Item 12.2 was the establishment of my new fitness / health baseline. Some of the photos may be gag-inducing, but well, not much I can do about that. No photos, no accountability. And another post: Changing my body – Baseline 21-001.
Item 12.3 is back to my website. I have five questions outstanding after the recent changes, and most of the responses from tech support have been lacklustre responses. So, while I’m trying not to get stressed, I do want them answered in order. So I’ve been chasing them one at a time, and making sure I get the full answer before moving on.
September 11 is the start of my new attempt at body transformation. My intent is to do all my measurements and photos on the first of each month, and so I’m a bit behind in a sense, but I need to set my baseline now. I have to start somewhere and there’s no real reason to delay until October 1st. So here it goes…
Physical baseline
Weight: 343.4 lbs … My highest top out was 350 even and that will be my overall mark from which I’ll do my formal deductions in the macro sense, so in a sense, I start already down 6.6 lbs, 158.4 lbs to go (4% of my goal). Yay me, hehehe
BMI: 47.9 (Obese Class III) [+4.8 since 2018]
Body fat: 53.5% [new baseline]
Neck: 20.25″ [+1.25 since 2018]
Bust / chest: 53.5″ [+.5 since 2018]
Lower-chest: 52.5″ [+1.5 since 2018]
Waist: 56.5″ [+1.5 since 2018]
Lower-waist / belly-button: 56.5″ [+2.5 since 2018]
Hips: 50.0″ [+2 since 2018]
Buttocks: 52.5″ [new baseline]
Right bicep (soft): 17.5″ [+.5 since 2018]
Right bicep (flexed): 18.5″ [new baseline]
Right forearm: 11.5″ [-1.5″ since 2018]
Left bicep (soft): 18″ [+1.5 since 2018]
Left bicep (flexed): 18.5″ [new baseline]
Left forearm: 11.5″ [-1.5 since 2018]
Right thigh: 28″ [+2 since 2018]
Right knee: 18.5″ [-1.5 since 2018]
Right calf: 20″ [+.5 since 2018]
Left thigh: 28″ [no change since 2018]
Left knee: 19″ [-2 since 2018]
Left calf: 20″ [no change since 2018]
Well-being baseline
Medical / sense of physical health: 3 / 10 [new baseline]
Social flexibility (willingness to do sports/exercise): 3 / 10 [new baseline]
Lifestyle (confidence for social outings despite obesity): 1 / 10 [new baseline]
Finances (related to obesity): 2 / 10 [new baseline]
Mental health (regarding health): 1 / 10 [new baseline]
Milestone tracking
COMMITMENT (Psychological)
Commit to the journey
Announce goal
Set up Seinfeld progress for plan
First workout for BowFlex
Setup bicycle machine
First week of 3 workouts
Average of 3 workouts per week in a month
Average of 4 workouts per week in a month
Average of 5 workouts per week in a month
Average of 6 workouts per week in a month
MEASUREMENT (Physical)
Set up tracking of weight and BMI
Set up photos
First weigh-in
First new pound
10% of goal
25% of goal
33% of goal
40% of goal
50% of goal
66% of goal
75% of goal
80% of goal
90% of goal
100% of goal
First set of measurements
First photos
PLATEAUS
Change of 1″ in waist
Change of 5″ in waist
Change of 10″ in waist
Change of 15″ in waist
Change of 20″ in waist
DIFFERENCES
See my toes past my belly
Tying shoes without effort
Kneeling without pain
See my abs / muscle definition
See difference in photos
See difference in clothing (275 / 240 / 205 / 185)
Fit into ~30″ pants
Hugs from Andrea and Jacob
Elimination of sleep machine
Elimination of compression socks
Elimination of medicines (4)
MONTHLY FITNESS TEST
Fatigue limit for all 26 exercises
Pushups
Expand fitness test
Photos
There’s no accountability without photos, however much I hate doing it.
And that’s a wrap. My new baselines are set. See you on October 1.
So this morning I decided to work through all the exercises for the first time and decide which ones I can do and at what power for now. A “starting” point, if you will.
Initial stretching. I don’t have a good stretching routine set up yet, so I’ll have to add that to my list. I did the basics:
Achilles Tendon and Calf –> Hands on wall, one foot back and lean in;
Qaudriceps –> Pull one ankle up behind your butt while standing;
Hamstrings –> Leg up on third step (almost horizontal) and lean towards feet;
Rotation –> Grasp alternate wrist, and rotate trunk to side;
Shoulders / lats –> Put hand up by opposite ear, and pull in on the elbow with the free hand;
Neck –> Seated, with one hand under seat and lean head opposite direction;
I have a workout mat for later in my efforts to be able to do some basic yoga, and I’ll eventually incorporate Tai Chi stuff too but I’m a long way from there. Heck, I’m going to have to add a milestone that even my stretching routine isn’t taxing for me. Sigh.
On to the chest exercises!
Chest #1 — Bench Press…The first one in the book is the ever-popular Bench Press. It is designed to work the Pectoralis Major, Deltoids and Triceps. It is a seated exercise, as you can see from the diagram below that comes from the owner’s manual for the BowFlex PR3000.
It’s a good exercise, and I’ll keep it in my repertoire probably for just about every routine. There are two more in the book that change the angle of attack for the “decline” (downward) and “incline” (upward).
When I started planning, I thought the main question was going to be simply spreading the “load” so that I knew which areas I was targeting (chest, arms, etc.). However, while the gym is designed in a way that prevents having to do multiple “pulley adjustments” throughout the routine, it quickly became clear that those aren’t the only variables.
For example, it is easier to start with only “seated” exercises. It reduces the risk of injury in the early stages, in particular as it makes for very controlled movements. There are 10 of those to choose from in the list.
However, I had more or less expected that the exercises would generally all use similar grips and pulleys in a run. Obviously, they don’t. For the first three above, they all use what is called the “centre bar” i.e., the pulleys attached to the centre bar that runs horizontally across the gym. Which means switching from one exercise to another that uses the same bar is pretty simple — you’re already holding the grips! If you switch to the top bar for the next exercise, then you have to reach around to find it.
Not a big deal for the top bar option or the centre bar option, they’re not too far away. But switching to the squat/lower bar is a bit more work to adjust. For simplicity, it would probably be easiest if I do all top bar exercises first, then centre bar, and then squat bar ones. If I was doing the full 26 in a run, there would be 5 top bar, 10 centre bar and 11 squat.
If I tried to combine them in some semblance of order, it would mean 10 seated exercises to start, 2 with the top bar (narrow pulldown and reverse grip pulldown), 7 with the centre bar (bench press, decline bench press, incline bench press, seated shoulder press, triceps extension, and abdominal crunch), and 2 with the squat bar (biceps curl and leg extensions). The last one requires installing a separate attachment, but as the last exercise in a routine, that shouldn’t be too much of an imposition.
How did I do?
I ran through 16 exercises, 1 set of 10 reps, mostly with everything set at 60 lbs (30 per side). Plus some additional stuff at the end along with some other testing. Call it 9600 lbs for the main workout and another 3000 lbs, or 12600 lbs in total.
But I made four errors in the workout.
Form…I will still need a lot of work on that over time. Some of the exercises seemed easy from the diagrams, but even if I start with the easiest of all (bench press), the tips are not as easy to do all at the same time:
90 degree angle between upper arms and torso;
Tighten chest muscles;
Limit and control range of motion;
Head back;
Keep elbows in front of shoulders;
Pinch shoulder blades;
Maintain spinal alignment.
Oh, and just for fun, you’re supposed to do them all slow — three seconds out, three seconds in. I know from earlier training, as well as numerous articles, that all of this comes together over time. Some recommend picking one and “nailing” it for muscle memory in the first few weeks, and as you get more comfortable, work on the other parts of your form. But as long as you are not going for much larger weights, i.e., keeping the entry-level down, you avoid risk of serious injury while letting you work on flow and motion at controllable weights.
Hydration…I’m an idiot. I honestly didn’t even think about it while I was working out. Obviously, I need to, but it’s been so long, and I was so focused on the machinations of the new tool, I didn’t really think of it as a normal “workout”. Easily rectified, just silly.
Constant weight setting…This is more of a choice than an error. In theory, of course, each of the exercises will be at a different weight / resistance setting so that you can tailor every exercise to your specific muscle group. It’s not rocket science, you are going to be able to do less weight on trunk rotations than on leg extensions. I set it low (30 lbs a side) and that was fine for the whole exercise except trunk rotations. I fatigued a lot faster on that one, and in fairness to the book, it did tell me to reduce for that one, and I chose to ignore it in favour of a smaller number of reps and ease of process. Long-term, I’ll be able to adjust all of them, and be more willing to as well.
One challenge that I mentioned earlier for me is the need to adjust settings, including pulleys and grips, and this gym was chosen in part because that is addressed through the design to limit the number of changes required. Four areas of change are still built-in though … switching from top bar to centre bar to the squat bar (and I’ve ordered extra grips so I don’t actually have to MOVE the grips too), seated vs. standing exercises where it recommends you remove the seat but I feel I can do most of them without doing that, attaching the leg extension (no option to avoid that), and the big one, changing weight settings. Whichever one is the most annoying is the one you “sort” your routine around to limit the changes required as you go.
Cooldown…I was taking notes, writing things up, trying to almost pre-blog as I went, and in all of that, I didn’t think about what the cooldown would look like. If you don’t do it, your muscles cramp up and you’re even sorer the next day. I didn’t really think about it in advance, kind of like the hydration thing, so I was about 20m post-workout and was like, “Oh, wait, I missed something, why am I feeling THAT there? Oh right, cool-down.” I did some basic stretching, and went for a walk around the block with Jacob, but I need a better cooldown routine.
But I did my first workout. Now I have a day off to recover. 🙂
Item 11.1 was getting better organized for tracking my workouts and measurements. I did most of the hard work earlier this week to figure out what I was going to measure, but I went through a bunch of apps this morning on my phone to figure out how I’m going to record the data. I want something that is easy to copy or share, and I don’t want to be continually grabbing a pen and a clipboard. So I’m going with apps on my phone. I have a decent one I like for tracking my weight which I will do several times a week probably, I’ve done that in the past, and a minimum of at least once a week. I like having a specific type of app for that, relatively uncluttered with all the other health stuff. For my measurements, as I outlined yesterday, I’m going to do those measurements on a monthly basis and I have two apps that I’ve set up for this. One is quite tight and efficient but lets me also do photos; the other is more versatile/robust but not sure I need that extra power. I’ll use them both for a while. And then I have one that I will use for tracking my actual workouts, and I went through and input up to 26 different exercises that are designed for the BowFlex.
Item 11.2 was an expansion on the workout stuff. I could have kept it in the previous one, an element of the app stuff, but this was bigger than that. I did my first set of measurements for weighing in, measuring physical size of various parts of my body, and taking photos. I’ll do a monthly checkin, as I said above, but this was “month 0” so to speak to get me started. After this, I’m planning on doing them at the start of each month.
Item 11.3 was a simple small treat for myself. I love serialized storytelling and season 6 of Lucifer just dropped on NetFlix. I’m going to limit myself to a couple of episodes at a time, mainly as it is the final season. I don’t want to binge and be done, but take a bit more time to savour the flavour.
Quick run-down for today so I can go to bed. I stayed up WAY too late last night reading.
Item 10.1 was getting organized for my workouts and tracking. I don’t know which exercises I’m doing yet (I have a set of 26 possible ones), I don’t know which ones I will like or sets/reps/weight. I haven’t even done my initial weigh-in and measurements yet. That’s all scheduled for tomorrow. But I organized my thinking at least, updating from 2018’s initial planning.
Item 10.2 was an evening about astronomy. I have been skipping the RASC meetings of late, just not interested enough in the topics, and they’re available for later viewing on YouTube if I want to watch. But this month’s topic was different — I’m the one who suggested the speaker! There’s a member in Toronto who has done some amazing astrophotography while travelling to Australia, including of objects we never get to see in the North. It was a great presentation, well-presented and well-organized. Very enjoyable.
Item 10.3 was a small restaurant treat for ourselves. Andrea had a Toastmasters meeting, I had RASC, the schedules weren’t meshing very well, so we decided we’d do take-out tonight. It ended up that we had a bit more time than we expected, so instead of doing something super fast, we opted for Lone Star fajitas, which all three of us enjoy. I don’t know WHAT they did to the steak tonight, but it was amongst the best that I’ve ever had, and that’s saying something considering how much I love their offerings. And we realized it’s probably been almost 3m since we last partook. A nice little treat for us tonight.