Getting Your Desired Body and Keeping It
Last week, I was in Telluride with my buddy, Mark. He asked me a question, very much on point...
Aren't you afraid you'll gain weight?
Why yes, I am terrified!
The context was my current "far less than I used to" training program. Sure, I was scared, and that's why I kept the volume rolling for so many years.
However, like so many fear-based quirks in my life, my fears proved groundless.
Further, creating a lifestyle catered to misplaced fear crowds out a lot of useful work!
Get Off the Wheel of Sugar
AC has been crushing with a series of threads encouraging athletes to improve their stamina and fat burning. The lessons run much, much deeper. Creativity, cognition, and metabolic health - all benefit from working on the low-end of our fitness.
Many of us use training protocol as a way to justify our food choices. With the best intentions, we remove a food group, and end up replacing it with sugar.
OR
Starting to train, we shift our nutrition towards "sports nutrition."
My buddy, Jonas Colting, calls this getting caught in Gel Hell.
Not a win.
Two tips work here:
Aim to eat more veggies than my vegetarian pals.
Stay below my sugar threshold.
#1 requires a bit of effort, but not too much. My main gig is salads and stir-frys.
#2 can be scary - it implies less total duration, less intensity.
Both these changes nudge us towards sustainable choices and, as we age, reduce the risk of ruin from following a Chronic Endurance lifestyle.
Get Strong
Back in the day, folks used to debate the utility of strength training for endurance athletes. Do y'all still do that?
I'm not into debating, I'd rather use something that works.
Strength Training Works.
There is a conscious, and unconscious, attraction to people who move powerfully - moving well, is attractive.
You want to be more attractive, trust me (see below).
Being attractive improves our self-image, which sets up a virtuous circle in our larger lives.
Remove One
Trying to change everything at once leaves me feeling scattered and distracted.
It doesn't work.
Again, here's what works:
One person, one habit, one pattern, one choice...
Each of us has a habit, relationship or pattern that we can eliminate, for gains.
2 beers before bed
A basket of bread with lunch and dinner
Cheese
Bread + cheese = pizza 😉
French fries
Soft drinks
A friend who's a feeder
Don't try to do everything.
Don't think you need to change "forever".
Simply take a break for 30 days and pay attention.
With all this stuff, letting go of my fears seems daunting.
No way, I'll be able to pull that off.
You don't have to.
Try it out for 30 days and pay attention.
Iterate towards better.