves "you want that in original recipe or extra crispy" when it comes to our bodies. 

Monday, June 28, 2021

The Heat Is On

 


Record setting temperatures happening around the Pacific North West and it just keeps getting hotter. Finally settled in after several weekends of packing and moving stuff into storage. Trying to stay cool as possible. Can't remember the last time I've taken as many cold showers as I have lately. Got in my sprints this morning which was still in the high 80's outside, 5 bursts at 20 seconds each time.

It has been a tough process and the stress levels are starting to die down a bit. We managed to finally finish things and Wednesday is officially the last day of renting our first home together. It's bitter sweet but good things are on the horizon and time to save up again but this time for our own home. The last 4+ years have been a hell of an experience.

Despite the scorching heat and all of the move being done, I've been getting in some workouts that are more of mini workouts (while still doing sprints 3x a week) and doing them for a few minutes to exercises throughout the day. After taking stuff to our other place and packing up storage yesterday, I managed three short workouts that actually went pretty good and didn't wear me out.....

3 Rounds of 10 Rollouts w/ the Power Wheel and a Power Wheel Bear Crawl as a superset

5 minutes of Picking Up & Dropping my 50 lb Sandbell

The final workout was 100 Reps with a 30 lb Kettlebell

Didn't want to go crazy because of the heat and the work we've been doing but still eager to keep myself fit lol. Today on the sprints wasn't too bad and didn't feel like I was dying but I'm glad I did them in the time I did, it's supposed to get up to 105 today and there's no way in hell I'm doing that when it's that hot.

If you live in the PNW, stay cool, drink water consistently throughout the day and get the most out of life. Even in the middle of a heatwave, there are some awesome things to do. Be safe out there and stay hydrated.  

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

When You Can't Sleep

 There are times where you just feel restless and just have this level of hyper-active energy that needs to be let out in order to relax and fall asleep. At about midnight or so last night I just had this burst of energy that I needed to get out. While watching a wildlife documentary series I had the urge to do some Animal Movements. Got into my Animal Dice Game and did double reps per animal, took a breather and walked around if needed to recover but kept going for maybe 20 minutes or so. 

I wouldn't say this is the first choice for most people and doing something else might work better for you but my instincts kicked in and just needed to move around and burn off some energy. Felt incredible afterwards and had a big endorphin high. I've always been a night owl so something like this isn't uncommon for me but it's been a while since I did Animal Moves in order to calm down my body. 

Not only does this burn up quite a bit of energy, it can stirrup some decent calorie burning throughout the rest of the night as you sleep. To me, it's a fun way to make sure I don't feel like I'll be tossing and turning all night which does happen often and getting in some exercise and a cold shower does have some great benefits. 

Animal Exercise is not just great for conditioning and developing functional strength but it also is a great calorie burner, creating greater HGH levels and the ability to wear you down in a positive way. If you ever need a way to get rid of that excess energy (other than the real fun thing to do), get up and move like a wild animal until you feel you've had enough. Be resourceful and do the best you can to get yourself to sleep well. 

Monday, June 21, 2021

This Is What You Train For

 Life is funny sometimes and yet it also has its tragedies, setbacks and forks in the road that can come out of nowhere and smack you right in the face. For close to two months, we've had some rough days and yet another has been added. Nearly 3 weeks after our accident, we were asked to vacate our house because of the owners wanting to renovate and update the duplex we live in. We could come back but the rent would be jacked up to what we can't afford. 

Every weekend since May 20th, we've had to pack up the house and put stuff into storage. My wife has been put through so much and trying to organize and storing stuff into boxes has been hard. My job basically is being the laborer and hauling the boxes to the car and into storage. As most couples, it hasn't been easy trying to stay on the same page on certain things but we've been doing our best to stay strong together since a lot of this move is just the two of us packing and hauling stuff. I'm so grateful for what she has done and her organizing skills are incredible and she's quite the hauler too when she moves some of those boxes.

I've helped people move ever since I was a kid and as I got older, I started to learn as I was training, it became more important to be in condition to help others when it is needed at any given time. When I haul stuff, I do my best to be quick and strong while remaining durable so I don't get injured. Can't help anyone if you're hurt and can't do anything. I've only been injured in a move only a couple times and comparing that to the amount of times I've moved friends and family, that's a pretty good ratio. This move is no different and I stick with the principles of moving as fast as possible while being strong from as many angles as possible and keeping as good of form as possible. Some stuff can be very awkward as you may have noticed if you've ever moved anyone.

It's one of the things that have always made me feel useful when I was needed. All that time spending on Step Up Workouts, carrying a 50 lb Sandbell, doing farmer's walks with a 70 lb kettlebell, the amount of isometrics being practiced, the conditioning, the grip work, the leg training, training to last as long as possible was all worth it to help a friend or a family member or even a stranger from time to time. This is what you train for.

Training for looks or a trophy is not always the most satisfying thing that you can hope for in your lifetime. Looks fade away, trophies collect dust and sacrificing your body for one or the other won't always make you feel good as you get older but to train to help other people, to put a smile on their face and give someone some comfort and letting them know they're not alone and doing things by themselves. Moving is stressful and there's going to be be days where you might go into a bit of a rage and just want to scream at the world but there's also going to be days where you feel the future is bright, a new chapter is unfolding and you get to create new memories somewhere else. 

We made this place our home for over 4 years, it was our first place together as a couple and we made it happen, now a new chapter is being turned and something new and amazing is within our grasp. We will be saving up for our own house this time and to never rent again. It will take time and we may struggle but if we can find a way to our first place, WE CAN find a way to own a home. A home that is meant for just us and a few additions to our family. This is a huge reason why I train the way I do and saving up as much as possible. 

Train to help others and when you're needed, make the most of what you can do. After all, everyone needs a little help and if that means hauling a few things to give someone a peace of mind, than everything you've done from a training POV was well worth it. 

Friday, June 18, 2021

Avoid Injuries As Much As Possible While Maximizing Your Training

From a general perspective, we are taught to give it everything we have, even on the brink of injury or even death. It's easy to believe that if you push yourself beyond your maximum effort, you'll get results that will blow everyone's mind. That's not always the case. Pushing to the brink of failure in just about anything can cause more harm than good especially when it comes to exercise. Even the legendary bodybuilder Bill Pearl has talked about never training to failure.

Maximizing your efforts in training doesn't necessarily mean to keep going until you puke your guts out or pass out due to exhaustion, trust me I know what it's like to nearly black out during a workout and it's not a good thing for your body. The idea is to get the most out of your training without the need to kill yourself and avoid injuries as much as possible. This means, resting as long as needed which varies from person to person, working a set that has you hitting reps where you have at least 2-3 left in the tank but not going any further than that, keeping the body as relaxed as possible without causing too much tension and breathing with efficiency throughout the whole session whether in a rest period or in a set. 

Certain exercises do need a level of intensity in order to create the results you're looking for but it's also important to understand where to draw the line with that intensity. You have read about the level of speed to time ratio for Hill Sprints but let's recap that: To get the maximum out of sprint, you need to have a good solid understanding of how much of a percentage in speed needed for the duration of a sprint, it's an experimental thing but once you know how fast you need to go, it's incredible what comes out of it. Normally a 10 second burst would be as close to maximum speed as possible that you can muster which would be roughly 70-80% depending on your fitness level, it's almost impossible to maintain that speed if you were to do a sprint for 30 seconds because if you were to try that, you could get injured or hurt your CNS more than anything. A 30 second sprint would be around 30-40% of your maximum speed, it's still a hard sprint but you're maintaining the pace of the speed needed for it to get the most of that sprint. I'm not an expert on this, I'm just looking at it from a logical perspective so it may be different for some people. 

Rest periods are crucial for maximum results because it's going to come down to your recovery and having the quality of rest to be at your best for the next set. This varies from person to person as well because some people are so damn fit that they can go for a good period of time without needing a rest period but from a general perspective, getting the most out of set and resting as needed goes hand in hand. If you're doing mini workouts, depending on your fitness levels, you might need to rest less because the workout isn't that long say like 10 minutes. If you're doing workouts that take about 30 minutes to an hour or more, rest periods might be needed more because you want to get the most out of the workout. Not everyone is a pro athlete or a world class Olympian so you have to figure out what works best to get the most out of your workouts. If you're an average person but tries to do anything close to what a world class crossfitter or powerlifter does, it could kill you or put you in the hospital. Rest when it is needed, if it's too short, you're not giving yourself enough time to be efficient but if it's too long, you might have lost some of the pace you normally can do. 

We can't avoid injuries 100% of the time (hell even getting out of bed or sitting too long can cause injuries) but we can do our best to minimize them to get the most of what we want to achieve. Giving something 110% in a literal sense makes no sense at all because you might as well be dead or broken if you believe in that or do that overall. Put in the effort that gives greater benefit to the results than the risk of an injury, if risking an injury is higher than the benefitted results that would be good in the long run, that's the wrong kind of training to do. 

Be smart about your training and get the most out of it without getting hurt or worse.   

Monday, June 14, 2021

1st Full Month Of Hill Sprint Training

 When you set new goals, certain things may not show up right away and they say the big results don't show until the 3 month mark. Well, I started Hill Sprint Training on May 17th and I think I've made some pretty good progress but still have a good journey ahead of me. I have been eating a bit differently and because of doing Hill Sprints, doing less intense workouts the rest of the time and getting the most of what's possible to do. 

I just decided that after a few years and wanting to test myself in hard sprints again, they've become a joy to do. I mainly do them in the morning or early afternoon 3x a week and keep the afterburn effect going the rest of the day which is a hell of a perk. I have also come up with a little progression system where I started out with 4 Sprints the first month and each week add 5-10 seconds per burst so the first week was 10 seconds, second was 15, third was 20 and the final week was 30 seconds. This is to help progress to go a little longer on the hill each week until I can practically do the majority or the full hill in 30 seconds. Each month I would add one sprint and use the same progression system of timing.

I am also training on two different hills in my area which gives a different feel in incline and to see what speed I'm best at depending on the time needed to maintain that speed. Soon I'll just be doing only one hill but for now, each one is fun to walk to. One is steeper than the other yet just as awesome to do. When I sprint, I do what's possible to run as hard as I can to maintain speed for a specific amount of time. That doesn't mean I sprint at 100% capacity, that's nearly impossible regardless of how good you are. Even the legendary Walter Payton could only maintain speed on a sprint for the amount of bursts he did in his prime. You can't run nearly as fast on a hill as you could on flat ground but it does still kick your ass.

Say you ran a sprint for 10 seconds, you could probably do close to your maximum capacity of speed which would be around 70-80% at best which on a hill is more than the average person can do. Now if you did a 30 second burst, your speed might go down to maybe 30-40% at best because to keep the pace for that long is something a lot of people don't realize. If you tried to do the absolute maximum of speed like you would in a 10 second sprint, you would start to slow down dramatically those last 20 seconds of a 30 second sprint and within those last few seconds you have, you might as well be jogging. If you knew how to maintain speed for 30 seconds, you'd be jacking up the heart rate and you'd be burning calories and fat like crazy. Whether it's 10 seconds or 30 seconds, go at the speed that is meant for that amount of time needed for that sprint. When I realized how to do that, it made a huge difference in how I sprinted and felt afterwards. 


For all intents and purposes, Sprints are by far the best exercise to burn fat like no tomorrow and burn calories over an extended period of time, even long after a sprint session. Regular cardio such as running on a treadmill does burn calories but only burning from the session and that's it. If you look at Sprinters as opposed to a marathon runner or Olympic Runners in the 1500 meters, there's a world of difference in physique and muscle to fat ratio. 

The first month may not have a huge difference in my physique but I do feel like I've dropped some fat and put on a bit of muscle but like I said, I think I've made some good progress and making small changes along the way. There's still some work to do but this is something I want to pursue at least right now for the summer and fall before winter hits. 

 




Friday, June 11, 2021

The Outlook Of Being A Nerd That Works Out


As a kid growing up, I enjoyed cartoons such as Batman The Animated Series, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Alvin & The Chipmunks, Scooby Doo, He-Man and many others, read a comic here and there and played video games but it wasn't until I was older and really heavy into training and working out that these things in Pop Culture gave another meaning to how you can look at things in real life.
I wasn't called a nerd so much when I was school but as time went on, I just embraced that side of me and it makes working out that much more interesting. It's the imagination that gives me that drive and thinking like a superhero or a Jedi or Sonic The Hedgehog just thrusts into the element that you can improve with the use of the mind and body together. Many use the word nerd in a very derogatory sense but that's also because they don't understand what it's like to have that need of running from reality or seeing something so exaggerative that it becomes hero-like to a little kid. 

Certain aspects of Pop Culture such as Comic books show a fictional ideal of what society is in currently or the idea of what it could be in an alternate universe. Did you know the concept of the X-Men with Xavier & Magneto was the premise of the time centered around Civil Rights activists Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcom X? A time where certain people weren't accepted because of their race? A lot has changed in that time but there's still ideals that remain where we view the world from a certain perspective.

Now, what does all this have to do with working out or exercising? Well, imagine what it would be like to be the Flash and be able to sprint so damn fast that by the time someone said hello, that person would be in another town on the other side of the world maybe. What it would feel like to Heal like Wolverine and be impervious to injuries, could you imagine the type of athlete who had that ability or be able to train without getting injured? The true outlook of this is not always the workout aspects but the concept of understanding that if you were very fast and couldn't be caught, there's temptation there too but also the dream of being able to run from something so horrible that escaping is the only way. The healing ability is a favorite of mine because if I could heal like the man with adamantium claws, I wouldn't need to have surgery and have pins being put into my legs, my bones and surrounding tissue would just piece themselves together. It's the idea of looking at things and either wishing we had it or looking at it as to understand empathy for others who have sustained horrifying injuries.

Being a nerd helps understanding that certain aspects of pop culture have a lot of aspects of real life but in the exaggerated sense. No we can't levitate off the ground or fly without wings but we have things that make that possible such as anti-gravity and having suits that help you glide through the air without a parachute. The Noun aspect of a nerd is "a foolish or contemptible person who lacks social skills or is boringly studious" and the Verb is "engage in or discuss a technical field obsessively or with great attention to detail." The weird thing is, anybody can be a nerd and not have the stereotypical aspects of a fool with glasses and never having able to kiss a girl or boy along with the obsessed outcome of paying attention to detail. A nerd can look like anybody from a bodybuilder to a maid, a blue-collar worker, a bartender, an athlete or even a School Principle and not what a certain look people have.

Someone who trains but also has a vast love for Comics, Cartoons, Science, Music & other things can be some of the nicest people on the planet and share a common trait with those who also have a vast love for things like that. If you want to talk nerdiness and someone who also works out, look at Lou Ferrigno, the guy who went from an introvert and nearly deaf kid into one of the greatest superheroes ever seen on TV and yet has a collection of various Comics, Star Wars stuff and collectable treasures that even someone like Sheldon Cooper would envy. A nerd is just a human being like the rest of us, if he works out as well, it is another cherry on top of a bad ass Sundae. 

There are a lot of nerds out there who aren't weak and frail and are crazy strong and powerful. Don't make any mistakes about it, there's a lot of good people out there that have a view on life that is as crazy as a comic book, stranger than a cartoon and certainly a lot more interesting than any video game. The biggest perk of being a nerd that trains, you look at workouts very differently and more imaginative than just a person who works out. Embrace your nerdiness, be yourself and make the most of what is possible to have the best life. 



Thursday, June 10, 2021

Finger Gymnastics: Taking Hand Conditioning To Another Level

You never know what you'll find on the internet when it comes to exercise programs and platforms based on Sports Training, Conditioning, Strength Building, Developing Flexibility and other stuff. When you see ad copies that promise this and that and show almost the same type of claims or exaggerate them to make them not only sound cool but make it sound they're the hidden secrets to the lost treasure or scrolls of the ultimate way to get fit yet around 99.9% of it is pure bullshit? Well, here's that .1% that does what it says it does and more.

For more than a decade now off and on, I've practiced what are called Finger Gymnastics based on the training principles of CoreForce Energy produced by Concert Virtuoso Garin Bader. Although the name Finger Gymnastics sounds a little quirky, it shows many aspects of Hand Conditioning, Dexterity Training, Finger Strength Training & Suppleness Training all rolled into one course. The exercises aren't just your typical form of Hand Exercises, they show how to use your imagination and throw your whole body into them in order to stay strong yet flexible without developing Carpal Tunnel. Matter of fact, these exercises have incredible chances of preventing Carpal Tunnel and arthritis. 

At first I used them to warm up or cool down to prevent injuries from doing various feats of strength which puts a lot of strain on the hands. I would also use them as a standalone workout to strengthen the tendons and ligaments in my lower arm. For the most part I use them to build dexterity in my hands because as you know as a kid, using my right hand was very difficult for me. If I had known these exercises when I was like 9 or 10 years old, who knows what I could've done that would very different today. These days, my dexterity in my right hand is far from ever being equal to my left but I have made tremendous progress over the years that it shows what I can do now as opposed to when I was a teenager. 

It teaches how to supple the wrists that are very unique and Finger exercises that strengthen the tendons to an extent that it could help develop strength to do Fingertip Push-ups, strengthen the hands for pull-ups, be able to grip harder without straining and if you're a rock climber, be able to move or hold onto something longer. These also have exercises that are great for those who are Musicians, Fighters, Baseball Players, Hockey Players, Typists, they can help with your Golf Swing, greater dexterity for Magicians, Massage Therapists or those who perform in Cirque Du Soleil.

Almost all the exercises can be used without any equipment and there's a great set of Putty that comes with the course that you can do all sorts of things with that is really fun to use. For many years, Garin has performed all sorts of acts and has done so without much injury and he can do Magic, play the Piano so beautifully it has to be seen to believe, do two finger push-ups with arms straight out, glide through the air on a silk curtain and perform other instruments with ease it's unbelievable. If there's one guy who has mastered many things and knows what he's talking about when it comes to conditioning and strengthening the body, it's him.


When I met him back in 2010, it was like seeing Picasso, Copperfield, a guru and a Mythic all rolled into one human being. The hours I spent with him will never leave me and I still do things he taught me that day as of right now as I write this. He's the genuine article and has a very positive outlook on life and training that you don't see in many people today. It was an honor just to even shake his hand let alone have conversations with him and absorb his knowledge like a Sponge. The way he moves and expresses his himself in the moment is a surreal thing to see and his dexterity, strength and coordination is just incredible. You'd be missing out big time if you didn't have Finger Gymnastics in your arsenal. 

This course IMO is the GOAT of Hand Conditioning bar none. These exercises are top of the line and will give you levels of energy and power that you probably haven't experienced before or experienced in many years.  

Monday, June 7, 2021

Relearning To Write Cursive

 



From what I talked about having Meningitis as a baby, you know that the way I learn things isn't always the traditional way or what is the normal curriculum taught in schools. Some things I had to learn the hard way and what comes natural to most people, can be very difficult for me to comprehend. It becomes an issue constantly to think in specifics and understanding certain concepts one at a time and not from a generalized point of view. It's not an excuse and it's not because I can't but it is how my brain operates and I can only do what works with that chemistry of brain to body function.

When I was little and learning how to write, I never really had great hand writing, it wasn't and still isn't all that pleasing to naked eyes but I never gave up trying. When I was about 9 or 10, I was taught how to write in cursive and although it was readable (not steady but you can understand a little) that was the only period of my life where I consistently wrote in cursive. As a boy at that age, it was tough for me to understand simple concepts and being socially awkward didn't help. I did have friends but wasn't truly part of a brotherhood so I always just went along with people. 

I stopped writing cursive on a consistent basis for more than a quarter of a century and although I'd write my name in what looked like cursive was more than just a scribble of lines, I just signed my name in print. Up until about a year or so ago and as recently as Saturday night, I had learned how cursive could be a major brain building exercise and generate natural hormones. Now that does sound ridiculous as far as the hormones part but the way you strengthen the brain through various notions of exercise methods can jumpstart powerful nerve points in your body's system. I started writing in cursive again, it's not very good and as you'll see, the writing in pencil was from a year ago and the blue ink is from Saturday night. I just started practicing writing my name, my wife's maiden name, superheroes, Matt Furey's and just about those for now. 

Hardly anyone under the age of 30 writes in cursive anymore and it has become somewhat of a lost art because due to the technology we have today, we can just write or type up notes and names and such in printed formats and fonts that are extremely easy to read. Sure some type words in cursive on their laptops or design websites but how many actually write on paper in cursive?

It is hard to do and we need to utilize our brains that is rarely seen these days. Back in the day going back centuries, cursive was the norm for mainly those that were highly educated. Hell the declaration of independence is written in inked cursive for crying out loud. The fundamental aspects of writing this way, helps strengthen neurons in the brain and can raise intelligence by a good margin. Some studies even say it can raise testosterone but who knows if that's true or not , the fact is it's one of those things we should be learning again.

It takes patience and practice but as they say, practice makes perfect but I'd say, consistent practice creates better results. Like I said before, right now my cursive is not very good and probably no better than a 4th grader from the 80's or 90's but little by little it can get better and I believe it's worth perusing. 

Friday, June 4, 2021

Workouts That Can Be A Great Add On To Hill Sprint Training

 If there was one method that is the Holy Grail of burning calories, fat and building muscle at the same time, it's Hill Sprints. Just finished my 3rd full week of Hill Sprints doing bursts from 10-20 seconds starting with only 4 sprints at a time and little by little, increase one rep every 4 weeks. I'm already seeing some changes in my body, lost a few pounds in the process and put on a little muscle while reducing fat. 

I love the way sprints make me feel afterwards and when I walk back home when I'm done, I feel like I'm on cloud 9; must be the endorphins kicking in and getting that Runner's High. Because of the crazy calorie burn, I have been eating a bit more than usual but yet continue to drop weight, not a lot but as I progress, it gets more and more obvious that fat loss and weight loss are showing. 

Now, as a person who likes to go nuts when it comes to training, it is important to be smart about what you do in addition to training this particular method. Having said that, what workouts could you do that keeps things flowing but not burn you out? Since I've started back up on Hill Sprints, I've done other workouts on other days that aren't as intense but still feel like I'm getting something done.

1. Isometrics have been a great addition because you can just do certain holds for an extended period of time or you can do the intense 6-12 second contractions and get that strength training going along with burning even more calories. Along with Hill Sprints, Isometrics can put on definition and keep the fat burning going without impacting the joints.

2. Animal Movements are awesome for day after Sprints but it is important to not go full boar on them because you still have to recover as much as possible. They're great conditioners but they're also amazing for keeping up your mobility and they're fun as a treat to do so you can feel like a young kid.

3. Step Ups can do amazing things to keep your stamina going and in addition, because they're not as intense as Sprinting, they're really good for keeping your breath under control. One day after doing Sprints, I dis a superset for 30 minutes carrying my 50 lb Sandbell and doing 20 Step ups. Felt incredible afterwards and didn't feel exhausted. It was a chance to learn to breathe while focusing on building stamina and no so much on strength.

4. Club Swinging & Mace Swinging have exceptional benefits of training for mobility, coordination and conditioning. I'm going to try this out myself and see what it does because the exercises that these implements display also have growth hormone effects that keeps you healthy and strong. In addition to building flexibility in the shoulders, wrists and elbows there are strength components for the entire upper body and building muscle in the upper back, core and arms. They also strengthen the hands which also leads to brain strengthening. Just a few minutes is really all that's needed.

5. Loosening Up The Joints to me is the ultimate form of recovery exercise because we don't want to stiffen up and feel like we're walking like C-3PO. We want to relax and not have so much tension built up in our bodies otherwise we won't be able to perform the amount of training we need to do in order to be successful in our goal setting. When you loosen up the joints, you're also creating better blood flow to the body while developing suppleness, flexibility, mobility and chi energy. When we are stiff, things don't flow as well and when our mobility and energy is limited, it won't have the full effects of being able to perform the simplest tasks. 

There you have it and hope these can give you ideas of what you can do if you pursue Hill Sprinting. Don't push hard, just keep it simple and keep things flowing. If Hill Sprints are more than enough for you especially in the beginning and additional training isn't in the cards for you yet, than that's great. The idea is to recover as much as you can on your off days from Sprints but if you want to play around with the idea of other workouts because they're beneficial to you, keep the intensity levels low and rest as much as you need between sets. When you train Sprinting Hills, you're going to need that explosive power and strength to do those hard climbs.   

Monday, May 31, 2021

Do Workouts Cause You Anxiety?

 Living in an age where information is just a tap or click away, it can be stressful finding a workout that gives you meaning and suited to your goals. A major anxiety problem in fitness is that you have to count your macros, do this many reps, that many sets, do this amount of exercise per week and if that isn't stressful enough, you need to be in the right position to hit the right set of muscles otherwise results don't ever come. Now with all that, when you actually get to the workout, does it become stressful to even try to keep up with the "curriculum" of what you're supposed to do? 

Personally, there have been times with my own workouts where I felt I had to follow every step someone else said to do and it just made me feel like crap. The truth is, I really don't like it when a book or a person orders me to do this or that and if I did it wrong I'm a horrible person; fuck that LOL. My philosophy has always been to study the principles, experiment and see what works and what doesn't that pertains to me, nobody else. A workout should never have to cause an anxiety attack, it's supposed to help push it aside and give you an endorphin high and feel good about what you're doing.

There are times where your mind isn't even there and if you're trying to do a workout, it'll feel like at times you're resisting yourself and at the same time it just doesn't feel right, that can cause some anxiety and you feel forced. Not all workouts are going to cause you anxiety but it could lead to a way of doing things where if you do have anxiety, you do things to calm you down. Being hyperactive can also be a factor in certain things and that's where you need to train yourself to understand what's causing the anxiety and what is possible for me to do to pull the plug on it?

In case you haven't figured it out, I do suffer some form of anxiety and it's been that way with me for as long as I can remember and that's where my workouts are a blessing to me. When I do Hill Sprints now, they tone down the anxiety and release that high where it just feels great afterwards and I'm better focused and I handle tasks better. When I do my animal workouts, I keep going until I feel I've had enough and my mind is calmer, my body feels more relaxed and it keeps me from being all over the place. 

If you read my previous article on workouts being a form of therapy or meditation, than you understand that for some people who suffer depression, anxiety, ADD, ADHD, being Bipolar and other sources of mental/physical issues can't always practice standard programs like seated meditation and mainstream forms of therapy. Exercise should be a blessing and not a chore or something to feel forced on. Working out should be about taking your aggression or raising your endorphin levels or you being hyperactive and making something great out of it so you can feel like a functioning human being.

I do understand that there are medications for those ailments and for some people, medication is needed in certain cases but not everyone needs to be popping pills and looking like a damn zombie. I know what it's like to be on medication, I was on Ritalin for years when I was younger because of the meningitis and I needed to stay focused. I hated it so much that by the time I was about 8-10, I completely went off of them and it took adjusting especially for the people in my life but I managed to live my life for nearly 30 years without it. I'm not saying you should do the same, just telling you what I did.

Anxiety can be harmful, at times dangerous but it's also a teacher and we need to be aware of it and what it is causing beyond what's going on in our heads or in our bodies. Sometimes it can be harmless and you're just over anxious and nervous, it's a very human thing. If someone is suffering from Anxiety or Depression or other mental ailments, don't poke fun at them, it's not cool and it can drive a person to a place they never wanted to go but do because they just want the ridicule and mocking to stop. Do what you possibly can to not let ailments like these ruin your life and do something productive that keeps them from popping up frequently. If at all possible if you manage to rid yourself of these things, I'm very proud of you and you are amazingly awesome for overcoming them. 

Do what is right for you and if you do use exercise to get yourself off of medications, that's great. 

Thursday, May 27, 2021

Why My Training Is My Therapy Or Meditation

 For the life of me, I can't do standard meditative practices very well like sitting or standing. I get overzealous easy and become hyper or feel the need to move. Some people have mastered it, others not so much and it has been that way for me since I was a kid. Throughout my life since I was 21 years old, exercise has been my go to session for meditation/solace/therapy whatever you wish to call it. From relationships to the stresses of moving to another home and even with the loss of friends and family, it has always been there for me.

When you find something that gives you a reason to rethink things and emerging yourself into an element that becomes something beyond yourself, it turns into something you'd never expect. You put yourself into a world where it is your own and only you can allow someone in or not. You've seen the videos, the pics, the articles and some will tell you what they see when I train but there's more to it than meets the eye. When I zone out, nothing around me matters and I get to be in full control of what happens, what I use and how it's going to go.

Working out for the majority of people is more about impressing others and doing what is "possible" to look good when in fact, looking good should be secondary or third or whatever is on a list except for first. Most of the time these days, people have no clue what real training is and they follow trends and do this or that because they don't have a mind of their own. It's one thing to experiment and learn new things or make a habit to train but it's a totally different world where you're zoned out and a workout becomes something beyond moving a weight or doing a hold or doing some variation of a callisthenic exercise. 

The world can be a scary place and we all have dealt with some traumatic things within that scary world but if you can find something that is therapeutic and it gives you hope, smiles and a reason to reach for something, the world for a few moments isn't scary anymore and you get to do something that makes it brighter, more fun and full of possibilities. It does feel like therapy and it becomes meditative when you have full control of your mind and your body together, not just one or the other. It's like a car being able to move with gas in the tank or a carriage being pulled by horses, it's about connection.

Create your own world, throw yourself into your imagination and build that connection to what gives you purpose and how you develop a skill to meditate in your own way. Meditation is not about Yoga Poses or humming in a seated position, it's about finding what connects you and holding onto it. 

These are things that make me feel I'm in a meditative state and get to do something fun and full of wonders. The tools and exercises aren't perfect and some may look horrible to some people but in the end, this is me and this is what makes me happy along with creating my own sessions of Therapy or Meditation.



   

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

The Mental Aspects Of Hill Sprinting

 When we do physical things, we don't always realize how much of the mental side comes into play. We may have muscle memory or we learn certain things many times and they become a reflex but that's mainly because we have conditioned our impulses and our nerves to move at various points and understand concepts faster. When it comes to Running Hills, there isn't much to be seen yet we are in awe of them.

The mental aspects of Sprinting up a Hill is not just in how we program our minds to literally run as if our lives depended on it but also to push our capacity and find out what we are capable of doing. A 10 second burst isn't long but there is so much going on that it would take an encyclopedia to completely explain it. We can however use certain examples on what is going on; in order to even explode into a sprint, we need to use our brain to send messages to the wiring in our body to activate muscle fibers and become in sync with our structure and keep up with sending those signals in order to stay in stride. 

Other than what we signal our body from the brain, it's also a matter of what makes you want to go a little further, run a little faster or toughening up to beat the Hill. There are certain goals we want to achieve and what we are willing to do to achieve those goals. Walter Payton was the man when it came to Hill Sprints, he pushed himself so hard that it made him a machine. He saw beyond what the physical was to take on that Hill and pushed his mental capacity to a level that some of the best athletes in the world couldn't understand. 

The real mental aspects is how you use your imagination and taking goals by putting them together to create the ultimate achievement. Some people visualize, some just run up and don't think about anything else and there are others that do something different and unique. What would it feel like or sound like when you picture yourself as the fastest human alive? What would it feel like if you thought of yourself as a superhero like the Flash or the GOAT of Anime Characters; Goku from Dragon Ball Z? How would you characterize that kind of Speed, the ability to run so hard that it melts fat like butter in a hot pan or that having that power to accelerate your hormones and burn calories as if it was a furnace? Imagination creates a different result when you add in the physicality.

Don't just go to a Hill and run it, make a game of it, a test of your mental game and creating something in your mind that is greater than your human form. In Dragon Ball Z, there was the villain Frieza who is just your typical aspiring dominator with ambitions to be ruler of something but has a unique way of fighting, he can do great things but he doesn't have just one aspect of his body that's at it's peak, he has layers of weird transformations that make him a little stronger than the other and each time he changes his form, he becomes more and more powerful until he reaches the ultimate transformation. When you have that kind of mentality where your body right now isn't even in it's final form, there's a layer of strength and power just waiting to be revealed until it hits a peak.

The most powerful version of yourself isn't even remotely at it's peak and if you picture yourself at your strongest and see "as if" you can harness that power, it could turn into such a reality that it feels unreal to have done it. The net time you do Hill Sprints, picture being in your most powerful form and when it's unleashed, that Hill has no choice but to give in and let you reach the top. Conquer your own Hills and become even more powerful than you can possibly imagine.  

Thursday, May 20, 2021

A Blast From The Past (Training Hill Sprints In Santa Cruz)

Since I've gotten back into Sprint Training (specifically Hill Sprints), it made me reminisce about the times I did them in Santa Cruz in my early-mid 20's. The hill I use to train on was about a quarter of a mile from my house if that and it was the road that led to the DeLaVeaga Golf Course that was also a Disc Golf Course behind it, that hill to this day is one of the steepest I've ever done. Just the incline alone would even make you question your sanity. 

I would do up to 10 Sprints at 10-30 seconds at a time and this was all I could do, no matter how hard it was, ten was my limit. Whenever I did it, no one else was really around and just to hike that thing to get to the golf course would take down some really fit people. I never did the whole Hill, if anyone would be crazy enough to pull that off would be a Olympic Primed Kurt Angle or someone of that Caliber, maybe Walter Payton. The point is, training with a hill like this took guts and doing it off and on tested me. 

When you got a good hill, make the most it and that's what I did. I busted my ass on that damn thing and it was one of the best times in my training career, I really wished I had some footage to show how crazy this thing was. If you go to google and research a little, you might find something. Not too far away from this is another hill that led to a restaurant/resort called the Chaminade and fun fact about that hill, that was the same hill Matt Furey trained on while training for the world championships in shuai chiao in 1997. I was 13 at that time and never heard of him then. He was basically a nobody back then and was only a couple years shy of training with Karl Gotch. 

Sprinting the Delaveaga Hill wasn't for competition or anything, it was just a time in my life where I wanted to know what it was like to do that kind of training. It was hard and I wish I was more consistent with it but life has a way of turning you in a different direction and although I was still training everyday, Sprints weren't a priority and it was a shame on my end. I use to take my girlfriend at the time there and my best friend, neither one wanted to do Sprints with me and would just watch. I don't think we ever fully climbed the hill, maybe once or twice and that nearly killed me. 

Today, I'm back at doing Hill Sprints and it reminds me of how important they are even more now than all those years ago because in my 20's, I was 15-30 lbs lighter and they were hard but fun to do but now in my mid 30's, it's a different ball game and I don't want to lose out on having a good level of testosterone and lowering my body fat. As we age, our hormones get lower and it becomes harder and harder to maintain that youthfulness and drive in the body to produce natural Growth Hormone. I know where I'm at fitness wise and have decent cardio to prove it on certain levels but I want to build that explosiveness and jump start the metabolism and burn calories like a furnace again. 

After a few sessions now, I do feel a difference in my body composition and my need to fuel up with food and have lost a few pounds in the process but I also know this is just the beginning and got some work to do. This is important to me and the beauty of this type of training is that the workout doesn't take long at all, just sprint up for 10 seconds, walk down and repeat. The whole workout without the rest period is like no more than 1:40 seconds if you do 10 10 second bursts. 

It's all uphill from here.

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

The Ability To Train Harder Using Hill Sprints


 When I was growing up in California, I was more of a baseball fan and basketball fan watching the likes of Barry Bonds & The San Francisco Giants (Had an opportunity to go to Candlestick Park several times) and Michael Jordan with the Chicago Bulls dominating the NBA for years. I wasn't a big fan of football but I did grow up watching the 49ers and watching the duo of Steve Young & Jerry Rice. I didn't understand conditioning and working out until I was in my teens and early 20's and how sports guys trained but once I understood it, I had a much higher respect for their craft and determination.

Jerry Rice will always be the GOAT of Wide Receivers but what made him remarkable and be able to last as long as he did starting in the 80's and ending his career in the 2000's was his conditioning, specifically hill sprints. Seeing footage of him running hills is just awesome. Hill Sprints is a simple but tough as hell form of exercise that not only burns fat faster than practically any other method but also has some great safety benefits as well: It helps avoid shin splints, reduce the risk of ankle and/or knee injuries and even saves you from pulling a hammy. If this kind of training can help even the greatest catcher in NFL History have a long career, why wouldn't it help you live a healthy life?

It doesn't cost you a damn thing to do Hill Sprints, it doesn't require any special equipment and it keeps your metabolism firing so freaking much that even after a workout you're not only revving it up in to the stratosphere but also burn tons of calories. Because they're hard to do in the first place, they build that mental toughness that helps you stay in the game not just in sports but in life as well. It builds confidence because when you can go hard on a hill and do it with that fighting spirit, it'll carry over to other areas of your life.

Now should sprints be the only workout you do? That depends on your goals but for the most part, they aught to be an addition to your regimen because they can help you develop insane levels of conditioning and explosive strength that in other workouts, it might feel easier to get through. One day after doing sprints, I put myself through a 30 min superset of Sandbell Carrying & Step Ups and it not only felt easy, I felt like I can go another 30 just for good measure. My stamina was just off the chain I couldn't believe it. 

Be smart and be sure to check with a doc to see if you're healthy enough. If you have the ability to do so, start with 4 sprints in the beginning for no more than 30 seconds and don't worry if you can't go full speed yet, just go at a pace for those 10-30 seconds that gets you out of breath. As you progress, picture being able to able to sprint like Jerry Rice, Rocky or Walter Payton, picture them as if they're cheering you on and telling you that YOU GOT THIS!!!


The P.A.C.E Method

Monday, May 17, 2021

Sprinting Hills To Make Fat Scream Like The Wicked Witch Of The West


 Warmth is in the air and it's getting nicer out by the day. Been in the 70's and 80's here the last few days and it feels like summer. Feeling incredible at 100% again, I started changing up my training to doing Sprints. Have only done 3 sessions so far starting back on Thor's Day. Sprinted on a hill about a 10-12 min walk from my house and ran 4 10 Second Sprints. 

Hill Sprinting was a favorite of mine back when I was living in Santa Cruz, CA and off and on for the last 10 years up here I would do them (been about 3 years or so since I've done them). I figured since I might want to drop a bit more weight and get rid of some body fat, nothing will do that better than Sprints. I love to train and do things that some of the greatest legendary sports heroes have done. Walter Payton is definitely at the top of the list as one of the greatest hill sprinters ever. 

The training is so damn simple and nothing beats simplistic training. Want to be explosive, sprint; want greater speed and burn fat like like a furnace? You Sprint. If you can't sprint, do something that you can give your all fast for 8-30 seconds. Go hard and slack off for 2-3 minutes than you repeat it a few times, how awesome is that?

What if it was so simple to burn unwanted fat in such a short amount of time that the fat is melting like the Wicked Witch Of The West right before your eyes. Be able to crank up your metabolism and burn calories during and long after a workout. Not only that but you don't need to do it more than 3 times a week. Start out by getting a feel for sprinting, you don't need to go 100% full speed, just enough to get out of breath. Just doing a few of them is more than enough for most people and the most you'll ever really need to do is about 10 bursts if that. Build up and little by little add time to your sprints and max out at 30 seconds because let's face it, even the greatest sprinters on the planet wouldn't last more than 30 seconds without slowly down at their highest peak of speed. 

Be smart about your training and get that beach body ready. Eat good and drink plenty of water.  

Friday, May 14, 2021

I Am Ready

 It has now been just a tick shy of two weeks since the accident and it has been a crazy road healing both physically and mentally. Slowly getting myself back to feeling like me again and seeing a chiropractor for adjustments and such. I have been eager to get back to doing my sandbell carries, kettlebell exercises and throw in some hammer work since it's nice out this time of the year. 

Yesterday was the day that felt made all of the difference in how I felt before and everything from my mind to my body telling me that I' am ready and I feel like me again. I went to a park nearby and just get in some animal movements along the grass, rest as long as needed and not try to kill myself. After a while, something within me decided to add in some sprints which I haven't done in a long time but I figured what the hell. Ended up doing 4 sprints from one end of the park to the other, walked slowly after each sprint back and took my time and as a finisher, I did some hanging exercises on the Monkey Bars to stretch and elongate the spine.

I jus felt incredibly happy and I wasn't in pain or any discomfort. Had an adjustment that same day about an hour or so after the workout. I talked to my chiropractor about what I did and how I felt, also told him how ready I was to get back into using the weights (sandbells mostly). I told him what size weights I had and planned on what to do with them and all he said was to keep it light for another week and see how they feel like the heaviest I can do is the 20 lb sandbell which is perfect for me to start with. The only thing not to told me not to do was to lay off the bridging for a little longer which is easy for me to do since I don't plan on doing bridges for at least a couple more weeks.

It's a continuous journey and my healing has come a long way but I feel like me again and I'm incredibly excited to train the way I want to again. When you're determined to do something, you keep that fire and passion within. Do everything you can to make things happen and little by little things will become bigger. Be strong and don't ever give up on what you love and what possibilities you can create to make an impact not only on yourself but others around you. 

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Healing In Progress

 Since my last article, the healing process from our accident is coming along pretty well. My wife is just now starting to show some bruising and it's hard for her to take a deep breath at times but she's fighting the best way she can and I do everything I can to help her so she doesn't strain herself. For me, I'm very close to being 100% again, just a bit longer and I'll be back to doing my crazy workouts. We're both seeing a chiropractor whom I've got work done on before and I trust him and he's done a hell of a job with our adjustments.

My training has shifted a little more when I added in DDP Yoga the first few days and when it came to Isometrics, I was holding various positions for 1 minute each. I shifted back to the 6-12 second Iso Contractions and added in Hanging to my rehab training. The hanging has helped immensely, doing sets of different hanging positions and stretching the muscles while building strength in the tendons in my forearms along with building shoulder flexibility. I've also done a couple 30 min workouts with just the step ups at 12 reps per leg per set non stop. 

I still can't do the weights I normally use in my workouts (sandbells, kettlebells, hammers) for a bit longer (not that I'm tempted because of how I feel) but because even one tweak can set me back, I need to stick with bodyweight and isometrics. To test myself to see what I can do again, yesterday I did a 10 min non stop superset of Bear Crawling 40ft and 20 Step Ups (10 per leg) as many times as I could and afterwards, did various hanging exercises. It felt great and I didn't feel pain or discomfort, some tension yes but neither the first two.

The one workout that I've kept consistent with every single day since this thing happened is my mobility routine which consists of Neck Exercises in a slow fashion that doesn't use tension and focuses on breathing and dynamic flexibility, circulating the shoulders in three different exercises, working the wrists and forearms, rotating the waist, side bends, rotating the pelvis, tai chi waist turner, standing leg lifts, hip rotations, hamstring flexibility, 2 different knee rotation exercises, 2 ankle rotation exercises and calf raises. This workout hits the body everywhere and it's all from standing. It takes roughly 20-30 minutes to complete and it feels nothing short of amazing afterwards. 

Injuries are a part of life and the best thing we can do is doing what's possible to get back to our full strength. Some don't ever come back because of severe injuries that can be life threatening but do what you can and don't take life for granted. Take care of each other and be there for the ones you love when you can. 

Thursday, May 6, 2021

Sometimes The Universe Prevents You From Going On Vacation

 Life throws curveballs at you and you never know when they'll hit you. For me and my wife, that curveball hit us hard. We were on our way to the Oregon Coast on Saturday for our 2 Year Anniversary and about 90 minutes into the trip, we had a car accident that totaled our car. I don't want to go into too many details but we did sustain some injuries; she had bruising on her chest and ribcage and I ended up with Whiplash, tearing some muscles along the left shoulder and a injured my Rotator Cuff. 

Scary couldn't even begin to be an understatement as we were really shaking up and there were 3 cars total (including ours) involved and one person went to the hospital for precaution. Last year for our 1st, Covid prevented us mainly but this time, it just wasn't meant to be. I'm just glad we are both safe and not severely damaged physically. The man who went to the hospital, I believe he'll pull through and has a full recovery. The first couple days were mainly getting over the shock of everything. We went to an urgent care the day of the accident and quite frankly, I didn't get a good vibe from the doctor and barely even looked at me and put me on a mild dose of muscle relaxers. The wife was to take ant-inflammatory. 

We decided to go to a chiropractor and that's when I found out there were tears in my muscles (mainly along the scapula and just below the neck line). Luckily my spine was still good. I'm going to be off some resistance training for a while (kettlebells, sandbells, hammers ect.) and was basically told to take it easy and stick with light stretching, yoga and joint loosening. I felt that when it came to that, do Neck Chi Gong, DDP Yoga, Aerobic Isometrics and my mobility training. Also needed to take Ibuprofen & Tylenol to help with the inflammation so it dies down and helps the healing process. My wife does need more work done due to also having a knotted up back and shoulders when it comes to adjustments. 

We ended up spending the rest of our anniversary vacation recovering and taking time to heal. We took care of each other and as much as it sucks, I'm doing my best not to shoot for the typical workouts I do and help my girl with stretches and keeping things mobile so things flow better. I feel so blessed to be in the shape I'm in and for the most part, the way accident happened, if there was even a second or more, the car that we collided with could've hit the the passenger side completely (where I sat) but ended up hitting the front end around my side. All that mattered to me during the shock was if my wife and all those that were involved were ok, I didn't give a damn about me.

Tragedy comes with lessons and we learn and find out who we really are in the midst of it. All we cared about was making sure we were all safe and coming together as a couple. Being overly emotional was bound to happen and being there for each other. Learn to love one another and we all know accidents happen and doing our best to come out of it alive. We are both healing the best way we can and taking it one day at a time. Real strength comes from how you react from suffering and having the courage to keep fighting no matter how small or big it is. 

Keep it up everyone and don't take anything for granted. We get only this one life. 

Monday, April 26, 2021

Deep Breathing Isometrics


 One of the great benefits of Isometric Training is that you can do all sorts of exercises that take on a unique aspect of the results you'll receive. When it comes to Aerobic Isometrics, people find it easier to time their holds and focus on the breath as they hold a posture or whatever. Now, what if we changed things around a bit? Why not experiment with the breathing part of Isometrics in a different way? 

Learning this concept from my workouts with Matt Furey's Exercise Bible and taking repetition to a different level, the concept of breathing for reps as you hold an exercise (wall sit, hindu push-up, tablemaker and V-Up), let's look at it a different way. When you hold a posture, let's try seeing how many deep breaths we can take before our bodies feel like coming out of it. I experimented with this the other night (sort of) doing Isometrics of Dead Hang, Fist Push-up Plank (mid range), Handstand, Dragon's Pose (variation of Warrior Pose in DDP Yoga) and Hugging The Tree (or Embracing The Tree in Qi Gong circles) and counted my breaths until I felt coming out of it. 

How many breaths can you take (slowly) in a dead hang before your grip gives out? When you're done, how long do you think those breaths made you last? This is a different way of thinking and seeing what is possible to hold an exercise longer and not just see if you can hold it. If you can hold an isometric for 30 seconds or longer, how many breaths would that take? One idea of this is something I learned from Matt Furey was how many breaths it took to hold a 3 min. bridge. Some counted breaths like seconds but what if you were to able breathe deeper than that? I was averaging 12-15 breaths in 3 minutes at some points in the last 15 years and my best was about 10-11 breaths in 3 minutes which is pretty good in my book.

Deep Breathing is a vital and crucial component that gives us the idea of how we handle stress whether in training or in certain life situations. When it comes to training, the better your breathing, the more you'll last. When you're in a horse stance, how many breaths can you take before you even start shaking? Or how many breaths does it take before you start breathing faster like for example: If you can take in a breath that lasts about 15-20 seconds (a full inhale and exhale), how long can you do that before your breath becomes frequent at 5-10 seconds a breath or less? It's the ability to control the breath as much as possible. 

When you think differently, you get a different result. So the next time you do long holds in your isometric workout, instead of just timing the hold, count your breaths and see how long you can hold the isometric before your breathing becomes faster. Just an experiment, something different to test your breath control, strength and endurance. 


Featured Herb: Stag Swag

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Playground Isometrics

 



When you were a kid, being at a park was one of the best times of your day. Going up and down slides, running around the grass, going on the swings and doing all kinds of crazy stuff. When I was little living in Santa Cruz, there was this one park called Branciforte Park and it had this really long slide that was probably about 15 ft or so going down that was close to a wooded area. Kids today wouldn't understand what it meant to be on a huge slide.

I always enjoyed going to a park and sometimes just sitting on the grass and let the world go by. See kids play, see a ball game on the other side of the fence, skateboarders doing tricks or seeing families play little games. It can be a beautiful place to go to especially in the sunshine. These days, most adults don't enjoy a park so much and because of so many changes to playgrounds even from 20-30 years ago, it's become a thing where being careful and overly cautious becomes the norm.

I do understand that we don't have the same energy we did as kids and our bodies aren't as durable as they used to be when we were used to running, climbing, swinging and falling off of places. I know I've slid off swings and slides the wrong way a time or two but got back up, today it's almost like if you go down a slide or go on a swing and you move ever so slightly, you can hurt yourself. We may not have the same strength or endurance to go for hours at a playground, but we sure as hell can do something to help maintain our joint health and still enjoy doing things.

I was out for a walk yesterday and went to this park that I haven't been to in a long time and had the urge to go hang on the monkey bars from different angles. Just to hang there and feel the stretch from the torso down while maintaining my grip strength, it felt great. Hanging is a great Isometric Exercise that many don't realize the true benefits. Yes not many people can hang for very long if at all but with practice and working different grips, you can gain some incredible strength and endurance (not to mention flexibility and posture). Going on the swings was just as fun and engaging the core to stabilize you is also a great isometric. 

There are so many different ways to do Isometrics at a playground it's almost unreal. Other than hanging, you can do pulls for arm wrestling, hold yourself up on the dip bars, do pushup holds on the Jungle Jim, do pikes holds on the swings (those are tough as hell to do), L-Sits on the Monkey Bars, Chest Presses on poles, if you're really ambitious and strong you can do the human flag, there's so much we don't realize is possible. Strengthening the body doesn't have to be boring and if kids see you doing Isometrics, they may imitate you and see that there's cool stuff to do. Kids absorb like sponges and when they see some positive and encouraging things as they play, it teaches them to see that exercise is fun and interesting. 

If you live near a park and its got a playground, find a time where there's no kids around and really tackle some exercise and enjoy yourself, if there are kids around, maintain distance as much as possible because these days parents and guardians can freak out and nobody will be able to have fun. We all need some joy in our lives especially now and it is important we find a balance in how we do things. Train while having fun and have fun while training. 


Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Can't Beat An Old Fashioned Pair Of Legs

 Sometimes when I think about legs, I think of the back and forth banter between Will Smith & Kenneth Branagh from Wild, Wild West. Watched that scene so many times and laugh every single time. It's good to laugh.



Many trainees hate training the legs because they're the muscles that basically get the crap beat out of them more than any other muscle group and get frustrated as hell when they train the calves since they're very difficult to develop a large amount of muscle. Leg Day to me is kind of fun and don't do a ton of exercises to get the job done. Just doing Step Ups in the triple to quadruple digits is more than enough and when I was consistently doing 500 or more squats a day, I felt satisfied.

For the most part, when I train legs, I don't go for the bodybuilding approach and try to put on a ton of definition and specially put on as much muscle, I train to condition the legs as much as possible and strengthen the tendons and ligaments of the ankles, knees and feet. My big workouts for legs these days is occasionally doing 100's of step ups, consistent rucking walking with up to 40 lbs or more (once did a 45 min walk with 70 lbs of gear) and Isometrics that include Wall Sits and other exercises. My goals are mainly to keep my legs healthy and strong because I get older, there's going to be issues with shin and ankles from my injuries if I don't train accordingly. 

Some people bust their ass working the legs so damn hard, walking feels like death the next day and as cool as that may be in your 20's and 30's, once you reach 40, 50 and 60+, you're going to need to train differently. Building muscle should be a priority for sure regardless of age but train safely and train for long term strength, not just temporary. As we age, one of the first things to go is our legs. Strengthening the ankles, knees and feet is what's going to keep you from being in a wheelchair in your golden years. 

From time to time to strengthen my ankles and put some muscle on my calves, I would do one legged calf raises going from one to the other for 5+ minutes non stop, it's a hell of a warm up plus it almost looks like a little dance and hey, dancing can be fun every once in a while. Dancers have some of the most powerful legs around and not talking the squatting 500 plus pounds or trying to leg press a freaking car kind but the kind of strength that keeps you on your toes and are conditioned over a period of time. Some dancers have had serious injuries they paid for later in life is true but others even in their 70's and 80's have incredible stamina and that people half their age would be jealous of. 




Recently I took photos of my legs that I don't think I've ever really shown before since most of my workouts and photos are of me either in sweats or shorts that you can barely notice the calves. I was hesitant about it but the majority of the reception I got felt really good. Honestly I don't think my legs look that good at all but after a decade and a half of training legs off and on, I think I developed them pretty good and they kept me from getting seriously injured a time or two. My dad doesn't call me Tree Trunk for nothing so I think I've done something good. 






Definition and looking good isn't always going to save your ass and if your legs aren't conditioned to a sense of degree, you're not going to last long in many areas. Train them with ferociousness but also take advantage of the little things that make a huge difference. Remember the words of Herb Brooks in Miracle "The Legs, Feed The Wolf." 

Friday, April 16, 2021

2 Mini Workouts And 130 LBS Of Hell

 Sometimes you may not always have a lot of time to get a workout in but just a few minutes could do wonders. You can even do them throughout the day when there's a window of opportunity, 5-7 minutes can do a lot than just doing nothing.

Yesterday, I thought I'd get in a couple mini workouts just for fun and chill out and work on stuff the rest of the day. Here are the workouts...


Superset Of 10 Overhead Presses (50 lb Sandbell) & 20 360's (20 lb Sandbell) for 5 Rounds in 5:41.


The second one was another superset but this time it was for 5 min nonstop of Carrying the 50lb Sandbell 2x across the garage & 10 Sandbell Slams with the 20 lb Sandbell. 


After a while during the day, I thought about doing something else for a quick workout and decided to test how long I can hold a Horse Stance wearing my 2 Weighted Vests (40 + 20) and holding my 70 lb Darth Vader Kettlebell. I didn't expect to hold it very long since I never used that much weight before but I managed to get past the 30 second mark (approx. 36 seconds). It was brutal in my opinion and by 20 seconds, my legs started quivering. My goal for next time is over a minute.




Horse Stance training can give you an idea of where your weaknesses are at and just holding one without weight for an extended period of time is a killer workout in itself. Shaolin Monks would hold a Horse Stance Posture for hours on end and we all know how bad ass those guys are. When you add weight, it becomes a whole new ball game of testing your strength in your entire body. I would at times hold my 50 lb Sandbell in a Horse Stance for as long as 3-5 minutes and feel sore as hell the next day. I once held 110 lbs for more than 2 minutes and that felt different.




130 lbs of added weight in a Horse Stance would test you big time and shows how much strength you can possess beyond the muscles. It shows how strong your tendons and ligaments are and that is what really pays off. You don't need to go crazy like I did, just holding up to 50 lbs can be beneficial. If you prefer just your bodyweight, hold it for as long as you can. My best time in just a regular Horse Stance was about 10 minutes or so and I was dying, that was years ago, I don't know what it would be now.

Train outside the mainstream of modern fitness today and learn the old school aspects of strength and conditioning. Toughen up your bone structure and strengthen your tendons and ligaments especially in the legs because as you know, as we age our legs tend to go first. Train accordingly and progress little by little even if it's a tiny fraction each day. Stay strong everyone and have an amazingly awesome weekend.

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Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Cyber Bullies And Haters

 Words can have an impact on a person that at times is far stronger than getting physically beaten up. Physical wounds can heal, the mental wounds can be far more difficult to heal. Some people are more sensitive than others and you think in most cases they just need to get over it, if only it were that simple. Can words weaken a person? Words at times are like the bullets of a gun and if you point it right, they'll hit you and you can be changed forever.

Kids especially are impressionable and vulnerable to bullying and even if they're taught to fight back, some way, an impact has been bestowed on them. Some of us are taught to stand up to bullies and take a stand for our own psyche and believe that nobody is going to bully us. It works at times but just about everything comes with a price. Sometimes the victim becomes the bully, what we see and hear can give us the impression that being a bully is inevitable, not always so. 

Suicide rates from being bullied on social media these days is pretty damn high and it's a shame that has to happen to people whether it's the victim or the bullies themselves. On one end, a person makes the choice to be an asshole or that was what they were taught and learned how to belittle and poke at people. On another end, a person didn't do anything wrong yet is ridiculed for just having the wrong hair color or listens to terrible music or can't read a sentence without stuttering. Suicide is about suffering and ending that suffering and often times, people think it's selfish to take your own life but in certain cases, you can never understand the suffering someone goes through.

When you have haters, mainly it's either out of jealousy or they hate themselves so damn much that they have to take that hate on others in order to feel some sort of satisfaction. How could you hate someone that you don't even really know and why do you feel the need to hate on them because they're different or they're associated with someone or just flat out have a sickening passion to just hate and not look at the world around you? Success doesn't always come from something you were born as or born with, it comes from failing over and over again and not giving up until something clicks and continuing that click consistently.

Haters have issues with their own set of problems and at times hate on someone for no other reason than to just hate. They say things that really don't make any sense and try to call you out as if they think they can fight you when the truth is, they really can't. A lot of times, haters are basically cowards with nothing better to do than try to piss on your success and calling it Peach Tea. They're not your friend but at the same time, not really an enemy either unless it goes to an extreme setting because all they truly want is attention and to be recognized as the big dog when they're really a scared little poodle. 

If you're successful, you're going to get some form of bullying or hating whether you want it or not and true success is taking the good with the bad. Some just love to talk shit just for the sake of being able to "talk" but in reality, what's the real issue here? What exactly triggered them to make them hate you so much? The answer, we don't truly know. Words can have an impact on people that triggers many things and we don't always know which ones are triggered or which ones that were deliberately thrown at. 

Don't buy into the bullying and stick up for yourself if you have to or ask for help. If you have haters, keep your distance but stop being you. It's not easy, I understand that, trust me but the more you live with the love and compassion and success of your endeavor, the less noise comes from the haters and bullies are nothing more than turds with bad egos and a hate for themselves. Don't be a bully and don't hate on anyone. 

Monday, April 12, 2021

90 Seconds Of Isometric Exercise

 If you ever have read my articles or have done research on Bud Jeffries, Steve Justa and even Bruce Lee, you know we're all big advocates of Isometric Training. My favorite style is doing the 6-12 sec intense contractions from as many angles as possible but every few workouts or so, I do either a mixture of intense Iso training and Aerobic Isometric Training or do Aerobic exclusively for that particular workout day. 

Long Isometric Holds take on a whole other realm of strength training and conditioning. The most common AI hold is the Plank which can be really good especially if you practice certain variations instead of the typical hold with the forearms on the floor. One variation that is difficult but simple to do is holding the plank on your fist with elbows bent at mid-range, most people barely last 20-30 seconds if that but if you can last a minute or more, that shows some serious strength.

Some people have experienced some interesting results with AI's such as hypertrophy, feeling lighter as they move, loss of body fat, increased strength, better stamina and even an increase in testosterone. When you hold a position for more than a minute, it takes another level of strength beyond the muscles, it is the strengthening of the tendons and ligaments. Shaolin Monks can attest to this as some of their holds go for hours, talk about strong joints. I've had great results in doing long holds but unless it's bridging or holding a horse stance, 90 seconds is my cut off point not because I can't go anymore but because I want to do other exercises and not just do one for a long ass time (I get bored easily).

For the most part with Isometric Training, most courses teach people to do holds at 60-90 seconds because that's where they'll start to experience the fatigue of the muscles and only exerting no more than 60% of their strength. The truth is, very few people know how Isometrics work and the understanding of where fatigue starts or ends depending on what they're doing. Isometric Holds are nothing new obviously but the knowledge of when fatigue sets in, the experience of fat being burned and strength that is developing conjures up more to what the real veterans of the method teach as opposed to those B-Movie style books where knowledge is virtually non-existent and go through the motions (oxymoron I know) of just showing exercises have little to do with real world applications and have dangerous consequences when they're not applied right.

One of the most common mistakes people make when doing Isometric Training is how to breathe. This is because Bodybuilders today and even quite a bit of yesteryear that hold the breath as they flex as hard as possible, this is extremely dangerous and could prove fatal to someone's brain. In longer holds, the objective is to breathe deeply and as controlled as possible and to not exert more than 40-50% of force. If you're a shallow breather, you may not hold a position for very long but if your breathing is controlled, you can hold for a good extended period of time. The better your breathing with long holds, the stronger you can be. 

The fact is, Isometric Training is far from easy and it takes a decent level of concentration that many don't understand. Once you exert an amount of force, you need to keep it there for the duration as much as possible. It is literally impossible to hold an isometric at 100% for 90 seconds or more but if it's around half or less than half that amount of force, you can go longer and develop strength that can shoot past plateaus in your regular training. 

At first, 90 seconds may not seem like that long but when certain things start to set in, it may feel like an eternity. Once you can control your breathing and keep that exertion of force at that level, it can give you one hell of a workout and feels very relaxing when you come out of it. One of my favorite exercises is the 90 second Deadlift using my Iso Strap & Dowel, I feel it everywhere and builds a great level of power in the forearms and strength in the legs and lower back. You don't need to do a ton of exercises to get in a good workout, just a few that totals around 10-15 minutes is more than enough. The results can often be extraordinary and it's not complicated unless you make it that way. simple and yet can beat you into submission. 

You can do them anywhere and use just about anything. Have fun and make it interesting. 

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