Sunday, March 23, 2014

Forest for the trees

Been there done that?

Ever notice that when you have a sore tooth your tongue won't leave the spot alone. Keeps returning to it even though you already know it's there and sore?


Then throughout the day it becomes the background of everything you do and think. You perceive good news is a little less good. Bad news a little worse, etc etc. The day takes a little more out of you. You know what I mean, we have all been there.




So what does this mean to me?

Think about that and think about what that means insofar as counting calories. In you are constantly thinking about calories and food values, where will you mind be? Where will you attention be turned. What will be the color of you mood as a result of this?

Working with clients over the years I have coined a new term and a new way to think about calories.  Rather than counting them we can Mind them.  There are plenty of internet tools out there to help you do this and believe it or not once you get into the groove it's kinda fun.  It winds up being a tools in your toolbox rather than a yoke on your mind.


Something to think about as we move about in the real world

Stay tuned true believers.  There's always something around the corner.



Friday, March 14, 2014

Bullet Points





If you have been reading about how to improve your health and fitness for any length of time some of the quickies I am writing out today are somewhere along the "duh" end of the knowledge continuum. Move on quickly.

There is a lot of good useful information out there, however unless you get it before it gets tossed into the commerce grist you will not get very much out of it. Good information, like Tabata style training, gets dumbed down or altered for the purposes of convenience and salability diminishing it's value, substantially.

So here is a quick list of basic things to have in your mental editor when you read about the next new product or training style, or as you start to put your own programs together.

* You lose FAT by creating a caloric deficit- Caloric deficit simply means using more calories than you take in. Burning more than you eat. For better or worse it's largely about the math. Don't get TOO caught up in the math.

* Train the way you are going to play - If you want to train for a sport, define the movement needs and design around that. If you are trying to get healthier define what your issues are and train to mitigate them. If you are trying to get fitter, define what fit means to you and look at the building blocks that will get you there. This is sometimes called Reverse Engineering.

* Big moves do more than small moves. The more muscles you move the more calories you burn. Multi joint big moves more reflect real life.

* Something is always better than nothing.

* Warm up and cool down ARE AS IMPORTANT as the workout.

* Warm up and cool down ARE AS IMPORTANT as the workout.

* Treat your training like a Dr. appointment. It's that important.

* Treat your training as a chance to play again. Find opportunities to nurture the playful.

That should do for now. Read, Think, Digest. Get back to me on it's usefulness

All the best,
Steve

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Breathing 101





I would almost guarantee that if you are reading this you are breathing.  Lungs expand air goes in, lungs contract air goes out.  Roughly 8409600 breathes a year, give or take a whole lot.


So you have this down? Nothing I can tell you about it?


OK let me ASK you a couple of things.


What muscles are involved in breathing.  How many.  Do THEY burn calories like other muscles in our bodies?


Does the old adage "Use it or lose it" apply to these muscles?


Do the breathing muscles need to be stretched to stay supple and flexible like other muscles?


Does posture affect breathing?  Does mood?


So run through that and I want to throw one other question at you, but actually just a statement (We here at FitnessNexus are very keen on full disclosure).




Did you know that breathing is the only process in the body that is both voluntary and autonomic?  Yeah, marinate on that for a minute. 


You can consciously control your breath, up to a point at least, but the body will take care of it automatically (WHEW) most of the time.


So don't be so smug you breath-o-philes


There's always more to learn true believers so as always, stay tuned

Monday, March 10, 2014

Living in a three dimensional world part II

At the end of the last post I mentioned that in addition to increased strength and injury prevention working our bodies and limbs through all potential angles was also good for the brain.


Here's why;  Our brains are interactive.  You probably already know this.  We take in information, analyze it, use it as seems appropriate.   You know that reading and learning throughout life helps keep the neurons firing and developing.  The old adage "use it or lose it" applies here.


While it is obvious in academic learning and in life it is less obvious in movement. 


In the case of movement the data is not external like reading a book or figuring out how to nail  together a door frame.  Learning movement is mostly internal.  In this case the data is sent to the brain by sensors we have throughout the body called proprioceptors.  These proprioceptors constantly feed information to our brain about how our body and limbs are aligned, how quickly they are moving and how much tension is being put on the muscles, tendons and joints. 


The more and varied the data the more the brain has to process and analyze and the more capeable it becomes. 


Instead of "push ups hurt my shoulder" the dialogue becomes "The left shoulder was higher than the right and the push up was harder on the left side"  The ability to identify subtle changes in the body BY FEEL helps performance but it also challenges the brain.




This subject was worth a two part talk because as neuroscience continues to develop we are learning about the very powerful interaction between movement and mental health.  We are moving away from a mechanistic view of ourselves and our bodies to an organic one where everything touches and affects everything else.  As we evolve our view of our bodies so we evolve our view of the world.


Stay tuned true believers. There is always more to learn.


All the best
Steve

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Living in a three dimensional world


I had some of my best feedback ever upon ending a class.  The client, already pretty fit came up to me and said what was shocking to her was that when she did my class it didn't seem all that hard, but she noticed when she took other instructor's bootcamp classes after taking a few weeks of mine, THEIR classes were a lot easier.



She wanted to know what was the secret of her getting stronger, more endurance, more control and stamina without me killing her to do it.



Not a GREAT secret but a good one.



Circular training.



In most training we move and think like our limbs (arms and legs) are piston like, they go out and they go back, they go up and they go down, in and out. 



In reality our muscles are not attached in straight lines parallel to the bones.  Mostly the muscles sweep in a gentle arc spiraling around the bone (to varying degrees).  That means when they contract the motion is somewhat circular, other muscles counter that to keep the motion in a straight(ish) line.



By working in a spiral, twining fashion we use the body as it was designed, and by following this smart natural design we get stronger with less perceived effort and as a bonus we avoid injury and, believe it or not (believe it) we get just a wee bit smarter.



Have I blown your 2D world, let me know.


Stay tuned true believers.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Spectrum

Once, a long time ago a client came back to me a few days after our last session.  She was depressed.  She had stopped her walking program on my advice.


Shocked me because I never gave such advice.


The conversation was the merits, nay, the necessity of pushing the body past it's normal functioning.  As most of you know it is this push that causes adaptation.


She was an avid walker.  Walking was not a challenge for her, at least the way she did it, and so she reasoned that she should give up walking.


I then explained that there are a lot of good things to walking.  Health and balance in our lives is not solely tied to the growth and change of hardware and software.  It ties into, and stems from a lot of factors.


She was happy again.


The moral of the story.  Don't throw the baby out with the bath water.  Don't put fitness in a box.  We, all of us, have to strive to work out the blueprint of our minds and bodies until the very last day.


Stay tuned true believers.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

What rest means



Short one today True Believers:


What does rest mean..to you.
Is it sleep, is it brain dead via TV or other diversions.
Is it the quiet of a walk in the woods.


I will propose this question to help you reflect on what rest means to you.


How do you feel after you have applied your version of rest?


Take your time, get back to me when you can.


Until next time....