Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Overwhelming






It might just be my circles, but it seems like almost everyone I talk to lately is feeling a bit overwhelmed.  Sometimes fitness seems like one more too-difficult thing in a too-difficult day.

It might be true.  If it is truly too much to add to the day’s tasks, it is all right to take a rest day.  Our goal is to have a healthy, balanced life, not an award for perfect attendance.

 

However.  (You knew that was coming, right?)

 

When things feel overwhelming, sometimes what we need can be found in the gym.  Cardio elevates mood and increases our energy level and helps our brains work.  Strength training makes us strong (duh!), but also teaches us that we can do hard things.  Working on physical balance can help us, metaphorically, achieve life balance.  And our mind-body practices help us tune in to our breathing, calm down, and relax.

 

If we can manage to invest even a few minutes in movement, we may find that the rest of the day is less overwhelming.  Plus we get the rush of ticking off something on the to-do list.

Monday, April 24, 2023

Monday Workout: Kettlebells!






This week, I felt like using the kettlebells, a lot.  Three rounds.

 

skier jumps

30

flies

20

kb hammer curl

10

 

kb swings

30

kb twist

20

kb 8s

10

 

plyo/regular/mod jacks

30

front raise

20

V sit press

10

 

Thursday, April 20, 2023

The Amazing Stickie and Squat Raise






The Amazing Stickie knows that eventually tank top weather will be here.  She is preparing so that when it arrives, she’ll be ready to show off her beautiful deltoids.  One part of that plan involves doing squat raises.

To begin, Stickie stands in what she calls the starfish position, feet a little more than hip-distance apart, arms extended at shoulder level.  She uses light dumbbells, but those of us who don’t work out as often as Stickie may want to try the exercise without weights first because deltoids can be whiny.  She squats and brings her hands together in front of her chest, keeping her elbows extended.  Then she straightens her knees and hips and brings her arms back to the starting position.

 

Sets of thirty are good.

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Annotations and Modifications






In yesterday’s post annotating the week’s workout, I occasionally mentioned modifications I would offer for different kinds of clients.  Today my plan is to annotate that annotation, more or less, and discuss modifications generally and why we might want or need to make them.

Workouts do not have to be horrible.  This is one of my foundational beliefs.  Life is too short for horrible things.  (This does not mean that workouts will always be all fun, all the time, but I try to find the least-horrible ways to get the job done for my clients.)

 

There are three basic reasons to make modifications to a workout:  to avoid an exercise that we hate, to make the work harder, and to make the work easier.

 

That first one could be easy.  I could just substitute any other exercise for the one my client hates and be done with it.  The trick is, though, that I want to find another way for my client to do the kind of work I think they need to do.  In other words, if my client hates squats, I need to find another way to work glutes and quads and hammies and abs.  It might mean that I shift multiple other exercises to get the job done if the hated exercise is one that does a lot of different things.  Also, I will occasionally leave the hated exercise in there because sometimes, as clients get stronger, they find they can tolerate it later.

 

Making exercises harder is fun because it means that we’ve made progress.  We can simply make the weights heavier or we can do more reps.  We can change the relationship to gravity, as when we put feet up on a box or medicine ball or bench to do pushups.  We can add instability by using a BOSU or a stability ball or by doing the exercise on one foot instead of two.  We can add jumping or another cardio element (for example, squats becoming jump squats).  We can change the tempo, making things either fast and explosive (once we’re sure that we have really good form) or slowing things down a lot to maximize time under tension.

 

When we need to make exercises easier, sometimes it is because a client is new and needs to build up endurance or strength, or hasn’t yet mastered the form of an exercise.  This is where we choose lighter weights, fewer reps, and shorter lever arms, as when we do knee- or wall-based pushups.  Other times, we are dealing with pain.  Once a client understands the difference between the kind of pain that means injury and the discomfort that naturally accompanies working out, I say:  if it hurts, don’t do it.  (Note:  physical therapists, who have a bunch more specific knowledge than I do, often make their clients do things that hurt for their own good.  Any injury that requires physical therapy is one that means no working out that injured part until after physical therapy is done and the PT says that it is all right to get back to workouts.  This is common sense.)  Some chronic conditions, like osteoporosis, do require permanent modifications in exercises.

 

We all need modifications from time to time.  I’m here to make them for you!

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.