“Nothing good comes in life or athletics unless a lot of hard work has preceded the effort. Only temporary success is achieved by taking shortcuts.”

Roger Staubach







“Lack of activity destroys the good condition of every human being, while movement and methodical physical exercise save & preserve it.”

Plato 427-347 BC




 





Gymless Training Blog

The Kaizen Principle & Bodyweight Training

Alistair Ramsay - Monday, April 30, 2012
In Japanese the word Kaizen means constant and never ending improvement via small, incremental steps. Traditionally this has been applied to the business environment however I also read about the Kaizen Principle being applied to fitness training in one of Charles Poliquin’s excellent books The Poliquin Principles. It really struck a chord with me and I have been using the principle ever since in my own fitness programs and those of my training clients. Applied to fitness training the Kaizen principle implies that you must seek a small improvement each and every time you perform a workout. Over the long haul these small improvements add up to some really impressive gains.   

Merging bodyweight exercise and the Kaizen Principle is a little trickier than traditional weight lifting as the monitoring of performance improvements is not quite as simple. When performing compound barbell movements like the squat, deadlift and bench press you can keep all your training parameters the same and simply look to add additional resistance to the bar each time your perform a movement (commonly known as linear progression). However, when using bodyweight exercises it is not quite this easy. You can of course use an adjustable weighted vest, ankle weights or bands to add resistance to certain exercises however this is not always optimal and/or possible.  Instead you have to look to other performance markers such as:   

1. Successfully completing a harder exercise progression
2. Improved movement quality (quite a subjective measure)
3. Increase in repetitions (or duration for isometrics)
4. Reduced rest intervals between sets
5. Increased workout density (good for fat loss)

The first two markers in this list are more closely related to strength and skill development, the middle marker is a good indicator of both strength and work capacity improvement (depending on the number of reps in question) and the latter two markers are good measures of work capacity improvements. 

Arguably increasing the total amount of work performed in a workout (volume) could be gauged as a performance improvement too however I normally prefer to focus on quality over quantity as adding more and more volume to a workout will begin to seriously eat into your powers of recovery and exponentially increase the chances of injuries and niggles rearing their ugly head.   

As I discuss in my Gymless Training System eBooks the Kaizen mindset can also help determine how often you should train. As a general rule I like the following mantra:  

“If you feel fresh enough and strong enough to improve on your previous workout then go for it. If you still feel tired and sore and doubt you will achieve any performance improvements then rest for a further day or two”

Remember, there is no one size fits all training formula which we should all use for optimal gains in strength and performance. Our age, training experience, biomechanics, injury history, recovery rates, day jobs, family commitments, sleep cycles all vary to such an extent that it is impossible to prescribe a one size fits all solution. Instead I recommend using the Kaizen Principle mindset to determine your workout frequency. If you feel like you are fresh enough and strong enough to beat your previous workout totals then go for it. If not, then back off for a further day or two and focus instead on some low intensity restorative exercise techniques. 

Using previous workout scores, optimal workout frequency and the Kaizen concept I regularly see people push much harder than they otherwise would in a workout in order to top their scores and continue moving forward. Obviously you cannot improve forever in a particular workout (or else we would all be able to jump over buildings and run through walls) so once you feel progress stalling (or even before you start stalling) ensure you switch things around with new exercises and/or a new training focus. Typically beginners will be able to make progress for longer before hitting a plateau whilst more advanced trainees will likely have to swap things around more regularly to make progress. 

Remember… small gains in the short term, big gains in the long term!

PS - The one time I would ignore the Kaizen Principle is during your recharge/recovery weeks. Here the focus should be on effective recovery and not performance improvements!

Ninja Warrior Bedroom

Alistair Ramsay - Monday, April 30, 2012

This is great, I want one.....


Born To Run Video

Alistair Ramsay - Monday, March 19, 2012

A nice follow up video to the post I wrote last week about the book, Born To Run. Particularly like the end of the video where they examine the ground impact forces of barefoot running vs traditional running shoes!



People Are Awesome

Alistair Ramsay - Sunday, March 18, 2012

Fun video to finish the weekend....hard to pick a favorite but I am quite enjoying the backflip/basketball combination at 3.52...can't decide whether it is legit?!



Too Much Of A Good Thing

Alistair Ramsay - Thursday, March 15, 2012
Modern life is full of stressors, some of them positive, some of them negative! 

Eustress - A beneficial stress which produces growth, performance and repair (Hans Selye)

Distress - A detrimental stress which can cause decay or damage (Hans Selye)

Exercise can fall into either category depending on how you juggle the intensity, volume and frequency of your workouts. Like so many things in life, you can get too much of a good thing! If you consistently destroy yourself with frequent high volume workouts, exercise will quickly move into the destructive realm. It will steal your energy, ramp up your cortisol levels and leave you feeling beat up and drained. Granted there are certain times when using this kind of approach within a carefully structured training cycle can set the stage for some good adaptations. However you cannot simply train your body into oblivion day after day, week after week without accepting some negative consequences. 

For those who simply want to get better body composition, improve their strength and fitness and feel good on a daily basis then opting for exercise quality over exercise quantity is more often than not the way to go. Certainly you should train hard, but make sure you are not exceeding your powers of recovery with the volume and/or frequency of your hard training sessions and thus turning a good thing into a bad thing. 

Of course at the other end of the spectrum you have plenty of folks who don’t exercise or move their body at all, but that is a story for another day....

Born To Run

Alistair Ramsay - Monday, March 12, 2012
After a long time sitting in no-mans-land on my to-read-list, I was recently given a copy of Born To Run written by Christopher McDougall and immediately set about it. I have to say, given my dislike of endurance running I was surprisingly gripped by this book which takes you on a journey into the world of ultra marathoners and a long-lost tribe located in Mexico’s copper canyons, The Tarahumara, who excel at covering unfathomable distances at great speed.



One chapter I particularly enjoyed was when the author took a look at the potential benefits to be derived from running barefoot or as phrased in the book.... 

“Lost in all the fireworks between Ted and Caballo was an important point: running shoes may be the most destructive force to ever hit the human foot” 

I for one am certainly a big advocate of getting your feet out of their cotton wool packaging and allowing them to work as evolution intended. Much to the despair of my girlfriend I am a proud owner of some Vibram 5 Finger shoes and since making the switch to these admittedly ridiculous looking trainers for my sprint workouts and long hikes I have noticed nothing but good things happening to my often troublesome right knee. I can only put this down to stronger feet, enhanced alignment and better biomechanics brought about by going barefoot. If you have any interest in the topic of barefoot running then this chapter is for you. The author gets up and close to some leading running coaches and physiotherapists sold on the benefits of barefoot running and examines the big players involved in a multi-billion dollar trainer industry which may ultimately be built on nothing but empty promises! 

“The de-conditioned musculature of the feet is the greatest issue leading to injury, and we’ve allowed our feet to become badly de-conditioned over the past twenty five years” Gerard Hartmann 

So has the book ignited my desire to compete in some ultra endurance events? Erm, in a word, no. Whilst I can certainly see the attraction in completing these immense challenges (and tip of the hat to those that do), an optimal prescription for health and fitness it is not. Give me some strength training, sprints and mobility work any day of the week. That said, Born To Run is an extremely well written and totally absorbing read and one that is most definitely worth adding to your collection!

The Truth About Exercise

Alistair Ramsay - Thursday, March 01, 2012
A few nights ago the BBC aired a Horizon documentary, The Truth About Exercise, which I thought was a definite step in the right direction of mainstream reporting in the area of health and fitness. For those that did not watch the program you can still catch it on iPlayer or read the accompanying article on the BBC website. Here are my fifty cents on some of the points raised during the program... 

Chasing calories is a futile task

This segment of the show correctly demonstrated how unfair the ‘burning calories’ versus ‘consuming calories’ fight is. In a few mouthfuls the show presenter was able to undo the calories burnt in 55 minutes of moderate exercise. It pains me to see how deep-rooted this notion of using exercise purely as a mechanism for increasing calorie expenditure has become. Why can’t people look beyond calories burnt and instead focus on all the other tremendous benefits of exercise including: 

  • Improved strength and function
  • Improved movement and flexibility
  • Improved cardiovascular power
  • Improved energy system efficiency
  • Improved insulin sensitivity
  • Improved bone density
  • Improved organ reserve and longevity
  • And I could go on..... 
No wonder people struggle for motivation when the only thing driving them on is a digital number creeping slowly upwards as the workout duration drags on! Here is an analogy I like to use with people still sold on calorie chasing.... 

"Rather than focus on burning fuel, focus on building a better engine"

I promise it is a more satisfying and ultimately more effective way to approach your workouts! 

High Intensity Interval Training Improves Insulin Sensitivity 

By measuring insulin levels in the presenter’s blood for an extended period of time after consuming a high sugar drink the researchers were able to graphically display his insulin sensitivity. Then after a month long intervention of high intensity interval training they repeated the experiment and were able to show a 24% improvement in insulin sensitivity....very encouraging! 

So the underlying message is work harder, not longer! Hardly groundbreaking news, but I was pleased to see this concept being presented to a larger audience....hopefully it will gain some traction. I am not 100% convinced by the programs recommendation of 3 minutes max effort work per week but hey, it is a good starting point I guess! 

What about the foods you eat? 

I thought the program would have really benefitted from taking a closer look at the pivotal role food plays in the whole health and fitness equation but alas it was not to be. Needless to say, doing 3 minutes of high intensity cycling per week coupled with a diet full of donuts, muffins and soft drinks is still going to leave you in a pretty sorry state of fitness both inside and out but perhaps this is a program for another day?! 

Overall, definitely worth a watch!


Simple Fitness Is Best

Alistair Ramsay - Monday, February 20, 2012
One of my training philosophies is that you should strive to keep things simple. As with most things in life, over-complicating fitness training tends to negatively impact performance. With this in mind I have outlined below a series of common fitness goals with a list of bullet points summarising the bare essentials you should focus on when pursuing that particular goal. I am well aware it is possible to dive much deeper into each goal but for many this is unnecessary (at least in the short term!) Choose a goal and then pursue it. Ignore all the distractions and minor details which simply stall your progress! 

Goal 1 – Strength  

  • Work with exercises or loads which you can perform for 5 reps or under (10 reps or under for novices)
  • Balance volume and frequency so you complete as many good reps as possible per training week
  • Periodise your training to avoid injury and allow strength adaptations to occur in the muscles & connective tissues  
  • Seek progress on a cyclical basis (heavier resistances)  
Goal 2 – Muscle Gain  

  • Lift a moderately heavy load lots of times (sets & reps)  
  • Base your training around multi-joint compound exercises
  • Keep rest periods between sets short (60-120 seconds)
  • Increase training density on a regular basis (Work = Force x Time)
  • Eat a high volume of nutrient dense calories
  • Allow time for muscles to recover and grow
Goal 3 – Strength & Muscle Gain

  • Use the above two methods in a conjugate or block combination
  • Conjugate - Separate training methods within the same week
  • Block - Separate training methods into training blocks (1-6 weeks)
Goal 4 – Run Faster  

  • Increase maximal strength (particularly in your lower body)
  • Increase rate of force production (power)
  • Improve sprinting technique (stability, mobility, relaxation, biomechanics)
Goal 5 – Fat Loss  

  • Focus on the quality and volume  of your food intake
  • Get healthy (more sleep, stress management, less booze, toxins etc)
  • Move regularly (strength training and sprinting works best)
Goal 6 – General health and fitness

  • Focus on the quality of your food intake
  • Get healthy (more sleep, stress management, less booze, toxins etc)
  • Move regularly (strength training and sprinting works best)
  • Don’t exhaust yourself with too much training 
Simple is often better and in my view that is certainly the case with fitness training! Don't concern yourself to much with the small details (at least while you are getting going). You can always fine tune your training program further down the line once performance improvements are that little bit harder to come by.

Minding Your Mitochondria by Dr. Terry Wahls

Alistair Ramsay - Monday, February 06, 2012

Check out this excellent TED presentation given by Dr. Terry Wahls on how she used her diet to cure MS and get out of her wheelchair. A great reminder to us all of the importance of eating high quality food from good sources!

Enjoyment - Consistency - Progression

Alistair Ramsay - Monday, January 16, 2012
Three habits that breed long term fitness success.... 

Habit 1 - Enjoyment 

In my eyes this is where any successful training program begins although I doubt everyone will agree with me..... 

I hated every minute of training. But I said to myself, suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion! Muhammed Ali 

Like the great Muhammed Ali you could just suck it up, put in the time and effort and make progress whilst hating every minute of it. However, is this really likely to be the most successful formula for the rest of us? I doubt it, the more likely outcome is you will slave away for a few weeks or maybe even a few months before throwing in the towel at which point the use it or lose it principle will kick in and your strength and stamina will erode away. 

This is why (in my opinion) finding a training program you enjoy doing is so important. Enjoyment breeds consistency which in turn breeds progression! Enjoyment could stem from the performing the individual workouts, it could stem from overcoming a particular challenge or fitness goal, it could stem from the people you exercise with. It doesn’t matter, as long as you enjoy the process you will set yourself up for habit 2. 

Habit 2 - Consistency 

Next on the list is consistency. This needs little explanation, performing one workout every couple of weeks is not going to get you anywhere fast. On the flip side, if you make working out a staple habit (which is much easier if you enjoy your training) you will pave the way for the all important final habit to take form.... 

Habit 3 -Progression 

Last but not least is the key habit of progression.  Habit 1 and habit 2 are really just precursors that allow habit 3 to happen. The human body has an amazing biological mechanism for adapting to the demands placed upon it. Applying habit one and habit two (with some smart programming) will allow you to take advantage of this evolutionary advantage and progress from average joe to serious competitor in almost any exercise discipline. Patience is the key to making this habit effective. Progress will happen via a long series of small incremental improvements, not in one giant cascade! Push forwards then back off, push forwards further then back off... you get the idea! Try not to concern yourself with how others are progressing around you, they are playing the game with a different set of genetics and will progress differently from you..... focus on your own journey and enjoy the ride! Don’t be the guy who does the same old thing at the same old intensity week after week, year after year... unless of course you are happy with mediocrity?!