Tuesday, December 6, 2022

This fish is feeling judgy, but I understand






Like everyone else, I have times when I’m working out more and times when I am working out less.  I get enthusiastic about a particular kind of workout and I ignore some other kind.  That said, my recent experience has reinforced the idea that consistency is really a virtue.

 

Now when I say that we need to be consistent, I definitely do not mean that we pick a workout and we do it every day for the rest of our lives.  Among other problems, it would bore us to death.  What I do mean is that we need to make sure that we get in all our different kinds of work.

 

Lately, I’ve been super excited about playing pickleball.  It’s fun, it’s social, and it gets my heart rate up.  I may have let my enthusiasm distract me from the fact that I need to do my strength training and my core/balance/flexibility work.  I got back to doing Pilates last week and oh dear do I have some ground to regain.  I returned to my weight lifting earlier, but again, I noticed the difference.

 

Of course, everyone else is probably way more organized and conscientious than I am, so this might not be a relatable problem.  Worst case, y’all get a good laugh at my expense and I’m cool with that.  However, if you, too, have slipped a little, let my example gently encourage you to get back to balancing out the workouts you’re enthusiastic about with the other ones you need to be doing, too.

 

Go play.

Monday, December 5, 2022

Monday Workout: New Stuff!






This week we have a bunch of new exercises, plus we’re getting in some burpee practice before the twelve days of Christmas workup shows up later this month. 

 

Leg kicks are exactly what they sound like.  We stand with our arms stretched out in front of us and kick one leg toward the opposite arm and then the other.

 

Front raise starts in a similar position.  We stand with arms out in front of us holding light weights and then we raise them overhead and return to the start position.

 

Truck driver can be done with a weight plate if available, but a dumbbell also works.  Hold the weight out in front as if it were a steering wheel and twist it 90 degrees one way and then return to start.  Repeat on the other side to complete one rep.

 

Three rounds.

 

leg kicks

30

front raise

20

truck driver

10

squat to leg lift

30

flies

20

burpees

10

mountain climbers

30

rows

20

pretty princesses

10

 

Thursday, December 1, 2022

Noteworthy






Welcome to December!  Today would be a good day to take a snapshot of our current situation.  If you are so inclined, get out a piece of paper or start typing.  Here’s what we want to know:

 

1.     Current measurements:  that would be height, weight, and circumference measurements.

2.     Current cardio plan:  what we’re doing, for how long, and how intensely.  If we have access to the data through a smart watch, we can note our HRV.

3.     Current resistance training plan:  what we’re doing, with how much weight, how often.  Alternatively, we can do one-rep max workout and log the results.

4.     Anything else we think we might want to change.  This is our “before” picture, so if we want to, say, change our diet, we might want to write down what we’re eating now.  If we want to change our sleep habits, we might want to write down how much sleep we got last night and when we went to bed.  The first step to change is data!

 

Go play.

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Growing with Uncle Joe






One of the reasons I like Pilates is because I am short.  Pilates helps me feel taller.  How?  The principle, in Pilates language, is axial elongation.  Normal people might call it standing up straighter.

 

It’s a little more complicated than that, but not too much.  Gravity is an inescapable fact of our lives and as we walk around and do the things we do, it pulls our spines down toward the earth.  When we do Pilates, we work to create space between our vertebrae in an anti-gravity kind of way.

 

Want to feel taller?  Here’s how.  We’re going to do a bridge together.  We begin lying on our backs (yay!) with our knees bent and feet flat on the floor with our heels in line with our sitting bones.  We take a deep inhale.  Then, as we exhale, we tilt our pelvises back toward our belly buttons and then keep tilting until our pelvises begin to lift in the air.  We peel one vertebra at a time off of the floor until we are supported on our shoulders and our feet.  Our bodies, from our shoulders to knees, should make a straight line.  We take another deep inhale.  Then, as we exhale, we peel ourselves back down on to the floor, pulling our hips away from our shoulders the whole time.  We imagine creating space between each vertebra on the way down and our hips will likely come down farther from our head than they started.  Voila!  Space in the spine!  We are taller!  (Please note:  people with osteopenia or osteoporosis should not do bridging with spinal articulation.  Those folks, instead of doing the pelvic tilt and the peel up and down, should lift the pelvis straight up toward the ceiling.  In the lowering phase, they can still pull the hips away from the head, but the spine should move as a unit rather than one vertebra at a time.)

 

Welcome to a taller future!

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Forget about it






We’re back from the holiday weekend.  Now we’re going to forget about it.  No, not the great memories we made or the valuable lessons we learned about what not to ask Uncle Jerome at the dinner table; we need to keep those things.

 

We’re going to forget what we ate, how much pie we put away, and how little exercise we got.

 

We are going to start again, today, with the workout in front of us.  We’re going to eat our normal healthy foods.

 

There will be no punitive workouts and no one is being restricted to just bread and water.  Fitness, in the form of healthy eating and movement, is a gift we give our bodies.  We do it because we want to take care of ourselves, not because we think we are horrible people who deserve to suffer.

 

Go play.

Monday, November 28, 2022

Monday Workout: Both!






I love compound exercises and asymmetric ones, too.  So this week we get both!  Hooray!  Three rounds.

 

squat raise

30

flies

20

pushups

10

 

 

lunge punches

30

bench press

20

curls

10

 

 

1 arm clean and press

30

1 leg squat

20

brains

10


Thursday, November 24, 2022

Thankful!






Happy Thanksgiving!
  Things to be grateful for today in our bodies include:

 

1.     Food!  It fuels us and tastes good!

2.     Feet!  They take us where we want to go!

3.     Brains!  Consciously and unconsciously, brains figure out how to make all our body parts work and work together.

4.     Muscles and bones!  They move us and they support us, no matter what we are doing.

 

Now go eat.