Monthly Archives: April 2011

(Re)Defining Fitness – The Case Against Machines

Note: Part 1 of the Redefining Fitness series which talks about The Basic Capabilities of the human body can be found here.

The other day I walk into one of the 24 hour Fitness gyms and on the front door I see a sticker that says “The Truth About Fitness”. I open the door and I see like 50 elliptical machines and treadmils and steppers and other such shiny fancy equipment that honestly serve no purpose (other than giving people the false feeling of having worked out of course!). Even worse, every single one of these machines is occupied and I couldn’t help but brand these folks as ‘human hamsters’ – standing on a machine, watching TV, mindlessly doing something that is perceived as healthy. Nonsense!

I walk further in and I see an army of resistance training equipment. I’m talking pec dec, machine bench press, tricep extension, bicep curl, ab workout machines etc etc… and this time not only were the machines occupied, but there was a line for almost every machine! Gotto get that pump on ya know!

I scoot away from this jungle and at the end, near the restroom, in a 5 sq ft area with no light, I find one squat rack… one lonely squat rack. And guess what… the whole area around it was empty. Empty like there was a lion inside it!

I don’t get it! The squat rack IS the gym and yet people want to use everything but that! What is this obsession with flashy new equipment? How does this make any sense? A flashy phone… sure! But super clean equipment to help you get down dirty and sweaty? Really? That’s like having escalators at the gym! Oh wait…

What is fitness?

Fitness is the capability to do certain feats which you are already programmed to be able to do. Lifting loads, sprinting, covering distance by foot, jumping and contolling bodyweight are some of the most critical aspects of fitness and anyone interested in ‘general fitness’ should focus on these and possibly nothing more. Let me break this down.

Lifting loads:

You have an object. It has a certain weight. You need to lift it for some purpose.

How do you train for this? You find a object and learn to lift it in a way that is safe and a technique that allows you to exert the most force against the force applied by the object (i.e. it’s weight). This object can be a dumbbell or a barbell or a damn rock for all I care… but it has to be a free weight. A weight that is free to move/fall in the 3 dimensional space. Why? Because you need to be able to control the weight before attempting to move it. You know, learn to walk before you run kinda thing.

Sprinting:

You have something coming after you and you need to move away from your current physical position as fast as possible.

How do you train for this? Stand. Run as fast as you can for a certain distance or time. How much simpler can this get?

Covering distance by foot:

You are in point A. You need to get to point B.

How do you train for this? Move! Move at a comfortable pace such that you don’t crumble mid way. Done. And for all you runners, here is an awesome article that teaches you how to run.

Jumping:

You’re walking. There is a 20″ hurdle on the way. You need to get past it. You can jump over it or you can place your arms on it and climb it like you just turned 98 yesterday.

How do you train for this? Well, you jump. It is a basic human movement and teaching someone to jump is like teaching someone to talk. Don’t think. Just jump. You will teach yourself to do it.

Controlling Bodyweight:

Your body has many degrees of movement and the capability to move (and move loads) in all three planes. Using it’s own resistance to build muscle, strength, speed and power is possibly the most efficient way to train if fitness is your goal.

How do you train for this? Push-ups, pull-ups, squats, dips, planks and handstands. You don’t need anything more than this.

But you’re advanced! Don’t you need isolation exercises?

Well firstly, can you do 75+ pushups, 25+ pullups and 10+ pistol squats/leg? If you said no, then you are not advanced.

Secondly, no one with ‘fitness’ as a goal needs isolation exercises. If bodybuilding is your goal, then knock yourself out with 200 sets of isolation exercises… oh and don’t forget the steroids! And please don’t bother to read this blog anymore. Thanks.

Thirdly, check out what the top fitness coaches have to say about exercises to get strong and fast and fit.

So what’s my point?

In all of these training methods, do you see a single mention of a treadmill or elliptical or stepper? No! Why? Because machines are dumb. Flashy expensive machines are dumber! No exaggeration here – Gyms that advertise they have brand new state-of-the-art cardio machines are bascially scamming you. Why? Well, if they tell you its better to train without machines, why would you come in to the gym?

In any point of your life, have you ever had to move a load which has a pre-set fixed movement plane? No! Sitting on a piece of equipment that helps you direct force in a fixed plane of motion WILL NOT get you fit. Such exercises will strengthen specific muscles, sure, but will end up creating imbalances!

You see, your body is meant to work in harmony. When you squat, for example, you flex and extend your hip joint, knee joint and your ankle joint. But if you replace the squat with a leg extension, you only flex and extend your knee joint. So while your quads get worked, the muscles in your posterior chain (hamstrings, glutes, lower back musculature etc) and the muscle attached to your ankle (soleus, gastrocnemius, anterior tibialis etc.) will remain weak. You don’t want to be the guy with big thighs who hurt his lower back when lifting a suitcase! Same deal with the pec-dec. Strong pecs but weak shoulder muscles resulting in almost certain injury when loaded. You don’t want to be that guy with a big chest who hurt his shoulder when attempting to lift his son overhead!

Summary:

And now that you’ve read this, feel free to laugh your ass off everytime you read “We have brand new blah blah equipment made by blah blah” in a gym’s website!

Peace out!

(Re)Defining Fitness – The Basic Capabilities

Has to…

  • play multiple channels.
  • be capable of swaping from one channel to another.
  • have volume control.
  • have remote control capability.
  • have color/contrast adjustment capability.
  • be portable.
  • last for 3-4 years.
  • produce picture of good quality without streaks.
  • be cable ready.

These are what you expect from a machine called Television. I’m not talking about LCD/HD/Flatscreen TVs. I’m talking about the oh-so-common run-of-the-mill 24″ color TV that anyone in almost any country can afford today. It is an idiot box for which you pay a very modest amount of money and you still expect it to perform at a certain level. Why? Because it is ‘meant to’ perform at that level! It was designed with these features and it needs to live up to the design. If it doesn’t… well then its just a piece of junk!

Now your body is a machine too. Albeit, a much more complex, a much more valuable and a MUCH MUCH more capable machine. So what is your machine capable of?

Can you…

  • squat till your butt touches the floor?
  • run fast as you laugh your ass off?
  • jump around for hours without getting exhausted?
  • go for long hours with even thinking about food?
  • roll?
  • sleep like you’ve been hit by a log?
  • carry a 40-lb backpack and walk miles?
  • climb a tree?

Well, these are things every 8 yr old can do! And guess what… you were able to do every single one of these things when you were 8 yrs old! What about the adult version? Can you…

  • jump over a 15 inch parapet wall?
  • run a mile without gasping for breath?
  • do a few push-ups?
  • at least a single pull-up?
  • sprint?
  • bend at your waist and touch your toes?
  • lift 100-lb off the floor and not damage your back?
  • cover long distances by foot? say walk 10 km?
  • easily go 24 hours without food?
  • climb a rope?
  • squat down with your heels on the floor and butt low enough to touch your heels?
  • wake up every morning feeling well rested, strong and awesome?

It’s not about being able to do one of these things. You HAVE TO be able to do every single one of these things because these are the basic capabilities of the human body!

Why? Because you were designed to be able to do all these things! Because your body has the potential to build enough muscle and strength and endurance and flexibility and mobility to be able to perform these feats! Because like how telephone is a telephone only if it can make calls, a human body is a human body only if it is capable of effortlessly exhibiting these actions! If it isn’t… well then its just another piece of junk!

Listen – I’m not trying to guilt trip you here. I’m only trying to tell you that these basic movements are pre-programmed in you… like talking and hunger and greed. Sure you have spent the last how-many-ever years in successfully reprogramming your body to do nothing but sit in front of a computer, but what you were born with never goes away! These things are there for the taking! This is money on the table! Just open your eyes, reach out and grab it!

Your body is one bloody awesome piece of equipment. It superior to every other equipment you have ever come across and it is the only thing… ONLY thing… that will stick with you forever.

So don’t let anyone tell you what you can or can not do. Set your goal and go get it. Period.

Peace out.

Picture credit: Industrialfocus

Coconut Salmon Cake

Ingredients:

  • 6 oz wild pacific salmon
  • 1 whole cage free egg
  • 3-4 tbls real coconut milk
  • 1-2 tbls salsa or pasta sauce
  • 2 tbls coconut/almond four
  • 2 tsp crushed ginger
  • 2-3 cloves thinly sliced garlic
  • 1 pinch thyme
  • 1 pinch turmeric
  • 1 pinch dried basil
  • Salt to taste
  • Cayenne to taste

Procedure:

  • Pre-heat the oven to 380 F.
  • In an oven safe bowl, mix all ingredients.
  • Bake for 25 min.
  • Remove and top lightly with basil and cayenne.
  • Have this by itself along with a side of vegetables/fruit.

Prep time ~ 5 min

Cook time ~ 25 min

Nutrition:

  • Total calories ~ 600
  • Protein ~ 50 gm
  • Fat ~ 30 gm
  • Total Carbohydrate ~ 20 gm (with 10 gm fiber)
  • Net Carbohydrate ~ 10 gm
  • Ginger, turmeric, thyme and basil have too many amazing health benefits to be listed here.
  • Egg yolks are a powerhouse of nutrients.
  • The fats in coconut products help in everything from healing the gut to losing weight.

This is just how I made it because these were the ingredients available. You can improvise and make it your way.

That’s all for now!

Peace out.

Walking The Talk – Update

Note:

  1. I am into “fitness” and my goal is to get as strong and fast as possible while staying healthy and lean.
  2. I’m not into bodybuilding and hence care more about my strength and endurance than my bicep measurement.
  3. You can see my other updates here, here, and here.

Why do I post updates?

Well, because I want my readers and clients to know I don’t just sit there and say stuff. I’m not one of those internet fitness experts who use the picture they clicked in 1987! I believe in what I recommend. I practice what I preach. I walk the talk!

Anyways, the last time I gave you guys an update was in December, so I figured it is time for one. So, here ya go…

Nutrition:

  • 90% real food with some cheats here and there.
  • Very laid back. Ate out as much as I cooked at home.
  • 2-3 meals a day. Intermittent fasting (Leangains) on most days.
  • Protein sources: Meat, eggs, whey (~ 150-175 gm protein per day).
  • Carb sources: Sweet potato, white rice, other veggies.
  • Fat sources: Avocado, butter, coconut, dairy
  • Click here for more specifics on my nutrition.

Training:

  • Full body strength training 3 days a week.
  • Sprint once a week.
  • Ab work: Maybe 1 set of 8-10 hanging leg raises per week.
  • Off days: Walking (~45-60 min), mobility work, handstands, pistols etc.
  • Click here to see what my training looks like.

Results:

  • Back Squat 5RM went up 25 lb.
  • Front Squat 5RM went up 15 lb.
  • Deadlift 5RM went up 15 lb.
  • Dumbbell Press 8RM Went up 10 lb.
  • Bodyweight Chin-ups went up by 4 reps.
  • Weighted Chin-up 5RM went up 5 lb.
  • Bodyweight went down 4 lbs in 12 weeks.
  • Recent picture below…

 

Peace out.

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