Tagged: triathlon

Healing From Injury as a Country

I deal with physical injuries all of the time.  Just like a physical injury, yesterday our country was affected emotionally and mentally by a coward who chose to murder an innocent man in cold blood and then attempt to do something horrible in the name of possibly nothing but stupid ideology.  To be blunt, I’m happy he’s dead.  I feel horrible for the family of the soldier who gave his life, and I feel horrible for the fact that one mentally disturbed person can change the feeling an entire country has towards safety.  A lot of people are saying to just move on like nothing has happened and by not letting it affect us, we win the fight.  But the reality is that it has already affected us, just like if one of my clients tears a muscle.  There’s nothing we can do about that except to figure out how to deal with it and heal.

Driving into work today I was thinking about injuries.  In the acute stage things hurt, which is a signal that something isn’t quite right with your body.  In our society, obviously this disaffected person and others who create chaos in the name of a religious ideology have this symptom.  Something isn’t quite right, whether it be their mental state, their background or just the fact that they don’t like normal society.  And they lash out, which causes pain, sometimes on a large scale as happened yesterday.  Sometimes it is on a smaller scale and we simply don’t hear as much about it because it only affects one or two people or a family, but the common symptom and result is emotional and mental pain.  We cry out as a nation and clutch onto whatever area we feel is injured.  It consumes us when we sleep.  We cant ignore it because it is everywhere.

Then the acute stage is done, things calm down a bit and the evaluation process begins.  As with injuries, the first reaction is full defense mode.  We shore everything up just like the body does when it creates inflammation around an injury.  We close doors, we cordon off areas, we stay home.  We’re afraid that things might get worse.  This is a normal reaction.  We stop moving.  It takes times for that inflammation to fully set in and for someone to realize what has really happened.  We also try to diagnose what happened and why.  It;s really easy for us to claim a cause, but fundamentally we just don’t know 100% what created the situation.  Was it the chicken or the egg?  Did that one jump that led to the trauma create the problem by itself, or did it take place over a period of months?  We might never know.  But we can look into it and look back and try to figure it out, because that’s what is going to help us figure out the healing strategy.

The next step is to figure out what to do about it, just like the state our city and society is in today after the event took place. For a lot of people with injuries, they live with it for a while or ignore it, which is often the worst thing they can do.  It certainly doesn’t solve the problem and means that the person has to live with the effects of what happened, which can change how they move and think about their day to day life.  Or even worse, they try to go about things exactly like they did previously expecting a different result or for that pain to not happen again.  They think they are invulnerable.  Nobody is.  In order to heal, we need to take steps to help ourselves.

Healing takes a proper strategy towards two things.  The first is to address the situation and deal with the area that was affected.  For us in Canada, this means that we have to acknowledge that there are people in our society who obviously have enough issues that they decide to commit crime under the flag of hatred.  They are out there, and there’s no question about that.  However, we also have to realize that the actions of a few misguided people doesn’t represent a whole segment of our society.  Just like if I perform a quick movement slightly wrong and cause myself to injure my back, it doesn’t mean that my whole spine is broken.  It doesn’t mean that you have to suddenly put yourself in a full body cast and not move for six weeks.  While it may feel that way temporarily, the simple fact is that it isn’t the whole picture.  One person committing an act doesn’t mean that a whole group is bad, just like one exercise causing pain doesn’t mean that a machine is bad or good.  It just wasn’t the right application.  For some reason this person reacted differently to the way we live than what a normal person would.  This doesn’t mean that a whole group thinks the same way or would react the same way.

The second part of the healing process is making sure that it doesn’t happen again.  In the strength world we apply force to an area because we know that once it heals, it will heal stronger than before.  Our society is the same way.  Through the actions that we take from now on our city and country will be stronger because we’re finally going to apply things in a way that (hopefully) deal with the actual problem, not just the symptom.  I’m not claiming at all to know what that is, but whatever it might be the process of healing remains the same.  Maybe it is a new policy towards something, maybe it is increased vigilance towards certain movements and maybe it is both.  The point is that we can heal, and once we heal we will be stronger than we were before.  That’s certain.

So in my opinion here’s what we can do, just like I would do with a client.  Deal with the acute symptoms, create a strategy, and what is most important is making sure that this doesn’t happen again.  Life in general should be a continuous learning process, and we as a society can learn from this, as horrible as it sounds.  Whatever your strategy is for dealing with this pain that we have had inflicted upon us, don’t ignore it and just move on with your life.  Make sure that you evaluate and we can all take steps to make sure that this doesn’t happen to us again.  That’s what will lead to true recovery as a nation.

Thank you to our military personnel who sacrifice all the time in the name of our country.

#ottawastrong

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It’s Biggest Loser Time

It’s that time again – I saw the first inspirational commercial yesterday, with two former NFL athletes who are now severely obese starting on their weight loss journey followed by millions of people.  Complete with massive weekly weight losses, lots of crying and screaming from trainers, product placement shots from Jenny-O brand ground turkey and Subway and lots of manufactured drama we can look forward to another person losing up to 50% of their body weight whether it be healthy or unhealthy.

You might remember at the end of last season where the winner looked severely depleted on the finale and there was a massive public outcry about her weight loss methods and how unhealthy they were both physically and mentally (and then it was revealed that most of the finale winners do the same thing, she just did it better).  So here’s a few revealing notes about this show and some things to think about when approaching your own fitness regime, if this show inspires you to get off of the couch and actually get healthier.

The Winner is pretty easy to pick right away

Here’s the thing – when your body was fit and healthy in the past it really, really wants to get back that way again.  Some of the contestants have been unhealthy and overweight their entire lives, and these are the ones that have a hard time once they hit a certain point.  The contestants that were formerly athletic and thin (and have a ton of weight to lose) make the final 4 almost every time (unless they get booted due to politics), and almost all of the winners have been fit in the past, either when they were younger or just a few years before.  So when I’m watching and I hear that “I was a high level athlete in high school/college” or there is someone who turned 20 and then gained 200 pounds that’s the person you’re going to see going really far unless they sabotage themselves or fall victim to the game politics.

I won’t comment on the trainers except to point out that the workouts they put the contestants through aren’t anything revolutionary or different than what a decent trainer would do – except at a much higher intensity (which isn’t always a good thing) and with lots of screaming and drama for the benefit of TV.  And just because they do it – doesn’t mean you should.

Lesson:  Your body likes to be healthy – and will try hard to get back there even after you have done awful things to it.  It might take a bit longer to do so, but odds are you can get back there as long as you stick with it.

What these people do daily is NOT healthy

Contestants on the show are contractually obligated to burn x amount of calories every day and eat x amount of calories, all of which is controlled.  The workouts you see with the trainers are for about 1 hour of the day and are somewhat staged, but they do work out – for hours.  People hurt themselves constantly and sometimes you see it and sometimes you don’t, but if you watch you will notice how sometimes things like knee braces and support tape start appearing.  When they go home, inevitably their weight loss slows down – because they aren’t working out hours a day and they actually have a real life time management situation with family, children and jobs.  If many of you could dedicate 15-20 hours a week to exercise and eating right, you would lose weight too, possibly just as rapidly.  Don’t assume that just because they did it, you can too – real, healthy weight loss is much more gradual.

Most of the gains you make while attempting to lose weight are done outside of the gym by eating properly, lowering stress and sleeping well for recovery so that you can exercise again as soon as possible.  This is how real gains are made over time.

Lesson:  Your body also likes to make change gradually, and will fight back against doing anything forced.  Give yourself time and constant effort and the weight will come off.

Why load a leg press with only yourself?

Why load a leg press with only yourself?

Buyer beware with the products that they push

Please remember that the products that they promote are based on marketing dollars – not the best products.  For example, on the most recent episode they were promoting canned soup.  Low calorie, certainly – but canned soups are often high in sodium.  There are also highly processed ingredients in them, even if they claim to have chicken or vegetables as an ingredient.  Subway, which has been a huge sponsor of the show has been shown to not have much more nutritional value than many other fast food places.  Things like Lara Bars and other quick snacks are fine once in a while, but should not ideally be eaten over something natural and whole.  Ground turkey and chicken are good protein options, but possibly having a whole product from your local farm would be a much better idea (and cheaper).  Instead of vegetables cooked in a plastic box, get them fresh from the produce aisle.  The trouble is that the general public doesn’t know and will blindly purchase something because they paid the show to be a sponsor – don’t be that person.

Lesson:  Just avoid anything processed as much as possible.  Eat real food whenever you can.  Period.

Don’t get discouraged if your personal journey takes a long time

The main focus for anyone changing their lifestyle should be HEALTH FIRST.  In case I didn’t say that emphatically enough.  Scale weight coming off is a nice by product of maintaining an exercise program and eating whole foods within your caloric requirements, but it should not be the top priority.  In fact, stay away from the scale at the start if you can.  Compare how your clothes fit, think about things like energy levels and sleep quality and improve steadily day by day – then step on the scale.  Sometimes you get a pleasant surprise when you have had all of these amazing benefits plus you’re down 20 pounds.  On the show they do some brief doctors’ visits with lots of tears and crying, especially when people do things like lower their blood lipid values or successfully reverse diabetes onset.  The thing is – you can do that too.  It’s really not that remarkable if you just start treating your body with respect.

Lesson:  Getting started is the hardest part, but pretty much any condition can be slowed, stopped and even reversed if you do things the right way.  You don’t have to feel the way you do right now if you’re unhappy – it’s a choice.

Television shows are meant for entertainment, and this show is a prime example.  As I have said in the past, if this show inspires regular people to get off the couch and start exercise, eating maybe a bit healthier and changing their lives then fantastic.  Obesity is a horrible epidemic that will continue to get worse if we don’t start getting smarter about it.  This article simply means to point out some perspective on the fact that what you see (especially in the fitness industry) often isn’t real.

Until next time, losers.  And I mean that in the nicest way.

 

 

 

 

Today

The fundamental truth about changing anything in your life is that it takes time and effort.  I have talked about this many times before and constantly have to talk people down from expecting things to change overnight.  In our society we are used to getting things right away, whether it be email, text messages, fast food, even watching a movie can be done instantly online thanks to modern technology.  We forget about the fact that advancing a career, learning, growing a family and relationships take time and effort, like anything in life.

But in our society people rush into relationships and when they aren’t instantly happy they get divorced because it is easy.  We take up workout programs and diets over and over again because they are really easy to start – but somewhere along the way we lose momentum because we expect this massive change within a short period of time and when it doesn’t happen, instead of continuing for some reason we just stop.  We consume crappy things because it makes us feel good for the moment, but then the negative things that happen afterwards just stall our progress.

By just continuing on the path, even if the results don’t happen as fast as you like you’re going to be far better off over time than if you stop and start something different.  Ours is a society where we don’t finish what we start.  We give up way too easily.  We needlessly over-complicate things like health and nutrition and exercise when most tried and true methods are always accomplished given enough time and effort.

So as a message to take away for today, remember that even making one simple change – today – can fundamentally alter the way that your future unfolds before you.  Today you always have a choice as to what you want to do, eat, drink, how you want to sleep, what you want to accomplish.  The world is in front of you, but we as humans always allow what is behind us to guide our path rather than just moving forward.  Once you realize that each day doesn’t have to be affected by what you did the day before it can be a very liberating feeling.  Just because you have missed 5 days of working out doesn’t mean that you have to – today.  Just because you ate a pint of ice cream last night because you were feeling depressed doesn’t mean you have to do it again – today.  You skipped yoga yesterday, but you can find another class to go to – today.

Our lives have an immense duration.  Who you were five years ago isn’t who you are now and who you are now isn’t going to be anywhere close to who you are five years from now.  You might have a different job, city, partner, spouse, and this can all be guided by making that one simple choice and then doing it consistently over time.  Remember, even the Grand Canyon started as a little stream at some point.  But it had to start.  And all of us can start whatever we want to – today.

So say it out loud – “I am going to do (whatever you want to get done) today.”  Make a choice and move forward.  That’s the only way to possibly change over time.

If you’re looking for a good book, I recommend The Slight Edge by Jeff Olson.  It’s what inspired this post and is an easy read.  I hope you enjoy it.

Is YouTube Making You Dumber?

Recently I was provided with several examples via clients and just various internet sources of people who are “fitness experts” on YouTube throwing up videos on various topics.  Most of them centred around exercise and technique for the best possible application for whatever body part they are focusing on.  I’m not even going to get into the amount of nutrition videos that exist (and have information that would make you laugh) because we would be here all day.

Just as an example, one was provided by an IFBB Figure Pro and was talking about changing the angle of the leg press in order to “isometrically” stimulate the glutes.  Not only did she realize that isometric doesn’t mean isolation when it comes to exercise, but she also stated such gems as “this is all glute – no quad and hamstring at all” (hmm, I wonder what was helping your knee extend and flex during that press?) and also had you positioned on a leg press lying on your side – something that is not only risky, it could also be really harmful for somebody’s back if the load was high enough.  A gimmick position designed to take a regular movement, and make it fresh and new – and potentially dangerous.

Another was a video about bicep curls.  Very slick, very well produced and of course full of buzz words like “kinesiology” and “biomechanics” and “concentric” but at the end of the day, it was about bicep curls.  Barbell bicep curls.  And it was over 6 minutes long.  The person who produced it used pretty much every buzz word they could pronounce, and made it seem like something as simple as using a barbell to perform elbow flexion was something that required a ton of attention from the average gym person.

Pretty much every YouTube fitness “expert” has videos of the “best [insert body part here] workout”.  These videos will typically show you a circuit of exercises that you could find in any magazine on a shelf this month put in an order that isn’t anything new or different than has been said 100 million times previously.  Movement is movement, and Arnold was talking about bicep curls about 40 years ago – surprisingly, the movement hasn’t changed.  If anyone ever tells you can that they have come up with a brand new way to stimulate a joint, they are full of it.  I’ve read papers written over 2000 years ago about human movement – odds are, things haven’t changed that much.  Elbows are still flexing exactly the same way.  Force is force.  What changes is the way people try to repackage fundamentals so that they can sell it to unsuspecting people who don’t know any better.

Now, before people jump on me for being critical, I’m not saying that these videos are wrong or that they don’t provide some good information for exercise variety for the average person.  I’m saying that there is a TON of inaccurate information out there, and you have to be aware of it in order to be able to sift through all of the crap.  Just recently a study was done on Wikipedia articles that dealt with medical information and it was found that across 20,000 articles, 90% of them had false information in them that could potentially lead to misdiagnosing an illness.  Since most people these days get their information via the internet this could be fairly serious.  I’m sure that I can spot inaccuracies in over 90% of videos on YouTube as well, making it also a potentially dangerous source of knowledge, especially when you consider that people will hop on there, watch a video and then try a movement without any real coaching.  Many of these videos also encourage people to run through a very challenging circuit that likely they have no business performing at that stage in their fitness evolution.  I’ve written before about people who push way too hard way too soon, and YouTube is a great place to get ideas for that.

I know that when I have a client come in and they tell me about something they read on the internet, my answer usually is that it wasn’t wrong – it was misleading and not totally accurate.  Part of my job is to provide accurate information to people and explain exactly how things work – then it is up to the person to make their own decisions.  One of my mantras is that there is no “good” or “bad” – there are varying levels of appropriate and how things are applied to whom, where and why.  Are leg presses sideways bad?  Probably – but it depends on who is doing them.  Is there a better, safer way to do almost exactly the same thing?  Yes.  Are bicep curls being done wrong in every gym across the country?  I have no idea.  It probably didn’t require a six minute video to explain, but obviously this person thought that it did and is using it to market themselves as a “fitness expert”.

You also have to consider the motivation behind the videos that you watch.  Are they just marketing fodder, sponsored by a supplement company and starring an attractive figure model?  Are they telling you that a “revolutionary” new technique is going to get your results to you even faster (especially if you take/wear/drink their product at the same time)?  98% of the time that person is there to market themselves or a product that they sponsor and the more hits they get, the more money they make.  Some of the videos know that sex sells so their model is wearing next to nothing.  Again, more hits = more money.  And a lot more people who might just believe that lying sideways on a leg press is a great way to isometrically use your glutes.

With all of this information being thrown at you, it is really not easy to pick out the accurate information from the inaccurate without having someone to point out what the truth is.  If you sit and watch videos long enough, suddenly you start to believe that if you just try this new technique that your results will change drastically and that you will vault into the stratosphere of fitness without putting in the appropriate time and effort.  That’s what makes you dumber.  I’ve had fellow trainers message me asking “is this right?”.  The point is that this inaccurate information makes people question if what they are doing is actually what they should be doing.  This applies to both trainers and people who are looking to get fitter.  Then someone watches a video, gets on a leg press at a sideways angle and wrecks their back (or hip or both) and wonders why.

Here’s my suggestion – get off of the internet and start reading books.  NOT Dr. Oz books.   Textbooks, manuals, journals with published research, things written by people with track records and credentials to match their publishing history.  Odds are they are going to be a TON more accurate than somebody who looks great in a pair of tight pants or tank top and is showing you a nice booty exercise.  There are actual web sites where you can open source whole courses on anatomy, mechanics and movement or at least the textbooks for reference – for free (if you want to know some feel free to message me).  Be a little more proactive about your knowledge.  Read books on workout routines written by actual coaches and people who have been doing it for thousands of hours with hundreds of people.  Not someone who only has a fitness following because they are on TV or look really hot in a set of tight pants.   And if you have a question – find someone who knows the right answer and ASK THEM.  I’m always happy to answer questions for people even if they aren’t my client, because part of my job is to help people, and to me that means providing accurate information to the best of my ability.  And if I don’t know the answer I can direct you to someone or somewhere who does.

The fitness industry is full of marketing ploys and terrible information and it can all be found just a click away and make you dumber as a result.  Please, don’t fall for this stuff and don’t allow the internet to dictate what you do or don’t do in a gym or to your body (yes I realize the irony of writing this on a blog).  Find an expert, consult with them and get it right the first time.  Don’t let anything that affects your body be as simple as believing someone with a slick video on the internet is anything close to an expert on the body and what it does.   I’m happy to help if you need it.

Feel free to like, share, but please don’t publish it on YouTube.