Showing posts with label progression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label progression. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 October 2014

New Regimes....

New Regimes

Now, here we are. Firstly, welcome back and thanks for staying tuned to my blog, and here is my first hello from “nowhere” on this, my first deployment. Oh and for the record: 1 month no soft fizzy carbonated drinks. Boom.

Life aboard this ship is pretty comfortable, and the work involved long days and nights. Between my “watches” I eat, sleep, work, study and train. My gym and workout routines have needed a serious overhaul. My nutrition has needed careful preparation ahead of deployment, with new supplements that can withstand a long duration at sea. I even purchased a portable tri-voltage (12/24/240v) Freezer, that's got a  35 litre capacity...Its gonna keep me away from the sweet stuff and bad health choices available...

Nutritionally speaking, I’m finishing off my last container of BNRG Pept-1 Ultra Burn protein and then I start an entirely new series of supplements. I’ve got thermogenics, complex protein and casein and post-workout supplements to complement my dietary supplements. Here’s a quick breakdown of what’s coming in the nearing weeks:

Training Supplements:
Optimum Nutrition Platinum Hydro Builder Protein
Optimum Nutrition Platinum Casein
Optimum Nutrition Amino Energy
Ultimate Nutrition BCAA’s
EHP Labs Oxy Shred

Stocked Up...
Dietary Supplements:
Bioceuticals Ultraclean EPA / DHA Plus
Activated B6
Vital Greens
Spectrum-ceuticals SB-500 High Potency Probiotic
Thorne Research Basic B Complex
(Gluten Free Weet-Bix) :)
(Frozen Fruit for smoothies: Bananas, Berries, Mango, Pineapple) Yummy!

The Anti-Junk Food Haven
I’ve conducted hours and hours of research, consulted experts and for me and my body these were the best for me. (That’s for the neigh-sayers).

I’m very keen to include the use of the Oxy Shred and the Hydro Builder into my training regime. The plan is to build lean muscle mass and get some definition over next few months.

The Plan Ahead

At least for the time being, I’m directing my energy toward a new workout. It’s a little interesting because it spans 8 days! It covers the 4 major muscle groups (excluding legs as they are involved in my day to day routine and throughout the program) and switches between 4 days of heavy weight and low repetitions, and 4 days of light weight and high repetitions. It also builds over three rotations, which are then repeated.

Progress through each day on program A, then start over in program B, and again for program C. Then rotate through again.

Here’s a table to explain:

DAY
EXERCISE
WEIGHT
A
B
C
1
CHEST & ABS
HEAVY
8-10
6-8
2-5
2
SHOULDERS & ABS
HEAVY
8-10
6-8
2-5
3
BACK & ABS
HEAVY
8-10
6-8
2-5
4
ARMS & ABS
HEAVY
8-10
6-8
2-5
5
CHEST & ABS
LIGHT
12-15
16-20
21-30
6
SHOULDERS & ABS
LIGHT
12-15
16-20
21-30
7
BACK & ABS
LIGHT
12-15
16-20
21-30
8
ARMS & ABS
LIGHT
12-15
16-20
21-30

The cool thing about this workout is that it incorporates cardio and abdominal work every day.

Each exercise set is followed up with a 60 second high intensity cardio interval (to keep heart rate up).

I’m currently at the end of the first 4 days, so I’m a little sore and achy. I’m looking forward to tomorrow’s chest session!

This program is already showing promise. It should help me shred the excess blubber and build lean muscles. My plan is to return to Winnie as fit-looking as possible.


To my darling Winnie, I Love You; To the Moon & Back. I Miss you very much. I cannot wait to see you when I return, on FaceTime and in my dreams...


Sunday, 28 September 2014

Phase Two - Giving Up

Giving Up...


The hardest part about being healthy and moving towards being fit is giving up those hard to quit vices. My vice, my one thing that I cannot seem to live without has always been Coca-Cola, and all other forms of sugary, soft fizzy drinks. They have always been my refreshment 'go -to' for as long as I can remember and honestly, I've known for a very long time that its part of the reason why I never shift those stubborn inches of unfriendly, unhealthy fatty tissue. Well, not anymore!

It's going to be hard, but I intend to diarise my next goal - Quitting Coke (and other soft fizzy drinks). I'm going to get fit, that goes without saying since my Naval career demands me to be, but I'm going to give up the fizzy drink that I've been consuming at an alarming rate. I'm going to follow a Yoda philosophy and I'm not going to say try...

 Yoda, Jedi Master - Star Wars V, The Empire Strikes Back

On the back of my trifecta of goals this year, I decided not to wait for the anti-climax, and push on with another goal for 2014. So, I'm a gonna kick the habit and give up Coke (and other soft fizzy drinks) and keep pushing myself to get as far away from FAT and as close to FIT as I can!

I left this post until I had completed 3 whole days before writing it and today is the 4th.... Since I'm not always going to have a good signal (I'm currently deployed) to post I'll be writing everyday (ish) and posting all of the written blogs in bundles! It's the best I can do.

So, Why Coke? Well, as long as I can remember I've been a little addicted to coke, well any cola derivative and well, as much as I enjoy a refreshing cola beverage, I'd like to think that I can live without the urge to drink it. Luckily, I've never needed cola for it's caffeinated properties, instead I just love the taste and the sweetness. Well, thats where I've realised I need to focus my attention. As I've known for a while a single 12oz / 355ml can of coke contains 34g of sugar (or equivalent to sugar in the High fructose corn syrup), which is like swallowing 10 teaspoon of sugar, every time I knock back a can of cola... that's just wrong. My dentist would agree, my wife definitely agrees and almost anyone interested in health and fitness would be like "Derrr! We know that Gaffa!" - however its taken me almost a year of training, eating right and developing my own nutrition to realise I'm potentially reversing all the good I've been doing. If I drink 4 cans of coke (I have been known to smash more in a day), which is like 48oz / 1420ml of coke I'm consuming 136g of sugar... thats 40 freaking teaspoons of sugar...no wonder there's such a concern for obesity when people consume large quantities of cola (and other soda pops).

I've decided to ignore all of the advice out there, in lieu of knowing my own body. I'm aware that I should reduce my coke intake until I stop 'needing' it, but I know that one taste and I'm hook again, so I'm going cold turkey... at least I'll be a grouchy bugger at sea and not at home! I've had a headache and I've lost my appetite this week already, so I'm hoping for some stability there.

Apparently I'm supposed to get a caffeine withdrawal, but I doubt that'll happen since I drink coffee - which incidentally I've reduced in consumption too!

Wish me luck. This may be a bigger challenge than a marathon!  

Monday, 4 August 2014

Gymania...

Catching Up.

Over the past week or so  I've done a fair amount of training, in one form or other. I've cycled, run, climbed a crap-load of stairs, and I've trained in the gym quite a lot. I've been eating cleaner too. My body really notices when the slightest whiff of gluten passes my lips, I've had some accidental slip-ups, and I've even eaten some supposedly GF meals that've made me sick too. My body responds quicker the more time off gluten I have, so being clean means I notice the traces now...interesting times. Still, I mostly fuel my body with good nutrients and train pretty hard, so I'm happy I'm making progress.

I Love this. Charry.

Riding to Work

On top of the occasional run to work, which is pretty draining since I do the stair-master workout as part of my daily routine on my ship, I've started riding my road bike to work. It's around 10-11km depending on the route I ride, but its a great way to start and finish my day. Plus I beat the traffic and get to add the kilometres to my legs a different way!

My Gymania

It's awesome being back into a regular workout routine. I've missed it. But now I'm training hard, gaining functional strength and seeing minor changes all the time. My gym-focus is back with a renewed vengeance and its helping me get my body ready for marathon time.


I've changed my routine more regularly to keep myself on my toes. I've thrown in abdominal workouts at the end of my weights sessions (instead of during the rest sets), so I can rest, hydrate and prep for the next set, since I've been going a little heavier.

I've continued to utilise dumbbells, barbells, cables, med-balls and my favourite of the moment kettle bells. I'm planning on utilising my TRX onboard my ship (if possible) and I'm going to try doing "cardio intervals" during intra-workout in the gym too.


I've recently joined Fitness First, they look after members of the Defence Force, and have some really good flexible options for people like me. I get to train with Winnie and that just makes me very happy. Our workouts are always fun and its nice to spend that quality time together being healthy :)

Tonight, I concluded a fairly progressive Shoulders workout, with an abdominal blast. I actually managed to rope Ms Cheezo (one of my colleagues on my new ship, and good friend of Holmie) into doing it with me. We did Figure 8 crunches, Med-ball throw and catch sit-ups, overhead v-sits with kettle bells, heavy kettle bell standing side crunches - all 3 sets of 10 (or more). 


It was fun to repeat this workout, its one that Winnie and I did on the weekend at the gym too. Although, Ms Cheezo did find the med-ball to be a little challenging, throwing, catching and sit-ups all at once! It was a laughter inducing experience.....LOL.


Friday, 13 June 2014

Day 80 - Trainers on.


Day 80 - A Long Road Travelled.

80 Days ago I decided to start something. I can't believe I'm still going strong, stronger than ever in fact. I feel awesome, albeit a little fatigued, but awesome. My life feels like it has turned a real corner in the health and fitness department and that is what I was after.

12 weeks in, and my will power is growing with my strength. I've noticed that on this journey (and thanks for hitching a ride with me, I love the company) my eating habits are consistently improving, my strength and admiration for gym work has increased, and my cardio elements are really going from strength to strength. The best bit is that people are starting to notice my body changing and that adds motivation, and the extra support from those around us by means of the occasional compliment goes such a long way in helping us to keep our compass pointing in the right direction.


Changing the Game.

After a little advice from a super fit colleague of mine about distance running training, I've decided to do as I said yesterday. I'm increasing my kilometre count per week, adding the distance to my legs. I really want my body to be comfortable and be able to sustain a full marathon. The only way I can successfully achieve this is to put my trainers on, and get my run on. I plan to taper my gym sessions, maintaining strength and core work but not heavy. I'm going to be continuing with the endurance training, but more reps and lots lighter weight. 

Starting Monday, my program will look a little more unusual - especially since I will mostly train at night. I cannot fit much into the mornings due to work commitments for the next 2 weeks....

So, my plan is in formation. I'm currently working on my running sessions having some variety-flavour! I want to throw in a 5km speed session, a Hills Session (in principle a HIIT Workout), a Spin-Run Brick Session (something like a 5km Spin then 10km Run), a middle distance 15km Run, and a long run (25-35km or thereabouts). I also want to maintain at least 2-3 swims per week, and a minimum of 3 gym workouts. I'm going to spend this weekend building a new endurance, low weight program for myself, so watch this space.
 

Half a Marathon

Since signing up for the Marathon, I've only done sub-10km runs for one reason or another. Today I decided to change that. I thought at first to do a 16km run, then as my run progressed I felt comfortable pushing the distance. I ran 20.9km, so for arguments sake a half marathon and that was a great start.

I have to say, at first I was running with slightly sore right ankle (due to some heavy challenges at footie the other night Bruce Lee was on the opposing team and he had a good go at trying to snap my ankle! After the first 5km were out of the way, my legs started to be less obvious to me and my ankle pains subsided a little. I ran past Jervis Bay Village, Green Patch, Bristol Point, Scottish Rocks, Hole in the Wall and finally arrived at Murrays Boat Ramp (MBR). MBR is about the furthest south you can get to in Jervis Bay by road; located 8.5km from my warm cosy cabin, it did however offer the most fantastic sunset on my arrival - well worth the effort in getting there. I took a few seconds to enjoy the vista afore my eyes, take leak and get back on my way again. As I headed back up the hill (not experienced this particular hill since my Exercise Matapan scenarios from NEOC) donned my head torch and made for HMAS Creswell.

As I approached the 10km point, at around 56minutes, I snapped open my first ever GU Gel electrolyte. I opted for 'Espresso Love' flavour.

After talking with IronRay, I cautiously took small sips of the extra thick gel at 1km intervals. I didn't have my hydration bladder with me, so I took the small quantity of gel and pasted it around my gums and sort of sucked it and mixed it with my saliva to make it more palatable. I have to say though, no complaints on taste or the thickness. I made the gel last a little longer, and controlled the uptake of the energy gel. At the 15-16km mark, I stuffed the empty packet into my shorts zipper pocket and continued on. By comparison to the Endura Brand, the gel was thicker and more noticeably so. No after affects on my gut from either gel is a very good sign for this glutard!

As I ran through the gates at Creswell I felt the surge of energy kick in and I pushed through to chuck in a couple laps of the quarter deck, clock tower and waterfront...just for shits and giggle...well, actually to firstly hit 18km...then I kept going and at 20km I was almost home, thought I'd make the 21km exactly...but 100m out and still under 2hrs of running...I was very pleased.

Average Pace: 5:43/km
Average Heart Rate: 149bpm
Calories Burnt: 1807

I took a screenshot from Map My Ride's website, and it shows a few points of interest. The run was essentially a dark run, with many a kangaroo and cane toad along the roadside. I saw a sum total of 6 cars in 2 hours of road running off-base. It was a beautiful evening, fairly balmy until the sun was finally set and then it was pretty chilly (especially when my sweaty singlet was sticking to me).


These pretty much sum up how I feel at the end of any long run, and why I keep going....


Good Night x

Thursday, 12 June 2014

Day 79 - Changing it up...

Time for Change


It's fast approaching the time for me to knuckled down and get my body ready for the spring running festivals that I am enrolled in. This means reducing the weight training, increasing my cardio - specifically my runs and working on my endurance.

From an endurance point of view, I've been busting a groove on this for nearly a month now, with some interesting results. I noticed additional strength when cycling, I noticed slightly increased fatigue when swimming, but running has reached a sort of plateau....I think the daily routine of weights is awesome, I'm addicted to it. I love it. However, I need to reduce it and increase my cardio training.

Today I worked out in the gym with a pretty full on arms and abdominal session. I pushed hard for nearly 2 hours and really gave the gun a good going over. I've noticed my core strength improving, and I really want to maintain that, so I'm toying with the idea of developing a strength-based all over body workout to compliment my running aspirations and training.

One thing I did notice was that starting over at the new gym really hindered my workout. I was looking for kit and having to make changes on the fly because the new gym has different gear. Thank goodness for options and the learning I've achieved in this so far!

I will do some more research and see what advice I can glean from experts and experienced peeps before I make too many drastic changes. This week I plan on increasing the run distances, and frequency of my run too. I plan on changing the gym routines to more reps, much lower weights (perhaps even just body weight) and I'll start combining muscle groups to start giving the whole body a workout each session.


Tomorrow I'll give you a little more insight into how I plan to develop my next routine, and how I plan to train specifically for the next big milestone - The Blackmore's Sydney Marathon.



Thursday, 22 May 2014

Days 58 & 59 - Blur

Blurring the Lines....


Talk about crazy busy. Yesterday I woke up late (first time in 9 weeks), missed my early morning workout and got annoyed with myself. Thankfully, we were cut-away early so I punished myself for 90 minutes doing an extended version of my missed workout. Endurance training for 90 minutes was hard work, but it got my head back in place and made me feel stronger. Sometimes we trip, we fall flat on our faces, but when we rise up, we stand up stronger and with greater purpose to not do it again.

I think being human about this stuff, whilst trying desperately hard to stick to a routine is why I am seeing results (both physical and emotional). I feel more together than I have before. I'm more zen and less hectic. Tuesday's yoga allowed me to reflect on that too. I still believe the goals we set ourselves can drive us crazy, can lead to tunnel vision of the rest of the stuff going on around us. That kind of perceptual narrowing, is totally going to mean that destination ends up overshadowing the journey. To me, the journey is still the most important element. We have our bumps, and our triumphs, but most of all we create an emotional attachment to the new way of being - it makes us feel good to step off the plane onto the tarmac at the start of an adventure, it lifts our spirits to see the sun rise or fall over a new back drop..this is why I travel, the destinations are not as important as how I get there....

Using this, helps. I've found of late, that the journey has been blurring somewhat, and this is causing me to get upset for the minor setbacks. Shit happens, to all of us, most of the time.. Remember, falling off your bike (as I've done a lot lately, dang cleats) just means you can get back on it and re-adjust. I suggest having a good laugh too. I guess what I'm trying to say is that we all need to slow it down, enjoy the bumps and sensations of the ride. We should all take a few minutes to ground ourselves,  take the time to align ourselves and carry on.


Chest, Abdominals, Arms & Abdominals


2 Days of tough training, like the rest of this week. Its pretty intense working for 60-90 minutes without a rest set. The endurance really shows when you're burning through fatigue. Obviously, as this is a new experience in the gym for me, I've dropped the weights (not by much) to maintain the work, keep the reps at 8 per set, and all exercises are 4 sets. Moving directly from a set of Chest or Arms to a set of Abdominals, then back to the original chest/arms set is not easy. My body is a little sore, but good sore, and I'm enjoying challenging my resistance workouts with a cardio-intensive rhythm. It's like I'm doing my own version of cross fit or something! I work really hard, usually I'm sweating before I get throughout the first "pair" of exercises. You see, I pair the exercises based on the logistics of what I need to do each. So for example, doing bent over rows (on back day) using the land mine set up is perfect for land mine 180s for abs. Or going from palm up forearm burners, leaning over a bench leads itself nicely for body based abs like plank or retractors.


Here's a sample of the last two Workouts: Remember I alternate between each set of each exercise....

Thursday:
      1. Palm Up Forearm Burners & Plank (20 sec hold)
      2. Palm Down Forearm Burners & Retractors
      3. Standing Zuttman Curls & Plate Twists (10kg plate)
      4. E-Z Bar Spiderman Curls & Side Plate Bends (20kg plate)
      5. Inclined Bench Barbell Curls & Barbell Ab Rollouts
      6. Standing Barbell Drag Curls & Heel Tap Twists
      7. E-Z Bar Skull Crushers & Bicycle Twist Abs
      8. Low Cable Overhead Extenders & V-Sits
      9. Cable Reverse Grip Tricep Pulldowns & Cable Ab Crunches
      10. Cable Tricep Pushdowns & Hanging Knee Up Crunches
      11. 90 minute Bikram Yoga Workout in the evening

As you can see, its pretty full-on, and doing 4 sets of each is a real killer! This little lot took me an hour to pull off, so I was not hanging around! Yesterday's 90 minute punishment was tough, but worthwhile!

Wednesday:
      1. Bench Press & Bottoms Up Raises
      2. Incline Bench Press & Retractors
      3. Decline Bench Press & Plate Twists (10kg plate)
      4. Push Ups & Farmers Cage Walks (110kg max) - 6 sets just for fun
      5. Incline Dumbbell Chest Press & Bicycle Twist Abs
      6. Incline  Dumbbell Pectoral Fly & Side Plate Bends (20kg plate)
      7. High Cable Fly & Land mine 180s (15kg plate)
      8. Low Cable Fly & Pallof Press Core Holds
      9. Pec-Deck & Single-arm Land mine 180 wiper catch & throws (10kg plate)
      10. 90 minute Bikram Yoga workout in the evening

Bikram

It is the first time in absolutely months, that I have practiced Bikram so frequently. I've really missed the class and how it leaves me feeling. I've noticed that I'm calmer, less erratic, more balanced than usual.

When I'm in the class, of course I'm thinking "my gosh, this is hot", or "why can't I breathe properly", or "I wish I could stretch and bend like the person in front of me"... but after acknowledging my thoughts, I return to my breath and silently meditate on my mantra "Om mani padme hum" which really quietens my mind. I sometime just solely focus on my breathing, how I breathe determines how calm I feel. The other thing I've noticed is that as I can hear/feel my heart rate elevating, my meditation and thought process often leads to my thinking about calming my heart down. I can often feel the slowing heart rate as a result of my thoughts.

What I think I'm saying here is that I'm developing an internal self-regulation of my core functioning. My heart rate, breathing and thought processes are all being controlled when I take the time to slow things down, return to basics and calm down. I call it getting my "Zen On"...


Monday, 19 May 2014

Day 56 - The Week 9 Intensification Process!

Not Long Now...

Yo! How ya going? What an amazing Monday. I thought it would be a great idea to give week 9 an injection of energy, focus and well, something a little more intensive. Plus, I'm highly motivated by the simple fact that I am going home to my wonderful wifey this weekend... 4 More Sleeps :)

How exciting....

Intensification

So, in an effort to up the stakes on this my 56th day, after such a big weekend of achievements I decided to do a morning workout that meant very little breaks and a whole other level of work.

Last week's back workout, although tough, seemed a little like it needed more. So, I decided to couple it with abdominals. How's that any different? Well, instead of back, back, back then abs...I decided to go back, abs, back, abs...no breaks. So after each set of back, I threw in a set of abs. Just because.....

I did a little research on back exercise routines last night, and decided to revamp the whole routine. I started with four sets of axle dead lifts to warm up, I managed to get to 55kg on the bar (75kg total)... After I got stuck into the new plan, with reverse grip bent over rows (with the barbell), with roller abs using the same barbell between sets. I did 4 sets of 8 reps of each, increasing the weight each time to a maximum of 30kg (until I get my technique perfect) - this is actually much harder than it reads....

I set the barbell up using the floor plate (landmine), then conducted sets of T-bar rows, with Landmine 180's between sets. I needed to drop the weight each time for the land mines, but got to 45kg with the rows, and was working up a sweat on the land mines on 30kg! 4 Sets of each later...I was feeling the burn!

I continued with Lat Pull downs - wide grip and narrow, before moving onto the cage farmers walks - today my farmer's walks reached 110kg (new PB). To finish my workout, and since time was getting sparse, I knocked out back hyperextensions, coupled with leg raises and knee crunches. I then punched out 4 chin ups, before moving into the hanging knee crunches and retractors to finish... all 4 sets of 8 reps each... Boom, another 75minute burnout! 

Not to be out done by this morning's effort, I wanted this evening's workout (predominantly cardio based) to challenge me. Subsequently I opted to do a 30 minute leg workout. I incorporated Smith Squats, Leg Press, Hack Squats, and Calf Raises.. I felt a little twinge in my calf so moved to the cardio part.... Incidentally, I PB'd on leg press tonight (180kg), which is another indication that my endurance and strength are really improving....yay for me!

Bricks

So, as you know, one of the new training tools to help me train for triathlons, is the brick session. So, I decided to do an out of sequence Bike then Swim. Since my pride and joy is packed for her trip home, I opted for a 30 minute spin, followed by an attempt at a speedy swim...

So, after a little leg stretching I jumped on the spin bike. 30 minutes later, feeling very comfortable I pulled up having travelled 15km. Nice. I quickly got changed and jumped in the pool. Now, I wanted to work my speed so I thought, hmm a snappy 500m to finish? I was aiming to finish in 15 minutes or less.... However, with my arms burning, and perhaps a little additional blood flowing in my legs I worked particularly hard to complete the swim. When I touched the poolside and stopped the clock, it read 09:52, my fastest lap was 01:06, and 01:58 per lap average. How funny, my best ever!