Posts Tagged ‘Well-Being

28
Oct
14

Ride I did

I got up early this morning and started that head game smack talk again.  Got dressed, filled a bottle, got all reflected up and set out on my bike at just after 5:00am.  It’s amazing how peaceful things are before everyone gets up.  Was I nervous, heck yes. But I did it anyway.  I successfully rode in the dark, fully lit by street lamps, my light on the front of my bike and the red blinker on the back.  I had no problem seeing the road and somewhere along the way I realized this early morning riding is so doable.

After watching my father-in-law, a very active man, lose his battle with cancer in 9 very short weeks and the follow-up deterioration of my mother-in-law, one thing is certain. We are all going to go sooner or later.

I’m not going to sit around and get old doing nothing. I’m going to continue to lift heavy things, swim, bike, run and just about anything else I really want to do.  I may not do any of those things perfectly, but who really cares?  Who are the exercise police that are going to say “you’re doing it all wrong”? Who are the food police that are going to come in my house and say “You aren’t supposed to eat that”? Really?

I’m feeling a little rebellious this morning. 🙂

My you all be blessed with the courage to do what really moves your soul.

Be Awesome

 

07
Jul
14

Baby Steps and Monster Leaps

A couple of weeks ago I posted an update on passing my Precision Nutrition Level 1 Coach’s certification.  It took a bunch of baby steps to get on with it after procrastinating for a good while.  I learned a lot of lessons along the way.

Just a few of them are:

1) You’re never too old to reach for amazing.

2) Procrastination is still my crutch, even after all these years.

3) You can never learn enough concerning a topic you are passionate about.

Fast forward a couple of weeks later.  I’ve committed to the Level 2 Coaching program with Precision Nutrition.  It’s a year of intense training toward becoming an even more effective coach.  I’m humbled and honored to have this opportunity.

Baby steps and monster leaps to better coaching.  I consider this Level 2 a monster leap for me.

Believe it

 

 

03
Jul
14

Doing the TGU Turkish Get-Up

Of late I’ve been adding the Turkish Get-Up (TGU) to my own workouts more than ever. About two months ago I witnessed my neighbor take a spill while working in her yard. She lives on a slope and when she fell, she was unable to catch herself, resulting in a broken right arm and broken left hand. She is my age. Since that day the TGU has been coming to mind over and over.

By adding it to my program I’ve also gone through a cycle of self-realization. One, progress comes more rapidly when I get completely uncomfortable. You know that whole “suck it up Buttercup” thing. Secondly, the brain and central nervous system play a huge role in Turkish Get-up.

I’m strong, that’s not a secret. But I lean to the rather uncoordinated side for sure. In example, some folks take to the snatch and overhead squat like they were born to do them both. Me? It took months and months of skill drills to improve on both of those movements. Same with the TGU.

The TGU shows the uncoordinated and off-center balance I have and the need for unilateral training better than anything else I’ve ever done.

I have also begun adding the TGU to clients training protocols as well. The pictures below are of one of my clients. She turns 65 years young on Friday. She is just as concerned with functional fitness and mobility as I am. She successfully completed 3 sets of TGU yesterday. We both learned a lot about where our focus needs to shift in her training. She gladly allowed me to take these photo’s to share with you. And BTW, at a few days shy of 65, she can dead-lift her own body weight.

25
Jan
14

Moving Past That Place

Twice this week I’ve had conversations with women who find themselves at a crossroads.  It’s the crossroads to long-term change.  It’s a frightening place to be.

To the left is everything you know, comfort, habit, status quo, the norm, the place you’ve known for what could be your whole life, failures, the past.

To the right is belief, discomfort, truth, health, happiness, knowledge, pressure, fear of the unknown, trials, failures (yes you have failures on both roads), wisdom, desire, change, gratitude.

I know this crossroads all too well.  In the spring and summer of 2010 I stood at the very same crossroads.  I had just won the Body-for-Life challenge which had been a goal for 9 years. Everyone thought I had it all figured out. What people around me didn’t know, was what was happening on the inside. Even my best friends had no idea.

I was terrified. Afraid I’d back slide back to the 328# person I used to be. I was terrified I would fail again. I was terrified that I was a fake. I was afraid I didn’t believe in myself as much as others believed in me. I was afraid of the future.

Looking back on that crossroads now it seems silly. But at that time the fear was very real, very much a part of my daily life.

In order to overcome that fear, I had to put some daily habits in place. Below are the most important ones listed in the order of importance for me.

  • No Negative Self-Talk. EVER
  • Write down 3 things I’m grateful for daily
  • Write down 3 positive affirmations about my body daily
  • Get the fear out of your head

These things may look trivial to some, but to a person who doesn’t believe in themselves, I believe these things are a game changer.  Let me elaborate.

  • No Negative Self-Talk. EVER

Negative self-talk is the single most detrimental habit a person can develop.  Negative self-talk comes up when you look in the mirror, when you are handling your personal finances, when you go to work, when you parent your children, in your marriage.  It’s everywhere. SHUT. IT. DOWN. You are worthy of greatness, no-one, not even yourself should tell you otherwise.

  • Write down 3 things you’re grateful for

Gratitude helps you realize in the big scheme of things you’ve got it really good. Be grateful you’re healthy and not fighting for your life. Be grateful you have a roof over your head. If you are reading this, be grateful for the very device allowing you to see this, even if it’s a loaner. Be grateful for the simplest things in your life. Once you remove your “woe is me” tunnel vision, you get to fully see what you have to be grateful for.

  • Write down 3 positive affirmations about my body daily

I don’t mean the same things every day.  Each day find 3 things you love about your body.  They may or may not have a thing to do with your physical appearance.  I love my eyes because they allow me to see things.  I love my strong and powerful legs that allow me to move heavy things. I love my ears because they allow me to hear beautiful music.

  • Get the fear out of your head

If you are afraid of something talk about it with a trusted friend, a person who’s walked this path before you, or if nothing else, write your fear down in a journal.  What I found over time was the fear was much, much greater in my head than it ever was out in the open.  I’ve written letters to people and then burned them (very healing). I have sobbed on my friend’s shoulder when faced with the realization I wasn’t going to reach a goal I set. Getting your fear of failure out of you mind clears the space so that it can be filled to the brim with positive and grateful thinking.

All of the above may seem trivial, but if you are at the crossroads of significant weight loss, throw these habits in to play and see if you don’t find some peace from the constant fear of back-sliding.

Want it more than afraid of it

22
Jan
14

Strong Legs

It seems like all I write about lately is the legs.  Well mostly anyway.  I’ve neglected to push my legs at the same level I’ve pushed my upper body, so now I’m playing catch up.  I’ve used every excuse under the sun for the past four years as my excuse for not being more goal oriented on these strong legs.

As most of my readers know I’ve lost a lot of weight, with the losses, I’ve gained some unflattering skin issues on these strong legs.  THAT has been my number one excuse for not being overly concerned with them.  The whole “I’ll never wear shorts again” excuse.

Well as you can tell I’m sucking it up and getting busy changing these strong legs into even stronger legs.  The lower body contains the largest muscles in the whole body.  The more I work them, the more dense with muscle both the legs and glutes will become.  I will burn more calories as well, like a big old furnace.  I can’t wait.

I don’t expect them to be perfect because that would certainly be unrealistic.  I’m all too familiar with unrealistic expectations, they set you up for failure.  All I will say is that I have before pictures and I’m making videos along the way of this journey.  I will stay the course and you guys will get sick of the updates.  Until then I’ll keep sharing what I’m doing and you guys can cheer me on.

 

14
Jan
14

Torn Between Two Loves

Here lately I’ve been struggling.  No not with food, that’s dialed in quite nicely actually.  I’m torn.  Torn between my love of bodybuilding and my love of barbell building.  When I do one with serious focus, I feel like I’m cheating on the other.  It sounds so silly but really it’s not.

Every morning I get up at 4am.  Spend about 15 minutes getting ready to head out to the gym.  If I do not have an iron clad plan of what I’m going to do in a given workout, I will falter.  Monday and Friday are hard-core bodybuilding lifting days because I have much more time.  Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, I teach at 5:30am class so that only gives me about 30 solid working minutes after I’ve warmed up.  Saturday or Sunday when I’m afforded the time, I’ll sneak in another good workout and it rotates between barbell and body building.  Here lately, I’ve decided to use those 3 shorter training times for barbell work.  Man I love it.

I’m reminded every time I pick up the bar that I’m strong, but the bar can be stronger.  I’m also reminded that my training over these past few years has really changed my functional fitness and ability level. At almost 51 years old I can do things I wouldn’t have dreamed of doing in my 30’s.

I read an article the other day that really struck home for me.  It talked about the fact there are no studies showing eating healthy and exercising will prolong your years.  Then it went on to talk about the quality of your life with strength training versus quality of life with out it.  I already knew this, but it was quite gratifying to read it in black and white.  I don’t care how long I have left, I just want that time to be spent as fit as I can possibly be.

So more motivation to lift!  And more motivation to stop trying to choose between the two disciplines.  I fully believe they compliment each other.  The video below in particular reminds me of my functional ability.  My form isn’t perfect, but my technique is improving with practice.  If you have any doubts about whether weight training is for you, at minimum look into it.  It will make you sore some days, those days will simply remind you that you are growing in your fitness.  I look forward to being the little old lady in the corner lifting.  Absolutely.

08
Jan
14

Inspired By Others

Yesterday while reading Lifting My Spirits FB page I was greatly inspired by her recent workout video posts.  She has allowed folks access into her workouts via video and I just thought that was the greatest thing.  When you are doing this fitness thing for good, as in like brushing your teeth, there are always times you can use a little motivation.  I’m nowhere near as good as she is with this whole video thing, but today, I thought I’d try it.  I have a lot to learn about camera placement etc., and practice will remedy that.  And again a shout out to Lifting My Spirits for being such a great mentor and example for all of us.

When I looked at this video I thought to myself “man you’re getting old” and then the lifter in me said “but you’re still going and will continue to do so”.

Before you get all stirred up about my form, please keep in mind this was a short workout that began at 4:45am.  I didn’t have a lot of time to warm up and it shows.  There are also flaws in my technique and there is nothing better than a video to show you exactly what you need to work on to improve technique.  So there it is.  For the sake of time, I’ve edited out the rest periods for the most part.

A shout out to my friend Roxanne Perkins for helping tutor me on the art of video editing.

Location: CrossFit Madison

Music by Lenny Kravitz

Grunts and groans by yours truly!  🙂

Squat Cleans 2 reps every minute on the minute 85#

07
Jan
14

Workout #2 YOTL 2014

After being out of town and dealing with a spousal unit with food poisoning I managed to make it to the gym on my lunch hour.  It was a quick, lighter weight workout. Not bad for a quickie during lunch.  No complaints here, only accountability.  I also want to make clear the only workouts being posted under this title are leg workouts.  I suppose I should start a separate thread for all other workouts.  🙂

Walking Lunges Wide Step

3 sets x 15 reps
 
Back Squat
45# x 10 reps
65# x 5 reps
85# x 5 reps
45# x 10 reps
 
Seated Leg Press
110# x 10 reps x 4 sets
 
Seated Leg Ext.
60# x 15 reps x 5 sets
 
Walking Lunges Wide Step
2 sets x 15 reps
 
06
Jan
14

Another Round With Patience

Something clicked for me this morning and reminded me of a topic I wanted to talk about.  Long term weight loss comes with a price tag labeled with patience.  No matter how long I’ve been working out, I still mentally want more faster. I also know I’m not the only one.

There have been times when I trained with an almost frantic pace.  A pace no doubt, that would have surely have led to injury if I had stayed on that pace.

There have been times I’ve tightened up my food intake to unreasonable levels truly believing that less is more.  I was wrong.

The thing I’ve lacked the most in my journey has always been patience.  Patience to allow myself to get good at this whole fitness and nutrition thing.  Patience with my own expectation regarding my results.  This stuff doesn’t happen over night.

I consider those who get on the fitness band wagon without massive weight to lose to be a an advantage for a couple of reasons.  I might get a little hate mail for this, but I do.  To have the physique that doesn’t have the wear and tear of major weight loss is a gift that so many take for granted. Instead of worrying about losing all the time, you get to focus more on making positive gains.  It’s more of a one way street.

I screwed up, yes I did, for not taking responsibility sooner.  For not stopping that locomotive I was on.  That being said I wouldn’t be literally half the person I used to be if I hadn’t gone through what I’ve been through.  This my friends is where patience comes in to play.

Everyone I meet who wants to change, they want it over night, ok to be fair, they want it in a week or two, some even make it a month before they freak out because they are dramatically changed and still working their butts off.

They want change that takes years to happen in just a few months.  If they aren’t seeing change, they want to change this or that because what they are doing isn’t working fast enough.  I’ve derailed myself more times than I care to admit because I kept searching for the better, faster way of getting results.  The one thing that I only recently got better at was patience.

It was only when I stop waffling all over creation and starting focusing on what I was doing right and doing just enough more of it to make even better progress.

I wanted my shoulders to look better, it was only after I made the effort to add a bit more focused attention to my shoulders did they respond.  Does that mean I worked shoulders every other day, no.  I it means I worked them one extra workout per week.

I wanted to get leaner, does that mean I ate less?  No, actually I started tracking my caloric output vs. my input a little more thoroughly.  Does that mean I became obsessed about it?  No, I came to the realization that my oldest and by far my worst “dieter, less is more” habit was still alive an well.  It was only when I logged it and looked at it staring me back in the face that I knew I had to make some changes.  Small changes, like adding a more effective carb source post workout and adding a bit more fat during the rest of my meals.  I feel better, I can lift more.

Is what is working for me what you should be doing?  No, not necessarily.  Every human body is different.  If you aren’t writing down or logging what you are doing, how do you know if you are making positive or negative gains?  Well if negative your pants will be tighter.  If positive?  That’s a different story.  You’ll come to a point when you don’t want your pants to get smaller, but you want your body composition to change.  Without photos, measurements, workout, data, and a nutritional log, you’ve got very little to trouble shoot with.  Your first instincts are to eat less and work harder, when just the opposite is in order.

So before you go changing things, are you doing the logging, the information gathering that you need to identify change when it is happening?  If not, start there.  Patience, persistence, and consistency.  Keep moving forward!

journal leather

 

 

02
Jan
14

Resolutions – Just Keep Going

I posted on my FB page yesterday, a simple shout out to those starting something new in 2014.  I’ve seen so many posts slamming new years resolutions and posts of seasoned athletes commenting on the new years crowds in the gym.

Today I feel a need to talk about the day I started my journey, exactly 13 years ago yesterday on 01-01-2001.  I was miserably fat, extremely insecure, and totally embarrassed to go into the gym.  I went anyway.  I was wearing a 3xl t-shirt and a pair of leggings that should have never ever been seen in public, but it was all I had that I could fit into.  So began my journey.  That first week was literally hell looking back on it.  I made myself so sore I got sick, but I kept going.  I could feel peoples eyes and the looks of pity, but I kept going.

A month or so later when I had been going consistently for a month (a huge deal at the time), I decided to join a morning aerobics class.  I got in the very back of the room. I noticed people looking back at me, some with encouragement, others with what I will describe as a knowing look.  A look of “we are about to run her off” knowing.  I hung in that class for 20 minutes and the instructor made no effort what-so-ever to modify the movements or even say to me “just keep going”.  Three little words was all she had to say, but she never did.  She became forever known to me as “the instructor I never want to be”.  I walked out of that class at that 20 minute mark and I never set foot in that room again.  Did I walk out of the gym??  Not a chance.

Instead, I got to know something called iron.  Dumbbells at first and then I added the barbell.  They didn’t yell at me.  They never at any point implied that I couldn’t do it, they just fought back with resistance.  From that point on, I knew I’d found what I loved to do.  I lifted and lifted and slowly over the course of the year 2001 I began to change. After 90 days no-one could even tell I’d lost 35# and I cried ALOT because I was not an “after” in that first 90 days. In 90 days losing 35 pounds was impressive (looking back on it) and I could have stopped there but I didn’t.  I just kept going.  Another 90 days passed and another 35 pounds down, people started to take notice.  Over the course of yet another 90 days, folks started noticing BIG changes on a monthly basis.  Some where around the 125 pounds lost mark, I felt like I was on the right path and my habits had begun to develop, but it took years to get my emotional head straight.  So if you are reading this and just starting, just keep going.  It takes longer than you may think to change, but just keep going and you will change.

All of that started with a New Year’s Resolution and a gym membership.  So for the next two or three months, walk around your gym and make eye contact with the New Year’s Resolutions, you may find a lonely soul that is one smile away from changing his or her life.

Me?  I’ll be the one standing on the sidelines yelling “YOU CAN DO THIS” with tears streaming down my face, because I just kept going.

live-your-dreams-One-moment-at-a-time