Friday, September 3, 2010

REST DAY

Today is the REST DAY...

Don't do any work whatsoever! Eat well (indulge in a cheat meal and prepare for the next week)

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Thursday - SWIM/REST

WARM-UP
100m easy pace
100m pull
50m kick

WORKLOAD
800 swim @ 80% (:30r)
600 swim @ 85% (:45r)
400 swim @ 90% (:60r)
Cool Down: 200 swim

Total distance: 2000m = 1.24miles

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Wednesday -- Gym Jones Session

GYM JONES session with Michael

TRX Plank Hold/Mtn clibmers :30/:30 on/off

1 round every 2 minutes (for 10minutes)
x5 Deadlifts @ bodyweight
x10 Push Press @ 50# DB
20 cal AirDyne

1 round every 2 minutes (for 10minutes)
x5 Goblet Squats
x10 Ball Slams
140m SkiErg


SWIM SESSION
100m warm-up
50m KICK
50m PULL
---REST 1 min---
2x50m @ 80% (:30r)

800m -- REST 1min
600m -- REST 1min
400m -- REST 1min
200m -- REST 1min

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Tuesday

Bench Press
4x15 @ 185#

Weighted AB crunches


BIKE 30min **brick** RUN 25min

Monday, August 30, 2010

Monday / Jackman Session

Squats
4x10 @ 225# / 245# / 255# / 255#

10x6 Pullups (strict)


Swim
Warm up: 200 swim, 200 kick
Set 1: 4 X 50 swim. 1-2 @ 85%, 3-4@ 90% (20 sec. rest between each.)
Set 2: 5 X 200 swim. Descend (time) 1-5 (30 sec. rest between each.)
Cool down: 100 swim
Total distance: 1700

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

WHY CARBS AREN'T GOOD FOR YOU

SORRY THAT THIS IS SO LONG! For part of my degree I took some nutrition classes and then focused on the PALEO diet. This was one of my better reports on why the FDA "Food Pyramid" is fucking bullshit, and why carbohydrates aren't always good for you.

Macronutrients: Proteins, Fats and Carbohydrates
by Kylie Boyle


Proteins are chains of smaller molecules called amino acids. Proteins are what compose our muscles and give our bones tensile strength and they include enzymes that make all the chemical reactions in our bodies possible. Generally, the body is constantly turning over proteins and re-cycling the amino acids to make new proteins for both structural and enzymatic purposes. Some of the amino acids (aas) will get used up in this turnover process, so we must have a certain amount of our calories come from protein to replenish these aas or we will literally waste away and die. There are 20 aas used by the body to synthesize new proteins, and we must have 8 of them to avoid deficiency. These are the essential amino acids we need to eat. Animal sources of protein like eggs and meat are complete sources, that is, one portion of such a food contains all eight essential amino acids. The other 12 we can synthesize from the essential 8.

Humans are omnivores and not vegetarians. Animals that exclusively eat plants are able to synthesize amino acids from a smaller essential list eating monotonous plant sources. Humans who choose to artificially emulate true herbivores by eating only plant sources must consciously mix and match different plant sources, and unless they want to eat their own feces (I am not making that up -it would take about 30% by weight), must artificially supplement to get vitamin B12 that we can otherwise only get from the animal sources we evolved to eat. Animal sources of protein like eggs and meat are complete sources of amino acids – no mix and match required to get the essentials.

Fats and oils are described by class here, but generally are in the form of triacylglycerols or triglycerides (TAGs), three fatty acids chains on a glycerol backbone. Lipid is the technical term, but lets use fats for short. The fat composition of our diets affects cell wall and other vital functions, and the ratios of fats like Omega 6 and Omega 3 has important effects on immune function and inflammation.

As a fuel, fats are nonpariel. The FDA and the AHA and the ADA and all the lipophobes say to avoid fats because they are 9 kcal/ g (versus roughly 4kcal/g for proteins and carbs) and this caloric density will somehow by itself make you gain weight. I never saw a wild animal titrate their food by weight and humans don't either. We stop eating when we are no longer hungry and nothing turns off hunger like fats. The caloric density of fat is not an accident. Animals evolved to store energy efficiently as fat, and humans evolved to eat the the fat that prey animals we co-evolved with have stored “on our behalf”. We store the majority of the extra energy in our own bodies, whether derived from fats or sugars or proteins, as fat, especially saturated fat. To suspect that the saturated fat we store in our own bodies in such large amounts causes disease is wholly implausible, and I have yet to see any convincing scientific evidence that it does. Animal fats are quite simply the anchor food source of the PaNu approach.

Carbohydrates are simple sugars (glucose, fructose, etc..) or polymers (long chains) of simple sugars called starches. Glucose and Fructose are simple sugars. One glucose joined to one fructose is one sucrose disaccharide molecule. Sucrose and high fructose corn syrup or HFCS (manufactured from corn) are metabolically equivalent for all practical purposes. They are equally bad for you. Sugars can be burned as fuel or converted into storage fat in our bodies. They have other biological functions within the body, but importantly, there is no such thing as an essential carbohydrate. Any sugar or starch needed internally can be synthesized from scratch. Unlike the case with Proteins and Fats, starches and sugars are basically just fuel. PaNu theory (well, basic cell biology, actually) recognizes that sugars are the oldest cell fuel. Many bacteria and primitive organisms, and dedifferentiated cancer cells, can only use glucose (sugar) as fuel. During the long evolution of animals, the ability to store and use fatty acids evolved as well. This has had huge advantages in energy storage and efficiency for animals. It is my working hypothesis that during much of human evolution, fatty acids were a much more utilized fuel source within the human body, and even though it was adaptive during our evolution for humans to exploit carbohydrate rich food sources when in a food scarce environment, our current food abundant environment has us using glucose as an internal fuel far more than what we are biologically adapted to. This is the first central dogma, if you will, of PaNu theory. Lets state this central dogma for reinforcement:

I. The first core departure from the evolutionary metabolic milieu (EM2) is the degree to which we use glucose as an internal fuel relative to fatty acids.

In a food abundant environment, where there is no caloric deficit, carbohydrates as a large fraction of caloric intake create a situation where our metabolism is not spending enough time in or near the fat-burning state known as ketosis. The consequence of this is the metabolic syndrome, which is insulin resistance, diabetes, hypertension, obesity and a variety of other diseases that have highly suggestive lines of evidence connecting them to chronically increased levels of insulin and/or serum glucose – including coronary artery disease, deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, atrial fibrillation, atherosclerosis, alzheimer dementia, degenerative diseases and even the most common cancers like breast, colon, lung and prostate.

Now, as a physician who sees a wide variety of ailments in the context of people who are ill enough to need MRIs, CT scans and Ultrasounds, I can tell you that this short list is about 60% or more of the serious diseases that I encounter routinely. Imagine if these diseases of civilization were not an inevitable consequence of aging, each with a different cause, but were all a consequence of living long enough despite eating the wrong diet – a diet that deviates from the EM2. That is what I believe to be the case.

My first central dogma is just a subtle extension of Gary Taubes' carbohydrate hypothesis. For the comprehensive tour-de-force argument for the carbohydrate hypothesis, read Good Calories, Bad Calories by Gary Taubes

So what can we do to get closer to the fat-burning metabolism of the EM2?

Let's look at our current diet (not yours or mine, the average north american's) and see what it's macronutrient composition is. (These figures are approximate but pretty close)

Average daily calories 2300

Sugar and HFCS 100 lbs/yr 496 kcal/day per capita = 22% Source – HFCS web site

Flour 138 lbs/yr 685 kcal/day per capita = 30% Source - The Wheat Foods Council

The percentage figures as a fraction of daily calories are 22% Sugar and HFCS and 30% from wheat flour.

These figures may be high and count wastage and protein (gluten), so lets round the flour carbs down to 20%. Most figures for current total carb consumption are 55%. So, being generous, we can ballpark all other sources of carbs like vegetables and corn and rice and fruit, etc. at 15% of calories.

So we have, roughly, 22% sugar and HFCS, 20% flour carbs, 15% veggie carbs, 16% protein and 27% fat.

Note that all the vitamins, and all of the essential aas and fatty acids (if we are getting them) are coming from 58% of our diet.

To get closer to the fat burning metabolism of the EM2, what can we do with this as a starting point?

Insulin levels can be low despite a high carbohydrate fraction and we are in ketosis if we are in constant caloric deficit, but this has nasty side effects like lethargy, muscle wastage and well, eventual death if we keep it up. Being hungry all the time is no fun either.

How about eating 55% carbs and only eating every other day, a rigorous form of intermittent fasting? Well, there is some evidence that would work, but I would not prefer alternate day eating to once or twice a day, and try fasting 24 hours after big plates of pasta sometime. Good luck with that.

Perhaps we could agree that Sucrose, HFCS and white flour are providing absolutely nothing essential to our diets, and the sugars (they are all nothing but sugars with some gluten protein in the flour) are just stimulating insulin secretion (glucose) and if not stimulating insulin, they are being converted directly to fat, damaging our liver, and making us eat more by not shutting off our appetites (fructose). To make our cells more reliant on fatty acids and avoid the damage from too much sugar in the diet and the bloodstream, we will completely eliminate 42% of our diet. That is step 1 of PaNu.

Now we have a 42% hole in our diet. We can fill it with more macronutrients from the following:

a) 15% other carbs category choosing from starchy foods like corn, rice, potatoes or fructose laden fruit.

b) 15% other carbs but choosing non-starchy vegetables like green salads, broccoli, asparagus etc.

c) Protein 16%

d) Fats 27% (This number has actually decreased at the same time obesity has increased over the past 20 years)

The a) choices just add back glucose and fructose we just removed even if we picked up a few vitamins from sugary fruit. The b) choices might be OK, but if you avoid starch and add green vegetables till they are over 60% of calories you have added most of the carbs right back and you are now chewing for hours a day like a chimpanzee just to get nourishment. *

Now, people don't eat pure macronutrients once they've eliminated sugars and flour. They eat foods that are composed of macronutrients. We need lower the carbohydrate fraction by adding back foods that don't just raise it back again. Since Fats have zero insulin response, are a great fuel source, and give great satiety, why not do this:

Increase Fats to 65-70%, and cut out all residual grains, legumes, and starchy vegetables like potatoes, corn and rice so that only the green salads and non starchy veggies are left. This will get carbs down to 10% (roughly 50g per day) and absolutely minimize glucose, fructose and insulin effects. For the reasons elucidated here we will not allow mechanically extracted seed oils into the diet. This leaves animal sources like butter, cream and flesh of animals like beef, chicken, pork and fish. Now, when we seek out these natural unprocessed animal sources of fat, we will get a bit more animal protein and many more vitamins in the bargain.

Keep carbs around 10%, seek out animal fats, let protein come along for the ride and you will get close to these ratios, + or – 5% for each:

65-70% Fat, 20-25% Protein, and 10% carbohydrates.

This may well be more protein than you need.

No harm reducing it to 15% and adding more cream or butter

Try it. Record everything you eat for a few days while sticking to 1 through 4.

Use Fitday to calculate your ratios. It will be hard to radically deviate from the above ratios unless you purposefully try to subvert it.

Now is when you ( well not you, but those who buy the healthy grains propaganda) say:

Where are the healthy grains?

Answer in the next post.



*Greens are fibrous and not starchy or calorie dense, so if we add enough back to replace the lost calories, we are eating a huge amount of vegetables now. This is in fact advocated by authors like Colin Campbell and Joel Furhman - it can have some effect as the mechanical satiety and sheer work of eating may reduce your caloric intake. However, you will be having a minimal effect on insulin levels at the expense of eating fewer higher quality animal foods and absurd amounts of fiber - this approach only makes sense if you think animal products and fats per se are unhealthy - they are not. Also you just don't need that many vegetables in general and you don't need "fiber" at all.

Friday, August 13, 2010

rant

Regardless of which training weight apparatus an individual may be using, I feel that the biggest problem problem I’ve seen, is people doing way too much. People (myself included) always seem to do way too many sets and/or too many exercises.

Training Equipment is in many ways like finding a pistol or rifle (sorry for the military analogy...but it is who we are) that works for you. Some people swear by Kettlebells and others prefer the traditional dumbbells and barbells routines. I like to use Kettlebells to warm-up with (KB swings, Round the Worlds, Goblet Squats and Windmills) and that is about it.

(1) I hate machines...stop being lazy and stand up while you are working out...and it is okay to utilize more than one joint while exercising. CAVEAT: If you are a bodybuilder...continue with your pec deck and preacher curl machines. However, these ultimately don't fall into "functional" exercises and are merely implemented when looking for an aesthetic look only.

(2) Nothing beats a steel barbell with brand-new knurling that is grinding away at your palms due to a heavy load on the bar. If one was to examine the classic linear periodization programs of most Division 1 athletes, Olympic competitors, etc. you would notice the heavy focus on exercises that use barbells as the primary means of training. Deadlifts, Romanian Deadlifts, Bent-Over Rows, Power Cleans, Back Squats, Front Squats, Snatch, Clean Hi-Pulls -- all of these exercises are the foundations of strength and power. If one were to construct a program based off of these exercises, with the addition of a day or two of running (each week), and a couple sets of pullups, they would find themselves in the upper echelons of society, in regards to their physical fitness.

(3) CrossFit is a great training regimen for losing weight and GPP (General Physical Preparedness) and that's it. With the endless hours, and millions of dollars (annually) that is spent on Human Performance research, they have come to a couple conclusions. First, in order to get stronger you have to lift heavy weight (1-4 reps) and follow it up with ample recovery to let the (Phospho-creatine systme) PCr replenish in the muscles so that you can perform the same (or heavier) work load again. 3 sets of 5 equals 15 total reps, and if you allow for recovery you will, over time find great strength increases. Now take CrossFit's infamous "FRAN". While it is a ball-buster and you will want to vomit at the end of your 3:02 (my Personal Best), it would be delusional to think that "FRAN" is in any physiological and scientific way beneficial for your body and your training, if you are trying to develop strength and get bigger. So, KB and Barbells and all other types of weights are fine and dandy for CrossFit...but at the end of the day the paramount question should be, "WHAT DO I WANT TO GET FROM MY TRAINING?" If people took the time to answer that question, I (and many other very knowledgeable TacFit instructors) can help design programs accordingly.


There are other supplemental lifts that are valuable but should only be used in a accessory-style program. These lifts should compliment the training, not detract from it (Dips, Lunges, Pushups, Shrugs, Pullups)

Assistance exercises accomplish four main tasks. In no particular order, they:
1. Strengthen weak areas of the body.
2. Compliment and help increase the four basic lifts.
3. Provide balance and symmetry to your body and your training.
4. Build muscle mass.

You must keep training economy in mind. Training economy means getting the best bang for
your buck from each exercise. That’s why squats are always better than leg extensions. There
are no right and wrong exercises, per se.

*** One quick side note, is that when teaching people how to squat...using a KB is essential. By performing Goblet Squats with a KB you can teach people how to keep their back straight and head up while performing squats. Work on their range of motion in the hip joint and making sure that the knees are properly tracking right over the balls of the feet, and then you can start progressing to Back Squats and Front Squats. ***

WHY SYMMETRY IS IMPORTANT (This is why I think Bodybuilders didn't get it entirely wrong...but they still can't ruck for shit)
Many ask why is symmetry important? Because professional athletes, special operations personnel should (and most do) want their bodies to
be symmetrical, from front to back and from side to side. This is how you have to think, and this
is why there’s a growing fascination with weak points and the posterior chain. It’s also why so
many injuries occur. When I tell people to "train like a bodybuilder", I just want balance in your
training. If you train your chest, train your back. If you train explosively with weights, train your
conditioning level. If you train your conditioning, train your flexibility.

Don’t get overzealous with one area for too long. If you do, expect to spend the same amount of
time getting neglected areas up to par. Remember this when choosing assistance exercises,
and try to achieve balance in your training with both exercises and muscles.