Tuesday, April 18, 2023

The annotated workout






If I am working with a client who both enjoys understanding some of the underlying reasons I am asking them to do what they are doing and also might need something to distract them from the momentary discomfort of doing that same thing, I often chat, a lot, about what exercises are for, what should be working, how stuff works in the body, and so on.  (I also sometimes tell stupid jokes, but nobody really wants to hear those.)

So, below, I’m going to talk about this week’s workout as if I happened to be working with a client who needed both information and diversion.

 

First:  here’s the workout (in case yesterday’s post got missed!):

 

suitcase swings

30

curls

20

lateral raise

10

 

(lunge) punches

30

bench press

20

truck driver

10

 

mountain climbers

30

squats

20

brains

10

 

 

Now for the analysis:

 

Suitcase swings:  These are a whole-body exercise.  The primary purpose is to get the heart rate up, which is why we try to move pretty rapidly while we do it.  We’re also burning lots of calories because we are moving many joints.  Whole-body exercises also have positive effects on our metabolisms, even after we are done working out.  Because the arm swing is facilitated by a little squat, one thing we want to pay attention to while we do this is where our knees are; they should be lined up over our toes.

 

Curls:  This is an isolation exercise for the biceps.  We often do sets of ten instead of twenty like we’re doing today because twenty is a lot.  We may choose lighter weights in order to complete the set with good form.  I can tell that the weight is too heavy when people begin to move their torso back and forth to get the weights up, even if they don’t know they are doing it.  Bodies are smart and like to find the easiest way to accomplish a task.  Or, to put it another way, they like to cheat and use other muscles to help when we want to use only one particular group.

 

Lateral raise:  This exercise is for the deltoids, a muscle group that often wins whining contests with the other muscle groups.  They are small muscles and they prefer cooperating to working on their own.  In fact, they tend to get all codependent with the upper traps and the scalenes, so I tend to watch clients’ shoulders to make sure that they are staying out of their ears.  The image I use, over and over, to help avoid shoulder lifts, is that our shoulder blades are like the counterweights on railroad crossing barriers; they slide down our backs as our arms lift up from our sides.

 

Then we get a rest and some water.  We want our heart rates to come down, because we are teaching our hearts to recover.

 

(Lunge) punches:  I happen to have several clients with pretty serious knee issues, so the lunge part of the punch is optional.  Punches work the abdominals in addition to all the arm muscles.  Adding the lunge increases the calorie burn, bumps up the metabolic effect, challenges balance, and recruits all the leg muscles.  Some of us naturally step forward on the same-side foot as the arm that is punching and some of us naturally do the opposite.  Both ways are good for this exercise.  We want to keep an eye on our knee alignment in lunges:  the front shin should not go past perpendicular to the ground and the back heel should stay in line with the back toes to keep everything safe for long-term knee health.

 

Bench press:  Nearly all of my clients do this exercise using a stability ball, which transforms it from a chest and arm exercise into a whole body one.  On the stability ball, clients support their head and neck on the ball, using their glutes (a lot!) to make the body bench-shaped.  This exercise also works the traditional way (on a bench, thus the name), lying on a foam roller lengthwise along the spine on the floor (bonus points for unstable surface), or even just on the ground.  No matter the set-up, the weights need to remain over the chest, not over the face.

 

Truck Driver:  This is an exercise I learned more recently than a lot of these other ones.  I really like it because it works the arms, a lot, and also provides a good amount of ab work.  The key is to keep the arms long to maximize the load.  I didn’t learn a lot in physics, but I did learn about long levers doing more work.

 

Hooray!  We get to rest again and have some water.

 

Mountain climbers:  There are a couple of variations of this exercise.  Some clients like to do the standing version, either because they get light-headed getting up and down from the floor or because a lot of weight-bearing on the arms is not appropriate for them right now.  In the standing version, I want to see continuous movement to get the heart rate up, plenty of side-bending to work the abs and create or preserve range of motion, and arms maintaining the cactus position for best arm work.  Those doing the more traditional version can make it more or less difficult depending on what the arms are resting on:  BOSU is most challenging, then floor, then bench/step/chair.

 

Squats:  As I have said time after time, squats are my very favorite exercise.  They are practical.  We are all getting older and the big determiner in how long we get to live independently is whether or not we can go to the bathroom by ourselves.  Squats will delay assisted living.  They also shape the glutes, strengthen the legs, challenge the core, burn calories, and demonstrate how well our bodies move.  Different clients may do squats with body weight or holding dumbbells at their sides or in the goblet position.  Sometimes we do sumo squats.  (I don’t do heavy squats with a barbell via Zoom; that’s not safe.)  No matter what the position is, we want to ensure that our knees and toes line up.  If we are doing regular squats, we also want to try to keep our torso parallel with the line of our shins—the tendency is to bend the torso a lot more forward because it gives us the illusion that we’re going lower than we are.

 

Finally, we get to lie down and do brains.  Brains are a great abdominal exercise for the obliques.  They are safe for people of every age because the spine is stabilized against the ground.  Clients with low-back problems may need to bend the knees (those levers again!) to reduce the load.  Also, the exercise forces some thinking; it is called brains because the brains have to engage to get the opposite arm and leg thing working.

 

After a rest, we do the whole thing two more times and then we stretch.

Monday, April 17, 2023

Monday Workout: Arms!






This week we are getting our heart rate up through arm work!  Three rounds.

 

suitcase swings

30

curls

20

lateral raise

10

 

(lunge) punches

30

bench press

20

truck driver

10

 

mountain climbers

30

squats

20

brains

10

 

Thursday, April 13, 2023

The Amazing Stickie and Alternating Kettlebell Swings






The Amazing Stickie loves kettlebells for many reasons, but one is that they challenge her abdominals.  Regular kettlebell swings are great, but when Stickie wants some extra work for her obliques, she chooses alternating arm kettlebell swings.

She begins with one hand on her hip and the other hand holding the kettlebell.  She swings the kettlebell back between her legs and then snaps her hips forward, straightening her knees and bringing her arm to shoulder level.  She transfers the kettlebell from one hand to the other at the top of the swing, placing the free hand on her other hip.

 

A set of thirty swings (in other words, fifteen for each arm) is a good place to start.

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Pilates Principle: Movement Integration






We’ve made it to our last Pilates principle!  Hooray!  It is movement integration.

 

The best way to talk about movement integration is to talk about what happens when we try something new and suddenly we have about 27 more body parts than we know what to do with.  We can do whatever we are supposed to be doing with our arm, but then our knees and feet are doing something else entirely.  As we keep practicing and learning and paying attention, eventually our various body parts get with the program.  They integrate into a whole, all concentrated on the task at hand.

 

The mindful practice of Pilates helps us learn how to go through that integration process.  We start with simple exercises, work with the breath.  We refine separate parts of movements.  Then we add complexity.  As our brains and our bodies learn more, we can do more, until we can move with fluidity and grace.

 

Go play. 

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Think Fast!






If you know me at all, you know I am not into fads or weird eating programs.  I believe in food.  In general, my nutrition advice is this:  eat your veggies and drink lots of water.  The rest of it, for many of us, is a matter of experimentation while we figure out what kind of eating makes us feel good.  I know people who feel best eating vegan and people who feel fabulous with keto and people somewhere in between.

All that is about what we eat.  There is a certain amount of evidence that when we eat can affect how we feel as well.  Enter intermittent fasting.

 

The theory behind intermittent fasting is that back before agriculture and electricity, we ate when we could and we slept when it was dark because there was nothing to binge-watch.  We know, physically, how to thrive when we don’t eat all day every day.  At least that’s the idea.  Theories are, by nature, generalizations and we have to test stuff out to see how they apply in our own personal, particular, unique-snowflake lives.

 

The science suggests that intermittent fasting can have a positive effect on lean body mass, longevity, and brain function.  Check out this link

 

Anyone who wants to experiment can try the 16/8 method, in which we fast for 16 hours and eat during the other eight, or the 5/2 method, in which we eat normally five days a week and have only a single meal on the other two days.  If we feel good, great!  If we don’t, we can stop and return to our normal eating patterns.

 

Tell me what you think!

Monday, April 10, 2023

Monday Workout: Stretch






One of the things I like about the combination of leg kicks and squat to leg lift is that we get some dynamic stretching in with our cardio.  Three rounds.

 

leg kicks

30

flies

20

curls

10

 

squat to leg lift

30

rows

20

kickbacks

10

 

mountain climbers

30

bench press

20

plank

10

 

Thursday, April 6, 2023

The Amazing Stickie and Jump Squats






The Amazing Stickie knows that a great way to add challenge to a workout is to add plyometrics.  Plyometrics is a fancy word for “jumping.”  Today she is doing jump squats.

She begins in sumo squat position, knees and toes aligned and pointed outward, back up straight, knees bent.  From there, she jumps into the air, straightening her legs and pointing her toes toward the floor.  To land, she comes down first with the balls of her feet and then her heels, bending her knees at the same time to absorb the forces from the ground.

 

When she first started doing jump squats, Stickie paused between reps, but as she progressed, she learned to minimize her time on the ground.  She uses the momentum of her landing plus the bend in her knees to propel her upward for the next jump.

 

Sets of thirty are good.