Author Topic: Two Hands Two Feet  (Read 515472 times)

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maxent

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1095 on: August 30, 2016, 11:01:27 pm »
+1
^ya, abs contract harder, that's the claim
Training for sub 20 5K & 40" RVJ & 170kg BS @ 85kg bw. log entry template

T0ddday

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1096 on: August 30, 2016, 11:53:43 pm »
+1

Yeah that's the beauty of using a belt. And it purportedly makes your abs bigger too. It's a panacea for some. I have an article on the training board about a study showing the use of a belt allows you to train your legs better!

ahahahahahahahahahahahaha no.

^ya, abs contract harder, that's the claim

LBSS, standard dogma says it gives your abs something to push against and this works them harder. IDK, dont have a horse in this race, dont use a belt but that;s what they claim.

I have heard this but the way it was explained to me was the belt gives your abs something to push against which gives you immediate feedback and the ability to brace your core better. Not sure how this plays as far as making them bigger/stronger though.


Lol.  This is funny.  This is one of the half truths that has morphed into some myth.  Physical pressure on a muscle increases activation.  Best example I can think to explain activation is bench press.  Take a kid who has never bench pressed.  Ask him to flex his pecs and he will wiggle his shoulders.  Now get him to bench press for a year.  Ask him to flex his chest and his chest muscles will contract visibly.  Is this proof that he is stronger.  No.  This is an improvement in muscle activation (given that he was a beginner and started benching he is most likely stronger even if the gains are mediated through neuromuscular activation rather than actual tissue adaption) but the point is improvement in activation does not equal strength.

Also, consider the kid after he has only been benching for 2 months.  Ask him to flex his pecs.  Maybe one side his chest moves slightly but he isn't all the way there yet.  Now take your index finger and press firmly against his pec.  Ask him to flex.  He will be shocked at the contraction. 

Your sensory cells (specifically pressure receptors) turn on in response to pressure and send a signal to the brain.  While this signal is being sent we get a multiplicative effect of signals sent back toward the muscle.   This IS useful.  This is why coaches should put their hand on athletes and good coaches use this trick a lot - putting your hands on someones hipflexors during a march get them to actually fire - I have had athletes that are try to do a straight leg pull back and don't figure out how to use the hamstring to initiate it until I press on it. 

So back to the argument at hand.  Will a tight belt increase abdominal activation slightly?  Maybe.  If you didn't have the coordination to activate your abs this might help...   But your trying to jump high without a belt.  The goal is to learn to coordinate your abs and contract them without pressure - a belt can be  a teaching tool - but it's not going to make your abs bigger!  In fact if anything it is a crutch that you will rely on and you won't learn to contract your abs without pressure any more.   

So, yes pressure applied to a muscle does increase activation.  Great trick to learn  how to activate muscles.  Pressure and bands are great in every toolbox for this reason.  But neither is very good for making muscles bigger.

AGC

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1097 on: August 31, 2016, 12:33:54 am »
+2
This is why coaches should put their hand on athletes and good coaches use this trick a lot - putting your hands on someones hipflexors during a march get them to actually fire - I have had athletes that are try to do a straight leg pull back and don't figure out how to use the hamstring to initiate it until I press on it. 

I can see a lot of female HS/college team track coaches abusing this advice lol.
« Last Edit: August 31, 2016, 07:47:09 am by acole14 »

Coges

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1098 on: August 31, 2016, 12:55:29 am »
+4
This is why coaches should put their hand on athletes and good coaches use this trick a lot - putting your hands on someones hipflexors during a march get them to actually fire - I have had athletes that are try to do a straight leg pull back and don't figure out how to use the hamstring to initiate it until I press on it. 

I can see a lot of female HS/college track coaches abusing this advice lol.

Haha. Just reminds me of the picture below. I wonder what muscle he was trying to activate?

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adarqui

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1099 on: August 31, 2016, 09:51:30 pm »
+1
This is why coaches should put their hand on athletes and good coaches use this trick a lot - putting your hands on someones hipflexors during a march get them to actually fire - I have had athletes that are try to do a straight leg pull back and don't figure out how to use the hamstring to initiate it until I press on it. 

I can see a lot of female HS/college track coaches abusing this advice lol.

Haha. Just reminds me of the picture below. I wonder what muscle he was trying to activate?



lmfao!!

adarqui

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1100 on: August 31, 2016, 09:54:33 pm »
+1
This quick point is related to T0ddday's post about dads, stereotypes, culture etc..

If we are subjected to those stereotypes as we grow up, there's a good chance we will believe them. And by simply believing them, it goes from being a stereotype to a "physical barrier" in our brains. I think our brains are full of those barriers, in all kinds of different forms - not just athletics. So if all of a sudden we want to "defy our genetics", which might actually just be - realize our true genetic potential, we have to destroy such barriers in our brains as we attempt to progress. I've been guilty of it myself by saying "defying my genetics". I try not to mention "whiteness" as being a limitation, though it is somewhat implied when I say defying my genetics. As a coach, I would make sure not to use such stereotypes in front of kids/athletes, and also make sure to call out athletes or their parents for using these stereotypes etc.

TLDR: stereotypes become physical barriers in our brains if we end up believing them. I'm not a neuroscientist, but I imagine an "inefficient series of dendrites" and such that weaken the "go get it" signal.

As for myself, I often think about my brain being a limiting factor: especially for running. For jumping/sprinting, I often tell my brain to "let go" and "give me more". Maybe i'm just nuts, but I really feel like my brain holds me back more than my muscle/tendon physiology. One reason I think this is, when i'm feeling REALLY GOOD MENTALLY, I can get much more out of my jump/sprint/run sessions. If I let any self doubt creep in, the quality of jumps/sprints/runs decrease dramatically (sprints less so, jumps/running more so). So I kind of feel like i'm in a battle with not only the physiological factors related to muscle/tendon/nervous system, but also with my brain. I feel like there's things in there "blocking me" from turning it up a notch ... perhaps protective mechanisms given my current fitness/strength etc. I mentioned a "governor device for engines" in a previous post... that's kind of what it feels like.. how to remove the governor and inject the NOS???  :ninja:

I'm finding that more and more difficult with my own kids.  I had never really thought about the impact of stereotypes because I try not to use them but when your kids ask you a question related to it you really have to think and be careful about not giving the easy answer. Also, it's very hard to control what teachers, coaches and other students and parents are saying because that's where a lot of stereotypes can stem from. Nearly all of it unintentional too.

Yeah I mean this is a really complicated issue especially when dealing w kids.  It's basically that we have to balance three things - barriers, stereotypes and realistic expectations/limits.

I think the barriers that Andrew talks about are totally real and their is a bunch evidence to support how damaging they are... Just think about Roger Bannister and the four minute mile.  Before he ran it people just were so sure it couldn't be done...  Then he went out and did it only training 3 hrs a week (he had limited time due to his schedule as a medical student and only did 400m speed repeats on his lunch break)... Within 10 years highschool kids had done it and somebody had run a sub 8 minute 2 mile!  He broke through the barrier for everyone and then it no longer had power over people and now it's not looked at as an amazing thing at all!  These barriers really hold us back from make individual progress or progress as a society or human race!  I hate when people have political ideas and people say things like "well a world without war is unrealistic cause humans are naturally violent war loving creatures"... It's like yeah maybe... But for sure if you keep saying that!!!

As far as stereotypes about race go they are mostly harmful if they involve any trainable quality...  There are a fun non harmful ones - over here we have a stereotype that Samoan people are generally really nice guys.  I don't see much harm in that - people expecting others to be nice is a good thing (we are far too fearful of others due to shows like CSI that make people think the world is full of psychotic killers) and if Samoans are effected by the stereotype and be nice rather than mean - well I don't really see much harm in that!  What's important to realize is that stereotypes can be harmful without being explicitly negative.  People don't see the harm in the stereotype that black people run faster or Asians or good at math cause they don't understand how it effects others. It's harmful for members of the race that the stereotype is about because of the pressure it puts on them.  In the case of math - the stories about Asian students committing suicide at MiT because of the immense pressure is an obvious reason why it is bad.  Or the fact that a black athlete who isn't fast will get branded as a lazy person who won't work hard while a semi fast white athlete gets praised as being extremely hard working!  That's wrong and damaging to everyone!  And then of course there is the contradiction that people are using empirical data as justification for believing some positive things like being good at math or running fast but claiming to not believe it at all for negative things.  I am always like "wait you think it's completely clear that whites are slow and blacks are fast cause a black guy won the 100m but you don't think poor test scores indicate that black people are not as smart?" Hmm.. I don't believe you, I think you think there is truth to both but you just don't want to admit one of them!" 

The problem though is that if we ignore stereotypes and limits completely and tell kids to do this we risk giving people unrealistic expectations.  This balance is so challenging.  I don't want white kids to believe that they can't run fast but at the same time I don't want any kids telling themselves that they don't need to do their homework because they have no natural limit and if they train they will be the fastest man in the world! 

Balancing this is hard.  They way I try and do it is emphasize that we do have limits - both genetically and lifestyle imposed.  However you don't know what the limits are until you work hard at something... The harder you work the closer you get to figuring being able to get a handle on limits and when you do get some idea of what your limiting characteristics are you shouldn't necessarily just ignore them because your filled with self confidence that barriers are always bad! 

In fact, part of the cruel irony of this is that while believing in your limitations and barriers can keep you from reaching your potential - so to can completely ignoring them...  One of the greatest examples of this is Andrew himself!  Think about Andrew's accomplishments and how he reached them.  He tried to get strong and jump high.  He read and researched and realized that he was limited in using the full squat to build his strength for his vertical - he recognized that limit and ignored dogma and half squatted and quad jumped his way to become a white guy jumping almost 40'' inches and blasting through barriers and making dunk videos.   Getting near 40'' is an accomplishment.  He power jumped his way to doing a DLRVJ that was damn near elite level through hard work.  Could he have got to 42?  45?  50?  Who knows.  But along the way he realized some limitations (or a better way to phrase it might be some areas where he was less advantaged rather than more) and is now embarking on reaching the elite 40/40 dunking club.  But he realized that he might be limited in how far he can progress jumping with a power two footed jump and realized that his best strength might not be carrying the mass and muscle necessary to jump like this and accumulate injuries - so he is switching to jump off one leg.  This is achieved only by working hard and being realistic and knowledgeable about ones strengths.  In the beginning there is no need to consider limits - he kept gaining cause he kept improving...  without self-belief that he could jump he never would have made these gains... But at some point blind self belief that he can achieve his goals however he wants if he works hard could keep his focus on two footed jumping exclusively and he wouldn't be able to jump as high in the long run...  This is why you have to be realistic with your body and know where you excel.  It's also why you should have a general goal (like dunking or running fast) rather than a specific goal like running an incredible 200m or jumping high via squatting and two footed jumping only...

I had a track teammate who would dominate in practice and usually beat me in the 200m.  The guy only wanted to run the 100m though. He was full of self confidence and in someways it served him well.  He believed so strongly that if he worked hard (and he was the hardest worker) he would be great. He insisted he was a 100m guy but in meets would always near 11 and only broke 11 one time.  He was full of excuses and mad that he dominated us in practice where we were fatigued and couldn't bring it in competition.  FINALLY, his last year he ran the 400m with little training and ran 46.1.   The were so many signs that he would excel at the 400m but he refused to do it because he ignored his "limits" or strengths and had to specific of a goal.  If he just wanted to be fast he could have probably achieved so much***.

*** Just to illustrate how hard this can be it's important to consider who should make the switch or make a training change.  It should only be you or someone you know extremely well...  This is why it's so important to be mindful and aware of your training, your strengths, what works for you, etc.  You have to balance patience with your coaches training and progress and work extremely hard while also being aware of what specifically works best for you... I have seen this happen countless times - a young sprinter comes to college after he had a good career in highschool running fast times in the 100, 200 and 400.  Perhaps he runs 10.9 off of highschool training that includes cross country, basketball, and some poor track work.  He hasn't lifted at all or done any real speed work.  If he is lanky and white the coach will take him after the first day and use stereotypes to make the decision that he is a 400m or even 800m guy and force him to do an event where he never excels simply because the coach imposed a racist limit on him rather than give him the speed work and strength training that could have made him into a great sprinter...  I truly believe that if someone like Christophe Lemeitre had grown up in the US he wouldn't be the first white guy to go sub10 because some idiot college coach would have forced him to run the 800m.  If the athlete isn't aware he won't put up a fight when someone imposes limits based on stereotypes or limited data and it will cost him his ability to succeed...

We can look no further for an example than Usain Bolt.  There is some terrible myth that Usain is lazy - but the truth is that it's just a myth - the guy pukes at practice daily.  His coach used stereotypes (that he is tall) to decide he could only be successful in the 400m and maybe the 200m despite the fact that he ran an out of shape explosive 200m in 20.5 as a 15 year old...  Bolt struggled at the longer distances and gave it a shot but at some point he knew his body and his ability well enough to ask/beg his coach for the chance to run the 100m....  His coach allowed him to and the rest is history...

TL;DR - Racial stereotypes suck.  Stereotypes that involve achieving something that takes hard work are terrible for everyone.  Ignore them and believe in yourself and know that you can do anything - but in the back of your mind be mindful that you might not be able to do ANYTHING but that you surely won't achieve it if you don't believe it...  As you evolve as an athlete don't let limits and barriers effect you BUT be mindful of where you might be more successful if it is a change in technique, training, strategy or even and keep your goals general enough so that you are afforded the flexibility to achieve them in whichever way works best for you...  In short, it's kind of like religion or faith in god.  Love sport and athletics and believe that you can succeed and be great - but realize that (god) success works in mysterious ways - you will get your goal if you believe in yourself but it might not be how you envisioned it or exactly the same goal you had when you started out!

great stuff man.

also I really love the Usain Bolt example.. that's probably one of the best examples of someone who could have fell victim to athletic stereotypes, but didn't.. I mean you look at him and you don't think 100m .. you think 200m / 400m.. but he single handedly crushed that stereotype forever. It's done. We'll probably see a ton more tall sprinters in ~12 years.



I think your most salient point here is that you will only know or realise your barriers through hard work. This is my message to my kids on most points. The more you try, the harder you try, the better you will get and the more likely you are to succeed. Do this and you'll get the most our of yourself. We don't really discuss limits or barriers with them yet (nearly 7 and 4 years old).

I had never considered the white/black athlete issue from a coaching perspective when picking distances though. It certainly makes sense given the lack of white athletes in sprinting. It's no wonder that stereotypes repeatedly play themselves out in real life. We're all contributing to them on a daily basis.

As far as barriers go you and Andrew make excellent points. Barriers can be self serving just the same as stereotypes are. I was thinking back to as little as 3 years ago I can recall instances when I would dunk before games and routinely hit my upper forearm near the elbow. Given I need 20" to touch the rim this put my SLRVJ at 35-36" at that point in time. It's kind of astounding to me to quantify it like that as I had never really thought I got much above 30. For my personally barriers though I generally have a healthy level of confidence in myself (not quite FIGJAM status but a decent ego) so I have never thought my barriers were too low. It's just that I don't think I've ever worked hard enough to reach anywhere near my potential barrier/ceiling so that actually gives me huge amounts of motivation for the future.

I'm actually glad that you have been so strong on these issues though. I had never considered an of these issues especially pertaining to racism but am seeing it on a daily basis. It's also a great reminder of what inputs my kids are getting given that teachers and other children/parents are largely ignorant of these issues.

Also, I have been listening to and reading a fair bit of Sam Harris's work. Whilst not on exactly the same issue it's food for thought which provokes greater reflection.

good stuff also!



sorry for the enormous quoting :D .. love it though.

T0ddday

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1101 on: September 01, 2016, 09:21:52 am »
+1
^^^ The sad thing is that while I don't blame Bolt he probably just reversed the stereotype such that every 5'6"  would be Trindon Holiday lookalike will now be doubted when they try to run the hundred because they just aren't tall enough...

I mean I get its human nature but the medias need to have things be obviously and simple is really part of the problem... The two most frustrating new stereotypes Bolt has created are:

1) Hes a poor starter cause his he is so tall.

2) His advantage is his long legs. 

Both totally false. 

1) He has the fastest recorded 30m, 40m, 50m, etc. Of all time (2009).  He may appear to be a poor starter because of the stupid automatic dq after false start rule... Since it bit him in 2011 Bolt has decided to be extremely cautious - I mean why risk any chance of a false start when you can win without a good start...  The new rule just ensures that faster people will "have" poor reaction times simply because the faster you are the more the risk reward ratio increases...

2) Bolt is fast because he has far more power than anyone else.  At high speeds our stride is hardly limited by our leg length - in fact he performs worse in the one part of the sprint where long legs provide the biggest advantage - the back straight in the 200m.  After already accelerating around the turn and fatigue setting in longer legs can start to make a minor difference in this part of the race (just watch Christophe Lemetrie long leg (his are longer than Bolt btw) his way to a bronze in rio)... Does Bolt have a great back 100?  No.  Yohan Blayke has run the fastest split of all time in the back stretch.  Number two is still Michael Johnson.  Bolt owns the record in the first hundred.  By a ridiculous margin.  He runs a faster turn than anyone else!  The turn! The part of the race where long legs don't provide a disadvantage if anything!  He is just simply more powerful than anyone else.

Maybe stereotypes get created partially cause we need to explain away others greatness because of our own ego?

Maybe it's just hard to say Bolt is simply the most powerful sprinter ever and I'm in awe of how much faster he is than me so instead I say "yeah he fast cause he has a huge advantage on me cause of his long legs".

Fine.  Maybe we need this.  I get it.  But let's just agree to make our excuses based on reasons that are illogical enough that they won't stick.  Bolt is faster than me cause he has access to magical yams.

Coges

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1102 on: September 01, 2016, 08:03:53 pm »
0
^^^ The sad thing is that while I don't blame Bolt he probably just reversed the stereotype such that every 5'6"  would be Trindon Holiday lookalike will now be doubted when they try to run the hundred because they just aren't tall enough...

I mean I get its human nature but the medias need to have things be obviously and simple is really part of the problem... The two most frustrating new stereotypes Bolt has created are:

1) Hes a poor starter cause his he is so tall.

2) His advantage is his long legs. 

Both totally false. 

1) He has the fastest recorded 30m, 40m, 50m, etc. Of all time (2009).  He may appear to be a poor starter because of the stupid automatic dq after false start rule... Since it bit him in 2011 Bolt has decided to be extremely cautious - I mean why risk any chance of a false start when you can win without a good start...  The new rule just ensures that faster people will "have" poor reaction times simply because the faster you are the more the risk reward ratio increases...

2) Bolt is fast because he has far more power than anyone else.  At high speeds our stride is hardly limited by our leg length - in fact he performs worse in the one part of the sprint where long legs provide the biggest advantage - the back straight in the 200m.  After already accelerating around the turn and fatigue setting in longer legs can start to make a minor difference in this part of the race (just watch Christophe Lemetrie long leg (his are longer than Bolt btw) his way to a bronze in rio)... Does Bolt have a great back 100?  No.  Yohan Blayke has run the fastest split of all time in the back stretch.  Number two is still Michael Johnson.  Bolt owns the record in the first hundred.  By a ridiculous margin.  He runs a faster turn than anyone else!  The turn! The part of the race where long legs don't provide a disadvantage if anything!  He is just simply more powerful than anyone else.

Maybe stereotypes get created partially cause we need to explain away others greatness because of our own ego?

Maybe it's just hard to say Bolt is simply the most powerful sprinter ever and I'm in awe of how much faster he is than me so instead I say "yeah he fast cause he has a huge advantage on me cause of his long legs".

Fine.  Maybe we need this.  I get it.  But let's just agree to make our excuses based on reasons that are illogical enough that they won't stick.  Bolt is faster than me cause he has access to magical yams.

Two words- sports analysts. Not sure how bad it is in the US but assuming it's way worse than here given the population, media outlets, number of sports televised, etc. Here we have complete channels dedicated to one sport and they over analyse the shit out of it and in the end create reasoning which ends up being mistaken for fact and is then regurgitated by others in an attempt to sound mildly intelligent.

Not really relevant but anyway-
I was having a conversation with my son the other day about being able to say "I don't know". With the amount of questions kids ask us as parents and ask other children the temptation is so high to create and answer of half truths or google it. What we don't actually do is say I don't know and then wonder what it might be.  I've done this a few times with him recently and it has led to some wonderful conversations with some highly inaccurate hypotheses and some accidentally accurate thoughts. 
"Train as hard as possible, as often as possible, while staying as fresh as possible"
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Coges

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1103 on: September 01, 2016, 08:14:43 pm »
0
Wednesday night ball recap:

Shit game. The last time we played this team I had 17 points and they physically targeted me from the start. Got a hip and shoulder on the very first play which gave me a dead left arm. Didn't realise how bad it was till after the game but I basically can't lift my arm above shoulder level. Even with that we played ok and were up at the half but struggled to score early in the second half and with 5 minutes left we were down by 10. Finally got some momentum going and got back within 1 but ended up going down by 4. What's worse is I sprained my left ankle with about 7 or 8 minutes to go. It's the shoes I've been wearing. Hadn't mentioned this before but the last 3 weeks I've played in then I have slightly gone over on both ankles. Never really put it together that the shoes may be the cause but I never had this problem in the hyperdunks. Going to get some new insoles and go back to the hyperdunks till I get some new kicks.

Long story short-
Injured left shoulder - cannot lift arm above shoulder level
Sprained left ankle - should be ok next by week but have some decent pain going on. Minimal swelling though.

Pissed about the injuries as it derails my training again. On a scale of 1-10 the body feels about a 3.5 right now.
"Train as hard as possible, as often as possible, while staying as fresh as possible"
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Coges

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1104 on: September 04, 2016, 08:58:39 pm »
+2
Still feeling a bit shit. Shoulder and ankle got me pretty down last week. Seems that when I get some good momentum I get injured. #poorme lol

Left shoulder is still out of whack. It’s pretty much right where the rear delt meets the tricep . Can lift the arm through controlled motion with some minor pain but putting force through it at certain angles is a complete no go. Same thing with the ankle. It’s pretty good but certain angles and it’s quite painful. On top of that my right glute, hamstring and calf have been super knotty over the last few weeks which I’ve been trying to work through but can’t seem to get any traction.

I had some shoulder issues in the past (snapping scar syndrome left side) as recent as December last year so it’s no surprise I keep getting issues here. Did all the rehab for it and got it back to feeling 100% but have let that go which makes me feel kind of stupid for not continuing it.

Anyway, enough bitching. The plan here is to reprogram myself on the go. I’ve been loving the T0ddday program as written. Am obviously keeping it but will go for the next month with some modifications. To manage stress while I get the body right I will go with the following:

Lifting days- 2 non negotiable days (down from 3)
Track days- 1 non negotiable day (down from 2)
Jump Circuits- 2 non negotiable days (down from 3)
Daily Mob Circuit- daily- non negotiable
SMR/stretch- daily- non negotiable
Shoulder re/pre-hab- daily- non negotiable

If the body is feeling good I can add in the extra sessions.

 I feel like this is a decent plan to get back to some form. I do feel that I’m weaker and more out of shape that I have been in years although this is not actually true. Going to be easy on myself with the numbers as far as pushing the weights go and give myself till October to get the body right and then start to ramp things up and push for some more impressive end of year goals.

The other main area of focus is sleep. Reading a sleep study yesterday and it’s pretty frightening the effect that continued lack of sleep can have. Looking back over the last probably 6-7 years I’ve had on average 6 hours of broken sleep every night. Just not good enough and although kids will cause some broken sleep sometimes I’ve been just as guilty of causing it myself too. The goal is 7 hours minimum with 8+ being ideal. 

*Edit- Was 93kgs this morning. Have gotten over my binge mentality and will be sub 90 by the start of October.
« Last Edit: September 04, 2016, 09:22:37 pm by Coges »
"Train as hard as possible, as often as possible, while staying as fresh as possible"
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AGC

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1105 on: September 05, 2016, 01:32:06 am »
+1
That sucks mate. Gonna keep playing ball for the short-term?

Coges

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1106 on: September 05, 2016, 06:24:31 am »
0
That sucks mate. Gonna keep playing ball for the short-term?

Thanks mate. Yeah I plan on playing the season out and will assess from there. Am skipping this week and will hopefully be good to go next week.

Feel like I'm whingeing a bit but it seems like a 1 step forward 2 steps back at the moment.
"Train as hard as possible, as often as possible, while staying as fresh as possible"
- Zatsiorsky

AGC

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1107 on: September 05, 2016, 08:47:16 am »
+2
That sucks mate. Gonna keep playing ball for the short-term?

Thanks mate. Yeah I plan on playing the season out and will assess from there. Am skipping this week and will hopefully be good to go next week.

Feel like I'm whingeing a bit but it seems like a 1 step forward 2 steps back at the moment.

Nah it's not about being soft or anything, you just have to be really smart and measured with this type of training. Can't neglect anything as there are just so many possible injuries you can't 'push through' no matter how big of a stoic you are. Even minor/moderate stuff can prevent you doing the meat of the program effectively (e.g. squatting big, jumping, sprinting, bounding). So don't feel bad about getting your ducks in a row. AELS and all that!

adarqui

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1108 on: September 05, 2016, 08:53:14 pm »
+1
That sucks mate. Gonna keep playing ball for the short-term?

Thanks mate. Yeah I plan on playing the season out and will assess from there. Am skipping this week and will hopefully be good to go next week.

Feel like I'm whingeing a bit but it seems like a 1 step forward 2 steps back at the moment.

Nah it's not about being soft or anything, you just have to be really smart and measured with this type of training. Can't neglect anything as there are just so many possible injuries you can't 'push through' no matter how big of a stoic you are. Even minor/moderate stuff can prevent you doing the meat of the program effectively (e.g. squatting big, jumping, sprinting, bounding). So don't feel bad about getting your ducks in a row. AELS and all that!

x2

aels!

i'd be curious to see if Coges sees any improvement in recovery once he's on a consistent 8 hour sleep schedule instead of ~6 hours. It could make a major difference eventually.. we'll have to wait and see.

Coges

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Re: Two Hands Two Feet
« Reply #1109 on: September 06, 2016, 01:21:25 am »
+1
That sucks mate. Gonna keep playing ball for the short-term?

Thanks mate. Yeah I plan on playing the season out and will assess from there. Am skipping this week and will hopefully be good to go next week.

Feel like I'm whingeing a bit but it seems like a 1 step forward 2 steps back at the moment.

Nah it's not about being soft or anything, you just have to be really smart and measured with this type of training. Can't neglect anything as there are just so many possible injuries you can't 'push through' no matter how big of a stoic you are. Even minor/moderate stuff can prevent you doing the meat of the program effectively (e.g. squatting big, jumping, sprinting, bounding). So don't feel bad about getting your ducks in a row. AELS and all that!

x2

aels!

i'd be curious to see if Coges sees any improvement in recovery once he's on a consistent 8 hour sleep schedule instead of ~6 hours. It could make a major difference eventually.. we'll have to wait and see.

AELS (anti ego lifting?)

I'm pretty conscious that two of my major flaws have been sleep and nutrition and I'm pretty sure that getting these two lined up would make a massive difference. Life changing.

Yeah @acole14 you're right. The reason why I feel like I'm complaining too is that I have never really been consistent with this stuff and when I am consistent I get great results. Frustrating but true. I'll continue to play because it's with a bunch of mates and I don't want to leave them hanging. If I can line up the other stuff I'm pretty sure I'll be fine.
"Train as hard as possible, as often as possible, while staying as fresh as possible"
- Zatsiorsky