12.01.08

Red Carpet Ready

Posted in Workouts tagged , , , , , , , , at 11:56 pm by leslie

I first bought Red Carpet Ready three months ago for my mom. She hasn’t been using it much, though; she stays on for almost a week at a time, but then falls off.

Well, at the beginning of October I lost my job, so I sit around a lot now as I internet-surf for another one. I needed something to get me moving for a little bit every day. At first I’d take hour-long walks, but then winter came in, and I don’t like walking in cold. So I started doing RCR myself, 2-3 days per week.

There are 3 circuits for each day, and you’re supposed to do each circuit 3 times. I can manage 2 times per circuit, and then I’m toast. Believe me, you’re glad to be using only 5-lb dumbbells! Even doing only 2x/circuit, though, it’s still taking me an hour to do each workout.

And though the circuits are intense enough that you’re breathing hard and even really feeling some muscles working hard, when it’s all over you’re not exhausted and ready for a nap. A post-workout shake and shower later, and you’re ready to keep going.

I didn’t do the cardio days, mostly because I can’t stand to walk on a treadmill for that long (and there’s no TV down by our treadmill). But then again, I was only doing it to get off my butt and do something that wouldn’t wear me out before BJJ classes.

So, thumbs up. Wish I had great news to report on my Mom’s success, but again, she hasn’t stuck with it long enough or made a real effort to change her eating habits. She comes around slowly…

08.06.08

Review: Red Carpet Ready

Posted in Workouts tagged , , , , , , , , at 2:52 pm by leslie

Photo by extranoise

I’ve had my mom on NROLFW, Stage 1, since April. She keeps dropping off the program for a few weeks and hasn’t really wanted to move on and learn new moves with more weight. She’d never really lifted before I put her on NROLFW; she usually just walks on the treadmill. And she works out in the morning, in the basement, by herself. So she really needs a program that she can do without supervision.

I first really noticed Valerie Waters’ Red Carpet Ready a while back when Skwigg blogged about her experiences with the program. And anything that gets Skwigg’s recommendation is worth trying out. I bought the RCR e-book last weekend and read through it with the intention of putting my mom on the program. (Ha! My own personal guinea pig!)

Goals section. The first part of RCR is about setting goals, preparing for the program, and really committing yourself to following the program. Because, obviously, if you don’t follow the program, you can’t expect the results of the program. (Don’t just say, “Well, duh,” because too many people think that just because they’re kinda sort “on” a program that the program should magically work.)

Nutrition section. Valerie makes it clear that “Nutrition accounts for about 80% of the program.” Eat every 3 hours, eat protein at every meal, drinks lotsa water, plan out your meals: all that important stuff is there. Valerie’s not a calorie counter, so instead she gives recommendations on sample meals, portion size, and plate coverage (the % of your plate that each macro should cover). (If you do need to calorie count, as some of us do, or need to know why you’re “hardly eating” but not losing weight, then check out Leigh Peele’s Fat Loss Troubleshooter for more nutrition advice. RCR would probably work well with FLTS.)

Workout section. There are two workouts, A & B, that are alternated, and the workouts themselves change after 3 weeks. Each workout has 3 circuits that you repeat 2-3 times, doing most moves 12-15 times per circuit, for a total workout of about an hour. The highest weight listed on the movements is 10 lbs; however, movements include single-leg Romanian deadlifts, planks, Y & T (from the YTWL), step ups, lunges, single-leg squats, and push ups. In other words, most of the movements are challenging enough as body-weight exercises, so having lighter weights isn’t hindering your progress. A few exercises require a resistance band or the “ValSlide” (it’s kind of like a pad that slides across any surface, so whatever limb is on the ValSlide is having to work harder to stay in place). All exercises include a description of where you should be feeling the work.

Cardio: In addition to the weight exercises, you do cardio on your “off” days (with one day a week completely off). There are 3 cardio workouts to choose from, all of them an interval workout. The first cardio workout is the easiest, the second is medium, and the third is more advanced. All cardio workouts are presented by “perceived exertion,” and a chart is included to help you figure out each level.

* * * * *

So who could benefit from RCR? (Obviously Skwigg did, so right away that means that everyone can.) If you’re not focused on gaining much strength, don’t have access to heavier weights, or only have 6 weeks, then give this a go. And/or if you’re following fat loss advice like Fat Loss Troubleshooter and so need a program that doesn’t drain you and doesn’t need lots of recovery, I think RCR would be a good complement.* (As many of us trying to do NROLFW and follow FLTS found out, NROLFW is too much on fewer-than-maintenance calories.)

My mom was actually very excited when I first told her the name of the program. She kept bugging me until I finally downloaded it, and she had it in the page protectors and in a notebook within a few minutes of getting the hard copy. She’s buying a small step today for the step ups (I use the weight bench) and is looking at resistance bands. This week is her prep week: making sure she has everything, getting used to eating lunch again, and going to bed earlier/getting up earlier. She’s been through Workouts A1 & B1, one time through each circuit; her first response was, “I have to do those more than once?!” She’s never tried intervals before, but she was up to jogging on the treadmill, so she should be alright with those.

Mom update, 08-08-08: She not only bought a step, she also found the actual Valslides at Target and bought them. (I haven’t played with them yet.) Couldn’t find the Valband, though. I’ll try a few other places for a resistance band for her.

*To be fair, I haven’t tried the RCR workouts myself yet, so I don’t know how draining the workouts might be. If they leave you completely wiped out, wanting only to crawl back in bed and unable to go on with the rest of your day, then okay, they’re intense and probably wouldn’t work well with an extreme deficit. (For the record, the previous description is how I felt on NROLFW when I did it in the morning on maintenance calories. Tired, sluggish, and grumpy all day.)

05.29.08

NROLFW, catching up

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , , at 10:35 am by leslie

I started lifting again, NROLFW Stage 3, last week. Forgot to post, though…

With my summer schedule, I lift M/W before TKD, then TKD for an hour and 45 mins, then to BJJ to see if they’re still going. In theory I want to lift before Saturday BJJ, but I don’t know if that’s really going to work, especially if we keep flipping tires afterward =P

Since I’m lifting before TKD, and TKD is in the university gym, I use the weight room there. Oly lifts and any derivatives thereof are not allowed :( so I have to modify the program as I go… And trying to work around what everyone else is doing is sometimes hard, so more modifications :(

Stage 3, A1

  • Front Squat: (2×15-lb DBs, 2×20-lb DBs) 1×6x45lb, 1×6x55lb, 1×6x60lb
  • DB Single-leg RDL: 1×6x25/15-lb DBs, 2×20/15-lb DBs
  • Bent-over Row: 1×6x25-lb DBs, 1×6x20-lb DBs, (no 3rd set)
  • DB Single-arm OHS: 3×6x20/10-lb DBs
  • DB Standing Overhead Press*: 3×6x20-lb DBs
  • Plank: 3×60s
  • Woodchop with DB: 1×6x15-lb DB, 1×6x10-lb DB, (no 3rd set)

*All the incline benches were occupied, so subbed this.

Bodyweight Matrix:

  • time 1: 2:53
  • time 2: 3:05

TKD after was a kick clinic. I tried to show a round kick at one point, and my hamstring cramped up. Oops.

And, oh my goodness, I was sore the next day.

BJJ, Saturday
Tire flips after class. Short, though, because everyone had places to go. 10 flips + 10 sledgehammers/arm. Then 4 flips with jumping through the tire + 5 sledgehammers/arm.

Went home and still wanted to go, so:

  • Pushups: 20
  • Deadlift: 1×5x50lbs, 1×5x70lbs, 1×5x90lbs
  • Pistol squats: 2×5/leg
  • One-arm DB snatch: 2×5x15lbs
  • Pullups: 2, 2, 1, 1 (whee!)

Stage 3, B1 (Memorial Day, so done at home)

  • RDL+row:

    • DL: (1×6x50lb, 1×6x70lbs, 1×6x80lbs) 1×6x80lbs, 1×6x85lbs, 1×6x90lbs
    • row: (2×6x20lbs, 1×6x25lbs) 2×6x40lbs, 1×6x45lbs
    • (I know, that’s not what I’m supposed to do. But I really want a triple-digit DL :o )
  • Pistol squats: 3×6/leg
  • Wide-grip pulldown: 2×6x50lbs, 1×6x55lbs (that was wimpy!)
  • Back Extension (Swiss Ball on bench): 3×6
  • YTWL: 3×6x5lbs
  • Swiss Ball Crunch: 1×6x10lbs
  • Jackknives: 1×6
  • Lateral flexion: … uh-oh, I laid down…I didn’t get back up.

Stage 3, A2

  • Front Squat: (2×6x45lbs, 1×6x55lbs) 2×6x60lbs, 1×6x65lbs
  • DB Single-leg RDL: 3×6x20-lb DBs
  • Bent-over Row: 3×6x20-lb DBs (can go heavier, but didn’t want to be a DB hog)
  • DB Single-Arm OHS: 1×6x15/10-lb DBs, 2×6x20/10-lb DBs (someone had the 20s on my first set)
  • Standing Overhead Press: 3×6x20lbs (again, all benches taken)
  • Planks: 1×90s, 2×60s
  • Russian Twist w/ Medicine Ball*: 3×20x8lbs
  • (Pullups: 1, 1 — couldn’t resist)

*There’s 1 cable machine in the whole gym, and it’s usually taken. Meh.

Intervals (bike): 2min warmup, 3×1min/2min, 1 min cooldown

TKD: stretching, some teaching, then stretching. They did conditioning work the second half of class. Next time they do that, I may sneak out to BJJ…

BJJ: they were done when I got there. Hung around for a few minutes, then went home.

04.25.08

HIIT vs. SSC

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

HIIT: High-Intensity Interval Training. Sprint, recover, repeat.
SSC: Steady-State Cardio. Long slow distance.

Which is better for burning fat? (That’s all anyone cares about when these two are mentioned in a single post, really.)

How about “both and neither” for an unambiguous answer? :)

There are benefits to both HIIT and SSC. They both get you moving. They both involve your heart and lungs and muscles. They both challenge your body (though in different ways). They both require mind over matter.

HIIT takes less time; SSC won’t make you puke (usually). HIIT, you’ll likely be feeling for a few hours after; SSC, you can do again tomorrow. HIIT, you think bad thoughts about the person who told you to do it; SSC, you invite your friends for a trail run.

There are proponents and opponents for both HIIT and SSC, and you can find lots of debates around the internet, with some claiming one is superior to the other, an “either/or” approach. There are studies that seem to back up one or the other. I prefer a “both/and”. Both HIIT and SSC have their place.

Which helps you lose fat/weight better? Both. In different ways, for different reasons, through different processes. But still, both.

We humans are made to move, and to move both fast and slow. Mix in both.

03.20.08

NROLFW, Stage 2, A3

Posted in Training Log tagged , at 8:11 am by leslie

  • Front Squat/Push Press: (1×10xOH, 1×10x20lbs (FS), 1×10x40lbs (BS)) 2×10x40lbs
  • Step Ups: 2×10x10-lb DBs
  • DB 1-pt Rows: 2×10x10-lb DBs
  • Static Lunge: 2×10x10-lb DBs
  • Pushups: 2×10
  • Plank: 2×60s
  • Woodchop (Swiss Ball): 2×10x10lbs

That FSPP is fun and hard. By rep 6 of the second set, I’m having to work hard to not drop the weight on my head :o

I was reading through the workouts in New Rules of Lifting for Women last night to see if the FSPP came back again (it does, in Stage 4). And I noticed that I’m doing my intervals incorrectly and that I’m doing the harder version of the woodchop. Doh.

I’ve been running my intervals at the fastest that I can and so have only gotten 1 or 2 sprints in. I’m supposed to start them slowish and work up to sprinting by the last interval. *headdesk* Well, that’s what I get for trying to think after workout B.

03.18.08

NROFLW, 2B2

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , , at 8:49 am by leslie

  • Wide-grip Deadlift: (1×10x20lbs, 1×10x40lbs) 2×10x60lbs
  • BSS: 2×10x10-lb DBs
  • Underhand Pulldowns: 1×8x60lbs, 1×2x50lbs; 1×5x55lb, 1×3x50lbs
  • Reverse Lunge + Reach: 2×10x10-lb DB
  • Cuban: 2×10x5-lb DB
  • Swiss Ball Crunch: 2×10x10lb (overhead)
  • Reverse Crunch: 2×10
  • Flexion #1: 2×10
  • Prone Cobra: 2×60s
  • HIIT (road running): 1x(1min/2min), 1x(45s/2min)

Ugh, HIIT after that workout? Are you nuts? By the second interval, I could hardly run. More like a slow jog. I’d push, but there was nothing in the tank. Problem is, there really isn’t a good time to do HIIT otherwise…unless I head off for TKD early and do it on campus. That would put it a night between workouts once a week. Hmm, that’s not a bad idea, actually…

There’s a “Women’s Night” at the campus gym tomorrow. The poster shows a girl with pink barbells. *eyeroll* I’m thinking about going and asking about Olympic lifts. I have no “should girls lift weights?” questions or “what kind of weights should girls lift?” (Yes, and heavy.) But I kinda think it will be a waste of my time… Decisions, decisions…

03.14.08

NROLFW, Stage 2B1

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , , , at 8:21 am by leslie

Oops, I was supposed to post this yesterday. Instead, I took the day off from work and slept. Woke up to eat and slept again. Didn’t get much sleep Wednesday night after 2B1, probably because of the intervals getting my heart rate up. Whew.

Anyways:

  • Wide Grip Deadlift: (1×10x20lbs, 1×5x40lbs) 2×10x50lbs
  • Bulgarian Split Squat: 2×10xbw
  • Underhand Pulldown: 2×10x50lbs
  • Reverse Lunge + Reach: 2×10x10-lbs DBs
  • DB Cuban Snatch: 2×10x5-lbs DBs
  • Swiss Ball Crunch: 2×10x10lbs
  • Reverse Crunch: 2×10
  • Flexion #1: 2×10
  • Prone Cobra: 90s
  • HIIT (road running): 3x(1min/2min), 1x(30s/2min)

Wowzers. This workout isn’t easy. Really, all of these workouts look so innocent on paper, but once you add heavy weights and start working through them, they’re anything but. And some of these exercises (BSS, Cuban, and flexion) look really easy, so you want to add more weight, but it’s really almost impossible! I was tired enough after the weights part, but I figured that intervals were there as a finisher anyway, so I went outside and ran as many as I could (which was far fewer than I’d thought I could).

I was so sore after 2A1, lasting until Wednesday evening. But I’m not so sore after 2B1, just so tired.

Part of the sleeping problem, I think, is that this workout took so long. Probably an hour to an hour fifteen minutes for the weights, plus the intervals afterward. Part of the time problem is the two single-leg exercises. I may drop the rest after those and just do straight supersets; I did that on the two crunches/flexion superset.

02.28.08

And rest, 2, 3, 4…

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

You workout, you eat right–and you’re still not losing weight (fat or otherwise). What gives?

Check your recovery and rest.

How often do you exercise? Every day? Too much, most likely. Your body needs time to rebuild what you tore down the last time you worked out. It’ll usually take your body 36-48 hrs to strengthen a muscle and have it ready for tearing down again. Take a day off between lifting or intense cardio sessions (HIIT, kickboxing or spinning classes, etc.). Some people say you can do LSD (long slow distance) in between, but I think that may still be too much, especially if you’re already burned out.

What about sleep? For me, even 8 hours isn’t always enough. While you’re asleep, your body can get even more work done because you’re not interrupting it. Get to bed an hour earlier to recover, or sleep in instead of throwing in another LSD session. Grab a nap, if you can.

Resting is one of the things I have a hard time with. I want to lift every day just because it’s fun, and, while I do like to sleep, I also have so many things I want or have to do. I use my lifting hour on non-lifting days to get things done. And I’m trying to get that extra hour of sleep each night, even though it’s hard to quit the video game, put down the book, get off the internet, or stop studying. I even started setting one of my alarm clocks to go off at night, to tell me to shut everything down and go to bed.

While it may seem that “not lifting” or “not exercising” is counter-productive and not logical, in reality, it’s an essential part of getting stronger. Purposely add rest & sleep to your schedule.

02.07.08

Less is More

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

I log my food over at SparkPeople. I also belong to some of the groups, so I read over the messages people write. And sometimes, I want to reach through the internet and smack them around.

Sometimes, it seems as if people are replacing an obsession with eating too much of the wrong stuff and not exercising with an obsession of counting calories and exercising. Cardio 5-6x/week and strength training 3-4x/week. It’s a wonder they’re not all injured from overtraining! (Well, from some of the topics, I suspect that some of them are–and undernourished.)

I read over The New Rules of Lifting For Women every once in a while, either when I can’t lift because it’s a rest day or when I need a little motivation. The other night, I read a section about how some people might think the workouts in the book aren’t challenging enough or aren’t hitting all of their muscles (I admit, I was one of them, but I’ve repented), so they’ll add an extra exercise for this or more cardio or the move they saw in a fitness magazine… On and on until they’ve created a monster that doesn’t resemble the program Alwyn created and that doesn’t give the results of the program.

  • Lift 3 days/week for ~30 minutes.
  • Eat more calories.
  • Do HIIT instead of LSD.
  • Rest.

It doesn’t seem like it will work. It doesn’t sound logical. It doesn’t seem like muscles will grow and fat will burn. And yet…

And yet, perhaps it will. If I do it the way it wants to be done and don’t try to overthink it.

So I’ll do it. I’ll do less than I think I should do, I’ll eat more than I think I should, and I’ll ignore all the voices that would distract me. And I’ll wait and see if it works.