Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Review of scooby

In this entry I'll offer a review of a site I stumbled across when looking up fitness information about a year or two ago. The URL for that site is www.scoobysworkshop.com.

I was pleasantly surprised when I found this site--mainly because the author of the site and I share similar fitness philosophies. The author of that site goes by the nickname "scooby," by the way, thus the title of this entry.

Scooby demonstrates bench press
It was refreshing to find scooby's site because, unlike the vast majority of fitness sites on the internet, he's not trying to sell you anything. Rather, he advises against buying expensive equipment and/or instructional material, encouraging readers to buy just a few used weights. His workouts are designed to be performed in a home setting, so gym memberships are likewise not promoted by him.

What's more, scooby even provides a wealth of material, including instructional videos, all for free. I would definitely advise anyone interested in starting a fitness regime to check his site. Even rank beginners can find useful material there--he's not at all elitist in his approach.

And he's not an amateur either. By his own admission, he's been lifting weights for 30 years--another reason I felt a kinship with him; he's pretty close to my age. His fitness pursuits all these years seem to have focused mainly on bodybuilding.

Which will clue you in to the aspect of his site that I find not so helpful. As you will know if you've read other entries in this blog, I'm not really interested in developing bigger muscles--"bulking up" as they call it in some circles. For one thing, I don't think there's a whole lot bulking I could do at 51 years of age, even if I wanted to. But then there's the fact that I wasn't interested in developing a bodybuilder's physique even in my younger years when it would have been feasible.

For my taste, there's too much emphasis on scooby's site on things like gaining muscle mass and reducing body fat--both obsessions for those who go in for bodybuilding. That said, he does have a good deal of information that can be helpful to those such as myself who are not pursuing a bodybuilder's physique. It just takes some ferreting around to find it.

For example he's got some good nutrition information and even recipes. And his videos give good demonstrations of proper form for various exercises. Scooby also provides a review of P90X which happens to agree pretty substantially with my own review written a couple of years ago.

So, all in all, scooby's site is a net positive. Anyone interested in fitness is bound to benefit from having a look. So, go check him out!

On the fitness front, we decided to take a week off this week. We're moving from one apartment to another so we're getting exercise from that. And we just give ourselves a break from time to time during the year. This is one of those times.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Blood pressure update

I need to offer an update on my blood pressure issue--high blood pressure readings having been a major factor in the development of my current exercise regime and in the institution of this blog. But before getting to that matter, I'll need to address another health issue that I've suspected might be related to the increased blood pressure--insomnia--as well as a new medication I've been taking in response to that issue. Follow me?

I finally decided to see a specialist this past summer about my insomnia issue, i.e., a doctor who specializes in sleep disorders. I described my problem and what I'd done so far about it--mainly, that I'd used zolpidem with limited success. She decided to offer a new medication; Lyrica.

Long story short, Lyrica has been fairly effective in resolving the insomnia issues. It's not the "silver bullet" by any means. I still have difficult nights on occasion. But it is the most effective sleep aid I've tried to date, and compared to life without Lyrica, the old "night and day" adage applies: I am sleeping much, much, better.

No more rising after only 3 or 4 hours in bed because I can't get back to sleep after having awoken for the 10th time. No, on almost any night I take the Pregabalin (Lyrica) I am in bed for at least 7 hours. I may not sleep as deeply as I should, and may still wake up a few times during the course of the night, but I don't have much problem falling back to sleep when that happens. So, the quality of sleep I'm getting has improved markedly over the past few months.

Now, back to the blood pressure issue. I'm no longer taking blood pressure readings with any regularity, as anyone who's looked at my blog entries on this subject over the last 9 months or so will know. But I do still get measurements taken when I have a doctor's visit or some medical procedure. And I stopped taking some time over the course of the summer when we were doing a lot of biking, the medication (hydrochlorothiazide) I'd been given for high blood pressure. I've taken that only a few times over the last several months.

The last few times my blood pressure has been measured, it's been pretty close to normal--systolic from about 122-132 and diastolic in the lower 80's. And that's a great relief, i.e., to be heading into winter, when my blood pressure usually goes up, with blood pressure pretty close to normal despite being off hydrochlorothiazide.

I hope what's happening here is that my supposition that chronic insomnia was causing my blood pressure to rise is correct, and that the Lyrica, which has greatly increased my quality/quantity of sleep, is what's brought this about. While I don't like the idea of taking Lyrica long-term, it seems at the moment the lesser of two evils: it might keep my blood pressure in check while allowing me to go off hydrochlorothiazide.

I remain on the lookout for alternative sleep aids. But that's a subject for a future entry.

Monday, November 22, 2010

13-14 miles over the weekend . . .

Our cycling mileage has definitely gone way down now. We're hoping we might get in 10-12 miles today--still waiting to see if the weather holds out.

Ok, so if we might get in 10-12 miles today, why am I crowing (in this entry's title) about having done 13-14 miles over the whole weekend? Well, here's why: because we didn't do that on the bike. We walked 13-14 miles--about 6.5 on Sat. and about 7.5 on Sun. We even carried packs and hauled home a few groceries on those trips.

Granted, there's nothing "sexy" about that kind of workout. But you still feel it, and I have no doubts whatever that it is a good fitness activity. After all, walking's been nearly the sole form of human fitness activities from the dawn of human history--which, as some would tell us, began when man "left the trees."

So, we're back to mixing in some walking now that the weather's not too favorable for cycling. And we love it. I recommend you give it a try.

Instead of jumping in your car to drive to your local fitness center, why not walk, then cut your workout a little short? Or even replace your cardio workout altogether with a good, long walk--and do some errands along the way to convince yourself that fitness and practicality don't have to be polar opposites.

I could go on a good, long rant about that, i.e., about segregating fitness from other life activities, something done in isolation from them--some sort of fitness purist attitude, I suppose. But, maybe I'll rant some other time.

Try walking! We have, and we love it!

Friday, November 12, 2010

New phase begins soon

We'll be ending our alternate modified P90X phase soon. We started it back in May, I think, as a new experiment in changing up our routine over the course of the year. It was intended to allow us to focus more on cycling, and a little less on the upper-body strength training we do to augment that.

Alt-Mod-P90X was to last for as long as we could put in decent mileage on the bike outdoors, and that time is pretty much here. The daylight hours have shortened considerably, so that limits riding time. Though the weather so far has been fairly mild--and we got in some nice, shorter rides this past week, there have been periods when we've had to resort to the stationary bikes indoors. All that spells the impending end of this Alt-Mod-P90X phase for this year, and back to one of our other, twice-weekly upper-body workout routines.

I wanted to make the change this week, but I got really sick last weekend. I'm still recovering. So we're taking a week off before beginning the new phase--it'll start next week. At that point, we'll go back to our modified Power90 phase.

I continue to think about ways in which we might further vary our upper-body strength training. I've considered kettlebells, but no immediate plans for that--other than a huge design improvement in the equipment that I'd like to make (soft instead of hard kettlebells). Maybe I'll post some details about that plan later.

Other than that, what I'd really like to try is some basic heavy lifting--something along the lines of geriatric power-lifting. It looks interesting and various things I've read recommend incorporating heavy weights. Problem is, the equipment. I don't want to buy a whole bunch of weight to keep around: I'd certainly only use it for a very small part of the year--and maybe not even every year. Likewise, I'm not too hot on paying to use the weights elsewhere. Having an (admittedly modest) exercise facility right in the building where you live kind of spoils you: no expense, no travel time to and from the gym, etc.

So those remain abstract ideas for now. I'd like to try them, but it's gotta fit into our schedule and budget, and at the moment I can't see how it would. And we've got something that seems to work pretty well for now.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

End of season conditioning

We managed to get in a 50-mile day, about which I was pleased. We even managed to get in a 60-mile day, about which I'm even more pleased. So I think I can truthfully say that we're pretty much where we were at, fitness-wise, prior to going on vacation at the end of the summer.

The signs are all there. The lactic acid build-up that occurs when riding really hard up hills and that makes you wonder whether you can still keep your legs moving when you're near the summit, becomes less bothersome--you feel some soreness but the pain is not such that you wonder whether you can keep moving. I wonder, by the way, what is the explanation behind this aspect of fitness? The weight is still down: by the way, I've been hovering at right around 200 since toward the end of summer, sometimes a pound or two below, sometimes a pound or two above.

I think this signals that the end of cycling season is just about here. We won't have too many more nice days for riding. If we'll see another 50, I don't know. But I hope so--at least maybe one last day this season.

And probably around the beginning of November is when we'll go back to our twice-weekly strength-training workouts (the modified Power90 phase). Less time for cycling, more time--and energy--to work the upper body.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Where I'm at now

This is a follow-up to my post about resuming exercise after vacation, having not done much intense exercise for about 3 weeks. As a means for providing you with what I hope may be helpful information, what were the effects of the 3-week break? And how long has it taken/is it taking to get back to my previous level of fitness?

First, a couple of caveats. Our most intense exercise season is summer, and it's more intense because on some days we're spending 6 or 7 hours exercising (long bike rides). And when we're not spending that long, we're spending at least an hour, and oftentimes more, on the bike. Compare that to the half-hour to 45-minute stints we do in winter. We can expect a big difference in terms of conditioning in those two seasons, right?

Well, when we left for vacation we were pretty close to the peak of that intense exercise period--maybe just a little on the downhill side of it. And now, having arrived back from that 3-week break, we are really beginning to wind down the more intense part of the fitness year: the days are growing shorter and cooler, so the opportunities for long bike rides are dwindling.

How wish we could get in another 70-mile day this season! But we'll be lucky if we can get in one more 50-mile day, I think.

I think that covers my caveats. The salient point to draw from all of that is that we're winding down our intense physical activity season, and so are beginning the portion of the year in which our fitness level is correspondingly lower. What I'll say, in a nutshell, then, is that we won't be getting back soon to the level of fitness we had prior to going on vacation: we'll be aiming for that middle of next summer, instead.

So, how are we doing in terms of getting back into the fitness routine after our 3-week break? Pretty good, I'd say. Those first few bike rides I did not at all have the feeling I had prior to vacation, when I had plenty of strength to get up hills and then recovered quickly afterward. No, it actually surprised me what a struggle it was to get up those hills the first few rides, and how winded I felt. Likewise, that first alternate modified P90X workout was tough, and I felt like I was functioning at about half capacity (lingering jet lag didn't help, either). I was slightly worried.

But we've now gone for our eighth ride or so--including a 34-mile day--and I feel my conditioning coming back pretty good. Likewise, our last alternate modified P90X session went pretty well--only a few "sissy push-ups" during the second half of the routine.

All that to say that, when it comes down to it, it's taken me about 3 weeks of our regular workouts to get somewhere close to where we were before taking our 3-week break. Pretty sensible, when you think about it: a break of X days will require X days of re-acclimation.

I don't know if this formula is age-related. Would I need that much time if I were, say, in my twenties, to get near the condition I'd been in before the break? I would guess not, but that's just a guess.

But this blog is for people around 50 who are getting into, or sustaining fitness, so I'm not really interested in figuring out the recovery-to-age quotient. It suits my purposes to say "hey, if you're around 50 and you take a break from fitness of X days, you'll need about X days to get close to the fitness level you were at when you started your break." I hope that proves helpful to someone.

Sometime soon I'll offer another entry mulling the purpose of this blog, it's direction, and what I intend to do with it as contrasted with other blogs. Stay tuned.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Kinda like starting from scratch . . . well, almost

Three weeks away from our exercise routine. It's not like we just laid on our butts all that time, though. We at least put in many miles walking.

But getting back to our alternate modified P90X has gone slowly. That first session was a killer that had my arm muscles trembling all evening afterward. And I took it pretty easy during the workout since jet lag has not yet worn off and I was feeling kind of out of it (bad headache). I'm feeling soreness today, too, but it's not as bad as I thought it might be. It'll be interesting to see how long it will take to get "back to form" in terms of upper body fitness.

And we've taken a couple of shorter rides as well. Hope to get in some miles this weekend--hopefully 30-plus each day.

So three weeks off is a definite fitness setback. It was a needed break and I'm glad we did it. But we'll be playing catch-up now for a bit.

BTW: The wife gained 5 lbs. on our vacation while I lost 2 lbs. One of the grave injustices of life!

Monday, August 16, 2010

So we're going along . . .

Sadly, we had to cut way down on mileage on the bike recently owing to a writing deadline I was trying to meet. But we've kept at it, getting in 5 - 10 miles on biking days or, worst case scenario, a half hour on the stationary bike.

We also had to cut in half our alternate modified P90X sessions a couple of times since we got started too late. But only twice.

Last week we did the full session we had scheduled. And over the weekend we managed to get in a couple of 25-mile days.

We'll have to make a break soon, since vacation is coming up. I'm torn about whether to just stop exercise routines during that time: I know we're bound to do a lot of walking, so it's not like we'll be just laying around all day.

Somehow a total break seems the right thing to do. I know I'll miss exercising. And that should help us to get back to it with a vengeance after we return from vacation.

Just a few thoughts . . .

Monday, July 19, 2010

Just another update . . .

Well, my weight has come down, as I expected it would. That could be due in some measure to some unusually bad stomach issues I've had lately, though. In any case, I'm down to about 200 lbs. now.

We've continued riding and doing strength training pretty regularly--just a couple days off recently. We rode almost 50 miles just a couple of days ago. I was so sick the next day, though (unrelated to the 50-mile ride, I think), that I didn't exercise at all.

But plenty of activities lie ahead. I don't know if we'll manage to get that 100-mile day this summer--it's looking a little doubtful now.

I'll close this entry with a little musing: why is there so little information available, both in terms of technical studies, and in the form of more mass-consumption sites (like this blog) on aging athletes? In case you need a hint, well, aging athletes are not very sexy now, are they? Perhaps more on that later.

Monday, July 5, 2010

How to pace yourself (and maybe why?): new use for the heart-rate monitor

Another long-delayed entry. We did almost 70 miles the other day, so cycling condition is nearing its peak now. I really hope to be able to put in a 100-mile day this year, though that may be unrealistic. We'll see.

Also, DVD 9 (chest, shoulders, and triceps) from our alternate modified P90X is rough. My triceps are still a little stiff from our workout last week.

In this entry, I'd like to talk a bit about a subject I've brought up previously--pacing oneself. I've blogged about not overdoing fitness so that it doesn't become a burden. I alluded to how I would get burnt out on training back in my bike racing days because I was always trying to go all out whenever I was on the bike: I didn't vary training intensity enough.

Well, I find that I'm doing a little of that now. I want to ride hard when we go out for a ride. And I end up sort of gauging my output by whether I can catch someone ahead of me, or whether we get passed--not such a good idea when you're on a tandem where one rider is quite a bit stronger than the other (you're actually getting a whole lot harder workout than whomever you're trying to catch, since he is probably not essentially towing his partner).

I think doing that could not just get me burnt out on riding, but it could actually stress out my system. I've noted previously how one intense chase session sort of put me out of commission for a few days. So, how to put a governor on the effort?

Well, it might seem pretty obvious to others, but it came as kind of a revelation to me. First, I decided I might try doing some walking in place of cycling, since it's pretty hard to overexert yourself walking. So I did one day of that. But then I got to thinking, why don't I wear my heart-rate monitor and use that to curb my efforts a bit?

So I tried it. And it turns out to be a really ideal way to do it. What I did was to decide on a certain heart rate as a sort of upper limit: I'd try not to exceed that amount.

150 bpm works well for me. At around that rate I'll get a decent aerobic workout, but it really doesn't stress me in any way. It helps me to hold back a bit on the physical output, but at the same time I know I'm getting a good workout. So I'm very happy this simple solution finally dawned on me.

In fact, I used it on our 70-mile ride. I tried to keep the heart rate at or below 150 with the idea that, if toward the end I felt I still had energy to up the pace a bit, I would. So I did for a few miles prior to the end of the ride (I sustained 160-165 for probably 15-20 minutes). Seemed to work really well.

Then there's the matter of pacing yourself, and why and how you should do it if you're not a competing athlete. Ok, athletes--or at least smart athletes--follow a training schedule that aims to get them in peak form at a certain point, in preparation for a certain event. So they take it easier at the beginning of their preparation, gradually increasing intensity. Then, not long before the event for which they're preparing, they often taper off the intensity.

Well, all that doesn't really apply to me, since I'm not preparing for any competition. I don't need to "peak" physically at any particular time. What I need to do is just to keep active.

Anyway, I'm still puzzling out how I should approach that. I'll offer further thoughts on that later.

Monday, June 21, 2010

We both agree . . .

Gotta get over some blogging inertia, so here goes . . .

There're actually a number of things I could have been blogging about. We put in a little over 50 miles in one day a couple of weeks ago, so that's worth writing about. It was a tough ride, made tougher by the fact that rain finally hit about 3/4's of the way through. And as fate would have it, the hardest rain, where we got almost completely drenched, started about 5 blocks from home. A very slight amount of consolation was provided by the fact that the new bike at least has fenders: I guess we could have gotten very slightly more soaked had we been riding a bike without them.

Then, we did almost 40 miles about a week later and were also hit by some rain. But the rain was less intense and didn't last too long, so we dried out quite a bit by the time we reached home. That ride was not memorable for either the mileage or the rain, but rather for the intensity.

There was a rider ahead of us that I was determined to catch. It wasn't too hard to catch him, but he decided he didn't want to be passed and overtook us, riding harder to try and stay away. I wasn't about to let him out of our sights, so I kept chasing. We eventually caught and passed him again.

Now, that was an intense ride--it took a lot out of me. I'd say it was several days before I got fully recovered. This year it seems to me age is really catching up in terms of how hard I can ride and how long it takes me to recover. Or it could be that long-standing health problems, not the least of which is insomnia, are taking their toll. But I'm still at it.

But none of that has anything to do with the title of this entry--those are not things we agree about (not that I really checked, but . . .). No, the title of this entry refers to our strength training, and specifically to the alternate modified P90X we're now doing.

We've now completed a full, 4-week cycle and are two rounds into our second cycle. And what we (the wife and I) agree on is that the modified Power 90 routines we do are much more intense than the alternate modified P90X we do.

I've previously blogged about how I don't get nearly as winded when doing the P90X routines we use. That's because there are lots of breaks interspersed, meant, in part, to allow you time to write down reps/weight information. And as you'll note from previous blog entries, we don't record any of that stuff. So we use all these mini breaks for ballistic stretching and recovery.

I'm still sweaty at the end, but not completely winded as I am at the end of the Power 90 routines we use. No, I'm much more wasted after those--they provide much more of an aerobic workout.

I was really, really sore after the very first round of our alternate modified P90X this year, though. I think that was due largely to the fact that I'd not done any pull-ups/chin-ups since last fall. I think those are what got me really sore (I actually do the sissy variety, by the way, meaning assisted). The second cycle of alternate modified P90X did not see me nearly as sore for as long, though.

I'm beginning to miss our twice-weekly strength-training workouts. I'll probably keep up the current, once-weekly, regime throughout the summer, but am already looking forward to when we can go back to the twice-weekly schedule.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Benefits of missing workouts?

It must seem like I sort of dropped off the fitness radar map. Wow, over 2 weeks without posting! And in a sense, I did drop off the fitness radar map--or maybe I just flew under the radar for a time.

Here's the deal. I had to make a trip out east on short notice and, almost immediately on arriving back home, we were slated to take a short vacation out of town.

I knew we'd have to take a bit of a break from our fitness pursuits, but our plan was to minimize the time off. As anyone who's read a few of my blog entires will know, I don't hesitate to take breaks now and then--I think a healthy fitness regime needs to include breaks. Perhaps I differ from fitbomb--who seems quite manic about maintaining his fitness pursuits--in my philosophy on fitness.

But the break I had planned actually got extended by quite a lot. Had everything gone to plan, we'd have done our alternate modified P90X late last week and would have been back at cycling again today. But things didn't go according to plan.

The main hindrance was a canceled flight that was supposed to get me back home in time to start the planned vacation. Instead of getting in on that flight, I ended up having to take another that got me in almost 24 hours late. Thus, we started and ended the planned vacation late. Needless to say, fitness plans needed to change as well.

So, it's now 2 weeks since we did any strength training. Moreover, it will be almost 2 weeks, once we get back to cycling, since I've been on the bike.

I could say that's not good, but that doesn't really capture what I want to convey with this entry. What I want to convey is that we miss doing our fitness pursuits. Because of the increased break, we have a longing to get back to it. And I think that's healthy.

This highlights an important aspect of my own fitness philosophy, namely, that it's good to "hold back" sometimes. There should be times when you feel that longing to get back to fitness pursuits--sort of like the opposite of feeling that it's drudgery, which is a danger, I think, if your training schedule lacks flexibility.

Now, there is, of course, a danger to taking breaks from fitness pursuits. Breaks that are to long can lead to inertia: it can be difficult to restart your regimen after a too-lengthy break. But what is too long a break, and what is an appropriate interval to set aside fitness?

I assume this will vary from person to person. To summarize briefly, I think one must tread a fine line between being regimented and allowing slack in the routine. I am still in the experimental stages of developing my fitness routine, but so far the approach I've taken of allowing some slack has worked pretty well: we've sustained this for a little over two years now, and we show no signs yet of burn-out.

We hope to keep it up. So, the fourth session of our alternate modified P90X will come today, and we'll be back on the bike over the weekend. Officially I'm back on the radar screen.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Satisfaction of the early stages of attaining cycling form

Did another 30 miles or so today. I just want to comment on what a great feeling it is, having gone up a hard hill, or done some acceleration to catch another cyclist--legs burning with lactic acid build-up and breathing going at a good clip--to feel there's still more gas in the tank. In other words, you're putting out hard and it hurts, but at the same time you feel like you can sustain it and maybe even gear it up a notch or two. Compare this to early in the season when, once you reach the top of that same hill, you feel like it's all you can do just to keep your legs moving.

Anyway, I'm starting to feel some of that satisfaction now. Looking for an opportunity to up the mileage again, but it's doubtful we'll be able to do that soon--certainly not tomorrow. We'll be lucky to get in some short on-road mileage, and may even have to resort to the stationary bikes. Well, I try to take comfort in the fact that quite a few weeks of decent cycling weather lie ahead of us.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Second segment of alternate modified P90X (after a year off)

So we did our second round of our alternate modified P90X yesterday. This is DVD 3 from the P90X series. It was a lot easier than DVD 1 and, though I feel sore today, it's nothing like the soreness I felt after we did DVD 1 last week.

Why is that? One reason is undoubtedly the fact that exercises on this particular DVD are much closer to those we've been doing over the last year than are those on DVD 1. Probably most importantly, the pull-ups were absent from yesterday's workout.

Also, I've had some strange soreness in my left shoulder and may have injured something there (torn muscle, perhaps?). So I've been taking it very easy on exercises like shoulder flys and upright rows--which are the exercises that bring on the pain in that shoulder. I'm definitely doing some relaxed intensity in certain parts of these routines.

I also came to an important realization yesterday about the relatively low aerobic intensity of these workouts. They're much less aerobically intense than the shorter variants we've done over the last year or so, in large part because of relatively longer breaks inserted between exercises. These breaks are deliberately included as part of the routine's emphasis on tracking progress: participants are supposed to note down the number of repetitions and/or weight used after every exercise. That break offer a pretty good breather (though, for reasons I've discussed previously, I don't write down any of that stuff).

Anyway, DVD 3 has had a much less pronounced effect in the aftermath than did DVD 1. I'll be blogging next week about how the next DVD we'll do (DVD 9) feels after having had a long break from P90X.

On the cycling front, we could only do stationary bikes for one of our cycling days this week owing to weather conditions. The weekend looks to be nice weather though, so we hope to up the mileage.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Getting cycling-season conditioning back, feeling modified P90X effects

Went for about a 13 mile ride today. I'm finally starting to feel--after a total of probably a couple hundred miles on the road so far this year--like I'm getting my cycling-season conditioning back. By that I mean that I'm recovering much more quickly from short bursts of intense energy output (e.g., on hills) and the burning sensation in the legs that results from lactic acid build-up when I do those bursts is also fading much more quickly. I was very happy to have those sensations of quicker recovery on our ride today--yipee!

And on the alternate modified P90X front (I think it's about time for an acronym here: how about am-P90X?), it's incredible how taxing these exercises are. We did DVD 1 last Thursday and I'm still feeling the effects. In fact, it's only today that I can do normal activities like raising my arms above my head, reaching into the fridge to grab something, or listing myself off the floor or out of bed, without serious discomfort in my lats/chest/triceps. I do still have some pain there, even as I sit and write this. But it's finally lessening.

It was really bothersome on Friday and Saturday and was maybe a little better on Sunday. That tells you how taxing this routine can be. And this is coming from someone who has been doing some fairly intense, twice-weekly upper-body exercise sessions for the last couple of years. I expect full recovery before Thursday--in time for our next am-P90X session.

And, on the weight front I've dropped 3 pounds. Interesting to see, as I've observed previously, whether I'll get down around 200 again this year at the height of cycling season.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Hello again, P90X!

We did the first in a series of alternate modified P90X sessions today--DVD 1, chest and back, to be precise. A pretty grueling workout.

I can understand now why I found the Power 90 and Arm Toner routines we were doing to be a lot more aerobic than the modified P90X routines we were doing earlier: it's because I can actually pretty much keep up with the performers on those videos.

With the video editing they do for these routines, if you are able to pretty much keep pace with the participants, you should be pretty winded throughout much of the routine. See, they're not actually doing all these exercises in such quick succession. Instead, "takes" from various studio sessions are being spliced together to make the full video.

With the P90X videos the same construction obtains, but the difference is that I can't keep up on these. The participants are able to do quite a few more reps on most exercises than I can.*

This is especially true of all types of chin-ups/pull-ups. I'd say that at my best when we were doing our modified P90X more regularly last year I could do 4 unassisted pull-ups/chin-ups. Now, I can only do 1 or 2. So I do what I can, then switch to assisted pull-ups/chin-ups.

I can do a lot more push-ups, but not as many as the P90X participants (probably 25-30 from a "cold start?" - don't know, since I've never tried to "max out" from a cold start). As a result, breaks between exercises are a lot longer for me when doing P90X routines than they are when we do Power 90 or Arm Toner routines. Thus, I have time to catch my breath and the whole thing ends up being less aerobic.

A further question is whether I should be disappointed about not being able to do more push-ups and/or chin-ups/pull-ups--especially given that I've been exercising regularly for a couple of years.

My answer is that, no, I'm not disappointed. I know I'm working hard and I know my muscles ache for some days after these exercises. And I'm gaining muscle tone and perhaps some mass. Those--especially the first--are my primary criteria for determining whether I'm getting the right kinds of benefits from these exercises. Number of reps is a pretty secondary concern for me.

Your thoughts on this matter? Feel free to offer them.

* Later reflection: it's true that the P90X participants can do many more of certain exercises than I can, as I've said. I've also realized on further reflection, however, that breaks between exercises on the P90X DVD's are longer than the breaks taken on the Power 90/Power Half Hour DVD's--deliberately so. Part of what they're so obviously trying to stress on the P90X videos is, after all, the importance of recording progress; so they deliberately take time between each exercise for the participants to write down their results (how man repetitions and/or how much weight they used).

Monday, May 3, 2010

Farewell, arm toner phase

I've been pretty lax about making blog entries lately, but give me a chance to reform my ways.

It all started with a last-minute trip I needed to make out east to get the new bike: obviously, it's difficult more difficult to blog--at least for me--when I'm away from home. Then, I needed to reassmeble to new bike. Plus, I got sidetracked by some other matters.

But I am still here and am still doing fitness. Our cycling mileage has gone down a bit as we get used to riding the new bike: this past weekend, for example, we only put in about 40-45 miles. That should continue to go up steadily, though, with increasingly nice weather.

And we've continued with our twice-weekly arm-toner/strength-training sessions. Even when we had to make runs out of town for one or a few days. We either used equipment we found and made due that way, or brought our own.

And like other routines headed by Tony Horton, we've enjoyed the arm toner phase. In fact, I already look forward to the time when we can go back to it. But, as I've forewarned in previous entries, the arm toner phase has now ended.

Effective starting this week, we'll start our summer routine. This will mean a lot more miles/time on the bike, and correspondingly less emphasis on upper-body strengthening.

We'll begin the new phase this week, and it will involve doing upper-body strengthening only one day (instead of two) per week. But we will be doing a more rigorous upper-body routine on this one day per week: we're going back to the 4 upper-body P90X routines we were using last spring and summer.

I've decided to christen this new phase the alternate modified P90X phase. What we'll end up doing is completing our fourfold P90X upper-body regime about once per month, rather than once every two weeks, as we had done last spring. So, over the course of the cycling season we'll probably do the whole fourfold cycle 4 or perhaps 5 times

I haven't yet worked out how/whether our ab/core routines, which we currently do twice a week, will change. But I'll be posting about that soon. More later on that.

Monday, April 26, 2010

My excuse for a two-week hiatus

A picture's worth a thousand words, as they say, so below is (in part) my explanation for not having blogged for a couple of weeks:
To make a short story long, I had to make an out-of-state run to get this thing. Then there was assembly, test riding, and tweaking--the latter of which is still in process. I'll give a fuller report on the new acquisition later, but will just say for now that I'm mostly pleased with it.

On other fronts, we're slated to go back to our modified P90X routine--though this time with even more modifications--in about a week. More on that later as well.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

35 mile day

It was nice yesterday and we had the time, so we put in about 35 miles. There was a strong wind, which made riding in a certain direction tough. And I wasn't exactly taking it easy.

I had the heart monitor on. During most of the ride my heart rate was between 150 and 160. I saw 173 at one point after we'd gone up a tough hill.

As a 51 year old, my maximum heart rate, according to some charts, is supposed to be 170. Well, I blew that one out of the water yesterday. And those who've followed this blog will know that I've seen much higher heart rates than that.

And sustaining a rate in the 150-160 range for the bulk of yesterday's ride--which took a little over two hours--should be impossible for someone my age according to that chart. Well, I survived to tell about it.

Not to say that I don't feel the effects of it today. No, this being the first 35 mile day of the year, I think I overdid it yesterday. I should've taken it a little easier. As a result of the muscle soreness/stiffness and residual exhaustion from yesterday, we did only a short, liesurely ride today.

But yesterday's ride will help me build up fitness. The next 35 mile ride will be easier on the body, even if I push as hard as I did today--at least if fitness in my sixth decade will work as it has throughout my life previous to this.

Monday, April 5, 2010

New upper-body fitness dream

I've wanted to try rowing since I was in my twenties, but never had an opportunity. Now that I'm looking into various ways of strengthening and toning the upper body, I've begun thinking about that again.

Wouldn't it be great to have a form of upper-body strengthening/toning that didn't require standing inside in a room and performing strenuous activity, but that allowed you to be out in nature while doing this exertion--at least sometimes? Well, rowing definitely fills that bill. Ok, so rowing works out your lower body as well; I'm not against doing some extra lower-body aerobics if it's complementary to my cycling, and rowing looks like it would be.

I did a little searching today to see what's available in terms of rowing possibilities where I live. There is a local club, but it seems to be geared mostly toward women, oddly enough. Plus, they use racing sculls and I'd actually prefer using something closer to a row boat or canoe. I also don't like the idea of going in reverse while you're trying to get a good aerobic upper-body workout: seems like a recipe for accidents.

Well, with some further searching I came across this:


There are actually a few different desgins/companies putting out this sort of thing. This design gives you essentially the same workout as you'd get from traditional rowing, but you face the direction of your boat is heading, rather than having your back towards it, as in traditional rowing. Incidentally, these are drop-in units that allow you to covert many types of boats into a forward-facing rowboat

This is exciting. I'd love to try one of these. Heck, I'd love to do something like this as my main form of upper-body fitness for most of the summer. But a few things interfere.

First, these things are not cheap. From what I've seen in my searches, you could easily sink 5 grand into a boat like this for two. With some economizing--like maybe by picking up a decent used canoe--you could spend maybe a grand or two less. That's still a pretty hefty price for yours truly.

But that's not even the main detriment. The main problem for me with this sort of fitness option is that I'm not very near any body of water where I could use it. At least not near enough that I wouldn't have to load the thing onto a trailer and haul it a few miles with my car. If I lived within a few hundred feet of a lake or river something like this would be more realistic. But hitching a trailer and loading an unloading a boat each time I want to go and do some upper-body strengthening? It's a bit impracticable, to say the least.

Then, there's the storage problem. Where do you keep your 15-18 foot canoe when you're not out on the water? For many people that would pose a problem, but for me it's an insurmountable obstacle.

But I'm going to keep dreaming. Who knows, maybe one day I'll live somewhere where owning and using something like this would be more realistic, or maybe I'll find a place where I could rent one on occassions when I wanted to do this?

It's an inspiring idea. I'll file it away in the category of great fintess concepts I'd like to try out.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

End of weeklong break

Just a short note to announce that our week off from fitness ended today and we got back to it with a 16.5 mile ride on the road. We had time and I had intended to put in more miles than that but there was a really vicious wind blowing: the kind that, when you come to a good clearing where a side-wind can hit you, you have to lean into the wind to stay a straight course--that is, after briefly getting pushed a foot or so to the side. Kind of sad to have not put in more miles, but it's still early in the season and there should be plenty of further opportunities.

On the strength training front, we'll start back with our usual Mon./Fri. sessions tomorrow. We talked about when our next strength-training switch-up will be and decided to shoot for the beginning of May. At that point we'll cut back on strength-training (upper body) and abdominal/core training to once per week. More detail s later on that, though I will at least say for now that I'm planning on calling this phase something like modified P90X-alt (I'll explain the title later).

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Weight loss during cycling season

Just a quick post to sort of wonder aloud whether this year will be like last year in terms of weight loss. Last summer, when we were doing a lot of biking, my weight actually went down to a bit below 200 lbs.; maybe to as low as 197? I suspect that's because of the intense and lengthy energy expenditure I get when we cycle outdoors on the road.

At my last weigh-in (this past Saturday), I was at 208 lbs.--so I've gained a bit over the winter. I do think I've gained a bit of upper-body muscle mass from our strength training, but I seriously doubt it amounts to anywhere near 8 lbs. Then again, according to reading I've done on the subject, I'm likely to have some extra water retention from the creatine I've been taking regularly for about the last 3.5 months. So I'm guessing that plays a role in the weight increase I now see.

But with this post I just want to wonder aloud--and also give myself a reminder to check--about whether I'll get down to around 200 lbs. or little less once we start putting in serious miles on the bike (i.e., 30 plus miles) in the coming weeks. Stay tuned for further reports in that in the coming months.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Arm Toner overview, review

Yes, I'm still here. And yes, we're still exercising.

We managed to put in an 8.25 mile day outside on the tandem a little over week ago, then we got in a ca. 15 mile day a few days later so, with the nicer weather, we're getting fired up to do some serious outdoor riding. Hoping to get in at least one 100 mile day this year, but that's quite a ways off (mid-summer, maybe?).

And we're still doing our upper-body strength training. We just did our Arm Toner routine a couple of days ago (on Fri.), as scheduled. Which reminds me that I still need to provide an overview and review--which is the main topic of this current entry. Without further ado, then, on to the overview/review.

First let me just reiterate how glad I am that we found this Arm Toner routine. It really is very much what I'd been looking for for some time, i.e., and upper-body strengthening/toning routine that would be fairly short and less intense than the P90X routines we were doing about a year ago.

I'm a firm believer in taking it easy--"holding back," if you will--at certain points during the fitness year. This routine has provided us with the means for doing just that.

As I've observed earlier, the Arm Toner routine is one of five routines that make up the Power Half Hour fitness series. I haven't looked at any of the other routines and do not intend to--this one provides the only things I want from that regimen. And I don't know whether there are any dietary guidelines associated with the Power Half Hour regimen, as there are with P90X. Since we've had our diet pretty much under control for some time now, I'm not interested in learning or writing about any of those aspects of this regimen. No, my sole interest is in the particular segment that we're using--Arm Toner.

So, what is the Arm Toner routine? Put simply it's a fast-paced series of exercise sets for the upper body that are interspersed with a number of short stretching sessions. The exercise sets involve some calisthenics and some use of dumbbells (latex bands can be substituted for dumbbells). So, equipment-wise, there are minimal requirements, making it possible to do the routine in just about any location.

The whole routine is only a half hour long, though an off-the-clock, one-minute cool-down gets tacked onto the end--making it actually 31 minutes total. The video shows Tony Horton leading two participants in executing the routine. The exercise sets and stretch periods are of very brief duration, the longest being only one minute and the shortest being only sixteen seconds. There are seven stretch periods interspersed among sets of seventeen different exercises--some of which exercises get repeated (i.e., two sets are done).

Thus the important difference between this routine and others put out by the same company that I've used and reviewed here that is that there's almost no counting of repetitions; rather, almost all exercises are done according to the clock, i.e., for a brief specified interval. I find this approach of not counting repetitions but rather performing each exercise for a set time, refreshing and very effective for helping me reduce intensity.

Timing-wise the layout of this routine is a little confusing. The average duration of a set is only about 30 seconds, though some are quite a bit longer (fifty seconds) while others are quite a bit shorter (sixteen seconds). But if you're following along with the DVD you don't really notice that and just switch to the next set when instructed to do so. Below is a table that lists all the exercise sets and stretch periods along with their durations:

push-ups
20 seconds
lawn mower right
20 seconds
lawn mower left
20 seconds
push-ups
20 seconds
lawn mower right
22 seconds
lawn mower left
25 seconds
stretch
20 seconds
incline push-ups
25 seconds
hyperextensions
26 seconds
incline push-ups
30 seconds
stretch
30 seconds
diamond push-ups
16 seconds
back flys
25 seconds
stretch
30 seconds
heavy pants
22 seconds
stretch
23 seconds
military press
42 seconds
basic curls
31 seconds
military press
30 seconds
basic curls
26 seconds
stretch
30 seconds
swimmer's press
32 seconds
open-arm curls
33 seconds
swimmer's press
35 seconds
open-arm curls
33 seconds
stretch
35 seconds
21's (curls)
50 seconds
stretch
30 seconds
shoulder flys
30 seconds
1-arm tricep kick-back (right)
34 seconds
1-arm tricep kick-backs (left)
32 seconds
shoulder flys
32 seconds
1-arm tricep kick-back (right)
30 seconds
1-arm tricep kick-back (left)
32 seconds
stretch
26 seconds
upright rows
33 seconds
chair dips
32 seconds
upright rows
31 seconds
chair dips
37 seconds
stretch
40 seconds
triple whammy
62 seconds

I need to add that there is a 2:09 warm-up session at the beginning which is figured into the thirty-minute total for this routine. The ca. one-minute warm-down at the end--which I mentioned above--is not figured into the thirty minutes. See some snippets from this routine in the youtube video I've embedded below.
Also relevant in the way of general remarks are the names of certain of the exercises--names whose actual referent might not be readily apparent. "Hyperextension" may not, for example, be readily understandable as what is sometimes called the "superman": this is where you lay on the floor on your stomach and then raise your arms and legs off the floor and hold them there for a number of seconds. Yet more obscure will probably be the "triple whammy," which is a combination of three exercises also found separately in this routine: bicep curl, leading into swimmer's press which then transitions into tricep kickbacks (using both arms).

One of the first things the more mathematically-minded might note when looking over this table is that the times I've listed do not add up to thirty minutes. That's because several seconds always tick by between every set when no exercise is taking place: these seconds are taken up with Tony's bantering and/or equipment adjustment (two of the participants in the DVD are using adjustable dumbbells).

To summarize, I just want to reiterate how satisfied I am with this routine. It complements very well our exercise regimen in a number of ways: it focuses on upper-body strengthening/toning; it's short; it provides a decent aerobic workout; sets are done according to the clock rather than by counting repetitions; and for these reasons it provides a great alternative workout to use during periods when we want to lower the intensity level of our workouts. For these reasons, I highly recommend it--but do be aware that, if your fitness regimen differs significantly from mine, you may not find it so suitable. I should also mention in this routine's favor the cost factor: I paid just a few dollars on Amazon (shipping included) for my copy of Arm Toner.

On other notes, we begin another week off from fitness this week. It's the last week of lent, so we need to turn our focus to spiritual things. We will try to do a bit more walking this week, but we'll be off the bikes and not doing strength training for a few days.

Future plans: we will probably reinstitute our modified P90X phase soon--though we'll be making some further modifications. I'll write more about that later, but the basic idea is to switch from Arm Toner back to modified P90X, but to do the modified P90X only once a week instead of twice a week. Anyway, more on that soon.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

More on the poll, part 1 of ?

Looks like fitbomb noticed my poll and is sending over some voting traffic. Waiting to see how many more votes come in. Meantime, some further observations about the poll along with a preliminary consideration of the results so far.

I'd like to begin by offering a big thank you to everyone who's participated in the poll. Thanks for visiting my blog and for showing your support for fitness and for fellow exercise enthusiasts. Now, on to preliminary considerations.

Thus far no one has slected the "3 more days" option listed in the poll--not surprisingly. That was meant to add a little levity and really can't be taken too seriously.

A few have predicted 6 more months for fitbomb, while yet more give him another year (my vote is among those). The least amount of votes so far give fitbomb 5 more years, while the most votes so far have him doing his fitness thing for the rest of his life (I suspect fitbomb himself cast the first vote in this category). What can we say about the results so far?

First, the way I've phrased the question is a bit vague. Having taught courses in which I offered multiple choice examinations I've learned that you have to be pretty precise in the way you formulate a multiple choice question: if you are not precise enough, more than one of the options could be considered correct. When that happens, you either have to eliminate the question from consideration when you grade, or you have to allow for two possible correct answers to the same question.

Similarly, it may not be clear what is the crux of my poll question. The question mentions fitbomb's "exercise craze," but what does that mean? Well, if you read my entry explaining the poll, you should be aware that in using the word "craze," I'm asking about the intensity of fitbomb's routine--which, as I observed, seems to me a bit manic.

Please note that I'm not alone in asking or wondering about the intensity level of his regime. Fitbomb himself posted an entry wherein he noted a similar reaction from a relative to whom he was describing his fitness pursuits. Fitbomb doesn't tell us whether this relative himself engages in any fitness activities but I thought it was interesting that I, as someone who's pretty serious about fitness, found myself similarly wondering about fitbomb's pursuits.

Unlike the relative, who may have been a corporate executive or something, and whose question may have been not just "What's the point? What are you looking to get out of this?" but additionally (the following words which I will conjecturally put into his mouth) "couldn't you be using that time to do something productive, like augmenting your income?," my question would have been something like "why do so much more than you need to do to maintain good health?"

And fitbomb does provide an answer in that very entry: he wants to test himself and he wants something extreme that will provide a contrast to his boring day job (side note: it's hard to feel sympathy for lawyers, but fitbomb has definitely tugged on my heartstrings with that remark :)--deepest sympathies, brotha). I certainly consider that a legitimate answer. But that answer doesn't tell us anything about the question I've asked in the poll: how long will his extreme regime last?

Speaking of which, back to the poll. What I intended to ask about in the poll was not how long fitbomb will try to stay fit. I could probably have phrased the question more carefully--as an experienced multiple-choice exam-giver should do--so that it could be construed only as addressing fitbomb's fitness extremism, rather than his desire to stay fit. But hey, this isn't an examination and participants won't be assigned any grades. This is a blog, the idea behind which is to generate discussion and provoke thought. So even responses that are wide of the intended question can be of interest and are worthy of further consideration.

My guess is that those who are voting for the fourth option, i.e., "the rest of his life," are expressing hopefulness about fitbomb's fitness endeavors. In other words, their responses, if they could be put in the form of discourse rather than simply clicks on a radio button, might go something like the following: "I hope fitbomb maintains fitness, and I encourage him to do so, for the rest of his life." And for anyone who may be wondering, I heartily concur with this sentiment and say "fitbomb, I wish the happiest and healthiest life for you and your family. You rock, my friend."

So that's one response to one of the ways in which my question could be construed. But what if we look at the other way my question could be construed, and at the implications attending that question? That is, what if we focus on the key word "craze," and identify that with fitbomb's own admitted "extremism?" In short, what if the question is not how long fitbomb can keep doing fitness and stay healthy, but rather how long can he sustain the fitness extremes in which he is now engaging? And furthermore--and a more interesting question in my view--can fitness be overdone?

Can someone do too much fitness? Is there a point at which health deteriorates owing to physical over-exertion? And, furthermore, what is the minimum amount of fitness activity one should engage in so as to maintain good health?

As I've admitted, I do not have an answers to those questions. I have some relevant data and experience. But I consider these open questions. And observing what fitbomb does--which is extreme by his own admission and in my own and his relative's judgment--raises those questions in a real way. I'm seeking at least tentative answers and hope others who read this blog may be interested in asking those questions and finding answers as well.

I've mentioned psychological burn-out as one possible effect of overdoing fitness. This is what I experienced in my bicycle racing days. Essentially I would burn myself out early in the racing season by pushing too hard and would lose interest in training later in the season. I didn't know how to go easy: for me, getting on the bike was synonymous with going all out. I think I could have done better and been more consistent by moderating my output and deliberately taking it easy at certain points--especially early--in the training season. Though I stopped racing bicycles over 25 years ago, I'm now trying to put into practice, in my current fitness regimen, what I learned from those experiences.

That's data I can offer from personal experience. As far as data that's generally available, we could look at examples of those who do physical fitness as a profession--namely, professional athletes. Are there any examples we can cite from the pool of professional athletes that might indicate that fitness can be overdone?

I hope the answer to that is obvious. Who can follow any sport and be unaware of one or another player who might have to sit out some or all of a season because of some injury? Isn't this scenario simply part and parcel of professional sports? Sure, some of those injuries are caused by legal or illegal physical contact, but others are stress injuries incurred during the activities or training that typify the sport. And some can be career-ending: to date myself a bit, think of Dick Butkus' early retirement from football.

These examples all provide some evidence that fitness can, in fact, be overdone. It is possible to engage in training to the extent of causing physical debilitation. But I refer mainly here to the more popular American sports that all involve some contact of one degree or another. It can be difficult in these cases to separate damage or injury resulting from contact from damage or injury resulting from training.

And you can injure yourself in training, with no contact, as I proved to myself early on in my current fitness regime. That was not an injury that resulted from over-training though, but rather from perhaps using improper form.

I want also to consider briefly another class of professional athlete: the personal trainer. These are folks who, while not being paid to play some sport, are instead paid to train people in fitness. Thus, fitness is their livelihood or vocation and is something they must do with regularity--whether as they help their clients or as a means to maintain their professional image. Tony Horton certainly qualifies as this type of professional athlete. And fitbomb, in the intensity and quantity of fitness he does, seems to aim to place himself within this class of professional athlete.

So, what sort of injuries do personal trainers incur? We don't hear much about that--probably because such information would be considered damaging to the vocation. But I'm sure those who do personal training for a living will have plenty of stories about stress injuries they or their fellow trainers have incurred. Tony Horton doubtless has quite a store of them himself. But the rate at which personal trainers get stress injuries from exercise is information to which I'm not privvy.

One need not, of course, be a personal trainer to get stress injuries from exercising. Injuries much more serious than the shoulder problem I had are, of course, possible. As someone who, like fitbomb, has become interested in what kettlebells offer, I'd encourage reading this thread for an example of how fitness can result in injury--though again over-training may not be in play here. But it does stand to reason that if you risk injury from training, and you do an increased amount of training, you thereby heighten your overall risk of injury.

Doing no training at all--as we all know--on the other hand, carries its own risks. I think the matter comes down really to what some call "the human predicament." There are trade-offs, risks involved in both and a corresponding need to balance those risks. Which gets back to the crux of this entry and to my poll: how do we draw the line or chart the appropriate middle way between too much and too little?

I'm still working on that. I've charted a course--a middle way, if you will--that seems appropriate to me. But it's a tentative one. I'm keeping an eye on fitbomb to see how his endeavors play out and in hopes that I might learn something. And I do sincerely wish for him and his a long and healthy life.

ADDENDUM ON PERSPECTIVE: it's occured to me that my assessment of fitbomb's fitness regime might be a matter of perspective--age-related perspective, to be precise. As someone a little over 50, I get exhausted just thinking about all the exercise he does on a typical day. Maybe if I were his age (I peg him at about 32 years old) I'd view it more as a challenge and would be trying to do the same amount he does?

Similarly, I think many my age might hear about what I do (summarized briefly in this entry) and think that I'm overdoing it. Actually, just reading that might not do it; they might have to see me on the bike and watch how I try to chase down anyone who has the audactiy to pass me, to see how manic I can be about riding. So, is the right amount of fitness really a matter of perspective?

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Differing exercise requirements for aging women

A recent study (appropriated from here) underlines something we've discovered to be true over the last few years: that women's exercise requirements actually increase with age. Or their dietary intake needs to decrease. Or a combination of the two.

In our experience, exercise and a popular diet (South Beach) were not enough to bring my 50-year-old-plus wife's weight down. She followed that diet pretty scrupulously and we were fairly active--much more so in the summer than in winter, since this dates to before we started strength training and riding stationary bikes over the winter. But we still did quite a bit of walking during the colder months. After an initial weight loss of a few pounds on that diet and intermittent exercise regime, her weight would start to go back up. It was obvious something wasn't working.

What finally brought the weight down and kept it there (she was up to about 170 and is at 125 now--and no, I don't want her to lose any more) was cutting the South Beach diet portions down and increasing exercise. She replaced one of the daily meals in the South Beach plan with one of their recommended snacks, to be specific. And we began our current, year-round exercise regime.

So she eats two South Beach meals per day and the third meal is replaced by a South Beach recommended snack (e.g., apple with peanut butter or small shrimp cocktail), and in addition she has the other two snacks the diet advises (one between breakfast and lunch and one between lunch and dinner). That eating plan in combination with our new exercise regime, has allowed her to lose about 45 pounds and keep it off (fingers crossed!). She's been at the target weight for close to 6 months now, incidentally. I'm very happy with that and so is she.

In any case, the study I mentioned seems to offer an explanation for why it was so difficult for her to steadily lose, then keep off, the weight. The article follows.

Women Need 60 Minutes Daily Exercise To Prevent Weight Gain -Study
By Jennifer Corbett Dooren
Dow Jones Newswires

WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- A new study shows women need 60 minutes of moderate daily exercise to prevent weight gain as they age if they consume a normal diet.

The findings suggest women need more exercise than the current guidelines of 150 minutes a week, or 30 minutes five days a week, of moderate-to-intense activity. The study is being published in the March 24/31 edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

"I don't want people to throw up their hands and say I can't do it," said I. Min Lee, the study's lead researcher and a doctor and associate professor at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

She says women who consume a normal diet and are already at a normal weight can beat middle-age weight gain by working out intensely for 30 minutes a day by running, cycling, swimming laps or working out at a gym.

"If you are willing to sweat it out you can do less," Lee said. Weight-gain can also be prevented with 60 minutes of moderate activity like walking, a leisurely bike ride or playing catch, for example.

Federal exercise guidelines of 150 minutes a week of moderate-to-intense activity are designed to prevent disease and obtain other health benefits. However, a 2002 report by the Institute of Medicine suggested 60 minutes a day, or 420 minutes a week is needed to prevent weight gain.

Lee explained that the basis of IOM's findings have been questioned so she and other researchers decided to look at the issue again with a group of women participating in the federal Women's Health Study. She also said the goal of the study was to look at women who weren't dieting and were consuming a normal diet to see what impact physical activity has on weight.

The study looked at 34,079 healthy U.S. women who consumed a usual diet from 1992-2007. The women in the study were all age 45 and older at the start. The average age of women in the study was 54.

The women were given a questionnaire about the amount of exercise or activity they engaged in per week at the study start and then at three-year intervals. Women's exercise activity was tracked for an average of 13 years while weight changes were tracked over a three-year period.

Overall women gained an average of 5.7 pounds in the study. However, women who were normal weight, or those with body-mass index of less than 25, maintained their weight if they exercised for 60 minutes a day. Women who exercised less generally gained weight.

Lee said that for overweight or obese women that 60 minutes a day of exercise wasn't enough to maintain weight, suggesting calories also need to be cut.

"These data suggest that the 2008 federal recommendation for 150 minutes per week, while clearly sufficient to lower the risks of chronic diseases, is insufficient for weight gain prevention absent caloric restriction," the study author's wrote.
As I've written earlier, at certain times of the year (mostly in winter) we might exercise as little as 140 minutes a week--a bit less than what the current guidelines suggest for women. When the weather allows cycling outdoors, however, we exercise far more than that. Heck, any typical Saturday or Sunday when the weather is nice sees us doing a minimum of 150 minutes on the bike at one time, and we might even do twice that or more.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

How insomnia can hinder physical fitness

Today I have a good example to share of how insomnia can hinder physical fitness. It might seem counter intuitive that a lack of sleep or troubled sleep could affect one's fitness life. But it can.

I suppose the most evident way insomnia could hinder fitness would be in the feeling of exhaustion that can accomnpany insomnia, and the hindrance that could cause in exertion: if you're already feeling physically drained owing to sleep deficit, are you going to be able to push yourself less hard than you would were you well rested? The common-sense answer to that question appears to be affirmative; yes, you should be less capable, having not rested properly, of pushing yourself.

But the hindrance I want to write about today is of a somewhat different character. It's actually more simplistic, involving scheduling.

As my readers will be aware, I suffer from insomnia. Last night, for example, while not by any means a really bad night, was a pretty restless one. I slept a little less than one hour before I awoke. After that I was unable to get back to sleep. I finally decided to get up and walk/sit to see if that would calm down some intestinal discomfort that seemed to be interfering with sleep.

I didn't want to be up for very long because I have to leave town briefly today, so I laid back down at around 2 A.M. I had already begun to doubt at that point whether I'd be in a condition to get up at 6 A.M.: you see, since I would be missing my stationary bike session this evening owing to the trip I'm taking, I had hoped I might get up early and do that session in the morning.

Well, I was not in a condition to arise at 6 A.M., so I missed doing the stationary bike session I had planned. Now, fortunately in this case, I had a little extra time later in the morning before my departure. So, though I overslept the session I had planned for today, I was able to work it in a little later after I'd gotten up.

But had my schedule been tighter, I might have lost my opportunity to exercise today owing to the insomnia problem. So, there's a concrete example of how insomnia can hinder fitness.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Super shake update

Just wanted to do another short entry on super shakes and how they've really made a big difference on strength-training days (for my purposes, strength training mean upper-body strengthening exercises). I posted earlier about retching problems I'd had when we do our strength training, and about how I hoped drinking a super shake on workout day might address that problem.

Drinking the shake on strength-training day did, in fact, help to alleviate the problem. And in this entry I just want to reiterate that and to recommend to anyone who may have this sort of retching problem when they work out that they should consider a super shake lunch/afternoon snack on workout days as a potential solution.

To be more concise, here's how the shake diet has helped me on strength-training days. We usually work out in the evening--around 6 or 7 P.M. I will eat a solid breakfast on those days and often have a mid-morning snack as well (yogurt, perhaps some fresh vegetables and/or some corn chips). But after about 11 A.M. I switch to what is essentially a liquid diet until supper (after the workout). So, most of a large supershake for lunch, then the rest later in the afternoon. This diet has made a big difference with respect to the retch factor.

Granted, you may not have such acute digestive issues as I have (I suspect a hiatal hernia). But using these shakes on workout days may nonetheless bring you some relief if you have the retch sensation during your workout.

Now, the urge to retch is not limited to strength-training for me, though it is more pronounced (owing, usually, to supine or prone positions you assume when doing certain exercises). So the question I now face is, should I consider--now that the cycling season impends--doing super shakes on hard cycling days as well?

I've definitely given it some thought. I'll be providing updates on that.

BTW, the backs of my legs are a bit sore today--hamstrings, calves, behind the knees. I'm guessing that's from yesterday's ride and owes largely to the fact that I ride an upright bike for off-season, stationary-bike training, while during cycling season I ride a recumbent on the road. Slightly differing muscle groups are involved in each of the two configurations.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Cycling season officially opens! (or: Two-thirds of a geriatric triathlon?)

We officially opened the 2010 cycling season today by hitting the road for the first time this year. Was it ideal weather for it? No, far from it. It was pretty cool (a little over 40) and the roads were still a bit damp from the rain/drizzle we've been getting all week.

No, I'd like to cast this as a valiant attempt to inaugurate the season, but the realist in me won't let me get away with that. Truth is, we had an errand to run. And the errand needed to be done on the bike. And today was finally a clear enough day and we had enough time to actually do it.

What was the errand? Well, we've finally decided--after five years of ownership--to take the bike into the shop for a full tune-up. And since we ride a recumbent tandem, we can't just throw it in a car or something and take it there. It would take a truck or van to do that. Or simply riding it in to the shop, which is what we did. The shop's only about a 5 mile ride from us.

Which brings me to the geriatric triathlon part of this entry. We actually need to leave the bike with them for about a week. We ride it there and drop it off . . . so, how do we get back?

Some might take the bus. Others might ask a friend for a ride. But us? We walked. We took a slightly shorter route to get home, so it ended up being a little over 4 miles. There's our two-thirds geriatric triathlon for you: 5.25 mile bike ride and 4 mile walk.

Joking aside, it felt great. I'm glad we did it--both the riding and the walking. I look forward to doing it again when we pick up the bike, probably next weekend.

And we are really, really glad, in all seriousness, that we've been able to kick off the 2010 cycling season so early--even if it's with a paltry 5.25 mile ride. We'll be putting in many, many more miles over the upcoming months, God willing, so lots more miles are to be added to this modest beginning.

Friday, March 12, 2010

More walking, shoulder update

Did some more walking today, though probably only about 3 miles or so. So when we got home we did a few minutes of intervals on the stationary bikes as well (half of our usualy 20-minute session). Itching to get out on the road now that the snow is melting apace.

I haven't written about my shoulder problems for a few months now. That's actually a good sign: it means it's not been bothering me much. I think it's now about as good as it's gonna get. What that means is that it will probably always bother me to some extent--if it remains like it is now, it will be mostly just a bit stiff.

I think I have an idea about what exercise was causing me difficulty: a sort of lat pull-down movement I was doing back in Soloflex days. Now that most of our upper-body strength training involves calisthenics and use of some dumbbells, the problem has pretty much been resolved.

I do feel a little stiffness in the other shoulder (left) these past few days, though. But this time it's actually behind my shoulder--like maybe in a muscle that goes between the upper part of the tricep over by the shoulder blade. We'll see whether that goes away.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

About the poll I added

I added a poll to my blog yesterday. It's set to last for about 2 months--yeah, so this is a low-traffic blog and I need to add extra time in hopes of attracting more participants. So, what's the poll about?

Well, it relates to a fitness blog I check on with some regularity, located here. This guy does an insane amount of fitness activity. Reading about his regime and thinking about my own comparatively modest endeavors I get to thinking . . . how long will this guy last?

I don't ask that with any malice. He seems nice enough and writes engagingly. But in my view he's going way, way beyond what is necessary for his health.

Will it hurt him to do so much more than the minimum necessary for maintaining good health? Who knows? He might end up with some sort of stress injury, which could have a greater or lesser impact on his health. Or he may not. But the real question at stake here is whether you can exercise too much. And I don't profess to have an answer to that question--certainly not with respect to the physical component of fitness.

I can, though, attest to the psychological aspect of overdoing fitness. I know from my own experience that it is possible to burn yourself out by doing too much: I learned some lessons about that back in my bike racing days. When that happens, it becomes drudgery, something you have to force yourself to do. Which is one step along the way to ceasing to do it altogether.

There are ways to deal with that, one of which is to introduce variety. That's what I'm doing in my own routine and it seems to be something fitbomb (the guy has never revealed to me his personal identity, so I'll just refer to him by the name of his blog) may be doing as well--though I'm not sure he's adopted it as a strategy: he may just be trying out all the latest fitness fads.

Which brings me to another possible motivation for him: perhaps he's doing what he does, in part, because it's popular? He's got a ready-made community of fellow exercisers that buy and perform the same sets of commercialized fitness regimes he does. Because of the promotion the creators of the routines engage in, the products are popular and glamorous. I don't discount this as a possible motivating factor for him.

But there's a flip side to the popularity aspect: what happens when, as happens with all fads, fitness wanes in popularity? Would he be doing what he does if most people held that fitness pursuits were a waste of time? Would he be able to sustain what he now does with the rise of this sort of attitude?

Aside: you might detect from these remarks that I am not a believer in progress. I do not hold that humanity has evolved to a point where the importance of fitness has permanently impressed itself on the collective consciousness and will remain with our kind in perpetuity. No, being a keen student of history I see those kinds of assumptions as naive and ill-advised. The time will come again in our history--provided our race survives long enough--when fitness will seem like a waste of time, mark my words.

Enough philosophizing . . .

All this being said, I do suspect fitbomb may be doing what he does for reasons that differ from the reasons I'm doing fitness. He seems fairly young--maybe early thirties? So he's doubtless still got a pretty good energy level. He seems not to have been in really bad shape before he started his current exercise craze, though he does admit to not being terribly athletic earlier in his life.

Me, on the other hand, I've turned to fitness to try and address some serious health issues. Not that I've been terribly unfit at any point in my life either. But I'm probably quite a bit older than this guy and my body--as is typical of bodies starting at around my age--is starting to deteriorate. Thus, I see fitness as mandatory for me if I expect to lead a decent life in the years ahead. In short, I should be maintaining at least my current level of fitness for the rest of my life.

I'm not sure these sorts of thoughts have entered fitbomb's mind because he may not yet have faced his mortality in such an urgent way as I have. Perhaps for him fitness will end up being some sort of fad, a phase he goes through during a certain brief portion of his life? Hard to tell.

But what I do sense is that he's overdoing things a bit, which can lead to burn-out. Now, granted, I do not know this guy. He might be a sort of manic personality, someone who was a hyperactive kid, and so may be capable of maintaining such an intense level of fitness for a very long time.

Whatever the case, the poll is designed to address some of these questions. How long do you think he'll be able to keep this up? My own feeling is that it won't last too much longer--maybe another year. I'm really guessing here and, if I knew this guy personally, I might have an entirely different opinion, knowing his personality. But not having that sort of information, I would have to guess that it won't last very much longer.

Find the poll at the top of the right hand column of this page and weigh in with your vote (I've included a screenshot of the poll in this entry: find the real, interactive poll at the top of the right column of this blog).