All posts by x01509

Workout for Friday, 25 January

The accomplishment of today’s workout made me feel like a badass.  Not how I performed, or the feeling when I finished (although it’s always a good feeling).  No, this time getting started made me feel like a badass.  More than usual even.

Why?  Because I overcame golden excuses to bail out.  I motivated myself to go for my run, got down to the spot along the road where I usually warm up and found out that my Garmin was dead.  Boom.  Excuse to turn around and go home.

Instead, I pulled my phone out of my Spibelt and downloaded MapMyRide.  Now, I’d had this app on my phone previously, so I had an account already, but I’d never used it so I deleted it a while back.  Now, I put it back on my phone, logged in and for the first time ever I used it to track a workout.  Boom.  Excuse eliminated.

So I put my phone away, fired up my bluetooth headphones and took off with MapMyRide running.  Aaaannnnnd before going 600m I promptly found that my planned run route was flooded.  Four to six inches of water covering a good 50m of road.  Boom.  Excuse to turn around and go home.

Instead I turned around, ran down a road I’d never run down before and connected up to my planned route a little further down where there was no water.  Boom.  Excuse eliminated.

Right around that point is when my bluetooth headphones and phone music playlist combined to a) be uncomfortable and unstable [the headphones] and b) play crappy music, not follow the playlist and generally avoid effective user interface (phone).  Boom.  Excuse to turn around and go home.

Instead I shut off the music, put the headphones in my pocket and agreed with myself to run without musical accompaniment.  Boom.  Excuse eliminated.

Now, let’s face it.  On a badass scale of 1 to 10, overcoming these “obstacles” and doing a 5K run is probably somewhere between 0.5 and 0.8.  But you know what?  I don’t care.  I did a workout in the face of numerous easy outs and did the right thing when it would have been easy to wuss out and do nothing.  That’s enough badassery to celebrate.

Here are some screenshots from MapMyRide.  I am considering using this a little more to see what kind of functionality it has.  Especially since I routinely leave my Garmin turned on when I come home and don’t find out until I try to turn it on before I start running.  It does have more adds and falderal than Garmin Connect but it might be worth trying.  It’s clearly worth having around as a back-up data collection method.

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Motivation: Beyond the catchphrase

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This is part of an ongoing series where I take a look at motivational images, phrases and soundbites culled from “fitness motivation” websites and other sources.  I break them down and try to figure out what makes them effective or ineffective spurs to motivation for me.

This particular poster is one of my favorites because it speaks to one of my especial weaknesses.  I am easily distracted and easily addicted.  This is a bad combination.  More times than I care to remember I’ve gone into an evening (or a full weekend day) with the intention to workout, gotten distracted by a TV show/computer game/book/other thing and turned around to find that the entire evening (or day) is gone and I haven’t worked out (or done anything else important or productive).

Time flies.  Sometimes we waste time without really being aware of it.  Other times we intentionally avoid doing things we know we should do, such as workout.  Other times we are legitimately busy and have unavoidable obligations that consume large amounts of time (although this is less often the case than most of us portray to others).  In any case, it is really easy to cut out working out.  In fact most of the time I bet it’s the first thing to get squeezed out.  Here’s the thing though: when I don’t workout, my life falls apart.  I get stressed, I start eating badly, I don’t sleep well, I let other important habits (cleaning, grocery shopping) fall by the wayside.  I get grouchy.

The key?  MAKE the time to workout.  But what does that mean?  It’s not as if you can just wave your hand and add hours to the day.  You can’t just set your clock back three hours and give yourself wasted time back.  “Hey, boss, I’m supposed to make time to workout so I’ll be coming in at ten from now on”?  Probably not.  And you – or at least me – aren’t going to quickly and easily stop doing the time wasting activities (TV, computer games, Internet).  Some people will same “time management”.  But that’s a stupid term.  You can’t manage time.  You don’t manage fifteen minutes and turn it into 30 minutes.  There is only doing something or not doing something.

So “making time to workout” simply means “making yourself workout”.  Making yourself DO it.  At first, particularly if I’m in a bad rhythm, this can be difficult, even ridiculous.  For example, after Christmas and New Year when I got out of my workout routine and had to start making time for exercise, I didn’t do it by eliminating books and computer games.  I didn’t do it by getting up early or skipping out on work.  But I had to do it.  So I made the time by just doing it no matter what or when.  9pm?  Doesn’t matter, go workout.  Tired and have to get up early tomorrow?  Doesn’t matter, go workout.  Overslept on Saturday and now it’s 95 degrees and sunny?  Doesn’t matter, go workout.

So at first, I’m making myself workout at whatever time is available, even if it’s inconvenient or ridiculous.  But eventually, usually within a week or two, I get tired of the ridiculousness and I start MAKING that time more conveniently, meaning I start to do my workouts at a more convenient time in place of other activities.  “Self”, I say to myself, “you know you’re going to make yourself workout at some ridiculous hour anyway, so go do it now, right when you get home.  That other stupid stuff you’ve been wasting time on [computer games, music practice, sleep, etc.] is a lot easier to do at 10 o’clock at night, so go workout when it’s more sensible.”  Eventually, a combination of workout routine, improved fitness, and complete fatigue force the elimination of less worthy or less productive and rewarding activities.  Boom.  Time made for exercise.

[The poster clearly says “Hasfit.com” on it, but frankly I’ve never been to that website.  I got this image from fitness related Tumblr – don’t remember which one – that is just a vast stream of random images – mostly either lame platitudes or unattributed quotes or pictures of bodybuilders and figure competitors.]

 

Workout for Thursday, 24 January

A nice little spin on the cycle trainer tonight.  No screen caps since my Garmin is (as usual) being tempermental about uploading and transferring to Garmin Connect.  Spinning on the cycle trainer is approximately 500 times more boring and mind-numbing than running on a treadmill or swimming laps.  It is absolutely critical to maintaining good mental health (not to mention for being able to stay on long enough to achieve a fitness objective) to have some form of entertainment to get you through.

TV series on Netflix or DVD are great.  Right now I don’t have any of those but what I do have and really enjoy are audio books.  I’ve always been a fan of audio books for my long runs or rides when I’m training alone.  Same on the trainer.  I use the Audible app on my iPhone and a pair of bluetooth headphones so I don’t have to deal with cables.  Plus it means that I can put my phone on a table or something and not have to put it anywhere near my grotesquely sweaty body.

So far I’ve almost always just done boring steady state riding on my trainer.  Occasionally, I will do some kind of interval riding (warm-up, 2 min hard, 5 min recovery, repeat 4 or 5 times, etc.) but nothing intelligently designed or structured.  Just messing about.   I actually own a cycling trainer DVD (no idea where it came from) but it’s still in the cellophane.  One of these days soon I’m going to pull it out and give it a whirl.  I’d like to introduce some variety in my cycling workouts and milk a little more fitness value out of them than just basic cardio and calorie burning.

 

 

Workout for Wednesday, 23 January

A nice 5-mile jog tonight.  Nothing special to mention.  I did wear my Vibram Five Fingers.  I hadn’t been wearing them much in the months leading up to Christmas because I was getting some muscle strain in my feet and Achilles tendon.  So 5-miles is the longest distance I’ve run in them in over 2.5-months.  Plus I wore them on a shorter run last week.  Which meant that in the morning after this run I was hobbling around a little.

Once I got warmed up for the day though I felt pretty good.  I plan to wear my running shoes for most of my running mileage but I’ll still rotate my Five Fingers in for some of my short to middle distance easy runs.  I’m not sure if or how much I want to try them on interval runs.  I’ll have to do some testing and decide.

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Workout for Tuesday, January 22

Just a short swim workout tonight.  I was going to knock out a nice, easy 30-minute mile but I didn’t get started until late (thanks middle of the evening conference call for work!) and I just didn’t feel like grinding out another 10-minutes.

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Two notes on tonight’s workout: 1) one of the main reasons that I’ve gone back to my self-regulated and designed, multi-sport, everyday, patented alternating cardio workout plan instead of using another pre-fab run program is for the flexibility it gives me to adjust to my real life schedules and also to regulate my effort to how I’m feeling physically.  2) I need to figure out how my Garmin Swim works.  I really like it, and I’m using it and it’s FAIRLY easy to use . . . but somehow I didn’t “end” my workout until 15-minutes after I stopped swimming.  So, yeah.  Need to work on that.

In closing:

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I’m not exactly sure what the take away is from this visual aid, and I sure as hell don’t have a plan to do anything with this data yet but “we’re paying for this stuff; look busy, will ya?”.

Cheers.

Workout for Monday, 21 January

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Another 8 x 400m run today.  I was much more moderate in my interval pace than the last time I did this workout.  This translated to a more even and consistent run but MUCH slower interval times.

This is going to be my bread and butter speed workout for the foreseeable future so I’m going to dial in the exact right amount of effort and use it to both improve and gauge my progress.

The whole story:

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Workout for Sunday, 20 January

. . . was a 40-minute spin on the cycle trainer.  I’d love to go out and actually, you know, ride my bike outside, but my “neighborhood” is awful for cycling.  I have to ride for 30-45 minutes just to get to moderately not-miserable cycling route.  I’m thinking about making some destination visits incorporating morning bike rides.  Need to do some planning.

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Workout rhythm is officially (for the most part) re-established.  Mindset is significantly improved.  I’ve got a couple of exciting ideas in gestation.  I was going to kick two of them of in conjunction tomorrow but the technical aspect of it got the better of me.  Once I get that part of it figured out I’ll post it on here.

Workout for Saturday, 19 January

I got up early and went for my run IN THE MORNING.  Pretty big deal.  I vastly prefer working out in the morning for a variety of reasons, but with my commute and some living arrangement considerations it is very difficult for me to do any significant exercise before work during the week.  Still, it’s so awesome to start my day off with my workout and not have to worry about squeezing it in later that I’m going to continue to play around and see if I can do it more consistently.

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So a nice easy run.  I went for time today instead of a fixed distance.  Not sure why, I just felt like it.  But I think I’m going to continue to mix it up and run sometimes for distance and sometimes for time.  Changing the target metric of your run changes how you approach it.  One year I ran with a good friend and we used a marathon prep program that was entirely time based rather than distance and it was fantastic.  I did some of the best running and got into some of the best shape of my life during that time.  Part of it was having a strong, consistent training partner but a I think a big part of it was the way that a time based program is elastic and auto adapts to your fitness and fatigue levels.

 

Workout for Friday, 18 January

Another good swim with my Garmin Swim (great Christmas present!).  I really like having swimming in my workout rotation because it’s a great workout (cardiovascular and muscular endurance) while being incredibly low impact (at least the way I do it).  It really helps me increase my overall activity level without increasing the impact and wear & tear on my body.

And the Garmin Swim is fantastic.  I haven’t messed with the drills mode yet, but for lap swimming I love it.  Just click it on and start swimming.  It keeps track of the time and the distance and the number of laps like magic.  So much easier than using my Garmin 310XT or a regular Timex Ironman watch.

Here’s some shots of the data it collects:

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Now I just have to figure out what the hell these graphs are trying to tell me.  Anyone out there speak “Garmin Swim Data”?

Workout for Thursday, 17 January

Wow.  That was not good.  So as I’ve mentioned I took about 3 weeks off from regular workouts.  So yesterday I went out for a run – my third consecutive workout in a row – and decided to do some intervals.  I was GOING to do 6 x 400m but got lazy pushing the buttons on my Garmin (don’t judge) and left it at 8 x 400m instead.

No big deal right?  I’ve been doing all kind of crazy interval workouts over the past three months for my modified-5K program.  Wrong!  My legs were a little stiff and sore already just from cycling the night before (sad, considering how easy a spin it was) and the 8 x 400m was way harder than it should have been.  6 x 400m would have been fine.  Plus I went out way too hard considering what I was working with.

Here’s the proof:

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But at least I got out there.  It was a struggle . . . again.  I think for now I’m going to stick with a cardio routine (swim, run, bike, run, repeat) until I’m back in a good rhythm.  Then I’ll start to develop a more focused regimen and up the intensity.

Don’t worry, I haven’t forgotten about my 375 CPFT goal (it is after all the name of the blog).  I’m just reevaluating the plan to get there based on my experiences prior to my unintentional Christmas layoff.  I’ve got some interesting ideas.  Stay tuned for more motivational and fitness goodness.