The power of a good recovery drink

Never underestimate the power of a good recovery drink. What? You only drink water or some kinda sports drink after your workout? Hmmmmm….

A recovery drink has some important attributes.

First of all, your body needs protein. If you worked out correctly, you broke down some muscle, so you need to build it back up. To do that, you need to ingest some protein.

Secondly, you need some carbs. Not only do you need them to replenish the glycogen stores you depeleted during the workout, but you also want to spike your insulin. Why’s that? Because insulin does lots of things in your body, and one of them is facilitating muscle-building.

“Okay,” you say. “I need protein and carbs. Why don’t I just eat a recovery meal of steak and potatoes?”

Well, that is fine, if you want to do that, I suppose, but I gotta tell you, I am not really in the mood to either make or eat a big meal right after I work out. If you think you’ll just go out to eat, consider that there is only a 45-minute window after your workout that is prime time for a recovery drink/meal, so by the time you shower, get to a restaurant, and get your food, well, you are likely past that 45-minute window.

But let me tell you something else about the recovery drink I use. I love it. It is one of my favorite things to eat/drink. So the prospect of having that recovery drink after my workout is sometimes a great motivator on those days when maybe I am not so inclined to get a workout in.

My recovery drink is a protein shake composed of

  • 8-12 ounces of unsweetened almond milk (my local grocery chain, HEB, has their own brand that is really good)
  • 4 or 5 dates, and
  • a heaping scoop of a vanilla-flavored low carb whey protein powder (Optimum Nutrition makes my favorite).

The dates don’t all chop up in the blender, so there is a little spoon action at the end of the drink, and, man is it good!

Whatever you choose to use for your recovery drink, don’t skip it — it’s the most important meal of the day.

Not achieving your fitness goals? Try something different!

Back in 2007 I realized I was fat and out of shape. I’d been that way for a long time, but in 2007, I finally realized it. But I’ve covered this story in my last post.

Having then realized that I was fat and out of shape, I set about to change that the only way I knew how: Calorie restriction and walking.

Sure, I’d tried low carb, Somercizing, low fat, you name it, but calorie restriction seemed to be the only answer for me. Plus a little exercise.

So I ordered Nutrisystem and started walking. My walking goal was 10k steps per day.

I lost 55 pounds in about 7 months!

Great. Of course, I could not keep up a calorie restricted diet forever, so I added steps, reaching for a daily goal of 15k, and sometimes even surpassing 30k.

But my weight crept up again. I gained back 15 of the 55 pounds I’d lost. Still not bad, and I rationalized to myself that I was older and could not lose weight as I had been able to do in the past.

Then my brother convinced me to try Tony Horton’s P90X.

Wow! It was tough, too tough for me to complete all the  workouts at first, but I continued through it, and continue working out with Beachbody products, including One-On-One and Insanity to this day. I am down 25 pounds since I started back in February 2010, and have put on a lot of muscle, so I am probably down 30-35 pounds of fat.

Much of that fat loss has to do with the diet I went on when I started P90X. It was a lot of calories — up to 2400 per day, although I shot for 2000 — but I completely cut out products with added sugar, focusing more on protein as 50% of my caloric intake, with carbs and fat at 20-30% each.

After about 60 days of P90X I pretty much leveled out with my fat loss. I moved to a primal diet where I didn’t count calories. I think this was problematic, because I was eating a lot, and taking in more calories that you burn is a surefire way to gain weight, which in my case meant gaining fat. As I said, I had pretty much plateaued, so my situation was not dire, but I sure did want to lose a few more pounds of fat from my gut.

Still, though, I stuck with my diet and workout plan.

Then one day, I came to the realization that I was not meeting my goals. I was doing great, I weighed a lot less than I used to, and I was in possibly the best shape of my life, but that excess gut fat was still there. I had to change something, try something different. Enter Insanity.

I had put off Insanity because I have an arthritic left knee. I felt that I was injuring it with the P90X aerobics and could only imagine what Insanity would do to it. But I finally told myself that I had hurt the knee before and cured it by quitting aerobics — I would try Insanity and, if it hurt my knee, I’d just quit, go back to resistance training.

I’m in my fourth week of Insanity and my knee feels great! I can still tell it’s arthritic, but no continual throbbing pain as I sometimes felt when P90X was my sole workout program.

I should note that my knee does not / did not hurt after I got it warmed up and into the exercise. It never felt weak. The pain would hit later, and it was really more annoying than anything.

My waist size is slowly moving downward again.

So the point? You have fitness goals. You think you are doing all the right things, but you are not reaching your goals. As you get older, you may tend to just tell yourself, “Well, I guess I just can’t do it anymore. I’m old and that means I’m going to be out of shape.” WRONG!

If you are not achieving your fitness goals, don’t give up. Try something different!

On a low-fat diet? Try low-carb. Doing P90X? Try Insanity.

Don’t give in to rationalizations that explain your failure to achieve your goals. Continue to strive for them by changing what you’re doing. You may be very surprised by how successful you will be!

How do you know if you are fat?

How do you know if you are fat? This seems like a silly question, right? Look at the scale. Look in a mirror. Pretty simple.

You might think so, but so many of us are blind to our own shortcomings. You’ve surely observed the people in your life who rail about the actions of others, when you know damn well that the one doing the railing does the exact thing they are railing about!

I’m sure there is a psychological term for this, but I’m not a psychologist, so I dunno what it is. I only know this phenomenon exists and that it quite likely exists in all of us.

Even in ourselves. Yes, we are not immune.

When I was fat, I only had an inkling that I was fat. I was buying XXL t-shirts, and I wondered why the manufacturers were making shirts smaller these days. I bought increasingly larger waist sized pants. I looked at my friends and wondered how they could let themselves go like that.

You might think that larger sized clothing is a key clue to weight gain. Well, sure it is. I knew I was gaining weight. But was I fat? After all, I had always worn size XL shirts. XXL is only one size larger. As for the pants, I can’t tell you what I was thinking. When I realized that size 42 was now getting tight, I started to wonder.

All that evidence, but still no action on my part.

What finally got me to thinking about my weight was my blood pressure. My doctor had put me on one medication, then he added another. This made me really nervous, because I do not like taking medication. I believe that drug companies are only trying to make you dependent on them — not cure you — so I was not really willing to be a participant in their profit motives. And that’s not to even mention any side effects, documented or not, those drugs may have.

So I was finally thinking about losing weight, but still not taking action. I had looked around. Everyone my age was fat. I supposed, perhaps, that was just the way life goes.

Then my wife and I went on a cruise. I am notoriously shy in front of a camera, preferring to shoot rather than be shot, but, of course, on vacation, photos happen. Wow. I saw the photos and immediately ordered Nutrisystem.

That started me on a path to fitness that I doubt I’ll ever veer from.

So, to answer the question, “How do you know if you are fat?” It’s rather easy. Face reality. If you are facing reality, you will be able to see if you are fat.

My friend Ken told me something once that has always stuck with me: “If your gut sticks out farther than your chest, you’re too fat.”

Put on a t-shirt and stand straight up. Is your gut sticking out farther than your chest?

Insanity fit test – results after two weeks

I’ve been doing Insanity for two weeks now. Just did the second fit test yesterday and here are the results.

Switch Kicks5565+18.18%
Power Jacks3056+86.67%
Power Knees78109+39.74%
Power Jumps2351+121.74%
Globe Jumps710+42.86%
Suicide Jumps1418+28.57%
Pushup Jacks2830+7.14%
Low Plank Obliques3657+58.33%

Not too shabby. But….

I had already voiced my concern to my brother about needing to add upper body to the workouts. There is no part of the Insanity fit test that measures upper back strength, and that’s because there is no part of Insanity that targets the upper back. Gotta add it.

As for chest, note the number on the Pushup Jacks. Only 7% improvement. I have read from other people who write about Insanity that they achieved great gains in pushups because of all the pushups we do during the program. I find, though, that by the time we get to pushups, I am wiped out, so my effort is not maximal.

I am also accustomed to using my Tony Horton pushup stands and I have not been doing that with Insanity. This puts my wrists in a different position, and that could be affecting my results as well.

The pushups may get better as things go on, but if I don’t see more improvement by next fit test, I’ll be adding more pushups to the workouts. I need my chest, because I can’t seem to shake all this gut fat, and a larger chest and back help mask that.

Speaking of my back, my brother mentioned that the Russians developed a system back in the day where they leave a pullup bar up and  do 200 pullups during the day, just grabbing some reps whenever the chance arises. This sounds like a great idea. Will probably give that a try once a week.

Have you tried Insanity yet? How are your results?

Just about two weeks into Insanity! Let’s work through this injury….

Wow. Two weeks into Insanity and, yeah, it’s still challenging.

You know what else? You can pull stuff doing this!

Well, strain, anyway. I strained my lower back last week. Worked through it, it’s fine.

Today I strained my right oblique. How? I dunno. Trying to push too hard, I suppose, probably on those moving pushups. I’ll work through this, too.

Working through injuries. Is that the way to go? I’ve sort of addressed that subject before when I gave you some P90X tips, and I stand by the idea that a minor injury should not — cannot — stop you from working out. If it does, you are just looking for an excuse.

Does that mean you don’t work around the injury? Nope. You do need to work around it.

Does that mean you sacrifice form to work around the injury? Nope. You should not sacrifice good form to accommodate an injury.

So, then, with a strained oblique, how can I continue training with Shaun T’s Insanity program?

Well, fortunately, it is a strain, and not a pull or tear (I think!), so I will just do the logical thing and take it easy! If I need to do a move, and I feel pain in the injured area, I will modify the move if the pain is too intense. I will still keep good form, but modify it, such as by doing pushups from the knees.

This is all part of knowing your body. Pain is not bad. It’s a reminder to you that something is wrong. However, you can feel pain and not give in to it. Could this lead to further injury? Sure, if I overpush it. Again, it’s part of knowing your body.

I know mine. I know how far I can push it!

(Okay, you got me, if I knew exactly how far I could push it, I’d never get injured, right? It’s not an exact science. But you get the idea.)

The point is simply this: Don’t let a minor injury cause you to seat your ass. You have made a commitment to work your body, don’t use a simple muscle strain as an excuse to keep you from your commitment.