Workouts

Active Rest and Recovery

The disease of the United States appears to be not pushing hard enough, unless referring to food in the mouth. However, many athletes, myself included, at times can fall prey to pushing too hard for too long. We end up injured, under performing, and probably cranky.

Active Rest is important, no it’s not a good idea for a highly conditioned or even recreational athlete who trains regularly to just stop all activity. However the body needs deep rest and the mind needs to rejuvenate for the next round of focused training and competition. For athletes who have true “seasons” this is perhaps easier to see and or implement. However even during their season they need down time.

The most common pit fall for most is the thought that more is always better, mentally they want/expect to be at their peak 365 days a year. This is not possible. The higher the level of performance, the harder and more specific the training, the greater the output, the more precarious the situation can get. What it boils down to is everyone needs rest. To quote my dear friends at Gym Jones: “Don’t do the work if you don’t have the balls to rest.”

Here’s a visual for you, take a sledgehammer to a wall in your home, bust out all the drywall for 2 hrs. Then you get the rest of the day to go get materials and supplies to rebuild the damage, hopefully you’ll do a better job than the first time it was done. You probably won’t get it done that day. The next day, same thing, different wall. Keep trying to rebuild that wall in the limited free time you have that day, yes you still have to go to work. Day three same thing. Day four you finally get smart and “rest” from busting up your house so you can “catch-up” on fixing the drywall. You almost finish but you’re exhausted. Day five start it again.

I hope by now you’ve seen the metaphor. Training is breaking down the body…taking really. You can wrap it up anyway you want: it’s “healthy”, I’m an “athlete”, but the body needs to rebuild itself to be strong, fit, healthy, and perform well. Just like your home in the above example you will reside in a broken down worn out body if you don’t take time to rebuild and rest.

Always have good recovery practices, great nutrition, good sleep, laughter and time with friends, massage, acupuncture, chiropractic care. Then schedule a vacation at an appropriate time, a week (or more) to do only fun things, or just stay home but and stay active but don’t do your usual sports or activities, get extra sleep, this could be up to a month for some athletes. You’ll come back rested, excited to train and compete again, you’ll miss it, if you don’t maybe you need a longer vacation…


Liquid Lightning

The evolution of the juice blend: my friend Anna refers to my blend as “liquid lightning”; truthfully it is amazing stuff specifically blended to provide a huge nitrate load with every serving. Yes, you feel super human if you drink enough everyday. And it provides many of the other vital micro-nutroients we should be getting from the vegetables we eat or drink in this case. I’ll do a detailed blog post later with exact amounts of nitrate per 8oz serving and other nutrients, here’s something to get you started juicing!

Beets, spinach and celery all have >250mg of nitrate per/100g and are considered very high in nitrates.
Parsley 100<250mg/100g is considered High
Broccoli, Kale or cucumber – 20 <50mg/100g somewhat low, I add for flavor and other micronutrients.

2 – 3 organic beets + greens (red or golden beets/color doesn’t matter)
1 – 2 Fuji apples
5 – 6 medium carrots
4 cups of or a bag spinach
1 bunch parsley
1 head of celery
1 medium cucumber
1 bunch of Kale (contains sulforaphan a chemical with potent anti-cancer properties)
A few slices of ginger

Refer back to previous “Juicing” post for information on supplementing your diet with nitrate rich vegetable juice – in this case beetroot or spinach juice – resulted in significant improvements in how the body utilizes oxygen during moderate to strenuous exercise.  Increased nitrate intake also lengthened the time it took for the body to reach exhaustion.


Outside the Gym

I Train To:
Climb, Ride, Ski, Run…Live.
Monday Climbing Day: Rifle

Rifle CP RE


Juicing

As an athlete, nutrition is a crucial key in optimizing fitness levels.  It’s well known that fruits and veggies are a great source of nutrients in your diet, but it can be hard to consume a large volume of them due to their high fiber content. Juicing is an excellent (and delicious) way to add the nutrients of fruits and vegetables to your diet without loading up your system with excess fiber, and recent studies have linked certain vegetable juices (those rich in nitrates) to improved athletic performance.

In a number of double blind studies on healthy adult men, it was determined that supplementing your diet with nitrate rich vegetable juice – in this case beetroot or spinach juice – resulted in significant improvements in how the body utilizes oxygen during moderate to strenuous exercise.  Increased nitrate intake also lengthened the time it took for the body to reach exhaustion.  During the studies, individuals were given dietary supplements for 6 or more days, and during the last three days performed a number of moderate to strenuous exercise tests to determine the effects of the nitrate rich supplements compared to the placebo.  By measuring the oxygen uptake in the lungs, scientists were able to determine how the body is consuming oxygen during exercise; decreased oxygen consumption would effectively mean that the muscles needed less oxygen to perform – in essence the muscles were being more efficient with the oxygen they did have.  During the exercise tests in the studies, the overall oxygen consumption by the muscles was lower  in the men who were given nitrate rich supplements than in those men who did not have increased nitrate consumption.  Furthermore, it took longer for the men with increased nitrate intake to reach muscle exhaustion than those without.  Increasing nitrate intake, even just drinking one cup of nitrate-rich vegetable juice per day, can have significant effects for racing and power endurance athletes. (J Appl Physiol 107;1144-1155, 2009/and /www.mendeley.com/research/dietary-nitrate-reduces-maximal-oxygen-consumption)

I’m experimenting with a number of different juice blends, and will post future updates of my juicing endeavors.  I use a Norwalk industrial juicer – produces delicious juice, squeezes every last ounce of micronutrients from the veggies and fruits I process and is well worth the money.  More on the benefits of juicing soon!


Sleep.

Fascinating article about the scientific benefits and purpose of sleep!

See the original article link here.

 

Goodnight. Sleep Clean.

By Maria Konnikova  JAN. 11, 2014

SLEEP seems like a perfectly fine waste of time. Why would our bodies evolve to spend close to one-third of our lives completely out of it, when we could instead be doing something useful or exciting? Something that would, as an added bonus, be less likely to get us killed back when we were sleeping on the savanna?

“Sleep is such a dangerous thing to do, when you’re out in the wild,” Maiken Nedergaard, a Danish biologist who has been leading research into sleep function at the University of Rochester’s medical school, told me. “It has to have a basic evolutional function. Otherwise it would have been eliminated.”

We’ve known for some time that sleep is essential for forming and consolidating memories and that it plays a central role in the formation of new neuronal connections and the pruning of old ones. But that hardly seems enough to risk death-by-leopard-in-the-night. “If sleep was just to remember what you did yesterday, that wouldn’t be important enough,” Dr. Nedergaard explains.

In a series of new studies, published this fall in the journal Science, the Nedergaard lab may at last be shedding light on just what it is that would be important enough. Sleep, it turns out, may play a crucial role in our brain’s physiological maintenance. As your body sleeps, your brain is quite actively playing the part of mental janitor: It’s clearing out all of the junk that has accumulated as a result of your daily thinking.

Recall what happens to your body during exercise. You start off full of energy, but soon enough your breathing turns uneven, your muscles tire, and your stamina runs its course. What’s happening internally is that your body isn’t able to deliver oxygen quickly enough to each muscle that needs it and instead creates needed energy anaerobically. And while that process allows you to keep on going, a side effect is the accumulation of toxic byproducts in your muscle cells. Those byproducts are cleared out by the body’s lymphatic system, allowing you to resume normal function without any permanent damage.

The lymphatic system serves as the body’s custodian: Whenever waste is formed, it sweeps it clean. The brain, however, is outside its reach — despite the fact that your brain uses up about 20 percent of your body’s energy. How, then, does its waste — like beta-amyloid, a protein associated with Alzheimer’s disease — get cleared? What happens to all the wrappers and leftovers that litter the room after any mental workout?

“Think about a fish tank,” says Dr. Nedergaard. “If you have a tank and no filter, the fish will eventually die. So, how do the brain cells get rid of their waste? Where is their filter?”

UNTIL a few years ago, the prevailing model was based on recycling: The brain got rid of its own waste, not only beta-amyloid but other metabolites, by breaking it down and recycling it at an individual cell level. When that process eventually failed, the buildup would result in age-related cognitive decline and diseases like Alzheimer’s. That “didn’t make sense” to Dr. Nedergaard, who says that “the brain is too busy to recycle” all of its energy. Instead, she proposed a brain equivalent of the lymphatic system, a network of channels that cleared out toxins with watery cerebrospinal fluid. She called it the glymphatic system, a nod to its dependence on glial cells (the supportive cells in the brain that work largely to maintain homeostasis and protect neurons) and its function as a sort of parallel lymphatic system.

She was hardly the first to think in those terms. “It had been proposed about one hundred years ago, but they didn’t have the tools to study it properly,” she says. Now, however, with advanced microscopes and dyeing techniques, her team discovered that the brain’s interstitial space — the fluid-filled area between tissue cells that takes up about 20 percent of the brain’s total volume — was mainly dedicated to physically removing the cells’ daily waste.

When members of Dr. Nedergaard’s team injected small fluorescent tracers into the cerebrospinal fluid of anesthetized mice, they found that the tracers quickly entered the brain — and, eventually, exited it — via specific, predictable routes.

The next step was to see how and when, exactly, the glymphatic system did its work. “We thought this cleaning process would require tremendous energy,” Dr. Nedergaard says. “And so we asked, maybe this is something we do when we’re sleeping, when the brain is really not processing information.”

In a series of new studies on mice, her team discovered exactly that: When the mouse brain is sleeping or under anesthesia, it’s busy cleaning out the waste that accumulated while it was awake.

In a mouse brain, the interstitial space takes up less room than it does in ours, approximately 14 percent of the total volume. Dr. Nedergaard found that when the mice slept, it swelled to over 20 percent. As a result, the cerebrospinal fluid could not only flow more freely but it could also reach further into the brain. In an awake brain, it would flow only along the brain’s surface. Indeed, the awake flow was a mere 5 percent of the sleep flow. In a sleeping brain, waste was being cleared two times faster. “We saw almost no inflow of cerebrospinal fluid into the brain when the mice were awake, but then when we anesthetized them, it started flowing. It’s such a big difference I kept being afraid something was wrong,” says Dr. Nedergaard.

Similar work in humans is still in the future. Dr. Nedergaard is currently awaiting board approval to begin the equivalent study in adult brains in collaboration with the anesthesiologist Helene Benveniste at Stony Brook University.

So far the glymphatic system has been identified as the neural housekeeper in baboons, dogs and goats. “If anything,” Dr. Nedergaard says, “it’s more needed in a bigger brain.”

MODERN society is increasingly ill equipped to provide our brains with the requisite cleaning time. The figures are stark. Some 80 percent of working adults suffer to some extent from sleep deprivation. According to the National Sleep Foundation, adults should sleep seven to nine hours. On average, we’re getting one to two hours less sleep a night than we did 50 to 100 years ago and 38 minutes less on weeknights than we did as little as 10 years ago. Between 50 and 70 million people in the United States suffer from some form of chronic sleep disorder. When our sleep is disturbed, whatever the cause, our cleaning system breaks down. At the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Sleep and Circadian Neurobiology, Sigrid Veasey has been focusing on precisely how restless nights disturb the brain’s normal metabolism. What happens to our cognitive function when the trash piles up?

At the extreme end, the result could be the acceleration of neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. While we don’t know whether sleep loss causes the disease, or the disease itself leads to sleep loss — what Dr. Veasey calls a “classic chicken-and-egg” problem — we do know that the two are closely connected. Along with the sleep disturbances that characterize neurodegenerative diseases, there is a buildup of the types of proteins that the glymphatic system normally clears out during regular sleep, like beta-amyloids and tau, both associated with Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia.

“To me,” says Dr. Veasey, “that’s the most compelling part of the Nedergaard research. That the clearance for these is dramatically reduced from prolonged wakefulness.” If we don’t sleep well, we may be allowing the very things that cause neural degeneration to pile up unchecked.

Even at the relatively more benign end — the all-nighter or the extra-stressful week when you caught only a few hours a night — sleep deprivation, as everyone who has experienced it knows, impedes our ability to concentrate, to pay attention to our environment and to analyze information creatively. “When we’re sleep-deprived, we can’t integrate or put together facts,” as Dr. Veasey puts it.

But there is a difference between the kind of fleeting sleep loss we sometimes experience and the chronic deprivation that comes from shift work, insomnia and the like. In one set of studies, soon to be published in The Journal of Neuroscience, the Veasey lab found that while our brains can recover quite readily from short-term sleep loss, chronic prolonged wakefulness and sleep disruption stresses the brain’s metabolism. The result is the degeneration of key neurons involved in alertness and proper cortical function and a buildup of proteins associated with aging and neural degeneration.

It’s like the difference between a snowstorm’s disrupting a single day of trash pickup and a prolonged strike. No longer quite as easy to fix, and even when the strike is over, there’s likely to be some stray debris floating around for quite some time yet. “Recovery from sleep loss is slower than we’d thought,” Dr. Veasey notes. “We used to think that after a bit of recovery sleep, you should be fine. But this work shows you’re not.”

If you put her own research together with the findings from the Nedergaard lab, Dr. Veasey says, it “very clearly shows that there’s impaired clearance in the awake brain. We’re really starting to realize that when we skip sleep, we may be doing irreparable damage to the brain, prematurely aging it or setting it up for heightened vulnerability to other insults.”

In a society that is not only chronically sleep-deprived but also rapidly aging, that’s bad news. “It’s unlikely that poor sleep as a child would actually cause Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s,” says Dr. Veasey, “but it’s more likely that you may shift one of those diseases by a decade or so. That has profound health and economic implications.”

It’s a pernicious cycle. We work longer hours, become more stressed, sleep less, impair our brain’s ability to clean up after all that hard work, and become even less able to sleep soundly. And if we reach for a sleeping pill to help us along? While work on the effects of sleeping aids on the glymphatic system remains to be done, the sleep researchers I spoke with agree that there’s no evidence that aided sleep is as effective as natural sleep.

There is, however, reason to hope. If the main function of sleep is to take out our neural trash, that insight could eventually enable a new understanding of both neurodegenerative diseases and regular, age-related cognitive decline. By developing a diagnostic test to measure how well the glymphatic system functions, we could move one step closer to predicting someone’s risk of developing conditions like Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia: The faster the fluids clear the decks, the more effectively the brain’s metabolism is functioning.

“Such a test could also be used in the emergency room after traumatic brain injury,” Dr. Nedergaard says, “to see who is at risk of developing decline in cognitive function.”

We can also focus on developing earlier, more effective interventions to prevent cognitive decline. One approach would be to enable individuals who suffer from sleep loss to sleep more soundly — but how? Dr. Nedergaard’s mice were able to clear their brain’s waste almost as effectively under anesthesia as under normal sleeping conditions. “That’s really fascinating,” says Dr. Veasey. Though current sleeping aids may not quite do the trick, and anesthetics are too dangerous for daily use, the results suggest that there may be better ways of improving sleep pharmacologically.

Now that we have a better understanding of why sleep is so important, a new generation of drug makers can work to create the best possible environment for the trash pickup to occur in the first place — to make certain that our brain’s sleeping metabolism is as efficient as it can possibly be.

A second approach would take the opposite tack, by seeking to mimic the cleanup-promoting actions of sleep in the awake brain, which could make a full night of sound sleep less necessary. To date, the brain’s metabolic process hasn’t been targeted as such by the pharmaceutical industry. There simply wasn’t enough evidence of its importance. In response to the evolving data, however, future drug interventions could focus directly on the glymphatic system, to promote the enhanced cleaning power of the sleeping brain in a brain that is fully awake. One day, scientists might be able to successfully mimic the expansion of the interstitial space that does the mental janitorial work so that we can achieve maximally efficient round-the-clock brain trash pickup.

If that day comes, they would be on their way to discovering that all-time miracle drug: one that, in Dr. Veasey’s joking words, “could mean we never have to sleep at all.”


A heartfelt complement

“…If you delight in existence,
You will become a guide
To those who need you,
Revealing the path to many.”
Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet.
Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. – Sutta Nipata
A friend sent this to me, it meant a lot…

Happiness

“Those who are not looking for happiness are the most likely to find it, because those who are searching forget that the surest way to be happy is to seek happiness for others.” MLK