Friday, February 10, 2017

Friday Book Report: The Omni Diet


As I have mentioned before, I am not a huge fan of diet books, or of diets.  That said, Tana Amen’s book The Omni Diet offers some decent advice.  She explains the nutrition information clearly and provides plenty of direction for those who want to follow her plan.  The recipes look to be pretty good, although I have not actually cooked any of them.

Because of the nature of this book, the reader needs to be prepared for the dreaded Inspirational Stories.  Most of them are helpfully enclosed in boxes for easier skipping.  Also, the prose lays it on pretty thickly about how delicious this is all going to be as we skip into our sugar and dairy free future.


Bottom line:  good information can be mined from what is, in my opinion, unfortunately styled writing.

Thursday, February 9, 2017

I am a rock...


Our bodies adapt to our environment.  Our muscles get stronger when we use them.  Our bones do, too.  The food we eat and the movements we choose and even the faces we make change us.


What marks do we want to make on our bodies today?  What do we want to look like tomorrow?  Who do we want to be?

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Walk this way...


Walking and hiking are good exercise choices for most people.  There is no equipment required, except comfortable shoes, and let’s face it:  we all should wear comfortable shoes.  Here’s how to make it more fun:

Go with a friend.  Skip the coffee date or the lunch date and walk instead.  Be the good influence for once!  Social connection is good for our health, too.  Being able to carry on a conversation is a great way to gauge how hard we are working; if we can’t keep talking, it’s time to slow down a bit.

Go with a furry friend.  Dogs are excellent for interval training.  They will go at top speed until something fascinating grabs them by the nostrils.  We can use this to our advantage, getting breathless when they are moving and maybe doing a few body weight exercises while they fully experience the aura of French fries on that discarded wrapper.

Go with music.  Bonus points for dancing on the sidewalk because laughter is good for the soul and the body, too.  Music can give us a good pace.  It also has a built-in measure for how hard we are working; if we can sing along, it’s time to step it up!

Go somewhere green and beautiful.  Nature is our friend and reduces our stress levels.  Make your heart both healthy and happy!


Let’s do it!

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Push or Not Push


Last week, I didn’t get to work out like I wanted.  I got crabby.  I didn’t like it.  And yet, it was the right thing to do.  How do I know?  Here are some ways to decide whether it is time to push or rest.

If you are injured:  It’s time to rest.  When your doctor or physical therapist says go, then you can go for it.  However, you are allowed to get specific with your health professionals.  Often there are things you can do while you are waiting to get back to what you really want to do, say, swimming instead of running or yoga instead of zumba.

If you are stressed out:  It depends.  Exercise is a great stress reliever.  If the issue is really about time, maybe compromise with yourself and do a short workout or at least take a walk.  (And it’s not really about time if you deal with the stress by binge-watching cooking shows.)  Ask yourself what you would tell a friend feeling the way you do.  If you’d tell her to get her shoes laced up, you should, too.

If you are sore:  Light exercise will probably help.  You don’t want to work the same muscle groups with weights two days in a row.  If walking up stairs makes you swear because of the squats you did yesterday, today is a good day to do upper body work.  Also, stretching and rolling are your friends.


If you are tired:  Try.  Showing up counts and a five minute workout is better than no workout.  Once you get moving, you may find you have more energy than you thought.

Monday, February 6, 2017

Monday Workout: Breathless and Strong!


This week’s workout pairs an exercise to raise heart rate with a strength exercise to create challenge.  We will be using weights that are a little heavier since there are only ten reps. Do four or five rounds.


1 min cardio



plyojacks or crouch jacks
30
clean and press
10


mountain climber
30
pushups
10


woodchoppers
30
squats
10


kb swings
30
bench press
10


opposite knees
30
lunges
10

Friday, February 3, 2017

Friday Book Report: Emergence

John H. Holland’s book Emergence:  From Chaos to Order is not particularly light reading.  People who are mathier-than-I (sure, that’s a word, right?) might have an easier time following some of his arguments.  There is a chapter on metaphor, for those of us who feel happier among the poets.  That’s the disclaimer.

The central idea of the book is that a few simple rules, as in a game, can produce surprising complexity that is difficult or impossible to predict from an examination of the rules.  This “emergence” implies some interesting things for areas as diverse as genetics and cognition.  It also impacts the art of model building, which, in turn, allows us to understand complex phenomena.

It is always worth reading books that stretch the brain.  I think that I put it on my blog reading list because the book was referred to in one of the books that traced our evolution; we do emerge, complex, from a fairly limited number of building blocks, after all.


I would recommend it, and maybe a math tutor.  At least for me.

Thursday, February 2, 2017

A plateful and some cones


I used to work in a context where there were community dinners and every semester the new community members would get a chance to make a plate to use, partly because it was fun and partly because reusable plates are better for the universe.  When I made my plate, I put words on it that I needed to remember. They come from Angeles Arrien and they are:

Show up.
Pay attention.
Tell the truth.
Remain unattached to the outcome.

The words are pretty universally applicable, but in a fitness context, what they mean is that we do the work and let the results handle themselves.  When we come work out, we have to be there, we have to focus on form, we have to see/say what is really there, and then we need to let the work take effect.


What’s on your plate?