A Monday Double: Spinning and Core Fusion

The hunger monster is in rare form tonight! I want to eat everything in sight but have limited myself to this delicious glass of homemade granola, peanut butter, and yogurt instead since dinner is still in the oven.

IMG_0877 IMG_0876

I hold today’s workout schedule responsible for my hunger level! This morning Bo and I enjoyed another Dave M spin class which was an absolute sweat fest. By the time he blasted a Girl Talk mash up of Ludacris around the 40 minute point I was sweating, sore, and exhausted. Luckily, I was able to find today’s Girl Talk song and have already downloaded them to my computer. They will definitely make their way into my National Half Marathon playlist.

After a long Monday of work, I enjoyed an amazing Core Fusion class at Exhale on Madison.

IMG_0875

It had been ages since I’ve taken a class with Fred. He spent the entire time adjusting students, making everyone feel like they were in a personal class. I felt like his class was more demanding than a few of the other ones I took in December but I loved every minute of it- even when my legs were burning and quivering.

Tonight’s class reinforced the benefits of strength training and cross training. The arm section was much easier today than it was in December, after the marathon. Due to the arm work I’ve been doing the past six weeks, I was able to do the arm portion of the class with 4 pound weights. My c-curl form has also improved greatly since my last class in December. I’m looking forward to working with Fred to develop a cross training, stretching, and restorative plan I can use to balance the running and spinning. I’m very curious to see what he recommends to keep my hip flexors, ITband, and glute muscles in check.

What is the best food to silence your hunger pains when nothing else seems to help?

Share Button
Follow:

Long Run Friday: Training Aches & Pains

In honor of today’s long run with Theodora, I wanted to share with you some wonderful information I’ve been using to keep my training aches and pains at bay. Anytime I increase my weekly running mileage or intensity, I end up with tight hip flexors which affect my daily activities and my running form.

74138_1376955158715_1676948544_716614_4133841_nDuring marathon training I pushed through this pain, thinking that it was just something that came along with the territory. Of course, like any good runner I did hip flexor stretches once or twice a week after a run, used a stick or foam roller, and I tried to practice yoga every now and then. But, I never did anything to strengthen my hip flexors.

IMG_426663163_1406932988142_1676948544_763327_2938847_n Luckily, Fred Devito, half of the power team over at Exhale Core Fusion, sent me a few tips to help my hips and aching body during my new training period. exhale - mindbodyspa

Thanks for reaching out and asking for my opinion on your current situation regarding past training and current injuries.

I would have to say that by you training for the marathon without any other type of cross conditioning and not suffer some sort of set back is common, I have heard that scenario as well.

But the body doesn’t forget and what you are feeling  today with shin splints  and hip flexor inflammation is not necessarily caused by the training that you are currently doing, but rather an accumulative effect of muscle/ joint over use. But it may be the training that you are doing.

I ran distance in college and my hips and knees were fine, until about 5 years later, I couldn’t run any more.  The accumulative wear and tear from earlier running weakened the interior walls of my hip socket.  After that, even what I would consider normal activity created pain.  After an MRI, I learned that  I suffered a minor tear in my labrum and arthritis in the joint from bone touching bone.  The cartilage in my hip wore out in a genetically weak area of the joint and it didn’t manifest itself as pain until years later.

Joints have a built in obsolescence.  They wear out over time.   Every place I go, I hear people having hip or knee replacement surgeries.  That’s why when you chose exercise routines focus needs to be on positioning and alignment before movement to tax the muscles hard (they breakdown but they also rebuild). Cartilage, ligaments and tendons i.e. connective tissue does not have rejuvenation properties like muscle tissue so joints tend to just wear out or over stretch and ligaments and tendons over stretched  and need arthroscopic surgery to clip and stable them back to a functional shape.

Because of this fact, routines for functional fitness, meaning fitness that helps you with living a better lifestyle, need to be intelligent.  I know that you  are young enough to probably be my daughter, but age doesn’t matter!  If you abuse your joints with over use exercises it is only a matter of time before it comes back to haunt you.  Also another important point is to keep your activities balanced.  If you spin or run then you should be doing hip flexor stretches daily to balance out the tightness from so much hip flexion and over development of those muscle groups that are predominantly used (example, speed skater’s thighs).

If you enjoy exercise classes that focus on movement, choreography, quick changes and hardly any stretching, this is also a formula for injuries and we see it first hand when we get students from other studios come to core fusion or yoga at exhale.

We not only teach exercise we teach lifestyle and we educate our students on how to exercise safely to see results and avoid injuries.  Injuries can and will change your life, they should be avoided at all costs by making intelligent exercise choices based on balanced work of flexibility and strength.

The muscular system, like all other systems in the body, needs to be balanced. The problem is that most of the other systems of the body: circulatory, nervous, digestive, glandular are self regulating.  To balance the muscular system intelligent choices need to be made so this then comes a problem if people don’t stop and think about what activities they are choosing to do and future implications.

Fred’s great advice makes me appreciate all the cross training, yoga, and stretching I’ve added to my training plan this time around. However, it does make me realize that I need to be careful of building too many classes like 30/60/90 to my routine which also put a great stress on my joints.

Question: What are your thoughts in response to Fred’s suggestions?

Share Button
Follow: