Here you will find things about fitness and nutrition, mainly (but not exclusively) in relation to the Beachbody programs like P90x and Insanity. And, I will start adding reviews for Books, DVDs and Blu-Rays, and other products. All views and opinions on this blog are my own.
Welcome
Welcome to my ever-evolving blog. It started out as a blog on Beachbody workouts and products, mainly when I was a Beachbody coach. I no longer coach, not because I don't believe in Beachbody's programs (I subscribe to Beachbody on Demand and use their workouts every day), I am just not a salesperson and hated that aspect of it. I am more than willing to answer questions about my experiences with their products and the various workouts, and I feel freer to do so without the appearance of giving a biased review of something.
I have also started adding reviews for various things I have purchased like movies, books, CDs, and other products. This was brought about by a fight with Amazon in which all of my reviews were removed over a completely bullshit allegation that I posted a review that violated their terms of service. After going back and forth with the morons in the community-reviews department (even after they admitted that my posts did not violate their guidelines) they restored my account (which took them six months to do), but I have been posting my reviews on my blog to have them preserved in case something like that happens again. And here, I will post uncensored reviews so I will swear from time to time and post reviews that may be longer than Amazon's character limit. Everything I post here on any topic or product is my personal opinion, and I take no compensation for any product reviews I post. I am a member of Amazon's vine program and because I get those products for free, I keep those reviews on Amazon only, but everything I have purchased with my own money, whether from Amazon or some other store/website/outlet, I will post here.
I also plan to do some longer blog posts on various topics, such as how to learn physics, how to get through calculus, and longer reviews of workout programs as I do them. Basically, whatever strikes me as interesting at the time. As you can see if you navigate around the blog, I had many years in between postings. During that time I was going back to school to get an engineering degree, and learning material that I avoided my first time through college was a different experience and one that gave me a lot of insight into how to do well in those classes, which I will try to impart here for those who are looking to get a science or engineering degree.
Tuesday, January 3, 2023
Food Review: Nut Harvest Sea Salted Whole Cashews
Blu-Ray/Movie Review: Personal Shopper
Monday, January 2, 2023
Workout Update: Lift 4/Beginner Pilates Doubles Day 8
Day 8 marks the beginning of week two. For the Beginner Pilates workout that means doing Pilates Flow 1. It is a total-body workout that builds on the concepts that were learned in the fundamentals workouts, but with a bit less modifying than those two had. There are definitely some challenging moves in the workout, and I did have to pause a couple of times. I still cannot do the double leg side leg lifts very well (a move in which you lay on your side and lift both legs off the ground without using your arms to help push you up). I did get my legs a little higher when I was laying on my left side today than I did last week, but when I lay on my right side I can barely get my legs off the ground. The reason I love (and hate) Pilates is that it definitely focuses on my weak spots when it comes to flexibility and core strength. I generally think that Pilates is tougher for guys because we tend to be tighter in our hips, low back, and hamstrings, sometimes regardless of overall core strength. There are some moves that I feel like I can barely move my body a centimeter when Lisa is completely folded forward with her head touching her knees. Of course, she has been doing Pilates for years and is in phenomenal shape whereas I have dabbled in Pilates off and on for years, and most certainly am not in phenomenal shape. But, I do what I can and just focus on getting better each workout.
The Lift-4 workout is another chest and triceps workout, but this week you do another two quad circuits (4 exercises, two chest exercises, and two triceps exercises, doing 10 reps of each exercise back-to-back with no rest). You do three rounds of each quad set, with 30 seconds between each round. After you do the two quad sets you do a blowout set, that is three rounds of wide push-ups followed immediately by triceps push-ups. After you finish those, the workout ends with two core-focused exercises. So, while there is no HITT cardio in this workout, your heart rate does get up there, and even lifting light weights, you get tired. It is still a guessing game for the weights for me. This week I mostly had to use lighter weights than last week for some of the same moves because the quad set is harder than doing two exercises back-to-back. The most I used was 20 lbs for the chest presses, and it was a struggle by the third round.
DVD/TV Series Review: Bull: Season 1
DVD/TV Series Review: Hawaii Five-0: Season 7
Sunday, January 1, 2023
4k-UHD/Movie Review: Spiderman Homecoming
Workout Update: Lift 4/Beginner Pilates Doubles Day 7
Day 7 was a total rest day for Beginner Pilates. It is an optional rest day for Lift-4, but I again did the flexibility and then the foam roller routines. Nothing really new to report about either of those two, as my flexibility (or lack thereof), was exactly the same as it was yesterday.
DVD/TV Series Review: The Good Place: Season 1
Saturday, December 31, 2022
DVD/TV Series Review: Designated Survivor: Season 1
Workout Update: Lift 4/Beginner Pilates Doubles Day 6
For Day 6 in Beginner Pilates, the workout is the Abs and Core workout. This one is short, just over 23 minutes, and focuses on just ab/core exercises. Although a couple of the moves in the workout also work hamstring flexibility and the lower back (which is a part of the core anyway). The moves are challenging, but doable. I did have to skip a couple of reps in some of the moves a couple of times, but for the most part, I could get through everything.
Day 6 in Lift-4 is another recovery day so I again did the flexibility workout and then the Roll and Recover workout. I do wish that they would have made each of those workouts a little longer...maybe 15 minutes each so that they could incorporate a few more moves and stretch a couple of other body parts. But otherwise, I think those are both good workouts.
Workout Update: Lift 4/Beginner Pilates Doubles Day 5
Day 5 for Beginner Pilates was the Fundamentals 2 workout. This was supposed to be the workout on Thursday, but I accidentally mixed them up, so I just did this one today and moved on. Shockingly, I am seeing tiny gains in my flexibility even after the first week. On the modified roll-up, when I stretch forward I can get a little (and I stress a little) a bit farther with my reach. Even when I was a kid, and was much more flexible than I am as an adult, I could never do that seated stretch worth a damn. When we had to do that fitness test in school and had to sit with our feet against the box and move the slider at the top, I could barely reach the slider, much less move it.
The Lift 4 workout was legs, which was a 50/50 lifting and cardio workout. For this one, there are three blocks of two different leg exercises. You do 10 reps of each exercise and then rest, and then repeat for three rounds. Then, after you get through the three blocks of leg exercises you do cardio. There are three cardio exercises you cycle through, high knee jog for 1-minute, a move where you keep your knees two inches off the floor and hop side-to-side for 45 seconds, and then squat jacks for 30 seconds. You do three rounds of the cardio, and then you alternate two different core exercises (a version of a crunch and plank leg lifts). So, it is another brutal workout that will have you gassed by the end of it.
Product Review: Filtrete 16x25x1 Air Filter, MPR 1200, Allergen Defense Odor Reduction, 2-Pack
Friday, December 30, 2022
Book Review: Star Wars: From a Certain Point of View (A New Hope)
Product Review: Dickies Men's Dri-tech Moisture Control Crew Socks Multipack
Blu-Ray/Movie Review: Gifted
Thursday, December 29, 2022
Workout Update: Lift 4/Beginner Pilates Doubles Day 4
Day 4 was supposed to be Fundamentals 2 again in Beginner Pilates, but I kind of accidentally and then on purpose did the Hips, Buns, and Thighs workout instead. Meaning, at first I thought that was today's scheduled workout, was glad to see it was 27 minutes long because I had a work call get scheduled last minute, and by the time I realized I was not doing the correct workout, I was not going to switch. I will say that this is much harder than either of the Fundamentals workouts and there were a couple of times when I had to pause and skip a rep.
The Lift-4 workout was shoulders, which is an interval workout. There are three rounds. In each round you do two shoulder exercises (ten reps each, without rest in between) then you do a 30-second HITT cardio exercise. After the cardio move, you get a 30-second rest and then repeat everything two more times and then move to the next round. In the first round, you do shoulder presses and upright rows for the lifting moves, and then the cardio move is a quick jump-step kind of thing. In round two you do front raises and lateral raises for the lifting moves and burpees for the cardio move. In the third round, you do wide front raises and what Joel calls shoulder flys in which you start with your arms bent at 90 degrees out in front of you so your hands are at forehead level and your elbows are basically touching, then you open your arms so that your hands move to either side of your head and your elbows stay high at the same height as your armpits. Then, the cardio move is plyometric lunges.
Once you get through the three rounds, you do two core exercises, back-to-back for three rounds. The first is that you lay on your back and kick your feet in a scissor motion (kind of like the Pfeiffer scissors from P90x, but your feet stay about six inches off the ground as opposed to kicking your legs and feet up high and you kick your feet fast), and the second is a sit-up variation. It is another tough workout that will have you gassed by the end of it.
Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Emerald City: Season 1
Book Review: Disloyal: A Memoir
Wednesday, December 28, 2022
Workout Update: Lift 4/Beginner Pilates Doubles Day 3
Day 3 was a total flexibility day. For Beginner Pilates it was back to the Fundamentals 1 workout and for Lift-4 it was a recovery day, so that means you can rest or do one or both of the recovery workouts. I decided to do both recovery workouts, first doing Lift-4 stretch and then doing the roll and recovery (which is the foam roller routine). While I cannot say that I noticed a marked change in my flexibility, but I can feel, especially after the foam roller routine, that my hamstrings and hips are a bit less tight. I still have way too much gut (along with the tight back, hamstrings, and hips) to make any of the forward-folding moves easy, and many times I cannot get my hands much past my knees. But, I have a feeling, with all the flexibility work that this doubles routine will have, that I will see improvement week-to-week.
DVD/TV Series Review: Hunted
DVD/TV Series Review: American Dad!: Volume 11
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Workout Update: Lift 4/Beginner Pilates Doubles Day 2
For the morning workout on day 2 of the doubles workouts, I did Pilates Fundamentals 2. It is much like the first workout in which you do a series of moves that will lead up to doing "regular" versions of the moves in a more flowing sequence down the line. In this workout, Lisa Hubbard again modifies all of the moves and shows unmodified versions for people who do not have tight backs, hamstrings, and/or hips (which is definitely not me). I would not say that I noticed any marked increase in my flexibility from day 1 to day 2, but I would not expect that to be the case anyway.
Then, for the PM workout, I did Lift 4's back and bicep workout. This workout is a circuit workout that consists of two blocks of four exercises that alternate between a back exercise and a bicep exercise. There are three rounds of each block, and you do not rest at all between exercises, but you do get 30 seconds to rest between the rounds.
The first block consists of wide back rows, open arm bicep curls (if you have done P90x you will recognize those), standard back rows, and hammer curls. The second block consists of dumbbell pullovers, top-only bicep curls (you start with the weights by your shoulders and lower them halfway), back flys, and bottom-only bicep curls (start with the weights low and raise them halfway).
After you do those rounds you alternate between a move that is a cross between the cobra from yoga and the supermans from P90x and then do as many bicep curls as you can for 30 seconds. You do three rounds of those and then finish the workout by alternating two core exercises for three rounds. The first core exercise is a sit-up in which you bring your elbow as close to the opposite knee as you can, and then you do planks for 30 seconds.
While this workout has no HITT cardio in it, the workout is very hard and you get tired very easily. I would suggest picking lighter weights to use than you think you need because, with no rest between the exercise sets, the weights get really heavy, really fast. And, your heart rate does get up there so you do not really miss the cardio. There is again a modifier in the workout that you can follow if you need to. One observation about this workout is that you really need a selection of free weights. A set of selectable dumbbells like the Bowflex SelectTechs would not really work for this workout because you really do not have time to re-rack the dumbbells and select the new weight before they move on to the next exercise. Just something to keep in mind if you want to do this program.
4k-UHD/Movie Review: Baywatch
Product Review: UHMER Silicone Spoon Rest for Kitchen
DVD/TV Series Review: Chicago Med: Season 2