For five of the last seven days, I have been with my family in New Jersey. My mother's house is a binge eater's dream. While there are plenty of healthy options around - oatmeal, fruit, whole grain cereals, there are also plenty of other things that are far more appealing: cookies and chocolate, to name a few.
Due to family circumstances, most of my meals for the last five days have not been had or made at home. They've been cafeteria and/or restaurant food. One of the first things I noticed was that there is a heck of a lot more salt in everything I was eating than there is when I cook, since I only use sea salt and very little of it, at that. But also, I wasn't feeling satiated, my schedule was totally thrown off and I wasn't strict about packing healthy snacks with me. So, by the time I'd eat, I would totally pig out.
But look, we can't control everything in our environment all of the time. We can only do the best we can do. And besides, I'm nothing if not determined.
When I came home on Tuesday evening, I ripped open the box that had arrived: TurboFire! I eagerly popped in the Get Started DVD and read through the nutrition guide and all of the materials and booklets provided. I was so amped, I decided to try my first workout - Fire 30 Cardio.
Within fifteen minutes, I was literally a dripping puddle of sweat. I also couldn't move another muscle one more inch. I fell to the floor in defeat and listened to Chalene Johnson gingerly provide direction to the fit folks on the DVD who were still kicking and punching and twisting and jumping.
In the last few days, I have described this workout like this: Take a hot, peppy blonde, put her in the blender and turn it on high. This takes a lot of coordination and grit. Stuff, that I thought I had. Stuff, that I know I have deep in the recesses of my soul. I can do this. I just can't do all of this right now, off the cuff like this.
Imagine taking a couch potato and putting them in a kickboxing tournament. They wouldn't stand a chance.
So, I took a step back, stopped beating myself up and decided to try the EZ workout the next day. I didn't fare much better. But here's what I know, logically and based on prior experience: If I can do 15 minutes today, that's better than no minutes. If I do 15 minutes today, I may be able to do 17 tomorrow, and 20 the next and the full 30 within a week, if I just stick with it.
Here are some of the things I really liked about the workouts so far:
- They are intense! I don't feel like I could do them half-assed if I tried.
- Chalene, for all of her blondeness and perkiness, is actually incredibly motivating. Not in an annoying I-Can't-Keep-Up-So-Thus-I-Hate-You kinda way, but that unlike Jillian Michaels, she's not berating you and telling how she's got people fatter than you not doing the modifiers. She encourages you to do as much as you can, as hard and fast as you can, but if you can't, it's totally okay. You just do a little more after you've recovered slightly.
- They work the entire body! When I had a personal trainer back in 2007, we did a lot of circuit training and plyometrics. It's the only way my body actually changed in a dramatic fashion in far less time than I'd been working on the elliptical and seeing no results. This workout takes all of those things and combines them with a fast pace and high energy music so that you're getting the full effect of an intense workout in far less time.
- If you need them, there are modifiers. And there's no shame in using them. You will still get a great workout. I tore my ACL and meniscus a few years ago and it required surgery. I now have osteoarthritis in that knee. I simply cannot do some of the moves, nor could I if I weighed 100 pounds less. But I don't get any less of a workout by not jumping as high or landing as hard.
I want to try those workouts really bad. I have a close friend who is a Beachbody coach and she posts about them all the time.
ReplyDeleteRemember, the scales will fluctuate when you start building muscle. I started strength training and freaked OUT when I suddenly seemed to bloat way up. Then I read that when you suddenly start strength training that your body will retain water a lot more for the first bit while it tries to re-adjust.
Thanks for the comment.
ReplyDeleteI've read that women gain muscle a lot slower than men, so I'm pretty sure that for at least this week, the gain was probably due to overeating. If that pattern continues for a few weeks where I've been diligent about both the workouts and eating well, then I'll start to look at the measurements - oh yea, I've got an arsenal of tools! - and we'll see what's really going on.
The workouts are GREAT! I am really enjoying them. Have you done any of her others - like TurboJam?
BTW, your blog is friggin' AWESOME!
ReplyDelete