Is there a place for steady state cardio in your training program?
The quick and dirty answer, yes there is. YES
I know what you're thinking. that doesn't sound like me. I'm sure there is plenty on record of me denouncing long-endurance based cardio; and I stand by that. running across the Gobi has nothing to do with health and fitness.
however;
at certain stages of your training there should be some steady state cardio in your program. not all the time.
I used to cringe when some of my fighters would come in and barely be able to get through a training session because their hips were so sore they could barely manage to walk. why? because their coach had them running 15k daily. if you don't have respiratory endurance 5 weeks out then you're not going to get it. quit the long slow slog and focus on what you need. killing athletes with running is stupid! there, i said it again.
back to the however.
Steady state cardio improves your respiratory system and oxygen uptake. the better you can utilize oxygen the better you can pick up heavy stuff.
& that's it in a nutshell. steady state cardio trains your body's ability to use oxygen.
human beings are designed to be able to do prolonged running. we get the best of all worlds; strong, fast and enduring.
but we were never designed to be as big as we sometimes are. that's one of the multitude of reasons why so many (especially strength) athletes are carrying around so many injuries.
steady state cardio improves our respiratory system. (gives you guts )
steady state cardio improves our core strength ( yes, running is good for the lower back and abs)
steady state cardio improves our metabolic functioning. burns fat)
now by steady state cardio i don't mean you should be running marathons or mini marathons daily or even weekly.
lets be realistic, if you start out on a run you are going to spend the first 5 or so minutes just warming up. so the first 5 minutes isn't really accomplishing a training effect. its only after that time that you start to get the benefit of the endurance cardio session.
types of cardio endurance training
running for time
running for distance
hill sprints
car pushing
stairs
tire flips
When you begin running I expect you'll be a bit slow & awkward. we call this the marine corps shuffle. as soon as you can you need to work your way into a proper jogging/running pace. like lifting, there is a right way and a wrong way to run. you should soon be paying attention to how you hold yourself and the way you move.
when running for time just slowly increase your time per week. its okay to work up to an hour but there's really no need to go beyond 30 min per session. (and yes that includes the warm up)
once you've worked up to 30 min or whatever time you've decided is your goal then you start trying to increase the mileage (distance you've run) within that time frame.
running for distance is like running for time slowly add 1/4 mile blocks ( you'd never have to go beyond the 5 mile mark & I'd say stick with 2 miles) once you've achieved your goal then start chopping away at the time it takes to get there.
when I talk about running i mean a proper jog. not slogging through a marine corps shuffle. fine to start out that way, but practice your pacing and technique. jogging should be comfortable. after the initial beginning if its hurting, something is wrong. check what your doing. some people just can't run. that's why hills, stairs and cars are good.
hill sprints start with one and work at it until your hitting 30 min sessions. run up walk down.
car pushing. why would you ever go over 20 min.
stairs, almost the same as hill sprints. 20-30 min. is all you'd ever want of these.
tire flips. grueling. flip that tire for the allotted time. ( i like to combine this with running) rest as you need to. continue as you can.
the sprints, car pushing and stairs are ideal for bigger people who can't run.
Even though its cardio endurance there really is no need to go past 30 min or 2 miles.
When I start with these programs i pay attention to the work load.
Its okay to run every day, but after you start hitting 20 min then you need to break it down to about 3 days per week.
After you hit 45 min. then you may have two 45min sessions and one shorter session in the week and so on.
Remember we're not trying to become marathoners.
car pushing and stairs you would be good to keep it down to twice a week.
hill sprints (if you're doing it right) once a week would be enough.
One thing I don't believe in, is wasting time on treadmills. Why on earth would you slog out on one of those things when you've got the whole world to play in? A treadmill locks you into an unnatural rhythm, in a boring environment, sucking in stale air. Get out and live a little. Run in the park, kayak at the lake, climb trees in the woods. these activities are good for the spirit and mind as well as the body. get outside. even if it raining, its better to go for a run out doors.
keep in mind, you are doing other forms of activity as well. i.e. lifting something 3 times a week.
you may also be doing some sprinting or spending time in the dojo.
steady state cardio (for the purposes of this article) isn't a now until forever deal. like all good programs work it in for a few training blocks then rest. set your goals and go about achieving them. once achieved, access & reset.
A block or two of steady state cardio can help your recovery from heavy lifting also.
remember my number 2 rule. pick up heavy stuff. to help those muscles become more efficient at picking up heavy stuff, improve your cardiovascular capacity.( the heart is a muscle too).
Program some steady state cardio into your training cycles.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Monday, December 3, 2012
e garbage
a word about energy drinks:
STOP
anything in excess leads to mass gain.
that includes sugar free, diet, regular, v, redbull, coffee, fruitjuice, energy drinks.
mass gain is fat isn't it.
you shouldn't be drinking anything but water or tea.
anything else is excess.
don't get me wrong i like my excess, but don't fool yourself into thinking you're doing yourself a favor by drinking something thats not water.
cut out the excess and see if your body doesnt show it by becoming leaner & reducing swelling and inflamation.
STOP
anything in excess leads to mass gain.
that includes sugar free, diet, regular, v, redbull, coffee, fruitjuice, energy drinks.
mass gain is fat isn't it.
you shouldn't be drinking anything but water or tea.
anything else is excess.
don't get me wrong i like my excess, but don't fool yourself into thinking you're doing yourself a favor by drinking something thats not water.
cut out the excess and see if your body doesnt show it by becoming leaner & reducing swelling and inflamation.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
little mouse ears
( or moose antlers?)
As soon as I can I have clients trying to do sit ups without their feet anchored..
Really if you can't do a sit up then why are trying to do any kind of direct abdominal work.
When you can do a sit up, then you can think about moving onto other 'core' work.
I don't know of a single client I've ever had that didn't lace their fingers behind their neck and use the 'jerk' method to develop momentum to enable their sit ups.
* if you are jerking yourself up, then you are not properly utilizing your core/abs. you're wasting time and encouraging injury
* sit ups should be slow and controlled (especial the down faze)[eccentric contraction is such a big word]
* as soon as you can, you should be doing sit ups without anchoring the feet
* I like to 'grip' the floor with my heals.
* using the mouse ears takes the pressure (even if unintentional) off the neck.
* the mouse ears add resistance ( as apposed to hands across the chest)
* hands across the chest encourages the 'jerk' reflex
* anchoring the feet uses more hip flexors than abs (so don't anchor the feet)
so whether you call them mouse ears or moose antlers (depending upon your clients I guess ) its just a better way. stick the thumbs in the ears and blow raspberries at your coach as you sit up.
As soon as I can I have clients trying to do sit ups without their feet anchored..
Really if you can't do a sit up then why are trying to do any kind of direct abdominal work.
When you can do a sit up, then you can think about moving onto other 'core' work.
I don't know of a single client I've ever had that didn't lace their fingers behind their neck and use the 'jerk' method to develop momentum to enable their sit ups.
* if you are jerking yourself up, then you are not properly utilizing your core/abs. you're wasting time and encouraging injury
* sit ups should be slow and controlled (especial the down faze)[eccentric contraction is such a big word]
* as soon as you can, you should be doing sit ups without anchoring the feet
* I like to 'grip' the floor with my heals.
* using the mouse ears takes the pressure (even if unintentional) off the neck.
* the mouse ears add resistance ( as apposed to hands across the chest)
* hands across the chest encourages the 'jerk' reflex
* anchoring the feet uses more hip flexors than abs (so don't anchor the feet)
so whether you call them mouse ears or moose antlers (depending upon your clients I guess ) its just a better way. stick the thumbs in the ears and blow raspberries at your coach as you sit up.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
the sad truth about diet
the truth about diets is that they work, until, you relapse.
anytime you cut calories there's going to be some reduction in mass.
the source of your calories determines the type of mass you maintain, gain or lose!
in other words your macro nutrient ratio is what you need to be paying attention to.
you want to be loseing fat not muscle.
if all you're taking in is carbohydrates (hello vegans) then you are going to suffer from a plythora of vitamin, mineral & amino acid deficincies.
sugar, flour, bread, pasta, rice, syrup, jam, = energy.
gasoline
if you take in more energy than you burn up, then you will have greater mass.
traditional vegetables/fruits = energy, fibre, minerals, vitamins
break fluid, transmission fluid, battery
steak, lobster, salmon, chicken, = building blocks, muscle, immune system
chasis
walnuts, olives, fats of anykind = bridges and communication.
oil, electrical transmission
the number one way to lose weight and harden up is the way thats been around for 100s of years. cut the carbs. i garantee, you are way overconsuming carbs (unless you are a competitive bodybuilder).
its hard to get too much protien. really hard. and if you keep your fats congruent with your protien then they will be under control.
the biggest lie on the world public is drop fat to get lean. want to be lean and muscular drop the carbs and manipulate the protiens.
the best results my clients get are by
not eating bread
not eating pizza
not eating cookies
not eating ice cream
not eating pasta
not eating canned meat
by eating more eggs
the newest trend (fad) in dieting seems to be the intermitten fasting bug.
i don't know why they call it that (yes i do but) its really just skipping breakfast and having a late lunch.
guess what, this diet has you cutting calories, just like any other diet.
i do like a lot about this eating style and there is a lot there for those that want to search it out and experiment.
it has several names, mostly paleo, warrior diet, renegade diet, etc. all have good ideas and bear some research just to further your knowledge but at the end of the day the keys to weight control are:
(bugs, high protien is always on the menu)
don't eat if your not hungry.
eat slow
when your not hungry stop eating
keep your sugar and flour stuff to a minimum
(actually just don't eat sugar, hell, its poison)
sit down away from the tv or computer to eat.
let me break it down simpler ( KISS right)
hungry eat
not hungry don't eat.
people want diets so they dont have to think,
just follow the rules of the diet, but the rules are many and complicated
so here's a diet with 2 rules.
hungry eat meat or eggs
not hungry- dont eat
stick with that for 2 weeks .
then
eat like a bear
http://primordial-athletics.blogspot.co.nz/search?q=eat+like+a+bear
Thursday, November 22, 2012
hard yakka: tough drills
take one flat basketball. fill it with sand.
makes a better medicine ball than anything you're likely to buy at your local sports store.
with this drill we picked up the ball from the ground
cleaned it to the chest
extended overhead and
threw it as far as we could
then ran to it and repeated twice
(total 3 times)
then sprint 30 meters and do 10 pushups
then jog back
kept it up for 5 min.
1 min rest
3 sets
good luck
Sunday, November 4, 2012
train like tesla
(this guy knew a lot about energy)
all things being equal the strongest one wins.
I've heard this again and again, naturally since the world I swim through is full of guys always trying to become stronger and sell their stronger is better ideology.
I DO agree with this 100%
but
almost nothing is equal.
I have trained a lot of fighters over time and one thing I'm big on is the importance of relative strength, maximal strength and the ability to end a fight quickly.
This article is not more about strength training however, its about energy. Sometimes, the guy or gal, who can dig deep into the tank is the one who comes out on top whether all other things are equal or not. That fighter who just keeps on chugging, getting up time and again. You know, your opponent is bigger, stronger, more experienced, hell, just plain better, but if you can endure, eventually they will get tired and you can go home with the belt or purse or inflated ego, whatever.
when Ortiz went up against Shamrock, it was Ortizs' energy levels (his astounding amount of cardio fitness) that overwhelmed Shamrock
The ability to create movement, slowly wearing down your stronger opponent, grinding away, until they just have nothing left.
'so how do I get energy like this' How do you become a big cat instead of a paper tiger?
move!
continuous motion.
when I'm training fight specific I always put in one more minute, one more round.
when we are not doing fight prep, we work 20 min circuits. my rule, if you can go for 21 min. then the first 20 weren't hard enough.
I like to start with some heavy work ( pick up heavy stuff- my number 1 rule) in the 1-3 rep range then jump into other exercise where we watch the clock or sprint; the rest period is spent with the jump rope.
i also try to hit the whole body and develop exercise that will accentuate the athletes ring performance.
good coaching, with these grueling routines, is very important, proper exercise technique must be maintained and the athlete must keep going. no surrender. a constant reminder, go, go , go , push, push, push.
music can be beneficial too, not wayne newton, but some alice in chains, drop kick murphys, metal church....
here's some evolutions we have used:
exercise reps rest
deadlift 1-3 0
sprint 1 0
pushups 10 0
jog 1 *
*continue for the duration of 1 round, rest one minute then repeat. ( start with 3 sets working up to 5 )
floor press 3-5 0
pull ups 10 0
stone lift/carry 1 0
sprint 1 0
kneeling pile drivers 6 30 sec.**
** if at all; 5-6 sets
jump rope 1min 0
bear crawl 1min 0
jump rope 1 min 0
bag work (arms) 1 min 0
jump rope 1 min 0
bag work (legs) 1min 0
3 sets; no rest
squats 20 0
hanging leg raise 6 0
pushups (rings) 7-9 0
one arm row 3 0
other arm 3 0
bag cleans 20 0
one arm db floor press 3 0
squats 20 as long as it takes.
2 sets, if your bad to the bone
( remember, the first set of squats should make you want to quit, you have to do a gut check and finish the rest of the routine)
these evolutions should be put into your program along with your regular strength training. about twice a week depending on your recovery abilities. they can be used on different days, later in the day, or at the end of a heavy session. if you choose to do this after a heavy session, make sure that session doesn't last longer than half an hour. maybe you choose to do one of these circuits every sat or sun? then head to the beach, river, swimming hole, pool.... as fights come up and training focus changes these routines should be usable right up until the week before fight night.
alternatively, if you just wanna burn fat, well, these routines will do that too.
once again i will reiterate, if you can go over 20 min. you've been goofn' off!
this is the kind of training i call 'gut check'. its tough and its designed to push the limits of your capabilities.
it requires max strength as well as endurance. it requires mental toughness and the ability to think and concentrate while winded.
it develops your ability to continue digging deep when the well is empty, to go further than the guy who is more skilled or stronger or faster. Even when things aren't exactly even, sometimes its the last one sparking that takes home glory.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
my buddy mikes rehab
The best thing for you to do is gather some of your mates together and start doing some small group sessions with me, however....
most lower back injuries are due to chronic inappropriate overuse patterns. In other words, your posture and the way you go about doing menial tasks. Most acute injuries result from long term, unnoticed improper movement.
Some injuries can and will occur due to sudden overload and movement under improper biomechanical positioning and, lets face it, overtaxing a system not capable of the work load. ( don't feel bad, I do this all of the time)
A couple of things about posture:
Very few people have correct neutral posture; most people gravitate toward either a Donald Duck posture or a Pink Panther Notice with the donald duck posture the arch of the lower back and with the pink panther the rounding of the upper back. The last picture on the right is a fairly neutral back though the neck could stand to be in better alignment
Most professionals treat lower back injuries either by strengthening the abdominal muscles or increasing the flexibility in the lower back muscles. Doctors seem to like prescribing drugs and sloth.
I think that both of these methods are wrong! How about that!
Most lower back problems are a result of a weak lower back (spinal erectors) and tight hip flexors.
So Mike, after all that blah, blah, blah, what you want to know is ‘how do I treat this man.’
POSTURE:
Good posture generally has the head, shoulders, hips and ankles in alignment.
When you’re standing or walking around you should hold your head up high, shoulder blades back and down and stomach ( tummy) slightly sucked in. Don’t hold your breath. This isn't the army.
Think of yourself as a marionette on a string. Keep the string pulled tight. Pulled upright through the center of your body.
The HIPS:
Lack of hip mobility puts a lot of stress on the lower back. So here are a series of stretches to work on.
Remember we are stretching the hips, not the lower back. So anything that is turning/twisting , hyperflexing or hyper-extending the lower back is not what we are after. We want a steady back and mobile hips.
The first flexibility drill we want to incorporate is simply sitting on a softball. Sit down one cheek on the ball and roll around on it trying to hit every sore spot. When you find a sore spot hold for a few seconds then roll some more and find the next one. Then swap cheeks.
Hip flexor stretch; the key to the hip flexor stretch is to maintain that neutral spine. I’ve never met anyone who does this stretch correctly. Everyone uses hyper-extension of the lower back to accommodate a great degree of stretch usually pinching the back and stretching the quads at best. They key to this movement is to keep the back straight and tilt the lower pelvis upwards. Point your groin towards the ceiling.
Seated glute stretch; simply sitting down. Back upright, sitting tall, one ankle across the opposite knee, the key to this one is to slowly push the knee not only down , but away from the hip.
Lying hip stretch; laying on your back, feet shoulder width apart knees bent touch the knees together. The key to this one is not to have the knees too close to your butt.
So there's some easy exercises for hip flexibility.
Next lets look at strengthening the back.
The first thing to start is the stretch and reach. Easy. Just start cleaning the walls in your house. Seriously. Reach as high as you can overhead and press against the wall and scrub away the dirt, cobwebs, matrix lines, whatever. The movements should be small and remain small. Think karate kid (the original) wax on wax off but high overhead.
Next and keeping it easy are kick backs. On your hands and knees simply kick one leg back and hold for a second or two and do 20-30 repetitions and then switch legs.
And a third exercise is stiffleg deadlifts: for this you want to stand with your legs wide apart. Bend over as far as you can, from the hips, while keeping your back straight. The key here is not thinking you have to reach the floor. Also, when you bend over, let your butt sit back.
take it easy, nice and light. just use a backpack and add milk bottles as you need to.
The secret exercise for back rehabilitation:
Running; now, don’t go starting ultra-marathons, but jog a block or two, make a couple of laps around the track. The key here, maintain your posture. Your not in a hurry, but getting a half mile to a mile jogging in will help loosen your back muscles and strengthen them. It will also strengthen your stomach muscles and respiratory system.
And here’s one I like to do.
Pick up heavy stuff!. To simplify; go to a rocky beach and wander around and pick up the rocks. No hurry, no program, no sets, no reps, no pushing yourself to your limits, just pick up what you think looks like ‘fun’ to pick up.
And
Since you’re at the beach, go for a wade. Get at least chest deep and spend 20 min in the water wading around. The buoyancy of the water will take pressure off your back and the tidal activity will massage it.
One last thing; I don’t know what kind of furniture you have but I have a couch that is just a tiny bit too short, so if I lie on it, I have to draw my knees up a bit, this takes some of the extension out of my back and helps it recover. A couple of nights sleeping on the couch does wonders for my back. Not so much for my marriage, but its only a couple of nights and this helps the heart grow fonder right?
One more last thing: change what you do. Mike, I know you carry all that heavy equipment around on your back, try carrying it around on your front, or get risky and try getting your sweetheart to carry it around .(wink, nudge). You’ll either get a few more nights on the couch or she’ll really be feeling included in your life.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
loosing weight
How to lose weight
Eat less!
So simple its stupid right.
The question that most people seem to ask is, what can I eat as a substitute. Nothing!
For years now, the diet industry has been telling us eat more of this, more often to replace this or to make up for that.
The thing is, most of us already eat way too much, way too often. Me included.
Want to lose weight.
Eat less! If you’re not hungry, don’t eat.
Why are you eating if you’re not hungry.
These days there is no reason to preload food. You’re not going to starve if you don’t eat at set times of the day and lets face it, the world we live in has us eating breakfast, break, lunch, break, dinner, snack. And that last snack of the day you definitely don’t need. The last thing you need is going to bed on a full stomach.
Man, we are eating all of the time.
I know there’s a million excuses to eat most of them dealing with comfort issues. Hell, pissed off. Eat garbage, that’ll show ‘em (teach me a lesson). Sad, eat a zillion calories and drown in my misery. Bored, oh hell yes, now that’s a way to kill some time, I’m headed for my coffee coma right now.
If you’re not hungry, you don’t need to eat.
Look at what you’re eating. Is it healthy? Does it give anything too you, the body machine? If you take in more energy than required to support (x) mass then x will increase. Every time you eat you should look at what you’re about to eat and determine if it contains things essential to the machine. Vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals? Guess what, sugar and white flour don’t have any of those things. None.
How much are you eating. These days almost everyone is eating way more than they should per portion, per meal. I say this a lot and I mean it, if you can’t wrestle, sprint or swim after you eat, you ate too much. Food is fuel and building material. Like wood on the job site, if it sits around in your guts for ages it just rots. ( hate to say it and I don’t want to know but are you gassy all day?? That food is just rotting away in your guts giving you nothing but bad bacteria and IBS).
Have a good look at your portion sizes and then figure out what a portion should be and then start cutting back.
And guess what, despite what the industry says, you don’t need a thousand meals a day. You need to eat, but you’re not a cow, you don’t have to constantly chew on something.
Courage, it takes a lot to embark on change. Diet’s a four letter word but changing your eating habits is a worth while goal. Who cares about what the media says is acceptable, how long do you want to live and what do you want to be able to do while you’re busy living? Have courage and better your health, have courage and change your eating habits. And it does take courage.
Discipline, so much harder than courage. There’s always a reason to start tomorrow, there’s always a reason to not do it right now. But sometimes you have to just say, crap, its got to be done.
Hungry and nothing good to eat, do with out for a little while longer
Bad day and want to caress your loathing with sugar, go out and throw a log around instead.
Discipline, decide right now to do what you know you should.
Eat less, eat right, move more
Its hard, its not fair and everything is stacked against us, but start towards feeling better, and you will feel better by eating less. Less volume. More quality. Eat less food, look at what that food is going to give your body to work with.
Diet is a four letter word, and if you look at eating less as a new diet, well, it will work until you go back to your old way of eating. Don’t diet, eat less for ever. Don’t diet, Change your life habits. Live healthier, live longer, live more actively.
Eat less!
So simple its stupid right.
The question that most people seem to ask is, what can I eat as a substitute. Nothing!
For years now, the diet industry has been telling us eat more of this, more often to replace this or to make up for that.
The thing is, most of us already eat way too much, way too often. Me included.
Want to lose weight.
Eat less! If you’re not hungry, don’t eat.
Why are you eating if you’re not hungry.
These days there is no reason to preload food. You’re not going to starve if you don’t eat at set times of the day and lets face it, the world we live in has us eating breakfast, break, lunch, break, dinner, snack. And that last snack of the day you definitely don’t need. The last thing you need is going to bed on a full stomach.
Man, we are eating all of the time.
I know there’s a million excuses to eat most of them dealing with comfort issues. Hell, pissed off. Eat garbage, that’ll show ‘em (teach me a lesson). Sad, eat a zillion calories and drown in my misery. Bored, oh hell yes, now that’s a way to kill some time, I’m headed for my coffee coma right now.
If you’re not hungry, you don’t need to eat.
Look at what you’re eating. Is it healthy? Does it give anything too you, the body machine? If you take in more energy than required to support (x) mass then x will increase. Every time you eat you should look at what you’re about to eat and determine if it contains things essential to the machine. Vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals? Guess what, sugar and white flour don’t have any of those things. None.
How much are you eating. These days almost everyone is eating way more than they should per portion, per meal. I say this a lot and I mean it, if you can’t wrestle, sprint or swim after you eat, you ate too much. Food is fuel and building material. Like wood on the job site, if it sits around in your guts for ages it just rots. ( hate to say it and I don’t want to know but are you gassy all day?? That food is just rotting away in your guts giving you nothing but bad bacteria and IBS).
Have a good look at your portion sizes and then figure out what a portion should be and then start cutting back.
And guess what, despite what the industry says, you don’t need a thousand meals a day. You need to eat, but you’re not a cow, you don’t have to constantly chew on something.
Courage, it takes a lot to embark on change. Diet’s a four letter word but changing your eating habits is a worth while goal. Who cares about what the media says is acceptable, how long do you want to live and what do you want to be able to do while you’re busy living? Have courage and better your health, have courage and change your eating habits. And it does take courage.
Discipline, so much harder than courage. There’s always a reason to start tomorrow, there’s always a reason to not do it right now. But sometimes you have to just say, crap, its got to be done.
Hungry and nothing good to eat, do with out for a little while longer
Bad day and want to caress your loathing with sugar, go out and throw a log around instead.
Discipline, decide right now to do what you know you should.
Eat less, eat right, move more
Its hard, its not fair and everything is stacked against us, but start towards feeling better, and you will feel better by eating less. Less volume. More quality. Eat less food, look at what that food is going to give your body to work with.
Diet is a four letter word, and if you look at eating less as a new diet, well, it will work until you go back to your old way of eating. Don’t diet, eat less for ever. Don’t diet, Change your life habits. Live healthier, live longer, live more actively.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
the difference between champions and didn't quite make its'
You know, sometimes I just can't help but roll my eyes, someone today said ' I don't do anymore than I have too!
wow,
what a difference in results from the client that pushes on and gets 3,4,5 more than they have to.
That's all the difference between Olympic gold and high school bench warmers. The Olympian pushes through, goes the extra mile. does what he needs to do then squeezes in more. Champions have to be held down and told not to do more. (then they're likely to sneak around and do more any way). that high school hero became an used cars salesman and never made the box of Wheaties because he only did what he had to.
I guarantee these guys do more than they have too |
If you can't give 100% in the gym, how will you ever give 95% to your diet regime. And
when i say diet, I simply mean cleaning it up, not becoming a health nut. cut the alcohol and sugar. eat healthy.
you can't run a marathon if you stop at the wall.
Every one whose ever done that extra set, that extra rep, that extra mile has always gotten that extra feeling of greatness. that champion attitude, that champions feeling of elation. champions have a tendency to look good naked and don't suffer too many inadequacy issues. because they did more than they had too and doing more builds a person mentally as well as physically.
I see people who've been going to the gym for 20 years looking as soft as the first day they came in. because they do what they have too and never more. I see people go out and buy new wardrobes because they have too, because they did more than they had too.
I know most of you aren't on your way to the Olympics, but that's no excuse to be a slouch either. the secret to a long (healthy life), hard training. Training with a champion attitude.
never give up
never say die
invest in yourself with effort.
Monday, April 30, 2012
i'm a rule breaker
A look at what I did and how I break the rules:
i love picking up heavy stuff. that's well known, but this current cycle revolves around me getting ready to go for a 6k run through muck, mud, trees, wet grass and hills ( I've also been promised some walls and ropes to climb and nets to crawl under).
today's a lower body day so it went something like this.
rope pushdowns
yes, i know i said this was a lower body day buts here's the crux, I'm abusing the crap out of this exercise at the moment. I'll do it as many days in a row as i can keep adding reps or weight to it. then when i plateau I'll give it a rest. often I'll do them while i get everything else set up.
leg curls
just did 1 warm up set then jumped right into the heavy stuff ( i know where my limits are by now so sometimes i have extended warm ups and some time they are brief). I do these lying on the floor with a dumbbell currently ( i will post more on leg curls later)
squats; taking it easy at the moment working with these. the emphasis here is trying to get rock bottom, which for me, barefoot is just below parallel. I thought i was going wayyy down but nope, only about 2" below parallel. after watching myself on video, Olympic squaters impress the hell out of me. mentally my ass is on the my heals but the evidence says otherwise. today i kept my time down to no more than 15 minutes on these. so lighter weight, higher reps.
walk outs. okay, i can't help myself. k like picking up heavy shit, heavy being a relative term. some guys would laugh at these weights (westside) I like these for the challenge, but also for the core and structural work
now here's where it gets funny (ozzy pops into my head singing 'breaking all the rules")
i went for a 20 min jog. this is about achieving what i need for the fitness of running through muck. getting my respiratory system in shape. It also adds volume to the leg work. because of the previous leg work, I'm already warmed up at the get go instead of the normal 4:30 it usually takes when i run.
when i got back to the gym i finished off with some step ups. just couldn't help myself. i wanted to really finish the legs off and i did. i like to step up high as opposed to low (like a pump class or something)
so:
pushdowns 4 heavy sets and a back of set of 12 reps
leg curls 3 heavy working sets
squats 3 sets 20,15,12.
walk outs 2 heavy sets
jog 20 min.
step ups 3 sets
the entire session lasted just over an hour.
i love picking up heavy stuff. that's well known, but this current cycle revolves around me getting ready to go for a 6k run through muck, mud, trees, wet grass and hills ( I've also been promised some walls and ropes to climb and nets to crawl under).
today's a lower body day so it went something like this.
rope pushdowns
yes, i know i said this was a lower body day buts here's the crux, I'm abusing the crap out of this exercise at the moment. I'll do it as many days in a row as i can keep adding reps or weight to it. then when i plateau I'll give it a rest. often I'll do them while i get everything else set up.
leg curls
just did 1 warm up set then jumped right into the heavy stuff ( i know where my limits are by now so sometimes i have extended warm ups and some time they are brief). I do these lying on the floor with a dumbbell currently ( i will post more on leg curls later)
squats; taking it easy at the moment working with these. the emphasis here is trying to get rock bottom, which for me, barefoot is just below parallel. I thought i was going wayyy down but nope, only about 2" below parallel. after watching myself on video, Olympic squaters impress the hell out of me. mentally my ass is on the my heals but the evidence says otherwise. today i kept my time down to no more than 15 minutes on these. so lighter weight, higher reps.
walk outs. okay, i can't help myself. k like picking up heavy shit, heavy being a relative term. some guys would laugh at these weights (westside) I like these for the challenge, but also for the core and structural work
now here's where it gets funny (ozzy pops into my head singing 'breaking all the rules")
i went for a 20 min jog. this is about achieving what i need for the fitness of running through muck. getting my respiratory system in shape. It also adds volume to the leg work. because of the previous leg work, I'm already warmed up at the get go instead of the normal 4:30 it usually takes when i run.
when i got back to the gym i finished off with some step ups. just couldn't help myself. i wanted to really finish the legs off and i did. i like to step up high as opposed to low (like a pump class or something)
so:
pushdowns 4 heavy sets and a back of set of 12 reps
leg curls 3 heavy working sets
squats 3 sets 20,15,12.
walk outs 2 heavy sets
jog 20 min.
step ups 3 sets
the entire session lasted just over an hour.
this set up makes the rope pushdowns we use/do a bit more user friendly. now you know i like to take the hard road, however, with the rope over the top bar, the friction generated at heavier weights makes the rope increasingly difficult to move, hence why it makes a good anchor wrapped around a tree when you're trying to lower something. this is simply a thick pvc pipe slid around the safety pin of the power rack . still hard to do the exercise but your rope will last longer and you'll get more even increases in your strength curve/ weight ratio.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
'I hate everything we do, but I like the result'
Well I'm glad you like the result but if you hate the work, go find something you like. You shouldn't be miserable chasing your goals. There is no easy way out, but there should be some physical activity you like.?. Don't like the gym, take up surfing.
'I hate everything we do, but I like the result'
This statement always gets under my skin, but gives me some good practice at self control. I get to hear it a lot. Be clear in your goals, be clear about the results you want, for goodness sake, start being a bit realistic.
life and training is all about the journey; the destination is one brief moment in time that will come and go and become a faded memory with only picture of rememberance or maybe a trophy that soon looses its emotional appeal. the journey can take years, decades.
not only should you stop and smell the roses, you should watch the bees and feel the texture of the petal and the prick of the thorn.
Primordial Athletics is all about the effort required to bring about change, to rise above the status quo.
despite the latest crap on late night tv and whatever fad happens to be passing through the era, there is no quick fix, (not a healthy one at any rate), there is no easy way. Gyms are full of people enslaved to the local market machine mentality that never go anywhere. 20 years down the track they are exactly the same as when they began. don't spin in circles. find something you enjoy.
find something you like
find something you love.
you should be saying 'i love what we do and i love the results'
don't like busting your ass in my training sessions?
take up surfing,
become an amature runner
take up athletics
join a softball league
take up martial arts
hell, become an yoga yogi.
yes we get great results, but you should look foward to your sessions, not dread them. Life is full enough of hard slogs.
love what you do
and
invest in yourself with effort.
Well I'm glad you like the result but if you hate the work, go find something you like. You shouldn't be miserable chasing your goals. There is no easy way out, but there should be some physical activity you like.?. Don't like the gym, take up surfing.
'I hate everything we do, but I like the result'
This statement always gets under my skin, but gives me some good practice at self control. I get to hear it a lot. Be clear in your goals, be clear about the results you want, for goodness sake, start being a bit realistic.
life and training is all about the journey; the destination is one brief moment in time that will come and go and become a faded memory with only picture of rememberance or maybe a trophy that soon looses its emotional appeal. the journey can take years, decades.
not only should you stop and smell the roses, you should watch the bees and feel the texture of the petal and the prick of the thorn.
Primordial Athletics is all about the effort required to bring about change, to rise above the status quo.
despite the latest crap on late night tv and whatever fad happens to be passing through the era, there is no quick fix, (not a healthy one at any rate), there is no easy way. Gyms are full of people enslaved to the local market machine mentality that never go anywhere. 20 years down the track they are exactly the same as when they began. don't spin in circles. find something you enjoy.
find something you like
find something you love.
you should be saying 'i love what we do and i love the results'
don't like busting your ass in my training sessions?
take up surfing,
become an amature runner
take up athletics
join a softball league
take up martial arts
hell, become an yoga yogi.
yes we get great results, but you should look foward to your sessions, not dread them. Life is full enough of hard slogs.
love what you do
and
invest in yourself with effort.
lookin for the cold
granny didn't have much money, they were about a poor as you can ever be. but she did have a great bid air conditioner stuck in the window of a little ante room. when we were kids we'd run in from the blistering Arkansas summer and sit in front of that big damn noisy machine and freeze our nipples hard. if water had ever been spilt on the floor we'd have been able to ice skate on it. it was cold enough that you couldn't wait to go back outside and warm up again.
i went for a run today. it was hot and muggy and granny and her air conditioned ante room is what i remembered.
i went for a run today. it was hot and muggy and granny and her air conditioned ante room is what i remembered.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
pushdowns
I'm always looking for new (more difficult) ways of doing things.
normally at the gym we use bands; which ones we use are dictated by the users strength and goals for the session. but i figure, I've got this rope lying around I'm going to try something different.
now what I've come up with is pretty hard. toss the rope over the power bar and push down. KISS.
here's the nuts and bolts.
vary your reps and set ranges like you normally would (i.e. whatever you need to achieve your current goals)
you need a thick bar to throw the rope over. the thin bar is to small a fulcrum
adjust your hand grip every few reps left over right; right over left
if you do this exercise you can't help but get strong triceps and tendons. it will make everything across the shoulder girdle stronger. think kinetic chain.
normally at the gym we use bands; which ones we use are dictated by the users strength and goals for the session. but i figure, I've got this rope lying around I'm going to try something different.
now what I've come up with is pretty hard. toss the rope over the power bar and push down. KISS.
here's the nuts and bolts.
vary your reps and set ranges like you normally would (i.e. whatever you need to achieve your current goals)
you need a thick bar to throw the rope over. the thin bar is to small a fulcrum
adjust your hand grip every few reps left over right; right over left
if you do this exercise you can't help but get strong triceps and tendons. it will make everything across the shoulder girdle stronger. think kinetic chain.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
no rowing machine, so what
no rowing machine, no problem.
jump stretch bands; giant rubber bands
I'm generally the first person to avoid a rowing machine. I mean, I'd much rather be rowing a boat. you're just not going to have the same result, in any way, on a machine in the gym.
having said that, I'm willing to give things a go, so I've been putting myself through some various cardio pases on the rowing machine; my version.
what i have found so far:
*the movement pattern is very different from a machine, this however allows for a greater variety of movement and greater range of mimicking various rowing options. (think paddle trajectories and specificity.)(if you're an martial artist this has some pretty neat implications)
*eccentric movement: the bands make this a pretty good lower back exercise due to the nature of the eccentric contraction. I've never encountered a rowing machine with eccentric movement, the bands however have you under resistance as you return to the start position.
*constant pressure. rowing against the band keeps you under a constant contraction throughout the movement. pretty good idea for contact sports (mma) where relaxing means dying.
*grip; i found the bands, especially when i used a handle gave my forearms a good thrashing.
*cardio output. to bring yourself into a cardio range you need to apply more mental discipline, especially if your doing short bursts ( that would be 1 min. minimum).
*you can't gage distance work so you have to play with time; work versus rest; i also counted strokes (ugh-no puns please) during work sets. by watching the time and counting the reps i was able to monitor my work load.
like everything i will keep these on board for a while and then cycle through them. by using revolving parameters i can keep them in my cycle for a longer period of time. (until i feel they've outlived their usefulness.)
my client find these punishing.
this adds another multidimensional weapon to your arsenal.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
top 10 ways to develop super strength
1) pick heavy shit up off the ground
2) pick heavy shit up off the ground
3) pick heavy shit up off the ground
4) pick heavy shit up off the ground
5) pick heavy shit up off the ground
6) pick heavy shit up off the ground
7) pick heavy shit up off the ground
8) pick heavy shit up off the ground
9) pick heavy shit up off the ground
and......
10) pick heavy shit up off the ground
Monday, January 9, 2012
cops
the news today: police officer suffers heart attack after training run!
well, why?
the coroner reckons that police officers should look into participation in a fitness program.
i could cry.
HELLO!
I've spent time and energy trying to get the local constablery interested in coming down to the gym. The treadmill in the police gym and few 15 min. talk sessions with a heavy bag twice a week aren't going to get anyone in shape let alone in shape to chase down a perp after spending the last 6 hours sitting in your cruiser.
innappropriate sleeping paterns and junkfood diets are just icing on the cake for a body wide meltdown.
cops should be spending a lot of time on the road and hills and over the obastacle course.
3 days a week with a heavy push pull routine and attention to diet. Eating foods that aren't going to kill you.
like I always say, you should be able to put down your fork and wrestle with the kids or the dog or an orangatang.
i get really aggrivated when stories like this come out. I'm right here. Its worth your while to see me. I've been there. I've seen the police getting dominated by the unrighteous.
cops need to train and train hard.
as funny as it may seem , you'd think cops would have that mentality. hard men and women. going hard. but it doesn't seem to be that way.
please. look me up. i will help you live longer, stronger, healthier.
well, why?
the coroner reckons that police officers should look into participation in a fitness program.
i could cry.
HELLO!
I've spent time and energy trying to get the local constablery interested in coming down to the gym. The treadmill in the police gym and few 15 min. talk sessions with a heavy bag twice a week aren't going to get anyone in shape let alone in shape to chase down a perp after spending the last 6 hours sitting in your cruiser.
innappropriate sleeping paterns and junkfood diets are just icing on the cake for a body wide meltdown.
cops should be spending a lot of time on the road and hills and over the obastacle course.
3 days a week with a heavy push pull routine and attention to diet. Eating foods that aren't going to kill you.
like I always say, you should be able to put down your fork and wrestle with the kids or the dog or an orangatang.
i get really aggrivated when stories like this come out. I'm right here. Its worth your while to see me. I've been there. I've seen the police getting dominated by the unrighteous.
cops need to train and train hard.
as funny as it may seem , you'd think cops would have that mentality. hard men and women. going hard. but it doesn't seem to be that way.
please. look me up. i will help you live longer, stronger, healthier.
been a while
its been awhile since i've written here, i've been sidetracked but its a new year so lets have a new start and see what happens.
i've just got in from a great end of year/begining of year tour, and while on tour i had meant to train. get stuck into my running and train with whatever nature provided.
but i didn't. i rested when i wasn't working. which meant very little rest, however, my body broke from its routine and recouperated a bit. it needed the layoff although it was only a 2 weeks. it was two weeks away from any real training protocals.
sometimes you just need a break.
in the past , at christmas, all the gym bunnies were looking for their new place to train for the christmas period. buying temporary memberships at various other gyms, while i always took the time off. i figured it was the only rest i was getting all year. this tour reminded me of that old habit. its good to rest sometimes.
i've just got in from a great end of year/begining of year tour, and while on tour i had meant to train. get stuck into my running and train with whatever nature provided.
but i didn't. i rested when i wasn't working. which meant very little rest, however, my body broke from its routine and recouperated a bit. it needed the layoff although it was only a 2 weeks. it was two weeks away from any real training protocals.
sometimes you just need a break.
in the past , at christmas, all the gym bunnies were looking for their new place to train for the christmas period. buying temporary memberships at various other gyms, while i always took the time off. i figured it was the only rest i was getting all year. this tour reminded me of that old habit. its good to rest sometimes.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)