Thursday, July 29, 2021

Five Things to Track to Maximize Success






What we want to track about our diet and fitness depends on our goals, our patience, and our tools.  Olympians need to pay more detailed attention than the rest of us.  However, most of us could benefit from tracking at least these five things:

 

1.     Sleep.  Enough sleep is crucial to workout performance, recovery, and even weight loss.

2.     Food.  People who track their food tend to lose more weight than people who don’t.  There is also the I-don’t-want-to-write-that-down-so-I-better-not-eat-it effect.  A lot of us eat far more calories than we think we do and we need to keep a log as a reality check.  This can be a pencil-and-paper thing or there are lots of apps out there to make it easy.

3.     Water.  Dehydrated people are unhappy people.  They also can’t work out as well as those of us who keep hydrated.

4.     Workouts.  This can be as simple as a checkoff or a detailed list of what kind of workout it was, how long it was, what weights and reps were involved, etc.  In general, it is best to start small to get in the habit.  However, if we have a goal of reducing our mile time, for example, we need to track that to see our progress.

5.     Measurements.  This can be as simple as tracking weight, or we can add circumference measurements (most common are chest, waist, hips, upper arm, thigh, and calf), body fat percentage (if we have a scale or other device to calculate it for us), BMI (which is a math problem based on height and weight), or any other measurements we think we might want to know about.  This allows us to see our progress.

 

Try it and see how it works!

Wednesday, July 28, 2021

It needs to be fun






A lot of us don’t like to work out much.  I get it.  It’s hard work and we have to get sweaty.  That’s true.  But it is also true that there are so many kinds of working out that it really is possible to minimize the parts we don’t like.

 

I will use myself as the example, because I’m handy.  If working out meant that I had to run, I would never do it.  (Last time I ran, I ruptured my plantar fascia and crutches are a deal-breaker for me.)  When I found biking, I realized for the very first time how much fun working out could be.  Some people feel this way about dance or skiing or swimming.  Even within those things, we have our niches—ballroom or ballet, downhill or cross-country, backstroke or butterfly.  It is worth playing around (and I mean playing—not everything has to be all serious) to find something that is enjoyable.

 

Sometimes we need to play around even after we have found something we love to do.  We may discover, when we revisit something we tried back when we were first starting out, that we like it better now that we have gotten stronger or faster or lighter from doing the first thing we loved.

 

Also, we may find out that doing something we don’t like very much (looking at you, again, lunges) is worth doing because it makes a big difference to what we do like to do.  Those of us who love weight lifting can benefit from finding some sort of cardio to build up endurance and those of us who want to dance all night could use a little strength training to help us out.

 

Go play.

Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Consider Tracking This!






I am, personally, a reluctant tracker.  I deeply dislike logging what I eat and do.  My Wristy Overlord (aka Apple Watch) takes some of the calculating away and I have a trusty app (LifeSum.  I use the free version, which does everything I want.) that figures out the calories in what I eat.  I am only willing to do this much because, unfortunately, it works to keep me meeting my health and fitness goals.  Given my general reluctance, it should carry some weight that I’m seriously considering tracking one more variable:  heart rate variability.

 

This metric is the kind that is only worth tracking with wearable fitness trackers.  I know Apple Health and Samsung’s version both calculate it, but my Fitbit knowledge is not up to date.  It is not so important that anybody who doesn’t already use a tracker should rush out and buy one, but, as I am about to explain, I think it adds something useful to our toolbox.

 

Heart rate variability is pretty much exactly what it sounds like.  It’s measured in milliseconds and it correlates with cardio fitness.  The higher our heart rate variability is, in general, the more fit we are.  However, it fluctuates from day to day, so it is also a good indicator for how ready we are to do a difficult workout. 

 

A note here on the reliability of data from wearable fitness trackers:  they are not usually as good as the big expensive kinds that hospitals use because hospitals don’t need to wear their equipment on their wrists.  However, the wristy overlords are pretty internally consistent, so we can still use them to measure progress.  It’s like using an idiosyncratic tape measure; as long as we use the same one every time, we can still see what has changed and how much, even if we’re measuring in Bigfoot feet or heptimeters.

 

The natural movement in heart rate variability plus the nature of fitness tracker measures means that step one in using wristy overlords to help us tailor our workouts is a boring and frustrating one:  we have to get a baseline.  To do this, we need to look at the data at the same time of day every day for at least a week and take the average.  That’s not very hard, but the thing is that we have to do it without changing what we are doing.  So those of us who are about to embark on a whole getting-in-shape journey need to spend a week eating and moving the old way to get the baseline before jumping on that new treadmill or weight lifting habit.

 

Then, with our baseline data in hand, we can get to work.  We still need to look at the number daily at more or less the same time (first thing in the morning is best).  Then we compare it to our baseline average.  If the number is significantly lower than our average, it is likely that we are not sufficiently recovered from our last workout and should take it relatively easy (swap the weights for yoga, do the flat run instead of the hill workout, etc.).  If we’re at or above our baseline, we can feel confident that we can handle the tough stuff.

 

This may be more than any of us really wants to deal with.  That is all right.  We can use subjective assessments (I am still really tired and sore from that workout on Saturday, so I’d like to go easier today…) to choose what we do today instead.  I am just a little excited to find something that measures recovery.  In other words, I intend to experiment and see what happens.

Monday, July 26, 2021

Monday Workout: Chest!






This week we’re working chest muscles from two angles with pushups and bench presses.  Which do you like better?  Three rounds.

 

step ups

30

rows

20

pushups

10

 

jacks

30

lunge twists

20

overhead press

10

 

 

squat to leg lift

30

bench press

20

brains

10


Thursday, July 22, 2021

Four Reasons Pilates Is For Everyone






Pilates has become one of those popular shorthand things for chi-chi things that snooty skinny people do in their adorable workout clothes.  Snooty skinny people in adorable clothes are certainly welcome, but so is everyone else (although snootiness is best left at the studio door; it gets in the way of concentration).  Here are four reasons why Pilates practice helps all of us.

 

1.     We all need core strength.  Core strength is essential to reducing lower back pain, which afflicts nearly everyone at some point.  All of us chair warriors need to give our cores some love.

2.     We could use an upgrade to our balance.  One of the biggest risks to our independence as we grow older is falls.  The statistics are not pretty.  Fall prevention is all about working on balance and Pilates helps us improve it.

3.     We would like to stand up straight.  Spine health, general alignment, and the aforementioned core strength all contribute to good posture and Uncle Joe is all about improving posture.

4.     We’re stressed out and need to breathe.  In the larger sense, Pilates is a mind-body exercise and so can help with reducing our stress.  In the direct sense, Pilates focuses on when and how to breathe to improve our function.

 

Everyone is welcome in my studio.

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Workout Instant Gratification? Yes!






There are plenty of benefits of workouts that we don’t get right away.  None of us is going to lose twenty pounds in one workout or go from couch to marathon after one visit to the treadmill.  However, there are some instant rewards from working out.

 

One of those is an increase in energy.  This may be counterintuitive to someone who is feeling the fatigue right after finishing, but it’s real.  Our bodies like to move and give us more energy when we do it.

 

Another is a boost to our cognitive function.  Anybody who has taken a walk around the block to clear their head intuitively gets this.  We all can use more brain power!

 

Then there is the metabolism boost.  When we lift weights, our bodies burn more calories both right away and for the rest of the day.  This can increase our weight loss or allow more cookies, depending on our goals.

 

A slightly less instantaneous, but still swift benefit is that working out helps us get better sleep.  With about a third of Americans getting inadequate sleep on a daily basis, this is definitely useful.

 

These little instant-gratifications can help motivate us to stick out the workouts until the longer-term benefits show up.

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Time Under Tension to Maximize Results






It is often tempting to try to work out as fast as possible.  We want to get it over with and get on with the rest of our lives.  I get it.  But I would like to talk just a little bit about time under tension.

 

Time under tension is exactly what it sounds like:  it is how long our muscles are working while we lift weights.  The more time under tension, the more work we are doing and thus the more opportunity to get stronger.  In other words, it is harder to hold a weight up longer, so it works better.

 

That’s the basic picture.  Now let’s add a few details.  Weight lifting has three phases, called the concentric contraction, the isometric contraction, and the eccentric contraction, or, in plainer language, the up, hold, and down parts.  Increases in time under tension can happen in all three phases, depending on our goals.

 

Power lifting is all about being able to produce strength fast, so if that’s the goal, the concentric (or up) phase needs to be as fast as possible without sacrificing form.  Building maximum strength responds better to a slower tempo, something like a four-beat lift, a two-beat hold, and a four beat lower.  (Working that eccentric/down contraction is both really challenging and really good for building strength!  Don’t let gravity be the boss!)  Those of us who are working to build up our muscle endurance by doing lots and lots of reps might want to try a two-beat lift, a nearly-zero hold, and a two beat lower.

 

As always, it is worth experimenting to find our own best pattern.