Thursday, September 30, 2010

Thursday

Deload continues.  Today was more of the same from Tuesday, only an upper body version.  Lighter weights, and lots of NWA and Public Enemy.

Bench: 185x5x3

TRX Rows: 4x10
w/
Dips: 4x10

Facepulls: 3x15
w/
Band Pushdowns: 3x15

Band Pull Aparts: 2x20

I'm feeling pretty good after this deload week.  Definitely ready to SFW next week.  Buuuuut first, this weekend is Carroll University's Homecoming.  The only alumni activities I will be partaking in is drinking in the parking lot, pissing in the art building, and getting sauced at the bars.  I'm also hoping to see a lot of friends I don't see on a regular basis.  It's going to be magical.  Shit, I might even try to get my hands on a bottle of Night Train for old time's sake.

Song of the Day:

"That Night Train is a mean wine." -Blues Brothers

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Tuesday

Deload this week. Didn't really have a plan, just went in and did whatever my heart fancied. I've got a little more stress than I normally do right now (goddam Packers). Only one thing to do in that situation...blast some punk rock with some NWA and Public Enemy sprinkled in and get the fuck after it.

Pause Squat: 135x5; 185x5; 225x5x3

I paused for about a two count at the bottom of each rep. I might add these in to help with strength out of the hole. We'll see.

Deadlift Carry and Load: 155x1; 265x1; 308x6

I loaded a bar on the turf. I put two pulling blocks that are just below my knee in height ten yards away. I then picked up the bar, walked it the ten yards, set it on the blocks, came around to the other side of the bar, picked it up, and walked it back to the starting point. It was more of a grip and cardio challenge than anything

Slide Board Leg Curls: 3x15
w/
DB Arm Curls: 3x12

This next part will make some people happy. I put my old football cleats on and went to the turf and did about twenty minutes of route running. Joe and Matt play for a local semi-pro football team and have been in my ear about playing for them. I may or may not be getting the itch. Time will tell.

Song of the Day:

"It is foolish to pretend that one is fully recovered from a disappointed passion. Such woulds always leave a scar." -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Saturday

Log Clean and Press: 5x5 ended with 160ish

Bent Row: 3x6 @ 260ish

Lateral Raise: 3x10

Band Pulls: 3x30

Wrist Curls: 2x25

I"m going to deload next week.  I'm still a touch sore from squatting on Tuesday.  This is one week before I had hoped to plug a deload in but it's ok.  No big problem.  Everything felt pretty good except I'm feeling a pinch in my lower left back.  I think my glutes are just tight and it's causing a little irritation in my sciatic nerve.  Just need to stretch and roll it.  Time for football and food.

Song of the Day:

“Thy fate is the common fate of all; Into each life some rain must fall." -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Thursday, September 23, 2010

200th Post

Blogger tells me this is the 200th post of 200 Pounds Is 200 Pounds.  Thanks everyone for all the support and visits.  I hope to keep doing this for as long as people keep enjoying it.  Again, if there are any subjects or if you have any particular questions, whatever they may be, that you'd like to see discussed please leave them in the comments.

Today was a bench day.  I definitely don't get as excited about these days as I do for squat days.  I think this is part of my problem.  I need an intensity and attitude adjustment when it comes to benching.  It's all mental which hopefully isn't too hard to fix.  You never know what's going on up there.

Bench: 265x3

DB Bench: 80sx10, 90sx8, 100sx6
w/
Sgl. Arm Row: up to 120sx15

TRX Inverted Row: 2x15
w/
Band Pull Aparts: 2x20

Piston Triceps: 2x20 each arm
w/
TRX Arm Curl: 2x12

Totally wiped after this.  I didn't stop sweating for about an hour after I was finished.  I needed a towel just to keep my face dry.  Overall a decent session.  Not the best but it'll do for now.

Song of the Day:

Who is not satisfied with himself will grow, who is not sure of his own correctness will learn many things" -Chinese Proverb

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Overtraining and Central Nervous Fatigue

The idea of overtraining with a resulting decrease in performance is not a new phenomenon.  Russian scientists have been researching ways of staving it off for decades (1).  Overtraining is also relatively easy to recognise as long as you know what you are looking for.  Recognizing the symptoms is the easy part.  Identifying the physiological processes that cause it is a bit more tricky.  First the easy part.

Signs and Symptoms of Overtraining

There are two different types of recognizable overtraining, A-overtraining and B-overtraining (1).  Both have different accompanying symptoms.  A-overtraining is much tougher to recognize since the symptoms are less drastic and not easily noticeable (1).  B-overtraining, however, is easy to recognize.  There are many noticeable symptoms involving different physiological and psychological markers.  Among them are: increase in blood pressure, impaired coordination, decrease in weight, loss of vigor, chronic fatigue, mood swings, lack of motivation, reduced appetite, increased recovery time, decrease in immunity, sleep disturbances, and an elevated resting heart rate (1, 2, 4, 6).

Causes

The causes of overtraining are as varied as the signs and symptoms.  In reviewing the research it seems that the causes and effects become a cycle that can get out of hand of left unchecked.  Much research has been done on the oxidative stresses placed on the body during exercise.  While this is true and is necessary in order for the body to adapt, there is evidence that a decrease in the body's ability to handle this stress can lead to overtraining syndrome (OTS) (6).  When this happens there is often a decrease in performance as mentioned above.  While getting enough antioxidants through the diet to supplement the body's own stores is important, there is not sufficient evidence to suggest supra maximal antioxidant supplementation (9).  This is not as cut and dried as it seems.  In my opinion when one does not put as much effort into rest and recovery as they do into their actual exercise regime this sets them up to not be able to handle the oxidative stress and the accompanying OTS.

There has also been some research done on neurotransmitters in the brain.  Researchers hypothesise that when there is an increase in 5-HT (serotonin) there is a hastening of fatigue in the muscles, and vise versa.  The research that I have found has been limited to acute bouts of exercise rather than the accumulative effects of a long term exercise regime.  Again, this is not as cut and dried as it seems.  There are many different mechanisms at play here since there are many different systems that go into brain function.  Due to this it can be difficult to pinpoint the exact cause of OTS (7).

To be honest I couldn't care less what chemicals in my body are involved in the cause of the OTS.  What concerns me is what chemicals are effected by the OTS.

Consequences of Overtraining

This is probably the number one reason I am going to put more time into my recovery.  Many studies have shown that overtraining in both men and women causes a decrease in leutinizing hormone (2, 3, 4, 6, 8).  This hormone is central in creating sex hormones in both sexes.  In females decreased estrogen often leads to and decrease in body fat and amenorrhea, or a loss of menstruation.  In men it means a decrease in testosterone.  With this comes a decreased ability to build muscle mass, muscle catabolism, loss of sex drive, and an overall loss of awesomeness (4).  Unacceptable.  I don't lift to live with the symptoms of low testosterone.  I lift to be the very picture of male virility.  Lot's of chest hair and strong as hell. 

Since overtraining usually involves an impaired ability to recover trying to push through it may cause overuse injuries (6).  These can include shin splints, and stress fractures in runners, and muscle strains and tears in resistance training (4).  I, for one, don't want to be sidelined with an easily preventable injury.  I get so frustrated when I'm hurt I could strangle a drifter.  It sucks ass to say the least.  Sometimes, however, these small injuries can be a blessing in disguise.  I'm talking hooker-dressed-as-a-clown blessing in disguise.  Scary at first, but awesome in the end.

What To Do About It

The best way to combat overtraining is to prevent it in the first place.  This means adequate nutrition, monitoring all the warning signs and symptoms, and, first and foremost, proper rest and recovery (2).  Proper rest and recovery includes sleep and taking a proper amount of rest days.  When you sleep is when you release the most amount of growth hormone than at any other time of day (10).  Growth hormone is central in rebuilding and repair.  It's like a foreman on a construction site.  It gets all the different mechanisms for growth and repair into action.  "Get off your asses and build these walls!"  "Frank, this foundation is cracked!  How the hell should I know, fix it!"  "You guys see that blond broad with the huge cans walk by?  Yeah I yelled something but she didn't look."  Yep, that's growth hormone to a T.

Back to the injury part.  Hopefully you never get seriously injured in the weight room.  But sometime the little nagging injuries are the ones that signal it's time to back off for a bit.  This is where deload weeks come in.  Deload weeks are not weeks off per se.  They are weeks where you do the same lifts you normally do but just at lower weights and sometime lower volume (sets and reps).  The purpose of a deload week is to assist in recovery and recharge the batteries for the next few weeks of increased activities.  Taking regular deloads really helps to stave off overtraining and if you do them right with proper intensities (weight), volume, sleep amounts, and nutrition you may even come back stronger than when the deload started.

Wrap Up 

Overtraining is a part of training.  Sometimes it creeps up slowly and sometimes it rears its ugly, wart infested head in the form of an injury.  The old remedy of telling an overtrained person to stop being a pussy is very outdated and at times inappropriate.  With proper rest, recovery, nutrition, and a smart training plan with deloads sprinkled in, it can be avoided.

Overtraining is not, however, an excuse to slack in the gym.  If the weights you use rarely exceed the pink dumbbells you are probably not overtrained.  If you do tricep kickbacks and anything on a bosu ball, you are not overtrained.  I could go on but hopefully you get my point.  If you encounter someone who does the above mentioned exercise or something similar and complains about being overtrained then calling them a pussy is a viable and entirely appropriate remedy to the situation.

Sources:

Siff, Mel C. (2003). Supertraining. Denver, CO: Supertraining Institute.

Eichner, ER (1995).   "Overtraining: consequences and prevention." J Sports Sci. 1995 Summer;13 Spec No:S41-8.

Safarinejad MR, et al.  "The effects of intensive, long-term treadmill running on reproductive hormones, hypothalamus-pituitary-testis axis, and semen quality: a randomized controlled study."  J Endocrinol. 2009 Mar;200(3):259-71. Epub 2008 Dec 9.

Johnson MB, et al. "A Review of Overtraining Syndrome- Recognizing the Signs and Symptoms." 
J Athl Train. 1992; 27(4): 352–354.
 
Davis JM, et al.  "Possible mechanisms of central nervous system fatigue during exercise."  Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1997 Jan;29(1):45-57.
 
Tanskanen, et al.  "Altered oxidative stress in overtrained athletes."  J Sports Sci. 2010 Feb;28(3):309-17.
 
Meeusen R, et al.  "Brain neurotransmitters in fatigue and overtraining."  Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2007 Oct;32(5):857-64.
 
Hartman MJ, et al.  "Comparisons between twice-daily and once-daily training sessions in male weight lifters."  Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2007 Jun;2(2):159-69.
 
Konig D, et al.  "Exercise and oxidative stress: significance of antioxidants with reference to inflammatory, muscular, and systemic stress."  Exerc Immunol Rev. 2001;7:108-33.
 
Fox SI.  (2004)  Human Physiology.  Madison, WI: McGraw Hill.

Tuesday

Squat: 455x3

Reverse Band Squat: 505x3; 555x2

Deadlift: 530x1,1

Glute Ham: 3x10
w/
DB Shrugs: 3x12

TRX Fallouts: 3x10

I was spent after this.  CNS was shot and will probably stay that way until tomorrow.  It was a great session though and I was glad I was able to push through it.  Everything is feeling good and I feel like I'm progressing nicely.  Not too much else to say.

Song of the Day:

“Heights by great men reached and kept were not obtained by sudden flight but, while their companions slept, they were toiling upward in the night.” -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Saturday

Bent Row: 245x5x2

Chins (various grip): 5x5

Band Pull Downs: 3x30

Lance, Eric, and Joe all came over to train.  Lance had a bit of the bottle flu and wasn't even going to train.  He decided to cowgirl up and he ended up hitting a PR on the overhead press.  It's weird how it works that way.  There have been days when I've been sick or hungover as hell and would go in not expecting much.  Then, I have a great session.  I'm not advocating getting sauced up the night before an important lift, just that sometimes you have to get shit done in spite of how you feel. 

On another note I'm really liking just doing a lot of upper body pulling on my third day.  It keeps me fresh and gives me some extra work on a muscle group a lot of people could bring up.

Song of the Day:

"You can't get much done if you only work on the days you feel good." -Jerry West

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Thursday

Bench: 275x1; 280x1

DB Standing Press: 3x8
w/
Lat Pull Down: 3x15

Barbell Shrugs: 3x12
w/
Inverted Row: 3x10

Nothing too exciting today.  I got in, got my shit done, and got out.  Bench went kind of weird.  275 felt heavy and slow, but 280 went up fast and smooth.  Sometimes it's weird that way.

I'm not sure if standing presses help my bench or not.  I don't really care because I like doing them and they give my upper body some balance.  Too much horizontal pressing without as much or more vertical pressing and upper body pulling is a recipe for shoulder injury.  I see it all the time in swimmers and old meat heads that don't know any better.

My CNS (central nervous system) is in the very early stages of fatigue syndrome.  It's not there yet but if I let it go unchecked it could get bad.  It's kind of a weird feeling.  You  feel tired and extremely weak.  It's almost like you feel you have to put in twice the effort to get the same return.  I can sometimes be moody, lack motivation to be in the gym, and be a little slower upstairs when this happens.  The best way to prevent this from happening is with proper diet and lots of rest between sessions.  For those that partake in heavy lifting you may need to take deload weeks to let it recover.  In writing this I've stumbled across a great idea for an article.  TO THE LIBRARY!!

Song of the Day:

“I hold it to be the inalienable right of anybody to go to hell in his own way.” -Robert Frost

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Weekend and Today

This past weekend my family and I celebrated my grandmother's 75th birthday in Peoria, IL.  My mom rented a houseboat for myself, my Grandma Donna, her and my step dad Pete, and my aunt Patti and uncle Matt.  We stayed on a houseboat on the Illinois River.  The houseboat was great, the river was shit.  The houseboat was big enough for everybody.  Four room, two bathrooms, full kitchen and living room, and a party deck for 30 people easy.  The Illinois River is extremely silty and full of Asian Carp.  These fish are some of the dumbest ugliest things I've ever seen.  They can however straight lay some pipe.  One fish can produce 32 million offspring in it's lifetime.  They must just eat and bang.  And jump out of the water anytime a boat comes near.  Idiots.

Sunday I trained.  Nothing worth writing about.

Today, Tuesday, I squatted.

Squat: 455x1; 475x1; 500x1

Reverse Band Squat: 550x1; 605x1

Deadlift: 485x1

Glute Ham: 3x10

Abs: 3x15

Squats were feeling a bit heavy today.  I was a bit high on the last reverse band but I'm ok with that.  I won't be going much heavier than that and I just want to use it as a way to gauge my progress.

I'm going to be moving a different direction with my deadlift.  I'm not 100% which way.  I'll get it figured out.

Song of the Day:

"There is nothing worse than aggressive stupidity." -Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Wednesday, Today, and a Tidbit

First, the tidbit.  I forgot to mention on Tuesday that I gained 12 lbs. over the Labor Day weekend.  I went from about 218 to 230 on the nose.  A lot of beer and a lot of sodium filled food and bam -12 extra pounds.  On Tuesday it looked like I was storing acorns for the winter.  My cheeks were puffy and my eyes were sunken.  Most of this was water weight however as I'm right now sitting at about 221. Between Tuesday and Wednesday I peed at least 20 times.  This might be a PR bloat.

Wednesday I did some mobility stuff and went on the cybex for 15 minutes.  Nothing special.  Just got a sweat going.

Today:

Bench: worked up to 265x2; 275x1

DB Standing Press: 60's x6x2

Lat Pull Downs: 3x12
w/
DB Shrugs: 3x12

Gun Show

Rotators

I know I'm stronger than I was at this time last year.  I did a meet last December and missed 265 on two attempts.  I just need to keep my weight where it is and keep make small improvements and I'll be fine.

Song of the Day:

“The chance is the remotest, Of its going much longer unnoticed, That I'm not keeping pace With the headlong human race” -Robert Frost

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Tuesday- SQ/DL

Squat: worked up to 465x2

Reverse Band Squat: 525x3; 575x1

Sumo Speed Deadlift: 284x1x6

Glute Ham Hypers: 3x12
w
Cable Crunch Downs: 3x10

Squats went a lot better this week.  I think on all of my sets except for the last reverse band set I was a bit high.  I don't feel this is from tightness or weakness.  I think I just need to get back to knowing without thinking about it when I am at depth.  This will come with time.  I just need to be persistent and always have a critical eye watching. 

I'm alternating light and heavy weeks on my deadlift.  This will help keep my CNS fresh and keep from beating me up to much.

Not much else to say.  Time for dinner and then an early night to bed.

Song of the Day:

“A successful man is one who can lay a firm foundation with the bricks others have thrown at him.” -David Brinkley

Monday, September 6, 2010

Weekend

It was a real hot dog cart at West Allis Barbell on Saturday.  Lance, Eric, and our friend Dan, whom Lance and I played football with, came up from Illinois to train.  Lance and Eric deadlifted while I showed Dan some technique stuff on some different lifts.  Dan is getting back into training after some time off.  We did some light squats, light benching, some pull ups, some abs, and some conditioning.  After training we all went to Hooters and proceeded to have an awesome time.  When we got home we were pretty tuned up.

 For whatever reason Dan was feeling skittish and wanted to wrestle Eric.  What came next was quite possibly the funniest thing I've ever seen.  I don't know why, but they felt the need to wrestle in their underwear.  It was the first match in the Drunken Undies Wrestling League.  Dan and Eric start out facing each other.  All of a sudden Dan starts flailing his arms as they tie up.  Eric pushes Dan back a little bit and then attempts a single leg take down.  "Attempt" is the key word here.  His knee more or less gives out as he lunges forward bringing Dan down with his other arm that was around his neck.  They wrangle around for a  little bit then Eric gets the upper hand and pushes Dan to his side and into the door.  I have a video of it on my phone.  It's my new happy place.  If I'm ever feeling down I'll watch it and then feel happy.

Sunday was Sunday Funday.  Much beer was drank again.  After two days of hitting it pretty hard I'm in rough shape.  Hopefully I'll be recovered for work this week.  Lots of water is going to be needed.  I'm sure I'll be watching that video a few times to cheer me up.

Song of the Day:

“There can't be good living where there is not good drinking.” -Benjamin Franklin

Friday, September 3, 2010

Thursday- Bench

Yesterday's session was absolute garbage.  I can only blame myself though.  I didn't get enough sleep and was tired and not focused going in.  I also worked out two huge knots in my traps that I should have gotten to earlier but was neglecting.  To compound the problem I tweaked my adductor during my warm-up.  Thanks for you concern, but it's feeling a lot better today.  It didn't effect any part of my lifting directly but took away what little focus I had remaining and put me in a pissy mood the rest of the day.  Here's how things broke down.

Bench: 225x3; 245x3; 265x2 (was supposed to be 3 but the sand in my you-know-where got to me)

Standing Press: 4x8 @ 95lbs
w/
Face Pulls: 3x15

Done.  I was too irritated to do anything else.  I'll make up for it this weekend. 

Song of the Day:

“Disappointment to a noble soul is what cold water is to burning metal; it strengthens, tempers, intensifies, but never destroys it.” -Eliza Tabor

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Five Foods For the Rest of My Life: Healthy Edition

I often pose the question, "If you could only eat five foods for the rest of your life what would they be?"  I do this mostly out of general curiosity and to see what people think gives them the most bang for their nutritional buck.  When the question is turned back to me I usually say healthy foods.  Shenanigans is then called and my healthy choices are called out for being just that- healthy.  My choices are based on living a long, healthy, productive life on a deserted island instead of filling my face with rich, fatty foods for the rest of my life.  So with out further ado here are my five healthy choices.

Grass-Fed Beef

I love red meat.  I love it a lot.  I can't say I've eaten a cut that I don't like.  Except for maybe some shit quality top round which usually needs some sexying up with spices because it kind of tastes like a tire if you don't cook it right.  Now for the qualifier: grass-fed.  The reason I want it grass fed is because cows evolved to eat grass.  When cows eat grass they are at their healthiest.  Which makes them healthier for us to eat.  Grass-fed cows have much higher amounts of omega-3 fatty acids, which if you've just crawled out from under a rock, are also known as "good-fats".  A simple Google search will yield you all the reasons you need as to why you should eat more omega-3s.

Grass-fed cows also have higher amounts of vitamin-E, CLA than their grain-fed brethren.  Vitamin-E is a very potent antioxidant and may lower the risk of heart disease.  CLA is another one of the so-called "good fats".  There is evidence that CLA may help reduce the risk of cancer in humans.  CLA may also be beneficial in weight management.

Almonds

I would rather eat almonds than potato chips.  I like the crunch, I like the taste, they go well with beer.  They do everything for me.  Aside from being tasty they are also packed with more nutrients than any other nut.  They are a good source of omega-3 fatty acids, magnesium, zinc, iron and fiber (got to stay regular).
Blueberries

I eat frozen blueberries all the time.  I probably like them better than fresh.  They have the same nutrient profile as fresh and it's almost like eating sherbet.  Blueberries have the highest antioxidant content than any other commercially available berry.  I've heard a lot about the acai berry and acai berry juice, but an acai berry you buy at the source is night and day from an acai berry you pick at the source.  Plus, anything I've had that has acai berry juice in it tastes like ass.  I'll stick with blueberries.

Sweet Potatoes

Sweet potatoes are another nutrient packed food.  They contain a ton of vitamin-A and are a good source of manganese (most people don't even know what manganese is), vitamin-C, copper, fiber, potassium, iron, and vitamin b6.  In addition they are also very anti-inflammatory, which is important when you live a life of reckless abandon like I do.  I can't worry about my joints being sore when there are volcanoes to luge, crocodiles to wrestle, and snakes to wrangle.

Spinach Greens

That Popeye guy was on to something.  When Popeye squeezed a can of spinach down his throat Bluto didn't stand a chance.  You think Wimpy could handle that shit eating all those hamburgers on loan?  Hell no.  Why do you think he was called "Wimpy"?  All those burgers and nothing else turned him into a sad sack piece of shit.  Popeye on the other hand ate spinach and  more than likely other healthy stuff and beat the shit out of Bluto and banged Olive Oil like there was no tomorrow.

Everything that I talked about in the previous four foods, except beef's high protein content, are present in some manner in spinach.  They have tons of antioxidant properties, are highly anti-inflammatory, and don't taste at all bad or earthy.

To conclude, there are obviously other foods that are just as healthy as these.  However if you make these foods the base of your nutrition, eat them according to your goals, and sprinkle in some other "fun" foods, you will look better, feel better, and perform better.

Next will be my non-healthy selections.  This is going to take a lot of deliberation and soul searching.  I just might find out who I really am.