You’re going to walk off that McRib? Really?

I think we often fool ourselves about our rate of calorie burn. There are many times I hear friends talk about eating something like a McRib with fries and finishing with “I guess I’ll have to get in a few extra steps on the treadmill to make up for this.”

WRONG!

A McRib with medium fries is 880 calories.

According to the Mayo Clinics estimates for a 200-pound person (less calories are burned for people who weigh less, more for people who weigh more), burning 880 calories would require you to

  • walk very briskly for over two hours
  • jog for about one and a quarter hours
  • run fast for about an hour

You can get the numbers here.

I really hope you aren’t saying to yourself right now, “Well, I don’t eat at McDonald’s.” The McRib was just an example. Most of us have poor eating habits that we justify. Acknowledge yours.

I am not saying here that you should not indulge yourself from time to time. In fact, I think you should do that. Do you enjoy a Sonic Bacon Cheeseburger with a Chocolate Shake? Have it!

All I’m asking is that you don’t kid yourself that you are going to burn off the 1200 calories from that meal (and that’s without fries!) with a walk around the block in your neighborhood. Not gonna happen.

 

Do you get enough fruit?

If you’re like me, you’re not really a fruit eater. I like a good apple, but it’s hard to find a good apple. I love a good pear … but it’s hard to find a good pear. And so on. So I really don’t eat a lot of fruit.

I probably don’t need to explain to you the health benefits of fruit, from their anti-oxidants to their added soft fiber to their lower glycemic sugars. I really felt that I should eat more fruit, but, whenever I bought apples and bit into a mushy one … blech!

Then my life changed.

When I started doing Tony Horton’s P90X, I also changed my diet. The dietary suggestions in the P90X program did not necessarily include more fruit, but they did include allowances for a lot more protein than I was used to eating. To get enough protein, I turned to prepackaged protein drinks.

Then I read Mark Sisson’s The Primal Blueprint and it made a lot of sense to me, so I stopped eating all grains. All of them. No pasta. No bread. No oatmeal. No tortillas.

(I eat grains again now, but in far smaller quantities that I used to. That is my usual approach to reducing a dietary item: Quit it for three to six months — sometimes longer — to break the habit, then add a little back in.)

I had already stopped eating almost all sugars with the exception of some honey after workouts.

Given those circumstances, how could I get the 250 grams of carbohydrate I needed for my new diet if I did not eat those things? I had to add more fruit to my diet.

I switched to a protein powder, so I could prepare my own protein shakes, and, yup, I added frozen fruit to those protein shakes.

I mostly use blueberries, raspberries, and strawberries. I don’t use bananas — too much sugar in those, and I’ve also always thought that drinking bananas is kinda gross.

Recently Costco also started stocking frozen organic peaches, so I use those in my protein shakes as well.

I mention “organic” because that’s important for me, if affordable. The organic berries and fruits that I’ve been buying have far less sugar in them than the fruits I was used to, and I find that much more enjoyable. When I eat those organic peaches, I feel as if I am eating food, not just sugar.

I don’t use the USDA Dietary Guidelines or the Food Pyramid as any kind of logical guidance for eating. You can read Good Calories, Bad Calories to find out why. (HINT: What shows up on those lists is way too influenced by politics, instead of being totally driven by actual nutrition science.)

But I do think that eating more fruit is a good idea, and I’m happy that I’ve found a way to incorporate fruit into my current eating habits.

How about you? Do you get enough fruit?

Chest & Back Workout

“Chest & Back” is the first routine in Tony Horton’s P90X, probably because every guy wants to work his chest and every guy needs to work his back, so it’s a good way to get things rolling.

(Sure, women need P90X too, but I’m a guy, so I really have to speak from a guy’s perspective.)

There is a great chest and back routine in Tony’s One-On-One series, too. It’s called 30/15 and consists of Tony attempting to do alternating sets of 30 pushups followed by 15 pullups, for a total of 24 sets. He only makes it partway through before he has to switch to 25/15, then 25/12, but you get the idea. That routine will pump you up.

Because I am a P90X disciple, I tend to do chest and back on Mondays, which is the first day of my weekly workout schedule. But, as you may by now know, I also like to mix it up, so I made up my own routine called, quite unimaginatively, Steve’s Chest & Back.

I decided that I’m going to provide you with the routines I make up myself. That way, if you don’t want to spring for P90X you can still have some guidance from someone who has been through the program.

This routine, which I’ve done for the past two Mondays now, gives me a good pump, wears out my muscles, and lasts about an hour.

It requires a pullup bar — I use the over the doorframe kind — and for the pushups, if you like, pushup bars.

I use a chinup bar I purchased from Beachbody.com, but you can probably find a good one at Dick’s or Wal-mart even. Wherever you get yours, I recommend a pullup bar that allows you to do wide pullups, like the one pictured here. Check, though, to make sure your doorway has enough room on the bar side to allow the wide grips to fit. For example, if you have cabinets really close to the door frame, the thing won’t fit, and you’ll need to get the kind without the wide grips.

Now when it comes to pushup stands, I do highly recommend Tony Horton’s. They are designed with a circular bottom so they won’t rollover during wide pushups.

Why use pushup stands? For me, that many pushups in a short period of time really overworks my wrists, and the pushup stands take a lot of that pressure off them. Also, you can add extra intensity by going lower into the pushup, if you use stands.

One of the things I don’t like about Tony’s workouts is that he uses the term “reverse-grip pullups” and also “chinups”. He surely knows what he’s talking about, but it’s confusing to me, so for the purposes of my routines, I use “chinups” to describe those exercises where your palms are facing you, and “pullups” for those exercises where your palms are facing away from you. Simple.

Here’s my Steve’s Chest & Back routine:

  1. Standard Grip Chinups – Hands slightly wider than shoulders
  2. Standard Width Pushups – Hands slightly wider than shoulders
  3. Wide Grip Pullups – Hands as far out as your pullup bar will allow
  4. Military Pushups – Hands right below shoulders, elbows stay near the body the entire move
  5. Close Grip Pullups – Hands less than shoulder width, maybe six inches apart
  6. Wide Pushups – Hands twice shoulder width
  7. Standard Pullup/Chinup Switch – Hands slightly wider than shoulders, switch between pullups and chinups every two reps
  8. Decline Pushups – Feet up on a chair, hands at standard width
  9. Close Grip Chinups – Hands less than shoulder width, maybe six inches apart
  10. Diamond Pushups – Fingers spread, index fingers and thumbs touching right below chest, elbows out, legs spread wide
  11. Wide Grip Pullups – Hands as far out as your pullup bar will allow
  12. Dive Bombers – Hands standard width, feet spread wide. Start with butt in the air. Move your nose and chest toward the floor, then come up on the other side, as if you are scooching under a fence. Then reverse the move and end up with your butt in the air. Like this guy.
  13. Parallel Pullups – These are with  your palms facing each other, if you have that kind of pullup bar. Otherwise, you can do some other kind of pullup/chinup
  14. Standard Width Pushups – Hands slightly wider than shoulders
  15. Standard Pullup/Chinup Switch – Hands slightly wider than shoulders, switch between pullups and chinups every two reps

Keys to pushups:

  • Do as many reps as you can for each exercise
  • If you feel that you want to do more, take a brief rest at the top and try a few more
  • Keep your core tight, no saggy body
  • Go all the way down
  • Come all the way up
  • Keep your elbows tight, pointed toward your feet, during military pushups

Keys to pullups/chinups:

  • Do as many reps as you can for each exercise
  • Do not hyperextend your arms
  • Only do one set of parallels (I’m pretty sure I got tendinitis a few years ago from doing too many of them)
  • If you are not good at them, and cannot do a lot of reps without stopping, do as many as possible in one minute, taking as many breaks as you need (this is what I do)
  • Keep doing them, you’ll get better
  • Don’t cheat by jumping, although I think a little leg kick is okay

Go ahead and give Steve’s Chest & Back a try and let me know how you like it!

Making up my own routines

It’s been a year since I started Tony Horton’s P90X and I only just discovered recently that:

  1. I know some of the routines well enough to do them without the DVDs, and
  2. I can damn well make up my own routines based on what I’ve learned from Tony Horton

It’s odd how we can become dependent on something — as I had become dependent on Tony Horton DVDs — and not even think about breaking away from it.

It’s a great boredome reliever to be able to watch a tv show or movie while working out, so not needing to use the DVDs is a bonus for me.

But best of all is the idea that I can make up my own routines. Like yesterday I did Legs & Shoulders. There’s no Legs & Shoulders in Tony Horton’s P90X. I made it up!

Day before that I melded some moves and made a new Chest & Back routine.

Besides allowing for other entertainment on the tv during workouts, this new development also provides for yet more muscle confusion. I mean, really, sometimes I get to a point where my muscles are not even sore the next day, and I feel as if I am not working as hard as I can. Varying the routines ensures that I will be working new muscles all the time, and that helps with overall fitness.

I guess the weirdest thing about this new “discovery” is that, obviously, back in the day, I used to make up my own routines all the time. I had no DVDs to work from, just a book or two of moves that I would combine in a way that seemed to make sense.

Everything old is new again. And I feel so much better for it.

I’m not saying, btw, that I’m totally abandoning Tony Horton. Far from it. I still need to learn new things and I need a kick in the pants every so often to keep myself on track. But it’s good to be able to know I can work out without him when I need to.

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