Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Please don't lick the equipment



Workouts come in lots of flavors.  Actually, I am not sure about the literal flavors since I don’t actually test them by licking, but it’s a good metaphor anyway.

One popular kind of workout is the cardio endurance workout.  When we see all those people on the treadmills and elliptical trainers and stair climbers and such at the gym, those folks are, by and large, doing cardio endurance.  They work to get their heart rates up and keep them up for 30 minutes or 45 minutes or even longer.

The cardio interval workout is similar, but not quite the same.  If a cardio endurance workout is vanilla ice cream, a cardio interval workout is like that same ice cream with sprinkles and/or a cherry on top.  Which is to say, it’s slightly more interesting.  It’s also better for you, but the analogy breaks down there—sprinkles don’t make the ice cream into a healthier food choice.  People doing this kind of workout hop on the equipment or stride out onto the pavement or trail just like the endurance folks, but every so often they put on a burst of speed.  That burst lasts up to a minute and is at a pace that can’t be sustained for longer than that.  Then, when the burst is over, these people go back to their previous pace until their heart rates slow a bit (but not all the way down to normal).  They repeat these intense intervals throughout the workout.  A good ratio to use doing this work is two minutes of recovery between one minute maximum effort bursts.  This kind of workout is better because it burns more calories in the same amount of time and it improves cardio fitness faster because it trains the system to recover.

Many of the exercise classes available at gyms are one of these kinds, although the ones that involve dance give extra bonus points for working on coordination and balance.

Then there are the mind-body workouts, like Pilates and yoga.  These workouts train flexibility, balance, and strength, plus proprioception.  Often, they promote relaxation and other mental well-being.  Some people do this kind of workout exclusively, but I like them mixed in with some other kinds for a more rounded experience.

When it comes to strength-training workouts, it gets a little more complex.  One way to sort strength workouts is by goal.  Endurance workouts use lighter weights and lots of reps to build basic strength.  People starting out begin here and many women stick to this kind of weight workout.  Once those basics are mastered, some people want big muscles and others want to lift the heaviest things.  The former group will lift pretty heavy weights a medium number of times (about 8-10 reps).  The latter group will lift heavy weights in short sets, culminating in a one-rep maximum for each exercise.

Structuring weight workouts for any of those choices can involve something as simple as a list of all the exercises.  People start at the top, do their three sets of each exercise with appropriate rests between, and call it a day.  Circuits spice that up a little; those same exercises are organized so that people do a single set of each and repeat the whole shebang a few times.  They can be more efficient if they are well-constructed because one muscle group can rest while another works (say, if upper body and lower body exercises alternate through the circuit.). 

When I create strength workouts for my clients, I use a circuit variation with cardio intervals.  They are efficient, more interesting than straight lifting, and adaptable.  Cardio exercises get the heart rate up, making the weight lifting more challenging.  At the end, clients have done their sweating and lifting and get the cardio bonus points.

Monday, January 14, 2019

Monday Workout: Asymmetry



This week we are working on some asymmetrical exercises to improve our balance and core control.  As always, adapt exercises to your personal needs (less overhead if you have shoulder problems, modifications for knee issues, etc.).  Three rounds.

1 arm clean and press
30
single leg squats
20
Bosu curls
10
mountain climbers
30
deadlifts
20
round lunges or 1 leg catch
10
plyo/regular/modified jacks
30
rows
20
pretty princesses
10

Friday, January 11, 2019

Friday Reading Report: More on Acceptance



There are times when I think my textbook needs to see a mental health practitioner.  It has some split personality issues.

I just finished the chapter on metabolism (but I’m not done writing about it yet!  More next week!).  The text pays lip service to body acceptance.  (I wrote about the general body acceptance principles earlier, and they are awesome.)  I am happy to read sentences like this one:  “There are limitations as to what each of us can look like or what we can healthfully weigh.”

Then the other personality shows up, saying, essentially, but if you aren’t thin, you really really really need to lose weight.  Or you will DIE a HORRIBLE DEATH.

Interestingly enough, one chart in the text itself belies the message to lose weight or else.  For adults ages 25 to 59, the “normal” risk of disease/death occurs at BMIs between 18.5 and 25, which is considered to be healthy weight.  People with BMIs under 18.5 have increased risk of disease and death, but in our culture, that is a small proportion of the population.  What is fascinating is that people with BMIs between 25 and 30, classified as “overweight” have a slightly LOWER risk of disease/death.  That is almost never pointed out.  Once BMI reaches 30, all bets are off and disease/death rates increase dramatically as BMI increases.

This is my opinion:  health is about way more than weight.  Health is about the way we take care of ourselves and enjoy our lives.  For some of us, that might include carrying around a few extra pounds.  Others may have different priorities and different things that bring joy.  All of us are valuable humans.