The scale fails to encourage Perry Mason

Nichole’s brother is doing that P90X thing. He’d appreciate your support and motivation, so he’s sharing his experience here at Butterscotch Sundae. Which is a pretty funny name for a place to talk about Feeling The Burn and whatnot.

Week 2 of P90X was so very different from Week 1, even though the exercises (i.e. the DVDs) were exactly the same. Because the exercises didn’t change from Week 1, I’ll leave it to my beautiful and diligent sister to link to my Week 1 Post. Instead, I’ll focus on the intensity of my workout, my mindset and my soreness on a day-by-day basis. Those three points are really where the week differed so drastically from Week 1.

P90X vs. cheeseburgersDay 8: Chest & Back
Going into this day, I told myself I really needed to increase my intensity. This was, after all, my second week of the program. So I pushed, hard. I increased my reps on all pull-up and push-up sets, and I really tried to slow down and concentrate on every muscle movement. About 75 percent of the way through the video, I ran out of gas. I’ve been told since that this is called “bonking,” in which your body quits because you aren’t giving it the carbs it needs. To this point, I’d been very strictly following the diet. From this point forward, I’m
doing so more loosely. This may reduce my results, but the feeling of “bonking” was not a good one, and I don’t want to do it again.

Day-after soreness level: 3. The day off in between Day 6 and Day 8 allowed my body to heal more than it would have otherwise. Also, I really think the Dark Matter supplement is working.

My mindset: I can’t believe I’m saying this, but I’m ready to “Bring It.” Afterward, I really felt like I brought it, but I wasn’t able to do ab ripper due to the “Bonk.”

Speaking of Ab Ripper, I forgot to talk about it in my Week 1 post. The short story is that three days a week (Chest & Back, Shoulders & Arms and Legs & Back), you also do a 15-minute abdominal routine. It consists of 25 reps of 13 (I think) exercises. In Hell, you are required to do Ab Ripper once an hour on the hour. To date, I’ve only been able to complete about 50 percent of Ab Ripper. I’ll try harder going forward.

Day 9: Plyometrics
Plyometrics was the day the really killed me in Week 1, so I was not excited for the post-plyometrics feeling I was to incur. This workout was not easier the second time around, but knowing what to expect made it more doable. I made it through 100 percent of the video and probably only skipped 15 percent of the reps, which was a big increase from Week 1.

Day-after soreness level: 6. Way less sore than Week 1. That has to be good, right?

My mindset: Getting better.

Day 10: Shoulders & Arms
I intentionally ate more carbs today and tried to increase my intensity, like I had on Day 8. It worked. I felt like I had a pretty good workout here. I didn’t work to failure on the second set of each exercise, like the video says you should, but I was pretty beat at the end.

Ab Ripper: Not much to say about this, other than that it is still hell and that I made it through about 65 percent.

Day-after soreness level: 4. My body is adapting.

My mindset: I made the mistake of getting on the scale, which told me I had gained a half a pound since starting 10 days ago. This drastically shifted my mindset from “I can do this” to “Why the hell am I doing this?”

Day 11: Yoga
I still hate yoga, but I decided to really give it an honest go this time. I forced my way through and made it to the part where Tony Horton tells me to ommmm. I ommm’d last week, told my long-distance workout buddy that I had and was made fun of. So this week I did not ommm. Instead, I pushed eject.

Day-after soreness level: 3. Yoga is boring, but it reduces my soreness.

My mindset: I’m not sure I can make myself do Yoga every week. And I’m really not sure I can do Yoga twice in one week, as I’m supposed to do in Week 4.

Day 12: Legs & Back
My legs are still not ready to give 100 percent on Plyometrics and then, two days later, give 100 percent on squats and lunges. But I tried. I made it through the entire video but really dogged it on about 30 percent of the reps. Also, I’m still not using weights and doubt I ever will. The weightless lunges and squats are difficult enough.

Ab ripper: Getting better, as I did about 80 percent.

Day-after soreness level: 5. My legs might just get more out of this program than any other part of me.

My mindset: I’m still really bummed about the “no weight loss” thing, and I’m finding it hard to keep the intensity up.

Day 13: Kempo
Even though this was my favorite day last week, I couldn’t make myself do it this week. The lack of weight loss to this point was really bothering me. So I spent some time researching. I discovered that no weight loss — and even some gain — is typical in phase 1, the first 30 days of P90X. Modest weight loss comes in phase 2, and drastic changes happen in phase 3. So I’ve got to stay off the scale for a while and just push. Good to know.

Day 14: Stretch/Rest
I rested, even though I’d rested on Day 6 as well. Two days off felt nice.

Overall, other than my lack of motivation towards the end of the week, I’m still feeling good about the program. While I don’t see a difference, my wife says she is starting to notice small changes in my body composition. And my strength is really coming back. I am rededicating in Week 3.

We’ve come to the multimedia updates

NaBloPoMo 2010Every year it comes to this. National Blog Posting Month drives me to listing the songs my iPod is currently playing. (See: Nov. 18, 2009). I’m just pleased that we made it this far without resorting to it. Anyway, here you are. Ten songs my iPod played this morning.

  1. Dancing Queen, Abba.
  2. California Girls, The Beach Boys.
  3. Spilt Needles, The Shins.
  4. I Saw You in the Wild, Great Lake Swimmers.
  5. Masochist, Ingrid Michaelson
  6. Pig Island, Scott Bakula
  7. Catch that Train, Dan Zanes and Friends
  8. Wolves, Iron & Wine
  9. See the Sky about to Rain, Neil Young
  10. A Man Needs a Maid, Neil Young

Tomorrow: 15 ways to butter a slice of bread! (Not really. I can only think of three.)

How writing keeps me sane

NaBloPoMo 2010I wasn’t the most meticulous note-taker in college – that was Rockford – but I did make an effort to take notes. Before a test, I would transcribe all of my handwritten notes. Not so I could more easily refer to them again, but to help the ideas stick in my head. I don’t find myself needing to take notes on lectures very often anymore (although maybe I should take notes on the nightly news to help me stay abreast on current events. Or maybe I could just start watching the nightly news), but I do still write a lot.

Works-for-Me WednesdayCommitting words to paper (or the internet) helps me to remember things more easily, whether they’re Funny Things the Kids Have Said or Things I’d Like to Own or Laundry: How to Do It.

OK, so I don’t really have a How to Do Laundry cheat sheet. I do, however, keep lists of:

Books I’ve Read.
I have a very nice reading journal just for this purpose. If I don’t keep a record of what I’ve read, I am 98 percent sure to forget. And I have been known to reread a book without realizing it until halfway through. Which isn’t a tragedy, of course, but it’s annoying.

Chores
Not just for kids! I have a list of things that need to be done in every room of the house. I try to tackle one room every day, and when I actually accomplish that I flip to the next day. I will readily admit that cleaning toilets aren’t the first thing on my mind every day. Having a list helps me stay on top of things that I know wouldn’t get done if I didn’t have it written down.

Meals We Like
What I said about having a remarkably bad memory? I usually make our meal plan and grocery list on Friday night or Saturday morning — it’s a wild, wild life – and there have been many, many times when I’ve been unable to think of any meal I’ve ever made. Sad but true. This is why I started doing Menu Plan Monday – so I’d have an ongoing record of things we’ve had.

What I’ve Eaten
I haven’t actually done this in awhile, but I need to start again. I first started a food journal when I did Weight Watchers several years ago. I’m certain it would help again in my ongoing (and, for the last few years, fruitless) effort to lose weight. The primary reason I need to start again, though, is so I can figure out what’s causing me to feel so rotten a good bit of the time.

So clearly that stuff isn’t writing in the Hemingway sense of the word. (And neither, if we’re being honest, is any of the other stuff I write.) But beyond making lists and keeping records, writing keeps me connected. I spend the majority of my time with the under-6 set. They have their charms, but it’s nice to have an adult conversation sometimes. And right now, the best place for me to do that on a daily basis is here and through various social media outlets. There are so many people with whom I would not be in contact were it not for the internet and, of course, writing therein. (Three cheers for you, internet!)

Writing helps keep my mind, my house and my body* in order. It doesn’t just work for me; I don’t think I could function without it.

*Well, it helps my body when I make an effort. Let’s go with that.