Monday, February 18, 2013

Starting Up . . . Again

My surgery for my shoulder was back in June of '12. Now its mid February of  '13. I have put on weight constantly, and have not been successful yet in getting back into my health regimen. So here's another start date. I've got a few friends who also either need too lose weight or are willing to help me stay focused on my own health. I've been so self reliant and been the one who encouraged and helped others that I've neglected the help that friends have wanted to give me. I've got to deal with that and admit my own need for help.

In ministry among pastor's it has been referred to as the "walk on water" syndrome. The pastor has the job of being an example and helping others. He's looked up to, placed on a pedestal and expected to not have problems like other people. When the pastor begins to believe that about himself and then experiences problems, the failure of his ministry is not far off. That conflicted situation will undermine the pastors and cause him to multiply his problems, not solve them. The end result is ultimately ruin.

So the same thing can happen in the life of the individual trying to lead others toward fitness. In my case, I succeeded personally on a level that few ever attain. Then when my health and financial problems began, I just thought I would work my way out of it. I haven't. I've fallen deeper into it. I've got to have help. I can't pretend to walk on this water any longer.

I know what to do. I have the resources to reach  my goals. It is time to get on with it and reach them. But I'm enlisting help this time. I will let my friends who have said they will encourage me do that. I'll own up to my weaknesses and tackle them. I'll start building the discipline that I have let fall by the wayside. So today, yes, once again. today, I start. And I won't start the journey alone.

Monday, January 21, 2013

Here's a FaceBook post I made on the Upstate BeachBody Coaches page. Just thought it was important to keep myself honest here as well.




Feeling the need to do some confessing and making myself accountable. I don't know how many of the rest of you have found yourself in this place, but I've been struggling - and not well - with my motivation. Since last April when my shoulder problems first manifested i've had a hard time being that product of the product we're supposed to be. The shoulder really isn't a problem. That just seems to be where the problems began - the pain, the operation, the recovery. All that is behind me, but I'm just not rolling like I was.

I keep starting and stopping a 90 day program. Each week I begin with "I'm going to do better this week."  I've lost a lot of dearly gained ground in my health battle.

I don't want to give up, don't want to quit. If I never make a penny as a coach, I want to help myself and, having helped myself, to help others with this same battle. But getting focused is a challenge I've having a hard time tackling.

This is humbling. But I don't want to continue missing important goals in my life just to keep hubris in tack.

I've never personally met most of you, but many of us have chatted and shared a good bit on here about health and what we're doing. I know I'm the only one who can "fix" me, but maybe someone out there has been this way and might offer some insights.

And maybe just getting honestly accountable is what I need to do. Still in the battle with you, just struggling.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Shoulder Pain and Strength

One of the recent improvements that I've noticed in my shoulder is that increased strength helps me manage the residual pain.What I mean is this:  previously when I moved my arm and felt pain, there was also weakness and that compounded the tendency to give in to the pain. As strength has increased, I will push through certain painful movements instead of giving in to them. To me it seems that as I do this I experience less pain than I was experiencing previously.

It could be that the completed movements are exercising the affected areas, and as a result there is less pain.  Also it could be that it's mental. Because I move through the pain more easily with the increased strength, I subconsciously discount the pain message and move anyway.

Physical, mental or maybe even both, my strength has incased and that's getting me down the road to a more complete recovery.  I'm still marking a lot of this quick recent improvement to the results of using the Les Mills Pump workouts. The barbell is doing the trick. My right shoulder is coaxed into performing as well as my right shoulder.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Still Sold On Les Mills Pump

I'm thinking that this will be my last week of physical therapy. Unless the therapist and doc can give me really compelling reasons to continue with that program, I'm really satisfied with - heck, I'm excited about - continuing the recovery using Les Mills Pump.

http://bcove.me/9l7g24ty
I've been suggesting this BeachBody program to a number of younger guys that I thought could benefit from its high energy/high reps approach to barbell exercise. Then I realized that, at middle age facing senior citizen status, I'm an excellent candidate for Pump.

Still feeling weak in my right shoulder from bone spur surgery on June 1st, I started this past weekend using the bar without any weight. Immediately I saw that using the barbell gave me feedback to work the right side harder in order to keep the bar level.

I've added 5 lbs to the bar the past couple of days and the shoulder is doing great. There is some soreness from doing the exercise, bur it is much less than it had been earlier.  Soon I'll start adding different weight amounts that will be appropriate for what I can handle on that particular exercise.

Using Pump is literally like waking up the muscles in my back and shoulder. It just happens to be the scratch for my particular itch, but if you are having a shoulder issue, I'm on board for highly recommending Les Mills Pump. Check it out at http://beachbodycoach.com/drrmc.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Pumping My Way To Total Recovery

Recovery from surgery on my shoulder has gone like I expected even though I being told that I'm doing great compared to others. I'm still very weak in my right shoulder and haven't been able to get back into P90X. I had planned that this would be the summer that I tore it up on X. Spring workouts were going fantastic. In fact, I was doing Insanity workouts along with my X workouts.

The problem was a bone spur in my right shoulder that developed as a result of a torn rotator cuff I didn't even know I had. In fact the doctor said it was a very "impressive" bone spur. She said she had to dig around a bit in the shoulder to clean things up. But she didn't do any muscle work or  graphs - just spur removal. So I'm a bit put out and bothered by the persistent post operative weakness in my shoulder.

I am excited about a work-around that I'm trying out. Where P90X uses dumbbells, Les Mills Pump uses barbells. Dumbells accentuate the weaknesses in opposing arms. Barbells provide some equity between the relative strengths of the left and right arms and shoulders. So I'm starting on the Les Mills program as a path to recovering my strength in my right shoulder and arm. After reviewing the program I think I've hit on a great plan.

So today is my first day of Les Mills. I'll continue to post the progress and nutrition here and show the results. But I am so looking forward to getting back to P90X and Insanity just as soon as I can.

Well, as they say in Les Mills Pump, "Kia Haha!"  Be Strong!

Monday, April 9, 2012

Power Routines

Spring break is over and I thrilled! That interlude into my daily routine brought on a major case of lousy. I didn't exercise for days. And I really missed the Insanity workouts we've done after school. I was just beginning to notice some great progress. I hope that I'll still see that there's been progress when I do my next session.

There are a couple of teachers doing Insanity with me after school. We aren't going through the program by the book. We take one routine and do it until we have an acceptable level of mastery. Then we add another routine and mix them until we feel we have a handle on both. Then ass another and rotate those. We'll keep,doing that until all the workout routines are in the mix. It should be summer by then and I can start a round of Insanity from start to finish getting some bragging rights results!

I was on the road a lot during Spring break. I really don't do very well traveling. I ate food that normally I won't touch. And I spent a couple of days at my parents house. That is a dangerous place for me nutritionally. So many kinds of good food and so much of it.

But, I'm back now and ready to make this an awesome April and May. Routine and familiarity can be powerful allies in the battle to win our health and fitness back. I'm looking forward to the routines of doing Insanity with my friends, of eating foods I make and I know are nutritionally safe and helpful. I enjoy the routines and rhythms of my life in my home. All of these work together to make me a winner with my health.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Catching Up

Can't believe I've gone so long without a post. Here's a quick rundown of my progress.

The treadmill running has been really good. I hit the three mile mark a while back, but I've backed off of it because my knees started bothering me. Apparently I'm still a little heavy for long distance running. So I dropped down to 1.5 to 2 miles and started focusing on building speed. I'm really quite satisfied with my modification and my progress.

It's getting warmer and I reclaimed the garage for my P90X workouts. I restart the round tomorrow. Next year I'll just have to invest in a heater for the garage. And at work something else starts tomorrow: one of my co workers and I will be doing insanity. We had done it some last year, but this year our schedules just didn't workout. We've both decided that we're doing this anyway and tomorrow we start doing Insanity. That is totally a coincidence, HIIT it will be interesting to see me keep up running, P90X and Insanity.

Nutrition is doing super. Back on at least one Shakeology a day. Watching my other meals.

Okay, more later. I've got to get my rest before tomorrow gets here.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Keep the Beat Up, Let's Drop the Beat Down

Using the treadmill as part of my overall fitness program is working very well. Currently I am mixing the HIIT training g with 5K training. That combination has pushed me to intensify my running much more quickly than I would have with the HIITs alone.

Coming to the conclusion that HIIT may not be the best term to describe all my slow/fast routines. When being faithful to the math of my runs, they tend to be very HIIT like. However, when I'm being less stringent with counting phases of speed bursts during the run, the proper term is probably "fartlek". No, the boys in math class didn't come up with that one, although it is kind of fun the way it rolls off the tongue. It is actually Swedish for "speed play" according to Wikipedia. That really is the idea. In a pure fartlek the runner selects a short term goal, like a visual marker in order to push himself harder while running until reaching that marker and then slowing down for awhile. The process repeats itself throughout the run. The goal is, like doing a HIIT, to go through cycles of exhaustion and recovery during a single run.

Since I'm doing fartlek on a treadmill, a visual goal in the distance isn't possible. I use the songs I listen to on my iPhone to vary my speed: fast riff, run fast; ballad, slow down. I'm using the music to motivate my running speed. I love doing this. A song with great electric guitar riffs/solos makes a great running song for me. Sometimes other styles/genres of music qualify on the basis of their individual uniqueness. There’s nothing like hitting the top speeds on a treadmill while listening to something like T.S.O.’s “Figaro” by Mozart. No, don’t picture powdered wigs and harpsichords. Nothing like that at all after Trans Siberian Orchestra gets a hold of a piece of music.

Oops, sorry. This is supposed to be about fitness and running, not music appreciation.

Anyway, it works. Fartlek running on a treadmill while listening to  good rock music. Helps you get a better burn.

Later folks.

Monday, December 26, 2011

New Toys!

I received some really nice gifts from my family this Christmas. One I'm enjoying learning about is a Nike+ unit. I'm looking forward to using this to track my walks/runs and compare it to readouts on the treadmill. I'm at my in-laws house today in Memphis, TN. I took my first walk this morning. I slipped out before anyone else got up and walked to Starbucks. The stats are recorded on my iPhone as I walk and a summary report is given at the end. Today was 26'42" for a walk of 1.52 miles. According to the report I burned 240 calories. That seems high to me (check some of my earlier posts about the calories count issues with treadmills - looks like it might apply to Nike+ as well.

I can see interesting possibilities using this. I can instant, accurate records of all my cardio workouts, even on the treadmill.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Sauna

The fitness center has a (large and working) sauna. I really enjoy using the sauna after an intensive set of HITTs. At the fitness center where I formerly had my membership, the sauna was small (three people was about all it could accommodate) and often broken down. This sauna is spacious and hot! I'm having to acclimate myself to the heat.

There are definite advantages to using the sauna. One is that it helps reduce muscle soreness from a hard workout. Another is that it helps rid the skin of free radicals. Sweating also moves excess salt out of your body (when I've been using a sauna regularly I can tell when I've eaten salty food - I can taste it in the sweat that runs across my lips). And finally, if it is quiet in the sauna, the combination of heat and solitude can be very relaxing.

The big myth is that weight can be sweated off in a sauna. There is a slight boost in metabolism that would mean a small increase in calories burned, but nothing worth building a weight reduction plan on. Sweat, no matter what circumstances produce it, does not come from fat. It is not being melted off. Sweat comes from fluidic the blood and that fluid is replaced the next time you drink water or do anything else to hydrate.

The sauna is enjoyable with definite benefits, but it is no substitute for the hard work of strenuous exercise.