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You are here: Home / Archives for Experiment of One

Accountability is Waiting to Be Found

June 4, 2011 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT Leave a Comment

In my previous article, Reevaluate and Be Real With Yourself, I spoke about some issues you might be facing on your fitness journey. In this post I'd like to expand on one of the issues mentioned in that article. I want to talk about finding some accountability. After all, I am in the middle of Mission Accountability and feel like I should share some tips with you.

Why Do You Need Accountability?

Even the best fitness plan in the world will fail if you don't follow through. That's just a fact. By being an open book about your progress you force yourself to make better decisions. I personally do the best when I am publishing my progress in a public place (ie. a blog, forum, etc.). When I know people are watching I make better decisions. I think several times before giving in to something. My planning is better. My consistency is better.

Five Places to Get Accountability

  1. An accountability blog. You could start a real time accountability blog where you publish very short posts about what you ate that day, the workouts you did, etc. You could even go so far as posting daily pictures. Whatever it takes to ratchet up the heat, you can do it with a blog. Adam Waters seems to have invented this concept via his Real Time Physique Transformation blog. You don't have to go as far as he did, but you can certainly learn alot from his approach. Have a look and see what ideas you can pick up. I have learned alot from his approach. At one point I had the time to do daily posts, but that has all changed. Now I utilize other means of accountability, but if I was in dire straits, I would go back to the blog format. If you choose this format, please leave a link to your blog in the comments below.
  2. Facebook. You can post your progress on Facebook. Post your goals on your Facebook wall and you instantly let all your friends know your intentions. Make it a point to start a Facebook note about your accountability needs. Update that note (with new notes) that outline the progress you are making on your plan. Ask your friends to check up on you. Publish your daily eating for everyone to see. By doing so you will think 2 and 3 times before making the wrong decisions. If you would like, post your Facebook link in the comments below and I will follow your progress myself.
  3. Twitter. Admittedly, this is a tougher way to go, but you can tweet what you eat (use the hashtag #tweetwhatyoueat) and what your workouts are. Let your followers know what you are after–accountability. They will most assuredly hold you accountable. Used in conjunction with a blog or Facebook, this is a very effective way to be held accountable.
  4. Tumblr. I have a Tumblr that I use for personal issues. On this Tumblr I post a video from time to time (at least weekly) giving an update on my progress. I don't like Tumblr for blogging much, but for short posts it is more than adequate.
  5. Personal friends. Talk to the people closest to you–family and friends. Tell them what you are trying to do and ask them to hold you accountable. You will find that there is less pressure on you when you go out with friends. By virtue of them understanding what you are after they will be less likely to ask you to make bad choices. They will be right there to hold you accountable.

Encouragement and Transparency

Accountability is all about the encouragement you will get from others as you achieve your goals. Your transparency will force you to think before you act. There is no better way to assure your success, so get going on this now. Don't wait another second. Pick one or more of the accountability methods I list above and do them now. Let me know in the comments below what you've chosen to do. I will be right there to support you along the way.

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Filed Under: Experiment of One, Featured

Stop Lying to Yourself

May 25, 2011 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT 1 Comment

In my previous post Reevaluate and Be Real With Yourself I discussed the issues involved in holding yourself accountable. This is some important information because of the Mission Accountability I have embarked upon. There are several steps that you must follow. The first step is probably the most difficult.

Stop Lying to Yourself

Like anything else, nothing is going to change until you admit that there is a problem. You have no reason to change something if you don't perceive it as a problem. This is why lying to oneself is so dangerous. At first you lie and you consciously understand that it is a lie. Over time the lies become the truth to your subconscious. At that point, you believe the lies and thus, have no reason to change anything.

This is why your nutrition never quite makes it to where it needs to be. You convince yourself that you've done a good job even when you are not. Your workouts are not as intense as they could be because you go easy and become convinced that you've worked as hard as you can. There is no substitute for clean eating and hard training.

Be Real

We all have our limitations. Our job is to figure out that limitations and include them into our planning process. Don't take on more than you are able to. If you make huge promises that you cannot keep it will cause you to start lying to yourself. You will want to look as though you are accomplishing all of your goals, so you will find ways to convince everyone that you are. Stop the vicious cycle you are in. Be real and the rest will happen naturally.

If you admit that you have certain foods that you have a hard time avoiding you will be able to plan your eating so that you get those foods, but in moderation. I was recently involved in a discussion with some other people trying to get in shape and was given some awesome advice. Let's say that chips are your weakness (they are mine). If you start craving chips, wait until after a workout and then have a small portion. Because of the anabolic state your body will be in at the time, the chips won't matter as much to your diet. You will handle the craving and be able to move on.

I've spent the past 11 days eating healthy. I have only had one issue with cravings (potato chips) while in WalMart shopping with the family. I simply removed myself from the aisle that contained the chips and the craving went away.This is why the approach is so important.

It Breeds Consistency

By stopping the cycle of lying to yourself you are starting a cycle of consistency. You will be able to tackle the real problems you are facing. Would you go to the doctor and lie about your symptoms? Not if you expect the doctor to be able to help you. So why go to the gym and lie about what you need?

You cannot train properly if you don't admit the mistakes you are making in the gym. I believe in leaving everything on the gym floor. I train with as much intensity as I can muster. I get in the gym, work hard, lift heavy and then go home feeling exhausted, but satisfied. As a result, I've seen results that I would never have seen had I taken another approach. I talk all about this in my article Going to Failure.

How to Stop?

Just do it. Make a vow to be 100% honest with yourself and it will happen. Don't ever let yourself off the hook. If you slip up, forgive and get back on track. After all, your health is far too important a thing to mess with. Pick yourself up and stop the lying. You will be happy with the results you produce from that point forward.

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Filed Under: Experiment of One, Fitness

Reevaluate and Be Real With Yourself

May 17, 2011 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT 2 Comments

My Story

Have you been working out hard, but you are still struggling with seeing good results? Are you doing cardio with intensity, but jsut seem to hold the fat on your frame? Are you one of the people who works out consistently, but is still “fat”? If so, this post is for you, so open up your mind and heart to what you are about to read.

I began working out in earnest a little more than 5 years ago. I got involved with a group that was formed by Adam Waters. Adam is a guy who became somewhat famous by transforming his body real time in front of followers on the internet. He posted daily accountability photos and blogged daily on what he ate and how he trained. He called his approach “Real-time Accountability” and it clearly worked for him.

I joined Adam's very first “Group Shred” mission and set forth putting up photos daily along with a blog entry. I never missed a day and soon began to see some progress. I lost a ton of inches in my abdominal area, but could only get things to go so far. I trained harder than anyone at my gym. I did my cardio. At the end of the day, nothing really changed regarding my body fat.

At one point I even thought that maybe I just needed more muscle, so I went on a bulk. I was very successful with the bulk, adding mass to my back, shoulders, arms and legs. I am very proud of the hard work I did on that bulk, but the gut still remained.

I've tried alot of approaches the past 5 years, but the biggest problem hadn't been overcome. I was lying to myself. While I was convinced that my nutrition was good, it really wasn't. The problem wasn't the majority of my meals, it was the little binges I would go on.

Just this past week I realized that I needed to reevaluate. I realized that I needed to be real with myself about my nutrition. I had to figure out the real cause of my failure in this area. As I examined all the evidence it became very clear that what was lacking was something I have personally written about in the past. I wasn't planning ahead properly. I was finding myself caught in a tight spot nutritionally far too often. This was sabatoging my ability to burn the fat. I quickly realized that I needed to make some drastic changes.

How Does This Help You?

If you find yourself relating to what I'm saying so far you are probably asking how you can be helped by this. Hang in there because that is the next step in the process. I want to help you the way I've been helped.

Four Steps to Being Real With Yourself

There are 4 steps to being real with yourself.

Admit that you've been lying to yourself

In order to change the cycle you've been in you must admit to yourself that you are really the problem. You have to stop blaming other people and other things. If you have been blaming others, you have been lying to yourself. Admit it!

Find a source of accountability

After you admit that you've been lying to yourself, you must take immediate action.  The fist piece of business should be finding a source of accountability. You must find accountability amongst like-minded individuals. Think about what I said.

“You must find accountability amongst like-minded individuals.”

If you want to get a better body you do it by seeking accountability from others who have the same goals as you. I found a place that is called Serious Lifters and that's where I am currently getting my accountability. The people there don't judge me. I get nothing but encouragement. They have vowed to hold me accountable. The site has a place to enter what you eat and it can be seen by anyone clicking on your profile. Remember, public accountability ratchets up the pressure on you.

I also recommend setting up an accountability blog. I am using Welcome Inside My Mind (my personal site) for this very purpose during Mission Accountability. You can also find accountability on Twitter.

Plan Your Meals

It is absolutely imperative that you do this step. It is truly the key to the entire change you are trying to make. This is what will keep you from being caught without the right food to eat.

Fat loss guru, Tom Venuto has said that counting calories is easy if it is done during the planning phase. What he means is that you don't actually have to count if you plan ahead correctly. I just used this approach this past Sunday to insure that I ate well at my daughter's soccer party. Bringing your own food insures you comply with your nutritional needs. If you are really not sure what to do about your nutrition, I highly recommend Tom Venuto's Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle book.

Plan your workouts

Just like not planning your meals will defeat you, not planning your workouts will derail you. Your weight training and cardio workouts are going to help you succeed, so be sure to have a schedule of when you will be doing them and what you will be doing. This is the key to great programs like Lean Hybrid Muscle Reloaded.

Wash, Rinse, Repeat

Now that you know the four steps, all you have to do is execute them over and over again. It is a repetitive cycle that you must stick to for teh long-term.

Conclusion

It is my belief that you will see much better results if you follow the pattern laid out above. It is a process that takes time. You approach it with baby steps. One small success that builds on a previous small success is the way to victory. String together a bunch of successes and you will be amazed at the results!

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Filed Under: Experiment of One, Featured

Mission Accountability

May 6, 2011 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT 1 Comment

I recently posted a video at Welcome to My Mind (my personal outlet for my thoughts) regarding the difficulties I've had this week gettign my workouts in due to a change in how I am working these days. The video is entitled “Confession” and tells of my plight this week and my plans to handle that plight. Doing the video got me thinking about accountability.

I originally got my start blogging with accountability in mind. It eventually evolved into something larger, but accountability was at the core of my reasons for doing this at all. I feel like I need to go back to that system. I need to be completely transparent with what I am eating and how I am training. I need you, the reader, to comment and push me hard. Call me out when I don't do what I am supposed to do. Praise me when I do well. It all adds up to enhanced results in the end.

Starting tomorrow (which is Saturday), I will be back to posting daily photos. I will be doing this daily on my site, Welcome to My Mind.

I will then post a weekly entry here that gives the links to all of my daily posts on Welcome to My Mind. This will enable you to either follow my progress daily or weekly, whichever works for you. Either way, I would really appreciate being held accountable for my actions.

As another means of holding me accountable, you should definitely follow me on Twitter via @mikemahony. In addition to my accountability tweets, I post information daily that you will find interesting and fun to read. We will also be able to get to know one another. Any comments on this situation are welcomed. I have found that using social media for accountability really works, so I appreciate your time and effort on this.

Related Posts:

  • Mission Accountability Update: Week #2
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Filed Under: Experiment of One, Featured

Time to Reload

March 25, 2011 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT 1 Comment

I am working on getting into great shape. My issue has always been how I eat and the cardio that I do (or sometimes don't do). I've had alot of success with the Stronglifts 5 x 5 workout in 2011. While I still weigh what I weighed on January 1, 2011 (that alone is a victory), my fat percentage is down a full 2% since the start of the year. That is significant because I know I could have eaten better. Saturday I am going to be doing one rep maximums. I am certain that I am going to obliterate my squat and deadlift numbers. After that I will begin the Lean Hybrid Muscle Reloaded program. I am planning for massive results!

The premise of Lean Hybrid Muscle Reloaded is that you can add muscle and remove fat simultaneously. This is a “recent” discovery, but one I've been privy to for a long time based on my friendship with Carlos DeJesus. When you handle your training with enough intensity and you eat cleanly, the result will be increased muscle and decreased fat. That's the plan for me over the next 12 weeks!

The Plan

In order to succeed there has got to be a plan in place. This is the first step in any body transformation. I have taken a step back and looked over the things that have worked well for me along with the things that have not worked well for me. I believe that if I am very careful with the timing of my carb intake, I will be able to blast fat even with the increase in carbs. I am doing this because I've focused on very low carb nutrition for a long time and want to reignite my metabolism.

Nutrition

I will not be strictly following the Lean Hybrid Muscle Reloaded nutrition plan. Instead, my plan is to carb cycle throughout the entire 12 weeks. I am starting out this way so that I can change things up if the fat loss isn't happening. The nutrition plan will involve eating lean protein, lots of fibrous carbs and having 2 carb up days per week and one day each week where I have a cheat meal (one single meal, not the entire day). My starting calorie plan is as follows:

Monday, Tuesday 2600 calories (40% protein/40% carbohydrates/20% fat)
Wednesday 2400 calories (50% protein/30% carbohydrates/20% fat)
Thursday, Friday, Saturday 2600 calories (40% protein/40% carbohydrates/20% fat)
Sunday 2100 calories (50% protein/30% carbohydrates/20% fat)

This will accomplish two things: (1) I am cycling my carbs in short spurts of high and low carb days; and (2) I am cycling my calories as well. Both of these things should aide the fat loss process and are recommended by the Lean Hybrid Muscle Reloaded nutrition plan.

Weight Training

I will be working the Lean Hybrid Muscle Reloaded weight training plan throughout the 12 weeks. I am going to use Phase 1 of the program.

Cardio Training

I will be using the Lean Hybrid Muscle Reloaded cardio plan with an added twist–double cardio! Yes, I am going to do the cardio from the plan right after the workout and then I am going to add a second cardio session later that same day. On rest days I will add one long steady state cardio session. The idea is to blast the fat and I am taking that mission seriously!

Mike Westerdal and Elliot Hulse

Mike Westerdal
Mike Westerdal

Elliot Hulse

This program is created by Mike Westerdal and Elliot Hulse. You can check out an interview with Mike Westerdal if you are interested.

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  • Book Review: Better Than Steroids
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  • The Easy Way to Count Calories

Filed Under: Experiment of One, Training

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