Posts Tagged ‘strength’

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.




Push-ups for Charity Final Tally

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Doing our part for the Wounded Warrior Project

Our March 20th Push-ups for Charity event was a huge success. We exceeded our goal by 20% and raised $6,000 for the Wounded Warrior Project. It was a great event for a worthy organization, and we’re looking forward to doing bigger and better things next year. Thanks to all our participants, sponsors and supporters. Check out our photos on Flickr.




Sound off – The calm before the storm

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Why do my local nursery and Super Fresh have Christmas Tress? Really? It’s not even Thanksgiving yet. Could we wait one more week for goodness sake?!

We’re in the calm before the storm now. Next week begins the 4 week frenzy the will culminate with Christmas and New Years.  And for many people that means four weeks of slacking off their workouts – missed classes and workout sessions, all in the name of “getting ready for the holidays”. Seriously, what level of preparation prevents you from putting in 60, 30 0r even 15 minutes a few days a week to improve or maintain your health and fitness?

I get it that we all have more commitments this time of year – parties, shopping, decorating, but your workout simply can’t be a casualty of the season.

If you know me, you know that I’m a big fan of short high intensity circuits. This type of workout isn’t a permanent means to a fitness end but it is an effective solution when you find yourself time crunched. To get the benefits of this type of circuit you must “go hard”; in other words keep the speed and intensity high during the entire circuit.

Devote 20 minutes 3-4 days a for the next 5 weeks. Consider it training for the next big holiday sale – strong and fit, you’ll be able to outpace the other shoppers at the mall.

Holiday workout “sprint”:

Do each of the following exercises for 1 minute. Rest 1 minute after Exercise #5 and then repeat the circuit (including rest) two more times.

  1. Burpees
  2. Walking lunges
  3. Bear crawls
  4. Bicycles
  5. Chair dips



Why do you workout?

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

I’ve had two conversations this month that have caused me to reflect on that question. One was at one of my speaking engagements.

During the speech I went around the room and asked the women why they did or didn’t exercise. One of the woman very frankly stated, “Because I don’t like it.” The other women chuckled and sighed jealously – “Well look at her, she doesn’t need to!”

The second conversation took place this morning. One of my boot campers remarked, “The first time I saw Stacy at class I was like ‘What’s she doing here? She doesn’t need a boot camp!’ “  My response was, “Well how do you think she got that way?! How do you think she stays fit?”

Stacy, unlike the woman at my talk  (a skinny woman with poor posture and no muscle tone who “didn’t need to workout”),  possesses an athletic body - sinewy and strong; the body of a runner who also lift weights.

Too often we think of fitness as a means to an end (often that end is weight loss) instead of the lifelong journey that it really is.  Weight loss or the elusive six pack shouldn’t be the end of your journey. There are always new goals to be set and mastered – whether it’s increasing your strength by 30 pounds, lifting your body weight over a bar or developing better foot speed.

Then there are all of those intrinsic rewards; those benefits that can’t be measured – energy, happiness, independence, inner strength.

I’ll never convince the naysayers that they should exercise. No matter how many times I tout benefits like independence, inner and outer strength and youthful energy not to mention weight control and disease prevention, they just ain’t buyin’.

So, I pose this question – Why do you work out? I’ll give you my answers first:

  • Working out makes me feel strong.
  • Working out brings balance and control to my crazy life.
  • Working out helps me deal with my stress in a productive way (read – it keeps me from yelling at my husband or eating a boxful of Lucky Charms).
  • Lifting heavy things empowers me.
  • Getting through a tough workout means that I can get through almost anything that life throws my way.
  • My body does what I want it to do when I want it to do it (well, most of the time) because I workout.
  • Working out makes me independent (I don’t have to wait for some dude to lift that heavy object for me).
  • Working out makes me feel like a bad ass!

So, why do you workout? Holla back…