Thursday, February 28, 2013

Coffee, Training, and WWII


Here's a nice ode to one of my long-time friends, the Americano.  The history behind it's creation during WWII is interesting as well.
http://www.primermagazine.com/2013/live/the-americano-your-new-go-to-coffee-order

And why not throw in some evidence to support the use of coffee as an ergogenic aid for training.  I took a good bit of coffee during my time as an NCAA Track athlete, to rev up before a serious workout on the tartan oval or a long run from 18mi outside the county line.  Now I don't miss a good, hot cup before my Squat, OHP and Deadlifts.  While the research definitely shows a fatigue-lessening effect there is less evidence to support maximal efforts or MVC (maximal voluntary contraction)... but anecdotally I can say coffee helps here too.  The third article below delves a little deeper into anaerobic performance effects of coffee consumption.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.libproxy.txstate.edu/pubmed/?term=coffee+enhances+strength+performance

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.libproxy.txstate.edu/pubmed/1665890

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.libproxy.txstate.edu/pubmed/19757860

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Top Dog Released

Looks like a good read.  Will put review up once I read it.
http://www.topdogbook.com/

Friday, February 8, 2013

You Reap What You Sew

Peep this homemade dip & chin up belt (doubles as a tow strap in case the hamsters give out under the hood).

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Fathers, Gun Control and the Pursuit of Athleticism: Part 2


I strongly believe that the vast-reaching, positive changes occur due to a significant shift of the individual’s locus of control.  Someone’s locus of control is their deep-seated perspective of how events unfold, whether life is happening all around them or the individual actively has control over daily events via choices.  If an individual believes that “It is what it is and there’s nothing I can do to change it,” they are said to have an external locus of control.  If someone wakes each day deciding how he or she should or could affect the events that will transpire they are said to own an internal locus of control.  The baseball players that recently pushed themselves on a regular basis to cover ground faster than they did the previous week consciously or unconsciously connected the dots.  “If I consistently put in some sweat and concentration towards this goal and I succeeded, then I can probably improve other things through similar means.” 
Physical strength is defined as the ability to exert force on an object in order to move it a measurable distance.  If you remember your Physics 101 this reads as Work = Force x Distance.  If the object doesn’t move no work was done.  For my baseball athletes, they learn to move kettlebells, barbells, dumbbells and medicine balls, as well as their own bodies from point A to point B (at top-end effort).  Ergo, psychological strength could be defined as the ability to affect change on a circumstance.  If the circumstance did not change, then no mental work was done.
Today boys and young men are starving for this type of strength and they need to learn it and then work it out.  They need to exercise their psychological abilities.  While I understand and lean towards physical training as a means of learning mental strength there are plenty of other ways to skin the cat.  If a young man is interested in computers he should solve the problem of building a CPU from scratch.  If a young man enjoys music encourage him to master the guitar or drums.  Whatever the path, it should be challenging and relative mastery should be the goal.  Simply "trying" a sport or other skill-based activity is not adequate.  When a young man learns he possesses the power of intention and follow through, eagerness and confidence grow towards the rest of his life.  

Some foundational questions in a young man’s soul get answered when he learns of his mental strength:
  • Can I come through in a pinch?   
  • Am I equipped to handle the inevitable challenges of life?  
  • Is my confidence merely posturing or indicative of real strength?  
  •  Can I walk or am I just all talk?
Answers to these inevitable questions can only be truthfully found in the crucible of a challenge.  A challenge is the opportunity to meet, exceed or fail to meet the demands of a given task.  Those three outcomes (meet, exceed, fail) all provide feedback.And therefore they are all valuable to the young man.  Who is the most attentive student in the karate class on Tuesday night?  It's the 12 year old who got his nose bloodied last week by a larger neighborhood kid.  Failure is extremely valuable.  I should not need to explain the atrocity of giving all participants a trophy at the end of little league baseball season.
"Well, that's a great idea Matt, but what about the teenager you wrote about last week, who had a lack of motivation to do much of anything?"  Glad you asked.  Tune in next week for Fathers, Gun Control and the Pursuit of Athleticism: Part 3.

-Pursue Strength









Friday, February 1, 2013

Kettlebell exercises from WKC (Valery Fedorenko)

Catalogued Kettlebell exercises with video and explanation.
http://worldkettlebellclub.com/intro-to-kettlebells/

Hip Hinge Drills

This is a quality article with some immediately applicable movements to teach an adult or youth athlete who is having trouble with  the Hip-Hinge (ie: deadlift, KB swing, olympic pulls) movement pattern.
http://articles.elitefts.com/training-articles/teaching-the-hip-hinge/