Sunday, a time for light reflection and spending time with your PC. I mean, family. But when your son would like to kick you to the curb in favour of Minecraft servers, well, you roll with it for the day.
Item 19.1 was a bit more tweaking of my website. There are two things that annoy me a little with my setup and plugins. The first is really small…when I post a new article/post, my site sends an email copy out immediately as a newsletter to subscribers. For this site, there are only a couple of people; for PolyWogg, it barely cracks double digits. Most people get their fix either through FB or Twitter or other feeds. But the option is there. Except, because of the way the software works, if I use too many special “blocks” in the article, the formatting may or may not go a bit wonky for the person receiving the newsletter. Since I can’t control how the plugin reacts to non-standard formatting, there’s a simple solution to that problem — don’t send the whole post. In fact, that is also a best practice — just forward the excerpt, thus encouraging them to click to the site to read the article rather than just in email. Click-through conversions, yay me (no, I don’t really care about that, not as relevant if I’m not monetizing the site). Anyway, that’s all well and good, but I used to send the post to myself so I would have an email backup of the post. Now that it’s only the excerpt, it’s not quite the same. Until it occurred to me, why not just create a second newsletter that ONLY goes to a smaller distribution list (population: ME!), and which sends the whole post? Sweet. So I set it up on this blog and completely forgot to do it for PolyWogg too. Oops.
The other bugaboo is sharing automatically to FaceBook. If I copy and paste the link to FB, the pasting will take my image settings for either the featured image or the first large image. The SEO for it is a bit finicky, and sometimes doesn’t seem to hold for every featured image. I bypassed the problem with a plugin that auto-posts for me, but it wasn’t sharing the image. I read their online setup, the PRO version DOES force it to share a specific image source, so I upgraded. Easy peasy lemon squeezy, installed, posted, annnnnnnnd, same deal. It was NOT sharing the right image on FB. Don’t get me wrong, it was sharing an image from the post, just not the right one by default. Dang it. I was about to open a ticket, after all I just paid a decent sum for a lifetime membership, and it wasn’t working. But as I worked through the help files, I discovered that it was NOT a problem with the plugin NOR my site. It’s a setting in FB. In essence, I need to verify my website with FB. In the past, you had to create your own FB mini-app to link the two, and getting those set up if you weren’t a paying business was a pain in the patootie. If you were Joe Schmo, personal user, the company wasn’t even TAKING applications for a really long time. I blew through 3 other plugins trying to crack that nut, looking for ANY solution to sharing properly. Nada. But I found info on how to do it on the site for the new plugin, and it looked like it was active again. Actually, it’s a different way to do things, but I followed the examples, and dang if it didn’t work. I tested two posts, first one didn’t work, second one did. So I ran a test later with a real post from PolyWogg and it worked PERFECTLY. Woohoo! They’re small tweaks, but I’m really happy with them.
Item 19.2 was about TV watching for the fall. I treat premieres almost like fantasy football, picking winners and predicting losers. I managed to work my way through the plans for 47 new shows from Entertainment Weekly’s coverage, and while it isn’t everything, it’s a start. I even blogged about it. https://polywogg.ca/early-thoughts-on-the-2021-2022-tv-premieres/
Item 19.3 was about helping Jacob with his Minecraft setup. He plays Minecraft with a bunch of his friends online, and they are sometimes a bit clique-y for who can play or not. Most of the time they let Jacob in because he’s nice and doesn’t cause anyone any problems, but other times they’re fighting lags on the free servers of two of the other kids playing. And it was frustrating them to no end. So they were all trying to figure out a way to download it and run it from their own computers, hoping that would solve the lag problem (it generally wouldn’t, but they didn’t know that). Anyway, mostly the problem was the low quality of free public servers, so I checked the price to run your own personal server for Minecraft. About $5 a month. Jacob and his friends found a server they liked, it was popular and had good settings, and I set it up for him late this afternoon. They all logged in, there was no lag, everyone’s happy for now. I admit I have a bit of a Machiavellian side to my decision too…if he’s the one running the server, it’s not like they can kick him out if they’re trying to manage numbers. A small cost for his major hobby.
Saturday dawned seemingly early this morning. I was hoping to sleep in longer, but alas, that was not to be.
Item 18.1 was a bit about tweaking my website graphics. I was doing a posting about something, tweaked my sidebar, and realized that one of the images was not showing quite right. I checked in another place, and it too showed it slightly cropped. Odd. I had fixed ALL of that about 18-20 months ago. I resized ALL of the images to a specific size, they should be all showing perfectly. Weird. So I checked it out in WordPress. I thought it was 150×150 px to match the default thumbnail size for theme layouts. Nope, it was 150×164. Umm, that’s not right. I rescaled it down at the same ratio to 136×150. Still showing cropped. Dang it. I played with WP settings for awhile, asked a Q on my favourite help site, and then decided to do it “properly”. I pulled up 37 images that were just slightly off-size, a side effect of exporting from PowerPoint apparently that I didn’t catch previously. Anyway, I opened them all in GIMP, resized so the largest size (w or h) was 150, and then resized the canvas behind it to 150×150, leaving any extra area as transparent, recentred them horizontally and top align vertically, exported them, uploaded them to replace the existing images, and voila. Problem solved. A bit annoying, but not problematic. While I was already in the site, I took the time to tweak a newsletter setup that was bothering me too. Oh, and I tweaked my sidebar layout (look to the right!).
Item 18.2 was about being organized for my workout routine, with handout versions for the stretching and BowFlex routines. Jacob joined me today for a full workout, and we went for a walk afterwards too. I blogged about it earlier. (Changing my body – Stretching, workouts and walking)
Item 18.3 was a bit more research around walking, with a deeper dive than I had hoped on MapMyWalk. My account is kind of futzed at the moment, so I’m hoping Under Armour can reset it for me. But it was a start at least.
So I went a bit overboard today on my planning function for my workouts. For Stretching, I took the 16 low-difficulty exercises, figured out which order to do them in that makes sense, and prepared a simple 4×4 table in Word that shows the pretty pics and names of the exercises. And then I used it today for the first time. It worked perfectly.
I wasn’t surprised I liked the layout, I had pretty much already done the same thing for the Bowflex routine (9 exercises in the 20 minute full body workout).
I used it for the second time today, and it also worked well. I have both sets of exercises on my phone so I can log the activities in my exercise app.
Annnnnnd then I went down a rabbithole for figuring out how far I’m going to start walking. When I went to the MapMyWalk website, I found out that I have apparently used MapMyWalk on three prior occasions.
First, back in 2008, I did some initial routes around my old house. I set up three or four routes, did a couple of them, but mostly I was laying them out as potential routes to see how far they were.
Second, I did a bunch in 2014, and that time I think I was expecting to be a bit more ambitious, as I set up some really long ones.
Finally, in 2016, I did a couple of ones around the neighbourhood that I had walked, and then mapped them afterwards to see how far I had gone. I can’t believe I ever did them, as the thought of doing them now fills me with dread. They are SO much farther than I am capable of right now, by a factor of ten at least.
So, it’s 2021, and I thought I would clean up some of the old routes and plot some new ones. Start small, keep some of the old ones for future inspiration. Ditch the ones where I was just trying to figure out how far it was, such as walking all the way to or from work, as I would never plan to actually do that route. It was just for info.
But I went to my profile settings and nada. It wouldn’t load that part. Umm, okay. So I went to the past routes, there they all are, great. Scroll down to one I don’t want, over to the right is an option for COPY / EDIT / DELETE. So I try deleting it, it asks me if I want to delete it on a pop-up, I say yes, and then it just sits and whirs at me endlessly. It doesn’t delete it and it doesn’t “end”. Eventually, I have to reload the page. I tried clearing caches, resetting passwords, logging out completely, etc. And no dice. The app on my phone shows me the same data, but you can’t actually delete from the phone, just the website, so that doesn’t help. I have a sneaking suspicion that my account is somehow dormant or something, or it’s confused with some old ones I had, but in the end, I had to email Under Armour and hope they’ll reset my account next week. If they want to erase the account and start over, I’m okay with that.
Mostly what I was surprised about was how many times I’ve done the same thing before. Started a new “habit”, set up some routes with the same tool, and then when life intervened, stopped using the app. Ultimately, I have no interest in the app for tracking, as I already KNOW the routes in advance. I have a separate workout logger where I’ll put in the distances for example, and then when I do the route, I just do the route. I don’t need a phone or FitBit to tell me my progress or distance, the pre-programmed route is already “known”.
When MapMyWalk crapped out, I went looking for a replacement app, and I found one (which also uses a website), but it is a lot more basic. If Under Armour can get me going this week, that’s probably the easiest option.
What is different about this round is that I know what I’m planning to do. For each of those previous occasions, it was more like I was trying the app out then actually tying it into my workout plans. This time, I already have some ideas of how I can set progressively longer walking goals too. And some of the old ones reminded me of some possible routes that would be really good to work up to over the next year. So far, my immediate routes are pretty embarrassing for distance. It doesn’t take much for my left hip / lower back to start screaming at me, regardless of the stretching in advance. I could put BioFreeze on it, and go further, but for now, I’ll stick to the short distances.
In the meantime, I at least have stretching and weights figured out; walking routes are pending; and then it will be on to the exercise bike setup!
Hey, look! It’s Friday! Wait, what happened to Thursday? Oh, right, I was too tired to blog again last night. 🙂
Item 16.1 was helping Jacob a little bit. He was feeling a bit overwhelmed for the week and so I gave him a ride to school in the morning. He also needs to plan a bit better coming home. He’s struggling to walk the full distance from the bus stop without his AFOs, which are pending replacement, and he didn’t pull his backpack all the way up and he just left his mask on all the way from the stop to the house. By the time he got to the house, he was practicall overheating. 🙁
Item 16.2 was a bit more research on stretching in anticipation of a post today.
Item 16.3 was going to bed early. Andrea’s away for a few days, so I’m on full parental duty for mornings too. And with no car, it means Jacob HAS to make his bus in the morning as I have no backup option to take him in the car. It’s rare that I’m in bed before 11:00, but I was last night.
Item 17.1 today was just having breakfast with Jacob. Through the week, I usually let Andrea and Jacob have that time and I don’t intrude, which is not as much about altruism as it is about not enjoying a lot of buzzing around first thing in the a.m. before I’m completely awake.
Item 17.3 tonight was an irregular Friday night routine with Jacob — pizza night! We noshed on Pizza Hut pizza that we both enjoy, along with the garlic bread, some pasta for later in the weekend, and mini Cinnabons for dessert.
I have my home gym in place, and I know what I’m doing for the exercises. I chatted with my brother-in-law last night who does a bunch of stuff with weights and works out regularly. He knows way more about this stuff than I do, and I got some good tips for how I set up my routine for the future in terms of weight levels for the BowFlex and number of reps.
But as I look farther forward to my “new” normal for working regularly and changing my body, there are several things still in my “to be determined” category. Two of those are stretching and cardio.
Stretching
I need to do more stretching for two primary reasons. First and foremost, so that I don’t injure myself while working out. The whole “warm-up / cool-down” thing that everyone understands easily.
However, I have a second reason which is just plain flexibility. If I am sitting in a chair, and I want to tie a shoe by crossing my right leg over my left leg, I can’t do it. As I pull my right leg up, I can get my ankle to just below my left knee, but then my right hip starts to object. Sure, I can reach down and PULL it into position, and I do regularly, but it’s not the same as just lifting it. If I do my left leg, I can ALMOST get it up, but then my left hip REALLY hates me. Or my left adductor. Depends on the movement and how fast I try to do it. If I try to lean forward simply, without adjusting my legs outward, my belly gets compressed and one of the muscles or several of the fascia in my upper stomach area says, “Nuh-huh, you ain’t doing that today, bitch.”
Losing weight will help with a lot of the resistance areas, but I need to be doing a comprehensive stretching routine. My view, generally speaking, is that there are three levels:
Structured stretching
Yoga poses
Tai chi
I may be the only one on the planet that thinks of those that way, but I do. Stretching is more technical in my mind…put this arm here, put this leg here, lean this way, good.
Yoga seems to me to be a step above that. It is more about overall body poses and flexibility. It includes stretching, sure, but it also gets you closer to movement and energy flow. I am not ready for serious yoga by any stretch of the imagination (or of my body! hah!), but Andrea has referred me to the Yoga by Adriene series on YouTube which is quite popular and has options for different levels of participant.
And then I see tai chi as a step even further along that spectrum. Less about stretching and flexibility, and more about the movement of your body. I feel like tai chi is something I could get to eventually, but I am SO not ready for it yet. I need to start with my “technical” exercises.
Let’s start with my “best” source, so to speak. If you think back to social media about 5 years ago, June 2016 or so, you may remember that a number of people were sending around some really good illustrations of how to do some exercises. The source was always unclear, and if you search for them online now, you’ll likely end up at various sites whose links no longer work. However, with a bit more luck, you can find them at the place I saw them originally, which is the LifeHack site and the post is still there (https://www.lifehack.org/345771/36-pictures-see-which-muscle-youre-stretching). Ignore the fact that there says there are 36 when there are only 34.
The pictures were realistic simulations of people doing the stretch, but where the muscles were being stretched, it showed almost an anatomical representation. The muscles were lit up in red showing you where IN and ON your body the muscles were that were being targeted. For example, there was one called the “wide forward fold” and the illustration shows a woman doing the splits with her adductors coloured in red.
In the collection, there are 34 possible exercises to do, of varying levels of difficulty (by my rating), with the text explaining how to actually do them.
Exercises
Muscles Targeted
Difficulty
Camel Pose (01)
Rectus Abdominus External Obliques
High
Wide Forward Fold (02)
Adductors
Medium
Frog Pose (03)
Adductors
Low-Medium
Wide Side Lunge Pose (04)
Adductors
High
Butterfly Stretch (05)
Adductors
Low
Forearm Extensor Stretch 1 (06)
Forearm Extensor
Low
Lateral Side Flexion of the Neck (07)
Sternocleidomastoid (SCM)
Low
Neck Rotation Stretch (08)
Sternocleidomastoid (SCM)
Low
Neck Extension Stretch (09)
Sternocleidomastoid (SCM)
Low
Lateral Side Flexion of the Neck with Hand Assistance (10)
Sternocleidomastoid (SCM) Upper Trapezius
Low
Half-kneeling Quad / Hip Flexor Stretch (11)
Psoas Quadraceps
Medium-High
Forearm Extensor Stretch 2 (12)
Forearm Extensor
Low
Lateral Shoulder Stretch (13)
Side Deltoid
Low
Standing Assisted Neck Flexion Stretch (14)
Trapezius
Low
Lat Stretch with Spinal Traction (15)
Latissimus Dorsi
Medium-High
Lat Stretch at the Wall (16)
Latissimus Dorsi
Low-Medium
Child’s Pose (17)
Latissimus Dorsi
Low-Medium
Standing Calf Stretch (18)
Soleus Gastrocnemius
Low
Front Split (19)
Psoas and Hamstring
High
Seated Forward Fold / Seated Toe Touch (20)
Hamstrings Calves
Medium
Single Leg Forward Bend (21)
Hamstrings
Low
Deep Squat (22)
Glutes
High
Seated Half King Pigeon Pose (23)
Glutes
High
Standing Calf Stretch at the Wall (24)
Soleaus Gastrocnemius
Low
Lateral Flexion at the Wall (25)
External Obliques
Low
Supine Twist (26)
Glutes External Obliques
Low
Lateral Flexion with a Dowel (27)
External Obliques Latissimus Dorsi
Medium
Triangle Pose (28)
External Obliques
Medium-High
Chest Stretch at the Wall (29)
Pectorals
Low
Assisted Chest Stretch (30)
Chest Latissimus Dorsi
Medium
Seated Half Pigeon Variation (31)
Anterior Tibialis
High
Supine Shoulder External Rotation Stretch (32)
Subscapularis
Low
Downward Dog Variation at the Wall (33)
Pectorals Latissimus Dorsi
Medium
Assisted Chest Stretch Variation (34)
Pectorals
Medium
Of the 34 exercises, I rated 16 of them as low difficulty. Which is my simple way of saying I can do them now. Maybe not perfectly, but I can do them. Three more are ones that I rated Low-Medium difficulty which are ones that look easy but require a bit more flexibility and a bit less girth than I have now. Six more are ones that I think I could get to in the next year or so, maybe a bit more, but foreseeable at least. The three that I rate Medium-High and six that I rate High are almost pipedreams for me.
On the positive side, this gives me a short-term goal — working up to a daily routine based on the 16 “low difficulty” exercises I flagged above. There are two others that I do now, one being just stretching arms over the head to the left and right (a side arch) and a reverse arch with two hands straight up and back, that I may work in there, although they would replicate similar exercises above. I have one more from my chiropractor and RMT that is more of a bent upright row, but that will get picked up by the weight workout with the BowFlex.
Cardio
As a friend pointed out in regards to a previous post, I have made a good start on physical and mental metrics, and I have the weights and now stretching figured out, but I don’t really have a good idea of what I’m going to do for Cardio.
I guess my plan comes down to three things, although I’m not sure it rises to the level of a “plan” so much as it is simply the options I see.
First and foremost, I need to do more walking. My friend was sharing with me his experience with walking, and I agree with all of his points. Starting small, tracking the steps, getting moving generally to get going. I have a FitBit and I have my phone for things like MapMyWalk. And I’m also interested in those online sites that do “distance” challenges. It’s a bit simplistic of a description, but it’s like you sign up to walk the height of Mount Everest, or the Appalachian Trail, or the Great Wall of China, something big, and then as you knock off a 2000-step day, it adds that to your total so far. Some sites also send you summaries to say, “Hey, great, you went 500 feet. In this 500 feet, you would have seen blah ablah blah, the site where runner James Smith had a massive heart attack and died, and heard birds chirping from the nearby bird sanctuary. Here are some photos!”.
I might be more tempted to “create” my own equivalent list in something like Google Maps rather than pay for a site, but hey, it’s an idea. At least through the other sites you get yourself a little medal or medallion to commemorate your steps (of course, you have to pay for it, but it’s gamification like Boy Scouts collecting badges).
Secondly, we have an exercise bike. Or at least we have the body of one, it still needs tweaking to be fully re-assembled and functional. Like with walking, I want to do distance things to track progress, although there are other settings too that track heart rates, intensity, etc. I doubt I’ll measure that, but they’re there.
Third, I have a scooter. It is an adult scooter designed for full-size woolly mammoths, and can handle me too. I tried using it shortly after I got it and it didn’t take many outings to realize I am just not in good enough shape for anything other than the basics. Way too much cardio for my current level of fitness to do much more than a block or two. So I’ll get there, but likely not before next spring/summer.
I have other dreams, I admit. I’d like to ride my regular bike too, although there are challenges for comfort with so much weight on so small a seat. I really would love to be able to go cross-country skiing when I retire, but again, I’m not there yet. A friend has a Finnish kick-sled, and if I ever get sub-250 lbs, I’d love to maybe give it a try (not sure how low I need to go, but somewhere around there). I really want to do kayaking, but I am neither flexible enough or agile enough for doing that. I doubt I’ll ever have the balance for stand-up paddle boarding, but I can dream I suppose. And since I’m already in technicolor world, I’d like to try Jacob’s trampoline when I get sub-230 lbs or so. A very very long way away for a bunch of those. Oooh, and maybe a rope course sometime. Wait, did I say that last one out loud? Hmm.
Conclusion
So in the short-term, I’m focusing on my BowFlex and weight routines. I’ll use the 16 low-difficulty exercises to get myself going for stretching and hopefully walking + exercise bike for some basic cardio.