Sunday, November 9, 2014

Tony Horton on Recovery Week between rounds of P90X

"The aim of a recovery week is to heal muscular microtrauma and get your body ready for more intense exercise. The more intense the program you’ve completed, the more intense your recovery week can be. This is an example of a recovery week for P90X only. You should take a recovery week, or two or three, at the completion of every exercise program cycle.

Monday: 30 minutes of easy aerobic work followed by X Stretch
Tuesday: Yoga X
Wednesday: Cardio X
Thursday: Core Synergistics
Friday: 30 minutes of easy aerobic work followed by X Stretch
Saturday: Yoga X
Sunday: Off"

INSANITY - COMPLETE!!!

I am a week late in posting this, but I finished the Insanity workout! I am very happy with myself, this was a tough challenge and I did it!
My weight didn't drop a whole lot, but my fitness has really improved and I am down a belt loop and a shirt size since September 1. More importantly, I feel better about myself and that has translated to more success in other areas of my life such as my personal relationships and my demeanor at work.
My Fit Test results are almost shocking, because of my gains as well as the fact that I beat the athletes in the video in a number of the exercise! Here are my results:
Fit Test 1 (Day 1) Fit Test 5 (Day 63)
Switch kicks 54 Switch kicks 128 Increase of 137% (video 110 reps)
Power jacks 43 Power jacks 61 Increase of 42% (video 65 reps)
Power knees 85 Power knees Increase of 47% (video 125 reps)
Power jumps 30 Power jumps 68 Increase of 127% (video 50 reps)
Globe jumps 8 Globe jumps 11 Increase of 38% (video 11 reps)
Suicide jumps 9 Suicide jumps 17 Increase of 89% (video 25 reps)
Push-up jacks 14 Push-up jacks 23 Increase of 64% (video 42 reps)
Low Plank Oblique 40 Low Plank Oblique 64 Increase of 60% (video 70 reps)

I took this week off to let my muscles and joints really recover. I found that the last week or two were tough for recovering from the previous day's workout, so I have to remember that I am not a professional athlete and I am not in my 20's anymore.

Lessons that I have learned from doing these extreme video exercises:
1. Follow the form that they show in the video - this will lessen the chance of injury. I found a few times I hurt myself because I was not following the correct form, either because of fatigue or simply not doing it correctly.
2. Listen to your body - I have also injured myself by pushing past my body's limits to try and match what the young people in the video are doing, mostly in terms of pace. I have to do MY best, not THEIR best.
3. Modify, modify, modify - If you have limitations due to past injuries (for example), modify the exercise to fit what you are able to do. It is better to do some form of the exercise than not do it at all.
4. Abs are made in the kitchen, not the gym - This is a lesson that I know in my brain, but my heart and stomach don't always listen! This is the hardest part of my challenge with weight loss: I love food and I need to remember that every little decision on what I eat or drink adds up over time, even though they seem insignificant in the moment. Making smart choices throughout the day will add up to better results in the end, just as poor decisions or procrastination ("I'll eat better tomorrow") lead to poor results.

I look forward to continuing Insanity this week coming; as the title of this blog says, I am on my journey back to fitness and this leg of the trip was a success!