Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Wednesday's Workout

Front squats: 3-3-3-1-1-1 (I maxed out at 175 pounds, which was more than enough for a 135-pound weakling like me.)

AMRAP (As Many Rounds As Possible) in 10 minutes:


I was 6 cleans shy of finishing seven rounds when the 10 minutes were up. And thank God, because I'm confident my arms would have sheared right off if I'd tried to complete the final few cleans.

40% Off Terra Plana Vivo Barefoot Shoes!

Awesome news for us barefoot obsessives:

For three days only -- July 2 to July 5 -- you can buy Terra Plana shoes for 40 percent off. Use the code JULY4 at checkout when you make your purchases on Terra Plana's website.


I love my Terra Plana Vivo Barefoot shoes. They're durable, comfortable, and unlike Vibram FiveFingers, they offer a barefoot-like experience without drawing everyone's attention to your feet. My eyes are up here, people.

Classy


(Source: BuzzFeed)

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Tuesday's Workout

My hands are still bleeding, so I did the Insanity Pure Cardio workout this morning. I couldn't make a fist, though, so when Shaun T called for jabs, I did karate chops instead, which looked super-cool (naturally).

Crafty


Following instructions in the CrossFit Journal, I managed to construct a pair of parallettes out of PVC pipe, primer and cement, and they’re surprisingly sturdy. (Usually, the stuff I make falls apart pretty much immediately.)

Monday, June 28, 2010

Double-Unders with Buddy Lee

Holy hell. I'm not looking forward to attempting double-unders during a CrossFit WOD.



Buddy Lee makes double-unders look like child's play. Sadly, I'm fall-down terrible at jump-roping. For some people, practice makes perfect. But for me, I'm just hoping a lot of practice will make me look somewhat less ridiculous.

Once I figure out how to jump-rope consistently, I'm definitely going to have to get Lee's book on jump-rope training and see if I can land a double-under or two.

Monday's Workout

Some people leave their DNA in hotel bedsheets and at crime scenes. I prefer to leave mine on the pull-up bars and kettlebells at my CrossFit gym.


On the menu for today:

Kettlebell snatches (6-6-6-8-8-8)

10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 Pull-Ups
1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 Plyo Box Jumps

It took me forever (7:33) to finish -- mostly because a bunch of my pull-ups were crap and I had to repeat 'em.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Sunday's Workout

I did Tony Horton's 20-minute One-on-One Killer Abs workout this morning, but M just got Chalene Johnson's newest BeachBody home fitness program, TurboFire, and wanted to test drive the HIIT 15 DVD this evening, so I joined her.


As with Chalene's other programs, TurboFire features colorfully-dressed and ridiculously peppy fitness zombies -- almost all female -- enthusiastically doing cardio on a brightly-lit studio set. HIIT 15 consists of three circuits -- each featuring three 30-to-40 second long sequences of jumps, squats, lunges, and the like.

HIIT 15's not as intense as (and definitely shorter than) a typical Insanity workout, and it's definitely geared towards a female audience, but I certainly broke a sweat. M's about to start the full 20-week TurboFire program, and it's possible I'll join her again on a CrossFit off-day just for kicks. Especially if, say, I happened to eat four mini-cupcakes earlier in the day.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Saturday's Workout

My entire workout took precisely 7 minutes and 50 seconds today:

10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1:
And then we went to Manresa and had a 4-hour meal.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Barbie Really Let Herself Go


(Source: BuzzFeed)

Friday's Workout

Muscle-Ups (but to get all the way up, I'm doing a little hop at the bottom)



For time:

10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 (meaning 10 reps the first set, 9 reps the second set, etc.)
Kettlebell swings
110-meter sprint

The last few times I did the sprint, it was more of a slow, labored jog. It took me 8 minutes and 10 seconds to finish the entire workout.

Omakase

Japanese food isn't all rice and noodles (and Pocky), which is a good thing, considering our ongoing efforts to avoid simple carbs.

Last night, we ate at a local Japanese place, and ordered omakase, leaving the choice of dishes up to the chef. Although we hadn't expected it, it turned out that the kitchen's selections were -- for the most part -- right in line with our Paleo/Primal approach to eating.





Yes, there was rice in our sushi and sugar in our dessert, but our two carbivore children gobbled 'em up.


Thursday, June 24, 2010

I Hope That Butter Was Fried in Butter

Thursday's Workout

I decided to do the Tabata, Row, Tabata workout in my garage this morning.

It took me a while to get into a groove with the Tabata squats. My first and second sets (out of sixteen total) yielded my lowest rep counts (18 and 17), while my highest reps (20 per set) came in my ninth, tenth, and eleventh sets.

The biggest disappointment? It took me 4:14 to row 1000 meters. (But it was kind of nice to get some use out of my Concept2 rower after all this time. We've had our rowing machine for years now, but haven't consistently used it. The Concept2 is evidently the CrossFitter's rower of choice, however, and it's featured in plenty of the WODs, so I'll be hopping on mine much more frequently going forward.)



I have to stop writing now. I think my glutes and hamstrings are about to explode.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Stop Touching Me

Wow. I guess I'd be pretty pissed, too, if I had to wear what Steven has on. (But the foam pit looks kind of fun, right?)

Camp Bacon

Last Saturday, the co-founder of Zingerman's put on "a one-day Davos of cured and/or smoked pork" in Ann Arbor called Camp Bacon, featuring "luminaries of the bacon world" and lots of bacon eating. Read all about it in The Washington Post.


Now that I've gone Primal, I can't tell you how sorry I am to have missed this.

Wednesday's Workout

When I drove up to my CrossFit gym for my morning workout, it was still dark. Looking back, I probably should have stayed in bed.

Today's torture:

5-5-5-3-3-3 Front Squats (I'm continuing to work on my form, so I'm still just shy of lifting the equivalent of my bodyweight)



4 rounds (for time) of:

400-meter Cradle Carry (run 400 meters while lugging a 45-pound weight plate)
15 pull-ups

It took me almost 20 minutes to finish all four rounds -- much of which was spent trying to: (1) catch my breath, and (2) get the feeling back in my arms.

When I got home, M was just starting her ChaLEAN Extreme workout, so I popped the Insanity Plyometric Cardio Circuit DVD in the player and did that, too. Bad idea. By the end of Shaun T's 40-minute beat-down, I was dead tired, and it wasn't even 7 a.m. yet.

Dinner Plates for Dummies

Designers Rui Pereira and Hafsteinn Juliusson have created plates that remind diners of how to load up with nutritious foods.

Too bad they didn't make a Paleo/Primal version.


(Source: Daque Design via Neatorama)

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Tuesday's Workout

Lest you think that I've wholly abandoned Tony for CrossFit, I'll have you know that my morning workout consisted solely of Fountain of Youth yoga. Having not done any yoga for a couple of weeks, my glutes and hamstrings were burning during the Warrior poses, but by the end of the session, I was back in the flow and got nicely stretched out.


(But honestly? I kind of wish I'd thrown in a batshit-crazy CrossFit metcon session.)

Monday, June 21, 2010

Monday's Workout

I rolled out of bed at 4:45 a.m. this morning and popped into my friendly neighborhood CrossFit gym.

Skills/Strength: 5-5-5-7-7-7 kettlebell snatches (from the looks of my forearm bruises, I'm not yet proficient at this yet)

Metcon: Modified half-Kelly -- as many rounds as possible in 15 minutes of:
  • 200-meter run
  • 15 plyo box jumps (using a 24-inch box)
  • 15 wall balls (using a 16-pound medicine ball)


I made it through only five rounds. God, this is tough.

What I Did on Vacation

We’re (finally) back home from our family vacation, so beware: I am about to bore you with details of our Alaskan cruise.

Alaska was beautiful (but what's with all the Sarah Palin calendars for sale? And in June?) and the weather couldn’t have been better, but there wasn’t a whole lot we could do with our kids and our parents in tow. It turns out that AARP members and pre-schoolers don’t have a lot of mutual interests other than the ship’s all-you-can-eat buffet. We ate plenty of meals at the two main dining rooms onboard, but the buffet restaurant scored the biggest hit with our family. The kids loved the 24-hour access to ice cream and French fries, and their grandparents enjoyed ingesting massive -- possibly toxic -- amounts of fruit. (They were taking no chances with scurvy.)

M and I carefully steered clear of the buffet's endless aisle o’ bread ‘n pastries, which didn’t look all that appetizing to me despite the homey glow of the heat lamps. Still, it was eye-opening to witness some of our fellow passengers load up their plates with as much carbohydrate content as possible. (I saw someone stack eight pieces of whole wheat toast on her plate and then head over to the pancake station to ladle a huge glob of imitation maple syrup over her tower of bread. She explained to her companion: “The French toast is too soggy.”) The amount of sugary (and sugar-loaded) food items on garish display at the buffet was almost enough to send anyone into diabetic shock by just looking at it.

To be honest, M and I ate a lot, too, but we tried to stick mostly to the meat, eggs and vegetables. Breakfast usually consisted of eggs (or an omelet), bacon, sausage and plain yogurt with berries. For lunch, we had heaping veggie-loaded salads with whatever meat was being carved up. And dinner was usually more meat (steak, pork, lamb, etc.) or fish.

We also ate freakish quantities of nuts. We purchased about eight pounds of nuts in Seattle to bring with us on the ship, and made bags and bags of trail mix in our cabin -- but that wasn’t enough for me. There was a cheese station at the buffet where you could spoon some nuts and dried fruit onto your plate to accompany your cheese slices (or blocks, depending on your level of hunger/gluttony). But every time I passed by, I loaded up whatever empty container I happened to have with me -- coffee cup, soup bowl, Ziplock bag, pants pockets -- with fistfuls of nuts. On the last night of the cruise, I walked by the cheese station again, and they were completely out of nuts. I like to think I had something to do with that.

Besides eating, our primary activities on the ship were: (1) sleeping, (2) keeping the kids from hurtling things overboard (although our five-year-old did manage to kick his shoe into the frigid waters of Glacier National Park), (3) compulsively washing our hands to avoid the risk of contracting illnesses involving “diarrhea and vomiting,” as the helpful signs in the elevators put it, and (4) trying to find time to exercise.

Eighty-five percent of a cruise is spent cooped up in a floating hotel. About a third of that time is spent eating, and another third is spent sleeping. And unless you love gambling, drinking, playing shuffleboard and/or bingo, or buying really overpriced, mass-manufactured “art” on the high seas, you might as well go work out. One great benefit of having lots of adult family members aboard: Free babysitting while you hit the gym.

Sadly, the fitness center on the cruise ship was less than awesome. Sure, the view from the row of cardio machines was incredible; passengers looking to trudge endlessly on the ellipticals and treadmills could gaze for hours out the floor-to-ceiling windows at the water stretching to the horizon. But there was little space in the narrow gym for anything other than cardio and weight machines. Three benches were bracketed by two small dumbbell racks -- and that was it.

And don’t get me started on the water situation. Thirsty gym-goers had three choices: (1) bring their own water bottles; (2) line up at the one water fountain in the busiest corner of the fitness center with a tiny Dixie cup in hand, or (3) pay $4.50 for a bottle of water.

One saving grace? The gym had a pull-up bar. This is huge. Most hotel gyms don’t have one, figuring that a lat pull-down machine is sufficient. For this cruise ship to have a pull-up bar was awesome -- especially for someone like me, who’s just starting to get into CrossFit, a program that heavily features pull-ups.

Another plus: The gym was next to the pool deck, which had lots of sturdy benches built at the edge of the swimming pools. For most of our time at sea, it was too cold for swimming, so the deck was mostly empty, which meant I could use the benches in place of plyo boxes for depth jumping without too many people laughing at me.

Anyway, for those of you who are keeping track, below are my past week’s workouts. None took more than an hour (most took far less time), but with the exception of the Sunday workouts, each day's session kicked me in the balls.

Sunday:

Before we checked out of our hotel in Seattle, I ran from the Westlake Center downtown to Cafe Flora (at East Madison and 29th -- a restaurant we visited regularly when we were last in Seattle) and back. On the way back, I stopped at Trader Joe's and bought a few big bags of nuts, which wasn't a smart idea given that I still had a few more miles to run and no easy way to carry my purchases. (Again: I like nuts.)

Monday:

Bodyweight Fran workout (21-15-9 reps of burpees and pull-ups)

Tuesday:

Half-Angie (50 pull-ups, 50 push-ups, 50 squats, 50 sit-ups), but not done for time
3 X 6 dumbbell bench presses
3 X 6 dumbbell back rows
10 X 10 plyo box jumps
4 minutes Tabata row
The other half of Angie (50 pull-ups, 50 push-ups, 50 squats, 50 sit-ups), not done for time

Wednesday:

6 X 5 pull-ups
6 X 4 pistols
100 plyo box jumps (broken up into as few sets as possible)
6 X 25 push-ups
6 X 25 sit-ups
6X 25 squats

Thursday:

5-minutes of L-sit (it look me almost 12 minutes to do this, and my “L” often looked more like an “N”)
50 long-form burpees (1X squat, 1X push-up, 1X sit-up, 1X superman, 1X tuck jump)

Friday:

3 X 6 dumbbell bench presses
3 X 6 dumbbell back rows
3 X 6 pull-ups - feet-to-bar
3 X 6 corkscrew dumbbell shoulder presses
3 X 6 chin-ups - feet-to-bar
3 X 6 pistols

Saturday:

For time: 100 plyo box jumps (it took me 4:10 - ugh)
20 bodyblasters (burpee to pull-up to knees-to-elbows)
Run 5K (on the ship’s jogging track, where people kept gawking at my Vibram FiveFingers and saying helpful things like: “You look like you have otter feet.”)
20 more bodyblasters

Sunday (yesterday):

M and I carried a bunch of luggage and two small children off a cruise ship, up and down rainy hills in Seattle, to the airport, on a plane, and off a plane.

I need a vacation.

I'm Baaaack!


Did you miss me?


Saturday, June 12, 2010

Tabata Run

Today's recovery workout:

3 sets of 6 bench presses
3 sets of 5 front squats
3 sets of 3 front squats
3 sets of 6 pull-ups
3 sets of pistols

I put on my Vibram FiveFingers KSOs and took off for a 20 minute Tabata run (alternating between 20 seconds of sprinting and 10 seconds of jogging -- I covered a surprising amount of ground here in Seattle and simultaneously squeezed in a nice interval workout).

And then, I chilled out in the pool.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Round 3 / Day 105: CrossFit WOD

Hotel gyms are such crap.

Take the one downstairs from our room. Like just about every other hotel fitness center I've seen, it's filled with treadmills and Stairclimbers and stationary bikes -- all with TV screens affixed to them. Pristine weight machines form a labyrinth in the room, but relatively few hotel guests use them. Mostly, people come in to tread hypnotically for 30 to 60 minutes at a time on a cardio machine while watching CNN. I used to be one of them, but not anymore.

My workout today consisted of a bunch of groove-greasing repetitions of dumbbell hang cleans, pistols, and tricep dips. Then, using my Blackberry, I pulled up the Workout of the Day -- the routine "prescribed" by CrossFit's central command and posted online each morning on crossfit.com -- and steeled myself for a good asskicking:

 15 rounds of the following (for time):
  • 5 pull-ups
  • 10 push-ups
  • 15 squats
It took me exactly 14 minutes to complete all 15 rounds, and I was seriously lagging towards the end. There's a CrossFit workout named "Cindy" that's similar, but instead of timing how long it takes you to crank out 15 rounds, it requires that you do as many rounds as possible in 20 minutes. I don't think I could last 20 minutes without passing out (or at least taking a nap break).



Afterwards, I was spent. I wandered over to the pool to watch M and our 5-year-old play in the water. Our big boy's been taking swim lessons for months now, and he's fearless in the water (though, like me, he's not exactly earning style points in the pool). I can't wait until I get to the point when CrossFit WODs fail to strike terror into my heart.

But let's be honest: that's unlikely to ever happen.

Today's workout marked not only my very first attempt at an official CrossFit WOD, but also my last workout of Round 3. It's been a hell of a ride these last 105 days as I've continued to refine my approach to nutrition and fitness.

I'm working on a lengthy post summarizing my latest thoughts on eating and exercise, and I'll do my best to post it soon. [UPDATED: It's right over here.] But right now, I'm going to focus on vacationing with my family. I'm not going to post as regularly (and possibly not at all) over the next week due to travel and limited Internet access, but will be back to daily blogging no later than Monday, June 21st.

When I do, though, I won't be ticking off the days on a 90- (or 105-) day calendar anymore, so you won't be able to just click onto "Day 26" and check out what I'm doing. My plan's to make exercise a part of my everyday life from now until I keel over, so I no longer see the point in treating it like I'm in a jail cell, scratching little hash marks on the wall in a countdown to freedom. If you want to keep tabs on my workouts, just keep reading my daily posts, or check out the archives.

But until I get back from vacation, you can find me at a shitty fitness center, rolling my eyes and making a gagging sound while sticking a finger down my throat. And then working out like a crazy person.

Brunch at Lola

Mighty tasty. We love this place.




That is all.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Sore in Seattle

I'm heading to Seattle today, still head-to-toe sore from my first few days of CrossFit, so perhaps it's appropriate that I post this Seattle Times article about CrossFit. It perfectly captures how I -- as a CrossFit rookie -- feel about this new endeavor.

Round 3 / Day 104: CrossFit - Front Squats

No one else showed up for the 6 a.m. CrossFit class this morning, so I got personal instruction in Front Squats.



I got the hang of Front Squats relatively quickly (for me, anyway), but I'm definitely feeling the effects of four straight days of CrossFit workouts. After 3 sets of 5 followed by 3 sets of 3, I wasn't looking forward to the metcon session.

The metcon for the day consisted of four 2-minute rounds of:

  • 150-meter dash
  • 5 "Man on Fire" burpees
  • Max reps of kettlebell swings

My results: 30 kettlebell swings in the first round, 32 in the second, 26 in the third, and 27 in the fourth.

Dead tired.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Round 3 / Day 103: CrossFit - Fran

Got up at 4:30 a.m., threw on some clothes, ate some blueberries and yogurt, filled my water bottle, and headed out to the CrossFit gym. I was the last one to arrive for the 5 o'clock class.

After a fifteen-minute warmup, we worked on One-Legged Squats (a.k.a. Pistols) -- 3 sets of 5, followed by 3 sets of 3.



Then came "Fran."

Fran is the name of one of the many CrossFit workouts with feminine names, though there's nothing "girly" about them. Fran consists of 21 Barbell Thrusters, followed by 21 Kipping Pull-Ups. And then 15 Thrusters and 15 Pull-Ups. And then 9 Thrusters and 9 Pull-Ups. As fast as possible.



I scaled down the workout -- using a 75 pound bar instead of 95 pounds, and using a big rubber band to assist me with my second and third rounds of pull-ups. Still, it took me 8:36 to finish, which I'm not thrilled about. But for now, I'm too damn tired to move. Time for a break!

Go Grass-Fed


After learning that healthy dietary fat is not the enemy -- and especially after watching "Food Inc." lay out a compelling case against stuffing livestock with corn and other crap -- we've been searching out grass-fed meat at farmer's markets and grocery stores. You should, too; after all, it's increasingly easy to find 100 percent grass-fed meat at your local supermarket:
With more consumers questioning how their food is grown and organic fruits and vegetables exploding into a multibillion-dollar market, grass-finished meat and dairy look like the next food frontier. In the past five years, more than 1,000 U.S. ranchers have switched herds to an all-grass diet. Pure pasture-raised beef still represents less than 1% of the nation's supply, but sales reached some $120 million last year and are expected to increase more than 20% a year over the next decade. Upscale groceries like Whole Foods and Trader Joe's are ramping up grass-fed offerings, including imports from Australia and Uruguay. Last month the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) proposed a certified grass-fed label to provide a federal standard.
Dr. Steve Atchley is one of many health-conscious carnivores fueling the trend. "I got tired of telling my patients they couldn't eat red meat," says the Denver cardiologist. So three years ago, he launched Mesquite Organic Foods, which sells grass-fed beef to 74 Wild Oats stores nationwide. The company, which contracts with ranches from South Texas to the Canadian border, has quadrupled sales since December.
And with summer here, there's no better time to throw some steaks on the grill. Grass-fed meat is more expensive, but there are a bunch of affordable grill-worthy cuts that won't break the bank.

(Source: Time Magazine, Washington Post, The Telegraph)

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Round 3 / Day 102: CrossFit - Jerks


Okay -- I think I'm done pretending I'm going to focus on recovery this week. We're heading off on vacation soon, and I'll have plenty of time for R&R. Today, I decided to squeeze in another CrossFit workout.

On the menu this morning:

Warm-Up: I rowed 1000 meters, did some push-ups, and tried to learn how to crank out some kipping pull-ups:



Jerks: 3 sets of 5 reps, followed by 3 sets of 3 reps. It took some practice, but I finally managed to do them with plates on the bar.



Metcon: Today's ass-kicker consisted of 3 circuits of the following: 400-meter run, 21 ring presses, and 12 deadlifts (I only lifted weights equal to my bodyweight) -- all for time. I finished in 11:03, which ain't as great as I'd hoped.



I'm ready for tomorrow's 5 a.m. beat-down, provided I can make it out of bed in the morning.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Round 3 / Day 101: P90X X Stretch + CrossFit

I got all nice and bendy with the P90X X Stretch video this morning -- but then I attended my first CrossFit class today, which whupped me thoroughly.

We started with a 15-minute warm-up (1000-meter row, push-ups, pull-ups), and then, while the other two people in class today practiced crisp, explosive squat cleans with barbells and plates, I started learning how to do them with a hollow PVC pipe. "Learning" may be too generous; I had serious trouble following along with the movement. I kept flailing around, arms and legs akimbo, and although I finally managed to "advance" to practicing with a 45-pound bar, I never got proficient enough to justify putting plates on it. I'm pretty sure Tim was getting exasperated by my total inability to follow his very specific pointers. By the end, I was just heaving around the bar like a crazed, sweaty moron.

God, I hate homework, but I'm going to have to figure out how to fix my form by watching videos like this one:



I fared better with the metcon portion of today's class. The task was to do as many circuits of 3 exercises (five 24-inch plyo box jumps, 10 push-ups and 15 Abmat sit-ups) as possible in 10 minutes. I managed 9 circuits, but had to lie down afterwards. While I mopped up my sweat, Tim kindly pointed out that he intentionally programmed an "easy" one to give me a gentle welcome to CrossFit. Gee, thanks!

Holy hell, I'M TERRIBLE AT THIS.

But I'm hooked. Definitely coming back for more.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

The Mighty Atom

Of all the guys on AskMen.com's list of the top 10 strongmen in history, my favorite is Joe Greenstein (1893-1977):

Despite his Cruise-like stature of 5-foot-4 and 140 pounds, “The Mighty Atom” began wrestling professionally in Texas under the name Kid Greenstein. That’s until a man obsessed with Greenstein's wife shot him between the eyebrows from 30 feet away. Astonishingly, the bullet did not enter his skull, but flattened on impact. This inspired more odd feats of strength: driving 20 penny nails through a 2.5-inch board with his bare hands, changing a car tire without tools and lying on a bed of nails with a 14-man Dixieland band on his chest. On September 29, 1928, the Buffalo Evening Times reported Greenstein resisted the pull of an airplane with his hair at the Buffalo Airport.
Even his hair was strong.

(Source: AskMen.com)

Round 3 / Day 100: Elise Gulan's Yoga Fitness Plus

I have no idea who Elise Gulan is, nor do I have any good explanation for why I decided to try one of her yoga workouts from ExerciseTV On Demand (other than the fact that I'm getting a little tired of my workout DVDs). Yoga Fitness Plus started off easy enough, but quickly grew to challenge me more than I wanted for recovery purposes. The Chatarunga-to-Downward Dog-to-Runner's Pose-to-Warrior Two-to-Triangle Pose-to-Warrior Three-to-Half Moon-to-Airplane Pose-to-Twisting Half Moon-to-Standing Splits-to-Glute Raises-to-Warrior Two-to-Runner's Pose-to-Chatarunga sequence pretty much wiped me out. Elise Gulan, on the other hand, stays as perky as ever while nailing all the poses and chirpily coaching throughout.

I'm going to do this workout again (and soon); the next time around, I'll know not to underestimate how difficult a free On Demand yoga session can be.

If you're interested in trying it out, Yoga Fitness Plus is available for free (streaming) online here. I guarantee you'll find it harder than P90X Yoga X.

Minimalist Shoes -- Now for Kids, Too!

Until I fell in love with Vibram FiveFingers and Terra Plana Vivo Barefoot shoes (and reaffirmed my lifelong passion for Chuck Taylor All-Stars), my typical footwear consisted of super-supported, big-ass foot coffins with heavy-duty inserts. M, too, was shod in MBTs and other shoes that offered more cushioning than an air conditioned ass pillow. After discovering the awesomeness of barefoot running and minimalist shoes, we've never looked back.

But what about our kids? They're barefoot a lot, and we put 'em in Chuck Taylors and kung fu shoes, but they're a pain to lace and unlace every time our boys want to run around outside. I suppose that's why Crocs are so popular among preschoolers and lazy adults who evidently don't care that they look like enormous children. (See, e.g., Mario Batali.) There really haven't been a lot of minimalist footwear alternatives for kids -- until now: Terra Plana now makes Vivo Barefoot shoes for kids!


(Source: GeekDad)

Let's Paint, Exercise & Build a Sardine Sushi Gingerbread House

Public television is awesome.



And in a suit and tie! My hero.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Round 3 / Day 99: P90X Core Synergistics

Thank God for Recovery Week. I'm beat.

Sadly, Core Syn's not exactly a cakewalk, and I wasn't looking forward to more push-ups today. But hey, at least I didn't have to go near the pull-up bar today.

Friday, June 4, 2010

CrossFit Noob

So I visited a nearby CrossFit affiliate today; the owner (let's call him "Coach T") led me through a one-hour introduction to the CrossFit philosophy and his training approach, and then put me through the paces with a bunch of kettlebell swings and then a quick -- but intense -- workout consisting of:
  • A 200-meter dash
  • 15 reps: Air Squats
  • 15 reps: Push-Ups
  • 15 reps: Inverted Ring Rows
  • 12 reps: Air Squats
  • 12 reps: Push-Ups
  • 12 reps: Inverted Ring Rows
  • 9 reps: Air Squats
  • 9 reps: Push-Ups
  • 9 reps: Inverted Ring Rows
  • Another 200-meter dash
No breaks -- the workout was timed, so I hustled. I did it in 4:43, which I guess isn't terrible for a CrossFit rookie. Coach T was impressed that I finished in less than 5 minutes (or at least graciously pretended to be), and told me that some beginners aren't able to finish at all. But that comparison isn't fair: While I'm new to CrossFit, I'm used to regular workout beat-downs, thanks to P90X, Insanity, Turbulence Training, kettlebell practice, running, etc.

Plus, I have a natural advantage when it comes to doing squats: I'm Asian.

Round 3 / Day 98: P90X X Stretch

Without X Stretch, I'm pretty sure my entire body would be as stiff as a rock. As it is, only my neck and traps are sore right now, which isn't bad considering how hard I've pushed myself this week. Next up: one final (recovery!) week of Round 3!

Thursday, June 3, 2010

CrossFit?


I've been eyeing CrossFit for months now, and it's time I gave it a shot, don't you think? Tony Horton and Shaun T still manage to reach through the television screen to kick my ass on a regular basis, but not as brutally as before. And with Round 3 coming to a close, the masochistic, challenge-seeking side of me is leaning towards joining a CrossFit affiliate.

On the other hand, the whimpering, cowardly, risk-averse side of me would prefer to curl up in a fetal position and cry rather than entertain the prospect of doing some of the CrossFit Workouts of the Day (WODs).

There are three(!) CrossFit affiliate gyms within two-and-a-half miles of where I live, and I'm visiting one of them tomorrow to learn more. If all goes well, I'll likely sign up with the expectation (hope?) that CrossFit will beat me to a sweaty pulp every single day (that I can actually manage to work out).

If anyone out there has experience with CrossFit and wants to drop me a line, let me know what you think of it.

(Click here to read Muscle & Fitness Magazine's profile of CrossFit. For more articles, visit the CrossFitLA website.)

Round 3 / Day 97: 2K5 Turbulence Training Workout B + RKC Get-Ups + P90X+ Abs/Core Plus

I think I need heavier weights. I have a set of Bowflex Selecttech 552s, and while they've been handy and space-saving, they max out at 52.5 pounds each. With Turbulence Training, I'm supposed to use weights that force me to max out at 6-8 reps per set, but without something heavier to heave, I'm not getting as much out of my presses and rows as I should.

So now, I'm considering whether to buy a set of Selecttech 1090s, which go up to 90 pounds each -- but they're more expensive than I'd like, and heavier than I'll probably ever need. Maybe I should just duct-tape some weight plates or small children to my current set of 552s. Luckily, I happen to have both lying around.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

George Foreman at McDonald's

Yes, it's an old photo -- but I'm still lovin' it.


(Source: Buzzfeed)

Another Buzzkill


Just when I was planning to schedule a relaxing, post-Round 3 massage to help me recover from months of daily workouts, The New York Times' Well Blog posted a piece about how post-exercise massages may actually be counterproductive:
The results [of a study by Associate Professor Michael Tschakovsky of Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario], published in the latest issue of the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, are a blow, at least to those of us who justify our massages as medicinal. It turned out that massage did not increase blood flow to the tired muscle; it reduced it. Every stroke, whether long and slow or deep and kneading, cut off blood flow to the forearm muscle. Although the flow returned to normal between strokes, the net effect was to lessen the amount of blood that reached the muscle, particularly compared with the amount that flowed to the forearm muscle during 10 minutes of passive recovery...
As a “direct result” of the lessened blood flow to their muscles, Mr. Tschakovsky says, the volunteers being massaged wound up with far less lactic acid removal than the groups who recovered passively or actively. Massage “actually impairs removal of lactic acid from exercised muscle,” Mr. Tschakovsky and his colleagues wrote in their published study.
In the immortal words of Senator Clay Davis, sheeeeeeeeeeit.

(Source: The New York Times)

Round 3 / Day 96: P90X+ Interval Plus


I just love that when Tony, Traci and Mark start doing Jockey Squats (a.k.a. "Morrow Monsters"), the clip-clop of fake-sounding hooves dominates Jason Scheff's P90X+ soundtrack.

Heavy Metal


How much arsenic, cadmium and lead is in your protein shake?
[A]n independent lab commissioned by Consumer Reports found that three servings of one kind of chocolate drink contains more lead and more cadmium than the daily allowances recommended by the U.S. Pharmacopia, the authority on these things. (Click here for full chart of products cited in the report.)

Andrew Shao, senior vice president of scientific and regulatory affairs at the Council for Responsible Nutrition, a supplement industry group, told Consumer Reports that protein powders and drinks are a safe option, even for teens and pregnant women — the ones frequently targeted for nutrition boosting.

But the extra protein may not outweigh the risks, said Michael Harbut, director of the Environmental Cancer Initiative at the Karmanos Cancer Institute in Royal Oak, Michigan. Cadmium can cause serious kidney damage, too much lead cause neurological problems, and we all know why arsenic is a mystery novelist's favorite poision, don't we?
But hey, everything is going to kill everybody eventually, right?

(Source: NPR)

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Never Get Up Again

Remember how I mentioned that we all need to throw away our office chairs? It looks like Honda's taking the opposite tack; it's made it possible to never, ever stand up at work. Ever.



(Source: Neatorama)

Round 3 / Day 95: Power Yoga - Total Body Workout

For a change of pace today, I stuck in a Rodney Yee yoga DVD.



Strangely enough, I found it to be at once too easy and too hard. The flow of the moves was serene and not at all exhausting -- it was almost as low-key as the movements in P90X X Stretch. Yet at the same time, I struggled with my technique, and my balance and lunge poses were more wobblier than I like.

Still, all in all, I can't complain; it felt great to do yoga this morning instead of pounding my body and risking an overuse injury.