Archives for September 2008
M4:D25 (D325) Heart
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M4:D24 (D324) Repetition Inroad
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The fact is that High Intensity Training reveals the truth about your body and your body's ability to push weight around. You are asking your body to work extremely hard. The problem is that you can take anything and make it work for you. However, once you get honest about your lifting this is no longer possible. What do I mean? If you think it through, you could manipulate the sets and weights to get to the rep range you want to hit. However, when you use HIT and you use measured reps (3 seconds up, 3 seconds down) in a methodical and controlled fashion you are getting honest by taking the muscle to the point of temporary fatigue. This results in the muscles revealing the truth. They can no longer fake it. This leads the body to expose itself and the repetition inroad principle. The body will reveal to you that your biceps can only handle a maximum of X repetitions. Just go with it. Keep adding weight when you hit that number of repetitions. You will see continual progress by doing this. As far as honesty goes, remember, too, that you cannot squeeze your body into a man-made system. It does not know that it is working on a 7 day cycle. The body will recover when it has recovered. You cannot train again until your body is recovered. If you choose to train again before the body has recovered, it will not respond. The key here is really listening to your body. It is going to tell you what it likes and does not like. It will tell you when it is ready to workout again. Anyone can claim that you need to workout every other day or some other scheme, but only your body, involved in the Experiment of One, can tell you what you need to do for it to grow. Remember, recovery, rest, fuel…these are the things you must have in order to achieve success with your bodybuilding. On a personal note, I handled scorekeeping and timekeeping duties at a hockey game tonight. It was a fun time. |
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I had trouble sleeping during the night, so I ended up sleeping later than my normal time and missed my 5:30 a.m. meal time. I gave myself a fail on that one. |
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Today was a cardio only day. I did a 60 minute steady state session. I'm learning to enjoy these. I've gotten the Bible on CD and ripped it to MP3s and I listen to it while I train. It provokes some interesting thoughts as I'm working through my cardio session. God is definitely working on my mind and changing my outlook on life in general. |
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The truth exposes the lies that are told about what your body needs. |
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Have you ever experienced the repetition inroad principle (even if you didn't realize that's what it was)? Comment this post to answer the question. |
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Until tomorrow…GET BACK TO LIFTING! |
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M4:D23 (D323) Adaptation
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Adaptation in bodybuilding is an interesting and varied topic. When you lift weights your body goes through many different physiological changes. The muscle can grow bigger, more efficient, change its composition or increase its strength and speed. The type of change you get depends on the program you are following. Different training regimens effect the muscle's changes differently. One goal I am after right now is hypertrophy (the growth of the muscle). To this end I am working on eating enough, resting enough and lifting with High Intensity Training. One interesting aspect of this is the "repetition inroad" principle. The repetition inroad principle is the idea that a given muscle group will determine its own repetition range. No matter what you do, this cannot be changed. The body sets its own repetition limits. This is the flaw in alot of published exercise programs. They ask you to perform in a certain repetition range and alot of the time the muscle group being worked is incapable of working in that repetition range. There is no sense in pounding your body trying to get the muscle group to respond by giving you more repetitions. Instead you listen to your body and work within the repetition range it has set for itself on that muscle group. This is part of what I always preach about listening to your body. You have to listen or you will attempt to make it do things it is not capable. of. Today I had to do several interviews for some developer positions I am trying to fill. That's why I'm all dressed up in my picture. I also figured that I haven't shared alot about how I look when I go to meetings, etc., so I decided to share today. I am going to start sharing more and more of the environment I live in and the things I am doing. I am going to tie this all in to the release of my eBook. Yes, the eBook is still alive and well. I simply have gone back and rewritten alot of it after spending alot of time talking to Carlos DeJesus about what is important and what should be included in that book. I am also considering writing a real (paper) book. I am currently working on creating an outline for the paper book. |
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Today I managed to improve in 13 of 17 exercises. This improvement involved either an increase in weight or repetitions. The amazing thing is that I managed to increase from the start of the week to the end of the week. I was quite pleased with the workouts this week. It just felt right. |
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Time tested principles are preferred over untested modifications to those principles. |
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How do you handle adaptation in your workout plan? Comment this post to answer the question. |
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Until tomorrow…GET BACK TO LIFTING! |
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M4:D22 (D322) Reflection time
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Tomorrow is Friday. Friday has been my traditional "Evaluation and Reflection" time for years. I learned the concept from Jim Rohn. He is a personal growth motivator. What I do is set aside an hour on Friday morning after my gym time. I sit in a quiet spot with my journal and I reflect on the past week and I evaluate where I am at as far as all my personal and professional goals go. I spend the time planning ahead. I regroup so to speak. It is a wonderful time that I look forward to each week. This Friday I will be reflecting alot on my personal and professional life as I move forward with certain issues. I recently had an employee of 3 years quit. For the past several months she has been making alot of mistakes while writing programming code. I've been working closely with her to fix the issues, but they just have not been getting fixed. On Wednesday morning she violated a department policy in regards to rolling out a new application. When I questioned her on it she admitted that if she'd asked me to allow her to roll it out, she would not have gotten that permission. She admitted that she had cut corners. I told her that she was not thinking and that she needed to start thinking. She took offense and, based on emotions, she walked out. I will be reflecting tomorrow on what type of person I want to fill that position. I will be considering my options and acting accordingly. Reflection time is important to your future growth. Take the time each week to reflect on your successes and failures. Don't just focus on the bad, make sure the good gets addressed as well. Life is a series of ups and downs, but just focusing on the downs alone will not get you to your ultimate goals. It will only succeed in depressing you beyond belief. |
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Today was cardio training. Yet another interval session. |
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Reflection time opens the door to your soul. |
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Do you have a regular time set aside for evaluation and reflection? Comment this post to answer the question. |
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Until tomorrow…GET BACK TO LIFTING! |





