Recovery Week Reflection

May 16th, 2009

So I’m midway through my eighth week of P90X, and this is a recovery week.

Some observations:

  • Nutrition is the easiest thing to slip for me. That’s because it takes as much or more planning than the workouts. I’ve slipped with my nutrition the past couple of weeks, and I’m going to get that back on track for the final phase that starts next week. I’m not eating tons of fried food or crap processed food or anything, but mostly I’m slipping on pre-preparing all my meals and snacks, so I might just get two or three meals a day instead of all the good calories I need.
  • I may bite the bullet and try out Beachbody’s new “Shakeology” replacement drink. It’s expensive as hell for a supplement or replacement drink (around $130 (*GASP*, *SHRIEK*) after shipping and handling for 30 days) but not so crazy when I consider that I used to buy $2 or more of sodas a day. I don’t drink sodas now, and this drink is apparently incredibly nutritious. Plus breakfast has been the part of my nutrition plan that has slipped the most. If I do buy the drink, Beachbody should go ahead and put me on the payroll for how much profit I’m raking in for them!
  • Frankly, setting aside an hour and a half a day for workouts and even more time in preparing lunches and suppers is about all I can do. I was great at getting up in time to fix breakfast as well, but I’d be more than happy to not have to think about that and substitute that with an uber-healthy shake instead. I would probably only use this shake during training periods with programs like P90X or (possibly in the future) Insanity.  And mostly I’m just curious as this drink is just insanely nutrient rich compared to anything I could put together myself, so I’d like to see if it makes a noticeable difference in performance and even mood throughout the day, which have both overall improved since starting the program anyway.
  • In the future I’ll detail out more about the things I have learned and what has and hasn’t worked for me. Every/body is different, so what works for me might not work for you and vice versa, but I think I can tease out some things that might help people struggling to jump into such a lifestyle shift avoid some of the hassles I’ve subjected myself to.
  • Yet another investment I’m considering making is getting a GOOD yoga mat. The wife and I just grabbed what we saw at Bed, Bath and Beyond for $30, and while it has gotten the job done, it’s really a piece of crap.  First of all, it’s a little too light-weight, so it slips around. It’s too small for me, so I have to make the choice of having my head touching beyond the mat or having my feet touch beyond the mat on certain routines. Not good. Finally, the thing gets way too slippery when I sweat. I would think a good mat is much more sweat resistant.

With all that said, for those on a budget, getting started with cheaper equipment and supplements might be the best (and sometimes only possible) thing. P90X really wasn’t designed to destroy your wallet; it was designed to SAVE you money in the long run. However, I’m finding that I have a perfectionist tendency when it comes to workouts, and I want to maximize my experience by giving myself the best equipment and supplements I can reasonably afford. I skimped on the mat, and my dumbbells don’t really add happiness to my life. For now I will probably stick with them, but in the future I might invest more in that sort of equipment.

“P90X Beer” is How Most Get Here

May 13th, 2009

I kid you not, the most common way people find this site is through typing the words “p90x Beer” into Google. This tells me that either there is a brand of beer called “p90x” I have not yet consumed, or people are interested in P90X as it relates to beer consumption, probably along the lines of “Yo, do I have to become a chaste, beerless nun or monk if I go on P90X, yo?”. Happily, I can assure you, that if you choose to do P90X, you can do whatever the hell you want. Should you choose to imbibe upon beer and/or wine, then that’s your choice. You can also lie about your workouts if you want. It’s all up to you!

For the record, I type this up while drinking some cheap red wine from Harris Teeter.

Week 7 – Still going strong

May 10th, 2009

Hi there, fitness voyeurs.  I just got done with Yoga X and am feeling pretty spry here towards the end of my 7th week of this program. I’m officially over the halfway mark (almost 50 days in?).

A few notable observations:

  • I am suddenly WAY more flexible than I was before.  I can now put my palms to the ground on certain stretches where before I could only land my fingertips at best. Hard to explain and a quick Google search (10 seconds or less is my limit for most searches) didn’t yield any images off the web I could grab to visually illustrate, but next time you see me I’ll show it off and leave you dumbfounded.
  • I bit the bullet and bought a couple of extra supplements to help for those extra tough workouts. I had bonked on a couple of workouts in Week 6 and vowed to give myself every advantage going into the final few weeks, which are quickly approaching. Some internet research (like, at least an hour’s worth) has convinced me I can safely add NO-Xplode (nitric oxide, etc.) and Cellmass (creatine, etc) to my pre- and post-workout repertoire. I was already using Iso-Pure (high grade whey protein) for post-workout recovery.  I’ve only been using them for a few days, so not much to report yet, but they’re supplements, so they’re meant for that extra 5%, not for working miracles.
  • Work is demanding more and more hours from me, which does not for a Happy P90Xer make. I’m trying to squeeze workouts in in the morning just in case I have to work late, but it’s still a stretch. The parents were in town this weekend, so I skipped a workout on Friday and moved it to Saturday. I should be back on track by the end of the week as long as I can use my normal rest day for Kenpo.
  • Before P90X, I was obsessing about the economy and the disintigrating global state of affairs. Now I’m obsessed with fitness blogs; hopefully a more useful obsession! Anyway, here’s a good entry I stumbled upon: Tony Horton’s 11 Laws of Fitness. If you want to know why P90X is so darn effective, it’s because it embodies every one of the laws described in that post.  Those are also good laws to keep in mind after P90X, as you can pretty much chart your own fitness course into interesting and exhausting new worlds.

That is all for now.

Week 6 – Weird P90X Week

May 3rd, 2009

So, I’m almost done with Week 6, and I can safely say that it’s been the strangest week so far.

First of all, my diet hasn’t been what it should have been. I didn’t exercise as much discipline as I should have during social outings, so I ingested some crap of only marginal nutritional value, or downright unhealthy stuff at times. My breakfasts and lunches were ok, but the night time dinners suffered.

Also, my strength days (Chest, Triceps, and Shoulders and Back and Biceps) suffered. I didn’t see any improvement on my chest, triceps and shoulders day, and I downright didn’t finish the back and biceps workout. That workout was a Friday night one, and to be honest, everything was going against me completing it. I had stayed late at work, and I tried squeezing it in before my and my wife’s date night. Didn’t work. I got a third of the way through it and had to quit. I felt like crap, and the stress of trying to squeeze too much in got to me.

So this is the first time I’ve missed a P90X workout, but I think I’m ok with it. I can make the workout up later if necessary, and I haven’t been bringing the attention and focus and discipline this week the way I have in previous weeks;  I felt my body was telling me to take a step back and to re-adjust.

And weirdly enough, I think I have. I had a strong finish to the week, with my best Yoga X workout and my best Back and Legs workouts. After starting the week WEAK, I finished pretty  strong.

I think Week 6 might just be a psychologically difficult week. You’ve just gotten over the initial thrill of starting a new workout program and successfully getting through the first phase, but here you are two weeks into the next phase and the end of the program still seems as far away as it did at the beginning, minus the unbridled enthusiasm. Plus the new workouts have kicked in and have confused the ol’ muscles to the point of humility. Finally, one of the characters on new workouts is a Grade A Asshat. I keep hoping Tony will pile drive him by the end of the workout, but, no, alas, he lives on.

Anyway, I also got a nice sunburn this weekend, as if working out isn’t uncomfortable enough, just imagine moving around with toasted feet and legs, chest and arms. Yes, I used Sunscreen, No, I didn’t use it well. I have splotchy burn patches mixed with smaller areas of relative peace and tranquility.

And, finally, I’m debating the use of supplements to give my body an extra boost.  A friend of mine at work is going to let me try the pre-workout supplement called N.O. X-plode.  From what I’ve read, it’s pretty popular among the athletes and strength trainers as it gives the muscles an extra boost of Nitric Oxide before working out, which helps you squeeze out more reps.  It also apparently helps with mental focus. I’m going to try a sample my friend gives me to make sure I can tolerate it with no side effects, and if I’m pleased I may just buy some.

I don’t want to become a supplement fiend, but the fact remains that rigorous training programs demand much more from the body than the average sedentary American day does, and the idea is to give your body every advantage possible — from feeding it good foods, to getting the right amount of sleep, to adding in nutrients your body uses rapidly during workouts and recovery.

I’ll keep you posted if I end up going this route.

P90X and Basketball

April 28th, 2009

So I used a rest day to apply my newfangled P90X conditioning to an honest-to-god physical pursuit outside of the confines of our living room. I know, it’s crazy. But I decided to play basketball with several coworkers at the local elementary school.

Now, first of all, let me say that’s it’s strange to play basketball at an elementary school. Aside from feeling like giants trouncing upon the land of The Lilliputians, we all had to restrain ourselves from showering curse words and unholy invectives in the heat of battle, lest we corrupt the little ones or invite the ire of their ever watchful guardians. Hardly ideal, but at the same time a good check on the social graces.

And how did my basketball fare now that I’m almost done with 5 weeks of P90x?

To be fair, we have to evaluate the full context of the situation. I haven’t shot a basketball in at least two years, and I haven’t been in excellent cardiovascular shape for at least eight years. So for me to expect to go out for the first time in ages and become the resident LeBron James is obvious the sheerest sort of delusion.

With that said, though, I have to say I kept up reasonably well given that we were playing full (albeit Lilliputian style) court and almost everyone there had been playing for the past several weeks and months. I was perhaps the lone newb, but I managed to keep up with everyone most of the time. I also, perhaps sadistically, began spotting weaknesses in my newfound adversaries. “That one heaves after a dead sprint! That one lacks any vertical leap. That one clearly can’t handle sudden side-to-side gyrations!” And so forth.  The funny thing is, I was doing this even though I was breathing hard and sucking wind in-between trips up and down the court. P90X is funny in that in inspires that sort of strategic competitive vision.

My shot was abysmal and my passing skills were a shade better than horrible, but overall I felt the promise of tapping into the sport like never before. I knew that my present cardiovascular weakness could be shaken out in a few weeks of basketball on my rest days and that all my other growing strengths would eventually reinforce natural progressions in the game. I am developing a foundation for sports again, but more than that, I’m developing better self-awareness for my physical strengths and weaknesses. All the Plyometrics, Legs and Back routines, Yoga and Abripper really provide a formidable foundation for pursuing damn near any physical activity.

And here’s an important thing some people might not realize. P90X is really a strength-conditioning program with some cardio incorporated. It is NOT cardio focused. However, it’s a well-rounded conditioning program that will improve everything for someone who isn’t accustomed to a well-rounded regimen.

So if P90X isn’t cardio-focused, what can I do to amp up my cardio fitness?

Is Insanity Next?

As it turns out, Beachbody seems to have done its homework and has realized there’s a fitness niche it hasn’t yet fully exploited. There are various and sundry strength conditioning workouts (Think P90X and P90X Plus and Chalean Extreme) and light aerobic workouts (Think Hip Hop Abs), but there aren’t any workouts that do for cardiovascular training what P90X does for strength training.

Until this summer.

Apparently a 10-13 disk, 60 day program called Insanity is going to be released in the Juneish time frame if all goes well. And, well, it looks insane.

To get an idea of what the program is like, check out the video:

I don’t know for certain whether I will attempt this program. Hell, I only have five weeks of P90X under my belt and still eight more weeks to go. But here’s what I do know — I love the feeling of progress and improvement. I also know I haven’t really tapped into my cardio potential for nearly a decade and that even the mighty P90X isn’t designed for that.

So I’m eying Insanity with a cautious but respectful glint of intrigue. It seems to possess something I’m still missing. Something that would make full-court basketball seem like a relaxing break. Something that might crush my ego and rebuild me anew right when I’m starting to feel smug.

We’ll see.

P90X – The “P” Stands for Perplexed

April 26th, 2009

P90X defies any sort of predictability or clear sense of progress sometimes. Don’t get me wrong; there are many times when one sees obvious, tangible results. There are many times one feels like one is on the way to becoming a kick ass, chiseled, acrobatic specimen.

For instance:

  • When one can complete all 16 minutes of Ab Ripper X in one sitting without hitting pause and nails all 330+ reps, which happened for me just this week
  • When one begins incorporating REAL pull-ups into the workouts instead of 100% unassisted pull-ups
  • When one begins craving steamed veggies over french fries
  • When one can balance on one leg and extend the other leg straight out and grab the toe and maintain balance (”Not possible!”, I said, just two weeks ago…now it’s a party trick for me)
  • When one starts noticing the pants that were too tight begin to get a little looser and drafty (”Look, ma, I can pull out the waist band and see my shoes through my shorts!”)

And, yet.

There are times when one begins to completely doubt one’s  self.

Legs and Back is the routine that fills me with dread and fear. Just two weeks ago I puked during the routine because of the excesses of the previous night.  And this week, my fifth week in the program, it still kicked my derier.

To get a small taste of the routine, you can check out this woman’s youtube review:

Note that this maniac mentions she’s doing it twice a week. Why, Dear God, why? Why do P90Xers all too often feel the need to stretch out the masochism into more areas of life? Trust me, onlookers, Legs and Back is not fun. And, really, let’s be specific here, it’s the “Legs” portion that sucks.

Every exercise subjects your lower limbs to a deep, intense, burning lactic acid bath. It feels as if someone has managed to infiltrate your waist to pour buckets of lava down each leg hole. It is not fun. It is not something anyone should want to do twice a week, even if that someone is a lunatic self-improvement-obsessed-workoutaholic.

Now, in the workout’s defense, I’m sure it’s going to work at some point. The thing is, it’s the only routine where I haven’t seen clear, demonstrable progress. The routine is focused on doing a set number of reps moreso than using weight, so you’re really going to be doing similar numbers every week; the problem is, it doesn’t feel like I’m getting stronger. My legs FEEL stronger when I’m doing other stuff, but during this routine, the burn is always there, the fatigue convulsions are always there, the creeping nausea is there, the desire to quit is there. The panic when I realize I’m not even halfway done and Tony has that crazed, overeager smile on his face because he knows you’re being owned is still there. I can’t feel the progress!

Oh well. I’ve gone on too long about something I hate. When I first started P90X I thought Yoga X was the hardest routine. Now I believe Legs and Back is.

If you don’t believe me, go do 25 lunges and a wall squat for a minute and a half and get back to me.

P90X Phase 2

April 22nd, 2009

Husband here:

The poor wiffy has been sick and ailing and also tied up in post-graduate schooling, thus she has been AWOL from the P90X world. She will resume after June 25th.

But back to me:
I’ve successfully completed Phase 1 of P90X and am beginning Phase 2. I haven’t had a chance to keep the throngs of unwashed blog followers up-to-date on my goings on, but trust that I will try to do better in the future.

For a brief update: I couldn’t sleep this morning due to work-related anxiety (yeah, the only people who don’t have this are either out of work ((which is un-work-related anxiety)) or sell guns or seeds), so I got up to do the uber-new Chest-Shoulders-Triceps routine. Holy Pectoralis Major was it a tough workout! If you want to feel better about your probably insecure professional life, just destroy yourself at 6 AM by doing crap like this:

one-arm-push-up1

The wiffy and I took 30 day pics the other night as well as measured body fat. I’m not posting pics yet, but a couple of quantifiably good results — body fat reduced from 20% to 13% and pull-ups increased from 1 to a whopping, eye-popping 5. I got stronger and stretchier and more balanced in lots of other areas as well, but I won’t bore you with stats for the time being, but I can’t wait to see how things progress by day 90.

Keep your chin up and your loins covered and I’ll try to be better at this updating thing.

Core Synergistics and Ego Confusion

April 16th, 2009

Husband here:

Just when I was starting to brag to family and friends about the tremendous gains I was making with P90X; the second-naturedness of the program growing on me like a shadow; the warm familiarity of discovering routines that seemed like a long lost part of me reawakened in me to give birth to a new body — just when I was getting comfortable, then entered Core Synergistics. If you don’t know what Core Synergistics is, don’t worry, I didn’t either. It sounds like a Corporate Management Leadership program run amok. But it’s so much worse.

Take Yoga X, Ab Ripper X, Plyometrics, and add a dash of Back, Chest, and Leg exercises, and you have this unholy amalgamation of bodily confusion. None of the exercises contained therein should be *that* hard in isolation, but taken together, it’s a demoralizing romp through muscle endurance drudgery. OK, I lie, there’s one move that’s probably relatively difficult even when you’re not tired.

Behold, the Reach High and Under Push-up!

You know, this move might not be that hard if it wasn’t about 20 moves in and your arms weren’t already Jell-O and, oh, you’ve never tried it before, but given that it’s your first time, the move is a real soul crusher. I did manage a couple, but they were sad and wobbly, like my spirit.

This is the “recovery week” and I’ve already done this dispiriting set of crapsuckery and Yoga X. I’d hate to see “hell week”. In a way Core Synergistics may be the one routine that best embodies the most extreme parts of P90X, for better or worse. I’m glad it’s over…for now.

P90 Wretch

April 13th, 2009

Husband here… If you look closely, you may see a problem with my latest Legs and Back workout:

p90wretch2

That’s right, I hurled mid-Legs-and-Back on Sunday; this by virtue of the fact that I was up too late the night before drinking adult beverages. In P90X world, no slothful deed goes unpunished, and my Saturday night of excess was no exception. I was about halfway through my workout when an overwhelming nausea crept over me and was exacerbated by the smell of household cleaning products wafting in from the bathroom the missus was cleaning.

Ladies, if your hungover man is doing P90X, do NOT clean the toilets until AFTER he pukes into them. That’s just a courteous household tip that should spare the sanity of all involved.

Anyway, I did get through the workout (feeling like a dazed refugee), but I couldn’t do Abripper X, so that had to wait until tonight.

Tonight I finished Kenpo X and tacked on Ab Ripper… I almost kept up with the entire thing without pausing! I also tried pull-ups again afterwards for the heck of it and managed four! That’s up from one just three weeks ago.

I am now entering the rest week of P90X. That means mostly cardio training for the next week while my muscles rebuild from the three weeks of hardship I subjected them to. The cool thing is I get to do two new routines I haven’t tried yet — Cardio X and Core Synergistics X. The bad thing is I have to do Yoga X twice.

Wish me luck!

Stress Relief & Odd Similarities

April 11th, 2009

Wife here… I have come to the conclusion that without some sort of stress relief, one may develop an evil twin or alternate ego. Reluctantly, I will say that P90X is a great stress reliever. Huh?!

Let me explain… stress from everyday things like a full-time job, going to class at night, being a wife, and so on and so on can cause me to get extremely emotionally delicate. (I could have a temper tantrum at any given second). I wasn’t always like this either… I used to feel like I handled stress pretty well. Not so much. Maybe I’m getting old (I turn 30 next month). Even though P90x is a resistance training workout program – stressful for your muscles, there’s nothing like finishing one of the workouts knowing that you’ve really pushed. I finished the Shoulders and Arms routine realizing that I’m going to need to go up in weight. Seriously after 3 weeks?! I love it!!!

The release for your muscles, catching your breath, and slowing your concentration leaves your mind feeling rested… Bye Bye Stress… at least for 24 hours until life resets.

On another note, I’ve decided that I think Chuck Norris and Tony Horton are related. They’re both in shape – bad asses looking for the greater good (p90x workouts and Walker Texas Ranger). I’ve squished them both together so you decide.

Hmmm... brothers?

Hmmm... brothers?