Posts Tagged ‘Plyometrics’

First phase of Insanity is done!

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

So a mild sense of accomplishment accompanies the finishing of the first phase of Insanity. What can I say? The program lives up to Beachbody’s hype. At no point was I able to completely keep pace with a workout without either taking a mid-set breather of a couple seconds or a between-set break at some point during the intervals, but the cool thing is I got better with each and every workout. I fully expect better results in my next fit test due in 9 days.

Lessons learned? P90X was a great foundation for this program, but it, in and of itself, didn’t fully prepare me for Insanity. As I mentioned before, P90X isn’t very cardio-intensive, so you’re certainly going to be playing catch up if you’re not used to intense cardio. And I’m not talking about 5 mile jogs, either. As great as long distance running is for aerobic conditioning, it does next to nothing for anaerobic conditioning, which is what Insanity and most high intensity sports play upon.

On a related note, I knew almost nothing about the pros and cons of different training systems back when I was heavily involved in sports during high school. I ran cross country (aerobic), played basketball (anaerobic), and baseball (low intensity), but had no idea how much more I could have improved myself with some targeted conditioning programs. I remember going from Cross Country — where I could run a 5k in around 19 minutes (not amazing but not bad) — to Basketball thinking all of my aerobic conditioning would carry over, but then quickly getting humbled when my muscles rapidly fatigued and I gassed out after only a couple of court sprints. It took me about halfway through the basketball season before my leg and cardio endurance finally stabilized and I could maintain my intensity through most of a game.

What I realize now is that athletes need to think about a lot of their fitness systems at once if they’re going to maximize their performance on the field. This is what we need to carry into our fitness regimens if we’re to avoid the infamous plateaus that plague most casual gym-goers.

When I undertake a training regimen, what are my goals? Am I trying to bulk up, slim down, increase muscle endurance and recovery time, jump higher, run faster, etc. etc. It’s not enough to go to the gym three times a week without a plan and expect drastic improvement. Programs like P90X and Insanity work because they *force* you through a targeted program proven to deliver specific types of improvements. It is possible, however, to go through these programs and still learn nothing about why they work. However, I’m curious by nature, so I always question why things do or don’t work.

On a lot of forums, you’ll see newbies ask about what they can expect to gain from programs like P90X and Insanity, and usually there isn’t a lot of good info for them to compare and contrast the programs. For instance, can I expect my vertical leap to drastically increase because of Insanity? The answer is, I’m not sure. It improved a lot in P90X because I was so out of shape and could get back to my baseline after 3 months of plyometrics once a week, but I don’t expect 2 months of Insanity to NECESSARILY KEEP increasing it in a similar manner. I do, however, expect my jumping endurance to improve drastically, meaning I could maintain jumping intensity for much longer durations playing, say, basketball. If anyone knows the best way to target fast-twitch muscles (whether it’s high-intensity interval training, or Insanity’s so-called Max Interval Training, or it’s some other routine), feel free to comment. I did come across an intriguing looking program called The Jump Manual that targets increasing fast-twitch muscle fibers to drastically improve vertical leaping ability. I have no idea if it works, but I do like the idea that it is a targeted program rather than a One Size Fits All How to Get Fit in 3 Weeks sort of deal.  What is fitness, really, if you have no idea what you’re improving and what you can expect from doing your workouts?

Anyway, I have a Recovery Week of Insanity coming up, then it’s on to Round 2. I hadn’t given much thought to what creatures lurk within the second phase, but Larry of the Do Something Initiative, has begun the round and has warned all that it is like starting over.  That is really and truly a frightening prospect.

How to Improve at Sports without Playing Sports

Monday, July 6th, 2009

A couple of months ago I played basketball and made the observation that it went pretty well considering I hadn’t played basketball in years. Well, the other day I decided to pump up a deflated ball gathering dust and mold in our garage and put my post-P90X physique to the test just casually shooting around at our condo’s tennis court / basketball court.  Even though this wasn’t overly intense activity, my experience was surprising!

If you’ve ever played sports and felt “connected” to what you’re doing, maybe even in the zone, you’ll know the difference between that and coming back to a sport you haven’t played in years. In general, when you feel in the zone with something, you feel like you have something to offer that activity, and that activity has something to offer you. In contrast, when you’re coming back to an activity you haven’t engaged in for years — particularly a more strenuous activity — you feel more like you should be slumping in defeat in the mere presence of that activity and that activity wants nothing in return but your demise and exile from the land of the living.

The past couple of days with basketball have been pretty encouraging. I felt completely coordinated, and my shot was weirdly accurate considering it had no good reason to be. Generally it’s been my experience that it takes several days, even several weeks to get a basketball shot reasonably back after being dormant for even a few months. For me it has been maybe 80% of the way (or even better) there already, which is way different from my previous history of chucking air balls and bricks when first coming back to basketball after long hiatuses. In general my shots felt strong and crisp, dribbling was easy, and I felt agile. Added bonus? I was able to dunk again for the first time in about a decade. Granted, it was no LeBron James backboard destroyer or anything, but it was an honest-to-god hand-touching-ball-while-simultaneously-touching-rim-while-also-penetrating-basket combo;  enough even to remind me of one of the few areas p90X does absolutely nothing for — hand sensitivity! You may not believe it, but ANY form of dunking hurts for the uninitiated. This is an under-discussed aspect about dunking (where are all the confused, frustrated, outraged sensitive-hand-dunker-bloggers?) This means my guitar playing would be fraught with similar under-callousing / under-conditioning issues I’d need to address independently from P90X, but these are minor quibbles at best.

In a future blog post I’ll try to highlight more where I think P90X really excels, where it falls a bit flat, and who would most benefit from the program. I’ve kind of touched on these issues in the past, but I haven’t really dug deep into them, and I think it’s worth exploring. I say that because my wife, with her newfound bounty of time from finishing grad school, has decided to not start back on P90X (so much for the web address’s premise!) but has instead started another interesting Beachbody program called Chalean Extreme.  She hasn’t gotten too far into the program, so the jury is out on how good of a fit it is for her, but I can certainly see some advantages with that program for her specific wants and needs over P90X. Maybe she’ll be so good to grace us with her presence for a moment to discuss the program when she gets a chance.

But who is P90X most ideally suited for? Any type of athlete? Certain types of athletes? Someone who wants to lose weight? Couch potatos who want to repent? Gym rats who need a change?  Someone who wants to bulk up? This is what I’ll take a stab at answering soon.

You Can Do Anything for 30 Seconds…

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

… or so says Tony Horton.  For 30 seconds you can hold your breath, stand on one leg, sing the last note to Don’t Cry, or even count to 30 if you’re feeling spry.

But tonight was Plyo, so I did a lot of jumping around, squatting, lunging, and scampering for 30 seconds at a time. I am always torn in describing Plyometrics. If you asked me how I like it when I’m doing it, I’d tell you I hate it. If you ask me an hour later, I’d tell you it’s a hard workout, but pretty fun. If you ask me a day later, I’ll tell you it’s an awesome workout, and like a woman who has given birth, I will have evidently forgotten all associated pain and will be willing to do it again.

Anyway, I’m in my 3rd week of P90X. Kind of weird that I won’t be doing the workout I did yesterday (Chest and Back) again until Week 9.  Oh, and just for kicks, I tried doing unassisted pull-ups tonight after my workout. I managed 3! 3 might not sound like a lot, but I could only do 1 when I started and I didn’t imagine I would be able to triple that in just two weeks.

For those of you who might be interested in seeing a Plyo workout in action, you can check out the following video. Note that this guy appears to have better form and speed in his routines than I do, but we have him beat in home decor. Also, check out around the 2:09 marker… the guy actually makes an “X” symbol at the camera. Is he taking it too seriously, or is Xing an inevitable side effect of the program?

Week 2 of P90X and the Forming of Equipment Lust

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Husband here:

So I can officially say, the second week of P90X has started off a lot easier than the first week. We are both tracking our reps and weight pretty closely where applicable, and I learned to pace myself on Chest and Back so I would have enough energy to give the last 30 minutes of the workout my full glory. My muscle endurance was better than last week, for sure, but I still have a lot of work left.

What I am realizing, however, is that I’m going to need some more weights if I want to get serious on the few exercises that require them. Most of P90X is about body resistance, cardio, ab workouts, mobility, and endurance, so on and so forth — in fact, needing so little equipment to get started and even to maintain the program (and even travel!) is a large part of its appeal — it’s really an elegant system.  Before starting P90X I was probably using $50,000 worth of gym equipment at Gold’s Gym, but now I’m using about $100 worth of equipment in my own home and having my butt handed to me.

Still, a few of the chest, back, shoulder and arm exercises do benefit from extra weight. For some people just looking to trim fat and tone up, the resistance bands may be enough. However, I’m guessing most guys who want to bulk up some will start getting into the 25lb+ weight range with dumbbells before too long if they haven’t already transcended wussy manhood. I bought an adjustable set of dumbbells, and they will scale up, however, in my dreams I would buy this set of PowerBlocks:

PowerBlock Personal Adjustable 5 to 45-Pounds per Dumbbell Set

These Bowflex SelectTech dumbbells look like a dream as well:

Bowflex SelectTech 552 Dumbbells

Generally the idea is to save space and make switching out weights super easy. However, you have to break the bank to do so unless you can get lucky on eBay or Craig’s List.

Anyway, week two is off to a great start. Tomorrow is Shoulders and arms, which is a little easier. However, Yoga X looms too close in the horizon, and I’m already trying to brace myself.

Days 1-4 Retrospective

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Husband here:

Not officially through the first four days but am close.

First off, P90X has been EXACTLY what I’m looking for, which is a program that relentlessly assaults and remedies my weaknesses. The bummer here is that I have far more than I realized, and I already knew I was weak. The good thing is Tony (whose blog I just found) encourages you to ditch the ego and focus on proper form and improvement over over-exertion for the sake of glory. That’s good, because this is humbling stuff.

Day 1: Chest & Back & Ab Ripper X

I don’t like push-ups. I don’t like pull-ups. The majority of this routine is doing variations of both until your arms are limp noodles. Weee. There are also some military-friendly exercises called “Dive Bombers” that simulate crawling underneath a fence, coming out the other side, thinking better of it, then crawling backwards again, repeat and so on. Shockingly enough, I could do that one, which suggests I am well prepared to trespass into fenced pastures if necessary! Nothing glamorous with this routine, just meat & potatoes type stuff.

Oh, and you end with Ab Ripper X, which is a 15 minute barrage to the abs. This is precisely another type of activity I would not do if left to my own devices. No worries, this program rubs your face in it. You’re not going to get out of this program without strong abs seems to be the message.

Day 2: Plyometrics

Partially fun, partially hell. This is definitely aerobic in nature as you jump around everywhere. A lot of the jumps simulate actual activities you might engage in if you’re not resigned to a desk-bound job in an air conditioned office; you know, stuff our forefathers might have done, like jumping across creeks, or hopping through rows of tires, practicing a jump shot in basketball, and so forth. All of this was novel for me as I haven’t played a sport in two years, and my legs felt like leprous sandbags by the end of the routine. Even simple exercises such as scampering around a towel in a circle  made me look like I was recovering from having been bed-ridden for a year.

Day 3: Shoulders & Arms

Suspiciously easy workout compared to the previous two. A lot of fairly conventional shoulder, bicep and tricep work, almost all of which I had done before. “This is not what I paid for!” I wanted to think, but secretly I was grateful it wasn’t more punishing. In the end, I had worked all the muscle groups to virtual failure, so I can’t complain too much about the effort required…and besides, little did I know what the next day would bring…

Oh, again, this session ends with Ab Ripper X. Fun ab onslaught.

Day 4: Yoga X

Holy Mother of God!!! This is one of the most humbling routines I’ve ever endured.  I felt like a crippled swan through most of this routine, as it emphasizes muscle endurance, balance, and flexibility, all of which I lack in spades. Most of the positions were vastly uncomfortable and I’d estimate I only did 50-60% of the overall routine to any sort of accuracy. Yes, it’s that hard. It’s the kind of thing I could see a cocky football player trying and quitting halfway through.
However, if you check your ego at the door, you just press through it and try to improve.

The first 50 minutes or so are the hellish part. The last 40 minutes (yes, another wrinkle, this is an hour and a half routine) are a little easier as they emphasize stretching more. The last 10 minutes are actually quite relaxing. Tony mentions that this is the “Yin” to the “Yang”, to which I thought, “Hey buddy, you only gave us 10 minutes of pure Yin and killed us the rest of the time!”

Oh well, I can always get a tamer Yoga program elsewhere if I want to get all relaxed with it.

Oh, below is the pose I attempted and failed at miserably. My goal is to be able to do it after the 90 day period.

Not for panzies

Not for panzies