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#1 |
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I set several personal bests this morning :-) The most important one was swimming 3000 meters (500 more than previosuly), but also nonstop (500 more than previously) and not only that, but all of it was crawl! Previously I had to switch to breast stroke after just 200 meters in order to "breathe", but now I managed to pace myself and breathe on every third stroke, taking a deep gulp of air to really fill my lungs, and even more importantly, breathe out completely and not just partially each time. That is the secret I think - in order to get as much oxygen as you can. After about 2200 meters I was even able to start breathing for every fourth stroke and the last 50 meters I did a sprint, breathing for every fifth stroke, really feeling the urge for air as my blood levels of carbon dioxide rose quickly. On top of this, I managed to jog slowly both ways, not only from home to the pool, but also all the way back afterwards, cutting the time for 5 km from about 45 minutes to about half an hour - and that while eating an apple on the way home! All in all, I pushed my limits way beyond what I thought was possible at this time in my progress towards getting in better shape. I think that's just excellent with regard to being able to mentally overcome my difficulties in unicycling right now, where I need to "lean forward and ride" as I've read several places as the key to move from standstill to movement. It's all in your brain (when your muscles have adapted to the balance thing, anyway). I'll list my training efforts since 1 May here, to document the progress: 7 May: 2000 meters swimming in 50 minutes - indoor 25m pool 12 May: 10 km running in 67 minutes 22 May: 2500 meters swimming in 51 minutes (2300 nonstop) - indoor 25m pool 23 May: 2 hours walking 27 May: 10 km running in 63 minutes 29 May: 15 minutes swimming - Oslo fjord - about 15 degrees 31 May: 50 minutes walking 2 June: 2500 minutes swimming in 67 minutes - outdoor 50m pool + 5 km jog/walk in 45 minutes + Day 1 unicycling - 3 hours 7 June: 4 hours biking 13 June: 2500 meters nonstop swimming in 55 minutes - outdoor 50m pool (drove the car there) 14 June: Day 2 unicycling - 1,5 hours 17 June: Day 3 unicycling - 2 hours 20 June: Day 4 unicycling - 3 hours (hurt my knee) 24 June: 2000 meters swimming in 47 minutes - outdoor 50m pool + 5 km jog/walk in 45 minutes 26 June: 3000 meters nonstop crawl swimming in 57 minutes - outdoor 50m pool + 5 km jog in 30 minutes This in addition to the regular morning exercise of 50 push-ups and 600 abs crunches. My weight has gone down from 97 kgs on 10 May to 88 kgs today, with minima at 83 kgs on 3 June (which was the equivalent of 87 kgs since I had no food inside) and 84 kgs on 21 June (probably also on a rather empty stomach). So I really feel like I am making progress. I can't really remember being this fit for more than 10 years :-) Considering that I've been running 10 km in an hour, I might even consider that my shape is as good or even better than when I did 30 minute runs of about 5-6 km back in 1995-1998 as a student, and if so then I have to go back to when I was 17-18 to beat my current fitness level. And I ain't gonna stop here :-) :-) :-) -- lillestrøm_uni My 'training journal' (http://www.unicyclist.com/forums/sh...d.php?p=1025788). My todo list (augustdreamt™): -Assisted mount-ride-idle- / *Ride */ PD / Turn / Idle / Hops / Curbs / Uneven ground / 'Mount / Rolling mount / Jump mount' (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRW7ePkZ_8E) / Side mount / Kick-up mount ------------------------------------------------------------------------ lillestrøm_uni's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/17152 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/69883 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
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#2 |
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lillestrøm_uni wrote: > taking a deep gulp of air to really fill my lungs, and even more > importantly, breathe out completely and not just partially each time. > That is the secret I think - in order to get as much oxygen as you can. it's things like that which are pushed out of attention due to the immediate need of attention to other things, like getting air in to breathe. It's probably a good example of what my original posts in the 'learning' thread are all about... not the everyday mantra's and obvious things to DO, but a question on what things might be being missed or being done extra that isn't realised. In your case and swimming you probably didn't realise at first you weren't fully exhaling, which means you can't really get a full and fresh inhale. > This in addition to the regular morning exercise of 50 push-ups and 600 > abs crunches. My weight has gone down from 97 kgs on 10 May to 88 kgs > today, with minima at 83 kgs on 3 June (which was the equivalent of 87 > kgs since I had no food inside) and 84 kgs on 21 June (probably also on > a rather empty stomach). Be aware that ab crunches are a bit cheap so don't get too into how many you can do. You would do better to put your attention elsewhere (maybe hand-weights for leg and arm muscle development and for further calorie expenditure). Think of it this way... a person can pretty much stand or sit for as long as needed due to the 'core muscles' which is generally just a shortcut for saying stomach and lower back muscles. Now if you didn't already have 'a strong core' to begin with then you wouldn't be able to function as every other person who sits and stands and leans and sways etc, as a 'weak core' would mean you would struggle keeping your upper body up in the first place. Now clearly you aren't falling over yourself so your 'core' is clearly ok. I could probably do lame crunches all day if I didn't get bored or hungry or need to pee etc. It's not about quantity it's about quality. Anyone can do a thousand rubbish crunches that are useless. What counts with ALL muscle development is actually taxing the muscles with a handful or two of intense use e.g. for arms doing roughly 10-12 heavy weight lifts as opposed to lifting a pencil 100,000 times, and for abs doing probably at a guess around 30 to 50 intense crunches (perhaps like slow movement V crunches where you lift your feet off the ground at the same time and basically touch your toes vertically if you are flexible enough, Pilates like). As with all new exercise that is different from what used to be the normal daily routine (watching tv eating a bag of Doritos and smoking 20 cigarettes during the ad breaks) there will be muscles that are engaged more than usual which you will feel sore from at first as they get used to being used, but like I said above with the stomach it's not particularly beneficial to do many crunches / sit-ups as you aren't likely to put on any significant or even noticeable muscle-mass in those muscles without steroid abuse and some hardcore crunches using weights/resistance to intensify the muscle requirement. You'd fair better to put that type of training (minus the steroids of course) into your legs and arms i think. It's always better to strive for some more muscle than to just do lots of aerobic-like exercises as a person with more muscle doing nothing burns more calories than a person with less muscle doing nothing, so in the day to day scheme of things when not actually working-out a person with more muscle is accruing more calorie expenditure 'on the cheap' so to speak. Moderation is the key though because who wants to be a 100 kilo mound of muscle who gets puffed walking up a flight of stairs and has lots of strength but no stamina. > So I really feel like I am making progress. I can't really remember > being this fit for more than 10 years :-) Considering that I've been > running 10 km in an hour, I might even consider that my shape is as > good or even better than when I did 30 minute runs of about 5-6 km back > in 1995-1998 as a student, and if so then I have to go back to when I > was 17-18 to beat my current fitness level. > > And I ain't gonna stop here :-) :-) :-) Maybe even write-down what you are currently doing and store that away somewhere for future reference in case you lose the plot a little and change things too much and lose your way... that way you can always read what your plan was for now when things felt great and you were making progress. It's just too easy to change small things bit by bit and then completely get lost and forget where you were going and how you were getting there. -- nubcake ------------------------------------------------------------------------ nubcake's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/15954 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/69883 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
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