Damn, I’m tired. 

Early mornings, coupled with late nights. 

Physically hard days.

Poor or restricted diet with an increased training load. 

Mental stress and prolonged concentration. 

All of these and combinations of them can lead to fatigue. Will lead to fatigue, given sufficient time. This in turn leads to micro mistakes, poor neural timing and eventually injury. 

Fatigue can hide behind coffee, sugary snacks and stubbornness but is easily spotted if you look for it.

Not recovering fully in the time you would normally expect to, regularly less than 7-8 hours sleep, using more stimulants to keep going, an elevated resting heart rate, more coughs and colds, an elevated or stressed breathing pattern, and poor focus and mental control are all signs to check. 

If in doubt, back off. Good decisions are rarely made tired and a day of down time will almost never lose the race. 

One way or the other

Momentum – the force that allows something to continue or to grow as time passes. 

Inertia – the tendency to remain the same. 

Starting something is tough. There is always a reason not to do it, a task that’s more important, an article that needs to be read. 

In physics, we have the concepts of inertia and momentum, as defined above (roughly). These apply everywhere in life, from starting the car to changing a habit. 

Starting takes energy and consistency, you need to give the job attention and drive. 

But once it’s rolling, it takes far less to keep going. 

So, put some energy into your big goals and watch them become easier to achieve. 

And, if you need professional advice or support, ask. 

Big Rocks

We all know that exercise is important, that is is the best medicine.

But there’s never enough time.

It takes too long to drive to the gym, change, follow the program card, shower, drive home.

So many of us aim to do it like that, its what the experts and celebrity magazines tell us we need to do.

The experts. The people who own gyms. The fake celebs with too much time on their sponsored wrist watches.

The people who make money from our seldom used good intention memberships.

These people would prefer it if we ignored the less commercial solutions.

There are, of course, many benefits to a well set up gym. Resistance work has been shown to be hugely effective at preventing a wide range of medical issues as we age. They can be sensible for many people, both from a medical and a personal safety perspective (not everyone feels happy walking or running around the darker areas of town). Training with a group or a qualified coach can be far more motivating than on your own.

And sometimes the best gym is your front room, a kettlebell and mat. A brisk walk, a few swings, a few squats, a bit of stretching, 30 minutes. Current advice shows huge benefits are gained from only 30 minutes a day of moderate activity. A 30 minute morning walk, with a few stretches after.

No machines, no noisy sound systems, no strutting peacocks.

Your music, or silence. Privacy, so no body anxiety. No travelling. And a free shower after.

Whatever your exercise style, make it a big rock, something that is really important to you, and figure out how to put it in the bucket first.

Even if that means a 5am alarm.

Its a better start to the day that pretty much anything else.

 

Get the basics right first 

It doesn’t matter what supplements you take, what your morning ritual looks like, who your guru is or whether you prefer goji berries, blueberries or beetroot as your preferred superfood, if you’re not getting stronger, faster or any achieving any measure you’re aiming for, there’s something not working. 

Nothing happens without enough sleep, enough water, enough high quality macronutrients. If you don’t get the basics sorted first, you’re building your castle on sand. 

So before you start spending on the latest expensive magic product, check you’re getting:

7- 8 hours restful sleep

2-3L water / fluids

75-150g protein

Plenty of vegetables and berries

No? 

Figure those out then move forwards. Basic consistent steps climb mountains. 

Be Ready….

If you can run 10k in 40 minutes but not carry your buddy 200 yards, are you ready?

If you can squat twice your bodyweight but can’t even run for a bus, are you ready?

If you can walk for hours with a pack but can’t climb a rope, are you ready?

If you can’t swim 25m in a pool, clothed, are you ready?

You never know what life will throw at you. It may be carrying a sick child home from a day out, helping a friend move house, walking across town because the traffic is messed up, or even being caught up in a situation where your skills and fitness are vital to keep yourself, and those you’re responsible for, safe.

Chris Hadfield, in his book “An Astronauts Guide to life on Earth” has a point about being a zero.  You might not be a direct asset to the situation at hand, but you really don’t want to be a burden. Being fit and ready to respond makes you a better zero.

We all like to think we’re fit, but have no idea what that actually means. Being able to run 10k fast is a skill but if you’re washed out for a week after, that isn’t so great. Being built like a rugby prop is useful, if you play rugby. But those guys and girls can also run very fast (at least the professionals), can you?

For its many detractors and weaknesses (not enough endurance based cardio respiratory training in most boxes), crossfit and its like offers a great way of being a better human. Not only do you get faster, fitter and stronger, you can develop mobility and recovery.

Of course, you don’t need to join an expensive box to improve. A few basic kettlebells, sandbag and jump rope are all you need to start.

And get some first aid training. The basics really are basic but could save your life and those who you love.

So be a better human and a positive asset to everyone around you. Get after it.

Linked below is a basic training plan and ready guide. It assumes you can move without pain but little else. Caveat: See a medical professional before starting any new form of exercise plan to make sure it isn’t going to kill you.

Be Ready V2

Open 16.4, its mental

Scaled Workout

13 minute AMRAP

  • 55 Deadlifts @61kg
  • 55 Wall balls, 9kg to 9ft
  • 55 Cals row
  • 55 hand release pushups

Watching a team mate at the gym struggle through 16.4, it was interesting to note the effect of his mental state on his performance.

I know, from having trained with him, that he is stronger and better than me at all of the moves needed.

But for some reason, he was scared of it. He’d backed out at least once and finally had to face it to get an open score.

Training was not able to parse into competition and this is something you can see frequently. Strong guys and girls crumble under pressure and they perceive themselves as failing.

Dry run it. See the success in your head and take it on from a position of winning before you lift the bar the first time.

And in the end, he did well, getting a full round in before the clock ran out.

Listen to your gut

Too often you’ve heard the phrase “You are what you eat”. But have you considered the effect of what you eat on your performance, mentally and physically?

We all know caffeine can give you a pre workout boost, carbohydrate drinks are sometimes necessary for energy during a long session and a good recovery meal helps you prepare for the next one. We also know that some people suffer from significant allergies and intolerances that have a huge impact on their lives.

But what if what you were consuming was having a negative effect on you? Not catastrophically but in little ways. That the bread roll with your soup at dinner had triggered a little bit of gut irritation which reduced your capacity to perform through mediated inflammation? That a spot of reflux and indigestion from eating too late and too much had stiffened up your thoracic spine, leading to an inability to squat as efficiently?That the beer to celebrate a good result had set off a minor chain reaction leading to a niggling injury due to reduced healing capacity? That the fructose in your sports drink started a series of cravings for other sugary treats later in the day?

All of these are not uncommon cases of tiny adverse reactions to food and drink, but we too often ignore them. Thats not to say that we need to be utterly soulless and controlling about our diets, simply aware that what we put in has a dynamic and often medium term effect on our ability to perform optimally.

Pay a little more attention to the effect of what you consume and reap the rewards long term.

Context!

Everything needs to be seen within the correct context.

stone crop 2

Unless you know English landscape history fairly well, this is just a man standing next to a rock. And even if you did, you couldn’t be certain what you were looking at.

If we zoom out and look at a larger scale, is becomes this:

complete stone

Stonehenge 2016, Copyright T. Saltmarsh

 

But even then, this is not fully seen within the true context of its historical environment, with the additional burial barrows, the ditches and the surrounding landscape, mythological and physical.

The same comes when we are treating or working with clients, whether elite athletes or older people.

If we cannot see the bigger picture, or insist on just treating the problem they presented with, we will not be able to solve the problem effectively. A knee sprain may not heal if we don’t work with the coaching  staff to ensure the athlete gets corrective exercise prescription or time off lower limb loading. An older patient may not regain full range of motion if they are afraid of falling and therefore do not attempt the mobility plan you recommend. A desk bound client will still have the recurrent shoulder problems if they don’t tell you the whole story about the work and family related stress, or at least acknowledge to themselves that it exists.

So don’t just look at the rock, block or restriction, zoom out and take into consideration the environment it exists in.

 

 

 

 

Why you don’t need your osteopath

If you can squat, full range of motion, feet together and flat on the floor, arms above your head, you don’t need your osteopath.

If you can train without unexpected pain or discomfort, you don’t need your osteopath.

If you can be in one position for a long period of time (for example driving to competition) and know how to unstick yourself, you don’t need your osteopath.

If you can jump out of bed after a good nights sleep and not “feel your age”, you don’t need your osteopath.

If you do a regular mobility practice and have a solid knowledge of how to get yourself moving out of most issues, you don’t need  your osteopath.

Otherwise, call us and we’ll teach you: 01420 544408

And keep our number close for those acute, it just happened, injuries as well!

 

Focus on the now

Buddists and other meditators claim that there is no past, no future, only now. Yet we spend most of our time ignoring whats in front of us and instead thinking about what has been or what might be, not being in our heads and focusing on the immediate task. This is not to say that planning (an almost unique skill in humans) is not vital, as otherwise we would be wasting ourselves spinning in circles watching a small screen, but this long term plan has to be combined with appropriate action now.

From a movement perspective, when coaching clients in new patterns, I use 2 key words  as triggers. Attention and Intention. What is the attention on and what is the intention. For example, moving the shoulder joint, the attention is on the joint, the way it feels and glides, while the intention is that the arm should move slowly and under control at all times. Many find this very hard to do as the mind tends to rebel against focusing on just one thing. The same is with running, the attention cannot be on the whole activity, as  we cannot cope with such input, but instead on just feeling the push off, or the chest postion, or another skill.

A five minute challenge, when moving next time, ask yourself: Where is my attention? What is my intention? Not just in a movement pattern but when working as well, it may provide some interesting results.