Showing posts with label Kettlebells. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kettlebells. Show all posts

06 September, 2012

Exercise: the good and the bad of it...as far as I'm concerned

I now and then wonder about why I do what I do. A good part of that speculation questions  the amount of  time and energy I invest in exercising.  I  ask myself, why bother? Where are the gains?

And it's true the promise of exercise -- so much promoted as a lifestyle essential   -- isn't really there. Our obsessions are seemingly fed by myths.

Will exercise help you lose weight?

No.

Will it improve your general  health and well being?

Yes -- but that's a perhaps 'yes'...so long as you 'exercise' properly.

If I do more exercise am I gonna be healthier?

Definitive answer: No. Volume doesn't decide these matters.

These above observations are the sort of conclusions coming out of more recent research into exercise and its effects on the human body. (See video below for over view of some of these). That 'exercise' is such a huge industry today cynically obscures this underlying physiological reality.

Assuming the above...I'd like to review what I do and assess it according to these criteria.


What I do is too much

Yep. I really don't have to exercise as much as I do do  -- that is, if I was you. That's what I'm telling myself anyway.

At one time during the distant past I ceased to consciously exercise and my health and mobility suffered terribly. I soon enough had to rely on a walking stick to get around. I thought this was just pathology doing its evil work, but the fact was that while I was gaining nothing self evident from 'consciously exercising' I was nonetheless, holding back the grosser impacts my chronic condition, Fibromyalgia, was having on my body.

So that's the heads up for exercise: not that you are gonna feel better, but that you won't feel worse.  That's a consequence which is extremely hard to get your head around.

Exercise -- of any amount -- is gonna be primarily preventative.

Now if I knew way back whenever what I know now I would have definitely always exercised and done much more of it.

"Of it"? Of what? What kind of exercise would I have been doing?

All exercises aren't equal of course and I had to apply myself to my own body's quirks.

So, let's assume , that after a hiatus I started off on a journey of recovery through exercise. Not that I'll get anywhere special but at least I won't be going backwards.

Walking

Walking is my core ever-so-conscious exercise routine. I try to do it daily -- and to help me do it regularly I rely on my pet dogs to force me out the door.

You want to 'exercise' but don't trust your ability to always do it?  Simple answer: get a dog...and walk it.

Dog walking is probably the best long term exercise strategy available to suburbanites and there is nothing like a dog to keep you doing it. When one dies you go get yourself another...then another as you adopt to the  pack life style.

As I began to  ramble further in my doggy routes I addedx trekking poles to my walking rig. These are  hiking sticks about the height of ski poles. As a walking tool they generate upper body activity and increase the aerobic quality of your exertion.

Today I neither walk with a stick nor with trekking poles  but they were a great means to an end. As  my distance increased and my confidence improved I embraced the 10,000 steps walking program and began to seriously notch  up some ks.

That was over 5 years ago....and today I'm still walking the dogs. On average I'm out most days , preferably in the evening and usually I walk those dogs for at least 5 km. No aids of any kind. While I used to listen to audio podcasts on my mp3 player  as I walked -- for maybe 40 plus minutes -- I now partake of the experience device free.

Just my legs and a dog leash.

My walking stick and trekking poles are now family heirlooms resting against the garage wall.

Swimming, well sort of anyway.

Another invention I pursued was to walk in the water. We had a round 3 metre wide pool  filled with water up to my chest and I'd get in and drag myself walking around and around for a couple of  kilometres or so such that I'd create this whirlpool. Lovely in the Summer heat at night. When it got cold   I even had a wet suit so that I could jump in and do the routine during the cooler months.

 Water aerobics like this  was useful  because I could often do it despite the way I may have been feeling as the water offered buoyancy and I had to carry less of my own body weight around.

But really a pool and all that may be kosher for the kids -- and we had sprogs -- it is, nonetheless, a bit ritualistic -- what with the special dis-robing, towelling off and such. It's not much of a challenge given the effort and hardware required.

So aqua-robics like this  is an exercise option I mark down. You can't do it all year. If you use public pools you need to  commute to them before you can get wet. And really, it didn't have much of an impact on my health. I could get a better 'workout' --  which ticked the same boxes -- staying dry by   walking the neighborhood with a pair of  trekking poles.

Scootering

If you walk, sooner or later you may wonder that maybe instead of walking you could begin to run. I had been a keen jogger in my past pre-illness existence and loved it. Since I used to run long distance,  I knew what running required of a human body.

I was much heavier than  my old jogging weight and I knew that running was all about pounding the pavement and ramming gravity down hard on the ankles and knee joints.  Running can also be an injury waiting to happen.

So I thought: no I'm not gonna run. I'd like to but back then I didn't.
Nonetheless, this year I began to run the soft surface of tidal flats where I live. Had a great time, running with the dogs for 5 km at a stretch.

But I stopped running because (a) injury set in despite all my care and (b) it interfered with the time I spent scootering. I was delighted that I could so quickly notch up 5 ks -- at my age and given my condition -- but what was the supposed gain that I couldn't reach more easily and with less threat of injury by another means?
Back then - concerned that my condition was deteriorating -- I thought I may be sentenced to an electric  mobility scooter soon enough, as here I was already dependent on walking with a cane. 

I didn't want to cycle as it was too hard to always push down on the peddles and mounting a bike with a leg over wasn't going to be an option.  

I then had an epiphany: why not push a scooter? 

My first scooter was a home built vehicle cannibalized by my neighbor from two BMX bicycles (pictured left).

Thus began my  scootering passion....I later got a kickbike and then supplemented that with my cute Mibo Folding Scooter.

What can I say? Kickbiking rocks.

Unlike standard peddle powered cycling, scootering is always a physical challenge as there isn't much in way of hardware to assist your travels. Two wheels and the rest is all your own work.

Easy to mount.  Easy to dismount. You can always -- as you will so often -- get off and walk.

And the 'work out' is top to toe. A kickbike doesn't just demand that the legs do all the work. It's all over cadence.

While I  relied on  my scooters to get around, it was when I consciously deployed them as part of my exercise regime that their utility soared. 

I realized that each morning I had a brief window in which my relentless pain and stiffness was yet to make up its mind as to how brutal it was gonna be that day. So opportunistically I'd get on the scooter and push it around the block, exploiting the window. First once, then two times around, then three...while I logged my efforts.

Today I do 14-8 kms on the kickbike on a morning scoot without turning a hair . My base distance is around 7 km and if I can I go further. Scoot out of town. Walk the tidal flats if the tide is out and scoot back in again. 

It is, aside from dog walking, my  core (hopefully daily) routine.

Some days I don't make it because I am indeed so far under the weather that walking itself isn't  an easy option, let alone scootering.

But there, you see: great workout/injury free and a transport plus.

Weight Lifting and HIIT

Walking and scootering is all very fine -- thought I -- but I didn't feel like my body was changing for the better. This is when I started going to a gym, got a personal trainer (weekly sessions) and started boxing.

Great experience it was too. I loved the society of it all and the way I was pushed to the max.

It cost a pretty penny  -- and I shelled out for it for a year or so. 

I'd love to go back to that gym -- Northside Boxing -- but I now live so far away  and am my own personal trainer. 

The gym experience taught me how to lift weights properly and how to box. And it was there that I fell in love with kettlebells.

It's here that some of the recent research begins to really matter.

While exercise won't take your weight off and while aerobic activities are a bit of a physical plus in way of cardio efficiency (and that's all), lifting heavy things is now thought to be much more useful than was  originally believed. Bone density, insulin resistance, muscle glycolysis ... are all greatly improved by following a weight training regimen. If you are diabetic (like me) or pre diabetic (like so many in the population at large, all unaware that they are) weight training is gonna be  one of  your best options so long as it is pursued  within HIIT protocols.

HIIT means High Intensity Interval Training and to get your share of that I think you really do need to do weight work  even if the weight you lift or pull is your own body.

I love the kettlebells but I also now use dumbbells.  The problem with weight training is that it can be  so darn boring and so exhausting. I mean it hurts, really hurts to generate all that required grunt.

But  it's what the gyms won't tell you that really matters: do the weight training less for shorter times for the same or better results. 

Chris Highcock's wonderful manual, HillFit  offers a great summary in its introductory essay about this wonderful logic -- so go read it. 

Chris's perspective is 5 minutes of HIIT exercise 2-3 times per week! 

So that's what I do:  but I alternate every second day (sort of) the HillFit regime lasting about 5 minutes with a kettlebell and dumbbell routine that requires 18 minutes to complete. I do the  exercises slowly --  very very slowly.

Injury free. Challenging. Exhausting. Painful. But over and done with soon enough. 
I think this every second day HIIT routine I follow is one of the best things I've ever done for my physical self. I'm mastering my stiffness and pain by pumping heaps of adrenalin and other relievers through my protesting body.

I only wish I knew this decades ago. 
Knew what? That you can exercise less for much greater gain so long as you worked hard at it when you do.
So if I was designing an exercise program for whoever this would be my numero uno. 

The KB or DB lifting is customisable; the HillFit is not. But you need to research the physiological rationale otherwise you miss the point of what you'd be doing.

Start with  Body by Science  by Doug McDuff and John Little...

Is that too much?

The reality is, as far as I'm concerned, I am indeed doing too much. The HIIT stuff should be an ample investment if I wanted to do good things for my health.

But I'm not gonna give up the kickbiking...because I love those morning scoots. I'm not gonna give up the dog walking because I love those evening walks.

In fact I've recently added  to this routine by once again hitting the bag boxing. I do this under HIIT protocols via a Tabata schedule which means I box  for less than 5 very painful minutes in staccato 20 second bursts.

While  I love boxing, I'm primarily doing this because I have learnt that intense burn workouts like  Tabata  pump my muscles  with analgesia concoctions and I appreciate all the long term pain relief I can get.  A session on the bag -- despite how short its duration -- will stay with me and my muscles all day.  

So every other day I'm now back punching the bag. 

In terms of the current research into HIIT you don't have to do what I do -- but if your are arthritic you learn to appreciate what works for you and for once, in my exercise journey, I can say that through HIIT I am logging tangible results.

I guess I'm one of those -- again according to research -- who are  exercise resistant.

I didn't see  results from a year of gym work with a personal trainer. I didn't see them in the pool, and I don't see similar tangible results from my walking of kickbiking. While most of my exercises are  deployed as  preventative measures, the conscious HIIT has  made me  into something a little different from what I was before I started it. And that's despite how little time it demands.

But there's more...

That's not the end of it either. There's more. I didn't begin Urban Soul Line Dancing  because I wanted 'to exercise' -- I began it because I wanted to dance and I  had reached a level of physical capacity such that I knew I could sustain  the challenges posed by stepping.

So my exercising prepared me, with my illness handicap, for my dancing.

However, I can dance on days even when I can't do this other stuff and that's a wonderful bonus.  I also find that dancing changes me physically  in a way that these other grunt routines do not.

I do however do a lot of dancing on a daily basis.

The more I practice the steps the more my body flexes especially along the spine and hips. The groove takes over. It has taken months for this to begin to happen. My body  is changing as it moves into Gene Kelly mode. My foot work is still tardy -- but maybe in time....?

Dancing has given me a way to become  more movement aware and I haven't had that going for me since way back when I was doing T'ai Chi ch'uan which is one of the best 'movement awareness' regimes on offer (as is Yoga, Feldenkrais, Pilates, etc).

So the irony is that while dancing is pursued as an exercise it isn't the standard criteria that actually may rule on its efficacy. It's impact is multi layered. 

If only I was dancing decades ago! ...and doing HIIT my life would be much better today.
ADDENDUM: What I haven't discussed --and won't but I will refer to it -- is  how exercise improves your cognitive and emotional existence.These are the subjective plusses that a routine offers. The sense of accomplishment. The excitement of physical challenges. The excuse to get out and about. The camaraderie of the dog pack.Sunsets. Sunrises. Sunshine.  Distances logged. Real pain from real physical effort and exertion. The joy you get when you finish the straining. The horror you feel when you begin...All these things keep your wonderfully attuned to yourself.


24 March, 2012

HIIT,HillFit, Hardware: the exercise 3 H's rule

I suspect that I have made a turning along the three meals-a-day yellow brick road of life.

A turning such that I have quickened my pace.

But I need to add, my turning isn't a shortcut nor  detour, nor a high or low road...

Henceforth, to celebrate,  I shall refer to myself as  'Dorothy' and wear  red shoes when in the company of Munchkins. 


 Becoming Dorothy

Auntie Em: Help us out today and find yourself a place where you won't get into any trouble!
Dorothy: A place where there isn't any trouble. Do you suppose there is such a place, Toto? There must be. It's not a place you can get to by a boat or a train. It's far, far away. Behind the moon, beyond the rain...
[begins to sing "Over the Rainbow"] 

HIIT

After years of deploying many exercise regimes, experimenting with a range of approaches, I have now settled upon a creative mix that seems to have more impact upon my person than of yore.

The key element is to defer to the principles of High Intensity Interval Training 
HIIT exercise strategy alternating periods of short intense anaerobic exercise with less-intense recovery periods. HIIT is an effective form of cardiovascular exercise. Usual HIIT sessions may vary from 9–20 minutes. These short, intense workouts provide improved athletic capacity and condition, improved glucose metabolism, and improved fat burning.
For me the baseline was/is the Tabata Method
20 seconds of ultra-intense exercise (at an intensity of about 170% of VO2max) followed by 10 seconds of rest, repeated continuously for 4 minutes (8 cycles)
That set off bells in my head. Gave me a comprehension of what I was missing (and missing out of in way of pain!).

I doubt that  my Tabata-ing reaches 170% of VO2max but it's the thought that counts.

HillFit


I guess the  h's rule!


It's a simple set of only four (that's right, only four) exercises packaged in a thoughtful essay on exercise.

HillFitting anchored me and more so than related literature gave me a comprehension of the why and the how. I mean my routine was no longer routine. It had meaning. 

HillFit also bought me back to the importance of technique: it is not about repetition or 'grunt'. Easy does it, slow as you go. 

It's Tai Chi without Mr Yin and Ms Yang. High Intensity Interval-ing for the sake of an exercise Zen.

HillFit and related inputs also changed my attitude toward frequency and duration.

This was a Wow! moment.

Instead of forcing myself to keep to an unrelenting routine of obligations I simply  'exercised' every second day. 

And these every-second-day sessions are no longer than 5-10 minutes.

Hardware


Another 'h': hardware. 

I've been a long term kettlebell user. And I love my kickbiking. I also box and own gloves and a heavy bag. In the present mix I make use of these resources. I've recovered an old cheap rusty set of dumbbells and put a sandbag in a torn old back pack. I got myself some cheap sandals I can run the tidal flats in...

So I put all this stuff to work.
  1. Every Second Day: I keep to a every second day schedule of focused exercise. One day I do HillFit. Two days later I do Kettlebells. And two days after that I do a dumbbell session. We're talking 9-12 minutes each time...with Tabata finishers (either Tabata boxing or squats: all of 4 minutes). If I'm a bit challenged that day -- ie: ill -- I skip a day or only do Tabata boxing if only for the pump up 'high'.
  2. Other times: Kickbike + Running.  Elsewhere in my week I take off on the kickbike as has been my long term norm and instead of simply going for a walk when I reach my destination, I run -- I run the tidal flats. Strictly speaking this isn't supposed to be exercise . It's supposed to be 'fun'. At least it will be once my running improves. I don't have a schedule for this, I simply do what I feel like doing, when I feel like doing it.
  3. Spontaneity: Running Stairs. Since I live on flat terrain and can only yearn about the elevations in the far off distance, I've taken up the impulse to run up things -- usually stair cases -- when the opportunity presents itself. I'm working on a few stair running routes to tackle when I'm in the vicinity. But every train journey is going to offer me a chance to run stairs at most railway stations. I am also much taken with Jacobs Ladder here in Brisbane town. If I have an ambition -- a goal -- then 'running stairs' or sandhills or mountains is it. 
So far so good. My body is now ordering weight reduction  after plateauing for 12 months. I expect my bood sugar will also roll back a bit. I've done some dietary tweaking which I'll explore in a later post. I feel the best I've felt in a long time -- despite my ready penchant to be relapsing hither and yon. (Can't do much about that unfortunately esp in the current weather conditions: wet and humid). I also do urban soul line dancing but that is fun and more a mental challenge.






01 March, 2012

Neghar “Poetry in Motion” Fonooni.

Since I have returned to kettlebell lifting with a bit more passion  than of yore I was keen to resource some inspiration. Who better than Neghar Fonooni?

I'm no longer into the gym thing and any of that but I was referred to Fonooni with the nick name attached -- and I can see why.

Women are superb kettlebell lifters. It's all technique and form. Women don't fall back on grunt and muscle mass like men do. They have to lift right to get the weight skyward.

And Fonooni's form is amazing: poetry in fact. If you were keen to lift your game, study these swings and lifts. 




01 February, 2012

HIIT: The times they are a changin'


Since I am studying High Intensity Interval Training in a quest to transcend the hype I'm keen to fiddle with what I currently do.

After reading Hill Fit by Chris Highcock (review pending in later post) I'm inspired to experiment.

Nonetheless, I suspect that my current version of HIIT sessions -- short, intense and sharp -- is the form that best suits me and better serves what I seek to achieve. 

However, while I love boxing the bag and kickbiking under strict HITT protocols, lifting kettlebells is not so user friendly. To achieve the max you need to lift fast and sharp -- squeezing as many reps into your 20 second window of effort as you can.

The problem is that this is dangerous. You trade form for effort. You maybe don't lift correctly or consciously,  and you open yourself up to the chance of  injury. 

Since I still want to lift dem bells and make kettelbelling a key part of what I do, I've tweaked the kettlebell session times by doubling them.
40 second effort/20 second rest. That is: [40:20] x 8
I may have to play around with this regime a bit in order to get it right -- but the main game is to do slower and more  controlled lifts which require a more careful muscle engagement.  That's the intention, anyway -- the plan. So my session on the bells will last 9 minutes rather than 4.5. I may have to extend that timing, but we'll see. 

Once a week should see me doing this and on the 2 day separation between HITTs I'll do boxing one day,  and kickbike sprints on the other perhaps. And follow that with a longer session on the  kettlebells.
Just to complicate things further it may be better to run my kickbike interval according to the Little Method: [60:75] x 12 . But that requires much more time --  27 minutes -- to complete.
Three sessions per week: roughly 5 minutes : 5 minutes : 10 minutes -- totalling 20 minutes/week.  And that may even be over training! 

Among that I'd like to be able to include a long kickbike ride each week -- because I enjoy that so much . At the moment the limit of my range is 15 km (Swan Lake and back) but maybe I can extend this. The complication is that I love Swan Lake so much because it is such a great commune with  the local environment -- often as not, when I do it, at dawn or soon after. 

This isn't exercise so much as something else and one of the great things about deploying HIIT principles is that you can separate 'exercise' and 'fitness' from this other inspirational and lifestyle stuff. My preference you see and my aspiration -- depending on my health that day -- is to kickbike every morning.

That's been so very important to me these last two years. That physiological window first thing in the morning enables me to do more regardles of what the rest of the day may be like inside my body.


10 January, 2012

Video: Tabata Kettlebell options. Go the max for 4 minutes. And if you survive you gain...

I am only beginning to self consciously do the HIIT via a Tabata protocol. Today for instance I survived kettlebelling 20 seconds on and ten rest seconds off x 6.
Fortunately, you can work your way up to the full 20 seconds on/10 seconds off protocol by using different time variations.
10 seconds on, 20 seconds off x 8
15 seconds on, 15 seconds off x 8
20 seconds on, 10 seconds off x 8 (reference)
Whew! That's so I won't kill myself. And that's nice to know. The draw back is that the level of exertion required is high -- an intensity of 170% of VO2max. (The woman in the picture is 62 years old). But at most only 3 times per week for maybe 4-5 minutes each time.
VO2 max  is the maximum capacity of an individual's body to transport and use oxygen during incremental exercise.
I can live -- in  a fashion -- with that. The main game is to ensure the exercise is easy and not complex -- quickly completed without any complicated moves. It's a quick  up/down thing rather than this as well as that. If all else doesn't suit, or you are without apparatus -- you simply do squats, or sprints, or something simple...

But for now I'm using Tabata music  which gives you the intervals with a snappy beat of your choosing. Sweat music on my mp3 player.

The irony is this: would you pay $$$$ gym  membership to go there for 4.5 minutes three days per week? Despite the fact that the science is supportive of  just such a regime...

I don't think so. YOUR problem -- which is also my problem --  is keeping it up.

05 September, 2011

I shell/You shell: Getting my body back

Since  I've been under the weather these last -- so many that I cannot recall them -- weeks I have not been able to sustain an exercise regime. 

With a dicky knee I haven't been able to kickbike because I cannot stand on one leg.

The knee also obstructed -- through a ready dash of intense pain -- my kettlebell swing; and the generic pain and stiffness (not to mention the pain in the knee I rocked on) postponed boxing the bag.

Knees will be required to move any time the body above moves. This I have learnt. Sneeze and the knee will move. Turn the head...and the escorting  shoulder ...then the knee will follow. There's no aloneness in the body. No show without Punch. 

But today I completed my first 10 Shell  Workout in yonks.

Hallelujah! He I is risen!


My previous best during this epoch of pain without gain had been 3 shells so I must be on the mend. 

Oh what a whiz it is to notch up those shells! If the  Little Red Engine had to remind itself that "I know I can..." I get to tell myself, "I shell!" Big difference. It becomes personal misspelt law: Thou shell...

Checking my records my last 10 Sheller was six weeks  ago.

So I'm getting my body back...

This may not be 'bouncing back' style but crawling back will do. 

My last sailing attempt on the paddleski was a month ago and the adjustments I have since made to the rig have not been tested. Since my last outing was abortive I need the trials to catch up. 

Oh the frustration of watching the wind come up and knowing that the water waits for me only a short walk away.... if I could but bend my knee enough to sail about.




01 July, 2011

I shell/you shell: the Magic Shell Workout

My 10 Shells
I can see the marketing options already on late night television: The 10 Shell Workout  -- up against the Ab-Circle Pro and Zumba.

And all I would have to do is send the insomniac customer 10 shells. That's all: send them ten magic shells. (As magical as any late night six pack abber dabber do or weight loss device.)

These aren't big shells, or special ones. They're just beach pick ups that  in one row will number to ten.

That's it. That's my new workout: moving those shells into one neat row.
Customer endorsement  goes in here...
But before you are allowed to move a shell  you have to do 1 minute of intense exercise.

That's the rub.

Since I'm slowly recovering from my crippling knee injury I am slowly getting back into the kettlebell lifting and boxing.

Very slowly apparently.(Or so my body tells me.)

So I alternate: one minute on the kettlebells; followed by one minute with the gloves  punching the bag. Then back on the bells...

With little respites -- time taken to line up the shells -- in between.

Of course I could move up the scale and, in time, tackle the 15 Shell or even the 30 Shell workout. But then I'd need to get more shells....and around here, shells  there are aplenty. I could also rule that I need to work longer before I earn the right to move each shell.

If I want longer respites all I need do is line up my shells father away from where I pick up the gloves or bells.

Brilliant.

I shell means I will.

Shell Values:
  1. Kettlebell lift
  2. Left Right box
  3. Kettlebell swing
  4. Upper Cuts
  5. Kettle clean and jerk right
  6. Left Right Left
  7. Kettle clean and jerk left
  8. Right Left Right
  9. Kettlebell Bench Press
  10. Left Right box

21 February, 2011

Patience and lactic acid

I use kettlebells and boxing as key elements in my workout regime. But since I suffer from very chronic Fibromyalgia I am hampered in my ability to engineer a routine.

Somedays walking will be challenge enough.

That said -- and we're talking not so much 'looking good' but surviving pain and muscle contraction -- I've found that any time I go to the exercise max -- such as in a group exercise class -- I'm stressed over and the worse of my symptoms will kick in.

This has been my experience over New Year when I joined a local circuit class. Despite my ability to keep up and perform the routines, my health suffered. And over Summer, heat is sufferance enough.

I learnt a lesson that I canot afford to be impatient. The price I'll have to pay is too high.

Much as I have tried over the years to push my training up into  really intense zones for longer periods, I am  thwarted by the consequences -- which always lead to setbacks. The sweet point -- the therapeutic threshold zone -- is always going to variable day to day but sustaining in its own good time.

Recent research indicates something along this line -- albeit for normals. Upping your blood lactic acid  for as long and as high as you can manage may not be the best way to do exercise business. There is a false efficiency in pushing so hard -- more pain for less gain.

I've found that while kettlebell lifting is a great tool I need to supplement  that discipline not so much with other weight training devices (as I fund a cheap gym) but I get a lot of reward from Gymball/Stability Ball (el cheap again) work -- especially as an option on those days I cannot manage KB lifts.

A good day I'll do both KB (+ boxing) and ball. The challenge is to pick which option suits the body at that moment of somatic time.

The problem over Summer is that unless I am mobile in the early morning -- and I'm more often mobile soon after wakening -- I miss the opportunity to get out on the kickbike and notch up the ks before the day's heat kicks in.
You want to stress out? Then exercise in the Summer sun.
So I can get caught often enough between a rock and a hot place.

This is where the paddling is supposed to kick in -- paddling the paddleski along the coastline. But that, given how inundating and storm prone has been our Summer  here in Qld -- has not so often been an option. 

But as the weather settles and the days are more comfortable....expect Salty Dog.

10 December, 2010

Exercise and the brutal irony of my painful existence

While I may be very physically active  I am in fact crippled by stiffness and pain so that much more often  than I'd prefer I'm popping  analgesia into my mouth.

Since I have gone off one of the primary medications for  treating the neurological pain  of Fibromyalgia  -- amitriptyline hydrochloride -- I am at the receiving  end of much more daily soreness.

Ironically the best response to this is to do a lot of exercise..and compared to my peers I do indeed do a lot of exercise. Exercise is its own analgesia and combats muscle stiffness. 

It's no pain/no pain/no pain/no gain...

Over the past few years I have anchored my exertions with a personal trainer and developed a penchant to box and lift kettlebells . 

Love them bells....

But since I have moved residence I haven't had gym access and have relied on my  other routine stalwarts -- kickbiking and walking --which I do every day.  The break had caused me to slack off lifting the bells and boxing.

However, my very good doctor -- Dr Julian -- insisted I attend an exercise physiologist. She was most   adamant about the  visit.

I complied and the guy reviewed my engagement with exercise and wrote me up a "Kettle Bell Circuit" which exploited my experience and preferences. Despite my exertions over the years, with age especially, I know that I am weak and stiff in certain areas of my challenged bod  especially the knees and hips.  The rigors of illness have ensured that because of this my stride is shortening and my ambulation slowing.

I'm like a brittle,  ageing crab, closing in on itself.

The circuit addresses some of these weaknesses. It can be completed in around 20 minutes. It requires a punching bag, kettlebells and boxing gloves.

It makes me work hard. There is no comfort zone.

Kettle Bell Circuit 
(Reps: 1x10-12)

  1. Clean and Jerk
  2. Straight jabs (30 seconds)
  3. Deadlift
  4. Left. Right. Left Hook. (30 seconds)
  5. Front swing.
  6. Right . Left. Right Hook. (30 seconds)
  7. One arm row.
  8. Quick jabs (30 seconds)
  9. One arm bench press.
  10. Quick upper cuts. (30 seconds)
  11. Walking lunges.
  12. Upper chest stretch
  13. Lats Stretch
  14. Calf stretch.

19 June, 2010

Kettlebelling: my new training schedule

Rather than muck around we've worked up a  drill plan.for the Kettlebells.

Swings
  • 10x2 hands
  • 10xL hand
  • 10x2 hands
  • 10xR hand
  • 10x2 hands
Lifts
  • 8x clean and press
  • 10x snatches
  • 6x clean and press
  • 8x snatches
Swings
  • 10x2 hands
  • 10xL hand
  • 10x2 hands
  • 10xR hand
  • 10x2 hands
This schedule pushes me a lot. My complication is one of finding the sweet spot during each day when I can do it as as each day wears on I  normally become stiffer, sorer and my range of motion reduces -- depending how restrained I am when I wake up each morning, the weather...whatever. The trick is to deploy the exercise as analgesia.

While I get to vary the weight and pace I lift, it's not an easy call...
Not me: drill examples




13 June, 2010

Kettlebell lifting: Catherine Imes Interview


Catherine Imes is perhaps the most influential American born Kettlebell Lifter to date. She has not only earned her respect on the platform but also the admiration of men and women lifters alike from around the world. Catherine is the 1st American Master of Sport, Record holder for the 16kg Biathlon, and Coach to many advanced lifters. What’s more interesting is that even though she does not have the ideal build or the athletic background for kettlebell lifting, she continues to excel to the top, making her a true living legend in Kettlebell Sport!


Maya: What is Kettlebell Lifting in your opinion?


Catherine: Technically, it is high rep-usually ballistic Kettelbell lifts like the Jerk and Snatch. For me, it is a way to keep my conditioning at a decent level even though I don’t always have a lot of time to train. It has been a safe and effective way for me to maintain my strength, conditioning, flexibility, and mobility. I find that it has made me mentally resilient as well. Pushing myself in training is not near as difficult as it was prior to lifting KBs and I think that is because the protocols teach you how to relax even when you are uncomfortable. It is a good anti-dote to the pressures of a desk job.

12 June, 2010

VIDEO Women Kettlebell Lifting

The Ice Chamber Kettlebell Girls is the only team in the USA comprised 100% of Masters of Sport. They are national champions in the 20kg Long Cycle, and are athletes of the World Kettlebell Club. The ICKB Girls are Jessica DiBiase, Mayachela (Maya) Garcia, Surya Voinar-Fowler, and Sara Nelson. Visit www.ickbgirls.com for more information.

I can only dream of doing this sort of lifting....


Girls can do anything....

21 April, 2010

VIDEO Kettlebell routine 3 minutes flat


.Tabonga2001 July 01, 2007 — Leonard Wu, RKC, demonstrates Dr. Mark Cheng's Kettlebell "Trifecta" with a 24 kg (53 lb) kettlebell. If you've got no more than 3 minutes to be able to crank out a full-body workout, this is the workout for you. As long as you're able to do the snatch, the clean, and the swing with good form, you've got your ultimate 3-minute fitness and conditioning solution right here!

The format is simple - 30 seconds per hand of snatches, 30 seconds per hand of cleans, and 60 seconds of swings (with any number of hands or switches). Once the timer starts, the kettlebell must remain off the ground, and hand switches must be done in mid-air, as Wu is demonstrating.

For your convenience, we shot this clip of Instructor Wu doing the Kettlebells Los Angeles "Trifecta" for the full 3 minutes so you can follow along.

For more information on this or other kettlebell training sets, please visit www.kettlebellslosangeles.com.

16 March, 2010

Tabata squats with Kettlebells

I've mentioned Tabata squats here before. Well here's a simple combination routine that will stretch me (and maybe you). Tabata is time ruled so you'll need a clock.
Reference: "...ultra abbreviated kettlebell circuits that deliver a metabolic whollop and a nice dose of ‘calorie afterburn’ that’s hard to match with other, ‘lesser’ training tools like dumbbells or barbells." So much pain, so cheaply!


09 March, 2010

Women and Kettlebelling -- Will my daughter join them?

My daughter complains  that she has neither the time in her life  nor the motivation to exercise regularly. 

The problem is, of course, that you need a very good reason to push the body through a workout and set time aside to do that. Maybe it is secondary to something else like walking the dog or because you want to be slimmer or because you can no longer touch your toes or have health issues...

There is always the possibility, you see, that you may not enjoy it!

Let's assume that that is your problem.

In cases such as this I think the kettlebell becomes a very viable option, primarily because you can attain a very good workout by spending just ten minutes at it. That's right: ten minutes!

For the newbie woman a single  8 kgm kettlebell is probably all you need. Later as you get more proficient and adventurous, go up the scale. But that isn't an imperative. Lifting light weights like this is a great way to explore the basic kettlebell routines over and over again.

Kettlebells also come in a 4 kgm size -- if you want to start your experience at a very low weight.
The best place to purchase kettlebells is online -- search cheap kettelebllsEmporiums like Target now have low weight kettlebells at cheap prices. Elsewhere you'll pay much more.
To fill ten minutes with kettlebell lifting/swinging makes for a very intense workout.You won't have to change your clothes or put on special footwear. You can even do it watching the TV.

I mainly use 12kgm k-bell at the moment as I am trying to increase the number of my reps and not so much the total weight I  lift. For  lifting weight challenges I am still stuck at 16 kgm, but I l have a range of routines I can apply which will extend me during any one workout  despite my limited weight options -- in my case two K-bells, one  of 12 kgm and  another of 16kgm.

I am however lifting heavier weights in supervised conditions at the gym.

My likely next advance is to lift 2 kettlebells at once in order to consolidate the clean and jerk -- but I could just as easily do that with one.


K-Bell weights  go up (or down) by multiples of 4 kgm -- or traditionally as denominators or multiples of 1 Pood (16kgm) --- that is, if we were in Russia --which is the country where kettlebells ( girya  in Russian) and kettlebell  sport  (Girevoy Sport) was embraced and  became  a mass popular exercise activity.

But sport level or not, the bells are such tools that no matter what you put into them, you get a return  much more -- in terms of 'productivity' -- than a lot of other routines that may also have a sharp accommodation and training curve.

But you need to lift properly so watching the videos -- such as the ones here -- is where you should start.  And always, lift correctly.Never carelessly. Always with intent and purpose. One mistake and you may pay for it.

01 February, 2010

VIDEO: Grivony Sport over 60.




There's a website run by a Sydney doctor who has a Russian background --Girevoy Sport after 40.

It is one of the best and most useful of the Kettlebell sites -- "Girevoy Sport" is kettlebell lifting. 

Since I'm 20 years after his 'after', I need to take my threshold measures where I can find them. We don't want the fam coming upon Dave flat out and hypoxic   with a kettlebell indent in his chest, cranium or abdomen.

But the news is I'm back.I am beginning to lift longer at heavier weights than I've been able to for most of 2009. That H1N1 took the heave hoes out of me mid year and it's taken me until now to climb back to where I once lifted.
Watch video
So when you mark up the lifts  and show off the armpits more than of yore -- you start winning back a bit of confidence.Like the little choo choo engine: I know I can.

But hey! look at the technique! I'm way over to the side when I should be straight up and down
(even though this  sequence has been shot  somewhere close to the thirtieth consecutive lift. In Girevoy sport that's no excuse!).
It looks like I'm going to have to take more video so I can study my mistakes.

20 December, 2009

Where I'm at Kettlebell-ing

Just so that I have it down somewhere for this anno domini 2009 -- I'm managing , at least this last week, daily Kettlebell workouts for 15-20 minutes
  • 12 kgm KB -- Tabata Squats 2 sets x 20 reps
  • 16 kgm KB -- double hand swings x 40 reps
  • 12 kgm KB -- right hand x 40 / left hand x 40 reps
  • 12 kgm KB -- snatches -- right hand x 15 / left hand x 15 reps.
That's not bad considering that my health isn't so good at the moment. Improving but not so good.

I also get to cross check my progress by measuring how well I go at the gym each Friday morning -- doing focus mitts boxing and a range of lifting challenges. While I skip rope, I don't do enough of that. I want to do pull ups but I need to get some weight off before I could even consider doing any unassisted. So I'm at that plateau stage -- meddling along and strenuously working without much in the way of  explosive  progress. As you get older  exercise doesn't register so easily  on your body  and over exercise registers far too well.So if I can do a gym session on Friday and manage to do a workout on Saturday and/or Sunday thereafter I know I'm ahead of the body's pain threshold and moved my 'fitness' up a wee notch.

For 2010?
I like settiing goals so in the year that begins shortly I hope to:
  1. re-establish a minimum KB lift threshold of 16kgm and move up to using a 24 kgm bell;
  2. really work on my KB lifting technique
  3. do a couple of sparring rounds  with a passive opponent
  4. do at least 3 pull ups unassisted.
  5. establish some regular distance road wok on the kickbike.

Below is a circuit workout  developed by Denis Kanygin -- a Russian born Kettlebell instructor -- with a straightforward  approach to getting some lifting done..

Denis Kanygin : Beginner's Circuit 

15 December, 2009

Pavel "Call me comrade " Tsatsouline and Kettlebells without the testosterone.


Pavel Tsatsouline is a product but one nonetheless that has had a massive impact on spreading kettlebell training in the US. You can't get very far into kettlebell-ing without tasting Tsatsouline's style of teaching.Humorous. Strict. Mocking.. all rather pretensious I guess, but there is a lot of method  in his approach that you have to respect.

When you decide to seriously address Kettlebell lifting -- "Girevoy Sport" in Russia. -- you gotta read/watch  what Tsatsouline has to say. You'll be much better for it.

The big vogue in the United States is real grunt training driven by Cross Fit fanatics and the macho edge of "New Warrior" systems. All very militaristic and something that Tsatsouline, with his Russian army background, panders to.

While the  kettlebell is now also being marketed with a softer and a feminine edge -- a branding change -- the discipline with which it was promoted by leading practitioners  like this guy, ensures that

every little element of the exercise or sport is scientifically addressed.

Outside the approach taken with some martial arts forms the conscious physiological and  kinetics focus that are base line kettlebell training is almost unique. What may seem a very simple exercise -- lifting or swinging  12, 16 or 23 kilograms on the end of your arm -- is used as an excuse to review and improve core aspects of everyday body mechanics.

However, despite the machismo rhetoric, Tsatsouline also suggests through his ready use of anecdotes that Girevoy Sport is  mass peoples activity in Russia at least -- going back centuries. (Read more at Old Time Strongman Blog)That appeals to me --.  machismo pretension  and marketing aside. Unfortunately with all the adolescent hype that is laid upon the KB its' hard to work out what the popular sports culture was like.


But it's clear that you don't have to get into it so deeply that you have to up the anti week in week out and be the best lifter your testosterone can mange.I like kettlebells because I'm naturally a good lifter but I can vary the exercise workout by varying weight, pace, number of reps and intensity to suit where I'm at that day. I'm no KB hero, but as a workout the bells rock. The irony is that the more you work at it the less lifting you have to do and your routine can become shorter rather than longer to attain a sustainable workout  level in reps and weight. And if you do it right -- lift right -- and consciously -- your overall statue, posture and movement will improve in the same way that a martial arts -- such as Tai Chi -- changes you overall.



25 October, 2009

Basic Kettlebell Swing, with Jeff Martone

TacticalAthleteThis is the very best Kettlebell instruction session you'll find. online From within the CrossFit Community of grunts, Jeff Malone breaks the business of lifting the bells into the key component parts. After you've mastered that, go see some more here.