Designed With You In Mind

I received an email from my friend and fellow fitness pro BJ Gaddour (Sven) where he mentioned he was asked to comment on in article on MSN Fitbie called “Is this workout completely insane?”, referring to the latest infocommercial craze “Insanity”.

You can check out the article and his complete comments here http://fitbie.msn.com/get-fitter/workout-completely-insane

In the email he went on to highlight some concerns beyond the protocol itself, which included lack of progressions, modifications and the high volume of plyometric work. I know BJ well enough to know these are legitimate concerns, not just the ranting of another jealous trainer.

His email got me to thinking about a subject near and dear to my heart, which is quality program design. One of the best tools we can put in your hands is the knowledge why you are doing what you do when you train with us, so please read on.

There is much more to effective and safe program design than meets the eye.

I remember the first time I sat with the coaches at King Sports International and started going over the concepts of effective program design –  it was truly mind boggling to me.

The way our bodies are designed to move is truly incredible. Single joint, multi-joint, unilateral, bilateral, vertical, horizontal, push, pull – and that’s just the upper body!

Since that time I have had the opportunity to write hundreds of training programs taking thousands of hours, and spent more thousands of hours on the training floor with clients. I’ve gotten a bit better at it over the years, but the learning and refining never stops.

So you may be asking yourself “What’s the big deal?”

Well let me preface by saying that just about any program will get you some level of results, at least when you are newbie.

But then reality sets in and one or more things happen:

  • Progress stops
  • You get hurt
  • Progress stops because you get hurt

And while there can be more reasons than program design why these things can happen, it is a common culprit.

Thought I would show you an example of movement types and parameters we use when considering our program design, just to give you an idea of what it involves. Keep in mind that exercise selection is just one of many parameters that are considered when designing strength training.

Others include number of sets, length of set, rest between sets, rest to work ratio, etc. We also consider the ratios between pulling exercises, which tend to be neglected resulting in injury, and pushing exercises. Same thing goes for hamstrings versus quads (back and front of legs).

I haven’t given examples for every exercise, but you’ll get the idea.

Upper Body Movement Patterns

Vertical Push
Unilateral
Single Joint
Multi Joint
Bilateral
Single Joint (lateral raises)
Multi Joint (push press)

Vertical Pull
Unilateral
Single Joint
Multi Joint
Bilateral
Single Joint (pullovers)
Multi Joint (chinups)

Horizontal Push
Unilateral
Single Joint
Multi Joint
Bilateral
Single Joint (t-raises)
Multi Joint (pushups)

Horizontal Pull
Unilateral
Single Joint
Multi Joint
Bilateral
Single Joint (t-raises)
Multi Joint (partner band rows)

Lower Body Movement Patterns
Quad Dominant
Unilateral
Single Joint
Multi Joint (1-leg trx squat)
Bilateral
Single Joint
Multi Joint (goblet squat)

Hip Dominant
Unilateral
Single Joint (1-leg stiff leg deadlift)
Multi Joint
Bilateral
Single Joint
Multi Joint (KB swing)

Trunk (Core)
Stabilization (plank variations)
Flexion
Extension
Rotation (sprinkler heads)

Within each one of these patterns are myriad progressions, regressions and modifications.  Each training week is programmed within the current training cycle to keep your progress moving forward and your body feeling good. Flexibility training, soft tissue work, and even our training schedule is designed with a purpose in mind.

The beauty of great program design coupled with great coaching is that your program is individualized in a group setting, and it’s a lot more fun and effective to have someone to sweat with!

The bottom line is the real Insanity is choosing to train somewhere else! :)

Thanks for choosing to train with us, and keep…

Making It Happen,

Coach Dean

 

I HATE Recovery Weeks!

Is that what you are thinking? Maybe you just started training with us and you are unfamiliar with the concept, or maybe you just believe that your body is different than anybody else’s and you just don’t need it!

I assure you we absolutely love the fact that you want to keep working and getting better – it’s my mission today to reason with you and explain why time off absolutely makes you better!

The Recovery Curve

I saw the recovery curve for the first time during my time with Australian physical preparation coach Ian King. His principles laid the foundation for the way we program, train and especially recover here at Get Fit NH. The principles that work with professional athletes apply to us too!

The following illustrates a “good” recovery curve:

The green line represents what we are all looking for – continual, never ending progress over time. We are getting stronger, faster, thinner, better looking (ok at least that’s what I wish for).

Reality Check – ain’t gonna happen. The process of changing your body is not linear, in fact what we are looking at in an optimal training environment is more of a “One step back brings me Two steps forward”.

A closer look at the chart will help explain what I mean.

The red line represents Equilibrium. This is where your body wants to stay, no matter if your goal is losing fat, gaining lean, or both. As you have no doubt found out, forcing your body to change is hard work – really hard work. When you walk into Get Fit NH, our training is designed to elicit that change. But it’s not as simple as “working out” day after day after day. In fact as I am about to illustrate, training without proper recovery is actually hurting you, not making you better.

The blue line represents the “recovery curve”. Starting at the left hand of the chart all the lines intersect. For this illustration that point is where your first training occurred – you “worked out”.

But what’s going on?

Instead of performance going up, that line is actually heading down – this is what is called Depletion. If you think about it makes sense – you have worked hard, you are fatigued, your body is depleted of nutrients – you are spent!

Don’t worry, your body will get over it, if you treat it right! This is what we call Adaptation. Your body wants to be able to handle the increased demand that was placed on it, and starts the process of getting better.

You are in charge of if and how fast that happens. A few of the factors that influence this adaptation include Recovery Nutrition (read up!), stress levels, sleep habits, supportive nutrition, age, and training history.

The recovery curve continues with Supercompensation. Here is how Coach King describes this process:

“It is only when recovery is allowed that we see the super-compensation effect, the unique phenomenon where the bodies physical capacity is elevated in response to training, in anticipation of another exposure to the same stimulus.” – King, I, 1999/2000, Foundations of Physical Preparation

In other words your body has gotten better in response to your training, a new Equilibrium is established and this state  is when we will ideally train again. Our programming at Get Fit NH is carefully designed to give this the best chance of occurring, but as I hope you are discovering, you have a lot to do with this with how you treat your recovery!

As you can see, when things are clicking, this process when repeated over and over means you are getting better and better, the blue line is headed up – pretty cool!

The flip side to all this is what happens when the recovery process isn’t working so well.

This chart represents recovery gone “bad”:

When we continue to train in a state of “Depletion”, regardless of the reason,  the adaptation to supercompensation effect doesn’t occur, and instead of getting better, we find ourselves in a downward cycle. This can happen when we train the same muscle groups too soon, when we haven’t taken the steps described above to recover optimally (sleep and nutrition for instance) regardless of time between training, when we train too hard coming off an illness, etc. The last thing we want to happen is new equilibriums to be established in a downward pattern – not good.

The long and short of it is your body absolutely needs to recover from hard training. Consistently training in a fatigued state results in injury and illness. Your body is an amazing machined designed to put up with a lot, but it was also designed to need rest.

Which leads us to:

Recovery Weeks

Face it – you can get beat up anywhere. Our responsibility at Get Fit NH Bootcamp is to help you get better!

That includes recovery weeks. We have found that somewhere between 8 and 12 weeks of training is just about right to take a full week off and let your body recover.

That doesn’t mean that you spend your training time on the couch eating bon-bons, but if you insist on going down to PF and hitting the weights or running 10 miles every morning, your body will suffer in the long run, and perhaps even in the short term.

If you find yourself fighting this concept, ask yourself this – Is your unwillingness to take a week off a well reasoned decision based on what you know to be true, or is it that your attachment to training is so strong emotionally that makes it so hard? You will not lose all you have gained by taking the week off, I assure you! Again to quote Coach King, “…if you don’t (take time off)…most of you are going to lose it anyway!”

So now that we have established you are ready, willing and able to embrace recovery week, what do you do?

Glad you asked!

Three Steps for Successful Recovery

1.) Physical Rest and Regeneration

-        Our bodies must rest and recover to prevent over-training (or under-recovering) issues so that we can come back 100% healthy and energized for the next phase of the program

-        Focus on maintaining and/or increasing flexibility and tissue health by stretching and foam rolling daily. 15-30 minutes is fantastic!

-        Daily restorative walks are beneficial during this week. 30-60 minutes briskly walking (not jogging/running) will keep your body refreshed and active, without negating the purpose of this week. Don’t overdo it!

2.) Physiological and Psychological Rest and Regeneration

-        We must normalize key anabolic hormones, refill muscle glycogen, increase caloric intake, and prevent any diet induced catabolism (losses of lean body mass) so that we can enjoy greater fat loss for the next phase of the program

-        We have taken the road less traveled by being flexible eaters with a long-term approach to success and thus we will take a break from our aggressive fat loss nutrition plans. This is not a free for all, so stay away from your “trigger foods” (junk foods and sweets) that open the door to excessive calorie intake.

-        Instead plan (key word) and enjoy 2 or 3 controlled free meals to reward yourself for all of your hard work, but do not overdo it!

-        Caveat: If your nutrition habits have been less than optimal, more than likely none of this applies to you. Instead now is the time to plan and prepare to make the changes necessary to see the results you want. Spend some time in our “Practical Nutrition” archives and get started!

3.) Celebrate the Fruits of Your Labor

-        Take some time to reflect on how far you have come since you joined Get Fit NH Bootcamp in terms of improving your overall health, body composition, and performance

-        Enjoy your results!

THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!

We would just like to take the time to thank you from the bottom of our hearts for all of your hard work and dedication to improving your health and fitness… keep Making It Happen!

You will never know how much this means to us and how much this is appreciated. It has been a total team effort from the start and though we provided you with all of the necessary programs to get the results that you were seeking, YOU DID ALL OF THE WORK! We cannot wait to get even better results during the next phase of the program!

Come Be A Kid Again!

Some more footage of our Wicked Warrior Workout edited by Jen Schwab of Schwab Communications

Thanks Jen!

Slip.N.Slide + Mud = WOW!

Video of the Ultimate Slip.N.Slide after Warrior Dash Training – If you missed it, well, I guess you just plain missed out!

Sorta makes the ones we used as kids seem a little lame…

Can’t wait to do it again!

Warrior Dash Training – In The Mud – Sweet!!!

We had an absolute BLAST this morning at our Warrior Dash Training!

The highlight of my day was seeing the incredible teamwork as everyone got over “The Wall”, followed by the Slip.N.Slide down the hill!

You Guys Absolutely ROCK!

Warriors in Training

On June 25th Dean & I are heading down along with quite a few Get Fit NH Bootcamp clients to participate in the  Warrior Dash New England in Amesbury MA. You absolutely must head the Warrior Dash Website and check it out!

It’s not too late to sign up to join us on this wild adventure -  Registration closes on June 13 at 3PM. We are headed down on the 25th, but you can race the 26th as well.

Over the next couple of weeks you are going to see some activity going on at Get Fit NH Bootcamp Epsom, as we build our own obstacle course to not only help train for the event, but just have a blast any old time!

On Saturday June 11th we are going to do a “Warriors in Training” workout! You don’t have to be a participant to come as we climb, crawl, leap, duck and jump over and around the obstacle course being built – Don’t Miss It!

More details on the way, but put Saturday June 11th on your calendar now!

Use It or Lose It!

I am sure most of us have heard that little ditty, but is it true? Turns out when it comes to exercise it is! Researchers put new exercisers on a conditioning program for eight weeks, which resulted in dramatic improvements in cardiovascular fitness and aerobic capacity. After the eight week period they stopped exercising altogether for another eight weeks, then tested them again. The results? They lost all their aerobic gains and returned to their original fitness levels – not cool! Other studies have shown that deconditioning can occur in as little as three weeks!

The take home? If you want lifelong fitness, training has to be a lifelong pursuit. Regular exercise (3 or more times a week) is best, but  your gains can be maintained with as little as two days a week of hard training. Spring is here and summer is coming, but training doesn’t stop. Coach Nancy rightly says that we train hard so we can get out and hike, and bike, and garden, and do other outdoor activities without being miserable the next day. It’s always cool when a client comes up to us (like happened 3 or 4 times to just me in the last couple weeks) and says “I (gardened, packed all my stuff because I am moving, chopped firewood) and I wasn’t sore because of the training we do at bootcamp”. There’s nothing like a hard days work and having energy to spare!

Your health and fitness doesn’t take a vacation. Your lungs keep breathing and your heart keeps pumping. Without exercise your muscles get flabby which makes you crabby. :)

Start planning now to keep fitness in your life all year long!

Make It Happen,
Coach Dean

Coach Nancy, Sven, and the Band Man

Got some video of Coach Nancy cranking it out with Dave “The Band Man” Schmidt and BJ “Sven” Gaddour.

Good Times!

Deb Adds 20 Yards To Her Golf Drive at Bootcamp

It’s time to polish up the golf clubs and hit the links! Have you ever considered what physical preparation can do for your golf game? Listen to what Deb has to say:

“I started at Get fit NH bootcamp in October of 2009. I wanted to try a program that would make me feel accountable to coming to it. I had a gym membership for the past 3 years and I can always make an excuse as to why I can’t go and no one cares. With this I have no excuses. I love going and am sorry when I miss a class. I have developed muscles that I never knew I had. I can finally at the age of 41 do a real pushup. (while actually 28 of them in 1 minute.)

And for all the golfers out there after 6 months of bootcamp last year when I picked up my golf clubs I couldn’t believe how much yardage I gained on my driver and the rest of my clubs. I could now drive the ball over 200 yards which was over a 20 yard gain in 6 months. Can’t wait to see how my golf game is this year. Thanks so much for keeping bootcamp interesting and motivating us to “MAKE IT HAPPEN” – Deb K.

New Get Fit NH Bootcamp Concord Training Time

We are pleased to announce that starting April 18, 2011 we will be expanding Get Fit NH Bootcamp Concord and adding a much requested afternoon training time:

4:15 PM!

As is our custom we have added this additional training time as our training staff has grown and is able to provide the excellence and quality you deserve.

I understand that another evening slot has been requested as well, and once this training time is up and running we will take a look at additional expansion.

Once again thank-you for choosing to train with us. We do not take it for granted and look forward to continuing to serve you.

Click Here To View Our Full Training Schedule and To Register