Showing posts with label situps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label situps. Show all posts

20080204

The Warmup

My workouts vary, as I try to keep things interesting from using different machines and different settings on the treadmill and bike. When I ramp up my work outs soon, the training will be completely different from now. But when I ramp it up, it will be outside of the confines of a small apartment complex gym. I am considering joining a gym and doing classes such as boot camp or possibly join team in training and have a built in support group and all that jazz. My friend Erika did team in training for the Disney Marathon and she said it was awesome. Her endorsement was rousing. Even after I ramp it up, I will continue to have the same warmup that I've been doing. Here's a guide to my current warmup. Say ramp one more time.

The warmup starts with pushups. I found that if I try to do pushups after my blood starts flowing, I feel like I'm crushing veins and arteries in my hands. It is one of the most uncomfortable feelings trust me. When this happens I resort to doing pushups on my knuckles. I use the pushups to get my blood to start flowing and as a checkpoint of how my training is going. I do as many pushups to exhaustion in a row, which is still currently 50 but 50 is getting easier to achieve each time. My sister's husband Steve says that if I do bicep curls to exhaustion before I do pushups, then I will be able to do 10-15 more pushups. He says it's because they're complementary motions so they don't cancel eachother out but bicep exercise get the blood flowing to the upper arm. I think I'd just have the feeling of crushing veins and then I'd get the awk-awks.


I then move onto situps or, more appropriately named, crunches. These aren't your garden variety crunches though, they have a slight twist which I learned from growing up with sisters and a mother who would do "Abs of STEEL" workouts. Basically, my feet never touch the ground and my legs crunch in as my torso crunches in. I believe it's called a total body crunch. I call them situps. I also do alternating situps as were mentioned in an earlier post. They involve pointing the elbow to the opposite knee on each crunch, alternating left and right elbow each time, and only pulling up one leg at a time. I did do these to exhaustion before but now I just do them to the second crampy feeling because it feels like I can go forever just because I probably change how I do them during the crampy feelings.


After the pushups and situps and recording of my progress, I stretch. Some times I do more stretching than others, especially if I'm going to run during my work out, but I always at least do the following stretches that I learned from the circle stretching before lacrosse and cross country practices. I always thought it was weird that I played two sports that could be represented with an "x", as they often were, xc and lax. I think it was to make them seem cooler and more XTREME because of the 90s phenomenon of the X-games. I couldn't shorten them to xc and lax however, because I already used my reserve of douchebag points in other facets of life. Enough of an aside, on with the stretching.

The first stretch I do is a simple standing reach for your toes. I feel like this is a good most of body stretch. I imagine I'm leading my past stretching circles and say to myself, "to your toes, take it down." It helps with the boringness of it. As with all stretches, I hold it for at least 8 seconds, and I don't bounce at all. Bouncing is really bad, you can tear a ligament or hurt yourself in general that way. If you can't reach your toes, oh well. If you can go past your toes, you already know how to stretch.


Kim Jong-Il can't touch his toes yet.

I then put my right leg across my left leg and reach for my toes from my waist, still keeping my legs straight. "Right over left, take a clown." Then I do the same with my left leg. "Left over right, Parson Brown." One of the stretch leaders in lacrosse, Kevin, would replace "take it down" with random things like that. He thought he was funny, and he was damned right. Everyone in my imaginary stretching circle giggles everytime.

Take it clown, Kim. Take it all the way clown.

The next move, which is important according to one of my training tapes (Kindergarten Cop), is the neck roll. It is pretty self explanatory and feels damned good.

Kim Jong-il is a trained professional, please do not attempt to drink and neck roll at home.

An important stretch that I neglected to do before I was injured a week back is an excellent one for the back of the knee. There are several variations of this stretch and some may be more effective than others, but I use them interchangeably. If you have a wall, you can place the bottom of your foot against the wall and then lean forward into the wall, feeling it in the back of your leg. If you have a partner, you can use the bottom of their foot. Another way is to do a lunge, effectively using the ground. If I have an attractive and nice smelling partner, I prefer the second way, otherwise a lunge will do since I messed up the paint in my last apartment with the wall way.

You should feel it where the red arrow points.

"On your butts, butterfly." A butterfly stretch is where you put the bottoms of your feet together, pull them into your crotchal region, and then push down on your knees. Althought your knees are shaped like butterfly wings and can flap, don't flap during the stretch lest you want a groin injury. When the ground was wet, we'd do "spidermans" instead. I actually prefer spiderman because there is less flapping possibility and less of a chance for mr. dan to come out and acquaint himself with others. To do the spiderman, get on your haunches and put your arms between your knees. Then push out with your elbows. The next picture is pretty creepy, the squeamish should avert their eyes if they don't want to have nightmares of a Kim Jong-il spider.


Dammit Kim, I'm all out of poop baggies.

I then finish it up with a sitting reach to my toes. Basically it's one of those "it's on the test" things. Remember in gym class when you'd have to sit at that box and reach as far as you could? I thought those days were over. But then I joined Lifetime Fitness a couple years back and for the fitness test to see your starting point, they used that same box. I hate that box. I was completely unprepared. I vowed to never be caught unprepared again, so I throw in the stretch for good measure. I also do one leg to the side at a time stretch, but it may just be superfluous.


You graduated with honors... well you just barely passed, but you're in. You're in the university of stretching.

I've heard some rumors of stretching being unnecessary and other tales that you should stretch both before and after working out. I took the middle road and just stretch before working out. It's relaxing, feels good, and I'm pretty sure it diminishes my chances of injury. I yearn for the days of group stretching circles and my fantasies of leading them, and perhaps will one day realize that dream. For now the warmup is just something I do on my apartment floor before I work out, but one day it will be a social event again. Mark my words.

P.S. I borrowed Jordan's idea of cutting up and using dictators in an amusing fashion. His blog is hilarious and can be found at: http://jaharriman.blogspot.com/ .

20080122

The First Chart

Part of my training includes stretching and doing pushups and situps (crunches) before hitting the machines. Sometimes I feel like I can do a million situps, and therefore I think I must be performing them in the most girly girl of ways most days. But it's kinda hard to fuck up push ups, and I feel they can be an accurate measure of my progress. Yesterday I was finally able to do 50 consecutive push ups and feel that is an important milestone. Here's a chart with my "Calisthenics" progress so far. Alternating situps are situps that alternate between going to the left and right knees.


Must've been a full moon on the 13th...



Once I start actually training, I will join a gym instead of using the rinky-dink apartment gym. My previous experience in joining a gym (Lifetime Fitness) was a good albeit expensive one. I started going 3 to 5 times a week. However, I moved to Rosslyn 4 months after joining the gym and the closest lifetime was over 30 miles away. Paying money is definitely a motivator to go to the gym more often. There is a gym called Planet Fitness across the street which is only $10 per month. But, their website is very pink and purple and they're very big on a "Judgment Free Zone" which sounds sort of like "Don't ask, Don't tell." Fitness First is a brand new gym also very close that is about $30 per month and has a bunch of included classes (I would do the 6:30 AM boot camp), which Planet Fitness does not have. Another choice is the Gold's Gym about a mile and a half away since I have a couple friends that already go there. But I'd be least likely to go to Gold's Gym since I'd have to drive to get there. None of the gyms have a pool, so I'm going to have to figure that part out.