Sunday, February 12, 2017

The journey to Level II


In January 2016 I began work on a long-term goal: meeting the requirements for the Kettlebell Level II Certification as decreed by Agatsu Inc.  In November 2013, I achieved the Kettlebell Level I certification, but this was mostly about showing up, learning techniques, demonstrating ability to perform them, and passing a physical test at the end.  The course took place over two 8-hour days. If you were in reasonable shape, you could pass it. The next level is orders of magnitude beyond level I.

I practice and teach kettlebells regularly, so I am less concerned about the kettlebell component. However the certification is about more than swinging kettlebells. It is about a demonstrating a high level of strength, flexibility, balance and technique.

The requirements are: 10 chest to bar pull ups; 10 pistols each leg (on hold); 3 min bridge; 10 toes to bar (performed on stall bars) ; 10 ring push ups with external rotation; 100 snatches in 5mins (one hand change); 35 double jerks

The reason this is a great goal for me is training for it will build my base. What I have learned is where my weaknesses are.  So I am working on those. If you’re like me, you might think everything is your weakness. But it’s useful to isolate where you are weak relative to the rest of your body, so that you can focus on those areas.  I am repeating what I wrote in last week’s blog about training motivation when I say that if you are training your strengths, you are getting weaker!

For years I trained upper body and hit my legs by riding the bike until I discovered that, despite all the cycling, my legs are actually not very strong! After all, cycling is an aerobic activity. And although you deplete your leg muscles during hard cycling, you don’t necessarily make them stronger. Your cardiovascular and respiratory system get stronger. I also trained conventional free weights but seemed stuck at the same strength. I imagined I was on a “maintenance program”.  When I got bored with that I spent several years varying my training among TRX, kettlebells, bodyweight, free weights, and clubbells. In January of last year, I hired a personal trainer to give my training direction.

You might be surprised that as a personal trainer I also have a personal trainer. Not only do I have a trainer, but my trainers, who are world class athletes as well as world class teachers, also have trainers. I learned this at one of the certifications I took from Agatsu: everyone needs a teacher.

Not only do my sessions with Agatsu help me in my own training, they have in turn helped me to become a better trainer. I am always learning something new from them and pass the knowledge on to my students.

I now train 5 days a week and over the course of those 5 days, I hit all major areas of the body. The weaknesses are quickly revealed, as are the imbalances. The training includes mobility, joint preparation, locomotion, strength building, endurance, conditioning and stretching. If it sounds like a lot of work, it is! But it’s worth it. If I ever wonder if this is time well spent, I remind myself of this quote from Socrates:

“No citizen has a right to be an amateur in the matter of physical training... what a disgrace it is for a [wo]man to grow old without ever seeing the beauty and strength of which h[er] body is capable.”

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Frustration to inspiration


I am getting back in the blogging groove with another installment on getting and staying motivated for training. Not very original perhaps but something we all struggle with to one degree or another.

The double-edged sword that is the Internet opens up the world of amazing abilities humans have for feats of strength, flexibility, agility, grace, and endurance – in short, the incredible range of skills that exist out there. Watching these feats might inspire us to be better ourselves. Or, depending on the level of skill, it is possible to feel frustrated by one’s own comparative lack of skill.

How do we get from frustration to inspiration? By setting goals for yourself and getting to work to achieve those goals. This takes a specific mindset: one must develop persistence.  How do you learn to be persistent? You first need patience. Difficult skills don’t happen overnight. Even the most gifted have to put in hard work to get to where they are. If you are training and putting in consistent effort training the skills you aspire to, then you are on the right course.

When frustration takes you to that fork in the road and you are faced with two choices: to quit, or soldier on, choose the path of greatest resistance.  Because if you quit in frustration, you will be guaranteed not to meet your goals. Sounds obvious but, I guarantee training will get you results eventually. Remember, if it were easy, it wouldn't be worth doing. Your goals might not happen as quickly as you would like but they will happen. Instead, stay inspired, persist in your training and be patient with yourself. This is the road to mastery. It is not a well-trodden path. The road less traveled is worth taking.

If you are feel stuck, search for the reason. What is holding you back? Is it you: not being consistent, not putting in the effort, not showing up? Or is it your method? Your trainer? Your health? Your nutrition? Once identified, the roadblock can then be removed or worked around. It might be time to look for another way – that way could be another trainer, program, method.  Find the right fit for you. Make sure all the elements are in place for you to succeed. And carry on training. The hard work will pay off. Maybe not as soon as you’d like, but it will be all the more rewarding for it when it happens.

And since you will be on this road for a long time, find ways to enjoy the journey. When the going gets rough, keep the end goal foremost in your mind. And find ways to make it fun. If it’s not, why are you doing it? There may be aspects you don’t like, but keep in mind that only by” staying in the suck”, will you improve. This means, working your weaknesses, not your strengths. It’s possible you don’t even know what your weaknesses are. The right training program will expose your weaknesses and develop them to make you stronger.

If you are training your strengths, you're only making yourself weaker. - Sara Clare-Lajeunesse

If the goal is something you really want, the training is something you really need. So if you’re not already training toward a goal, find out what your goal is and get to work.  Both the training and the end-results create a win-win. So keep those inspirational videos coming!