Friday, March 31, 2017

Friday Book Report: Incognito


David Eagleman’s book Incognito describes the intersection of biology and consciousness.  He begins, “Take a close look at yourself in the mirror.  Beneath your dashing good looks churns a hidden universe of networked machinery.  The machinery includes a sophisticated scaffolding of interlocking bones, a netting of sinewy muscles, a good deal of specialized fluid, and a collaboration of internal organs chugging away in darkness to keep you alive.  A sheet of high-tech self-healing sensory material that we call skin seamlessly covers your machinery in a pleasing package.” (p. 1)  Obviously, he has a way with prose.

He explores, at a general level, the questions of philosophy, psychology, and biology, with excursions into chemistry and physics.  It’s all informative and entertaining.  We are led to reflect on what makes us who we are, and this is not an easy or comfortable process at times.  It’s a useful bunch of brain gymnastics with a side of soul-searching.

I personally found the section on criminal justice to be… odd.  Yes, his arguments about free will do have implications for how we deal with transgression and protection and rehabilitation.  He presents an interesting batch of proposals that make, if nothing else, an interesting thought experiment.  He is very invested in this particular experiment, however.  The overall feel of the discussion resembles that family dinner where someone makes the mistake of bringing up a particular conspiracy theory and Uncle Frank goes off the rails, again, even though he is totally reasonable on every other subject.


Overall, a good book and well worth reading!  Go brains!

Thursday, March 30, 2017

What counts?


What counts as exercise?  We know that watching a movie doesn’t count.  We know that running a marathon does.  What about the stuff in between?

Like, say, gardening.  Well, it depends.  Sitting on our butts weeding for hours probably doesn’t count.  We’ll get dirty and possibly sweaty if it is hot and sunny, but most people don’t find their pulses racing while having it out with the dandelions.  If we’re digging compost into the garden beds, however, it probably does count.  Hefting the bags, shoveling, turning over the dirt and everything can get us good and breathless.

Same deal for housework.  Light dusting: no exercise.  Spring cleaning with rug beating, Goodwill-schlepping, and forty seven trips up and down the stairs:  exercise.


Bottom line:  if it makes you sweaty and breathless, it counts.  If you’re sore the next day, it counts.  Otherwise, not so much.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Two things to do


Fitness, shockingly enough, does not happen in the time I spend with my clients.  What we do with our session contributes, I hope, to their fitness, but all the rest of the hours in the week heavily outweigh our time together.  This is why I’m working on mind control.  Just kidding.  Mostly.  It’s why I write a blog about fitness issues in hopes of helping non-workout time become better for us all.  There are two things that clients need to do for themselves in order to make the most of their fitness and of their time with me.

1.     Sleep.  Rest is as much a part of fitness as work.  Culturally, we are sleep-deprived, to the point that many of us take pride in how un-rested we are.  This is not good.  Our bodies and brains need sleep and dreams and downtime.  Let’s grab a nap.  Let’s forgo the extra hour of television or housework or video games and go to bed on time.

2.     Eat.  We need the right amount of healthy food.  This may require some experimentation because we are all our own personal chemistry labs.  Some of us need more protein.  Some of us do better without dairy.  Some of us must have green things.  Find the right balance.


Do these two things and we can have even more fun working out.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

File under things to think about...


Over the weekend, I helped move some filing cabinets.  It was fun (yeah, I know; not everyone has the same sense of fun I do) and I wasn’t in charge of making things fit, so it went well.  The thing is, filing cabinets, like most things, are not shaped like dumbbells and barbells.  They are bulky and awkward and sometimes sharp and poky.  Moving them around has only a tangential relationship to what I do when I work out.

Keeping the relationship between workouts and real life tasks in mind can make workouts more relevant.  I’m not suggesting outfitting a home gym with filing cabinets and boxes of books and unwieldy bags of dog food, although there would be a certain novelty in doing that.  The point is that we don’t, generally, lift weights to get better at lifting weights in the gym, but to have a better experience in the rest of our lives.


When we do whole-body exercises during workouts, when we change direction or twist during a movement, when we work with ropes or medicine balls or other objects, we are practicing for the real world.  Let’s get strong for living.

Monday, March 27, 2017

Monday Workout: Kick Butt


This week, we’re going to work our butts (off).  Heavy squats and deadlifts are great for our behinds.  All the other stuff is good for us, too.  Four rounds!


1 min cardio



heavy squats
20
ball bench press
20
1 arm clean and press
20
tricep kickbacks
20
deadlifts
20
brains
10

Friday, March 24, 2017

Friday Book Report: Shoe Dog


Andrew Luck picked a good one again for March.  His “veteran” book club selection is Phil Knight’s memoir Shoe Dog.  The man can write.  He’s engaging and he has done many interesting things, from bootstrapping his company to climbing Mount Fuji.  There is plenty in the book to interest the sports nut, the business person, and the traveler.  Perhaps even those looking for something more spiritual can find it:

“I thought back on my running career at Oregon.  I’d competed with, and against, men far better, faster, more physically gifted.  Many were future Olympians.  And yet I’d trained myself to forget this unhappy fact.  People reflexively assume that competition is always a good thing, that it always brings out the best in people, but that’s only true of people who can forget the competition.  The art of competing, I’d learned from track, was the art of forgetting, and I now reminded myself of that fact.  You must forget your limits.  You must forget your doubts, your pain, your past.  You must forget that internal voice screaming, begging, ‘Not one more step!’  And when it’s not possible to forget it, you must negotiate with it.  I thought over all the races in which my mind wanted one thing, and my body wanted another, those laps in which I’d had to tell my body, ‘Yes, you raise some excellent points, but let’s keep going anyway…’” (P. 61).


Risk averse people might need to breathe deeply while reading about his methods of running his business in the early days.  Sometimes the tone veers a little too far toward the drinking frat boy.  Those are quibbles.  The book is definitely worth reading.

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Both, coach


Sometimes people ask me if they should be doing personal training or Pilates.  There are two answers to that question.  It depends, and both.

The first answer speaks to the question of what we want to get out of our workouts.  If our primary focus is building muscle mass or burning fat, we probably want personal training.  If we want to increase our core strength, maximize our tone, and improve our posture, Pilates can help us get there.

The second answer addresses the fact that we need both big and small strength.  We need to work those big muscles with weights and we need to align ourselves with our small ones.  We need power and we need finesse.  We need force and flexibility.


Whether you choose one or the other or both, I can help!