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.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
P90x Hybrid week one in the books!
Anyone who has done yoga-x, especially those who have not done a lot of yoga in the past, knows that the first 45 min of that is killer. It takes a lot of stamina and can really wear you out. I found, however, that while some of the poses were still challenging, I never got winded during the workout at all, and poses like half moon and twisting half moon where I had previously taken water breaks I could do. Granted, they were not perfect, and I had to come out of them to regain my balance, but I could stick them out.
Similarly, just how far into stretches I could get both in yoga-x and x-stretch are vastly improved. One of my goals for this round of P90x is to really focus on my flexibility. When I was young, I had almost gumby-like flexibility, and it has deteriorated over time. While I probably will not get back to the level I had as a child, I really do want to get to the point where I can get all the way down on the various hamstring stretches. My glutes, hamstrings, and lower back are all very tight and inflexible. My hips, on the other hand, are still very flexible.
The other goal I have for this round is to finally be able to do pull-ups unassisted. I have never been able to do more than one or two on my own and then have to use a chair or the counterweights on the pull-up machines at the gym. My legs have always been appreciably stronger than my upper body. I think that comes from doing a lot of taekwondo when I was younger with all the kicking. So I really want to try and even that out, or at least get it closer to being even.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Update
As some know I am going back to school to take math and science classes so I can practice patent law. I already have the law degree so I am essentially doing it in reverse. For those who don't know patent law is a fairly specialized form of law that you need a science or technical background in order to practice it. I initially got a history degree for my BA, and did everything I could to avoid math. Little did I know that is the best background to have when going to law school. The upside is that after law school even the undergrad classes I considered hard are incredibly easy.
On the workout front, during the spring semester I took a jogging class, which was the bulk of my workouts for those three months. After school ended I started a second round of Insanity which I just finished. Here are my initial and final fit test numbers for this round of Insanity:
Switch Kicks - 92 118 (+26)
Power Jacks - 54 70 (+16)
Power Knees - 103 125 (+22)
Power Jumps - 45 70 (+25)
Globe Jumps - 7 11 (+4)
Suicide Jumps- 10 13 (+3)
Push Up Jacks- 16 30 (+14)
Low Plank Obl- 40 53 (+13)
I am now going to do a round of P90x, with at least for a time, a lot of added cardio. I am taking most of the month of July off from work so I am going to take the first month and do a hybrid doubles program of P90x. Basically, I will follow the P90x classic program, but add a second cardio workout later in the day, which will be piecemeal from Insanity, Chalean Extreme and the Cardio-x routine. I do not want to lose all the cardio conditioning gained from Insanity, and this plan should keep things from getting too repetitive.
My last month of P90x will overlap with my first month of the fall semester in school. I am going to finish it out, even though I will be really pressed for time going to school part time and working full time. At that point I will not be doing doubles any longer. Once I finish that out I will probably use the workout facilities at school, but I will figure all that out when the time comes.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Insanity recovery week done!
Tomorrow is a rest day, then Wed I have the Fit Test and Max Interval Circuit. The plan is to do the fit test in the morning, and MIC in the evening. That way I do not kill myself doing them back to back.
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Core Cadio and Balance
Monday, December 21, 2009
Month 1 of Insanity is Done!
While I have yet to get all the way through any of the workouts without taking unscheduled breaks, I have for the most part cut them down to a few seconds to catch my breath, then I can get back into it. Also, just in everyday life I can take stairs two at a time, and hardly get winded. I am excited to see what month 2 brings.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Month one nearing completion
I do cardio abs in the morning, then do pure cardio later in the afternoon before I go to work. For those who do not have that kind of schedule, I would say do cardio abs first, almost as a warm up to pure cardio, then do the other. There is only a couple minutes of high impact jumping in the ab routine, then the rest of the workout is pretty low impact. If however you try to do cardio abs after pure cardio, unless you are in phenomenal shape it will be damn near impossible. At the very least a lot harder than it has to be.
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Halfway through week 2
I have seen people ask if you can every get "used to" the Insanity workouts, and my answer to that is yes and no. Yes, you become familiar with the movements, and your cardio will improve. However, as you can do more, if you keep pushing yourself as hard as you can the workouts are never going to get easy. I think the best example of that are the people in the DVDs, who are all very fit, and many of them were in the test group and knew what they were in for, were all collapsed on the floor by the end of the workouts. At times, Shaun T. is the only one still doing anything, and even he is stopping for water breaks.
I cannot stress enough that this is not a program you do having never worked out before or after a long lay off from working out. At the very least you have to be used to hard workouts like bootcamp type group classes or something like P90x. The moves are not as easily adapted to less intense variations like in P90x or Chalean extreme. If you have that base level though, it is a great workout.
Monday, November 30, 2009
Week One in the Books.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Pure Cardio....Bananas
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Recovery?!
Cardio Power and Resistance
Friday, November 27, 2009
Yes, Insanity is aptly named!
After the stretch you do 2 more circuits, each with three rounds, and you go as hard as you can in each one. There is a 30 second break between each round. Needless to say, your heart rate skyrockets, and you burn a lot of calories. The entire workout is right around 40 min, and I burned about 500 calories, and that was with taking quite a few "unscheduled" breaks.
For me, the hardest part of the workout are the level 1 drills. You basically do a burpee, but instead of coming right back up, you do 4 push up, then run while in a plank position (usually called floor runs) then jump up. Personally, I hate push ups. It is one of the reasons why I like Chalean Extreme more than P90x. There are a lot of push ups in insanity, so I will just have to work through them.
I personally do not pay a ton of attention to the people on the DVDs unless I am really trying to get the form down. But the insanity workouts can be downright entertaining. All of the people on the DVDs are very very fit. However, nearly everyone has to take breaks aside from the 30 second scheduled ones, and by the end a good percentage of them are lying on the floor gasping for breath. You can also tell the people that were in the test group, vs. the people they hired to participate in the shoots. The test group people can get through the workouts keeping their form and taking a minimum number of breaks. Some of the others tend to start dogging it big time when they get tired.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Beginning Stats for Insanity
Weight 188.4
Waist 40"
Body Fat 24% approx
Chest 44"
Hips 41"
I will post a little later after my workout. Ploymetric Cardio Circuit is today. It is day 1 of the "real" workouts.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
My insane journey
Insanity is pretty much purely a cardio based program. It is a lot of football and track drills, with plyometric drills mixed in. It is NOT for someone just starting out. If you do not have a baseline level of fitness you will at best quit the program prematurely, and at worst hurt yourself. I have watched through the DVDs and by the end of nearly every workout the participants in the videos, including the trainer Shaun T, are lying on the floor gasping for breath. If you want to start with a beachbody program but have never picked up a weight there are alternatives out there. Feel free to ask and I will give you my thoughts.
That said, the first workout for insanity is the fit test. If you have done P90x and are wondering how the fit test can be the first workout...trust me, you will feel it by the end. The program is 60 days long, and you re-do the fit test every two weeks to track your progress. Here are my week one numbers:
Switch Kicks 80
Power Jacks 60
Power Knees 95
Power Jumps 50
Globe Jumps 7
Suicide Jumps 10 (think burpees with a jump every time you come up)
Push Up Jacks 15
Low Plank Obliques 35
I will try to update this every day, or most every day after my workouts and keep you posted on my progress. Have a safe and happy Thanksgiving!
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Burn phase complete
I also did my measurements today, and compared them against Day 1. My weight actually stayed the same for the most part. I started at 184.4 and got to 183. However, a perfect example of why one should not live and die by the scale alone, my bodyfat went from approximately 22.1% to 20.7%. My waist went from 42" to 40.8", and my hips from 42" to 41". I also lost 1.5 inches in my chest going from 44.5" to 43".
Overall I am making good progress. From what I have read, in the test group for Chalean Extreme many people made the most progress in the Push phase, which is up next. Instead of failing at 10-12 reps for each exercise, you fail between 6 and 8 reps. The goal of course to put on as much muscle as possible. Tomorrow is my rest day, so I will be doing X-Stretch, then Push Circuit 1 on Tuesday.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Burn Phase done...almost
I like the fact that until you get to 25 pounds you can adjust the weight in 2.5 pound increments. Then it goes from 25-50 in 5 lbs increments, then to 52.5. And for most people doing the CE or P90x workout, that will likely be plenty for nearly all the exercises. Plus I figure if I need more than that, I can get a couple 55 and 60 pound dumbbells in the future.
Throughout the Burn Phase I was able to increase the amount of weight I used on many of the exercises. Here is the Breakdown.
Burn 1 Start End
Sumo Squat with Hip Lift. 20lb 20lb
Lunge w/ posterior fly 7.5lb 10lb
Push Up w/ leg lift 11 12 (all on toes)
Dead lift w/ posterior fly 10lb 12.5lb
Lunge w/core rotation 17.5lb 20lb
Bench Press w/ leg lower 17.5lb 17.5lb
Squat w/ Side bend 17.5 lb 30lb
Forward lunge w/ post fly 10lb 10lb
Chest fly w/ Hip Lift 15lb 17.5lb
Burn 2
Sumo Squat w/ Bicep Curl 17.5lb 20lb
Lunge w/ tricep extension 10lb 12.5
Dead Lift Row 20lb 30lb
Sumo Squat w/ overhead
tricep extension 25lb 25lb
Dead lift w/ double row 25lb 25lb
Bowler's Lunge w/ row 20lb 20lb
Bicep Curl w/ abductor
balance 12.5lb 17.5lb
Forward lunge w/ double
row 20lb 25lb
Triple Threat Push Up 10 12 (6 on toes 6 on knees)
Burn 3
Sumo Squat w/ overhead
press 12.5lb 15lb
Lunge w/ calf raise 20lb 22.5lb
Squat w/ lateral raise 7.5lb 12.5lb
Lunge w/ frontal press 12.5lb 15lb
Squat w/ calf raise 20lb 30lb
Sumo Squat w/ Delt Raise 7.5lb 12.5lb
Squat w/ double overhead
press 15lb 15lb
Lunge w/ lateral raise 10lb 12.5lb
Sumo Squat w/ calf raise 20lb 30lb
While many of those weights are lighter than what you see a lot of people doing in the gym, when you do the reps as slowly as the program calls for...especially when you do not have anyone to spot you, you do not need massive amounts of weight to make progress. Had the Burn Circuit continued another week, I would have been able to increase the amount of weight on nearly every exercise. I can tell I made huge strength gains even just between the third and fourth weeks. I am excited for what the Push phase will bring.
Monday, February 2, 2009
Chalean Extreme End of Week 3
Tuesday: Burn/Push/Lean Circuit 1
Wednesday: Rest Day 1 (Alternating Yoga or Pilates in the morning and taekwondo class in the evening)
Thursday: Burn/Push/Lean Circuit 2
Friday: Burn Intervals and Burn Abs
Saturday: Burn/Push/Lean Circuit 3
Sunday: Burn it off and Recharge
Monday: Rest Day 2 (Usually doing X-Stretch from P90x)
Aside from the differences from P90x I mentioned in the earlier post, as you can see Chalean Extreme has two built in rest days. It sounds like those who have done P90x previously are working in extra cardio on one of the days, then taking the second one as an actual rest day. I am using taekwondo as my extra cardio for the week on Wednesday evenings.
Another difference I see from P90x is that I think Chalean Extreme is a little easier for beginners to start off on. There are more modified moves in the cardio programs to take the impact out, and the cardio programs are shorter than both plyometrics and kenpo-x. While some of the moves in Plyometrics are modified, it is still very hard to get through the entire hour, and is nearly impossible for a beginner. P90x does allow for swapping out Plyo with the Cardio-x DVD which is pretty low impact and less intense however. Either way you go, you are going to be getting a hell of a workout.
Saturday, January 31, 2009
Detour from P90x
I did end up buying my townhouse, and did continue on P90x. I ended up having to modify the program somewhat because I had to deal with tendinitis in my knee. Therefore, I was able to pretty much maintain my level of fitness, but did not make the kind of gains I wanted to. Plus, I did not follow a great nutrition program as strictly, which did not help my cause.
A few weeks ago I decided to purchase the new Chalean Extreme program from Beachbody. While my knee issues were resolved, I was getting somewhat bored with the P90x workouts, and wanted to change things up. I am just about done with the third week, and I am loving it so far. I will do a more detailed review of the program in later posts, but for those who are, or have done P90x, it is a great alternative, and in spite of what you may think, is not just for women.
Like P90x, it is a circuit training program where you are going from one exercise to the other with very little rest in between the moves. The one issue I have with it, is there are a few points where you can tell it was edited to make the breaks shorter and they are already onto the next move before you can get your weights ready. The routines are shorter than the P90x routines where the shortest one in P90x is about 45min, most Chalean routines are anywhere from just over 30 min, to about 50 minutes on the days where you do a couple different workouts. I am sure the reason for this is because on the lifting days you are expected to go to failure on every exercise whereas P90x, wants you to struggle, but not fail when you get to 8-10 or 12-15 reps.
I will go in depth on the routines and my experience with them more in later posts. I will try to keep more up-to-date. I may not post every day, but will every couple days or so.
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Ending Phase One
So far I have done the core synergistics, cardio, shoulders & arms, yoga, legs & back, kenpo and stretch workouts (and of course ab ripper). Although I have yet to get the full effect of the back workout since I am not doing pull ups yet. I like all the workouts, with yoga being my favorite non weight training routine. I like shoulders & arms and legs & back pretty much equally. I personally find ab ripper the most challenging workout. I can do more of it than initially, but I am still not able to get through it all without stopping. Luckily in the lean program I only do it twice a week. I am hoping by the time I do the classic version of the program I can do all reps for all the moves.
As I said in a previous post I am using the lean program as more of a maintenance phase until I move into my townhouse (in about a month) where I can go all out in all the workouts without worrying about the neighbors. Therefore, I am not following the nutrition plan 100%. I am following more of a "body for life" eating plan where I eat clean 6 days a week, and have a free day the 7th. Once I get into the classic program I will do my best to eat as clean as possible the entire 90 days.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Kenpo X
On one hand I am glad they included some form of martial arts into the overall program. On the other hand it is the hardest thing to pick up off a DVD without any kind of prior experience. I have helped teach taekwondo at a local community college for about 10 years and have seen a lot of people with no martial arts experience try to learn it from scratch. Needless to say people tend to run the gamut from having potential to be very good, to not being able to do the proverbial walk and chew gum at the same time thing.
Most of the moves in the Kenpo DVD are fairly basic. The first half of the workout focuses on punches, then the second half focuses on kicks and a few blocks. I think they were smart not trying to combine a lot of punching, kicking and blocking as connected movements. While the workout could have been more intense had they done so, those combinations are the hardest things to pick up for novices.
The only real critique I have of the workout is that the form of people in the video tend to get bad on some of the kicks. I think that has to do with the fact that they were doing the workout in regular shoes as opposed to bare feet or martial arts shoes. They also eliminated any pivoting from the kicks, which again may have lessened the intensity of the workout, but if it is done incorrectly can lead to serious injury.
Friday, June 13, 2008
P90X workouts
The main reason I am doing the lean program at this point is that I am living on a third floor apt so I cannot really do the full hour of plyo (which basically involves jumping around for the entire hour) and I did not want to start messing with the program the first time through. Also, I cannot put up a pull up bar because I cannot put any holes in the woodwork on my doors, so I am doing pull downs with resistance bands.
I am using the lean program to really maintain my current level of fitness until I can do the full classic program. I am buying a townhouse next month, and will then be able to do the regular program as round 2. That said, I am definitely making progress in terms of balance and flexibility which were my weak points before starting. While I am not making all of the strength gains that I am hoping to make once I start doing pull ups and adding the additional upper body workout, I am feeling it.
The first phase of the lean workout rotates Core, Cardio, Shoulders & Arms, Yoga, Legs and Back, Kenpo and Stretch as the optional seventh day. I really enjoy all the workouts. Core is definitely hard to start out with as the day 1 routine. In the classic program the first exposure to it is in the 4th week, where one has presumably become used to the style of the workouts, which may make it a little easier the first time out. On the other hand, I think I am making more progress with it than I would in the classic program because I do it once a week, plus get about 10 minutes worth of it in the Cardio workout.
I also love Yoga. I think it is the workout that people tend to dislike the most because of how long it is. It is an hour and a half long and is definitely hard as an introduction to Yoga. I had the benefit of taking classes at a studio a few years ago, so I was familiar with many of the moves before jumping into the workout. I have seen "reviews" around the Internet where people (mainly men) mock the inclusion of Yoga in the program because it is "not a real workout" or "for women". Anyone who has ever done Yoga, either the P90X version or elsewhere, knows the idiocy of those statements. When you are holding yourself in some of those stances/poses for 30 seconds to a minute I guarantee you will be shaking as much as in any weight training workout.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
P90 X Intro
Like nearly everyone I had seen the infomercial many times, but like many I tend to be skeptical of things hawked on late night TV. So I did some research on the Internet to find reviews of the program and found mainly positive reviews, and decided to purchase the program.
I will say right out of the gate, this program is not for everyone. If you are a person who casually works out when you have the time, are a "weekend warrior" or tend to start working out and slack off after a few weeks, this will be a complete waste of your time and money. Also, if you are not in decent shape to start with I would not suggest jumping into this. If you think you have the dedication to keep yourself on track working out at home, there are other programs that you can use to get started and work your way up to P90x. Otherwise, I would suggest joining a local gym and working with a trainer for a while (trust me you will learn a lot about how to exercise properly and a lot about how your body responds to exercise which will help you down the road). I personally think the best time to start P90x is when you get to the point where you would hate the thought of skipping a workout. Obviously life gets in the way, and you will likely miss a day sometime during the 90 days, but the closer you can get to completing the program on schedule the better.