The Gym is Dead to Me

Quick Tips

It’s not really, and it never will be, but the point here is that the gym reminds me of a jail cell.

When I first started training, it was very traditional.  Barbells, cable machines, stationary bikes and treadmills were the ticket.  It was how people stayed “fit”, strong and athletic.

Again, these tools still work, but the deeper you go into the rabbit hole, the more you question why building high functioning bodies has to be such a cookie cutter process.

Barbells will never go away.  Why?  Because a barbell’s design is perfect for lifting heavy things off of the ground, loading up the squat pattern and building explosive power through exercises like the clean, snatch and push press.  We need tools like barbells.  Barbells are safe.  A quality barbell isn’t going to break mid-rep, and there are a series of checks that a person can run through to make sure that  replicate their technique every single time.

But what I am beginning to question- and the better term might be “explore”- is why movement should be so cookie cutter.

Because that is how I am seeing it these days.  It’s cookie cutter.  We preach posture, we preach exercise technique, we preach moving within manageable ranges of motion.  But how about this… let’s get out of the gym and move.  Forget about all of the in-depth information, get off of the couch and out of the house.  It’s sunny and 80 degrees outside and it’s a prime opportunity to use your god-given right to move yourself around.

If you’re a newer to training , and you cannot handle your bodyweight… the load that you carry around with you 24/7/365… forget about barbells, cable machines and kettlebells.  You have bigger fish to fry than worrying about the next great exercise.

When I left the gym I started to LOVE training again.  When you’re done with organized athletics, working out just for the sake of working out is a sure-fire way to burn out.  Boredom sets in and you start to wonder what all of the effort is for?  A six-pack?  Honestly, who cares.

Six packs are nothing without function.

You can have a rippled six-pack and blow out your back in a heart beat, tear a rotator cuff, etc.

It’s like, “Congratulations, you can see your stomach muscles through your skin, but you can’t run a mile or pull yourself up to a bar or pull yourself out of Quasimodo posture”.

In fact, these days, I think that dedicating your training to achieving a six-pack is comical.

Once you get in this “I’m training for a six-pack” mindset, you’ll go insane trying to get it or attempting to maintain.  It will elude most people not because their workout program sucks, but because their eating habits suck.  You wouldn’t believe how hard that is for people to swallow (no pun intended).  If you want a six-pack and don’t have it despite insane physical efforts, it’s most likely because your eating is not conducive to having a six pack.  Ok?

It would be like if you started a business only with the goal of getting uber-rich and but ignored your customer service.

It’s short-sighted.

Get yourself out of the gym and start moving more.  What do parents tell their kids when they are inside for way too long?… “Go play outside”.  Adults should take their own advice.

Once you’re outside bodyweight training is an amazing method to leverage when you use the correct formula.  Climb some stairs, hills or jog flat ground.  Get your heart rate up and get the blood circulating rapidly.  Mix in some squats.  If you cannot squat, grab onto a pole, hinge your hips down and back, keep your chest tall without folding at the lower back and feel the movement.  Use the pole to help groove that squat pattern, and what it should feel like.  Gradually let go of the pole and continue to “feel” the movement.

Face the wall squats

“Face the Wall” squats are great for learning technique.

If you cannot perform a certain movement- and I use the squat as a common example because it seems to give people the most trouble- you have got to practice it.  Occasionally, you’re going to find that your internal wiring is all mixed up.  In this case, you need to implement corrective exercises, which I why I promote The Functional Movement Screen so much.

Everyone should be able to squat, among other things.  This isn’t a circus move that is exclusive to fitness buffs, this is exclusive to all humans.  If you cannot squat, you need to figure out why and restore your ability to squat.

Screen Shot 2013-08-04 at 1.32.21 PM

Gym memberships.  We seem to think that just because we buy a gym membership we have just bought ourselves a fit body.  But you haven’t.  What you did is you bought yourself a gym membership, a contract that says you can walk into a brick and mortar structure where a bunch of fitness equipment resides, waiting for the next person to pick it up, push it, pull it or run on it.

But most people who purchase memberships never go.  Buying the membership is the easiest part of the process.  Anyone can hand over a credit card, swipe it and feel great about their decision.  Especially credit cards, because when you don’t physically see the money being handed over, the impact of the purchase is dampened.

The real work begins when you make it a priority to go that gym over and over again.  Daily.  Every other day.  Or at least on some kind of consistent schedule.

But most people burn out or never commit from the beginning.  Out of the gates hard and fizzle, or they purchase the membership and never go in the first place.  But they have the membership, so they will go “someday”.  The membership is comforting because they always have it in their back pocket, never to be used… but it’s “there”.

Ido Portal

In the back of my mind, I have long thought movement should be explored.  We should be able to execute movements that require power and strength, yet exhibit a stable full range of motion and gracefulness regardless of the environment or the obstacle.  And let me tell you something flat-out, one brief glimpse at how life happens in real-time when you are actively engaged in movement (outside of the confines of the gym) will reveal that you need to be able to adapt to the unknown.

However, I also believe that exploring movement should be done unloaded.  External loading in really awkward positions can cause injury, and that erases any ground that you’ve made.  Move with your body, and your body only.

Unknown stress, unknown range of motion, etc.

You’ll never be running on a trail and find a barbell neatly loaded with a chalk container sitting next to it.  You’ll find a rock with shitty hand holes for gripping that is weighted heavier on one side than it is on the other, and wet.  Or maybe that rock isn’t on the running trail, but it’s a part of the magnificent landscaping in your yard.  Maybe you’re gripping 40lb bags of mulch carrying for 30 yards up an incline, shoveling gravel or raking a 2 acre yard.

You cannot train for this stuff.  You can prepare, and barbell training and other more traditional forms of gym work can aid in your completing of these tasks, but we have to develop succeed in raw movement.  It’s life.  Movement is part of life.  So I have embarked on my dabbling of increasing my ability to move, mixing in Ido Portal-like methodology (logo seen above, great logo).

I believe that there is something to be learned here.  Getting out of the cookie cutter mindset and into the movement mindset.  Exploring the bear crawl, moving into a lateral lunge flowing into a crab crawl, gorilla hops and then into single leg pistol followed by a pull up to a bar where you pike out and lower yourself with a graceful strength.

Got that?  🙂

I value the building of systematic strength.  I value programs that are geared toward making damn sure that strength progress and conditioning progress can be measured and evaluated.  We call this “periodization”.  We move through 3-4 week phases where focus is placed on building a certain quality, such as strength or hypertrophy.  But all of this work needs to transfer over into the unknown, into life.

Systematic strength building and conditioning will always have a place for every human, and I will never stop promoting that to athletes, Mom’s and Dad’s and the elderly.  We should place some focus on this method of building physical fitness.

But once we leave the gym, we have to realize that movement is more than bending over to pick up a piece of iron, grunting, standing up with it, then dropping it back on the floor.

Blip on the fitness map

Fitness is a blip on the movement map.

Fitness doesn’t mean that you can move.  

In fact, I really don’t know what fitness means?  Who’s considered fit?  The powerlifter who can pick up 1,000lbs in a deadlift?  The marathon runner who can win the Boston marathon?  The UFC fighter?  Usain Bolt?  The kettlebell guru?  The Crossfit Games champ?

I know this might not make sense right now, but fitness does not mean that you can move.

Ah, the gym.  It’s really dead to me at this point.  I value the tools found in the gym, particularly cable machines that can be used for movements that cross the midline, such as chops and lifts, but not the gym itself.  I think there are better places to train.  Places that inject an energy into your sessions.

With the evolution of  training equipment that is capable for training outdoors, I’ve never been more motivated to explore movement in different environments, using different tools and lately with others who value the same approach.  It’s a great bonding experience to train outside with someone else and finish the workout together, just as it is to climb a 14,000 foot mountain, bike 100 miles or complete a marathon.

SUP ATX Stand Up Paddleboard

With the popularity of unique outdoor activities like stand up paddleboards on the rise, I’ve never felt more justified about my decision to leave the gym in my rearview.

Come join me out here.

Cheers to movement and your ability to do it anywhere!

KG

Forget Fat Loss For Now! Quality of Movement Before Quantity of Exercise

Quick Tips

Out of the gates fast here.

Two things…

1)   Gray Cook is a genius.

2)   “People would do better if they knew better”.  –Jim Rohn

If you aren’t familiar with Gray Cook, it’s quite alright.  The trickling down of human performance and corrective exercise information coming from Gray isn’t targeted to the average Joe and Jane.  Gray is the guy that teaches professionals.  You can probably guess how influential he is judging by the fact that he is the person who is teaching the people who you folks think are the experts in their field.

Gray Cook FMS

Genius.

Did you catch all of that?  Make some sense?

Anyways, Gray developed a system of assessing human movement called the FMS, or Functional Movement Screen.  Some years ago, he noticed that the movement industry lacked a protocols for assessing the quality of a person’s movement.  There was no baseline from which to build from.  Sure, you could watch a person squat and determine that it didn’t look right, but what then?  What is the course of action to fix that squat?

All we really had outside of the rehabilitation setting were “quantity” protocols.  By quantity, I am referring to the stereotypical physical assessment that you can still get in many gyms around the world. These assessments commonly included:

–       # of squats to failure

–       # of push ups to failure

–       # of chin ups/pull ups to failure

–       some assessment of cardiovascular performance (treadmill, bike, etc)

–       flexibility testing

Sit and Reach Test

I enjoyed my time in my college Kinesiology program as much as the next person, but how relevant is the data that I’m gathering from Sit and Reach Test (pictured above)?  Look at that guy!  That test is largely designed to measure lower back and lower extremity (hamstrings, etc) flexibility.  Check out the amount of spinal flexion he’s got going on that will increase his numbers.  Sit up straight son!  Even if he did sit up straight, and the test was legit, what are you going to do with the data gathered from the test?  What is your course of action?  Stretch the hamstrings?

We know that the lower back demands (primarily not only) stability for health and the hamstrings have become long, weak, and dormant in most people (from sitting all day).

So, using something like the sit and reach rewards a person that has flexibility in the hamstrings and flexibility in their lower back.  Pure tunnel-vision.

It’s not enough.  Tests like this are ancient and it’s just not enough anymore.

Quantity.  Do you see what I am talking about now?  Everything was based on physical performance qualities like strength, endurance, flexibility, etc.  I have no beef with any of these qualities, as they are definitely worth improving, I simply have shifted my thought process of what we should be assessing on people from the beginning of our relationship.

Personally, I now promote establishing quality of movement, then adding quantity of movement.  Move right and then burn tons of fat.  It’s a pre-requisite of sorts.  Adding quantity of movement with high volume methods (circuits, complexes, interval based, etc) only serves to make pre-existing movement problems worse.

Dust under the rug

 It’s like sweeping dirt underneath the rug.  Dirt is still there, you just can’t see it.

That shift led me to favor the FMS and everything that it stands for. 

It took me a while to understand what the hell the Functional Movement Screen was all about.  It’s complex.  It takes a great deal of studying, reading and experimenting to grasp the concepts.  Every single time I listen to Gray speak; it’s easy to pick up that he is on a whole other level of knowledge and understanding.  He’s a pioneer for sure.

Messing around with the FMS and the associated corrective exercises is a blast.

Why?

Because in a matter of minutes you can fix a person’s faulty movement.  You can go from testing horribly in one of the seven FMS screens, to testing near perfect from leveraging a number of highly impactful corrective movements, each designed to improve a specific movement pattern test.

 

The FMS to me is the pre-assessment to the assessment. 

—> Personal Trainers:  Don’t Sell Yourself and Your Clients Short…

If you an exercise professional stopping by this blog, you need to get educated on the FMS.  It is a disservice to ask a client to perform bodyweight squats to failure when they can’t even squat properly in the first place.  I would also like to add that the inability of a person to squat often not a grooving problem.  In other words, having a person perform more and more ugly squats is not going to improve a person’s squat form.

Motor control definitely has something to do with movement technique, yes, but there are so many underlying issues revolving around primarily mobility and stability that need to be addressed to work out the kinks.

Personal trainers, you’ve got to establish your identity.  People come to you to lose weight and get “ripped”, but you’ve got to have standards.  Articulate the importance of moving properly and then moving to burn fat and lose weight.  We live in a world that feeds off instant gratification, but you’ve got to resist the urge to do the activities that make your clients happy at times.  You’re the professional, you’re in control.

So, my shift in thinking is from quantity to quality.  I adopted the concepts of the FMS quite a few years ago, and it’s been nothing short of fantastic.  I can’t even say that I am “drinking the Kool-Aid” anymore… I am officially doing a full-blown keg stand with the Kool-Aid.

You should to.  I’ll hold your legs while you drink.

—>  Average Joes and Janes read and watch now…

If you’re not an exercise professional, take a glance at this video from Gray.  Many of you are familiar with the Turkish Get Up, and Gray does a fantastic job describing how it fits into a training program.

Wrapping it up for now… address your movement quality and the ramp up your training regimen to burn fat, build muscles and all kinds of crazy athleticism.  Sustainable movement is more important than some rapid flash in a pan fat loss training program.  You’ve got the rest of your life to strip fat off your body.  Literally, years I tell you.  Habits are made over time and broken over time.  Stay dedicated and consistent in your workouts and fat loss with lean muscle gain will be pleasant reward.

*** If it feels like I only provided a hazy glimpse into what the FMS is and why we should apply it right now to our own situations, you’re accurate in with that feeling.  As I mentioned, the FMS is complex and articulating it’s importance and application to your own workouts is something that I want to address over time and multiple articles, not in one shot.

All in good time friends, all in good time.

—> Speaking of friends… if you like anything that you read or see on this blog, subscribe to it.  All subscribing does is notify you of a new posting when it drops.  I have stated that I want to build a community using this blog as my vehicle.  Humble beginnings, yes, but it will grow.  Let’s connect and move mountains together.<—

 

Cheers on this Superbowl Sunday 2013!

 

KG