Archive for the ‘Fitness’ Category

Inversion Table

Monday, February 20th, 2012

Background
I’ve read and watched videos about inversion tables. I’ve known they existed for quite a few years, but lacked interest in sacrificing the bedroom/spare room real estate for such a thing. As I recall, they’re designed to alleviate the pressure that gravity causes your own body mass to exert on your frame, specifically the discs in your spine. By inverting oneself, you effectively reduce or altogether eliminate that pressure by reversing it. Impressive idea.

In the recent past I started looking into these things, not because I’m suffering from back pain, but to try and take advantage of what appears to be a healing tool, or concept. I wasn’t overly enthusiastic about it, but did take it as far as making a special trip to Play It Again Sports just to try one out. I was only in it for 60 seconds, tops, but dared to go full vertical and really enjoyed the experience.

Present
Today, my wife admitted she found an inversion table on Craig’s List and made plans to surprise me with it when I got home. There was a problem: the table wouldn’t fit in her car. She had to tell me about it, so that I could take my car to get it. Fortunately, I had just the right amount of cash to offer in exchange. The seller claimed to have purchased it to relieve lower back pain.

I loaded the STAMINA Gravity Inversion Therapy Table in the car and headed home. A few hours later I brought it inside and we set it up. There’s only minor setup required, no tools, and it collapses to take up minimal space for storage. I got in it and quickly realized this particular model doesn’t go full vertical, in fact I’d have to say it stops at roughly 70 degrees, give or take. No worries. It is ill-advised to get in them for very long, or very ‘far’ at first. You’re supposed to gradually ease into the duration and angle over time.

My wife jumped in and gave it a whirl for herself; she too enjoyed it.

I intend to do more research and add the inversion table to my daily fitness routine. I’ll post more about my experience later.

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Reducing Boredom on the Treadmill

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

For some, running on a treadmill is more an exercise in distracting their mind than focusing on the workout. My first experience on a moving belt left me uninterested in trying again. I was at a Gold’s Gym in Richmond, VA. My friend, knowing I considered myself a runner, suggested I try out the treadmill. It was fine until I tried to get off the thing. I nearly collapsed in a heap at the rear end of the machine and secretly vowed I would forever avoid any similar embarrassment.

Things have changed, as have my feelings towards or against the treadmill; in fact I now own one that resides in our guest bedroom. The point of this post is not to share with you my love for this fantastic contraption, but rather tell you what I do to keep myself engaged in my workout and distracted from the potential onslaught of boredom and desire to quit.

First of all, it’s important to note the way I setup the treadmill. If you always walk or run on the treadmill at 0° you’re doing yourself a disservice. The best way to mimic self-propelled walking (viz. waking on your own as opposed to hovering over a moving belt) is to set the incline to at least 2°, 2.0 as it appears on most models. More often than not the speed control and display are on the right, and the incline control and display is on the left. You’ll figure it out, it’s easy.

With your treadmill set at 2° you’re ready to start walking or running. I don’t condone reading while on a treadmill, walking or running. Many people listen to music, myself included, but there are obvious problems (that can be avoided with practice). When listening to music, particularly a familiar song, I tend to keep track of how long I’ve been running measured against the duration of the song. For some, this may be helpful. I find that for the most part I annoy myself when I do this. However, music is definitely one way to reduce boredom on the treadmill.

An easy way to jazz things up a bit, and give yourself a better workout, is to vary the speed of the belt at predetermined intervals, every 0.25, 0.50 or 1 mile mark. I’ve never come across a treadmill that didn’t track your distance in 0.01 increments. If yours doesn’t, upgrade.

I always start my workouts with a 0.25mi walk at 4.0mph; this takes 3m 45s, or 3:45. I then continue my warmup at 6.0mph (or a 10:00 pace). I’ll run at that speed for 0.25 to 0.50 miles before cranking it up to 6.7mph which is an 8:57 pace. This is where my runs get interesting. My unspoken (until now) and undocumented goal, or plan, has been to keep my running pace at or above an 8:57 pace. By varying the speed and incline I keep my runs interesting and the little increments of 0.25 to 0.50 miles giving me something to look forward to that’s no more than 2, 15s away!

To give you a continued example, after my walk/jog warmup I’ll run at 6.7 for a mile which takes roughly 9:00. I then bump it up to an 8:00 (7.5mph) and sub 7:00 (?) pace. I’ll run at each of these paces, or somewhere in between from 0.25 to 1.0 miles at a time. I try to finish my faster running in 3 or 4 miles and cool down over 1 to 2.0 miles at or below a 9:00 pace.

I hope this helps. I know it’s nothing earth-shattering, but it should help. You can also improve your workout by maintaining the same pace while increasing the incline. Don’t try and be super-dude taking it up to 10° unless you’re used to walking/running at that speed and pace. Go slow. Ease into it, particularly if you’re new to exercising regularly.

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Diet Diary

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Earlier today a friend and I were discussing each others eating habits. We’re both trying to lose weight and taking two very different approaches to the same goal. He’s going the diet pill, heavy protein, no carbs (and no fruits and veggies for that matter), work-out-until-you-pass-out route. I’m going the Paleo Diet-ish and regular exercise route I’m not an official Paleo Dieter, but I use that philosophy as I think about what I’m going to eat. I use the rule if it were at one time living, it’s OK to eat, with as little processing as possible. (I’ll talk more about this later)

As he and I talked about our choices in food I thought it might help to share what I’m eating and how I’m approaching the task of losing 40 pounds. Below is the list of foods I ate today. I don’t know the exact quantities and don’t really care; I don’t count calories or weigh my food. I eat a modest amount of everything, and I try to snack (on what I have listed) throughout the day.

Breakfast

banana
peanut butter

Post-Workout Snack

large apple

Lunch

carrots
grapes
salad: iceberg lettuce, black olives, fresh mozarella (home-made, but not by me), cucumbers and sunflower seeds

Post-Work Snack

provolone cheese
raisins

Dinner

steak
onion
green peppers
rice

Not every day is this healthy, but I’m making a concerted effort. I put my lunch together in the morning before leaving to go to the gym. I’m up at 5:30am and try to be out the door by, or before 5:45am, so I don’t have much time. I use Rubbermaid Easy Find Lids containers because they’re reusable, they pack a tight seal, the lids stick to the bottom of the container, and I’m trying to be more Eco-Friendly. :)

Dinner is usually off the cuff. My wife and I start talking about the evening meal just before it happens. I’d like to have a meal calendar with breakfast, lunch and dinner planned in advance, but for now we just wing it. I’m planning to follow the Paleo Diet meal plan which will make some of my erratic preparation unnecessary and the task of food preparation much simpler.

Afterthought: the Paleo Diet (as I understand it) was championed by Loren Cordain, PhD. I bought his book and read it with vigor. I soaked up all the scientific explanations about how our bodies process food and how important it is to eat lean meats, fruits and vegetables. I’ve found some other websites about the Paleo Diet school of thought that I found useful:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleolithic_diet
http://paleodietlifestyle.com/
http://altmed.creighton.edu/Paleodiet/Foodlist.html
http://www.earth360.com/diet_paleodiet_balzer.html

After, afterthought: I’m also experimenting with sourdough (thank you, Mom); it’s not exactly Paleo, but it’s healthy and fun. :)

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Barefoot running, research.

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

I’ve been reading about barefoot running for nearly a month and written about it before. It makes sense to me even without scientific evidence. I can easily believe that our ancestors (10s, 100s, 1000s of years ago) traversed their home terrain without shoes, so the idea of barefoot running seems logical. Of course, it helps when the scientific evidence that proves the barefoot running community is not intellectually challenged, as some have said. Enjoy.

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Iterations from Health Month

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

I’m playing a never-ending “game” called Health Month, created by Buster Benson. It’s a creative way to encourage people to make healthier choices in a fun, and competitive social-networking-type online platform. I keep a separate blog about my experience. Here’s a partial quote from my latest entry:

$5 Well Spent?

If you’re already playing Health Month then you probably know Buster Benson (the site’s founder, creator and sole-developer) doesn’t allow more than three rules unless you’re a paid player. I spent the first quarter of this year (January – March) playing three rules a month, for free. In March I played disastrously, spending two days out of the month catching up ten missed days each! I decided to renew my commitment, pick myself up and play better this month; unfortunately that hasn’t happened as I would have liked.

Click here to read the post in it’s entirety.

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