Several years ago when I was much younger, say in my early twenties, I suffered from knee pain anytime I ran. To treat this knee pain I used the most current methods known to modern medicine, Ibuprofen.
Upon waking and prior to running I would take an 800mg table of Ibuprofen. Now this certainly worked, I was able to run without pain, and I was young enough that my stomach and liver and kidneys could handle the damage I was inflicting upon myself with chronic medication. I also did not know that NSAIDs such s Ibuprofen and Acetaminophen prevent the body from healing and repairing tissue.
In fact I have since leaned that recent studies have implicated Ibuprofen specifically in preventing the body from repairing soft tissue. This means that when I took Ibuprofen after an ankle sprain, my body had a more difficult time in repairing that ankle sprain that then lead to a higher chance of spraining that ankle again. It also meant that the damage in my knee that was causing my knee pain also never could fully heal.
So no that I am older, but yet leaner, and faster how do I take care of my knee pain. Well I changed the way I run entirely. I no longer run in heavy stability and motion control shoes, instead I run in light shoes with very little heel and minimal padding and cushion. I have learned how to run on the front of my foot striking on the balls of my feet. This uses the natural arch in my food like the leaf springs on a truck axle and engages my calf muscles eccentrically like shock absorbers. By running in this way I also have change the angle of my center of gravity over my point of balance. In making this simple change I have improved the bio-mechanics of my running motion and I no longer suffer knee pain. I now run faster, greater distance, all with no knee pain and none of the horrible but silent side effects of chronic NSAID usage.
This is not something that happened overnight. I spent a few weeks performing drills and conducting short runs to build up strength in my calves and soft tissues. But in less than a month I was able to run without ever letting my heels slam into the ground and thus absorbing all the shock and impact below my knees. Running pain free is great. I learned how to do it from watching video demonstrations of Dr. Romanov and his Pose Method.
Daily Vitamin B
B vitamins help you metabolize food into energy and building blocks for your mind and body. I write this blog to offer some perspectives in metabolizing our complex world into understandable chunks. To paraphrase Einstein: “Make things as simple as possible, but not simpler.” I aim to provide relevant, practical, accurate, and precise information and insight that supports life in you and yours.
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Great Exercise Machine
By far, hands down, my favorite exercise machine, in fact one of the few that I actually use, is the Concept 2 Rower. Why?
It provides a full body workout that utilizes your muscles in functional movement patterns.
It stressed both the anaerobic and aerobic metabolic pathways resulting in a complete workout.
It is very safe, it is rather difficult to hurt yourself with it or stack on too much weight.
The electronic module provides a feature for self calibration.
The rower is robust and I have rarely seen one out of commission.
It requires little to no maintenance; you simple oil the chain every now and then.
It takes up very little space when stored in the upright position.
Just about anyone can jump on it and safely push themselves.
The electronic control module provide a great amount of feedback information.
The electronic control module also has a wide variety of workouts programmed in including a game.
Back when I injured my IT band I relied heavily and almost daily upon the concept 2 rower for rehab. I came back, leaner, stronger, and fast and cut over a minute from my pre-injury 2 mile run!
The concept 2 Rower is for me the best all around piece of workout equipment. I bought my own to have at home for those rainy, or cold winter days, or anytime I just need a solid but simple workout.
I enjoy the 2K row for the moment but I also like performing Tabattas and 500m sprint intervals. All of which I find easy to program into the New Workout option on the electronic control module.
If you are saving up for your next and probably your last piece of exercise equipemnt I would put my money toward a Concept 2 Rower.
It provides a full body workout that utilizes your muscles in functional movement patterns.
It stressed both the anaerobic and aerobic metabolic pathways resulting in a complete workout.
It is very safe, it is rather difficult to hurt yourself with it or stack on too much weight.
The electronic module provides a feature for self calibration.
The rower is robust and I have rarely seen one out of commission.
It requires little to no maintenance; you simple oil the chain every now and then.
It takes up very little space when stored in the upright position.
Just about anyone can jump on it and safely push themselves.
The electronic control module provide a great amount of feedback information.
The electronic control module also has a wide variety of workouts programmed in including a game.
Back when I injured my IT band I relied heavily and almost daily upon the concept 2 rower for rehab. I came back, leaner, stronger, and fast and cut over a minute from my pre-injury 2 mile run!
The concept 2 Rower is for me the best all around piece of workout equipment. I bought my own to have at home for those rainy, or cold winter days, or anytime I just need a solid but simple workout.
I enjoy the 2K row for the moment but I also like performing Tabattas and 500m sprint intervals. All of which I find easy to program into the New Workout option on the electronic control module.
If you are saving up for your next and probably your last piece of exercise equipemnt I would put my money toward a Concept 2 Rower.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Gluten Free, Grain Free, Dairy Free, Paelo Breakfast
With all the news about what is or isn't good for you I am frustrated at times with what to make for breakfast. There are all kinds of paleo "hacks" or ways to make all those bread and pastry items without gluten or without grains. It is just hard to find something that tastes just like the old but deadly pancakes, or it is extremely complicated to make. The other drawback is that the macronutrients are always out of balance and you will have to add something else and/or reduce portions to balance the meal.
So my solution is to get back to basics and take more of an Ancestral Diet approach. I make some bacon, a mushroom and onion omelet, with kale, and a little bit of fruit. This results in a well balanced 3 Block Zone meal that is about double or triple on the fat, which keeps me full until well past lunch time. Aside from being extremely tasty, and very healthy, the best part about this meal is that you will feel satisfied and full until you make it to lunch!
3 Block Zone, Paleo, Grain-Free, Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Ancestral Breakfast!
For Two People:
5 Slices of Center Cut Thick Bacon (1 is for the dog)
3-5 mushrooms sliced up
1/4 of an onion diced up
1-2 tablespoons of coconut oil to fry
2 handfuls of Kale
1-2 tablespoons of coconut oil to blend with
4 eggs scrambled
1 Banana (or 4-5 oz of berries)
So my solution is to get back to basics and take more of an Ancestral Diet approach. I make some bacon, a mushroom and onion omelet, with kale, and a little bit of fruit. This results in a well balanced 3 Block Zone meal that is about double or triple on the fat, which keeps me full until well past lunch time. Aside from being extremely tasty, and very healthy, the best part about this meal is that you will feel satisfied and full until you make it to lunch!
3 Block Zone, Paleo, Grain-Free, Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Ancestral Breakfast!
For Two People:
5 Slices of Center Cut Thick Bacon (1 is for the dog)
3-5 mushrooms sliced up
1/4 of an onion diced up
1-2 tablespoons of coconut oil to fry
2 handfuls of Kale
1-2 tablespoons of coconut oil to blend with
4 eggs scrambled
1 Banana (or 4-5 oz of berries)
All ingredients either on the stove or prepped and ready! |
Epic Bacon Flip, make the grease to keep the eggs from sticking. |
Mix in melted Coconut Oil from top pan into the Scrambled Eggs |
Kale, Bacon & banana plated, omelets still cooking. |
In the pan split the omelet, as it stiffens flip each half over, then plate when done! |
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
U-shaped Curve to Exercise Benefits
Everyone agrees that exercise confers significant health benefits, leads to not only a longer life but a more enjoyable life. Exercise has shown again and again to reduce one's chance of cancer, osteoporosis, heart disease, heart attack, hip fracture, and other such health perils. For the longest time many doctors and professionals felt that more was always better. For decades we have been told that marathon runners were the elite, the most fit among us, and thus the most healthy.
But the consensus against such claims has slowly been building from the minority for the past two decades or more. Evidence that the dose response curve between exercise and health benefits is shaped like and upside down U is now mounting and creating legitimate controversy. More doctors and sports professionals are now coming to favor shorter and higher intensity exercises.
Physiological studies are now showing that anaerobic exercise carries over to develop aerobic exercise but not the other way around. From the perspective of the muscle cell and the metabolism of energy this makes perfect sense as cells produce ATP through multiple pathways but aerobic exercise rarely taps into the pathways required from high intensity anaerobic exercise. Conversely anaerobic exercise taps out all of the pathways which metabolize energy and thus produce and more thorough "exercise."
Thus CrossFit and its now more than a dozen spin-offs (Seal-Fit, Military Athlete, OPT) both official and un-official are bringing the idea of high intensity short duration training to the main stream.
The bottom line is exercise has a therapeutic range of values. Below these values one should not expect results, while beyond these values more harm will occur than benefit. This range differs between people and individual fitness levels, but in my opinion marathons fall outside this range for most people.
If I spend more than 40 minutes conducting a work out and am not yet completely exhausted then the workout is to easy or I am moving to slow. Generally I try to keep my workout challenging enough to wear me out in 20 minutes.
But the consensus against such claims has slowly been building from the minority for the past two decades or more. Evidence that the dose response curve between exercise and health benefits is shaped like and upside down U is now mounting and creating legitimate controversy. More doctors and sports professionals are now coming to favor shorter and higher intensity exercises.
Physiological studies are now showing that anaerobic exercise carries over to develop aerobic exercise but not the other way around. From the perspective of the muscle cell and the metabolism of energy this makes perfect sense as cells produce ATP through multiple pathways but aerobic exercise rarely taps into the pathways required from high intensity anaerobic exercise. Conversely anaerobic exercise taps out all of the pathways which metabolize energy and thus produce and more thorough "exercise."
Thus CrossFit and its now more than a dozen spin-offs (Seal-Fit, Military Athlete, OPT) both official and un-official are bringing the idea of high intensity short duration training to the main stream.
The bottom line is exercise has a therapeutic range of values. Below these values one should not expect results, while beyond these values more harm will occur than benefit. This range differs between people and individual fitness levels, but in my opinion marathons fall outside this range for most people.
If I spend more than 40 minutes conducting a work out and am not yet completely exhausted then the workout is to easy or I am moving to slow. Generally I try to keep my workout challenging enough to wear me out in 20 minutes.
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