10.02.08

Result of the OCD…

Posted in Ramblings at 3:23 pm by leslie

So, I realized that my focus has changed from lifting, as it was when I started this blog, to BJJ. (Not even TKD, kickboxing, and MMA, but BJJ only.) And that the BJJ posts are crowding out everything else. I like things orderly, though, so the thought of having old lifting posts on the end of the BJJ posts has been driving me a little nuts. That, and having a completely unrelated blog URL. Yes, I am, in fact, crazy.

End result — I moved all the BJJ posts and related martial arts posts to their own blog, BJJ Grrl.

I know, people are actually reading some of the stuff I write now on BJJ, so this inconveniences you, and I’m sorry. But it was either give in to the OCD now or go crazy and give in later, in which case I’d mess with far more people and have a lot more work to do. And since people are actually reading and commenting on my BJJ journey, I decided I needed to be less grouchy and more analytical. Also, I wanted to link to my team. Still some housekeeping over here to take care of, but the other site is up and running.

Everything else I wrote here, though, will stay, since some of those posts are still being looked up. So now it looks like I haven’t written anything in months… Doh. Oh, well, at least the OCD is happy for now…

04.11.08

Push ups

Posted in Ramblings tagged , , , , , at 9:00 am by leslie

Somehow, the little push up is being debated as “sexist.” Seriously.

It all started with a New York Times article. The article suggested that push ups are a good measure of overall fitness because they’re an easy body-weight exercise to measure upper body strength. The article also says that push ups are important for older people to do because they’ll be able catch themselves more easily when they fall. All well and good.

(The video with the article is amusing–and sad. They show women doing either “girlie pushups” from their knees or just barely dipping their shoulders + dropping their hips (cheating and not a push up). In other words, those girls were not even doing push ups. Just to make sure I wasn’t despising them for something I couldn’t do, I dropped down beside my desk and did 20. Knuckles. No problem.)

I didn’t follow the story any more than that, but apparently there were “feminist bloggers” who took issue with the story. They claimed that the push up was unfair and “sexist” because women generally have less muscle in their upper bodies. (Hint: That makes it an even better test of fitness for women.) Since the push up was invented by males, they argue, we should get rid of it as a test of fitness.

Why is it “sexist” when women aren’t allowed to do something, but then once they are but can’t do it as well as men, it’s supposedly now an inherently sexist whatever-it-is that should be eliminated? We should eliminate push ups and pull ups because some women can’t do them? (Is that what “feminism” means? Only let everyone do what women can do? Gag.)

I can do push ups. (I’ve nearly got pull ups, too.) So can the girls in the TKD classes I teach. And guess what? They can do them better than most of the guys. Oh, yeah: and we do them on our knuckles. For each test, there is a push up requirement. One number. Not a separate number for girls and a different one for guys–because that would be sexist. (Equality’s what you want, right?)

Whining wimps. Drop and give me 20. Quit crying and start practicing. I like the attitude in this article from the San Francisco Chronicle in response to the silly backlash:

But I absolutely agree that push-ups are a symbol of everything we have done wrong in fitness, especially for women.

Here’s a newsflash about why women have a hard time with push-ups: We don’t do them. We don’t do other kinds of weight training that would build the necessary strength.

Women don’t do push ups because they think of them as a man exercise. Same goes for weightlifting. We teach women to strive for thin and toned, but not strong and powerful. I mean, be athletic, but not so athletic that you can kick a guy’s rear end at strength endeavors.

How many push ups can you do?

More article love:

Notice, too, that all those sites above are written by women. Who workout. Who do push ups and pull ups. What was your excuse again?

Update: I can now do pull ups.

04.02.08

Losing “weight”

Posted in Ramblings tagged , , at 9:00 am by leslie

duck_softcotton.jpg
Photo by softcotton

When people say they want to lose weight, they mean that they want the number on the scale to go down.

Image you could wake up tomorrow with your ideal body, whatever size you want. Whatever clothing size you wanted. Strong, fit. Remember, this is your ideal body. But there’s one catch: you weigh 500 lbs. Would you take it?

That’s an extreme example, I know. But so often I hear people equate “ideal body” with “ideal body weight.” The two aren’t the same. A pound of muscle takes up less room than a pound of fat, even though both weigh 1 lb. In other words, just because the scale shows a “low” weight, you still might not fit in those size 4 jeans because you have a larger percentage of fat that takes up more room. (And you’ll still struggle to carry in that gallon of milk.)

The scale lies. It doesn’t tell you what’s in your body, only how much that body weighs. Why let an inanimate object define how you feel about yourself?

01.19.08

Women & Lifting

Posted in Ramblings tagged , , , , at 9:00 am by leslie

Women are told to “sculpt” and “tone” our muscles. Isolate small muscles. Low weight, high reps.

Hogwash.

How heavy is your toddler? How heavy are your groceries, and how many trips from the car do you make? How heavy is your couch and the other furniture you rearrange? How heavy is your purse, your shopping bags, your laptop, your books, your pets, whatever it is that you lift and carry on a regular basis?

Probably heavier than your vinyl weights.

Sure, we’re doing cardio and/or lifting weights so we can look better, but forget that for a minute. What if you did what you did at the gym so that you could go through your day easier?

How often do you need to run five miles in the course of your day? Lift 5 lbs 20x? Lean over and move something to behind you using only your triceps (i.e., triceps kickback. See, it even sounds silly to write out.)? *cough* none *cough*

How often do you use your entire body to carry a child + diaper bags + purse + computer +++?

Just something to think about…

01.08.08

Pow-pow Power Rack

Posted in Ramblings tagged , , , at 9:03 am by leslie

All I want for Christmas is… a power rack!

I didn’t get one (even though I did ask for one), but a power rack is starting to be a necessity for my lifting to progress. A power rack is basically just a place to set bars before using them; power racks have adjustable pins so you can set the bar where you need it. It’s especially useful for squatting, for placing a bar up near shoulder height so you can step under it. Most also have safety bars just below your lowest point in an exercise in case you need to drop the weights.

Currently, I’m having to clean & press the bar and then lower behind my neck. The biggest problem is that I can squat a lot more than I can clean & press, and I add weight faster to the squat than to any other exercise, so the weakest part of my squat is now getting the weight in position. (And doing 5×5 Overhead Press after all those clean & press is nearly impossible for my poor little arms.) I tried a Steinborn lift but nearly knocked myself down. Oops. Front squats still require a power clean.

For now, I cheat. We have a tower (for pull-ups, dips, and leg raises), and the dip bars are at just the right height for my squat rack. One power clean required per 5×5 Squats. My justification is that I weigh more than the bar, right now, so the tower isn’t going to tip over. However, I still have no safety bars. I know this isn’t safe, but right now it’s all I’ve got.

My Overhead Press may soon take advantage of the dip bars, as well, if the weight exceeds what I can power clean.

Of course, if I do get a power rack, I’ll need an adjustable bench. And more plates. And some newer bars. Or maybe I should just work on my clean & press ;) Decisions, decisions…