The Actionaut

January 27, 2010

Don’t fear what you value

Filed under: Fitness — Philippe Til @ 12:09 PM

Animals don’t think, not smaller brained ones, at least.

In his essay on the physiological effects of stress (Stanford Report, March 7, 2007), Robert Sapolsky discusses how in the wild, larger brained mammals suffer a form of stress similar to ours. Baboons, for instance, whose society is broken down into classes that mirror ours, are virtually predator free. They spend 12 hours sleeping, 3 hours looking for food, and the remaining 9 hours of their day in their head. Same with elephants. In these animal societies, signs of psychosocial disorders like depression have been observed.

In our health and wellness, everything boils down to stress management. Our initial interaction with our environment is controlled by our Autonomous Nervous System (ANS). However, under chronic stress, the Hypothalamus Pituitary Endocrine (HPE) axis takes over. Stress shuts down the thyroid, which is not needed for survival, ultimately. Enter “I have a thyroid disorder” excessive weight gain. Stress also shuts down your reproductive system (explaining early menopause, as well as andropause in men) and disturbs your digestive system (enter acid reflux disease).

As I said: animals don’t think. Humans make up stories only so they can justify their actions, especially when they think they “know what their body wants”. Craving refined sugars, buttery garlic bread rolls is nothing but a “story”.

Understanding that is a key factor in staying fit and healthy. Overweight people who are not aware of that are sabotaging their present and future health prospect because without a solid training regimen, they are not building organ and muscle cells, rather fat cells, which promotes hunger.

Training begets lactic acid, which begets production of human growth hormone, which in turn breaks down fat cells to save the muscles being “grown”. HGH is a protein-sparing hormone.

While training is a form of stress, it is a positive one. However, the prospect of training can be daunting for some, or boring for others. Finding a good coach who can make it fun will allow you to change your perception. You don’t need to be running a marathon when you can simply experience the joy of movement. Modify how you view a training session if a coach is not available by creating value in your activity (like learning a skill, having fun and doing something good for you, interacting socially with others etc.) instead of generating fear (“this is hard”, “it hurts”, “I’m not conditioned”…)

January 23, 2010

Capoeira Workshop

Filed under: Fitness,Training — Tags: , , , — Philippe Til @ 3:40 PM

This is a short video of the latest beginning Capoeira workshop taught by Eric Marinho at Action Fitness on January 23, 2010.

Capoeira is a Brazilian martial art, dated over 500 years, practiced by slaves who disguised the fighting movements as a dance. Eric’s approach to teaching Capoeira is about personal flow and energy, allowing oneself to follow one’s instinct rather than to stay in a rigid structure. This freedom of movement promotes not only a healthy corporal expression through movement, but it delivers an amazing workout which incorporates flexibility, cardio, speed, agility and body weight strength, all through natural movement patterns. Yet another way to become “Wild Fit”!

January 13, 2010

Training Kids

Filed under: Fitness,Training — Tags: , , — Philippe Til @ 7:23 AM

I am in the process of writing a new series of articles that follow natural movement patterns and will be interviewing the founder, Tara Wood, as well as program director of Wildfitness, Lee Saxby. More info on them in the upcoming articles.

As a teaser, I am posting the question I asked them individually: how would you train kids, how young? It seems like preventing the societal inhibition of natural instincts needs to start ASAP!
Social skills and physical development at once

The Answer To Training Kids is:
Lee Saxby: I wouldn’t “train” young kids. I would let them play in progressively more
challenging movement scenarios/environment.

Tara Wood: the younger the kids are
when they start moving naturally, the less coaching they will need.
The training could be much more in a playful context where kids
naturally do the movements we were designed for.

Makes perfect sense, doesn’t it? Play time teaches kid social interaction, assertiveness, builds character intuitively. You can see a child’s temperament through actions. There are programs out there that focus too much on work and practice, taking the fun out that important (and ultimately very short) stage of a person’s development. After all, you don’t see lions doing pull-ups and sprinting without purpose, but you see cubs play-fight, pounce and have fun while slowly turning into deadly predators.
From cuddly cubs to awesome predators

January 11, 2010

Glad I screwed up!

Filed under: Health,Training,coaching — Tags: , , , — Philippe Til @ 5:05 PM

Today, as I was thinking of the theme for my next series of “pillar” articles (translation: procrastinating with writer’s block and “blog mastermind” homework), I redirected my attention to a home project instead.

A good blogger is supposed to publish content daily, or almost. Since there are so many of us out there, I didn’t want to spam the Web with extra stuff just for the sake of blogging. But, like Archimedes dropping his soap, or an apple falling on Newton’s head, I had my own “Eureka!” moment! Stay with me, it’ll make sense and relate to fitness quite obviously!

How lack of focus can take you off track:
In preparation for the arrival of our first baby in May, my wife and I are finally getting some grown-up furniture and organizing the place we moved into 16 months ago. Today, I started to build our new bedroom furniture. Towards the end, upon screwing in the back panel of a dresser, I realized the top panel was facing the wrong way. At first, like any red-blooded male, I was going to jam the sucker in, figuring all “ready to assemble” furniture is cockeyed anyway. The mistake occurred when I looked at my watch and was going to beat the 90 minute mark some other guy had as his record (based on his review of the dresser online, which took him 2-3 hours alone, 90 minutes with his wife’s help). My focus shifted to the record time, instead of the work. Well, undoing my work and fixing it took an extra 30 minutes. And, there was no way around it, I HAD to step backwards.

How it obviously relates to fitness:
Most guys don’t follow directions. Once we’re on a roll, we keep at it. Had I looked carefully at the pictures in the manual, I would have avoided the error. Also, the manual advises you to read it cover to cover before assembling (something I venture to say no one does). And once you screw it up, you could keep things the way they are. The dresser would probably hold. Until it decides to collapse from the load it’s meant to carry because of the “misalignment”. Even the instruction were missing some information I had to figure out for myself (using this thing called common sense). The lack of concentration caused an error in judgment, leading to misalignment, at which point I had two choices: work with the jammed panel, like a jammed vertebra or pulled muscle, or go back, fix the issue even if it slowed me down, until everything was corrected in the “body” the the dresser I built.

Moral of the story:
Follow instructions before starting a program. Make sure your head is in it for the right reasons (here, to build a dresser, not beat some other guy’s record for assembling one!). Even instructions from a book are not 100% reliable. I’m no furniture builder, but I am a great trainer. Wanna get fit? Get a trainer, even if only to get you going. We’re not a luxury. We’re here to help so you don’t end up having to backtrack and waste time.

January 5, 2010

Carnegie-style Fitness

Filed under: coaching — Tags: , , — Philippe Til @ 1:21 PM

Happy New Year 2010!

I’ve been reading this book by Dale Carnegie called How To Win Friends and Influence People.

I brought it with me to Kauai as leisure and education reading and instantly, I saw how I can apply it and share it with others, regardless of your profession. Just as I posted in a newsletter a couple of years back (which I will update here at some point), I will list some of the principles taught by Canegie and apply them to fitness (as a coach or as a client/practitioner) and let you apply it to your life. It’s a fun exercise for the brain and may affect your mindset positively too :)

How to Handle People:
1) Don’t criticize, condemn or complain: when you see a display of bad form, focus on what’s done correctly, praise it and adjust. If someone trains in a style that isn’t what you learned or believe is not beneficial (RKC vs Xfit “swing”, Muay Thai vs. Taekwondo, whatever your personal view…), praise the differences, don’t bash them.
2) Give Honest and Sincere Appreciation: don’t give lip service or patronize. Flattery is not always honest. It seems like you have a motive. Appreciation is genuine, subtle, understated.
3) Arouse in the other person an eager want: actions are better performed when they come from within oneself. Don’t tell somebody what to do. Instead, present the action and its benefits in a light that makes the other person want to do it. I recall offering the option to perform an exercise with a heavier weight, knowing my client was capable, but didn’t push her, having done a great workout already. Letting her decide at that point to “go for it”, having instilled confidence in her, made her enjoy the drill immensely more and she left with a feeling of accomplishment.

How to Make People Like You:
1) Become genuinely interested in other people: learn their likes. Ask them about them, and they’ll open up and talk. My job as a coach is not about me, it’s about changing something for the better in my clients. I’m not there to brag about my skills, I’m there to see what they are like and how my skills can benefit them, not me.
2) Smile: change the world one smile at a time. A secret to longer life (certainly a pleasant one). The neurolinguistic programming of smiling directly affects your output. Smile when on the phone, people perceive it. Do it now and see how it feels :)
3) Remember people’s name: it’s the sweetest sound in any language. It engages you and connects you to them, strengthens your bond.
4) Be a good listener: encourage others to talk about themselves. Goes with #1 above. The greatest conversations are usually one way, when you ask about something the other person is excited about and just take it all in. I know it works when done to me (I can talk about my job for hours!!)
5) Talk in terms of the other person’s interests: here also, don’t push your POV, but maybe include it and connect it to their needs. I had people afraid of working with kettlebells who became addicts after I showed them how beneficial they are.
6) Make the other person feel important, and do it sincerely: talk to people about them, and they will listen for hours. Each client you work with should enrich your life as much as you improve theirs.

Remember also, we’re wrong more often than we’re right. We don’t have all the answers and even when we think we do, we should let others the right to have their opinion. Let them explain it, don’t antagonize them. Who here likes to be embarrassed by being proven wrong? I’ve done it myself where I knew I was right, but made the other person feel small and chipped at their dignity. Let people come to their conclusions, and you may turn them around, especially if you appreciate their thought process and recognize their individual knowledge. Educate, don’t admonish!

More “Carnegie Fitness” in a later blog! Then, Miyamoto Musashi’s 9 Principles reviewed!

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