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Regular guy lifts car off girl December 19, 2009

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Like something out of the excellent movie, Unbreakable, an ordinary guy lifted a car off a little girl today.

Anatomical trivia time. Humans are born with every muscle fiber they will ever have. Massive body builders have no more muscle fibers than they had when they were regular sized people. Muscle fibers thicken themselves through use so that they won’t break when they’re called upon. Big muscles don’t equate to strength. They pretty much equate to a central nervous system that’s not afraid to use those muscles. So in theory, enough adrenaline (chemical will-power, if you will) or just plain will-power is “all” that’s needed for a regular guy to lift as much or more as your average body builder.

The fitness nerd in me wonders if this guy tore anything, seeing as how his muscles weren’t large (ie: weren’t conditioned for lifting heavy loads). He might still be too pumped up to know if he tore anything. LOL

Are drugs hurting young athletes? December 22, 2008

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This site is getting way too common.

That’s USM’s DeAndre Brown who tonight had his shin bone broken clean in two. Notice this was a non-contact injury – meaning it didn’t happen from a hit by another player. He jumped. He landed. His shin snaped in two.

The same thing happened to Mississippi State’s Brandon McRae this year. The same happened to Alabama’s Tyrone Prothro a few years ago.

Its also been seen in other sports in recent years.

Professional ‘Wrastlin’s Sid Vicious had his shin snapped when jumping off a turnbuckle onto the wrestling ring’s spring-loaded surface. It also happened to UFC fighter Cory Hill, although his did happen when his shin collided with another fighter’s shin.

The Texas Ranger’s Ruben Mateo broke his femur, the biggest bone in the human body (“thigh bone”), while simply running to first base.

What do all of these snapped-in-two tibias have in common? Not much except that they’ve all happened in recent years.

Rewind to 10 yeras ago. Had you ever heard of this happening before? Didn’t think so. Not in non-contact situations anyway.

Joe Theisman’s famous injury seemed like a once-in-a-generation thing and his came as a result of contact and twisting awkwardly to the ground.

There was nothing awkward about DeAndre Brown’s landing. Or Brandon McRae’s making a right-hand turn untouched on the football field. Or Tyrone Prothro’s landing in the endzone. Or Sid Vicious jumping off a turnbuckle onto a relatively soft spring-loaded surface. Or for heaven’s sake – Ruben Mateo just running to first base.

These should be HIGHLY unusual injuries. Especially when there is no player-on-player collision. But it is happening. Almost once per year now.

You can’t say they don’t make shins like they used to. Every year athletes are in better and better shape. If anything, they should be injured less, especially in non-contact situations.

Could it be these guys have been on performance-enhancing juice that has made the bones and soft tissues more injury-prone? Its a fact that illegal anabolic steroids can do that. But this is the only explanation I can come up with.

The Tabata Method December 18, 2008

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Following a Chips Ahoy post, its incumbent upon me to make a fitness post.

“Four minutes of pain” is one way to describe the aforementioned tabata method. Tabatas expend more energy more quickly than any other exercise routine I know of. It goes like this – pick any weight-based exercise. Check your ego at the door and pick a light weight.

I’ll put it this way – T-Nation recommends a 95 pound squat for a guy that can squat 465. Tabatas aren’t about weight. They’re about performing as many repetitions as possible in a short timeframe.

So what’s a “tabata”. It goes like this:

  1. Do as many reps as you can, as fast as you can for 20 seconds.
  2. Rest 10 seconds.
  3. Repeat 7  more times.
  4. Puke.

Sounds easy. Its not. Trust me.

I supersetted 4 tabatas yesterday. I did the aforementioned (forgive the use of “aforementioned” twice, drats that’s that’s 3 times now, in one post) procedure 4 times. I did a dumbbell burpee tabata, followed by a body weight squat tabata, followed by another dumbbell burpee tabata, and finally a pushup tabata.

By the way, this is a burpee. And you can see the dumbbell burpee variation included in this quite impressive circuit .

The pushup tabata round was more like 10-15 seconds of pushups instead of 20. I was just flat whooped at that point.

An hour or two later, I blew my nutrition budget. Had to. I was stark raving ravenous. Its probably good I ate more than I planned because I certainly worked a lot harder than I thought I would. By 8:00 PM, I couldn’t hold my eyes open anymore. I was asleep by 8:20 and slept until 6:00.

A hearty breakfast and just a hour and a half after that, and I’m starving already.

If you want to kick your workout routine into high gear, try a tabata round or four.

Biotest Workout Fuel December 3, 2008

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(hello….is this thing on…)

Anybody out there tried Biotest Workout Fuel? I would like to hear what you think.

I’d like to try it – when and if I get over bicep tendonitis.

Post Velocity Diet update August 5, 2008

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Quick update on that crazy Velocity Diet that I tried…

Its been 2 1/2 weeks since I finished and I’ve lost and additional 5 pounds since I stopped dieting. Yep, I lost 10 pounds on the diet and 5 more pounds in the few weeks after I “quit” dieting. (BTW, this puts my bodyweight down 69 pounds from when I started in the spring of 2006.) Now there’s one secret to dieting that most people don’t get.

Put yourself on low calories and when you “quit”, ramp your calories slowly while continuing to eat healthy and you’ll keep losing weight – at least for a little while. What’s happening is that the metabolism takes its foot off the brake in response to more food intake (but not so much more that is stores the bountiful harvest :-) ). During this metabolic acceleration, the body will continue to lose weight – until it reaches equillibrium.

The body always strives for homeostasis, adapting to whatever you throw at it. The trick is keeping it off balance. So as I gradually ramp my calories, I’m ramping up my exercise level too. My body won’t have a chance to adapt for at least a few more months. Maybe by then I’ll be where I want to be.

The Velocity Diet review July 20, 2008

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What is it?

Before I say anything I must say that if you don’t know how lose weight in a traditional way or maintain weight loss, absolutely do not use the Velocity Diet. You may lose weight with it, but if you don’t know how to handle yourself nutritionally, you’ll certainly gain it all back plus more when you are done.

The Velocity Diet is a liquid diet based mostly on supplements which provide bare essential nutrients. It is a dummy-proof method to, first and foremost, build mental fortitude for dieting in general, and second to lose weight with minimal muscle loss.

The diet is 4 weeks with each week having mostly protein shakes and only one healthy solid meal (HSM). Following that, there is a 2 week phase to transition back to solid eating.

Gus and I ate all this in 28 days.

But Shane, given your success in getting fit, WHY would you do this?

Despite losing around 55 pounds, I was still carrying a pot belly. I could have continued my established path and been just as successful as you’ll see that I was with the Velocity Diet. But recently I was trying get off a mini-bulk cycle (eating enough calories to make one gain weight while training hard to make most of that gain muscle instead of fat) and was having trouble dialing it back down to weight loss mode. Yeah, yours truly was having nutritional discipline issues. And moreso than that, I was sick and #($^& tired of all the planning, preparation, and cooking that goes with eating 6 healthy meals per day.

So what exactly did you do?

The Velocity Diet is a product from Testosterone Nation. The diet consists almost entirely of Biotest supplements. Biotest owns Testosterone Nation. See the connection? OK, bear with me though.

Documentation for the diet is evolving into a book by its creator, Chris Shugart. Right now unfortunately the instructions aren’t neatly presented in one place. The starting point for reading about it is here. The most up-to-date info on the velocity diet is scattered through out this thread about a test subject (although not the 1st test subject; this diet has been done by 1,000′s of people).

Instructions for the 4-week diet are found here, about half way down the page. The gist of it involves calculating how many calories you need on weight-lifting days and non-lifting days. For me it was about 1,650 and 1,400. Then you calculate how many grams of protein you need per day. That info is used to figure out how many protein shakes you need (5 for me with the last one being not quite full size). Then the diet adds fish oil and peanut butter for health fats, as well as ground flaxseed and fiber supplements for digestion. And they recommend BCAA supplements which discourage muscle loss. And every 7 days you get to have exactly one healthy solid meal (HSM) containing whatever you want provide its not huge and its healthy.

Yes, for each of 28 days in a row I ate nothing but 5 protein shakes, 2 tbsp peanut butter, 8 fish oil caps, 4 tbsp ground flax seed, 12 metamucil capsules, vitamins, and some BCAA pills. Well except for the one meal every 7 days in which I ate something like a lean steak, broccoli, and a sweet potato.

Oh and on lifting days, there is a tasty sugar & protein workout drink (supplied by Biotest of course) that I got to have immediately after lifting. This is what makes up the calorie difference between lifting & non-lifting days.

I’ve just finished the 28 days and I’m transitioning back to regular eating now. Instructions for the transition phase are here about half way down the page. Transition is 2 weeks starting with 1 HSM per day and gradually adding a 2nd HSM, a 3rd HSM and on up to however many meals you’re going to eat regularly (6/day for me).

Did you exercise?

Yes, exercise is required. But not much. I’m following the recommended Velocity Diet training program. You’re free to make your own program. But the general style needs to be basic lifts with heavy weight and low rest (30-45s) in between. Cardio work is strictly forbidden. With caloric intake this low, cardio would be counter productive as the body would be forced to cannibalize mucsle to provide energy for the cardio. In place of cardio, NEPA (Non Exercise Physical Activity) is recommended.

My experience suggests NEPA is crucial. You’re encouraged to get as much NEAP as possible. The more NEPA I did, the better my results were. My NEPA was usually brisk walking or slow-paced cycling. NEPA could be everyday activity such as mowing the lawn, washing a car, or in my case sanding & painting kitchen cabinets. I usually got 60-90 minutes of NEPA per day spread out over 2-3 sessions.

What were your results?

In 4 weeks, I lost 10 pounds and 1.5 inches in the waist. As far as I can tell I did not lose muscle mass, although it is hard to tell. Your energy level is pretty darn low on this thing, so you don’t have much umph in the gym for making comparisons. But considering I lost an inch and a half of pot belly and “only” dropped 10 pounds, there couldn’t be much muscle loss if any.

The Velocity Diet isn’t the end for myself or most anyone else who tries it. Its just a real good start. I still have a pot belly, but its down to not being very noticeable with clothes on. Believe it or not, I’ve got visible ab muscles even if they’re, uh, “pillow-topped” like the mattress I sleep on. Next up, I’ll eat more real food, increase my exercise intensity, and keep on truckin’.

You can read my mini-blog on my progress here.

Would you do it again?

First of all, nobody needs to do this often. It simply isn’t healthy not to eat real food for a long time. I think you’d do no harm one time on The Velocity Diet since I doubt a 4-week absence from real food is dangerous.

Second, while the diet was dummy-proof, it was still difficult. Very difficult. You get real tired on this diet. You’ll want to go to sleep at 8pm. You’ll drag thoughout the days. If you went with similar calories on real food, it would be a lot easier.

Easier provided you were disciplined enough to plan what to eat, how & when to cook it, and not cheat one iota. If you could do all that, real food would be easier to live through. But if you could do all that, then you wouldn’t need the Velocity Diet.

The efficiency of The Velocity Diet is in its simplicity. Eat these shakes mixed with these supplements N times per day and that’s it.

The rewards one gets from the Velocity Diet that wouldn’t come from a real food diet are an appreciation for….real food. Moving forward, I will gladly eat the portions of real food that I need to eat, savoring every bite instead of lusting for more.

So would I do it again – yes, probably once/year. Certainly no more than twice/year. But before doing this again, I’d try a lot harder (and most likely succeed) at properly dialing in my real food intake.

In summary, if you need both a nutritional attitude adjustment and fat loss to boot, then go for it. But if you’re new to weight loss, aren’t sure how to maintain weight loss, or aren’t sure how you got where you are or how to get out of it – then pass on The Velocity Diet.

Shane’s Fat Loss Manifesto May 14, 2008

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Having lost a bunch of weight, I get asked a lot about how I did it and what I’d recommend to other people. So I’ve decided to try and summarize all those ideas into Shane’s Fat Loss Manifesto. I’ve hope to include enough information to help somebody else be successful without dragging the reader through mind-numbing details which I’ve left out.

Run From The Sun results April 17, 2008

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The official results are in. I finished 80th out of 293. Woot!

Some teenager who weighs about 80 pounds won the whole thing.

Run From The Sun 2008 April 12, 2008

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Go me! I smashed my previous best 5k time by 1:10 to finish today’s Run From The Sun in 24:35. Today was also the anniversary of my 1st 6k race, the 2007 Run From The Sun which I finished in 29:51.

It was my first blood pressure drug-free race. I think it helped a lot not having some drug in me to hold back my pulse and/or thin my blood

Sadly, it might have been my last drug-free race. After 4 months without bp meds, the last of the gemfibrozil (generic ziac) has probably purged from my system and suddenly my blood pressure has been way up the last couple weeks. So was my pulse. All though today’s race, my pulse was 192-196. Yikes! I felt fine though.

I’m getting this heart thing looked at on Monday. Hopefully they’ll come up with some treatment that doesn’t involve stealing energy from my cardio system.

25:45, I am calling you out March 13, 2008

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Yes, you, my most recent 5k run time. Your days are numbered. To be exact, you’ve got 5 Saturdays left. That’s right, on April 12th, I’m headed for the 5th annual Run From The Sun. But I can’t hate on you too much. Just last September, me and you were proud buddies. But that was then and today I’m 15 pounds lighter. And since me and HIIT have been hanging out, my cardio has improved a lot. So, 25:45, its been nice knowing you. But next month, you’re going down. I’m upgrading to 23:00 or maybe 24:00.

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