Archive for the ‘Training’ Category

RKC!

Monday, September 20th, 2010
Me with Phil, RKC Team Leader and my trainer of 2 years

Me with Phil, RKC Team Leader and my trainer of 2 years

Four years ago I met Wilicious (back then I just called him Will) – a local trainer who was doing in this thing called kettlebells. I’d never hear of them, but Will seemed to know his stuff and the training seemed hard core – right up my alley, so I went to a class and I loved it. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to take Will’s classes due to schedule conflicts but but my interest in kettlebells had been sparked.  A year later I was still interested in training with kettlebells, so I did what most people would do – I bought a bell and a DVD and started training on my own. I became proficient in some of the movements (or so I thought) but I still had trouble with the clean and snatch, evidenced by the “kettle bruises” all over my forearms.  Even though I’m a PT, I know when to seek out help from an expert, plus my forearms were really starting to hurt, so I found my way to my current trainer, Phil Scarito.

I’ve trained kettlebells with Phil for the last two years. I love the workouts because they’re efficient – you can get conditioning work and strength work from one little (albeit heavy) tool. Training with kettlebells has improved my endurance and strength, and I can definitely credit the thousands of swings I’ve done with my 260 pound deadlift.

Last summer, 2009, the RKC, the gold standard in kettlebell certification and training, announced that they were coming to the Philly to do a certification. I asked Phil if I should go, but he told me I wasn’t ready. Fair enough. I went on the last day of the cert to volunteer and got a chance to see the grad workout. The grad workout is the last physical test of  the 3 day certification workshop. During this physical test the candidates are put through a grueling workout that demonstrates what they have learned over the weekend and their ability to perform under physical exhaustion. This is after 3 days that begin with the Snatch Test (the candidate must perform 100 snatches in 5 minutes), and require the candidate to do several demanding workouts,  physical training and absorb a ton of information.  After witnessing the intensity of the grad workout last year I knew I had to be there in 2010. I have issues.

I began to focus on training for the RKC back in February. I committed to PT sessions twice a week, trained on my own and added in a third day of PT plus classes over the summer. It’s amazing how fast 7 months can fly by. A week before the certification weekend I kept saying “I remember when this was all 7 months away and now it’s HERE!”

My heart was in my throat as I waited to do my Snatch Test on Friday. I completed the test in 4:45, not as good as my PR of 4:20 but good enough to pass. The next three days were physically and mentally exhausting (did I mention that we had to carry our kettlebells, 26-53 pounds depending on your size, with us EVERYWHERE on Friday?!) but I survived.

I’m proud to say that I’m now an RKC; a member of a community of select trainers and athletes. I’m grateful to Team Heinz, all the other assistants and team leaders and Pavel Tsatouline (RKC Chief Instructor) for their patience, caring, top notch instruction and guidance this weekend and to “Willicious” for the extra training he did with me this summer. But the major props go to Phil for sharing his knowledge, challenging me, helping me reach me goals and being such a great guy.

Power to You!




Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness or DOMS is often heralded as a sign of a “good” workout by many avid exercisers.

“I know I’m gonna feel this tomorrow” or “My (fill in your muscle group of choice) hurt for 3 days after that last workout!”

DOMS is an addictive state. A badge of honor sought by some exercisers as a sign of virtue, inner and outer strength and overall bad assi-ness. For others it’s a dreaded state – an indication that the workout was “too hard“.

But is DOMS really the sign of a “good” workout?

In a word “no”; muscle soreness is not indicative of an effective workout.

So, why do you get sore after some workouts and not others (some ab workouts leave me unable to laugh without having abdominal pain for days, while others barely leave a mark)? Why were you sore for a day (or a week) after your first training session or boot camp class? Is a lack of soreness a sign of an ineffective workout?

Muscle soreness occurs when you make the muscles do something they’re not used to doing. The unfamiliar can be a change in exercise order, a new 5K route or a routine that’s higher in reps, sets or duration than your used to. Change up some variables and you will most likely be sore for a day or two or three.

Your results are a more reliable indicator of the effectiveness of your program. Are you leaner, smaller, stronger or faster? These should be the metrics by which you judge your program.

But what about the cause of DOMS? Maybe it’s caused by lactic acid build-up?

I’ll sometimes hear from a client: “Wow you really killed my (fill in muscle group of choice). We must of gotten a good lactic acid build-up going.”

Lactic acid (or L-lactate) has had it’s turn as friend and foe. Jane Fonda’s mantra “Feel the burn!” was a reminder for her leg warmer clad followers (who wears leg warmers to workout?) to push themselves to their limits.

Then lactic acid became foe because of the belief that it damaged muscle tissue and cause excess muscle soreness.

These days we know that lactic acid is more friend than foe. Lactic acid has a role in energy production that allows us to keep exercising. Lactic acidosis (“the burn”) occurs when lactic acid builds up in the blood stream faster than it can be removed. Scientist also belief “the burn” is a result of a change in pH as the body switches from aerobic (think jogging) to anaerobic (think sprinting) metabolism. Since lactic acid is cleared from the body within 30-90 minutes after intense exercise ends it has no role in DOMS which occurs 24-72 hours post exercise.

The real cause of DOMS? In addition to the muscle stress factor (making the muscles do more than they’re used to) DOMS is thought to be the result of microscopic tears in the muscles and connective tissue which occur during eccentric contractions (when the force of resistance is greater the the force created by the muscle it “succumbs” and lengthens).  Running downhill, lowering your body on the down phase of a pull and landing a jump are all examples of eccentric contractions. This small tears are not dangerous, in fact it is during the process of repair and recovery that we build stronger and/or bigger muscles.

Muscle tenderness, soreness, stiffness or some lose in range of motion (flexibility) are all symptoms of DOMS and simply require that you back off your workout intensity for a day or two. Sharp or throbbing pain, extreme lose in range or motion or pain that lasts more than a week warrant a trip to the doctor.