Category: Everything Else

  • Shows to Stream During Workouts plus Fitness Tips for the Perpetually Busy

    Shows to Stream During Workouts plus Fitness Tips for the Perpetually Busy

    photo (64)

    The secret of getting ahead is getting started.
    -Mark Twain

     

    Disclosure: I’m a member of the Netflix Stream Team, and they’ve equipped our family with a streaming account to drive discussion.

    I hate running. And the elliptical machine. And the stationary bike. Did I mention I hate running?

    I like CrossFit, and a large part of that is because each workout is new and interesting and challenging, with a lot of different exercises done for a short amount of time. I can do anything for 90 seconds. I can do most things for 5 minutes if I know I’m going to get a 60 second break.

    But the crazy WEATHER we’ve been having lately means I can’t always get all the way into town to hit CrossFit Riverfront and I’ve learned that too many days off make returning awful. So, treadmill and elliptical and bike it is. (And the 1,000 Burpee Challenge. You’re in, right?)

    The only thing that breaks up that monotony for me is something to watch on the TV to help make the time fly by. THANK GOD FOR NETFLIX. I’d be lost without it.

    I love this “Exercise TV Playlist” with a breakdown of calories burned exercising while streaming your favorite shows.

     

    64902-Netflix-ExercisePlaylist-original crop

     

    Getting lost in a good show means you tend to perceive your workout as less taxing, so you’re willing to work a little harder and a little longer— maximizing the benefit of the workout and the odds you’ll keep with it over time. Pretty cool, yeah?

    For me at the moment, it’s generally Sherlock and Sherlock and more Sherlock, with sides of Doctor Who, Orange is the New Black and the occasional X-Files; I’ve finally finished Breaking Bad. (Let me know in the comments what I should queue up next, I’m about due.)

    The most common complaint I hear about starting a new fitness regimen is that there is no time, no time, and I hear you. I had to set my workout times in stone and adjust my life around them; otherwise I don’t think I ever would have had “enough time” to spare. There’s never “enough” time: always work to be done, dishes to wash, errands to run. You have to MAKE the time.

    Here’s some more tips for those of us perpetually on a (NON-fitness) hamster wheel from celebrity fitness expert Harley Pasternak, who works with famous busy parents like Jennifer Hudson and Megan Fox:

     

    64902-IMG-0030-original

     

    Harley Pasternak’s Fitness Tips for Busy Parents

    1. Resist: Even the busiest mom or dad can carve out at least 5 minutes to do some resistance “sculpting” exercise. Pick one exercise a day (i.e. lunge, squats, superman) and do 3-4 sets of 20 reps. Over time, add some weight and increase the sets.

    2. Walk: You shouldn’t stop moving from the moment you wake up to the moment you go to bed. Use an activity monitor like a Fitbit to make sure you walk at least 10,000 steps a day. Make your phone calls as you walk around the block, park your car a little further away, take the stairs, and walk to your favorite cafe in the morning (instead of brewing your own).

    3. Blend: Soups and smoothies are the perfect “on the go” meals that take only seconds to prepare. They’re a great way to get all your veggies, fruits, healthy fats and lean protein in one meal.

    4. Be Entertained… But Not on the Couch: I tell all my busy parents to make sure they’re moving while watching their favorite show. Whether it be “Breaking Bad” or “House of Cards,” stream your show to your phone or tablet with Netflix and you may end up working out longer and harder!

    5. Sleep: One of the most common complaints I get from parents is they are exhausted! It’s so important to get at least 7 hours of sleep a night. Parents— make sure there is no light at all in your bedroom. That means no cell phones flickering, televisions blaring or alarm clocks flashing. Studies show even the smallest amount of light can disturb your sleep patterns. Other sleep tips include avoiding caffeine after noon, wearing an eye mask and avoiding surfing the web before you fall asleep.

    I wrote up some more tips for my friend Annie’s blog Mama Dweeb a while back, you can see those here.

     

    Your turn. Best tips for fitting in fitness?

    And don’t forget your streaming recommendations, you hear?

     

     

  • A Very Moving Argument Against Plastic

     

    MIDWAY a Message from the Gyre : a short film by Chris Jordan from Midway on Vimeo.


     

    Water and air, the two essential fluids on which all life depends, have become global garbage cans.

    ― Jacques-Yves Cousteau

     

    I got into an argument with someone once about those stupid single-serving Keurig machines. I was against the idea of all those plastic cups being thrown away, cup after cup after cup. She argued that those small bits of plastic weren’t as bad as wasting water brewing a full pot (you don’t actually HAVE to brew a full pot each time, but that’s beyond the point).

    I still think I’m right. Small bits of plastic are just as bad as big bits of plastic. They all, in time, degrade into itty bitty pieces of plastic that don’t go away, they just absorb pollutants and become incorporated into our water and our land.

    But small pieces of plastic also fall by the wayside, unnoticed. Until they’re picked up and eaten.

    Remember how we used to worry about plastic six-pack rings getting caught around wild animals’ beaks or throats? It gets oh so much worse than that.

    What happens when a bird mistakes a small bit of plastic for something tasty? What if they’ve eaten something tasty that has in its time eaten its own plastic pieces? They swallow it and it just sits there, in their small stomach, undigested. It’s joined by more. Until eventually, their stomach doesn’t have enough room to hold the food they need to eat to survive.

    This is something I knew, having seen some photographs that seared the information into my memory. The photographer, Chris Jordan, is working on the film MIDWAY, slated to premiere in 2014. I hope you’ll remember and take time to see it and spread the word about it.

    The MIDWAY media project is a powerful visual journey into the heart of an astonishingly symbolic environmental tragedy. On one of the remotest islands on our planet, tens of thousands of baby albatrosses lie dead on the ground, their bodies filled with plastic from the Pacific Garbage Patch. Returning to the island over several years, our team is witnessing the cycles of life and death of these birds as a multi-layered metaphor for our times.

    Our trash. Traveling the ocean to kill off birds on a remote island. It never goes away.

    Reduce, reduce, reduce. Recycle, recycle, recycle.

    3 minutes. Please do me a favor and watch it.

     

     

  • Puppy Photobomb and Fitness Perception

    Puppy Photobomb and Fitness Perception

    Shamrock Compression Socks

    For me, the camera is a sketch book,
    an instrument of intuition and spontaneity.

    ― Henri Cartier-Bresson

     

    I was planning to run the ShamRock & Roll 5k in Newark yesterday, but it didn’t happen. Jeff apparently nudged me awake at 8:30 but I don’t remember that at all; he tried again at 9:20. I cursed a blue streak, got up, got dressed, brushed my teeth, started to shove some toast down, and then faced facts: there was no way on earth I was going to get to Main Street (a 20min drive if zero traffic), find parking (presumably the entire surrounding area would be blocked off), register, and be at the start line in time.

    I was bummed. I knew it wouldn’t be my best effort ever, since I’ve only recently started running again regularly and I was still feeling my Thursday kickboxing class/3mile treadmill double workout, but I wanted that objective time as a baseline. So instead, Jeff came with me for a leisurely 5mile walk/run.

    I realize this all speaks more closely to my poor sleep habits than anything else, but that’s a post for another day.

    Anyway, I didn’t want my shamrock ProCompression socks to miss their moment in the sunshine, so I wore them with a sweater dress and boots while out with Jake shopping for pants (the mall with a teenager? NOT my favorite pastime). I got a bunch of compliments on them, and they made my legs feel way better. Compression socks and furry boots are where it’s at.

    By the by, Pro Compression Marathon socks & sleeves are 40% off with free shipping with code MARCH. AND when you buy you’re entered into their current sweepstakes. Prizes: Marathon Socks (2 pair), Marathon Calf Sleeves (2 pair), iPod Nano (1 item), iPad Mini (1 item, 16G Wi-Fi model). Looks like it runs until midnight 3/20, so hop on that! I think I’m going to buy a pair of sleeves so my feet can breathe once warmer weather comes, but I’m still on the fence about what color. I think I’ve narrowed it down to black or purple. But then the pink argyle socks keep calling my name…

    I asked Cass to take a photo and Karma totally photobombed me, sneaking a kiss in for attention. What a diva.

    Other stuff from this weekend:

    • The pump blew on our HE washer, but Jeff fixed it. PSA: if your HE washer is making new and interesting sounds, it’s probably about to break and will require a part costing $87 or so. Seems like a good deal if it’s the first time and you paid a pretty penny for your washer… gets a little more murky if the washer keeps dying on you and you paid a fraction of retail at the scratch-and-dent store.
    • Jake and I tried Goodwill & Salvation Army before the mall. They had nothing good by either of our standards. Are people donating less or was it picked over? Has the Thrift Shop song caused a surge in secondhand shopping?
    • I freaking love the Thrift Shop song. As I noted on FB, I really feel no song lyric really SPEAKS to me like “I wear your grandad’s  clothes. I look incredible.”
    • If you watch Doctor Who: we watched the episode about “the flesh” tonight and it’s killing me to walk away, but I try to limit watching to the weekends. Otherwise I would have gone through every episode available on Netflix in a week.
    • While Jeff and I were at the park, he went back to the car during my last lap. I was asked by a group of people playing flag football if I wanted to join their game (this was after I overheard a hissed “here she comes!”)— they were short a person and there was only one girl playing, so it would be even. I declined- I was already on my way back to the car- but it was like grade school all over again. I wasn’t sure if they were serious or making fun of me, and it didn’t really matter anyway, since I couldn’t stay and hang out. I know I’m not a hardcore runner and I’m not fast by any means, but it was the first time in a while that I was really shaken by the idea that my level of athleticism is probably laughable to other people. Along with my hot pink compression socks and brand-spanking new kicks. (And then I shook it off because, well, what difference does it make? No point in dwelling on it.)
    • Today is a palindrome. 3.17.13. So is tomorrow, and Tuesday. If you’re going to do something awesome, now is a good time.
    • Wednesday is the first day of spring. Tomorrow, we get snow and icy rain and a predicted messy PM commute. Somewhere, a groundhog is laughing.

     

    Ever become aware of strangers watching you run?

    Shopped secondhand lately? Have you noticed the quality of the selection going down the tubes?