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: Fat Loss Troubleshoot

Posted in Nutrition tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 4:07 pm by leslie

Ever wonder why you “hardly eat” but can’t lose weight? Why you work out like a maniac but don’t lose weight? Why you follow Program X but see no results?

What secret forces are conspiring to prevent your weight loss? (Genes? Hormones? Aliens?)

The answers to those questions and more are in Leigh Peele’s e-book Fat Loss Troubleshoot. Leigh’s main goal is to get you in, get the weight (fat) off, and get you on with your life; dieting should not be a way of life but rather a brief phase. She looks at common misconceptions and “advice” and shows you why that isn’t right and what, instead, is. She also includes case studies from her clients that shows how she was able to find and fix what they were doing incorrectly.

A lot of the advice, you might be tempted to think, “Oh, I knew that already.” Oh, really? Then why aren’t you losing the fat? Sure, you might know a lot of this, but you haven’t quite put it all together. Leigh lays it all out; you get no more excuses by the time you finish reading.

The section that really hit me was on training & eating for your goals and getting enough recovery. If your goal is strength, you need to eat for strength and rest & sleep for strength. But if your goal is fat loss, you need to eat for fat loss (that is, in a deficit) and train for fat loss (that is, not so intense that you can’t function) and make sure your body is recovering. So sure, do the fat loss thing — and just the fat loss thing — until you’re at your goal, and then change goals.

FLTS is mostly a breakdown of the how’s and why’s and why not’s of fat loss. It includes calorie calculations for maintenance and deficits and an activity quiz to determine how much you’re really moving. In addition to FLTS, though, Leigh also offers “OPT for Fat Loss,” which is a workout and calorie deficit program based on everything you learn in FLTS so you don’t have to do it all yourself, and the “Metabolic Repair Manual.”

MRM is for people who have dieted for years and who may have created a slow metabolic response and/or other intestinal problems. (There’s a quiz in the manual to see if you qualify.) MRM takes you through a process of resting and slowly eating more until your metabolic response and digestion is normal. A plan that makes you eat more? Sounds crazy and like a recipe for massive weight gain, right? Except Leigh’s plan works and with little to no weight gain, and sometimes even weight loss! (See this thread in the JP Fitness Forums for one lady’s experience with MRM.) I’m only a Level 1 (little to no damage) mostly because I haven’t been able to stick to any “diet” for more than two weeks. =P

And, as if she hasn’t written enough yet, Leigh answers questions in the Fat Loss Troubleshoot forum at JP Fitness, and her blog has more info, articles, and comments. Subscribe to her podcast; sign up for the Subscribers’ section. Also, watch her Fat Loss Tips video. (Btw, the answer to the question “What secret forces are conspiring to prevent your weight loss?” is found in that video.)

* * * * *

I really started following Leigh’s advice at the end of June (July 4th holiday not included!). With BJJ/MMA only 3 days/week and injured toes, I had the time to pay attention. And it made a huge difference. In the last month, my clothes have started to fall off as I’ve lost weight. I have progress pictures taken back in May and some taken last weekend, and the difference is amazing. In the last month I’ve started to get “You’ve lost a lot of weight!” comments. (And one hilarious addendum: “Did you do it on purpose?” Erm, yes.)

* * * * *

Update 08/15/08: Skwigg has reviewed both FLTS and MRM. (As for the grammar issues, yes, they’re there (and I had to hide all my red pens), but Leigh explained that she hired an editor who did a bad job. She’s the Fat Loss Troubleshooter, not the Grammar Queen, after all.)

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.)

04.08.08

NROLFW, 3A2, & BJJ class #2

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , at 11:14 am by leslie

Last night, I went to my second BJJ class. (There’s a class every night of the week, except Sunday.) And I made it through the warm-up, no passing out. Nice. :) Couldn’t completely do everything, but got at least half of it and didn’t pass out. Good start. Did some rolling, and then went home for NROLFW Stage 3 A2. Because I’m that crazy.

NROLFW 3A2

  • DB Snatch: 3×6x25lbs
  • DB single-leg RDL: 3×6x25/10lbs (25-lb DB in off hand; 10-lb DB in other)
  • Bent-over Row: 2×6x50lbs, 1×6x40lbs
  • DB Single-arm OH squat: 3×6x5/10lbs
  • DB incline press: 3×6x25lb DBs
  • Planks: 1×60s

After that Plank, I dropped to the floor for the rest period… and didn’t get back up again. Body was done. Got to bed and was asleep in under 30 minutes. Nice.

I’d skipped the third lifting session last week because I was too tired; I slept away most of the weekend. So I’m a workout behind. Now I just have to figure out how to fit lifting around BJJ & TKD without burning out.

This morning, I’m sore, especially in my shoulders. One of the things we practiced at BJJ last night, you had to partially lift the other guy with your legs/arms; then the snatch & incline press really hit the shoulders.

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.

03.05.08

Short-term Mentalities

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

Some of us doing NROLFW and posting on the jpfitness forums have noted that we have seen weight/size gain in our hips and thighs. And since we’re women, this is not where we’d like to see gains.

One of the women who’s about to start NROLFW also read another book by one of the NROLFW authors which recommended that pear-shaped women not do heavy lower-body weights. NROLFW, on the other hand, tells us to use weights as heavy as we can all the time. The author herself chimed in on that thread.

It came down to time and audience. NROLFW is a 6-month program. The other book, 8 weeks. You can and will see results and changes in 8 weeks on NROLFW. But they may not all be yippee-skippy, jump-around-all-day changes. (For example, gaining mass in your butt = not a happy camper.) On the other program, the other book company wanted an 8-week program, so she gave them an 8-week program. That is, a program that will produce positive results in an 8-week timeframe.

Then there’s the audience. NROLFW seems targeted at women who want better results but are afraid of strength training. But after reading the book, we understand that this process of reorganizing our body takes time and hard work, and so we grunt at weight gains, check our diets, and add more plates. The other program is targeted to a different group of women, who want fast results and who will probably give up on a plan that allows temporary weight gains.

Yes, I’ve gained weight and size in my hips since starting NROLFW. Water weight, muscle gains, resetting my metabolism–there are many explanations why this may happen. I seriously considered panicking at first. But I know that, in the end, lifting heavy and eating enough will get me the results I want. And NROLFW is a 6-month program. So I stick with it.

That’s not to say I ignore these things. However, I assume that the problem is with me first, not with the program. I’ve decided to trust that Lou, Cassandra, and Alwyn know what they’re talking about. So, first, I make sure that I’m following the program. I can’t blame a program for not working if I’m not following it. Second, I check my diet. Am I really eating enough? Am I eating the right macro ratios? Third, I check my rest. Am I sleeping enough? Am I taking enough time to recover between lifting sessions?

Do I want immediate but short-term results, or do I want slower but permanent results? When you put it that way, I don’t think there’s any more question.

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.

01.25.08

NROLFW, Day 6: 1A2

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , at 9:00 am by leslie

I still look at the weights I’m about the lift and think, “How wimpy.” And then after my sets, I’m jelly-legged, sweating, and panting. Now who’s wimpy?

The power rack isn’t set up yet, so my squats are still low weight… which might not be a bad thing =P.

Oh, and I had a lovely *headdesk* moment this morning. (There is one big problem with working out immediately after waking up: my brain is still very much asleep.) On the supersets, I wasn’t resting between the two exercises. But today I realized that I’m supposed to so that the just-worked muscles get an even bigger rest. Doh. Next time…

I was reading in the book about the lats and how far they extend. After Wednesday’s workout, I know exactly where my lats are. Hi, lats! :) My hamstrings are also still saying “Hi.” Whootness.

01.16.08

Glutamine

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

Glutamine is an amino acid (one of the building blocks of protein) and makes up about 60% of your skeletal muscles. Glutamine is a nonessential amino acid: that is, your body can synthesize it. However, it is used in so many processes in your body and can be used to synthesize other nonessential amino acids–and can be used a source of nitrogen–that supplementing with glutamine may be beneficial.

Glutamine is involved in growth hormone production, immune system function, and intestinal health. It is given to patients in burn wards, and they recover faster. Also, studies done have shown no overdose amount for glutamine (which rather makes sense, since it’s just an isolated amino acid).

I take a glutamine supplement with my protein shakes. One scoop = 5 grams. In addition, my protein has extra glutamine already. So I’m taking about 30 g/day, working out or not. I also keep meaning to take another 5g right before bed, but I haven’t got the habit yet of eating before bed.

Since I started adding glutamine, I’ve had little to no DOMS–and I used to usually have a lot of lingering soreness. And in that time, I’ve been increasing my weights until the last few reps every workout are hard to finish.

I’ve seen lots of forum postings that say they take 1.5 g/day and feel no difference; therefore, they conclude it doesn’t work and tell everyone to not take glutamine. That’s just silly, to take hardly any and then to say it didn’t work so it’s useless. Take a normal dose for several weeks and then tell me what it does.

01.12.08

Rest, then NROLFW

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , , , at 9:08 am by leslie

This last week, my legs have been achy and tired, mostly in my right quad and right hip.

My dad says it’s because I do full squats (well, they do work my legs more, true, which is a good thing–but he thinks I should be doing less-than-parallel squats. Safer, he says. Bleh!). I say it’s because I’m adding weight to the squat faster, and my legs aren’t adapting as fast as I want them to. I started with 20 lbs less than a month ago; I’m up to 60 lbs now. I’ve squatted much more than that before, so I’m mostly just annoyed that my body isn’t cooperating right now.

I dropped down to 40 lbs on Wednesday, to see if my leg still hurt. Oh, yeah. It even hurts when I walk really, really slowly on the treadmill. Grr. I tried Overhead Squats, where you hold the bar over your head and squat, and did them with just the bar (and when Krista says to start light, she is not kidding!). Yep, pain in right quad/hip. Aching in the quad, and a stinger in my hip. Meh! So, possibly, I’m bordering on overtraining, at least as far as that leg is concerned. (It could also come from a problem with my form, which would also not be good–and I can’t get my dad to check out my form, because he thinks it’s all wrong after I break parallel…)

Anyway, I picked up The New Rules of Lifting For Women: Lift Like A Man, Look Like A Goddess at Barnes & Noble earlier this week. Very much fun, and I wrote a review that will come out next week. They recommend taking an entire week off every once in a while, and since I want to do Alwyn’s plan next, I guess I’ll start following their advice now. Today I just played around with unweighted Overhead Squats again (they’re fun, so long as you don’t fall over) and a few of the exercises from NROLFW, to see what they felt like. I’m looking forward to starting that program next, but first I have to rest. Ugh.

Here’s to rest and recovery. In the meantime, I’m contemplating smatterings of things I’ve read in NROLFW and other training/lifting blogs: what are my goals when I left? How do I measure progress? (One of those things I usually try to avoid talking about…) And I have my work evaluation on Monday. Ugh.