September 22, 2010

"A Note to the Average Woman"

I just read this great article on http://www.70sbig.com regarding the benefits of lifting weights for women. Ch-ch-check it out!


Hi. I’ve heard that you are starting or thinking about starting a new exercise program. Your new exercise program may be CrossFit, P90x, boot camp, or any related intensity based conditioning activity. Your goals in starting this program will probably revolve around wanting to be sexy, healthy, and physically able to enjoy an active lifestyle. I commend you on your choice because it’s the first step in achieving those goals. Your program choice may even be the gateway to sport and/or athletic activity. In any case, there is a lot to learn regarding what is best to achieve your goal, because, well, conventional wisdom hasn’t been truthful to you.



Since you are investing time and money into an exercise program I’ll have to assume you are decently serious in achieving your goals. It’s perfectly fine to want to be sexier or healthier. However, “sexier” is typically interpreted as “losing weight” and “toning up”. What this ACTUALLY means is “losing body fat and having some muscle underneath it to have a nice figure”. Losing weight will just make you skinny. Skinny is not good.



Exhibit A.
Skinny=Fail


Losing body fat to get sexy isn’t only about burning and eating less calories: you must alter your metabolism in the short and long term. Exercising in a way that forces your body to optimally metabolize fat and produce lean body mass is imperative for quick results. Nothing does this better than getting stronger through weight training. I realize weight training has a horrible stigma, so I’m taking the time to highlight some of the perks that lifting weights can provide on your journey to a great body and health.



None of the women I have ever coached gained body fat from lifting weights. In fact, they lost body fat while gaining muscle. This happens because lifting weights elevates your metabolism while you’re doing it AND for the rest of the day. A higher metabolism means you’re burning more calories. Doing cardio at a moderate intensity doesn’t elevate your metabolism at all after you stop doing it. High intensity based conditioning/cardio exercise has a similar, albeit lesser, metabolic effect when compared to lifting, but it doesn’t have the same strength and muscle building properties as lifting weights.



When you lift weights, you break up muscle fibers. Your body needs to repair them and improve them so they can either handle more in the future or handle that same load easier. That whole process elevates the metabolism, it makes you stronger, and it will increase the muscle tissue (a little). But you will NOT be getting bulky. You literally have one tenth the testosterone of a guy, and that means you won’t be building muscle very easily. If you haven’t been a muscular woman your whole life, why would you suddenly become “bulky” now? Unless you’re using some kind of steroids, you don’t have anything to worry about.



Lucky for you, muscle tissue is “metabolically active tissue”. This means that the more muscle you have, the higher your metabolism and the better it will metabolize fat. Getting stronger means more muscle which means less fat. To top it off, you’ll be building muscle in your legs and rump, and this will garner positive attention from men and women alike. Whether you are skinny or a bigger gal, squatting and deadlifting shapes your booty in the most desirable way.



Lifting positively effects your metabolism for fat burning purposes and can help shape you into that appropriately curvy figure you’ve always wanted, but that isn’t all lifting is good for. More muscle mass and less body fat have tons of health implications. You’ll find that you don’t get sick as much, you’re able to handle viruses/infections easier, you won’t feel fatigued throughout the day, and you’ll start improving on all of those little tests doctors like to give you on your yearly check ups (not the gyno, the real, non-creepy doctor). Bone density will no longer be an issue because you’ll surpass the credentials for “weight bearing exercise” by training with a barbell. When you are stronger, your conditioning workouts will be more effective because you’ll be able to do more work, go faster, and/or go longer. If you are doing any of these three things, then you’re getting more worth out of the time you are exercising than you were when you were weak (i.e. you get sexier/healthier faster). If you’re going to invest the money and time, you might as well use it optimally!



Whether it be feeling better, getting in shape, looking better, or being more healthy, weight training will help get you there. As you get stronger you’ll be delighted to see your lifts increase gradually yet steadily. When you’re squatting 120 pounds, you’ll look back and think, “I used to only squat 45 lbs…I’ve come a long way.” All women who lift cite this sense of empowerment they get from lifting as an exhilarating feeling (in six months you’ll be able to lift more than most “men”). I’m not suggesting that lifting weights should be your primary training method, but when your trainer suggests or implements it, don’t give her so much hell. The fact that getting you stronger is part of her plan means you hired the right person.

September 16, 2010

GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOAL!

I really hope that Paleo Chix don't mind that I reposted their article, but I check their blog all the time, they are some wonderful women. I can across this article right when I was or I should say I am dealing with my own sugar issues. Today I started my own 21 day sugar detox, so far so good!!!. I have always been pretty darn strict Paleo but it has not been so clean lately.....and I feel completely out of control. No I do not wake up in the morning and eat a donut nor do I eat desert everynight, so some might think that I am crazy but when there is chocolate around the house I will eat it until its gone....ALL GONE! So I try and not have it in the house, but when it is... look out. I also have an issue with Splenda I put it in everything. So when I came a cross this article I almost started to cry just knowing someone else out there was dealing with the samething.....Thank you Cynthia J at Paleo Chix for the post.....Please check out their blog at http://www.paleochix.com/


About six weeks ago I was fortunate enough to attend a seminar with Greg Amundson, called “Goal Setting and Positive Self-Talk”. Greg is one of the original CrossFit Firebreathers, and serves both in the military and in federal law enforcement, and he has developed this talk over the past 4 years, bringing together his experiences in all three arenas. One section of the seminar really grabbed my attention: the importance of setting short-term goals.
Greg said “Short term and IMMEDIATE  goals are important. When accomplished, they build confidence in your ability to set and achieve long term goals. A long term goal is nothing more than the successive accomplishment of several short term immediate goals! This understanding is POWERFUL.”

I have wanted to decrease my bodyfat and increase my level of fitness over the past several years, and have done pretty well, especially since the original FRAT Paleo Challenge in August 2009. But I reached a certain point and have been stuck there for months. I’ve been “pretty good” with my Paleo nutrition and “pretty good” with my workouts. I have only one deviation from “perfect Paleo practice” left,  and its name is SUGAR. I’ve tried before to kick my Peppermint Mocha habit, and found that in its place my intake of dark chocolate surged. I’ve had no trouble at all eliminating grains and legumes and dairy from my diet, have had no desire to reach for a soda or a brownie, but chocolate and Peppermint Mochas have had an irresistible lure.
So what does that have to do with goals, you may ask? Enter our friend Diane’s 21 day Sugar Detox. I bought Diane’s guide way back in March but did not jump in on that 21-day detox. I’ve read through the guide (which is excellent) and checked out the Facebook page, and decided that I might as well give it a whirl this time around. I figured that if I told Diane I was doing it she’d notice if I didn’t contribute any comments :) and that making a “public” (ie. Facebook) commitment to participate would keep me from wussing out part way through. I knew, from having done a 30-day Paleo Challenge, that it is possible for me to “go without” my sweet treats for a while, so managing 21 days seemed like an attainable goal. I also told my children that I was embarking on this path, knowing that they’d provide a little moral support and reinforcement (“MOM! You’re not allowed to have that!).
Here’s what I’ve discovered so far.
First, that the timeframe in which I have to accomplish this goal of 21 days sugar-free is not weeks, days, or hours.. It is moments. Every day, there are several brief moments in which the desire for a “little indulgence” springs up. In those moments, I have to make a choice to either give in and “treat myself” or hold strong and stick to my decision not to eat sugar.  In those moments, my goal is very simple – don’t let THIS be the moment that derails my larger goal to make it through the 21 days without a single lapse.
Now that we are 13 days in to the Detox, this has become a comfortable process; I have found that if I talk myself out of indulging, the urge to pop into Starbucks for a mocha or a grocery store for some dark chocolate will pass pretty quickly, and when it does I feel a lovely little glow of accomplishment. In my mind, I have defeated temptation, met a small but significant goal, and moved another step closer to my ultimate goal of losing fat.
Greg said at his seminar that “Short term goals accomplished on a regular basis build confidence in your ability to arrive at your desired end state.” Boy, do they ever!
Another thing I have learned is that when I have a case of the munchies, if I eat fat (avocado, Sunbutter on celery etc) the hunger goes away immediately.  In fact since I’m not eating any fruit, I find that most of what I’m eating is protein and fat, with very little carbohydrate, and, surprise surprise, I find that I’m eating less often, and eating less in general. Who knew I could not only function but feel really good consuming so much less than usual?
The only thing I miss is fruit; there are still lovely sweet berries available at the Farmers’ Market that just make my mouth water. But honestly I find that I have no real desire to eat them, or the luscious apples and pears that are also abundant. My desire to eat fruit is completely overshadowed by my curiosity about how long I can go sugar-free, now that I’m accustomed to it. Maybe til Thanksgiving? That seems like a reasonable timeframe.
I suppose eventually I will allow a little sugar back into my diet, but for now, I am happy with this little experiment, loving the fizzy little sense of pride in accomplishment I feel at the end of each day, and starting to realize that if I can kick the Mocha and chocolate habit, my long-term goal of losing more fat and a developing a higher level of athletic capacity is easily within reach. And now I’m starting to think of how setting small, short-term goals can help me reach other long-term dreams – such as earning my 4th degree black belt in 2012!

September 14, 2010

Listen All Y'All It's a Sabotage

Ok, so why the heck is it so friggin' easy to sabotage goals??? I mean seriously! You can be focused. You know, "Eye of the Tiger" type focused. You're on the path, eating Paleo, and getting WODs in at least 3 times a week. You're looking good, you're feeling great, and then BAM! You hit a wall. At that point you have come to a fork in the road: stay focused on the goal or - don't.


Hmmmmmm, whence does this pondering come? Sit back, relax, and I'll tell ya...


In a nutshell, I joined CFC because a friend would not get off my back about doing On Ramp with her (thanks Mich!). Once I started I began to feel empowered, as I'm sure many of you did. Then came the nutrition aspect, and a 90 day "Cut the Crap" Paleo challenge. I reveled in it. I committed myself 100% - Eye of the Tiger - and ended up winning the challenge with 20lbs and 20.5 inches lost. I literally screamed when Allison measured my waist. 6 & 1/2 friggin' inches?!?! Hell Yes! I set some goals - pull-ups, CF level 1 cert, participation in an affiliate challenge, etc. - and set out to rule the world! MUAHAHAHA!


After the Paleo Challenge I started a 12 week strength program. About 1/2 way through the program my family and I went on vacation, and when I came back the shit hit the fan. My job became an extreme stress in my life, and I fell off the proverbial wagon. I maintained a 80%-20% Paleo way of eating, but I didn't work out for about 3 months. Not only did I not work out, but I found the "solution" to my stress in booze. Now don't get all crazy on me and get a mental picture of me on top of my roof, drunk off my ass shouting to my neighborhood, "I AM A GOLDEN GODDESS!" It wasn't like that. However, I did find myself coming home after an incredibly long day; and rather than going out to the garage and getting my stress out by swinging a 35lb kettlebell and busting out some pull-ups, I would pour a glass or 2...ok fine maybe 3...of vino, and call it a day.


I read an article in Real Simple and the author wrote on a similar topic. How much is too much? Is it "normal" to have 2 glasses of wine an evening in an attempt to "unwind"? She talked to her girlfriends and found that many of them were "coping" with their life stresses in the the same way. Putting the kids to bed, kicking off their shoes, and sitting on the couch with a glass of wine and a book. Maybe they watched their favorite DVR'd show; but whatever they did, they relaxxxxed.


This got me thinking about what I'm doing to sabotage rather than reach my goals.















To be continued...