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It’s been a while since I really felt ‘right’ about my lifting. For the longest time, I thought that I simply didn’t care as much as I used to, but now I’m sure that I still care. In fact, the problem wasn’t one of caring, but of belief.I didn’t believe that lifting needed to be what it seems to have turned into…I started lifting weights in high school for a number of different reasons, but none of those reasons were competitive sports.I am not an athlete.I can remember when I was first introduced lifting weights for the purpose of bodybuilding, and I can remember how it was portrayed as a ‘thinking persons’ activity – a physical sort of philosophy. The way Arnold and Frank Zane and Lee Haney all talked about weight training, it was more akin to yoga and meditation then it was football or MMA. It was a physical chess match between you and yourself, and it was this approach to weight training that appealed to me.Lately lifting has turned into sport where we compete on youtube by posting videos of our best lifts, or compete in crossfit or powerlifting or even obstacle courses, we race and we challenge based on time or speed or weight… or level of pukey exhaustion.We create haphazard workout programs based on the latest ‘proven’ scientific theories, instead of doing what we WANT to do.The science has taken over, and the art has died.This isn’t a judgment on how you train now, but on how I have trained in the past.Pushing to the point of breaking, always sore, always ‘almost injured’

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Creating Weakness | Brad Pilon's 'Eat Blog Eat'

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I Have Never Felt Healthier in My Life It’s Friday, everyone! And that means another Primal Blueprint Real Life Story from a Mark’s Daily Apple reader. If you have your own success story and would like to share it with me and the Mark’s Daily Apple community please contact me here. I’ll continue to publish these each Friday as long as they keep coming in.

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I Have Never Felt Healthier in My Life

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Get Ripped!For crying out loud, get off the elliptical! If you want to get ripped, then it’s time to intensify your cardio with High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT).HIIT is short in duration (ie. today’s workout is only 15 minutes)- which is great for saving time! It may be short in duration, but it is UBER INTENSE! Meaning BALLS TO THE WALL!

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Home Workout #24: HIIT CARDIO HELL! | Dr. Sara Solomon

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Living Room Workout!This is a 24-minute TOTAL BODY metabolic workout. If you adopt this training style, you will kill 2 flies with one shoe, meaning, you will get the benefits of both cardio and strength training combined into in one short, but intense workout. This is an extremely effective way to get leaner and stronger faster!You can do this workout in your living room. My living room just happens to have a plush carpet. If yours doesn’t, then make sure you place a mat (or folded towel) under yours knees when performing the ab wheel exercise.Always a Must!Don’t risk metabolic damage. I strongly recommend you read my post, “Sara’s Exercise Philosophy“.Work out in the morning. I always train in the morning. If I don’t, my motivation is non-existant after a long workday and I’ll talk myself out of training.

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Home Workout #14 – Total Body HIIT (Living Room Fun) | Dr. Sara …

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We’ve had some great feedback following our last post about HIIT, and one or two interesting queries about it too. HIIT has had some rather controversial coverage in recent months.  A BBC documentary implied that just 3 minutes of HIIT exercise a day is enough to change your life and get you fit and healthy.And then there was the news that Andrew Marr attributed his recent stroke to a high intensity workout on a rowing machine (combined with over-work).“I did the terrible thing of believing what I read in the papers,” Marr joked, “Because the newspapers were saying that what we must all do is take very very intensive exercise in short bursts.”If it looks too good to be true…When I was about 11 years old I received a letter informing me that I had been randomly selected as the lucky recipient of either a new video player, a holiday, or a cash prize of £500.  Of course, it was nothing more than a vacuous time-share scam, but the 11-year-old me was not to know this, and I was naturally excited.  When my dad got home from work he set me straight, and there and then I learned one of life’s most valuable lessons, “if it looks too good to be true, it probably is”This lesson has stood me in good stead.  I’m proud to describe myself as an open-minded cynic.So naturally, the notion that people could simply skip the long miles and get fit doing just a few minutes of HIIT was never going to sit right with meStart at the bottom and work your way up…“Advocates of high-intensity interval training say doing a few short bursts of exercise each week – four 30-second sprints on an exercise bike, for example – is a good way to keep fit.”  (Quote from the BBC article.)There’s a key word in there, and it’s “keep”.  It doesn’t say “get”.Common sense says that if you’re unfit, you start gently.  You progressively work your body harder as it starts to respond to the new exercise regime.  I can’t believe anyone would advocate getting stuck in the high intensity stuff from the start.  It’s an accident waiting to happen.I’m not a medical expert.  I’m not even a fitness expert, I’m just an enthusiastic amateur.  But the notion that you can transform your life and “get” fit with just 3 minutes of HIIT exercise a day is one of those “too good to be true” notions.  At least that’s my take on it.Train smart…As you’ll know from my last blog, I’m a huge advocate of HIIT.  The philosophy behind it seems pretty logical to this cynic, plus it’s worked for me!

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Our take on the High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) controversy …

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A missing aspect in most people’s approach to health and fitness is the idea of a target, an end, or at least a goal that you could call completion.For many, the idea of ‘completion’ of their weight loss and muscle building goals is almost blasphemy.  Most people approach fitness under the concept of CONTINUALLY losing fat and gaining muscle, because they don’t want to think about the idea of an end.Without diving deep into a discussion on genetics and phenotypes, let’s just agree that their is such a thing as an Ideal body for you.Lets also agree that we can all move close to our ideal body, and this ideal is defined by the limits of our own individual bodies.For some reason it’s not ‘right’ or ‘correct’ to talk about an ideal shape or an ideal body, even though we have a large body of evidence that this very thing exists. Instead, we’re supposed to all be happy at any shape or size, of body fat, or muscle mass…and somehow the message of ‘be happy’ has been mutated into “don’t strive to improve, and think poorly of those who suggest that improvement is possible” leading to the inability to fathom the idea there even being a true ideal.But an ideal does exist.  Anthropometric data (body measurements) on professional athletes and body transformation winners, combined with military data all all point to a very specific shape that signifies and ideal, healthy body.  We may not all be able to hit the goal, but we can all get very close to it by using exercise and diet as treatment – In this way, exercise and diet are corrective.Accepting that there is an ideal or a goal body that represents a true ‘finish line’ leads to the philosophy that the farther you are from this ideal, the more severe the treatment needs to be, but the closer you get the less severe the treatment becomes. Very similar to treating being ‘out of shape’ as a form of sickness – you treat the sickness, but once it’s gone you switch to attempting to prevent it from coming back.The point is to move from harder to easier, to the point where you are simply fine tuning the result… putting in the amount of effort needed to maintain, maybe tinkering with the process a bit, but not purposelessly putting in more and more effort in the hopes of achieving a goal that is not measurable or describable.Once you realize there is a point where you are no longer ‘sick or broken’ that you are OK, Fine, even… done, then you can you train less and eat more of what you want. This entire approach can be ruined by the concept of ‘Sick mentality’ which I learned about from some friends who have gone through cancer treatment.With cancer patients one of the most important things is to stay positive through your chemotherapy.

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My Philosophy of Fitness | Brad Pilon's 'Eat Blog Eat'

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This is day 49 of my Transformation Challenge and my day of rest from workouts. Tomorrow I will be back hitting it hard with the first workout of week 8 of the Challenge. I decided to post a Saturday blog.

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Saturday-March 16, 2013-Brad Pilon on Intermittent Fasting …

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In a day an age where science is EVERYTHING, we sometimes forget that philosophy is the ‘thinking of thinking’ and needs to play an important role when we discuss how we should eat. After all, we shouldn’t confuse data collection with wisdom. The more we simply absorb data without truly critically analyzing its meaning, the more we can potentially fall victim to many of the diet and nutrition scams that are so prevalent in today’s world.We have an unbelievable amount of data, and thanks to our  love affair with the ‘sound bytes’ that come from science we have all but abolished philosophy as a discipline, save for the quotes that occasionally appear on a person’s Facebook update status.But philosophy is of critical importance if we are to truly understand how and why we eat.It’s been said that philosophy calls us when we’ve reached the end of our rope. The insistent feeling that something is not right with our lives and the longing to be restored to our better selves will not go away.I’d be willing to guess that ‘end of our rope’ ‘somethings not right’ and ‘restored to our better selves’ would accurately describe how many feel about nutrition and deciding what to eat.We become philosophers to discover what is really true and what is merely the accidental result of flawed reasoning, recklessly acquired erroneous judgments, and the well-intentioned but misguided teachings of experts and gurus.  In this sense, philosophy and the scientific collection of data aren’t really opposites but rather necessary components of the whole ‘picture’.No mater what nutritional beliefs you hold true, you will probably agree when I say that we simply cannot eat everything that is available to us on any given day. food is simply too abundant, too available and too cheap for us to live in a constant state of eating at raw impulse

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My Philosophy of Intermittent Fasting | Brad Pilon's 'Eat Blog Eat'

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Make Me a Hollow Reed –The Benefits of Intermittent FastingReligion must agree with science, so that science shall sustain religion and religion explain science. (Abdu’l-Baha, Divine Philosophy, p. 26)Journalists have called the Baha’i Faith “the reasonable religion” and “a logical, science-friendly belief system,” because the Baha’i teachings focus so strongly on the essential harmony and agreement of scientific fact and spiritual faith. But it’s taken science a while to catch up with the Baha’i Fast.Every year, during the nineteen days before the Vernal Equinox, Baha’is all around the world voluntarily go without food and drink during the daylight hours.

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The Benefits of Intermittent Fasting | BahaiTeachings.org

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