Sunday, January 30, 2011

Georges Hébert - Father of MovNat and Parkour

A wiki article on the father of Mouvment Naturel and Parkour

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georges_H%C3%A9bert

Here is Georges Hébert s work in English.

Practical Guide to Physical Education


I am stuck by the fact that these to new ways of exercise we have found - MovNat and Parkour - have the same origins. Somehow it is not surprising, I just didnt think I would be able to pinpoint the root with such precision. Just another example of the interconnectedness of all life!

Enjoy!

~mandingueiro

David Belle - Rush Hour Le Parkour(BBC)

A cool workout plan

Here's a good workout if you are trying to get seriously fit and strong

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1608/is_5_24/ai_n25471700/

Thursday, January 27, 2011

6 Influential Factors of the 7 Components to Health

Here are a few diagrams I've been looking at as a part of my Kinesiology class at MSU titled "The Healthy Lifestyle". I will often be posting materials from this course to share with readers. It's also a great way for me to learn.
The Factors of Growth in Wellness

The core of a healthy lifestyle is self-responsibility. Given such wonderful opportunities in this world, we must treat life with great respect. Health and wellness go far beyond the state of one's body though this is often a good indicator of the state of a person's health beyond the physical aspects.  Above, the arrows so the factors that influence our growth in health. The circle represents the 7 components of wellbeing. Please assess the state of your health. Develop S.M.A.R.T. goals (specific, measurable, achievable, rewardable, and time-based). If one area is lacking, all are lacking. In a more positive way - if we improve one aspect, we improve all aspects!


Dimensions of Health and Wellness Continuum  
Above is a different way of looking at the components of health. Here they are shown intertwined. It's like a rope, if one thread is corrupt the integrity and strength of the whole rope begins to fail. However, being that they are intertwined - they are much stronger than 7 separate strands.

One last thing for now I'd like to touch on is treatment and prevention. All too often we act without thinking about the long-run. We don't fully consider the consequences of what we do. So when things finally catch up to us we've got to treat some ailment. Being well has a lot to do with preventing these ailments. We don't need all the drugs doctors would have us take. We need apples. Lots of apples. Eat lots of (non-GMO) fruits and veggies to stay in health and out of the doc's office. 

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

A Story Not about GMOs, but Leading to a Link about GMOs

Read this brief story/account of the experience I had today which led to my renewed interest in genetically-modified foods (well, read if you're interested and/or bored and/or desirous for an image of simple, common life). Read it if you want to see the value I found in being a detached observer rather than a victim of a situation; the value I found in the calmness and good-nature of those around me (the effects of calm environments on us, the value of establishing them when we can, therefore).

Or, if you're not interested in that, skip to the link at the end and read about genetically-modified foods! If you think you don't care, you might come to care. If you do know and care already, a reminder may be nice. If you don't care and don't want to care and won't care, read it for basic education. Why not?

The account:

I went into Zerbo's Health Foods store today. I was buying Kombucha tea (try it!). The woman in front of me at the cash register first had to go back into the aisles to exchange one of her many items; then searched her wallet for her credit card; then, even though the cashier offered a store pen sitting on the counter, the woman said, "I have a pen, just one moment!" and started digging again into her purse; then she pulled out a comically-large green pen; then she signed her name for an abnormally long time; then she started "carefully reorganizing" the mayhem in her purse before acknowledging me by saying, "oh, I just need to put this stuff back in my purse--you go ahead!" The cashier then smiled and rang me up for my one item, the tea, took my money, and handed me change in a matter of one minute.

All while the woman was at the register checking out, I simply stood at a distance behind her and observed. I smiled a bit at certain points. The woman herself seemed very good-natured. Her demeanor was light and she held a slight upturn of the lips. She was slender, with plain clothing, a small backpack, and a winter hat. I liked her vibe when I first walked up behind her. I became less enthused when she fumbled and caused my delay, and for a moment I even moved to agitation. But as I stayed true to my plain observation of the scene, the sense of her innocence swelled back up and resonated in me, as it seemed to do in the cashier as well. So I regained my composure and felt the woman and cashier's calmness transfer into me.

My mom had done me a favor by driving me to the store for this tea. She wanted it to be quick, because now she would have to rush for her upcoming meeting. So this circumstance, too, raised the chances of my irritability at the woman's slowness; and thus also increased my delight when I felt calm instead.

After I had purchased the drink, I picked up some free magazines about health. Then I quickly walked out of the store so that my mom wouldn't have to wait any longer. But just outside the exit and with weak eye contact, a man on a cell phone looked at me and my magazines and asked if I had "that magazine."
"Are you talking to me?" I inquired, a bit startled, and confused because I saw the phone in his hand as well. I had almost just walked away, assuming he wasn't talking to me, or else using the potential misunderstanding as an excuse to ignore him and keep going swiftly to the car.
He proceeded after a brief pause (where again, I could have scurried off, but I didn't want to be rude, so I lingered a moment longer):
"Oh, yes, you have it. Page 21. You know about GMOs? Read it!"
I quickly replied, "Yeah, I do. I'm interested! Thank you, but I have to go. I'll read it."

It was a strange interaction that occurred with this man, and it happened at all because the woman in front of me was slow and disorganized, yet her attitude kept me receptive to people at this time.
So I got in the car and told my mom about the simple events. We drove home. I read the article on GMOs in the magazine. Page 21, just as he said.

The website link I'll leave a bit below came from the end of the magazine article.

Genetically-modified foods are frightening (of course tons of other food treatment and tampering is also frightening, but right now I'm only looking at GMOs), and they're even more alarming because they're hidden or disguised. So please do check them out.

Please check them out again even if you think you know. That's what I did, and it was an excellent reminder of how little control we can have over our food--what we literally and spiritually become through what we may carelessly eat.

I know there are biases, I know there is more research to be done. I'm not asking that you immediately (or ever) accept the information from this link (in fact, I ask that you question it and look further yourself, if you're interested, which I hope you are).

The fundamental hope is that you'll help humanity begin to regain control over the treatment our food, and help to send out waves of appreciation for the nourishing, honest goodness of the natural world, left alone, pure, simple, and observed.

Give your body and soul some love. Give your self some love.

The link: 

http://nongmoshoppingguide.com/brands/fruits-and-vegetables.html

Thanks for reading, as always. 

Personal Experience

Clothing...

Since I've lost 65-70 pounds (My weight fluctuates between 260-265), my clothing has become a real focus for me. In the past, when I was extremely unhealthy and wanted to hide my body, I wore nothing but big and baggy clothing. Now that I'm healthy and really enjoying my healthy body, I've started to buy clothing that expresses that (Ironically, I shop at Express for clothing, haha).

This article I found actually explains my viewpoint on clothing and how it affects us as humans almost dead on.

http://www.sixwise.com/newsletters/07/03/14/clothes-psychology-what-your-clothing-tells-others-about-who-you-are-and-who-you-want-to-be.htm

The way we dress can make us feel great, terrible, embarrassed, ashamed, happy, slutty, sexy, sporty, etc. It's really amazing how much better I feel and how much more willing I am, personally, when wearing my dress shirts and ties. I exude such a different attitude. This is not to say that I'm a different person, but I definitely dislike my baggy clothing now-a-days. The better my clothing fits and the classier it makes me look, the more satisfied I feel about showing off the hard work I've put in to my body over the past 2 years.

Give it a try the next time you have spare time. Throw on a pair of clothing that you think you look poorly in. Reflect on how you feel in them, and then throw on your shnazzy outfit and notice how much different you feel.

Mood Boosters

Here is a link to an article that gives 18 ways or tips to boost your mood instantly.

http://www.menshealth.com/mhlists/mood_boosters/get_your_car_washed.php

Sunday, January 23, 2011

10 Breaths

I just want to share a current and new practice of mine. I got the idea from what one of my friends said. I've found a few stretches that make me feel good, get the blood flowing, and give me energy. Personally, I focus on stretching my hips, shoulders, hamstrings, and spine. I hold the stretches for 10 breathes each and it feels great.

This particularly pertains to stretching of the body but certainly can be applied to other aspects of life such as loss of focus, in response to a stressor, or when feeling light-headed. It's quite remarkable how simple, controlled breathing can bring one back in alignment. 

Give it a try in the morning, at night, or whenever feels right!

Nutrition & Tips For Better Health

What's the best way to lose weight?

The best way that I've found is to start changing your life in small ways. If you try to change your diet too fast, you're greatly increasing your chances to fail. We're not on The Biggest Loser Ranch, where you have dietitians and health experts at your every whim. You have to be realistic.

Lets say you are a heavy soda drinker. You try to change your diet by not consuming soda at all. What you're going to experience is HUGE withdraws from the newly formed lack of caffein and sugar. You have to ween yourself off of terrible foods, just like a smoker or alcoholic would ween themselves off of their addiction. Food is just as severe of a problem, if not MORE serious than booze and smoking.

Here's what I would do to change my lifestyle, and how I did it for my own actual benefit.

1. Get educated, before you even start removing or adding anything to/from your life. There's no sense in going in blind. Knowledge is power...no joke.

2. Find out what in your life and diet is leading to your own destruction. Is it soda? Is it lack of exercise? What's causing you to be the way you are?

3. Now that you've identified your problem, and that you've at least done SOME sort of research on it all, you need to take action! Go get a gym membership and a personal trainer to show you how to exercise. There's more people in a gym doing things wrong and blind than there are people doing it right. Ever notice why you rarely see women doing anything but cardio & abs? Ever notice how men do nothing but lift heavy and take long rests?

4. Never let your body conquer your mind. The power of becoming healthy is telling your body, "We're going to change. This...all of this...it's gonna change. I'm not happy with how my body looks and feels. It's time to get what I've desired for so long.". Find a piece of paper and write down EVERY reason that you can think of as to why you want to change. When you're done, post in on your bathroom mirror or your fridge. You need to be reminded of what you're in this for, especially when you hit a bad week.

5. Once you start feeling better, through your changes and exercise, you NEED to pat yourself on the back. You have to appreciate every little change. Even going from feeling like crap, to feeling like you can do more in the gym, or even going through your daily chores without feeling groggy and tired. These are all things you have to celebrate, and I do NOT mean by purchasing poor foods and going back to your old habits.

6. You have to stay with things. Just because one type of exercise doesn't work for you, doesn't mean they all won't. I've gone through countless routines, countless diets, and countless exercise styles to figure out what works for me. You may have to do the same. Remember that we, as humans, weren't built to have a 9-5 job and a couch to sit on after work. We were built to constantly improve the survival rate of ourselves and our loved ones. We used to hunt for hours, stalking and chasing prey. We didn't go to our refrigerators.

7. Stick with your 90-10 rule. It's saved me from giving up SOOOOOOO many times. 90% of the time, you're right on with your diet and exercise. 10% of the time, you're chillin and enjoying a beer or a small treat.

--- I hope that my tips help folks out. There's no excuse for not being healthy in our daily lives. There's enough people eating bad foods and not exercising that you can choose to be the smart one. You can eat healthy and exercise to your heart's every desire.

Also, remember that the media has destroyed the image of what a healthy person should be. Do not think for one second that we are all meant to be straight up ripped and thin. We're not. You will look how you're intended to look. Always remember that FEELING great and PERFORMING great are what makes you healthy. Not what size your pants are!

Saturday, January 22, 2011

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Are the videos that pop up in the video bar stuff you guys have posted somewhere?

Friday, January 21, 2011

What We Need for Health

Unconditional Compassion.

We need to love and accept each other and ourselves for what we are now. Obese, angry, gluttonous, self-scorning, self-hating, arrogant, bigots, ignorant, desirous, restless... Peaceful, kind, soft, humble, yielding... Confused, indifferent, apathetic, incredulous, skeptical, pained... Sorry, regretful, ashamed, humiliated... Neutral, everything, nothing...

Whatever we are, however we got here, it doesn't matter. What matters is that we love each other NOW, as we are, no requirements, no changes made. The life and beauty is there, in the mix of all of our histories and experiences and presence as we are.

Our mistakes are not mistakes. We live and we learn, so long as we are aware. Cultivate that awareness, and realize that we all have difficulties. Forgive yourself, forgive others, forgive ourselves as a whole.

Start there. No judgments.

Unconditional Compassion.

Food

So I was pondering and reflecting upon some of the recent visits to Costco, Sam's Club, and Kroger. I've come to realize that at the current rate of how people shop for shitty foods, we're going to see a massssssive increase in fatties around here. I can't even begin to explain how walking through food stores is for me now that I've lost the decrepit fat I once had. Almost every time I go through the stores, I see a parent buying absolutely horrible foods for what looks like children. It makes me absolutely siiiiiick to the stomach every time I see a kid holding on to a cart with an obese mother pushing a cart full of processed and nutrient null foods. It's like looking at a younger version of myself...thinking that nothing was wrong with eating all these delectable treats. Wanting...no...NEEDING these high sugar, high chemical, high SHIT foods to get through the day. Parents of this world need to wake the fuck up and realize what they're doing to not only themselves, but to their own children.

I feel tempted at times to walk up to that obese mother and ask her how she feels about being disgustingly obese. When she gives me an answer, I'd follow up with asking, "Now what would you think of your son/daughter going through life and ending up as fat as you? Do you even care? Does any part of your being even desire to give your child a real meal and lifestyle that'll yield a truly healthy body? Are you afraid of listening to him bitch about the lack of sweets and tasty treats? Really, mom? REALLY? What would you rather have...a kid who hates you for making him eat healthy? Or would you rather have a kid who has countless healthy issues in his future, an impending death before 50, and a SEVERE hatred for everything that he's become? Choose, mom...Choose."

Illness and Language

This strikes me as profound.

Think about the power packed in language--in a word, a phrase, a label.

It is thought--it is our minds, our egos, we allow it to create us on a daily basis. I allow it to shape the direction of my ideas now, as I write.

Language is diagnosis. Language is a physical form that nonphysical things are shoved into. Language is another type of body. In the same way our own physical human bodies hold our Life Force and consciousness, language holds in (limits, shapes, dictates, yet allows to exist in the material world at all... i.e., gives hope, chances at anything as we know it) the ideas that brew inside our souls.

I'm trying to say!!!!!!! That!!!!!!! Language is something to be watched. We must observe it, we must listen to it without being affected as it passes through our brains and bodies. We must detach ourselves from it while continuing to use it for positivity.

So with ILLNESS: If you feel yourself catching a cold; if you are injured playing a sport; if you have been labeled with a mental illness, an eating disorder, ADHD, depression; if you are labeled "overweight" or "chronically obese" or "underweight" because your body mass index is different from what the "chart" says it should be; if you have cancer, AIDS... If your body "malfunctions" in some way........ BE AWARE OF THE DIAGNOSIS. Watch the label, and watch how it then so easily can infect your perceptions. It weakens you the minute you believe it. You shove yourself into the sickness, to fit the label, to grasp it as part of your identity now.

Don't fall prey! Detach from the label. Your illness or body malfunction is nothing more than a new situation you find yourself in. Yes, there may be discomfort. Yes, you may see negative emotions creeping in. But you can still rise above it all. Things are not good or bad. Your illness is not a terrible situation. It is just one that requires certain actions and not others.

Please, please: You are NOT your illness. You are light that can shine on it, expose it for what it is--something separate from you in your essence--and you can take action.

This is not a magic cure, but it gives hope, gives peace, gives strength. Your physical body can fall ill, in that it will decay, it will end. But for You, the body is not the end. The body is time, is language, is thought and emotion, is sensory experience.
You are the animator. You are its Animator, its Creator. You guide your body--not the other way around where fear and blind belief carrel you into negativity, defeat by the physical. If you accept the diagnosis--the language, the labels--this means that you have now forced your Self again into another limiting physical body, and you trap yourself further. Come out of hiding....... See that you are the Commander. You are the Loving Commander, you are Your BEING. You are you. Not illness.

Be peaceful. There is no room for despair or panic. Someone diagnosed with cancer may feel to do this is beyond their control. Someone labeled depressed may feel that rejecting the label means all of their anguish and distance from life was illegitimate. Not true. The panic is real, the sorrow is real, the pain is real. Feel it fully, acknowledge it, but swiftly disengage before you are swirled into a cloud of blindness and turmoil.

Now, lastly for here, to note: All things physical are not to be scorned. They should not be given new labels now of "contemptible" or "dirty" or "disease-prone" or "alien." They are still beautiful, they are still part of you. To distance yourself from them does not mean to turn on them and make them enemies. It means, rather, to accept and love them for what they are. There is no fighting them, no resistance. Yes, they fall ill, yes they end. But they can be hopeful while we have them. They are vehicles, expressors of the inexpressible. Consciousnesses connect by way of them. Language and bodies are only scary if You aren't aware of how they function in your Being. If you let them push and pull you because you haven't distanced yourself from them, then they suck you dry and you get lost in them.

When you gain awareness, acceptance, and control over labels and your body, then you can use them for positive action and existence. You will have become enlightened. You will finally Be, with a captial B...not merely exist as blood and muscles and impulses. You bear yourself. You create yourself through awareness.

Hello...

I may need to return to clarify things. Posting now.

I love you all.

People...

There are a lot of people out there who seem to think that the body they've always wanted is completely unattainable. The truth behind that statement is how they're thinking. Our minds will tend to manifest exactly what we're thinking. If you think that the belly fat you have left on you is just stubborn and won't come off, then it won't. You have to constantly remind people to focus on where they wanna be. Positivity and motivation are what makes personal trainers valuable, but you've also gotta be able to keep people's minds at ease while they go through the process of losing weight!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

4 Easy Tips to be Healthier

Here they are:

1) Drink 2 glasses of water waking up - it jump starts both the metabolism and the day.
2) Have carbohydrates and protein together- carbohydrates is the fuel for current existing muscles in need of recovery, while protein is the building blocks for new muscle growth. Eating one or the other alone diminishes gains.
3) Pack your own lunch- No matter how healthy you want to be at fast food restaurants, nothing can beat the nutritional value of meat and produce from stores that can be easily packed for lunch.
4) Get 7-8 hours of sleep- getting any less and your won't fully recover. Sleep any more, your body becomes sluggish and less efficient.

Courtesy of Men's Health Magazine
http://www.menshealth.com/fitness/build-6-pack-abs

The bodyweight dynasty.

Since this blog is up and running, I figure I should lay down some of the really great things I've learned about fitness and anyone with a body type similar to my own. This may not be incredibly organized, but it'll do, donkey...it'll do.

There's a misconception, I believe, in the fitness industry that weight is the enemy. The simple fact of the matter is that only a certain demographic of people and body types can actually be told "This weight is what you should be, so lose XX pounds to achieve your ideal bodyweight". Being a 260-265 pound guy, I take the whole debate over healthy bodyweight very seriously! You would expect to see a 260 pound person not be able to run for the life of them. Well, I can tell you from my own training, that running is not only something we (we being dense and largely built folk) can do, but something we can thrive upon.

Running for a larger and more dense person, is an insane war at first. Your shins, ankles, quads, hams, and gluts all fight for you to stop - at first. After going through the hell of conditioning my body to accept the punishment of hardcore running, I'm finding that it's become increasingly easy to do. I may not be able to run distances like my 120-160 pound friends, but I can run faster, and harder than most of them.

The strength that we innately have built in to us is impressive when harnessed. I feel as if maintaining our natural strength, and adding agility and precision is more adequate for the way we're built. I enjoy my body a lot more now that I'm agile and capable of running my skinny friends down, rather than being the bulky and powerful person I used to be. I may not be able to do pull-ups or dips very well, but the power I have in my legs is incredible. Hell, back in high school when I was breaking leg press records, I still didn't even really have to try in order to do that. I knew almost nothing about how to build power, en yet I still destroyed those records.

The great thing about being so dense, is that our calorie expenditure is enormous during rigorous exertion. I can't tell you how many times I'll burn three times more calories than my 140 pound counterpart during sprints. He'd be running the entire time, which is sad...haha.

The best way for us larger bodied folk to put on solid muscle is through doing giant sets, with almost no rest. Giant sets being 4 or more exercises, one after another. 6 sets being the goal. 15 reps or more being the goal for each exercise in each set. I've heard through other professionals and friends that skinny, and more lanky folk put on muscle through lifting heavy, instead of the method that I've used on myself. It's extremely fascinating to me how we're all the same organism, en yet every machine is built to succeed in such a different fashion.

I've also found out through my own training that the human body really is more complex and ridiculous than any of us average americans could ever understand. There's soooo many things that I've done with my body that I really shouldn't have been able to do at the time. Just the other day, I put my body through a rigorous workout filled with jumping, push-ups, and variations of bodyweight cardio. The pace was absurd for my body's size and weight. Even though my body kept telling me to stop, through the lactic acid being built up, I told it to keep going. I was losing a small bit of control and precision with each exercise and set, but my body still kept on going. What was even more insane was that in my last set of jump roping, I absolutely SPED through the 100 jumps. I really had no idea how or why my body said "Go faster. Go harder", but I obliged and pushed on. That was just my way of expanding upon the thought of how amazing the human body really is. It's just capable of amazing things.

Something I've noticed throughout the general public and through tv programs is that people in this modern world, or the zoo syndrome as that french dude describes it, literally have no idea what their bodies are capable of. It's insane to think that we as humans have just trotted along with creating easier ways of doing things, when we really should be reverting back to the olden ways of how things used to be. Everything being carried by us, or even with help by family livestock and horses. It's insane to think that we as humans are better off than we were 100-200 years ago. Yes, our lives are extended and we live in a medicated society, where no condition is left solution-less...but at what cost? Are those years of being an elderly person...feeble, incapable of maintaining ones own life...incapable of even thinking for one's self...is it truly worth everything that we're giving up? I'd rather live a healthy and fruitful life where I live off the land at my disposal, dying at the age of 50-80...being entirely coherent and self-sustaining...rather than live trapped within this zoo-like environment where we cherish food and material goods over attributes, friends, family, and relationships in general.

If you've read to this point, then thanks for putting up with the randomness of my thinking process. Hopefully a discussion or burst of thought may have been created, haha.

Mouvement Naturel

So Garrett shed the light on this subject for me. It's some French guy that has spent much time training in the forests of Brazil with a supreme natural approach. Climbing trees, jumping across rocks, pushing logs down rivers, etc. There's potential to take a workshop or go on a trip with him. I personally am very interested but still have a lot to learn about this guy and what he's doing. Overall, I love his natural approach to diet and fitness.

Link to Mouvement Naturel website