Choose your environment.

“Your outlook upon life, your estimate of yourself, your estimate of your value are largely colored by your environment. Your whole career will be modified, shaped, molded by your surroundings, by the character of the people with whom you come in contact every day.”—Orison Swett Marden

We are shaped by our choices. Among those choices are the people we choose to surround ourselves with. Likewise, we impact those who choose us to be in their circle. Choose wisely.

Be your best today; be better tomorrow.

Carpe momento!!

Favorite Exercise?

Inspired by a question asked of a speaker for my friend, Sandi Griffin’s 12-week Fitness Challenge, I am prompted to discuss my “favorite exercises at the gym.”

It might be surprising that, as an exercise physiologist, I would say that “I hate exercise.” It is true. I often tell the story of a guy who is hitting himself in the forehead with a two-by-four. When asked “Why?”, he responds, “Because it feels so good when I stop.”

We don’t have to “like” exercise. We don’t have a “favorite exercise.” We just have to like the results that we get. Often, the greater the “suck” the better the results. The benefits of exercise come after the gym. The hard work—whatever the exercise—pays.

Now, I do have preferences with exercise. My preferences, however, don’t mean my “favorites” are the “best.” The best exercises are the exercises that are suited to your goals and that you will do regularly. I prefer weight lifting and high-intensity interval training. I like to keep things simple and stick to the basics—variations of the ‘basic 5’ (squat, deadlift, bench, row, and overhead press) with some accessory work. I like my Bulgarian bag. Others have different preferences. My exercise is effective because I do it. I do it regularly, and I do it safely and consistently. Consistency and Commitment are what produce results.

Favorite exercise? The one I am doing in the moment.

Be your best today; Be better tomorrow.

Carpe momento!

Toned?

There are many phrases used in exercise that bother me. “Toned” came up a few times recently. What does it mean? It is not a fitness term, per se. It is not a health-related component of physical fitness—okay, one might argue it falls under the category of “body composition,” but…. When people say they want to get “toned,” they are really saying that they want to lose body fat and not build “big muscles.” They mean they want to cut calories, do cardio, and lift only light weight. I will undoubtedly offend someone, but when I hear “toned” I hear someone saying “I don’t want to work hard to get into shape.

There is a long-term problem with getting “toned,” as well. The repetitive cycles of losing body fat via cardio and light “weight training” (and subsequent regaining of fat) lead to a progressive loss of muscle mass. According to Powers and Howley in Exercise Physiology, 10% of muscle mass is lost from 25 to 50 years, and an additional 40% is lost from 50 to 80 years. Loss of muscle mass leads to a loss of function. Loss of function leads to progressively diminished work capacity. In other words, “toned” doesn’t age well.

So, does this mean one should drop the cardio and become a powerlifter or bodybuilder. Well, not exactly, but…. I would suggest that, for more successful aging, one should embrace the principle of “progressive overload.” That is, one should embrace more intensive weight training and focus less on cardio. Maintain a healthy heart, of course, but realized that body composition is body fat and lean (muscle & bone) tissue. Gains in muscle mass = decreases in percent body fat (regardless of whether fat is lost). ”Skinny fat” is less healthy than muscled fat. (Of course, over-fat and obese are unhealthy either way.)

Loss of muscle (sarcopenia) often precedes or accompanies bone loss (osteopenia). Both result in impaired function with age—regardless of body fat. It becomes a vicious cycle.

Afraid that lifting heavy weights will give you big, bulky muscles? Reality check: People with big muscles work harder than you do. If you are so genetically inclined to easily gain muscle (which is exceedingly rare), you are lucky you don’t have to work so hard. The 3 days a week you spend in the gym are not going to give you a bodybuilder physique. Three to 5 sets (of, say, 5 repetitions) of the major lifts (variations the “basic 5”—squat, deadlift, bench, row, and overhead press) three times a week will give you the muscle tone (shape) you really desire and facilitate fat loss without extreme effort. Add to these a few sessions of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) and/or high-intensity interval resistance training [HIIRT—or what some like to call “metabolic conditioning” (I don’t)], and you will soon have a leaner “fit” look that will maintain long-term function better than caloric restriction and traditional cardio.

Cardiorespiratory endurance is easier to maintain than muscle mass. The easy path is rarely the best path, though. Do the “hard” stuff that makes life easier.

Be your best today; be better tomorrow.

Carpe momento!