Wednesday, September 30, 2009
P90X Day 53: X Stretch
(Incidentally, I've discovered that I'm not a big fan of anything in P90X that starts with the word "Dreya," including Dreya Forearm Stretches, Dreya Rolls and Dreya Weber. More on that later.)
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Portion Control
- Before eating, divide the plate. To ensure a properly balanced meal, fill one half of your plate with fruits or vegetables. Divide the remaining half equally between protein and starch/carbs.
- Pre-portion tempting treats. In other words, don't eat out of the bag or box; portion out the amount you're supposed to eat and set it aside, and put away the container before you turn off your brain and start popping stuff in your mouth.
- Head off the mindless munch. Have your restaurant server take away the basket of bread before you mindlessly down the contents.
- Downsize your dishes. Dinner plates are enormous compared to the ones used by our parents and grandparents. Trade them for smaller ones, or you'll end up overloading them with food (and eating all of it) just so your plates don't look so bare.
- Limit your choices. We tend to overeat if given more choices. Implement a no-buffet rule.
- Use your power for good. The person in your household who buys and prepares food is a "nutritional gatekeeper" who dictates the healthfulness of family meals and snacks. If that's you, wield this power responsibly.
- Avoid a "see-food" diet. Keep unhealthy snacks out of sight, and you'll be less likely to munch on them. Remember: Candy dishes are evil.
- Turn off the television. There's a direct correlation between time spent in front of the boob tube and amount of food that goes down your throat. Before you know it, that shitty episode of "CSI: Miami" is over and your bag of Cheetos is empty, leaving you with fluorescent artificial cheese flavoring smeared all over your gaping mouth.
- Think before you drink. Remember to choose zero-calorie beverages like water or tea. But when you do sip on something with calories (I'm talking juice, not soda), keep in mind that we're horrible at judging volumes and tend to drink more when using short, wide glasses.
- Serve good-for-you foods family style. Don't go family style when it comes to less-than-healthy foods -- we tend to pig out when a big-ass platter of deep fried anything is placed in front of us. But salads and vegetable sides can be an all-you-can-eat affair.
P90X Day 52: Kenpo X
As for the rest of Kenpo X, I'm still using weights, and trying my best not to land a hook/uppercut on my own face with a dumbbell.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Please Don't Hurt Me, Mr. Idol
I've not been especially kind to Wesley Idol. (See examples here, here and here.) P90X Day 51: Core Synergistics
Sunday, September 27, 2009
P90X Day 50: Yoga X
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Friday, September 25, 2009
P90X Day 48: Kenpo X
Say Something!
So spit it out!
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Who is Pam the Blam?
- Studied with the Groundlings!
- Served in the Air Force as a "medical professional"!
- Earned a paralegal certificate, a grant-writing certificate, and a license to sell insurance!
- Started her own business!
- Worked as a legislative assistant for a politician!
- Has "been on the Space Shuttle immediately after re-entry" (whatever that means)!
- Was a contestant on "The Weakest Link"!
- Ran a homeless feeding program!
- Performed weekly readings for the blind!
- Lectured at Cal State Northridge!
- Authored a book under the pen name "Nashieqa Washington" entitled "Why Do Black People Love Fried Chicken
"! (Here's the "About the Author" page from the book.)
- Runs a website called YourBlackFriend.com ("Your #1 Web Source for Questions About Black People") also using the "Nashieqa Washington" alias!
- Has provided commentary for NPR!
- Moved to Panama, and then Guatemala, and then Denver(?)!
Admit it: Of all of Tony's sweaty minions, Pam the Blam is now your hands-down favorite, too. Go friend her on Facebook!
[OCT. 2009 UPDATE: Pam contacted me after reading this post, and I had the opportunity to interview her at length. Read it here.]
[JAN. 2011 UPDATE: Pam's back with a new video -- and she's gone Paleo!]
P90X Day 47: Legs & Back + Ab Ripper X
But I didn't. It's tough waking up to Legs & Back (my least favorite P90X video) after just a few hours of fitful sleep, but at this point, I can't take a break for a day without risking the total derailment of my exercise routine. I'm the type of person who's all too eager to run down a slippery slope; if I deviate from the P90X plan even slightly, I could very well decide to stop entirely.
So I got up, changed, inhaled a bowl of yogurt, and dragged myself into the garage. I pressed play on the DVD player for what seems like the millionth time and dove into Legs & Back. I didn't up my reps or weights by much, but surprisingly, by the third exercise or so, I started feeling pretty good. I was totally alert. My legs felt stronger than they have since the start of Phase 2, and my pull-up form felt tighter and more controlled. By the time I finished the set of Mason twists at the end of Ab Ripper X (I did 80!), I wasn't tired anymore, despite having punished my glutes, hamstrings, calves, back and core for an intense hour and twenty minutes. Either I'm getting (slightly) better at this, or my body and brain were overcompensating for my lack of Zs.
I hate to say it, but I think P90X (or, at the very least, physical exercise) has become an integral part of my morning. Without it, my day wouldn't feel complete.
(Of course, this means I'm going to be stuck with Tony Horton for a good long time. I desperately need some new videos.)
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
P90X Day 46: Yoga X
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Spicy Thai-Style Peanut Salad Dressing
1/3 cup lime juice (from about 3 limes)
3 tablespoons smooth peanut butter
2 tablespoons water
1 1/2 tablespoons sugar (or a couple packets of Splenda)
1 teaspoon Sriracha chili sauce
1/4 teaspoon salt
Blend it all up, and use it to dress a simple salad of greens, grilled chicken breast, and whatever vegetables you want (carrots, cucumbers, scallions, etc.). This recipe makes 8 servings of salad dressing, assuming you're not too heavy handed with it.
Per serving: 165 calories / 18g fat / 4g carbs / 1.5g protein
P90x Day 45: Back & Biceps + Ab Ripper X
Plus, with the last Phase 2 session of Back & Biceps done, I don't have to hear Tony's hacky "gun show" joke or Katie's crazy-eyed-stalker laugh again for another three weeks.
Monday, September 21, 2009
P90X Day 44: Plyometrics (& A Note About Erik Stolhanske)

Plyo's my favorite of all the cardio-centric P90X videos, and I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that Erik, one of Tony's workout minions, is performing all the moves on a prosthetic leg. Watching him nail each one of the leaps, jumps, lunges and squats on just one foot reminds me that I have no excuse for being lazy or sloppy during Plyo. Erik's agility and coordination perfectly demonstrate how people with physical disabilities can kick massive quantities of ass.
There is, however, one Erik-related piece of business that bugs me every time I watch Plyo:
Tony, who babbles about the day jobs of just about every single one of his trainers (Sophia's studying to be a dentist! Dreya's a world-famous aerialist and gymnast! Phil and Joe are attorneys! Katie's an interior decorator! Dave's a substitute teacher and a karate man! Pam's a private investigator! Adam's a dancer and a trainer!), NEVER ONCE MENTIONS that Erik Stolhanske is a member of the Broken Lizard comedy group and an incredibly successful movie actor, screenwriter and comedian to boot.
Just an oversight? I don't think so. Last month, Tony Horton posted on Facebook a list of all the celebrities he believes have tried P90X. He goes so far as to include an L.A.-based local news anchor, but Erik is nowhere to be found on the list.
Perhaps this stems from professional jealousy. Tony's co-starring role in a soft-core porn flick doesn't stack up well against Erik's guest-starring spots on critically acclaimed shows like "Curb Your Enthusiasm" and "Six Feet Under," or against his writing credits and starring roles in movies like "Beerfest," "Club Dread" and "Super Troopers." But given that Tony can't seem to shut up about everyone else's jobs, would it kill him to acknowledge that Erik's more than just a guy who can jump around on a plastic leg?
[Want to learn more about the P90X gang? Click to read about Tony Horton's acting career, Dreya Weber's omnisexuality, Maren's hardcore porn stardom, Muscular Attorney Phil's lie-detecting capabilities, Wesley Idol's bafflingly half-assed performance in Kenpo X, Joe Bovino's cross-cultural dating expertise, and Pam the Blam's alter ego, Nashieqa Washington.]
Sunday, September 20, 2009
P90X Day 43: Chest, Shoulders & Triceps + Ab Ripper X
Saturday, September 19, 2009
P90X Day 42: X Stretch
After completing X Stretch today, I tried using my new foam roller to mobilize my IT band, hamstrings and lower back -- it's amazing how much tension I can isolate with the roller. I'm hesitant to add even more time to my morning workouts, but it's probably a good idea to incorporate a roller routine into my daily cool-downs.
Friday, September 18, 2009
Reality Check: Ripped in 90 Days?

“To make a change in how you look, you are talking about a significant period of training,” Dr. Kraemer said. “In our studies it takes six months to a year.” And, he added, that is with regular strength-training workouts, using the appropriate weights and with a carefully designed individualized program. “That is what the reality is,” he said.
And genetic differences among individuals mean some people respond much better to exercise than others, said Dr. Mark Tarnopolsky, an exercise researcher atMcMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. He added that although he does not think the before-and-after photos in ads are doctored, most people will not change so markedly no matter how hard or long they work. “I believe they are taking the top one or two people out of thousands,” Dr. Tarnopolsky said.
People who did change their bodies say six months is a bare minimum to see real change.
So knowing that we need to get to a low body fat % to get the "get ripped" look, and knowing how much caloric deficit we need to burn FAT (as opposed to just lose weight), and knowing that there's such variation of caloric deficit with P90X and that at the most it's calculated to drop about a pound a week of fat, AT BEST, what does this tell us about the likelihood of getting ripped on P90X?
If all the fat a person needs to lose is 6-12 pounds to achieve the ripped body fat percentage, then it's possible to get to the Ripped Place in the 90 days. Otherwise, it won't happen.
- 3 pull-ups for males / 1 pull-up for females. Oddly enough, despite the "P90X Minimum" label, these pull-up standards don't actually appear to be requirements at all. The Fit Test says that "many people won't be able to do any pull-ups when starting P90X. You'll get more out of the program if you can do pull-ups," but according to the guidebook, it's okay if you can't.
- 5 inch vertical leap for males / 3 inch vertical leap for females. Really? If a guy can jump a mere five inches off the ground, he's in "top physical condition"? According to this website, a vertical leap of less than 12 inches for men and 8 inches for women merits a rating of "POOR."
- 15 push-ups for males / 3 push-ups for females (or 15 knee-version push-ups). Again, these requirements are below other published standards.
Rubdown Rundown
P90X Day 41: Kenpo X
When I finally woke up at 7, though, I found that my whole routine was out of whack. I padded into the kitchen, rubbed the sleep out of my eyes, plopped my butt on a kitchen stool and flipped open a magazine. I didn't feel like exercising, and I had the luxury of being able to procrastinate, so I did. It wasn't until I ambled into the garage to start Kenpo X that I realized that I was going to be late for work if I didn't get my ass in gear.
And boy, did my ass get in gear. Kenpo X is a mighty fine workout if combined with weights; my shoulders were burning as I pushed through the moves. At this point, I can anticipate all the exercises on this video, so I'm pretty much on auto-pilot throughout Kenpo X -- I barely noticed Tony and the gang on the TV screen. My mind was focused on maintaining good form and high intensity, and when the workout ended, I was actually a little disappointed.
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Prison Workout
Tacolicious
But today, I was powerless to resist the siren call of the Tacolicious stand at the San Francisco Farmer's Market. Three tasty tacos for nine bucks, folks. I had the lengua in chili verde taco, the Rancho Gordo vallarta beans, peppers and nopales taco, and the "shot-and-a-beer" braised chicken taco.
And I do not regret it.
(M's on a plane to Chicago and has reservations at Frontera tonight, so at least I'm not alone in taking a diet-busting detour into the land of crazy-good Mexican cooking.)
P90X Day 40: Legs & Back + Ab Ripper X
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
U.S. Marine Corps Fitness Test

I'm too much of a pampered wimp to ever join the military, but I'm curious to see how well (or, more likely, how poorly) I'll perform on the Marine Corps Fitness Test at the end of my 90-day fling with P90X.
10 Rules of Good Nutrition
- Eat every 2-3 hours.
- Eat complete, lean protein each time you eat.
- Eat vegetables every time you eat.
- Eat carbs only when you deserve to (well, not ALL carbs -- eat fruits and veggies whenever you want).
- Learn to love healthy fats.
- Ditch the calorie containing drinks (including fruit juice).
- Focus on whole foods.
- Allow yourself “10% foods” (foods that break rules, but which you’ll allow yourself to eat or drink 10% of the time).
- Develop food preparation strategies.
- Balance daily food choices with healthy variety.
Yes, this free document is clearly a sales ploy by the Precision Nutrition team to get people to buy their products, and yes, there's nothing on the list above that most of us haven't heard before. Still, the guide provides surprisingly detailed advice on changing one's diet for the better, and is worth a look.
P90X Day 39: Yoga X
By the way, Yoga X features one of my all-time favorite P90X moments: Tony yells out "This isn't a competition -- we're just doing our best and WHAT, you guys?" and everyone ignores him.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Tony is Concerned About the Kids
He starts a set by grabbing a pair of inappropriately heavy dumbbells, and making sure everyone knows about it. "I'm pickin' FORTY-FIVES myself!" he exclaims. "I'm a FORTY-FIVE man. I got MY weapons. What do YOU got, Bobby?" Bobby -- knowing he'll have to complete every single one of his reps, had planned to use 40-pound weights, but is shamed by Tony into switching to heavier dumbbells. Tony laughs at him. (Of course, if Bobby later switches back to a lighter set of weights, Tony's line is: "Bobby picked the wrong weight; he THOUGHT he was a HERO.")
He then counts down: "Okay, everybody's doing TWENTY-FIVE REPS here. Are you ready? Five-four ... three-two ... one -- here we go!"
Tony then does a grand total of three reps, and sets his dumbbells on the floor. "I'd keep going, but I gotta CHECK ON THE KIDS," he explains. Uh, sure, Tony.
P90X Day 38: Back & Biceps + Ab Ripper X
It's not that I'm flat-out, fall-down horrible at pull-ups; thanks to P90X, I'm now able to crank out a full set of 12 wide-grip pull-ups in a row, and I can also manage to eke out 3 or 4 corn cob pull-ups before having to brace myself with a foot on a chair. But for the life of me, I can't even remotely come close to the insane number of pull-ups that Tony -- and in this particular video, Bobby Stephenson -- can do. Also? Their form is perfect whereas mine is shit; by the end of every set of pull-ups, I'm thrashing my legs around like a fish on a hook. (You know, the kind of fish with legs.)
My lack of pull-up progress really bugs me -- especially given that I've seen huge improvement in my ability to perform just about every other P90X move. I keep waiting for an "unlock" moment, when I suddenly figure out how to correct some biomechanical mistake I've been unwittingly making, and dramatically spike up my pull-up numbers. My gut tells me, though, that when it comes to pull-ups, I just need to lower my expectations.
On a more positive note: 70 Mason twists - no breaks!
Monday, September 14, 2009
P90X Day 37: Plyometrics
I started Plyo today feeling great. Part of it was attributable to the fact that I knew I had zero pull-ups to complete, but mostly, I just woke up wanting to exercise. So after downing some yogurt (and totally ignoring Tony's warning not to eat for at least an hour before plyo), I threw myself into the jumps, twists, spins, marches and circle runs with the abandon of a Shaker in late-eighteenth-century New England (but minus the speaking-in-tongues and faith-healing).
Get your knees UP, people!
Unfortunately, my quads are still super-tight and achy. They burn crazily every time I do a squat-related move. It's like the front of my thighs contracted gonorrhea. (But for the record: Neither I nor anything attached to me has ever contracted gonorrhea.)
[UPDATE: I'm very proud to report that this is now the first site that pops up when you search on Google for "Shakers and gonorrhea."]
Sunday, September 13, 2009
P90X Day 36: Chest, Shoulders & Triceps + Ab Ripper X
Chocolate Banana Split Shake
4 ounces of skim milk
3/4 cup of ice
1 tablespoon of smooth peanut butter
1/2 banana (fresh or frozen)
1 scoop chocolate-flavored protein powder (I use CytoSport's Muscle Milk "Protein Plus" Chocolate Shake powder)
Blend it all up. I think it's tasty (and so does my toddler, who demands a sip every morning).
325 calories / 10g fat / 27g carbs / 35g protein
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Four Rules
- Taper Carbs After Breakfast. Anchor your first meal with plenty of complex carbs, like oatmeal, for lasting energy, then eat fewer carbs throughout the day.
- Eat Small, Eat Often. Instead of three meals a day, aim for five snack-size ones You won't be famished and eat unnecessary calories that turn into belly fat, and you'll speed up your metabolism, creating a calorie deficit that will burn fat.
- Consume the Right Calories. Eliminate refined sugars and reduce calorie-dense foods, like anything processed.
- Chow Fruit for Energy. One hundred calories of fruit (half a banana) before a workout will energize you and get burned off. Another 100 calories after your workout restores energy. More than that is too much sugar and will turn to fat.
P90X Day 35: X Stretch

Friday, September 11, 2009
P90X Day 34: Kenpo X
Why won't Wesley Idol get down in a real horse stance during Kenpo X? He just stands there with his legs bent ever-so-slightly, totally phoning it in. Both Tonys (Ex-Adult-Entertainer Tony and Ex-Marine Tony) squat waaaaay down when they're in horse stance, working their glutes, hamstrings and quads, while Mr. Idol looks like he's just casually bending over to squeeze out a nonchalant fart. My legs and butt were completely sore from yesterday's Legs & Back routine, and even I managed to get down into horse stance a lot lower than Wesley Idol. And don't tell me he's supposed to be modeling the "easy" version of the exercises -- that's sweaty Vanessa's job. Plus, Wesley Idol's credited with being the kenpo master who introduced Tony Horton to this workout in the first place, so he should be one who shows off the super-intense moves.
But he doesn't.
How can anyone expect to get an intense workout from Kenpo X when its creator looks like he's just sleepwalking through the moves? Clutching light (3 pound) dumbbells throughout the session, I actually got a decent workout this morning -- but only because I followed along with Ex-Marine Tony and did my best to ignore Wesley Idol.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Tony Horton After Dark
Better yet, it appears that a certain "Tony Sawyer Horton" (his middle name’s no secret -- he put it on his Facebook page) played a detective in “Rebecca’s Secret,” a late night, premium-cable soft-core porn movie. (I have to point out that I totally called this, people.) The movie’s many taglines include "In the Lingerie Business, You're Always Dressed to Kill" and my personal favorite: “Full of Erotic Action Just for You.”
Look, I'm not judging. I recognize that acting gigs aren't easy to get, and it's not like Tony journeyed into the Valley and became a drug-addled Dirk Diggler type. A job's a job, and if it involves a lot of naked people and simulated intercourse, so be it. Besides, I have no idea if he so much as doffed his shirt on camera, as I'm unwilling to fork out $373.90 to order the "Rebecca's Secret" DVD from Amazon to see whether Tony himself actually engaged in any onscreen “Erotic Action Just for You."
[UPDATE 2: Okay, so Tony's not a porn star. But it turns out that Maren is.]
Food Conglomerates: Get Ready for a Smackdown
According to Pollan’s research:
We’re spending $147 billion to treat obesity, $116 billion to treat diabetes, and hundreds of billions more to treat cardiovascular disease and the many types of cancer that have been linked to the so-called Western diet. One recent study estimated that 30 percent of the increase in health care spending over the past 20 years could be attributed to the soaring rate of obesity, a condition that now accounts for nearly a tenth of all spending on health care.It seems nonsensical for insurers to turn a blind eye towards addressing the obesity problem -- isn't the prevention of chronic diseases good for the insurance industry? -- but as Pollan points out, “under the current rules, it’s much better business simply to keep patients at risk for chronic disease out of your pool of customers, whether through lifetime caps on coverage or rules against pre-existing conditions or by figuring out ways to toss patients overboard when they become ill.”
…
The American way of eating has become the elephant in the room in the debate over health care. … But so far, food system reform has not figured in the national conversation about health care reform. And so the government is poised to go on encouraging America’s fast-food diet with its farm policies even as it takes on added responsibilities for covering the medical costs of that diet. To put it more bluntly, the government is putting itself in the uncomfortable position of subsidizing both the costs of treating Type 2 diabetes and the consumption of high-fructose corn syrup.
No matter what version of health care reform is passed, however, these rules are going to change. “[E]ven if we get a health care bill that does little more than require insurers to cover everyone on the same basis,” carriers will be forced to insure “everyone at the same rates, provide a standard level of coverage and keep people on their rolls regardless of their health. Terms like ‘pre-existing conditions’ and ‘underwriting’ would vanish from the health insurance rulebook -- and, when they do, the relationship between the health insurance industry and the food industry will undergo a sea change.”
The moment these new rules take effect, health insurance companies will promptly discover they have a powerful interest in reducing rates of obesity and chronic diseases linked to diet. ... Suddenly, every can of soda or Happy Meal or chicken nugget on a school lunch menu will look like a threat to future profits.Pollan concludes:
[P]assing a health care reform bill, no matter how ambitious, is only the first step in solving our health care crisis. To keep from bankrupting ourselves, we will then have to get to work on improving our health — which means going to work on the American way of eating.It’s about time.
P90X Day 33: Legs & Back + Ab Ripper X
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
The Myth of the Fat Burning Zone
Just about every treadmill or exercise bike you've ever seen has a chart on it showing users how hard to push themselves to achieve their chosen fitness goals. According to charts like the one pictured below (which are often programmed into the electronic guts of the cardio equipment), you're in the "fat burning zone" if you're exercising at 50 to 60 percent of your maximum heart rate, and you're in the "cardio training zone" if you're at 75 to 85 percent of your maximum heart rate.

For weight loss purposes, the theory goes, it's counterproductive to work too hard; instead, you'll optimize your fat loss if you take it easy and work out less intensely. According to this argument, low-intensity aerobic training forces your body to burn more fat as an energy source, while high-intensity cardio work burns more sugar and less fat. As New York Times reporter Gina Kolata summarized in her excellent 2003 book, "Ultimate Fitness: The Quest for Truth about Exercise and Health":
The idea is that if you want to get rid of fat, you should force your body to burn it. Muscles prefer to use sugar, in the form of glycogen, for energy, because it is so easy to metabolize. but they also can use fat. The fat-burning-zone hypothesis says that if you don't push yourself too hard, your muscles will burn fat and you will lose weight. Extreme exertion, however, will force your muscles to burn glycogen, leaving your body's fat intact.Sound too good to be true? It is.
Here's the real deal: While it's true that a higher proportion of calories burned during low-intensity exercise comes from your flab (approximately 60 percent versus 35 percent from high-intensity workouts), higher intensity exercise still burns more calories from fat overall. Kolata writes:
It turns out that the myth of low-intensity-exercise fat burning is a misunderstanding of a basic relationship, best seen on a graph. One line shows muscles' use of fat as an energy source as a function of exercise intensity, and another line depicts muscles' use of carbohydrates as a function of exercise intensity. the crossover point, where equal amounts of fat and carbohydrate are being burned, comes at about 60 percent of your maximum effort, or a heart rate that is about 70 percent of maximum. After that, the amount of carbohydrate burned exceeds the amount of fat, and this imbalance increases as exercise intensity increases. If you guet to your maximum heart rate, less than ten percent of the calories you burn will come from fat.In other words, who cares if a greater percentage of your calories are burned from fat than from sugar/carbs? What really matters is the total number of calories you burn from fat. And the more intense the exercise, the more total calories (from both fat and carbs) you'll burn.
That led to the argument that as long as you keep your heart rate low enough, you will burn more fat than carbohydrates and you will lose more weight. The problem is that the argument is neglecting a crucial component: the number of calories burned. The harder you work, the more energy you expend, and the more calories you will need.
So suck it, "Fat Burning Zone" charts.
P90X Day 31: Back & Biceps + Ab Ripper X
- Wide Grip Pull-Ups
- Lawnmowers
- Twenty-Ones
- One-Arm Cross-Body Curls
- Switch Grip Pull-Ups
- Elbows-Out Lawnmowers
- Standing Bicep Curls
- One-Arm Concentration Curls
- Corn Cob Pull-Ups (see below for a video clip of this obscenity)
- Reverse Grip Bent Over Rows
- Open-Arm Curls
- Static-Arm Curls
- Towel Pull-Ups
- Congdon Locomotives
- Crouching Cohen Curls
- One-Arm Corkscrew Curls
- Chin-Ups
- Seated Bent-Over Back Flys
- Curl-Up/Hammer-Downs
- Hammer Curls
- Max Rep Pull-Ups
- Supermans (Supermen?)
- In-Out Hammer Curls
- Strip-Set Curls
Monday, September 7, 2009
Day 30 Photos
P90X Day 30: Plyometrics
Sunday, September 6, 2009
P90X Day 29: Chest, Shoulders & Triceps + Ab Ripper X
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Check It Out: Mindless Eating
After pointing out that our environment significantly influences our propensity for overeating, one of Wansink's suggestions is to create "distraction-free eating scripts":
- Rescript your diet danger zones. We all have various eating scripts for the five most common diet danger zones -- dinners, snacks, parties, restaurants, desks/dashboards. A common dinner script -- particularly for men -- involves eating second helpings of most foods until everyone at the table is finished or until the food is gone. If such a man wanted to rescript his dinner, he might try being the last one to start eating, pacing himself with his spouse, serving triple helpings of the healthy foods and single heapings of the meat and potatoes, or not including bread. Similarly, after-work snacking could be rescripted with a stick of gum rather than whatever is in the refrigerator.
- Distract yourself before you snack. Distractions are good news and bad news. They are goo when they prevent us from starting to snack. they are bad when they prevent us from stopping. at home, you can make your snacking life less distracting and less alluring by eating in one room only, such as the dining room or kitchen.
- Serve yourself before you start. If you can't distract yourself from a yummy snack, you can minimize the damage it does in a distracting situation (such as eating in front of the TV). To avoid "eating until it's over," dish yourself out a ration before you start. Eating straight from a box, bag, or serving bowl is the recipe for regret.
I've found the last suggestion above to be particularly helpful. I used to eat handfuls of nuts (they're healthy! I told myself) straight from the container while staring at the television at home or computer screen at work. Since I started on the P90X Nutrition Plan, however, I've been diligently counting out a snack-sized portion of almonds (15 nuts = 100 calories) rather than taking the free-for-all approach. And surprisingly, this tiny handful of almonds actually satisfies me -- at least until my next feeding.
Friday, September 4, 2009
P90X Day 27: Yoga X
My sense of accomplishment, though, was short-lived. I was in the Savasana Corpse Pose at the end of the session when my pajama-clad, bedheaded four-year-old poked his head into the garage (or, as I like to call it, my Deluxe Home Fitness Center). He rubbed his eyes, peered sleepily at all the silent, prostrate bodies on the TV screen, and declared: "P90X is WAAAAY too easy, dad."
Thursday, September 3, 2009
P90X Day 26: Core Synergistics
Core Syn consists of:
- Stacked Foot/Staggered Hands Push-Ups
- Banana Rolls (mmmm, banana rolls...)
- Leaning Crescent Lunges
- Squat Runs
- Sphinx Push-Ups
- Bow-to-Boats
- Low Lateral Skaters
- Lunge & Reaches
- Prison Cell Push-Ups
- Side Hip Raises
- Squat X-Presses
- Plank to Chaturanga Runs
- Walking Push-Ups
- Superman Bananas
- Lunge Kickback Curl Presses
- Towel Hoppers
- Reach High & Under Push-Ups
- Steam Engines
- Dreya Rolls
- Plank to Chaturanga Isos
- Halfbacks
- Table Dip Leg Raises
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Double Broccoli Quinoa
This double broccoli quinoa bowl is a favorite of mine. I cook up lots of broccoli, then puree half of it into a pesto. The other half is cut into little florets. Tossed with some quinoa, sliced avocado, and a drizzle of feisty chile pepper oil, it makes a nice meal and I hope you like it as much as I do.
P90X Day 25: Rest Day / TRX Suspension Training
Two years ago, after installing a TRX Suspension Trainer in my garage (by fastening an official TRX X-mount anchor to an exposed rafter, though I should have just gone with a plain old "U" bolt to save some bucks), I started using it regularly for body weight resistance exercises. It's great for developing core stability and balance; even a simple push-up can be made a lot more challenging with TRX because it forces you to balance while trying to perform the move.
Since starting P90X, I'd stopped using my TRX, but as soon as I picked it up again this morning, I was reminded of how much I enjoy using this thing. I'm thinking about incorporating the TRX into my P90X chest/arm/back sessions, especially when Tony calls for standard or military push-ups. Plus, I want to add to Ab Ripper X one particularly gut-wrenching TRX exercise that I've always loved (and hated): The TRX Atomic Push-up.
Deep Fried Butter
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Bizarro Jeff Probst

Or maybe he's Robbie Rotten from Lazy Town.
P90X Day 24: Kenpo X
The two best pieces of advice I got were to: (1) use weights -- light dumbbells or weighted gloves/ankle weights -- while performing the Kenpo X moves; and (2) add focus, intensity and speed to the workout -- even during the short breaks between circuits.
I incorporated both approaches into this morning's Kenpo X session, and I'm happy to report that with these modifictions, this workout has finally joined the more intense of the P90X cardio routines. I used 3-pound dumbbells through most of the moves (very effective when performing the jab/hook/uppercut combos), and during the breaks, I substituted fast high-knee jumps, front kicks, squat-jacks and X-jacks, and tried to do them at a faster pace than Tony and his on-screen minions.
At the end of the hour, I was drenched in sweat.
One more side benefit of using dumbbells during Kenpo X: it forced me to be more vigilant about maintaining proper form, because I really wanted to avoid injuring myself. (I'd hate to have to explain that I got hurt lifting 3-pound weights.)















