“If you could just tell people not to eat so darn much.”

What does the World’s oldest man think about diet?

This guy knows the truth of it, because he’s living proof. Don’t eat too much. Seems simple enough.

Two-meal diet aids in oldest man’s longevity

GREAT FALLS, Mont. — So what does the world’s oldest man eat? The answer is not much, at least not too much.

Walter Breuning, who turned 113 on Monday, eats just two meals a day and has done so for the past 35 years.

“I think you should push back from the table when you’re still hungry,” Breuning said.

At 5 foot 8, (“I shrunk a little,” he admitted) and 125 pounds, Breuning limits himself to a big breakfast and lunch every day and no supper.

“I have weighed the same for about 35 years,” Breuning said. “Well, that’s the way it should be.”

“You get in the habit of not eating at night, and you realize how good you feel. If you could just tell people not to eat so darn much.”

His practice of skipping supper began when he first moved to Great Falls from Minneapolis in 1978. He lived in the Yellowstone Apartments at the time and would walk downtown to Schell’s in the Johnson Hotel or the Albon Club on the second floor for lunch.

In 1980, the Albon Club moved to the Rainbow Hotel, and the owners asked Breuning to be manager, which he did for 15 years.

“I never started eating supper again,” Breuning said.

He gets up at 6:15 a.m. and has a big breakfast every day at 7:30 a.m. Usually it’s eggs, toast or pancakes.

“You can order anything you want, just like a restaurant,” he said.

“I eat a lot of fruit every day.”

Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer sent Breuning a fruit basket after a recent visit.

“Boy, I tell you that was good fruit. I ate the whole darn thing,” Breuning said. “Peaches, pears, everything, it sure was good.”

In addition to eating fruit every day, Breuning also takes a baby aspirin.

“Just one baby aspirin,” he said, “but everybody gets that for their heart. That’s the only pill I ever take, no other medicine.”

And he drinks plenty of water.

“I drink water all the time,” he said, and just a bit of coffee. “I drink a cup and a half of coffee for breakfast and a cup with lunch.”

Breuning said he has been healthy all of his life and believes diet has a lot to do with it.

“If people could cut back on their normal weight, it wouldn’t be quite so bad,” he commented. “They just eat too much!”

Breuning remembers his family having a cow, pigs, chickens and a big garden when he was growing up, like most people did in those days.

“Everybody was poor years ago,” he said. “When we were kids, we ate what was on the table. Crusts of bread or whatever it was. You ate what they put on your plate, and that’s all you got,” Breuning said.

Breuning recalls his mother being a good cook, though she died when she was 46 after an operation in Minneapolis. His wife was a good cook, too. They met when they worked in Butte for the railroad.

“Everything she made was good,” Breuning said. “We used to have lots of card parties, and they would always say what a good cook she was.”

While diet has contributed to his longevity, Breuning also believes that working hard was good for him.

“Work doesn’t hurt anybody,” he said, mentioning that he had two jobs, one working for the Great Northern Railway until he was 66 and the other as manager/secretary for the local Shriner’s Club until he was 99.

These days, Breuning keeps busy talking with all of the people who visit the Rainbow Retirement Center interested in meeting the world’s oldest man.

Though his vision doesn’t allow him to read anymore, Breuning keeps his mind active by listening to the radio.

“My eyes are gone,” he said, “but I listen to the radio. I get all my news on KMON.”

Breuning started eating out 35 years ago, but said he doesn’t anymore.

“Once you get used to not eating in restaurants, you don’t want to anymore,” he said. Besides, he’d rather eat at home, at the Rainbow Retirement Center.

“They have a lot of good food right here,” he said, “and good cooks.”

Breuning celebrated his 113th birthday with not one, but two cakes, one chocolate and one vanilla. And for his birthday lunch he got his favorite: liver and onions.

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The Tabata Protocal – Hardcore Interval Training

Tabata Protocol is interval training that Izumi Tabata, Ph.D. – a Japanese researcher – designed for Olympic level athletes.

Broken down, it’s 7 minutes of warm up; followed by high intensity 100% effort bursts of 20 seconds, 10 seconds of rest (starting at 4 series of sprints/rests up to 7 series of sprints/rests). You then do a cool down for 7 minutes (espeically key for old dogs like me!).

I have always believed in intervals and doing them has always been a key to staying in serious shape, IMHO.

But I got hurt in late April playing soccer (as I seem to be apt to do) and then re-injured the area in May. (Pulled groin – spare me the snickers, this injury HURTS and I’ll be down for another 4 weeks or so says the doc).

But I’m a fitness oriented guy and can’t play my sport. I’ve had to really rethink my workouts, I’m limited on what I can do. So I’m going a bit crazy. So I pulled my stationary bike back out and found that riding it doesn’t irriatate this injury at all. (Whew!)

So I barely recalled reading about this crazy Interval workout and using Google, found this.

I’ve been at it 3X a week now for the last 3 weeks. I’ve gone from barely making it through 4 cycles to ripping it through 6 cycles. I am pushing really hard too; my heart rate is cranking into the 167 range… which I don’t often see. (My max based on age and resting is 181 so I am hitting the bottom range of my VO2 range (aka 90%)). You feel like you are going to die towards the end of it, but man, it works.

So once I rehab this stupid injury completely (and not a DAY before it’s been cleared by the doc and I’ve been symptom free for at least a week doing wind sprints in the back field) and test this in ‘real life’ to see how my wind holds up in competition in the game, I can say that it feels good.

From the web: “…the Tabata Protocol is the rare workout that benefits both endurance athletes and sprinters — hard to accomplish …. (using this system) for six weeks improved their maximum aerobic capacity by 14%.” Compare that to traditional aerobic training at 70% for 60 minutes for six weeks showing an improvement of 9.5%.

Conventional Interval training, as I’ve done in the past, suggest keeping a 1:3 work-rest ratio (meaning your rest periods are 3X longer than your sprint periods). The Tabata Protocol’s work-rest ratio is 2:1.

If you are in shape (or have a doctor’s clearance to workout) then try this sort of Interval Training. I plan to maintain this level throughout from now on. It’s quick, it’s grueling, and it seems so far to be very effective. I won’t really know till I can bring it on the pitch for 60 minutes… but right now, injury or not, this has helped me remain in good shape.

Doing a mixture of P90X and this has been a good way to keep it together!

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New Year and Resolutions – Looking Back At a Year of One Fitness Journey and Looking Forward To More

This is the time of year that everyone goes into self analysis and many folks, I’d say the bulk of them, come out with fitness oriented/health oriented changes. It seems that now; and then spring are the main times folks that don’t live the fitness oriented lifestyle actually acknowledge it’s existance and even consider switching into some sort of ‘fitness’ mode.

I’ll just speak for myself right now. As I come into 2009, I’ve been really focused and prioritized towards fitness since April. Last November 2007, I separated my left shoulder in a sports injury (indoor soccer. How do you separate your shoulder playing soccer? Leave it to me to find a way…). It took me 4 months to have some normal range of movement and start to build my strength back up. That’s one reason I look so weak in my ‘before’ pic that I’ve posted on this site as my ‘Day 1′ photos. I needed to really change up my routine, get my life in order and not just ‘fade away’ like I felt I was. It wasn’t about looks, or walking around with my shirt off in the summer. It was about performance on the soccer field running around slower and slower with less power and less stamina than ever before.

The main issue for me was simply letting the aging process take over. I was 41 and felt older. I was working out, eating 1/2 decent (and 1/2 not decent!) but felt old. And slow.

I found P90X, but through on-line research and not the (in)famous infomercial you see all the time on the weekends. I was researching Plyometrics (aka ‘jump training’) after watching a special on Kris Draper from the Detroit Red Wings focused on Plyo and keeping his speed and jump as he aged as a professional athelete. The search led to P90X and I liked what I read, and then in checking out reviews from folks I found a lot of folks I knew on-line and in real life had tried it and I liked what I heard from them.

When I got the program, I admit I was overwhelmed with it. I read all the included material and watched the workouts. I took the fit test to set a baseline. And then… I waited. I wasn’t sure I could commit that much time (an hour a day, six days a week) and focus on my diet over 90 days.

I laugh to myself about that now;

What’s happened to me over the last half of 2008, physically and mentally (related to getting in this groove) is really moving to me. I’ve regained my jump, energy and strength. I feel like I’m 20. I’ve got abs like I’ve never had before, my core is stronger than ever before, my strength matches (almost) where I was in my 20′s, my stamina is better than ever before, my flexibility is better than ever in my life and my balance is better. Doing Yoga on a regular (weekly) basis in this program has done wonders for me. I hated that part of it, but now have come to understand what it’s doing for me overall. Especially on the flexibility and balance part of this whole experience.

Physique wise, I’m totally impressed with what all this has done for me. I didn’t really believe that looking like this was really possible again. Really. lol. I hate typing stuff like this, because it comes off the wrong way so much; but I don’t think I’ve ever had it all ‘together’ like this ever before. When I was in my 20′s and really focused on muscle building, size and strength, I had no idea about core strength or worried about abs too much. Back then, to me, if my stomach was flat, then I was fine. Now, combining portion control and sensible common sense good foods instead of bad ones… I have abs. I’ve never had that before. Ever.

Mentally, I feel like I can accomplish things and am more confident tackling even very large tasks and hard tasks in any realm because I am more focused on what I can actually do. I’ve proved to myself that things that seem so impossible can be successfully done with consistent effort applied over time. I can weather things that before would really bother me without blinking an eye now.

In August, I reset my goals and focused on my 42nd birthday coming up this January. I wanted to see how close I could actually come to looking like I did at my physical peak… which I sort of loosely peg about age 23. I was working out everyday, very determined to get bigger and stronger. I was playing outdoor soccer and worked at a job where I was running a lot. Luckily I have some pictures from then, though I don’t often take such pictures, where I was ‘posing’. They’ll remain private, but suffice to say, I am pretty much there even right now by the end of December. I still have another whole month (my birthday is the last day of January) to keep working. It’ll be fun to see how I end up at that point.

I’ve often gone off about ‘perfection isn’t a destination, it’s a process’. So when you set a goal and actually, gasp, get there… what do you do? Set new ones. I have no intention of slowing down, eating crap, getting sedentary or letting all this work go to waste. I want to stay fit, live clean and enjoy the rest of my life as best I can. I want to be the old guy out on the indoor soccer field that guys marvel at for keeping up even though he’s the oldest guy by far on the team. I want to be the guy that my kids can grow up and later think, “Well, the old man still does it, why can’t I?”

When folks toot their own horn, even if they can do it and be honest, I hate it. It always comes off to me as arrogant. That’s not my intention. I just want to be honest with myself – and anyone following this blog – about where I’ve been, how I’ve gotten here and where I am going.

Peace.



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Protein at EVERY Meal

This is an article I ran across today. And I’ve been believing and following this strategy with my food intake for a long time now. It’s just common sense; but it’s nice to see the science backs the plan.

I follow (or TRY to follow) a 30/40/30 diet. 30% protein/40% carbs/30% fats. I try to obviously eat ‘good’ carbs (complex carbs) and ‘good’ fats (nuts, fish oil, flaxseed oil) with a serving of protein at every meal. For snacks I have a protein shake (love BSN “Syntha-6″) or a protein bar (love BeachBody’s P90-X “Chocolate Peanut-Butter Bars”). Three ‘normal’ meals with 2-3 of these snacks everyday. It’s not complicated. It works.

Here’s the article:

Protein power: Your muscles need a helping of it at each meal

Carolyn O’neil / Cox News Service

Just when you thought it was fine to relax with a glass of well-earned wine and nibble on a few whole-grain crackers, nutrition researchers are here to ask, “Did you have enough protein today?”

OK, we know you’re not into body-building competitions, but get a load of this midlife reality check: You could be losing muscle mass and strength — a condition called sarcopenia — if you don’t consume enough high-quality protein on a daily basis.

“We’re seeing sarcopenia, which commonly occurs in the elderly, in younger subjects in their early to mid-50s,” says Susan Hewlings, a registered dietitian and assistant professor at Stetson University in Florida who specializes in protein metabolism. Hewlings and other researchers at the American Dietetic Association’s annual Food and Nutrition Conference this year shed new light on the connection between what we eat and the health of our aging muscles.

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Bottom line: Research shows that to prevent and treat lost muscle mass you must consume 1.5 grams of protein for every kilogram of body weight per day. That translates to about 90 grams of protein a day for a normal weight man and would be less if you’re a petite woman.

Breakfast, lunch, dinner

But here’s where the real specific advice kicks in: You should be including sources of high-quality protein such as eggs, milk and meats and balancing your protein intake throughout the day.

“Typically, people eat less protein at breakfast, a little more at lunch and then eat a lot at dinner,” Hewlings says. “To optimize protein synthesis and prevent sarcopenia, it needs to be more evenly distributed.” There goes that diet plan to starve all day and splurge on a big steak for dinner. Your muscles are hungry for amino acids found in protein foods all day long.

In fact, Robert Wolfe, professor of geriatrics at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock, warns that, “When there are periods of the day when no amino acids are being absorbed from the gut, muscle serves as the only significant reservoir of protein.”

That means your body starts robbing the muscles of stored protein to keep organs and other tissues humming along. So make sure you’re eating protein-containing foods every day and including protein in each meal. And that includes snacks. Something as simple as fresh apple slices topped with peanut butter is a good choice.

Hewlings emphasized that protein alone can’t do the job of preserving and building muscles as we age. “I call exercise ‘poor man’s plastic surgery,’ ” she says. “And note that physical activity boosts lean body mass only if you’ve got enough protein in your diet.”

Keep fat intake down

Since foods are often a combination of the three macronutrients (protein, carbohydrates and fat), choose protein-containing foods wisely with other health concerns in mind.

For instance, a 6-ounce broiled porterhouse steak is a great source of complete protein — 38 grams — but contains 44 grams of fat. The same amount of salmon gives you 34 grams of protein and 18 grams of fat, and it’s the kind of fat that’s good for you.

For a complete list of protein foods to include in a healthy diet, go to www.my pyramid.gov.

Carolyn O’Neil is a registered dietitian and co-author of “The Dish on Eating Healthy and Being Fabulous!” This article appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.



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Simplest Diet Ever?

There was an online discussion about high fructose corn syrup at a forum I hang on. There was a lot of commentary on how much of it is in so many things we eat. One comment was: “No matter so many people are so fat!”

Here’s my response to that; and it leads to some changes you can incorporate into a more healthy diet. Not strictly ‘health nut’ or ‘fitness nut’ stuff; but real life, quality of life, rest of your life common sense eating habit. Quickie statement that defines it: “Processed foods are no good. At all. Taste good? Maybe. Past that? NOTHING.”

High fructose corn syrup gets you fat? You’ve got it. And it’s just the tip of the iceberg, literally. Artificial sweeteners are even more evil and dangerous and all these things added to a more sedentary lifestyle = big problems.

It’s all such a mess that it’s overwhelming to even try to grasp, let alone deal with on a personal level. HFCS, and even just corn, are almost in everything a large majority of the population in the US eats everyday. Remembering that the simple adage of ‘all things in moderation’, even if you don’t mean to eat corn, some form of it is in something you ate yesterday, today and tomorrow if you are the average American.

Try removing anything with HFCS in it, anything with the words ‘partially hydrogenated’ in it, and anything listed with ‘bleached’ or ‘enriched’ (bleaching flour removes nutrients of wheat, so by law it must be ‘enriched’) flour from your diet. (Aka ‘processed‘ foods).

I’d guess that anyone would have to make major changes to what they currently eat.

It’s amazing what we call food.

My wife calls the average American diet as ‘eating for taste’; I call it eating for death. (Gross overstatement to make a point, but it’s my opinion).

Remove all that for a few weeks and tell me you don’t feel MUCH better.

Add in some form of regular exercise on top of that? You won’t believe how good you actually can feel.



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So, what happens after you complete P-90X?

An interesting aspect of the P90-X program, and Beachbody programs in particular, is that you can simply adjust them to fit your lifestyle.

P90-X is pitched as a 90 day program. Period. But what happens to most folks that use it to get into shape, is that they like it. Really like it.

There are enough workouts in the program to mix and match. There are different ways to do that in 90 day programs depending on your goals. Classic, Lean and Doubles.

I also am doing the “P90-X Plus” program; it’s an extension of the P90-X formula. It again is a 90 day program that you can do in various flavors depending on your goals. It adds in new workouts and routines and uses the P90-X ones from the original. It’s much more suited to folks VERY familiar with Tony’s sort of programs. It took me watching them and trying them a few times to get the moves.

It’s very fast, circuit training. He has no “8-10″ rep stuff; it’s all max reps based on time. The workouts in P90X-Plus are shorter (average 40 minutes or so each) and INTENSE if you do them full throttle.

The ab workout deserves special mention. It’s a fantastic ab workout, perhaps the best and most well rounded one I’ve ever done. You do moves hanging from the pull-up bar, then standing, then sitting, then laying down. Then you do the same cycle with different moves. And then again. And then once more. It’s very effective and hard core.

Negatives? Tony pushes the Bowflex Select-Tech dumbbells a wee bit too much (understatment!). I get product placement, but jeez. He also bases a lot of the moves in the workouts around using power stands for push-ups and dips and such. (I’ll give him slack on this, I already own the power stands he invented and they are the best I’ve ever used). You can get around not using them and still do the workouts, but it’s MUCH more effective to use them.

With support from a dedicated coach, the forums and knowing you conquered P90X at least once; the Plus is a great way to extend well past the first 90 days.

Fitness isn’t a destination, nor is the 90 days a race to a finish. They are merely points on a journey that is lifelong.





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Studies Show Yoga Can Treat Illnesses

Studies Show Yoga Can Treat Illnesses

BY SARAH AVERY • MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS • November 28, 2008

RALEIGH, N.C. — The ancient practice of yoga is increasingly finding a new following — among doctors and medical researchers who are working to prove its benefits for a variety of illnesses.
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Researchers at University of North Carolina Hospitals are studying yoga’s benefits for people with irritable bowel syndrome. Doctors at Duke University recently completed a study showing that yoga provided significant improvements with hot flashes, sleep and energy levels for postmenopausal women with early breast cancer.

And an oncologist in Beaufort County, N.C., sees improvement in his patients who take yoga classes.

“There’s been an explosion of data using yoga as a treatment option,” said Dr. Shelley Wroth, an obstetrician at Duke Integrative Medicine and a yoga teacher. She said studies have found that yoga helps people suffering from hypertension, anxiety, arthritis, chronic back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, fibromyalgia, stress, depression, diabetes and epilepsy — among others.

A recent study at Duke involved breast cancer patients who were experiencing severe hot flashes and other menopause symptoms. Because of their illness, they were prohibited from taking hormone replacement therapy, so yoga was proposed as an alternative. The study found significant improvement among the women who took yoga classes, compared to women who did not.

“There are a lot of reactions to stress that exacerbate the menopausal symptoms,” said Laura Porter, coauthor of the Duke study. “Yoga — the physical poses and the more cognitive aspects of it — dampens the stress reactivity.”

But even as the science establishes yoga’s benefits, less is known about why it’s helpful. Porter and others postulate that the practice reduces stress through stretching, breathing and meditation. For people battling illness, stress reduction may pack extra potency.

“A lot of our diseases have some sort of origins in stress, and the stress reaction,” said William Frey, who is leading a yoga class in Raleigh, N.C., as part of a UNC-Chapel Hill study among patients with irritable bowel syndrome. “By taking care of stress, you’re starting to eliminate some of the diseases that are caused by it.”

Frey said he began offering yoga eight years ago through UNC-CH’s Program on Integrative Medicine.

“There was some concern we might be bringing spiritual elements into a very clinical setting,” Frey said. “But as people have seen its staying power, and see the results and research, there’s beginning to be more respectability.”

Yoga’s legitimacy increased when the National Institutes of Health became interested in it. The agency is funding studies on yoga and its effect on diseases. But some skepticism remains — in the medical profession and among patients.

Gioia O’Connell, a 54-year-old breast cancer survivor from Apex, N.C., said she wasn’t sure that yoga would help her. Her main hesitation was that yoga stemmed from Eastern roots, and she worried it was incompatible with her Christian faith. Still, she signed up for the study at Duke.

“I have to tell you, it was energizing,” O’Connell said. After being diagnosed with cancer in 1994 and undergoing a lumpectomy, chemotherapy, radiation and rounds of daily drugs, she felt wrung out. “It helped with stiffness, aches and pains. And the breathing really did help my energy level. That’s what I deal with, being a cancer survivor, the fatigue.”

Dr. John Inzerillo, an oncologist in Washington, N.C., said his patients have felt that benefit time and again. He began teaching yoga about five years ago as part of a busy practice in Goldsboro, N.C.

“We had breast cancer survivors, lymphoma survivors. Over the course of time — three or four months — I could see a lot more flexibility,” he said, noting that patients also said they felt less stressed.

About three years ago, Inzerillo scaled back. He quit the Goldsboro practice, set up shop in Washington and wrote a book, “Passion Beyond Pain,” about the importance of striking a thoughtful balance in life to overcome pain.

“I made life changes to allow me to get more enjoyment out of life and be more effective at work,” he said. “People get disconnected from the things that really mean something in life.”





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My Before/After Pictures

A few questions I get alot are:

  • Does it work?
  • Is it a real workout?
  • Show me proof! (Well, not a question, but!)

Question 1 – Yes.

Question 2 – Oh, yes it is.

Question 3 – If it’s pics you want here you go (yes I chop my head off. At some point, I’ll drop some photos with my head still attached!)

Yes, these are my actual pictures.

Some Progress shots for everyone:

Day 1

Day 1

Day 1

Day 90

Day 90

Day 90

Day 170

Day 170

Day 170

Day 1

Day 1

Day 1

Day 90

Day 90

Day 90

Day 170

Day 170

Day 170

Day 1

Day 1

Day 1

Day 90

Day 90

Day 90

Day 170

Day 170

Day 170

Day 90

Day 90

Day 90

Day 170

Day 170

Day 170





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My Overall Thoughts About P90-X

I’ve been asked what I like so much about P90-X. What makes it so special? What makes it different?

To me there are very important things that any sort of fitness/lifestyle program must include:

  1. Diet - and not just a ‘diet’ you do for a given period of time, but real lifestyle choices to echo a common sense approach to simply eating well. A lot of folks that do eat correctly call it, “Eating clean.”
  2. Strength Training – the basis. You must work the muscles to develop muscles. I am more a fan of ‘big’ complex moves that involve the entire body than focused on ‘small’ moves that isolate certain muscle groups only to the exclusion of others. Our bodies were designed to function as machines as a unit; not a collection of parts.
  3. Cardio Training – utterly indispensable. Your heart and lungs are the basis of what you can do, how long you can do it and without them, your life, let alone your fitness, is in danger. I am a tremendous proponent of ‘High Intensity Interval Training’ (aka HIIT) as opposed to low intensity aerobic work. I’ll expound on this further later (and in other posts).
  4. Flexibility -  as we age, beyond losing other aspects of fitness, we lose our flexibility. And that lost flexibility is precisely what makes us feel ‘old’ and raises our chances of getting injured from even seemingly mundane daily tasks.

So that’s my basic exercise related ‘pillars’ along with diet. There are a lot of other aspects to pay serious attention to (sleep, recovery, breathing, stretching (ballistic vs. static), posture, drinking water, etc..) but we will approach those separately and in other posts in depth.

Other logistical considerations for me before committing to an all-inclusive program are as follows:

  1. At Home – I like gyms, enjoy working out in them and they have tremendous resources to offer. But I have a family with children, a wife and run a few companies. I simply do not have time to get to a gym. What happens is that no matter how dedicated I am to it, going to the gym becomes a major roadblock to actually working out over time. I need a program that I can do – in it’s entirety – at home.
  2. Equipment - because I need/want to workout at home, the equipment I need to have to do the program can’t be extensive, expensive or expansive. I want little to no ‘gear’ needed, I do not want to break the bank to have what I need to do it correctly and the equipment I have can’t take up lots of space.
  3. Support - I’m pretty smart about working out. I’ve done it for large parts of my life and read/researched a lot about it. I have scoured the web and found fantastic resources that have helped me to shape my own ‘custom’ programs in the past that did work fairly well. But what lacked and one of the most overlooked aspects to training at home is a lack of support. And I’m not talking about your significant other. I mean a support group for motivation, for accountability and for asking/sharing advice.

How does P90-X lineup with what I look for? Let’s breakdown what it is and what it isn’t.

If you have looked at P90-X at all, you’ve seen the infomercial. You’ve seen the website, you might have caught the videos on the making of P90-X on YouTube.

Beachbody is the parent company that works with different trainers. One of them is Tony Horton. He’s 50 as I type this, but was 45 at the time P90-X was done. He’s in better shape than 99.5% of 20 year olds. He’s been a trainer for a long time and developed this program as an extension or ‘extreme’ version of his P90 program (which is also still sold).

The P90-X program is a collection of 12 DVD’s, a diet plan and online resources to support you through the program. Let’s look at them in order.

The term they pitch in the infomercial is “muscle confusion”; and basically that’s what the workout side of the program is based on.  There are six strengthening/resistance based workout DVD’s. Each is a different workout: Chest & Back; Shoulders & Arms; Legs & Back; Chest, Shoulders & Triceps, Back & Biceps and Ab Ripper X. There are three cardio based workout DVD’s: Plyometrics, Kenpo X, Cardio X. There is one core workout, Core Synergistics. And two workouts centered around flexibility, Yoga-X and X-Stretch.

The workout program is setup in three phases, each phase is 4 weeks. Each phase consists of three weeks of six workouts; then a rest day. The fourth week is a ‘recovery week’ where you do no strength resistance workouts. The ‘muscle confusion’ factor comes into play by switching up the workouts you do each phase. The idea is to increase your reps/weight used in each move over the progression of the phases and the variety of the workouts each week and than in each phase keeps you interested and forces your body to not plateau like in so many other workout programs. I’ll review each of these workouts in other posts. Suffice to say, they are all real deal. The focus is on basic moves like push ups, pull ups and adding a tremendous (and VERY challenging) spin on such moves. Tony ties each of the workouts in with a warm up and a cool down. The moves he does are closer to circuit training, combining aspects of giant sets and super sets. There is little ‘downtime’ between exercises. They are all about one hour each. Yoga is an hour and a half. You do not stand around much in that time. It’s intense. Yoga will get it’s own post for sure; that one is perhaps the most challenging IMHO. But that’s another topic. These are REAL workouts. I’ve heard other folks call it “Cross-fit Lite” but I’d call it practical fitness. You will burn fat. You will gain muscle. You will gain flexibility. You will get more speed (Plyometrics is brilliant). You will learn moves you’ve never imagined.

What I particularly like about the workouts is that they translate into real world. The workouts you do will help you in sports, hiking, living life at any level. I can do things with ease that I struggled with before this program, even though I was in decent shape.

The diet program is divided up into three phases too. They go along with the workout and are as important or even more so than the workouts IMHO. In essence it’s a Phase 1 (low carb); Phase 2 (medium carb), Phase 3 (higher carb) diet strong in protein and focused on dividing up your meals into 5-6 smaller meals throughout the day. They give you lots of ways to customize it for where you are in your fitness journey; but since P90-X is stressed for folks that come into the program with some degree of fitness the diet isn’t anything revolutionary, just… common sense. It can seem overly complicated at first; but the key is using it as a learning guide to illustrate ratios between carbs/proteins/fats through the phases and observe how your body reacts to them with the workouts. I feel they overload you with calories in the third phase; but frankly by the time you get there, you already know what works for you.

There are other tools not in the P90-X program that work perfectly hand-in-hand with it. One is The Daily Plate and it’s free. A fantastic guide if you simply need a road map is from Beachbody, it’s called Michi’s Ladder. It’s far from perfect, but it’s a fantastic guide. The thing that these tools all start you at is ’40-30-30.’ “40-30-30″ means a healthy, balanced diet made up of 40% carbs, 30% protein and 30% fat. It’s a good starting place. Using something like Fitday and tracking your actual diet for a week gives you some idea of what you are actually eating now.  That’s an eye opener for most folks. It was for me. Note we all need carbs; the issue with them is what sort of carbs. I actually prefer to follow a 50-30-20 diet; which works for me. Once you get hip to this sort of thinking and simple portion control… well, then it’s easy to do.

So the workouts fit my three pillars of working out perfectly. And the exercises you do all make you stronger, faster, flexible and last longer in the real world. What about the logistical aspects?

The program is designed to be done in your home. On your timeframe, at your discretion. The secret is simply committing to do it. When I bought it, it sat for a few weeks as I familiarized myself with the workouts, the diet program and tried to get myself to finally give in and commit to it. One hour a day is a lot of time. I made a promise to myself to do it to the best of my ability for 90 days come hell or high water. And made the time, if you look for time that you can ‘find’ to do things… you’ll never ‘find’ the time. If you instead ‘make’ the time, it’s there for you to use. Just use it wisely.

What equipment do you need? Well, you NEED a pull up bar, some floor space (more on this), a yoga mat and block, and either some dumbbells or resistance bands. Pull ups are essential, and Tony has more in this program than I’ve ever seen before in any program my entire life. I already had a door frame pullup bar; so no big deal for me. (Beachbody sells a very nice one at a good price – click on the link for their store on my site here and check it out). I bought a Yoga mat and black at Target for about $25. I have owned dumbbells for years and years; but ended up with every resistance band that Beachbody sells (they call them B-Lines) in addition. They are VERY nice quality equipment. I think using both dumbbells and resistance bands is a great mix. They are very different in use and the variety is good.

There are other very helpful additions to consider if you are going all out. I ended up buying the power stands that Tony designed from Beachbody; they are extremely heavy duty and work phenomenally well. I didn’t buy them until after my first 90 day cycle. They are essential to doing P90-X Plus, but are great for all the P90-X exercises too.

Space. The final frontier…. err, well, ahem. I do all my workouts in my home office. In my family room, there are kid’s toys and a lot of the time, when I want to do my workouts (weekends and during the summer) my kids or wife a) don’t want me to hog the TV; and b) don’t want me sweating and jumping around in front of them. My home office is not huge. I need to modify some of the bigger moves that cover ground. But that’s no big deal and I do it. I have a useable floor space of about 10′ x 20′. That’s not a lot of room, but it works for me.

Support. We all need it. There are days you don’t feel motivated. Days you want to back off. If you aren’t answering to anyone about your progress, aren’t getting positive reinforcement… it’s easy to back off. There are fantastic support threads on the Beachbody forum. Great ‘rah rah’ posts, folks offering advice and you always have access to a coach. I do coaching for P90-X; and to me it’s about answering questions, finding answers and keeping the motivation up. Some folks have dramatic before/after pictures and stories. It’s far more important than you might imagine.

As I type this, I’ve lived with one hour of my day – every day – dedicated to Tony and P90-X of one form or another six days a week over 7.5 months. I’m never bored, not sick of Tony, the music, the chatter in the DVD’s or the moves. I get into doing them, form is a big deal to me. I work very hard at it and get it done.

As you can see (I hope) from the pictures, this program transformed my fitness. It’s taught me how to enjoy working this hard and I’m at a point where I am mixing/matching other workouts (Tony’s extension to P90-X, P90-X Plus and Tony’s “One-on-One” workouts) to keep the variety up and the muscles from plateaus. It’s working. I’m faster on the soccer field, stronger, have better posture without effort, have control of my diet, have energy, feel good and sleep well. I get sick less. I get better faster.

It’s hard work. It takes dedication and focus. But the pay off is enormous. Aspects of my life that are not related to fitness at all are benefiting. I have more energy and focus to do my work, play with my kids and spend time with wife. I find my confidence levels are higher when I am working with new clients or vendors for my business affairs. I am calmer and stress doesn’t get to me as much as it has always done.

To me this program was the complete answer. Beyond the 90 days they focus on.





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