Author Topic: ADARQ's journal  (Read 1657152 times)

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adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6030 on: February 27, 2016, 10:58:02 pm »
0
02/27/2016

Bio: Morning

sleep = 9.5 hr
wakeup = 10:30 AM
bw = 150 lb.
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = calves alot, hamstrings somewhat
aches = none
injuries = toenails wrekt, right big toe blister
feel = good but slightly sick



Food

10:30 AM

- 1 x thera-flu
- 1 x greek yogurt
- 1 x oatmeal with honey



Food

3 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Session: Evening

5 PM - 6 PM

uptempo calisthenics:
- basically nonstop for an hour
- basically did everything in this order:
- dip variations superset with pullup variations
- ~24" alternate leg stepups
- dip variations (hit a 14 repper with legs split) superset with pullup variations (hit 8 reps dead hang)
- lunges & bw squats (hit 100 in a set)
- dip variations superset with pullup variations
- lunges & bw squats
- straight leg hip flexor
- straight leg abduction
- straight leg hip flexor
- chinups

the dip/pullup supersets were nice.. i'd go to failure the first set. then, i'd keep banging out 1-3 reps going back and forth between dips and pullups.. changing the style and grip. really enjoyed that.



Food

6 PM

- 1 x 2% milk



Food

7:30 PM

- 1 x thera-flu
- 1 x water w/ lemon
- large amount of israeli couscous (1.5 cups) + grilled chicken, carrots, olives, serrano pepper, red chili pepper, olive oil, 1/2 lemon juice
- decent amount of mixed nuts
- 2 x spring rolls
- 1 x cadbury egg



Food

10 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

11 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



calves very sore. still sick.

been programming alot lately. that's good news for me.

right now i'm about to watch crawford KO lundy.. should be an exciting fight.

pc!

gukl

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6031 on: February 28, 2016, 01:29:04 pm »
+1
Got a question for you,

So we both get wrecked calves from FF running, and it's probably one of the limiting factors in my endurance atm...my calves simply give up after a while. Would it be worth doing high rep bw calf raises to give them some extra stimulus to get stronger/improved muscular endurance and if so how would you work this around running without completely destroying your calves all the time!

Be interested to hear your thoughts!


adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6032 on: February 29, 2016, 12:07:16 am »
0
Got a question for you,

So we both get wrecked calves from FF running, and it's probably one of the limiting factors in my endurance atm...my calves simply give up after a while. Would it be worth doing high rep bw calf raises to give them some extra stimulus to get stronger/improved muscular endurance and if so how would you work this around running without completely destroying your calves all the time!

Be interested to hear your thoughts!

yo!

well, i had finally adapted a while ago.. but then i took a few months off from it.. then i tried to jump right back in and got wrecked. so we def can adapt, takes time.. that also assumes our form isn't "incorrect" in the sense that we are overloading our calves too much by an incorrect strike. When I adapted, calves wouldn't give out at all.

if you see a few sessions ago, I did TONS of calf raises.. calves still sore ~3+ days after that session. so ya, i'm actually attempting that. I'm going to do alot more isolation work on my calves to see if it will help.

As for how to approach it, i've been running alot less lately due to my left calf/hamstring injury. So, it's given me time to throw in some of this assistance work, because all I can really do is rest. My plan is to just "adapt" to the high volume calve raises. Several weeks ago I did high volume lunges and my legs/glutes were destroyed for a week. I've been performing hundreds of lower body reps via squats, lunges, stepups, bridges etc the last few sessions.. barely any soreness. So i've adapted there. I need to achieve those same kinds of adaptations with my calves. I figure one or two more sessions might be able to do it... UNLESS they are just so unbelievably weak, which is a possibility.

I think the only real solution is to drop running frequency to a point where you can get in the calf assistance volume until it doesn't affect you. Then gradually bring the volume back. I just don't know if it's worth it yet... I predict it will be, there's no reason a few hundred calf raises should leave my destroyed for 4+ days. For example I probably did 80-100 total dips yesterday and soreness is microscopic. I've just neglected certain muscle groups way too much, it's disappointing.

You could also approach it via:
- high frequency / lower volume.. in the sense of 'activation'
- following your runs

I think it's worth a shot, at least ~2x/week. I mean ideally we should be making sure every link in the chain retains some kind of strength stimulus at least 2x/wk. Simply running doesn't seem to be enough. I'm amazed at how much weaker my calves got, even though my running volume was decent.

That's my plan right now with this upper+lower calisthenics stuff i'm doing.. I need to address every weakness, every joint movement... the fact that I wasn't doing calve raises (various forms) over the last several months, is a lazy oversight & now i'm paying for it. :)



When do your calves "give up"? At what point/time/distance?

Have you tried a flat foot strike? Or even heel->toe but landing basically underneath your hips or ever-so-slightly in front? I can run all day with those forms, and they don't bug my knees and such.. feel very stable.

pc!

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6033 on: February 29, 2016, 12:13:18 am »
0
still sick. lame.



02/28/2016

Bio: Morning

sleep = 9 hr
wakeup = 10 AM
bw = 152 lb.
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = calves alot (still!), hamstrings somewhat, upper body very slightly, left bicep slightly, upper/mid back very slightly
aches = left achilles (or somewhere around there) a little bit
injuries = toenails wrekt, right big toe blister
feel = good but slightly sick



Food

10:00 AM

- 1 x thera-flu
- 1 x greek yogurt
- 1 x cereal with banana & honey



Session: Afternoon

3 PM - 5 PM

walk:
- 6.35 mi in 1h:44m:02s
- one mile split was 4.1 mph
- felt great, calves tight though



Food

8 PM

- HUGE bowl of lentils with carrots, potatoes, olives, garlic, red chili pepper, olive oil
- a bunch of mixed nuts
- some saltine crackers
- 1 x water w/ lemon



Food

10 PM

- 2 x wheat toast with peanut butter
- 1 x greek yogurt
- 1 x tea with honey



decided to only walk today.. hoping tmw I can get some light runs in.. but calves have to recover. Otherwise, will walk then do a calisthenics workout.

programming a ton lately.

really sucks not being able to run & such.

pc

maxent

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6034 on: February 29, 2016, 12:20:10 am »
+1
Sympathise with the calf issues. It's frustrating me too how fatigued calves get and they seem to take forever to recover if at all .. just hard to do enough activity whether lifting or running/jumping with dead calves. I haven't figured it out either.. :/
Training for sub 20 5K & 40" RVJ & 170kg BS @ 85kg bw. log entry template

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6035 on: March 01, 2016, 02:06:54 am »
0
still sick. lame.

actually coughed up/snotted out a bunch of blood today.. sounds serious but it really seems to be from my throat/nasal passages. not worried yet.



02/29/2016

Bio: Morning

sleep = 9 hr
wakeup = 10 AM
bw = 153 lb.
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = calves alot (still!), hamstrings somewhat, upper body very slightly
aches = left achilles (or somewhere around there) a little bit
injuries = toenails wrekt, right big toe blister
feel = good but slightly sick



Food

10 AM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

12 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

4 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Session: Evening

walk & run:
- ~6.5 mi
- actually ran ~3.2 mi nonstop, legs/lungs felt great, but went slow/careful. Ran first two miles of that 3.2 at ~7 min/mi pace.
- walked another mi, then ran another mi, felt calf/hamstring & stopped, walked the rest
- walking finisher was ~4.1 mph.

feel really good, other than left calf/hamstring sooo.. can't wait until i can stop mentioning my calf/hamstring tightening up.

regardless.. this is a sign of progress.



Food

8 PM

- 6 x eggs scrambled
- bowl of cheerios with honey and banana
- 2 x wheat bread with peanut butter
- some tart cherry juice mixed with raspberry la croix



some stretching & icing to finish off the night.

late journaling, been coding. annoyed because I wrote a quick boxrec script for my bot that I wanted to use, which works fine from my laptop.. but boxrec blocks linode, soo.. can't query it from this server. need to setup some kind of proxy technique for my bot. blah! ;f

pc

gukl

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6036 on: March 01, 2016, 05:15:27 am »
+1


yo!

well, i had finally adapted a while ago.. but then i took a few months off from it.. then i tried to jump right back in and got wrecked. so we def can adapt, takes time.. that also assumes our form isn't "incorrect" in the sense that we are overloading our calves too much by an incorrect strike. When I adapted, calves wouldn't give out at all.

if you see a few sessions ago, I did TONS of calf raises.. calves still sore ~3+ days after that session. so ya, i'm actually attempting that. I'm going to do alot more isolation work on my calves to see if it will help.

As for how to approach it, i've been running alot less lately due to my left calf/hamstring injury. So, it's given me time to throw in some of this assistance work, because all I can really do is rest. My plan is to just "adapt" to the high volume calve raises. Several weeks ago I did high volume lunges and my legs/glutes were destroyed for a week. I've been performing hundreds of lower body reps via squats, lunges, stepups, bridges etc the last few sessions.. barely any soreness. So i've adapted there. I need to achieve those same kinds of adaptations with my calves. I figure one or two more sessions might be able to do it... UNLESS they are just so unbelievably weak, which is a possibility.

I think the only real solution is to drop running frequency to a point where you can get in the calf assistance volume until it doesn't affect you. Then gradually bring the volume back. I just don't know if it's worth it yet... I predict it will be, there's no reason a few hundred calf raises should leave my destroyed for 4+ days. For example I probably did 80-100 total dips yesterday and soreness is microscopic. I've just neglected certain muscle groups way too much, it's disappointing.

You could also approach it via:
- high frequency / lower volume.. in the sense of 'activation'
- following your runs

I think it's worth a shot, at least ~2x/week. I mean ideally we should be making sure every link in the chain retains some kind of strength stimulus at least 2x/wk. Simply running doesn't seem to be enough. I'm amazed at how much weaker my calves got, even though my running volume was decent.

That's my plan right now with this upper+lower calisthenics stuff i'm doing.. I need to address every weakness, every joint movement... the fact that I wasn't doing calve raises (various forms) over the last several months, is a lazy oversight & now i'm paying for it. :)



When do your calves "give up"? At what point/time/distance?

Have you tried a flat foot strike? Or even heel->toe but landing basically underneath your hips or ever-so-slightly in front? I can run all day with those forms, and they don't bug my knees and such.. feel very stable.

pc!

yeah - shortening my stride and focusing on picking my feet up definitely helped the soreness instantly so maybe there is more to work on there. i think i'll definitely give it a go after runs, since i tend to run once every 3 days atm. i would like to increase that though once my calves don't get so sore. even if i have to start with double legs 3 x 20 or something haha - i didn't ever actually train calves even when i was training for VJ etc and obviously for oly lifting they're kind of ignored.

well on the treadmill they lasted a full 5k ok - but i ran trail last time and they were shot after 2 miles, literally had to stop only because my calves were totally fatigued which is a shame cos i was having so much fun i would have run all day.

i'm actually just finishing off collecting my biomechanics data for my dissertation, i looked at different foot strikes and the effect of localised calf fatigue on kinematics/kinetics/emg - i used myself as a participant so once the models and stuff are created i'll have some real in depth gait data to look at which is pretty cool! we drafted in about forefoot strikers, one girl who weighs less than 50kg runs very FF dominant, lives in a hilly area + runs marathons FF - she had the most incredible calves i've ever seen.

i haven't really tried RFS and can't seem to get the hang of midfoot without slapping - RFS just irritates my knees no end and it's also difficult on the surfaces im running on too (other than treadmill).

btw, have you read 'born to run' ? - i'm about to finish it and now i'm totally inspired to run an ultra marathon one day haha.




adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6037 on: March 01, 2016, 11:09:48 am »
0


yo!

well, i had finally adapted a while ago.. but then i took a few months off from it.. then i tried to jump right back in and got wrecked. so we def can adapt, takes time.. that also assumes our form isn't "incorrect" in the sense that we are overloading our calves too much by an incorrect strike. When I adapted, calves wouldn't give out at all.

if you see a few sessions ago, I did TONS of calf raises.. calves still sore ~3+ days after that session. so ya, i'm actually attempting that. I'm going to do alot more isolation work on my calves to see if it will help.

As for how to approach it, i've been running alot less lately due to my left calf/hamstring injury. So, it's given me time to throw in some of this assistance work, because all I can really do is rest. My plan is to just "adapt" to the high volume calve raises. Several weeks ago I did high volume lunges and my legs/glutes were destroyed for a week. I've been performing hundreds of lower body reps via squats, lunges, stepups, bridges etc the last few sessions.. barely any soreness. So i've adapted there. I need to achieve those same kinds of adaptations with my calves. I figure one or two more sessions might be able to do it... UNLESS they are just so unbelievably weak, which is a possibility.

I think the only real solution is to drop running frequency to a point where you can get in the calf assistance volume until it doesn't affect you. Then gradually bring the volume back. I just don't know if it's worth it yet... I predict it will be, there's no reason a few hundred calf raises should leave my destroyed for 4+ days. For example I probably did 80-100 total dips yesterday and soreness is microscopic. I've just neglected certain muscle groups way too much, it's disappointing.

You could also approach it via:
- high frequency / lower volume.. in the sense of 'activation'
- following your runs

I think it's worth a shot, at least ~2x/week. I mean ideally we should be making sure every link in the chain retains some kind of strength stimulus at least 2x/wk. Simply running doesn't seem to be enough. I'm amazed at how much weaker my calves got, even though my running volume was decent.

That's my plan right now with this upper+lower calisthenics stuff i'm doing.. I need to address every weakness, every joint movement... the fact that I wasn't doing calve raises (various forms) over the last several months, is a lazy oversight & now i'm paying for it. :)



When do your calves "give up"? At what point/time/distance?

Have you tried a flat foot strike? Or even heel->toe but landing basically underneath your hips or ever-so-slightly in front? I can run all day with those forms, and they don't bug my knees and such.. feel very stable.

pc!

yeah - shortening my stride and focusing on picking my feet up definitely helped the soreness instantly so maybe there is more to work on there.

nice. that's usually what people have to do when going FF, shorten stride and pickup stride freq. so maybe that'll really help.



Quote
i think i'll definitely give it a go after runs, since i tend to run once every 3 days atm. i would like to increase that though once my calves don't get so sore. even if i have to start with double legs 3 x 20 or something haha - i didn't ever actually train calves even when i was training for VJ etc and obviously for oly lifting they're kind of ignored.

ya wait until your body is so adapted that you end up just running for an hour or two,.. it'll happen.. you just say to yourself 'why stop? let's just keep going' .. those runs feel GOOOOD.

when I train calves I get a good "burn" in my glutes.. if you get the same, you could also trick yourself into thinking it is a glute workout. plus it could help with your triple extension in oly's.. lool, anything you need to tell yourself to make them consistent. ;f


Quote
well on the treadmill they lasted a full 5k ok - but i ran trail last time and they were shot after 2 miles, literally had to stop only because my calves were totally fatigued which is a shame cos i was having so much fun i would have run all day.

damn..



Quote
i'm actually just finishing off collecting my biomechanics data for my dissertation, i looked at different foot strikes and the effect of localised calf fatigue on kinematics/kinetics/emg - i used myself as a participant so once the models and stuff are created i'll have some real in depth gait data to look at which is pretty cool! we drafted in about forefoot strikers, one girl who weighs less than 50kg runs very FF dominant, lives in a hilly area + runs marathons FF - she had the most incredible calves i've ever seen.

nice!! that should be interesting. curious to see what you find.



Quote
i haven't really tried RFS and can't seem to get the hang of midfoot without slapping - RFS just irritates my knees no end and it's also difficult on the surfaces im running on too (other than treadmill).

it's actually the opposite for me. midfoot/RFS is super quiet, I barely make any noise. (and i run on pavement). forefoot oscillates between somewhat quiet and noisy, for the most part.. it gets quiet, ironically, if I run faster.. but i can't maintain that pace right now without my calves blowing up.

once my calf heals i'm going to get back to RFS/midfoot. This seems to be my cycle: run RFS/midfoot & make progress (big mileage), want to go faster so transition to forefoot, calves die, can't run, take time to recover, repeat.

so going to get back to RFS/midfoot, but, this time keep training lower body calisthenics hard (with calve raises etc) & mix in some sprints.. that should help alot more than what I did the last few months (upper calisthenics + long running).

as for RFS, what I do is make sure I strike barely in front of me or beneath me. as long as you don't overstride with it, it feels good (to me). so just like FF, you pick up your stride rate & strike closer to your COG/under hips, and it makes it a pretty efficient/strong strike.

and finally.. the best thing about not going FF for me.. I don't have to think about it when i'm running. I like to "NOT THINK" about form and such. I like to either clear my head (zone out) or think about other stuff, not running related.



Quote
btw, have you read 'born to run' ? - i'm about to finish it and now i'm totally inspired to run an ultra marathon one day haha.

haha sick. nah I havn't. I heard it's a great book though.

If you like 3 miles, you'll like 10 miles, and you'll like 15 miles etc. Ultra makes even more sense given where you live.. around here it's just running on roads for 50 miles.. which is ok but, kinda meh. Doesn't excite me as much.

like I said earlier.. running for a few hours feels amazing.. you're lungs will feel so clean & fresh at the end, and the body/mind will feel light.. it's a great feeling.

pc!!

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6038 on: March 01, 2016, 11:57:17 pm »
0
still sick. lame. but getting better.



03/01/2016

Bio: Morning

sleep = 9 hr
wakeup = 10 AM
bw = 152 lb.
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = left calf significant, hamstrings slightly
aches = left hamstring tendon slightly, right tennis elbow (bad)
injuries = toenails wrekt, right big toe blister
feel = good but slightly sick



Food

10:30 AM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

1 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

3 PM

- 1 x 1/2 lb. cheese burger
- 1 x sweet potato
- some fries



Session: Evening

5 - 6:30 PM

eating so much at 3 made me tired.. i definitely prefer training after eating lighter.

calisthenics:
- upper and lower
- uptempo, pretty much non stop
- everything barefoot like usual, when I do these backyard calisthenic sessions
- did tons of dip variations, pullup variations, calf raise variations, single leg "squat" variations, standing straight leg hip flexion / abduction, kneeling hamstring, some pushups
- kneeling hamstring work really hits my hamstrings hard.. i kneel down, dorsiflex, and flex my knee, one leg at a time. i'll also do holds.
- pullups were great today, hit 11 dead hang on one set
- pushups are at ~30, need to bump those up eventually
- dips at ~12-14 depending on the variation
- did sets of ~25-50 for calf raises.. calves didn't cramp up like last time. probably won't be sore from them tomorrow.. nice.
- probably the best thing I did: alternating single leg squat variations.. soo.. i'll do an SL squat with left, then right, repeat for ~100 reps and such. I like this better than high rep stepups, it hits my legs harder. In a sense, it's "somewhat" similar to running if I pick up the tempo.. I could see myself doing long sets of that for <= 30 minutes and such. That would probably be a great workout (mentally/physically) substitute for running, from a strength perspective.



Food

6:30 PM

- 1 x 2% milk



Food

7:30 PM

- 1 x berry beet juice drink
- 1 x almond joy



Food

10 PM

- 1 x coffee ice cream (haagen dazs)
- 1 x tea with honey
- 1 x salted caramel biscotti




hoping to get some walking/running in tomorrow, but dno. Also planning on studying some stuff on my phone while I walk.. comp sci stuff. Been wanting to do that for a while now.

pC!

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6039 on: March 03, 2016, 02:17:52 am »
0
still sick WTF. lame. but getting better.



03/02/2016

Bio: Morning

sleep = 9 hr
wakeup = 10 AM
bw = 152 lb.
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = hamstrings slightly
aches = left hamstring tendon slightly, right tennis elbow (bad)
injuries = toenails wrekt, right big toe blister
feel = good but slightly sick



Food

10 AM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

2 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

7:30 PM

- 1.5 cups (alot) of some "grain of india" (forget the name atm) with curry saute (curry powder, olives, 2 serrano pepper, 2 red chili peppers, carrots, garlic, grilled chicken)
- 1 x cara cara orange
- 1 x water with lemon
- a bunch of mixed nuts
- some crackers
- very spicy



Food

8 PM

- some coffee ice cream



Food

10 PM

- 1 x 2% milk
- 1 x salted caramel biscotti



Food

12 AM

- 1 x greek yogurt



just rested & programmed today. up way too late.. but kind of have to be tonight, unfortunately.

pc

alestor91

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6040 on: March 03, 2016, 07:42:33 am »
-3
Stop with all the dairy brah. I used consume a shit ton of it as well, until I was made aware of studies like this (100,000 people sample size):
http://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g6015

"A high intake of milk might, however, have undesirable effects, because milk is the main dietary source of D-galactose. Experimental evidence in several animal species indicates that chronic exposure to D-galactose is deleterious to health and the addition of D-galactose by injections or in the diet is an established animal model of aging. Even a low dose of D-galactose induces changes that resemble natural aging in animals, including shortened life span caused by oxidative stress damage, chronic inflammation, neurodegeneration, decreased immune response, and gene transcriptional changes. A subcutaneous dose of 100 mg/kg D-galactose accelerates senescence (aging) in mice. This is equivalent to 6-10 g in humans, corresponding to 1-2 glasses of milk..."
March 03, 2016, 07:42:33 am - Hidden. Show this post.
« Last Edit: March 03, 2016, 07:44:38 am by alestor91 »

LBSS

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6041 on: March 03, 2016, 10:26:59 am »
+4
Stop with all the dairy brah. I used consume a shit ton of it as well, until I was made aware of studies like this (100,000 people sample size):
http://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g6015

"A high intake of milk might, however, have undesirable effects, because milk is the main dietary source of D-galactose. Experimental evidence in several animal species indicates that chronic exposure to D-galactose is deleterious to health and the addition of D-galactose by injections or in the diet is an established animal model of aging. Even a low dose of D-galactose induces changes that resemble natural aging in animals, including shortened life span caused by oxidative stress damage, chronic inflammation, neurodegeneration, decreased immune response, and gene transcriptional changes. A subcutaneous dose of 100 mg/kg D-galactose accelerates senescence (aging) in mice. This is equivalent to 6-10 g in humans, corresponding to 1-2 glasses of milk..."

so?

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26378576

Quote
Results from epidemiological studies of milk consumption and mortality are inconsistent. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies assessing the association of non-fermented and fermented milk consumption with mortality from all causes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. PubMed was searched until August 2015. A two-stage, random-effects, dose-response meta-analysis was used to combine study-specific results. Heterogeneity among studies was assessed with the I² statistic. During follow-up periods ranging from 4.1 to 25 years, 70,743 deaths occurred among 367,505 participants. The range of non-fermented and fermented milk consumption and the shape of the associations between milk consumption and mortality differed considerably between studies. There was substantial heterogeneity among studies of non-fermented milk consumption in relation to mortality from all causes (12 studies; I² = 94%), cardiovascular disease (five studies; I² = 93%), and cancer (four studies; I² = 75%) as well as among studies of fermented milk consumption and all-cause mortality (seven studies; I² = 88%). Thus, estimating pooled hazard ratios was not appropriate. Heterogeneity among studies was observed in most subgroups defined by sex, country, and study quality. In conclusion, we observed no consistent association between milk consumption and all-cause or cause-specific mortality.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25327185

Quote
CONCLUSIONS:
Drinking milk at least 1-2 times a month was associated with lower all-cause mortality in men compared to never drinking milk. An inverse association was also found between drinking milk and mortality from both cardiovascular diseases and cancer. However, lower all-cause mortality in women was found only in those who drank milk 3-4 times/week.
« Last Edit: March 03, 2016, 10:33:08 am by LBSS »
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

LBSS

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6042 on: March 03, 2016, 10:35:18 am »
+2
cherry-picking one study -- one that admits its own weakness, no less! -- to make dietary decisions for yourself is idiotic, and to make dietary decisions for others is even more idiotic.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6043 on: March 03, 2016, 03:30:48 pm »
0
alestor91, dno. dairy makes me feel good. There's too much conflicting research on it to come to a general conclusion, imho. Also, i'm not intaking too much of it for the most part; ~3 greek yogurts & maybe a glass of milk per day isn't too substantial. It's a good source of protein for me. I don't want to replace that milk intake with eggs or meat/chicken etc. I'm trying to eat less animals. Getting that protein from nuts/fruits/veggies/legumes etc would be possible, but harder/more expensive.

I could have cut back because of this cold, but I don't have that much mucous production. This weird cold I have has been going around Florida & my dad had it first. Caught it from him, I suppose. Havn't been sick in over a year.

I've gone without milk a few times (for 1-2 years). Didn't notice much of a change physically/mentally.. obviously no idea how it actually effected me molecularly.

pc!

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6044 on: March 04, 2016, 01:29:22 pm »
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from yesterday:






slightly sick WTF. lame. but getting better.



03/03/2016

Bio: Morning

sleep = 7 hr
wakeup = 2:30 PM
- went to sleep around 7 AM.. fml
:o
bw = 152 lb.
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = hamstrings slightly
aches = left hamstring tendon slightly, right tennis elbow slightly
injuries = toenails wrekt, right big toe blister
feel = good but slightly sick



Food

2:30 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Session: Evening

6 PM

run:
- ~9 mi in 1h:15m:33s
- ran slow, tried to prevent my left ham/calf from freaking out. around ~8.8 mi i felt it getting tighter so i stopped.
- as soon as i stopped running, could feel my hamstring tendons all tight.. it's literally every tendon.



Food

7:30 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt



Food

9 PM

- 1 cup of couscous with some butter
- grilled chicken sandwich + asiago cheese
- some ice cream



Food

11 PM

- 1 x greek yogurt
- 1 x biscotti



Session: Stretching

12 AM

- TONS of hamstring stretching and some self massage
- almost hyper-extending my left leg in order to stretch it out more specifically to where it feels tight when it 'injures'.. heh
- (felt good the next day but obviously need to be careful)



pc