Author Archives: Todd

Think Yourself Skinny?

OK so here is the latest technique to losing weight. Are you ready? It’s called habituation. The idea is that by visualizing yourself eating a food you really enjoy eating, you stimulate the pleasure centers of the brain enough so that when the time comes to actually eat the food you will eat less of it and be satisfied. Simple, right?

*beating head against keyboard*

The problem I have with habituation isn’t whether it works or not, but rather that weight loss seems to be the goal of this technique rather than building a strong, lean, healthy body by eating healthy, nutrient dense foods. Instead we are trying to play tricks on our heads by visualizing eating junk food so that when we actually eat junk food we don’t eat as much of it and lose weight. How many people do you know who’ve gotten fat from overeating healthy food? I certainly have never heard of such a person. The really great thing about eating healthy, nutrient rich, un-processed foods is that they usually taste just good enough to keep us interested and satisfied but not so much that we binge on them. Perfect.  Why mess with this successful formula?

I’m going to keep saying this in hopes that I may actually reach at least 1 or 2 people. There are no shortcuts. Having a healthy, strong, sexy looking and sexy feeling body requires hard work, proper nutrition and adequate sleep. Weight loss is not the goal. HEALTHY BODY RECOMPOSITION is the goal. This means maximizing muscle activity and allowing fat stores to adjust to proper, healthy levels. Stop looking for shortcuts unless you want to keep failing. Educate yourself! The information is out there if you pay attention and know where to look. LEARN about your body. MOVE your body. The panacea is simple and millions of people are already engaged in it – it’s called EXERCISE! DO IT. LIVE IT. LOVE IT.

My Running Story

In the 90’s I worked as a personal trainer and gym instructor for about 8 years which gave me a lot of knowledge about fitness, nutrition and similar topics. I changed my career which took me away from fitness and into a desk chair until 2008. In that time I gained about 80 pounds.

Now I have been running off and on for about 25 years and I have only owned 2 pairs of running shoes. A lot of that time running was done barefoot on the beach. I would constantly change up my running surface from the soft sand to the hardpack sand to the shallow water. It always felt great, but I never tried doing the barefoot thing on the asphalt. All that time I had the sneaking suspicion that the marketing hype and rhetoric we are fed by the traditional running community that a good running shoe is necessary to avoid or minimize injury, was bullshit.

I finally made the solid decision to get off my ass and get back to where I was 15 years earlier and lose the 80 pounds I had gained. Now I’ve always had a sort of love/hate relationship with running. I’m sure many of you can understand this. Sometimes it just feels right and other days it just feels like a chore. The pain I deal with is in the hips and knees, but they were always manageable and for the most part I accepted them as something I couldn’t change. At some point in 2009 I saw an interview with Christopher McDougall who wrote a book called “Born to Run“. For those unfamiliar with this book, ‘Born to Run’ explores the life and running habits of the Tarahumara Indians of Mexico’s Copper Canyon, arguably the greatest distance runners in the world. And these indians run ridiculous distances of 50-100+ miles across crazy rough and steep terrains in nothing but strap on sandals.

Digging deeper and really scouring the web for more information on barefoot running, I came across Barefoot Ted and the Vibram Five Finger shoes. I kept reading more and more until I had a strong understanding of what was going on and what I needed to do. If you haven’t seen Barefoot Ted‘s blog I highly recommend it for a wealth of information on the topic.

I first decided I needed to change the way I run, but I did it with my shoes on. I needed to stop heel striking or heel ‘rolling’ as some call it and start landing on my forefoot. Knowing what I did about kinesiology and biomechanics it slowly became clear to me how the foot was really supposed to be operating when running. OF COURSE!! The heel was never meant to be used as a striking implement. The more I looked at it and studied it I realized the heel is basically used for 2 things; balance and stability. When the foot and leg that are in the air, they need to be relaxed. After my first run doing this my calves were very sore. This was as it should be. By design, my calves got very strong, very fast. Look at the way a sprinter runs. They never touch their heels to the ground. Sprinter shoes don’t even have heel tread in most cases and the spikes are all in the forefoot.

So for about 6 months I did all my running very consciously striking on forefoot. It felt amazing!  I could run clearly faster and farther with almost no pain that I had from heel strike running. And it was much more effortless. It just felt natural. I was increasing my distances from 3-4 miles to 8-10 miles.

Much more recently I finally decided it was time to make the full switch over to the VFF shoe and see what it felt like. I kept my distance to a short 2 miles to see what the physical effect would be. My reaction was like a kid on christmas morning. Wow did this feel amazing.  It was like going from driving a loud, old, beat up VW, to driving a fast, sleek, silent european sports car. After that first run in the VFF I knew I would never put on my old running shoes again. My calves found a new level of soreness, but I loved it and knew it was only a matter of time before they were strong enough for me to go much longer distances. And the greatest thing was that my heel had plenty of room to operate when I was landing without hitting the ground. All that extra padding in the heel of my old running shoes was encouraging very poor running form which gave me all sorts of problems. TERRIBLE! The good news is that all those problems are gone. My longest distance currently is 12 miles and my left foot hurt pretty bad at the end, but only because I sprained my foot 6 months earlier. There is no way I could have done 12 miles in shoes.

I have lost those 80 lbs and I love sneering at large footwear companies and I love even more getting in conversations with runners who still wear foot coffins and introducing them to the quiet, peaceful panacea that is barefoot running. Many more companies are coming out with minimalist “barefoot” style shoes as more people get wise to the misinformation we have all accepted for so long about running shoes.

 

Slow Carb 5-weeks

As I suspected, the plateau is here at 219-220. Body Fat is reading 18% now but I am still very distrustful of body fat measuring methods. This last saturday we went much easier on our consumption of carbs. This should yield a better result at the end of this week. I did eat some cereal and dried fruit yesterday because I had a headache and was tired of using Excedrin to relieve the pain. The pain went away very fast. This is a very good thing as it keeps me very familiar with where my metabolic threshold is.

Slow Carb 4-Weeks

Weight 218. Bodyfat 18.2%. I think this monitor might be broken or just not very accurate. I can feel and see my mid section getting leaner. Diet seems to still be working fine, but I have a feeling a plateau is coming. Calories may have to be reduced further for continued results. Time will tell.

Burden of Proof

This is a response by Christopher McDougall to a New York Time article titled, “Is Running Barefoot Better For You?” from 2009. It was so well stated that I felt it deserved a blog post of its own. Here it is:

Wait — why isn’t the question “Is Running in Shoes Better for You?”? Since when did motion-controlling shoes become the default position for the human foot? It’s bizarre, and I guess admirable in a perverse, market-manipulating, sucker-born-every-minute way, that motion-controlling shoes are considered natural and bare feet are seen as some kind of thrill-seeking experiment. Since when did an artificial contrivance with absolutely zero scientific evidence to recommend them become the default position? The burden of proof isn’t on the human foot — which had been doing fantastically well on its own for 2 million years, thank you very much. It’s on these overpriced, overengineered novelty items which have done nothing to decrease the injury rate in 40 years.

— christopher mcdougall

I think this speaks brilliantly to just how easily our culture is manipulated by corporations.