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Are You Training In A Void? Why Competition Helps

Are you training in a void? I am a firm believer in goal setting. Without goals it becomes hard to establish action plans (in this case training plans) to drive improvement. In the world of business and athletics there is no such thing as standing still, there is only moving forwards or falling backwards. For this reason goal setting and action plans are essential in making sure you’re focused on improving yourself or your results and moving forward.

chris duffin, christopher duffin, kabuki warrior, elite performance centerThe interesting thing about goals is they often seem to get shifted around due to the normal happenings in life. Dates move, targets get revised, and life happens; examples include projects coming up at work or a vacation getting scheduled. Heck, even an unexpected sunny day can overcome that day’s motivation to train. This is where the value of competitive events comes in.

Having a planned competitive event scheduled (or series of events) puts hard fixed dates to your goals. The dates don’t change because you strained your quad or your little sister is getting married. What you do is figure out how to deal with these things within the confines of your fixed schedule, because there is no flexibility to your goal.

In addition to created firm dates you have to live by, it also provides additional focus and motivation to your training goals and objectives. Having that event looming in the future clearly defines what you’re working to achieve. It is not some loosely defined goal, and this clear goal provides the sharp crisp focus and purpose to your training plan. This purpose feeds one’s motivation.

Now there are those people who just have that incredible level of consistency and dedication to continued improvement. It may be easy to question why these people would need to rely on this method to provide the clarity and motivation to their training. The truth is they don’t; they need it for another reason. Oftentimes people truly training at this level are doing so due to some behavioral issues, such as compulsive or addictive behavior patterns.

chris duffin, christopher duffin, kabuki warrior, elite performance centerWith this type of behavior pattern it can be nearly impossible to get the person to occasionally down-regulate their training, which is needed to maximize their results. Personally, I fall into this category and things like major surgeries, vacations, births of children, or career changes make little to no effect on my training. It is only the competitive event that forces me to down-regulate my training so I can “realize” the results and achieve the recovery needed before my next training cycle.

Regardless of your sport participating in competitive events are a key piece in maximizing your potential and keeping you moving forward and progressing. Benefits include:

Clarity of goals
Inflexible dates forcing you to accommodate them (not the other way around)
Motivation
Forced down-regulation and “realization” periods

What’s your next event?

Conditioning for Strength Sports: Optimizing Both Strength & Conditioning

An athlete recently asked me how to achieve peak conditioning and peak strength levels simultaneously. To his disappointment I noted this realistically could not be achieved. It’s not the case, however, that one entirely negates the other. In fact the correct interplay of both conditioning and strength can maximize your performance in either.

Maximizing performance in your desired objective (either strength or conditioning) doesn’t mean simply incorporating the opposite and hoping for the best. Imagine an endurance runner tossing in a bunch of strength training leading into a running event or a large out of shape powerlifter slamming out a bunch of cardio leading into a meet. In both scenarios the athlete will likely reduce their performance. CrossFit has done an excellent job at incorporating training across the strength and conditioning spectrum (or broad modal domains in CF language), but at the same time its athletes are not in “peak” shape for any specific points within those spectrums.

At this point it may sound like I’m all for very specific training for competitive athletes. This is not the case and in fact I firmly believe maximal performance on the platform (or whatever the performance venue) requires incorporation of both strength and conditioning. It becomes not a question of “should you” but “how.” If you’re focusing on strength athletes, as this article does, the key point is to setup your training so the conditioning is supporting you as reach your strength objectives. Often, conditioning is implemented as a secondary goal, but done so in a manner that detracts from the primary objectives, when it could be accelerating them.

Looking at pure strength sports, such as powerlifting or Olympic lifting, it can be argued conditioning has no direct application at the time of the event. With a mixed sport such as strongman it becomes a little less clear. In pure strength sports the competitive event involves strength, speed, and technique, with conditioning hardly impacting the outcome of the performance. If, however, we take a step back to the training leading to the event, we will see a different story. An athlete with improved conditioning will be able to train harder and longer and recover faster, allowing them to get more out of their training cycle leading to the event. If you take two athletes of the same strength levels (all other factors the same) the one who has better conditioning leading into the meet training cycle will simply perform better due to these factors.

Conversely, an athlete pushing too hard on the conditioning side during their competitive training cycle will not have the energy reserves or recovery ability to maximize their strength training. Let’s take a look at it, as we did in the example above, but change it to two athletes of the same strength and conditioning levels leading into a competitive training cycle. The athlete who simply coasts and tries to maintain his conditioning levels with the focus being on his strength training will outperform the athlete who continues pushing both as hard as he can. The “coasting on” of conditioning levels can be taken even a step further - by constructing waves of conditioning micro-cycles you can realize strength bumps at key points in the training cycle and for the meet.

I’m sure I’ve bored you with the theoretical at this point. Let’s talk application. I’m going to provide you with some examples of how I arrange training cycle for a competitive strength event for myself and some of my athletes. The training plan example we are going to step into is not for a new athlete, but someone who has already developed a fair-to-significant level of strength and conditioning. The concepts can be used for other conditions, but for example purposes we are going to stick with one training plan.

With a 12-18 week meet training cycle in mind, I will back off 8 weeks prior to the start of that. During this 8 week block I keep the weights at a moderate level and focus primarily on bringing up conditioning levels. Often, the weight training sessions are set up as circuit training to maintain focus on conditioning as well. The first 6 weeks of this training block I will ramp up the conditioning and then taper it down the last two weeks. If someone is in moderate conditioning levels to begin with, a 6 week period of intense conditioning training is all that is needed.

After the pre-training conditioning block we move into the strength training cycle. With the taper at the end of the conditioning block we should be primed to start ramping up the strength training. I usually do 6 week training blocks. With each 6 week training block I overlay my conditioning (labeled Work Capacity in the chart) work. As I wave my strength-training block up, I wave my conditioning down. I repeat this 2-3 times, each time waving the strength training a little higher. In the final block I deload the strength training along with the conditioning deload leading into the meet. (See my article on 3, 2, 1, 0 Meet Preparation Countdown.)

In the example above I’m only showing two variables, but you can obviously use several methods to wave your strength and conditioning levels. For Work Capacity I just looked at the number of HIIT (high intensity interval training) GPP (General Physical Preparedness) sessions done per week for conditioning. This works well for me as I have a number of fixed sessions for team members, thus making it easy to manage. For strength training I just summarized with a fictional % intensity figure. This can be handled via periodization, block periodization, conjugate (my preference), or other training methods.

Block 1 – Conditioning ramp up “pre” competitive cycle
Block 2 – Strength training waved up, conditioning waved down
Block 3 – Strength training waved up, conditioning waved down
Block 4 – Strength training waved up ant then down, conditioning waved down

Another way to visualize this is by imagining the amount of resources you are dedicating to recover in each of these aspects each week. That allocation will be changed during each block, transitioning from Work Capacity to Strength, while the entire block is waved upwards in intensity. An example of what this would look like with the same training cycle is shown below.

Staging your conditioning training correctly will allow you to incorporate it in a manner supporting and accelerating your strength training, versus it detracting if done incorrectly. In addition, you will typically have the side benefits of being leaner, with better abs, and not having to pant when reach the top of a flight of stairs - which is always a plus.

Dear Coach: How Should I Eat to Gain Weight

Every Sunday our coaches answer YOUR questions! Have a question and you want to know what the experts have to say? Email us at [email protected].

And don’t forget “Dear Willow.” Our resident yoga expert, Willow Ryan, is here to give you guidance on yoga, meditation, and the mind-body connection. Email your question for her to [email protected] and check for her response on Saturdays.

Dear Coach,

I was wondering if I could get some advice on protein intake. Recently I’ve been eating a bit more but my meals haven’t been balanced and I feel like my progress is shortened to a point because of it. Today for breakfast I randomly decided to have a huge breakfast consisting of lots of grains, fruits, vitamins, and oatmeal. This breakfast totalled out to be about 70-90 grams of protein, as well as lots of calories and carbs. This is one of the first times I have ever eaten a breakfast this big and it had a huge effect on my vitality and energy throughout the day.

My fitness goals are to gain weight (roughly 10 to fifteen lbs) but I have no scale to measure myself with. So I have two curiosities here. The first being if you have any opinion on whether eating that much protein and eating light and healthy meals throughout the day will help me reach my goals. I find when I eat big suppers and relatively small breakfasts the meals I eat throughout the day don’t feel like they’re going down well. My second curiosity is any tips or advice you have that could help me towards my goal of gaining 15lbs without a scale to know if I really am or not. I’ll be getting a job possibly in a few weeks so if I do I’ll buy a scale. But in the meantime I was wondering if you could help me with this.

Thanks,
Tyler

Dear Tyler -

It appears your goal is clearly defined. A pretty easy conclusion for me to jump to is that you are also looking to add this as primarily lean mass as opposed to fat stores. Goals of adding lean mass are pretty common place in the areas that I coach (strength athletes), so I am quite familiar with a number of strategies that have worked well on me and those I coach.

Before getting into the discussion on diet I would like to start with your second point in regards to measuring your progress. It is critical in goal development process to identify the measures of success against that goal. I understand your constraints with getting a scale, but only you know the priority of where this goal fits in your life. With this in mind I will offer up some simple solutions for assessing your progress of gains in lean mass:

• Scale - You will need one to monitor your bodyweight.
• Flexible Tape - Monitor growth of waist diameter at 1-inch below the belly button (Quick tip: in men a one inch gain is typically five pounds fat (for men in the 175-275lb range))
• Mirror - Simple, but a very effect way to be aware if you are gaining fat versus muscle.

In regards to diet it’s important to remember that it’s not meal composition or food timing that has the significant impact on mass gains. Sure you can do some fine tuning with these methods, but overall gains in mass are from you total macronutrients over a longer period of time such as a week. This makes meal frequency, amount, and timing (except for post workout discussed below) relatively moot points, despite what a lot of diet gurus will tell you. Understanding this allows you to manipulate these variables to find the best fit for your digestion and energy levels.

I usually look at a week time period and shoot for a 10-20% increase in calories over maintenance levels (approx. 500cals/day) when bulking. With the proper training, rest, and food sources you should be able to gain .5-1lb of muscle per week, depending on how close you are to your genetic peak.

When bulking for muscle gains here are some key points to keep in mind:

• Protein Amount – Shoot for 1-1.5+ grams of protein per pound of bodyweight a day when bulking. The higher your protein intake the better. Maintenance levels can drop to as low as .75g/lb bodyweight.
• Protein Source – Don’t rely on low grade protein sources such as grains, legumes, cheeses, or nuts. The best sources are meats, eggs, and milk in that order.
• Carbohydrates – Eat the majority of your daily carbs in the 1.5hrs following your workout, so they can be utilized when your body’s anabolic pump is turned on to shuttle carbs to muscle tissue versus fat stores.

These methods are straightforward, easy to follow, and will provide results.

Hemorrhoids and The Athlete: How To Keep Training

It is a simple fact that heavy resistance training and even endurance training increases our susceptibility to getting hemorrhoids. If you lift weights, you are in danger of developing hemorrhoids and that risk develops as you age. The age discussion becomes important as today’s athletes and those with active lifestyles are choosing to maintain these activities for a far longer basis, thus increasing your risk. At age fifty about half of us will have hemorrhoids. In addition to age, history of pregnancy and obesity are also primary risk factors. For the purposes of this article, we will skip discussion in regards to obesity as we are talking about athletes.

The textbook definition of hemorrhoids is enlarged veins in the anus. Once enlarged these hemorrhoids may become irritated, or even prolapse and become external hemorrhoids. In addition to pain and irritation hemorrhoids may cause bleeding or display as a bloody stool.

Having hemorrhoids is not a sentence to reduced activity level by any means. You can still be competitive and perform at the highest level, even in sports that create significant abdominal and blood pressure. It is not uncommon for high-level strength athletes such as weightlifters, powerlifters, or strongmen to deal with these symptoms. If you incorporate the proper techniques you can minimize the symptoms or even make them completely disappear. These tips also are quite effective in preventing the onset to begin with.

If you follow these guidelines there is no reason you should not be able to pursue your activity without full force and vigor.

Exercise
• When lifting push air out against the abdominal wall, NOT down toward your anus.
• Stay hydrated during exercise.
• Ensure clothing choices don’t irritate the area (this is of particular importance for endurance or high-repetition athletes).

Diet
• Eat a diet high in fiber and increase fat intake (heart-healthy fats) to make a softer stool.
• Stay hydrated in general to soften stool.
• Avoid or thoroughly chew roughage, such as almonds or other nuts (this will severely aggravate existing conditions if irritated).
Reduce salt intake to reduce swelling.

Treatments
• Don’t strain/push while going to the bathroom.
• Don’t hold it when you need to go.
• Take a warm bath or a sitz bath (Only needs to be 2-4” deep to rest your bum in).
• Use moist toilettes to wipe.
• Don’t use over the counter anti-inflammatory such as aspirin or ibuprofen.
• See your doctor for any severe case or a persistent case that won’t diminish after two weeks.

These simple steps are highly effective in dealing with the symptoms of hemorrhoids, and many can be used as preventative measures as well. I can personally attest to the effectiveness of these methods as a strength athlete with hemorrhoids. By following these methods I am able to squat and deadlift over 700lbs on a weekly basis and rarely have any symptoms.