Tuesday, August 14, 2018

In which I disagree, slightly, with the Grateful Dead, in some contexts



Enthusiasm can get us into trouble.  In general, I am in favor of having lots of it.  It’s inspiring.  It helps us try new things and embrace the weird and wonderful.  It can also lead to those moments when we have to ask, “How did I end up here?”

I’m talking about fitness contexts here, so I don’t mean those times when we wake up wearing a hula skirt and several decorative fish, or even those times when the conversation in the car is so good that we pass the right exit and don’t notice for another seventeen miles.

No, it’s when we start something new in fitness and fall in love with it, or when we are getting back to something we love after an injury or vacation or other layoff.  We are so excited to be doing this wonderful thing that we overdo ourselves.  Too much of anything can hurt us.

By all means we need to find the play and the fun.  But we also need to have a real sense of enough so we stop before we get hurt.

Monday, August 13, 2018

Monday Workout: Christmas comes twice a year...



I can’t let summer go by without a little Christmas cheer.  Yes, it is time for the Dreaded 12 Days of Christmas Workout, swiped years ago from my dear friend and colleague Michelle and now a twice-yearly tradition.  Here’s how it works:  on the first “day,” we do 1 push press.  On the second “day,” we do 2 goblet squats and 1 push press.  On the third, we do 3 overhead presses, 2 goblet squats, and 1 push press.  We continue until we have completed all 12 days, which doesn’t actually take 12 days.  Yes, I realize this works out to doing 42 burpees and that that makes me mean and grinch-like, but it makes all of us stronger.  Let’s do it!

1 push press
2 goblet squats
3 Overhead press
4 1 leg squats each leg
5 deadlifts
6 burpees
7 pushups
8 renegade rows
9 mountain climbers
10 jump lunges
11 kb swings
12 plyojacks

Friday, August 10, 2018

Friday Reading Report: More on Critical Thinking



One of the themes of my studying seems to be critical thinking.  In practice, this means I am often annoyed with my textbook.

I offer the following paragraph for analysis:

“Most nutritionists consider vegetarianism a routine variation of a normal diet, particularly if the vegetarian’s motivation is religious or philosophical, the result of a concern for animals, or an aversion to animal products.  When a meat eater goes vegetarian in an attempt to prevent or cure disease, that’s ‘alternative.’”

Class, what is wrong with this picture?  Does the intent of the eater have an effect on the nutritional content of a diet?  Attempting to prevent or cure disease with vegetarianism may or may not work, but the health effects of a vegetarian diet do not change based on why a person chooses to eat a vegetarian diet.

By the way, there is a whole bunch of real evidence out there that vegetarian diets can be as nutritious and healthy as meaty diets and possibly more so, depending on the actual foods consumed.  One of the things on display in the quoted paragraph is cultural bias; Americans, on the whole, love our meat no matter what.  When we compare our diets to the people of Asia and Africa, for example, where far less or even no meat is consumed, we find that people manage to live perfectly healthy lives on the nutrition provided from plant sources.

Another possible underlying bias to consider has to do with lobbying.  The governmental food guidelines on which much of this text relies have had heavy input from the food industry.  Recommendations to eat less meat have been phrased as “choose lean meat,” for example.  We get a consistent “Eat More” message from industry and successful lobbying has embedded it into the guidelines.

We need to be ceaselessly vigilant about our information.  We need to use our big brains to evaluate what we read.

And I probably need to meditate a little more in order to avoid throwing the book…