Archive for the ‘blog’ Category

You Need This

Thursday, May 13th, 2010






This posting comes from the “Run Out and Buy This Even Though I’m Not a Paid Representative” department here at MOVE.

I was introduced to this by my lovely sister in law last year and have sworn by it ever since. Kettlebellers and gym warriors listen up. Sore? Tight? I have 2 words for you.

Snap Heat.

Snap Heat is a beautiful innovation by someone smarter than I am. It’s a heating pad that’s filled with some kind of saline solution. There’s also a magic button inside the pad. When you press the magic button, mystical crystals begin to form and spontaneously generate heat that delivers Asgardian healing to your weary muscles.

Ok, so it’s a measured chemical reaction that delivers an immediate and steady heat that lasts for what seems like a couple of hours. Here’s the beautiful part, when you’re done and it’s gone cold, drop it in some boiling water, which resets the chemical reaction and softens the hardened crystals so the pad is reset and ready to go again.

Trust me. I’ve done the Tiger Balm patches, electric pads, microwaved towels…nothing is as consistent of a heat for as long without being plugged into the wall as this is. They’ve got different sizes and shapes for shoulders, back, neck etc. Go check it out. Thank me later.

SnapHeat.com

A Word on the Soda Tax

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010


You know, my lovely wife, Sherrie, made a great observation this morning. It was another one of those don’t-attack-the-working-class-by-taxing-out-sugary-beverages commercials. Says Sherrie “What? So it was ok when tobacco was the big baddie, but it’s not so funny when it’s your Coca Cola?” And she’s totally right. Much like tobacco in the very earliest days of of the anti smoking campaigns, the culture around drinking sodas hasn’t shifted yet. In 5, maybe 10 years it will though. We know sodas are linked to obesity and all kinds of associated diseases. But like most truths, it’s still in the transition from an intellectual understanding to real acceptance. What would you do if Katie Couric or Brian Williams lit up a Camel on the nightly news? Edward R Murrow did it all the time. But it was accepted then. These days we see Coke, Pepsi & Snapple advertisements everywhere. With as much sugar as 6 fudgecicles, I wonder how long it’s going to take for people to fight for an R rating on all movies that show Snapple Iced Tea consumption like they’re doing with cigarettes now? How long until the average joe out there starts to understand that getting your kids started on soda at a young enough age that they’re effectively hooked for the rest of their lives isn’t all that much difference from a health point of view than giving them their first smoke? How long before we get over it, start taxing the foods and beverages that are killing us get them out of our kitchens?

Now You’ve Gone and Gotten Me Started…

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

See, this is what happens when you give me free reign enough to tell you what really pisses me off about my industry. And now you & whoever else is unlucky enough to bump into this blog today are going to have to sit through this little diatribe because of it.

When blessed with the machines, the beautifully efficient kinetic systems that God and evolution bestowed on us, what have we done as professionals? The human body is a singularly elegant machine. It has evolved over the entire course of human existance on this planet to be a streamlined and smoothly integrated series of energy supply, motors, levers and receptors tk meet the challenges of our every day. While we may not be done growing yet, right now we are at the momentary pinnacle of our evutionary journey. When given a task, we instinctually find the most efficient way to accomplish that task. If we can’t accomplish it, the body grows, learns and adapts to be able to accomplish it next time. The whole working together to accomplish the singular.

So what have we done? We’ve clogged the very spaces meant to develop our physical selves into their utmost with machines of inefficiency, machines that break our beautifully efficient and inteligent system into parts that are forced to function unnaturally independant of each other. We take nature’s greatest, smartest creation and shackle it. We make sure that the body is as comfortable and relaxed as possible to move one joint or one combination of joints in isolation of all else in order to get stronger. We deconstruct a system meant to function in harmony with its self, train the parts to move in isolation and then expect the total machine to work better when we put the whole thing back together again. What the hell?

This is why MOVE. This is why kettlebells, interval training, olympic lifting and all those damn burpees. Sitting in cars, offices Cybex, and Nautilus machines has created such a disonnect that we’ve forgotten what the last umpteen million years have taught us. We have to learn to function in our own bodies, in the real world again. Stand up, pick something with some heft to it and get moving!

Here’s a thought: How long have you been doing the same arm curls and leg press machines? How long have you been trying to lose that last 5lbs or get rid of tht back pain?

How’s that working out for you?

Staying the Course part 3

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Last point on this subject.


Set an event date for yourself.

For me theres always light at the end of the tunnel in the form of a competition date. I know once March 27th gets here, I’m going to be able to cut back and relax for a couple of weeks. American Kettlebell Club National Championships happen this weekend, so I’ve been training like a madman for 3 months now. But theres an end date, a time to recover coming up that sustains me.

If youre endlessly killing yourself in the gym on a punishing routine day after day, its going to wear you down eventually. So set yourself a date to hit an interim goal. Once you get there, go out and celebrate. Have a drink or a burger. Then, a few days later, you jump back in for the next segment.

How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. How do you win a national title or lose those pounds? One bit at a time. Give yourself permission to sit back and appreciate all the work you’ve done every now and then.

Staying the Course

Thursday, March 18th, 2010


Maintaining focus and consistency in training is all about finding the pieces and elements that excite you. And that can be extremely difficult, especially now, after such a long, difficult winter. (Those of you in San Diego, at lest just try to imagine that there is a thing called cold.), day in and day out in the gym, run after run. Staying on course is tough!

Over the next couple of entries we’re going to take a look at how taking tips from competitive athletes can apply to keeping you on track.

1. DO NOT BREAK YOUR RHYTHM: With everyone as busy as we are, its hard enough just finding those first couple of hours to get into our training routines. Well, once you find those hours, keep them, make them regular. If Monday at 7:30pm and that early Thursday spin class worked last week, hit them again this week and make dates for yourself. Make them regular anchor points in your week that you can look forward to doing something good for yourself. They’re dates for which canceling and rescheduling is not an option. As soon as I skip one of my mid week morning workouts, I know next week, that same question is going to creep into my mind and ultimately I’m going to end up losing that regular session all together.



Don’t do it to yourself. Get regular and stay there!




Special Edition How To Video: Home Made Indian Club

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Tip & Technique Video: Bilateral KB Jerk

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

Countdown

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

88 Days to Memorial Day and the unofficial start of summer….

Thank God. No. Seriously. Thank God. In a season that brought us the snowiest February on record for New York City…EVER, thank God summer is on its way.

What are you doing to get ready? What kind of goals have you set for your summer?

Think back to the New Year’s work we were doing. Ask yourself what you want to accomplish in your own fitness/athletics/wellness. Then look at what is the one better choice you can make for yourself each day (doesn’t have to be the same one every day) to get yourself there.

You pack a sandwich for work instead of running doen to Au Bon Pain. You park your car at the far end of the Costco parking lot. You take the stairs.You run 5 miles instead of 4 tonight at the gym. Whatever. Find one thing you can do for yourself, one thing a day. You’ll be surprised how fast it gets you where you want to be without all that broken resolution guilt.

STAND UP!

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

This is huge and I’m not even going to lie. The excerpts quoted below are taken directly from a WebMD article that can be found in its entirety here. They say this better than I could.
http://www.webmd.com/fitness-exercise/news/20100119/prolonged-sitting-boosts-bad-health

That being said, a new study just came out from the British Journal of Sports Medicine. It suggests “that people who sit still for prolonged periods of time — such as desk workers or couch potatoes — have a higher risk of disease than those who move a muscle every now and then in a non-exercise manner.”

There’s a new definition for sedentary lifestyle we have to consider.
“Prolonged sitting promotes a lack of whole-body muscle movement, which the Swedish-based researchers say is the more correct way to define sedentary behavior.”

Even if you exercise, you may be leading a sedentary lifestyle. “… the research team proposes that sedentary behavior is instead a distinct class of behaviors, unrelated to a lack of exercise, that boost bad health. Behaviors can include habits like TV watching…A woman’s risk of metabolic syndrome, precursor to diabetes and heart disease, jumps 26% for every extra hour she sits in front of the TV.” “Whole-body muscular inactivity associated with prolonged sitting has also been strongly linked to obesity and even certain types of cancer.”

Dude, kick that office chair out and trade in that desk for a tall drafting table.

Stuck in the Middle

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

First off, Happy Valentine’s Day lovers.


Ok, that’s as warm and fuzzy as I get. Enjoy.

With the present holiday as an exception, this is my absolute 100% least favorite time of year. Any little novelty that can be found for my in winter is long worn out and the promise of springtime warmth still feels like a distant tease. Life is lived like a mole, heading to work before the sun comes up, coming back after it’s down, never seeing the sun. All you want to do is sit in the apartment with your favorite tasty beverage and close your eyes until the plowed snow drifts outside disappear.

Which doesn’t work for my training at all.

Late winter can be the downfall of so many training programs. With the shiny newness worn off the resolutions and Memorial Day still being so far off, it’s easy to lose ground on those fitness gains we fought so hard for.

Don’t give in guys. Do not give in. Remember what I said back in early January about making one better choice for yourself every day. Keep rolling with that. Make the one better choice to get yourself engaged in some kind of physical exertion today. Don’t let all that sweat and those tears (I’ve seen you shed them) be spent for nothing! Keep Going!

Besides, how good’s that going to feel when everybody else is freaking out about the 10 lbs they have to lose by beach time and the only thing you’re worried about is how to shave another 10 seconds off your half mile sprint interval?

MOVE guys!