
Conclusions About Low Volume Workouts
Last month's Experiment saw me take my overall workout time down from the certifiably insane range back into ordinary fitness buff land. In addition to lowering my overall training volume, I took the advice of Rachel Cosgrove and dropped the running altogether. Except for 5 minutes or so of some jogging to warm up before weight lifting, Gym Buddy Allison and I stayed off the track & tread. Nor did we spin, ellipticize or in any other way aerobicize ourselves except for our Turbokick (which is more like interval training than steady state cardio).
We did however, do some gut busting interval workouts. We did one off of Cosgrove's website that was a real butt-kicker when we amped it up to two sets. Not to mention it provided a week's worth of hilarity with the "over/under" which looked like we were body rolling sans music and entertained a half dozen handicapped people for half an hour along with some fancy footwork that was meant to be done on a swiss ball, except that we couldn't stay on the ball for anything although it did still work our abs from all the laughing and falling off we did. For our other HIIT day, we made up our own intervals.
The goal was to exercise no more than 6 hours a week. I averaged 10. Despite not quite meeting my goal, it still took my exercise down by about half which did good things for me. I learned two important things (both of which I have learned previously but, as we have established, sometimes I need to be held after class in the School of Life):
1. I am a compulsive exerciser. Actually I am just compulsive, period. Yes, I do realize this can be a problem. Look for a post later this week as I head back to the blog confessional booth.
2. Nothing bad happens when I don't exercise as much. My weight stayed about the same (which tells you how the current Sensa Experiment is going). In fact, some good things happened as my body fat percentage actually went down 1.5%, I spent more time with my kids and was even able to retain my good humor amidst deleting the thousands of well-intended but nevertheless irritating political e-mails forwarded to me.
Suspension Training
It is with great joy I bring you November's Great Fitness Experiment: Suspension Training. Every month I start out as excited as a new puppy but this month I'm that new puppy that gets so worked up that they wag their whole bodies, drool and pee all at the same time. Today I am that furry, urine-soaked, hyperventilating SPCA (and Bob Barker!) endorsed sprinkler animal.
I'm all worked up about this because suspension training allows you to use the two resources always at your disposal - gravity and your body weight - to make a killer workout. It's as basic as you can get and yet you still have hundreds of options. The key to this is, of course, the suspension. You may at this point be imagining something akin to trapeze artists or aerial dancing and while those routines sound like fun, this is closer to, well, bondage gear. In looks anyhow. No Gym Buddies will be tying each other up. Of course the month is just beginning...
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