Insanity: The Asylum – DAY 16 – “Vertical Plyo”

Ah, halfway through The Asylum and I don’t expect it will be getting any easier. Well, maybe a little, because as I do the workouts, they have to become easier, right?

Shaun T's AsylumNah, not really. These routines are so difficult, that while they do get easier, the fact is I am still working harder, because I am able to do only more of the workout. That is, if I could do the routine all the way through, then maybe each iteration would seem easier, but because these workouts are impossible for me to complete, all I end up doing is working harder and harder each time.

And that’s a good thing.

This is my third day of sub-50g of carbs, and I feel great! In the past, not so much. Not sure what is different this time, but we’ll see if it lasts. I’m going to try to go a couple weeks like this.

Why ultra-low-carb? I am trying — dammit! — to lose this last bit of gutfat, and it is stubborn. I just have to see if it’s even possible to lose it, and I have not given low-carbs a fair chance at it.

So this time through “Vertical Plyo” I took time to — quickly! — write down each move and, if I remembered to count, which I did about half the time, a number of reps I did.

Now, if only I could read what I wrote.

  1. Long Jump – 7 and 7
  2. Split Squat Back Fly – ?
  3. Back Fly Tuck Jump – 28
  4. Low Stance Jacks – ?
  5. Single-Leg Jumprope – 100% (forgot to count, but kept going the full time)
  6. Resistance Tuck Jump – 28
  7. Plyo Resistance Pushups – ?
  8. Resistance X Jumps – 18
  9. Mountain Climber Switch Kick – 38
  10. Low Squat Jumprope – 90
  11. Rotational Agility Jump Squat – ?
  12. Decoy Split Jumps – 12 and 12
  13. Agility Scissor Jump with Pushups – 40 and 20 (100%)
  14. Double Jump – 90
  15. Single-Leg Power Jump – 18 and 18
  16. Lateral Jump – 15

Those are my numbers for today. I’ll be curious to see if they improve next time through.

I was definitely wiped out after this workout. In fact, I find myself taking a nap every afternoon I do an The Asylum that is not “Recovery”.

(BTW, I also did “Recovery” today. I figured I needed it after “Vertical Plyo” — my back was feeling a little weak. Hope it’s okay.)

Only 14 days left!

Insanity: The Asylum – DAY 15 – “Speed & Agility”

Yesterday, Day 14, was “Relief”, so no post necessary, but today marks the halfway point of The Asylum and I’m stoked about that. I’m not gonna lie, it’s been tough going, and I know it won’t get any easier. Only 15 days to go!

This was my third time through “Speed & Agility”, but it was my first time through it while on a low-carb diet. Yes, I am testing out how effective low carbs can be on my gut fat, while I am going through a high-intensity fitness program. If not now, when?

For the record, this was just my second day on low carbs, but I have to say, I didn’t feel that I was hampered by the lack of carbs. My energy level was high, high enough to where I was able to really push it, although, yeah, I did need many breaks along the way, as usual with this routine. I wrote more about it on the first time through, if you want to check that out.

I will be interested to see how low carbs affect me over the next few days, as the glycogen leaves my body and I turn to burning fat for fuel. This transformation may take a few weeks, but I’ve got time.

Insanity: The Asylum – DAY 13 – “Strength”

Yesterday, Day 12 of The Asylum, was “Back to Core” again. Not much to report, so I did a piece about carbs and the evil of sugar.

Shaun T's AsylumToday, Day 13, was “Strength” and, as much as I loved this workout the first time through, I love it even more now, the third time.

I increased the dumbbell weight this time, and varied it depending on the exercise.

For the warmups, I used 12.5-pound dumbbell, which is the same as I had used throughout the workout before. I will increase this to 15 pounds next time through, because I want to make the moves as difficult as possible at the end.

Well, wait. This is just the warmup, so maybe I’ll leave it the same at 12.5. I don’t want to wear myself out.

I didn’t mention before that after the warmup, this routine is divided into three parts.

Part One is Cardio-Dumbbell Rotations. These work your whole body. I went to 15-pound dumbbells for these.

There are three moves in Part One, and we go through the series three times. Each time through, the moves get more difficult.

ROUND 1.

The first move is a Dumbbell Rotation that involves a curl, squat, jump back to plank, pushup, jump up. Repeat 8 times. I did all 8.

The second move is an Alternating Shoulder Press, 12 per side.

The third move is a single dumbbell Rotating Jump Squat. This was a timed move. I made it through without pausing, but I do need to write down my numbers here on out.

ROUND 2.

Dumbbell Rotations level 2 adds a spider move — where you bring your foot up to shoulder level while still still in plank — and another pushup, so it’s curl, squat, jump back to plank, pushup, spider right, spider left, pushup, jump up. I also managed to do all 8 here.

Next is Reciprocating Shoulder Press, again 12 per side.

Third is Dumbbell Curl Rotating Jump Squat, where we add a two-handed curl with a single dumbbell before doing the rotating jump squat. Had to slow down here, but made it all the way through.

ROUND 3.

Dumbbell Rotations level 3 adds 8 Plank Runs, so it’s curl, squat, jump back to plank, pushup, spider right, spider left, pushup, 8 plank runs, jump up. I only managed 6 of these, resting after the third and fifth ones.

Next is Simultaneous Shoulder Press, 12 per side.

Finally, we add an overhead press, so it’s a Dumbbell Curl Overhead Rotating Jump Squat. I did not make it through these, resting twice. Tough. I really felt the extra weight here.

Part 2 is Back Exercises. I went back to 12.5-pound dumbbells for these. There are only two moves in this section.

Hip Flys came first, where we bend over slightly with knees together and bent, and lift the weight with palms facing back, lifting toward the back, squeezing shoulder blades together.

The second move is Jumping Pullups. The move is just jump-assisted pullups, being sure to engage the back at the top. I mistakenly went wide instead of standard width pullups and tired quickly, resting 3 or 4 times during the minute allotted for the move.

Oh, and, yeah, if you read my Day 2 post, you may remember I had said that I didn’t see a lot of value in using the pullup bar for this series. I was wrong about that. It’s all good. Use it if you got it.

Back to Hip Flys. Same as before.

The second move now adds a pushup between pullups, and progresses, so 1 regular pullup, one pushup, 2 pullups, 2 pushups, and so on for 2 minutes. I got through 4 of each. I could easily do more pushups, but the pullups were difficult.

Back to Hip Flys, again same as before.

The last move is Rock Climber Pullups, where you grab the parallel bars, move your hands to the other parts of the bar, then back, all while staying with your chin above the bar. I’d like to say I went to the floor move, because my in-door pullup bar couldn’t handle it. It couldn’t, but neither could my back and shoulders. Anyway, the floor move was a plank on top of dumbbells, move to low plank one elbow at a time, move hands back to dumbbells and plank, lift one dumbbell to chest and back down, lift the other to chest and back down. Repeat. I took several breaks during this move.

Part 3 is Chest Exercises. Two parts, three times. I used 17.5-pound dumbbells for these.

We start with Chest Presses, but we also work the core here, so we are on our backs with shoulders and feet off the floor, knees near the chest. As we push the weight up, the legs go out, still with feet off the floor. Lower the weight and bring the knees back toward the chest. Repeat for 1 minute.

Next we did a moving recovery with Squat Flys, where we jump to a squat, and move our straight arms toward the back at shoulder level, jump back to feet together, with hands together still at shoulder level.

The next group of Chest Presses is alternating. Shoulders are off the ground, weights are both up, one leg is raised, and one knee moves in as the weight on that same side comes down. The weight on the opposite side stays up, as does the leg on that side. 30 seconds per side.

The next moving recovery was Alternating Back Lunge Flys, where we move one leg back as the arms go out, just like in the first set. As the leg comes back up, hands go together at shoulder height in front. Repeat, but using opposite leg. Keep alternating legs for 1 minute.

The last group of Chest presses, both legs and shoulders stay off the floor throughout the move, and we press the weight up simultaneously with both arms. This is HARD! I had to take a couple of breaks during the minute-long repetition.

And we finish the workout with Frog Jumps to Alternating Single-Leg Plank. Frog jump forward, drop down and jump back to plank with left leg off the ground. Jump back up. Frog jump back. Frog jump up, drop down and jump back to plank with right leg off the ground this time. Jump back up. Frog jump up. Repeat until Shaun T tells you to finish.

NOTE: I’m not too sure I’m doing this last move exactly as Shaun T does it, but I have space issues, so the above is the way I do it.

THAT’S IT. I was DEAD at the end of this workout. I made it through the short stretch, but three hours later I am still feeling wiped out.

And loving it! Tomorrow is “Relief” — I’ll need it.

 

Are carbs evil?

Hmmmm…. Are carbs really as evil as many people think they are?

When I first started my quest for fitness, I went on a calorie-restricted diet. I didn’t pay much attention to what the calories were — fat, carb, protein, I didn’t care. I only wanted to stay under a certain number of calories daily. I lost 50 pounds that way.

Of course, once I went off that diet — I don’t know about you, but I can’t keep that up forever — I regained a few pounds. 15, to be exact.

I was doing a whole lot of walking during that time, and I added in some pushups and crunches to try to get more into shape. My weight was staying pretty even, but I wanted to lose excess fat. Problem is, I didn’t really want to diet, because I know that I just can’t stay on diets of any kind. No diet? Lose weight? I figured more exercise is what I needed.

Enter P90X.

When I got my P90X package, I read through all the literature that came with it, including the diet plan, along with a proclamation that reshaping my body was really mostly a matter of diet, not exercise. Exercise helps get a body more fit, adds muscle, and, yes, does burn calories, I read, but it just doesn’t burn as many calories as we think. We need to control our diets to lose fat.

This makes sense, I just had never thought about it that way. I can illustrate with a conversation I had with my neighbor just this morning.

I asked him this morning, when we were discussing his eating and exercise habits (after he complained about not being able to lose his gut), “How many miles do you need to go to run off a bowl of ice cream?” A cup and a half of regular vanilla ice cream is around 400 calories. Premium stuff like Ben & Jerry’s and Godiva raise that to about 700 calories.

You burn about 100 calories per mile, so you’ll need to run 4 miles to burn off that cheap ice cream or 7 miles to burn off the good stuff. And that’s just the ice cream. Wasn’t that a quarter-pounder with cheese, a large fries, and a large soft drink for dinner? That’s 1300 more calories.

1700 to 2000 calories. That is all the energy you need for a full day, and that was just one meal. Can you run 17 to 20 miles every day?

Why do we consume that many calories! That stuff tastes good! But why does it taste so good?

Sugar.

If you were to try to eat that ice cream without the sugar in it, how much do you think you’d eat? Have you tried drinking heavy cream straight? Not that tasty.

As for the meal before the ice cream, the large soda is the big offender, so good only because of the sugar. I drink sparkling water, and it’s not that easy to guzzle that stuff. But if you give me Coke? I can go through a few in no time.

There are carbs in the burger’s bun and potatoes the fries are made from, too, of course, but not so much sugar, so let’s focus on not the sugar itself.

Why can I drink so much soda? Sugar.

Why can I eat so much ice cream — and believe me, I never stopped at the 1.5 cups in the example above, unless that’s all I had on hand? Sugar.

Therein, I think, lies the key to controlling our diets. Lose the sugar. Sugar — in whatever form, whether it’s pure cane sugar, or high fructose corn syrup, or whatever — just tastes so good and therefore makes it too easy to consume too many calories.

Fats and proteins, on the other hand, make it much more difficult to overconsume.

When I started P90X, I dedicated myself to the provided diet plan, which required me to get 50% of my calories from protein, 30% from carbs, and 20% from fat. I had never eaten like that before! I’d been on low-carb diets, but not high-protein diets. And you know what? It was hard to get enough protein calories.

Do you know how much white fish I needed to consume to get half of my calories from protein each day? Almost 3 pounds (for 1000 protein calories of a 2000-calorie diet). That’s a lot of fish. Or about the same amount of boneless, skinless chicken breast. Or I could eat 7 turkey burgers (without the bun), although that would put me over my fat limit.

That’s when I started using protein shakes to supplement my meals, just to ensure I’d get enough protein.

Now, you could probably make the same argument about fat that I’m making about sugar. Yes, you can consume a lot of fat in one sitting. A fatty piece of meat usually tastes better than a lean one. Butter sure does make things taste better.

I don’t think it’s quite the same for me. I don’t tend to eat that much fat, anyway, so quitting sweets, removing everything from my diet that is created solely to provide sweetness — things like cakes, cookies, cinnamon rolls — seemed more sensible. You may be different.

Back to the original question: Are carbs evil? No. But for me, sugar may very well be. It just makes foods taste so good. So I avoid it.

How about you? Is sugar pushing your calorie count over the top?

Insanity: The Asylum – DAY 11 – “Game Day”

Yesterday, Day 10, was just “Recovery” again, so I didn’t bother posting about that, but I did put up a little comparison of P90X and P90X2.

Today, however, was a huge day in The Asylum, because it was “Game Day”.

This is a 60-minute workout and it is a KILLER! I ain’t kidding.

Shaun T's AsylumThe basic concept behind “Game Day” is that we are involved in a series of athletic competitions and must really bring it to win.

After a short warmup, we go into what Shaun T calls a 1-mile run. There is variety throughout the mile, as Shaun T leads us through high knees for speed, butt kicks while going downhill, single-arm horizontal runs for uphills. This is followed by 100-meter dashes and long jumps.

Basketball jumpshots and layups were next, followed by a series of wrestling maneuvers that will test your whole body.

On to soccer. We do a series of kicks until we are doing 8 in a row, then we juggle an imaginary ball with our feet for a minute.

Tennis, anyone? Side to side through the agility ladder, doing forehands and backhands, then forward and back to volley and slam.

Speed skating was next on tap with sprints and coasting, both very hard on the legs.

The swimming drill killed me. It involved lying on the stomach, holding shoulders and legs up, while moving straight arms behind the back then around over the head, sort of a breast stroke. It doesn’t sound hard, but…. We stayed in the water, because surfing was next, with a paddle out to waves, and quick jumps onto the board for a ride. Paddle, ride, paddle, ride, and so on.

Now for some familiar Shaun T football drills, with a few moves added. Then came rock climbing drills on the chinup bar or the floor. That late in the workout, I only did a couple on the chinup bar before I went to the floor.

We finished up with some baseball drills that were not too difficult, but they didn’t need to be.

Cooldown and out.

This was a very tough routine, even harder than “Vertical Plyo“. It’s a full 57 minutes of workout with a 3-minute cooldown at the end. Not for the feint of heart or body, that’s for sure. And, get this — I looked ahead in the schedule. The next two times we do “Game Day” we also do an extra bit of “Overtime”.

Shaun T is going to kill me!