2011

The Inertia of Exercise

The Inertia of Exercise
[caption id="attachment_1492" align="alignright" width="350" caption="Gotta say, 255lbs was feeling really heavy tonight!"][/caption]

Inertia.  An object at rest likes to stay at rest; and in layman's terms, the hardest day of training is always the first day back after any sort of hiatus.  I just spent the better part of the weekend recovering from the stomach flu.  All weekend long I've been feeling low on myself, lethargic and dehydrated to boot.  It's now Monday and I'm feeling somewhat better.  However, inside my head, I'm telling myself every excuse I can to not train today -- the voice is telling me "I'm still not 100%, you're just going to make yourself sick again... just wait until you are better!" --- Bad mind!  Bad mind!  Be quiet! 

In this case, the best thing to do is to just get the body moving again.  A little bit of force applied to my 210 lbs frame and voila!  The body in motion, stays in motion.  You see inertia can be defined on either end of the spectrum.  If you want to just stay in place and do nothing, well just keep doing that, but if you want to get moving, make some changes and keep the changes going... well you just got start one foot in front of the next.  Then momentum and gravity takes care of the rest.  ;-)

Warm-up:  3 Rounds

  • 15 x 20" box step ups;

  • 20 x double unders;

  • 10 x 25lbs ball slams.


Strength/technique:  Front Squat (2, 2, 2, 2, 2)

  • 255 lbs x 2 / 16 walking lunges

  • 255 lbs x 2 / 16 walking lunges

  • 255 lbs x 2 / 16 walking lunges

  • 255 lbs x 2 / 16 walking lunges

  • 255 lbs x 2 / 16 walking lunges


Workout of the day:  4 Rounds

  • 60 second plank hold;

  • 12 x Knees-to-elbows;

  • 15 x Pushups.


Thanks for the great workout today Coach DC!
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