I had my skin cancer removed from my neck the other day. I had had it removed once before, actually twice before. The first time I had it frozen or burned off with liquid nitrogen. The second time I had it excised and stitched.
This time I had Mohs surgery, where they cut it out and stitch it. They examine what they cut out to make sure that there is no cancer anywhere around the area they examine or they go back and continue until everything is clear. Fortunately, she cut out plenty the first time so then she stitched it up. It is a rather large area, about 3 and a half inches on my neck to the back of my ear.
I didn't realize how long the incision would be. I knew it would be bigger than the last time, but it is really big. I remembered that it hurt a little afterward the last time and I was worn out a little, but you always forget things like that after time passes.
This time because the incision is so long, it really pulls when I turn my neck. I will really have to make adjustments and take special care when I return to yoga.
I've learned how far I've come in the last year in so many ways and how grateful I am about so many things. I'm grateful that I spent so much of my life in my teaching career, which allowed me to do the work I always wanted to do and loved to do.
I'm grateful that somehow that work also came with benefits that I never anticipated, mainly, the ability to retire early and even retire extra early because of my medical issues. I worked my ass off and gave my heart and soul during the 29 years I taught. But not many people get to retire as early as I have, even with the pay cut, and I have health insurance.
I have time to take care of myself. If I was still working, I wouldn't be able to train and rest the way I can now, which has completely changed my pain management, and my health and my disposition. After having the skin cancer procedure, I'm reminded how much my body doesn't bounce back from traumatic experiences the same way as other people's bodies do. I'm not allowed to exercise right now, and it's a good thing.
I've been sleeping until noon. I'm exhausted. I went out today for just a few hours. I just came home and I'm completely wiped out. It's the way I used to feel all the time, but without the allover pain. I do feel like my new healthier body and training has given me a better bounce back than I would have had previously.
I think i will recover from this faster and better than I would have before. But it is reminding me that I have to listen to my body. I can't rush back to training or yoga just to be cool. Khris told me not to rush, he said to look how far I've come and that we have plenty of time. That made me feel supported and good.
I didn't expect this little set back. I asked when I could exercise. I forgot to think about when I would be ready to exercise. But I know now that my body will guide me and Khris will guide me to do the proper things. I don't feel upset or deflated about this weird turn of events. If I lose a little bit of something when I return, I'll get it back soon enough.
Friday, June 29, 2018
Monday, June 25, 2018
Finding People and Finding Myself: A Lesson from Morgan
On The Walking Dead, one of my favorite characters is Morgan. He has gone through some deep transformations to try to keep himself going. Some very all or nothing ways of thinking and acting to deal with the loneliness and the harsh realities of what the apocalypse has taken from him.
In his clear phase, he thought he had to atone for his lack of courage by killing all of the zombies and even the other people in his path in order to rid the world of suffering that came with this plague. He thought that part of his punishment including living alone and watching all of the suffering.
Then he was taught a different way that was the other extreme: all life is precious. He tried to not kill any human even in self-defense. This extreme caused unexpected conflict with the very people he was trying to protect and those he loved, causing even more internal conflict and confusion.
Something Morgan said when he decided he needed to leave was that he loses people and then he loses himself. He clung to his Aikido and all life is precious because he was afraid of losing more people and of losing himself again.
As I thought about loneliness (from yesterday's post) and I've been reading some books today about life and about happiness, I thought of Morgan. I believe that for me, when I find people, I lose myself. I need to find a way to find people and not lose myself.
Once you lose yourself, and focus on the needs and wants of other people or focus on the idea that other people and their reactions will somehow make you happy, then you become lost and lonely. Other people can't fill you and they can't be expected to.
It's an artificial high. And you need more and more to keep getting happy. There are always more zombies to clear. That doesn't mean I don't need people. I certainly do. And they can make me happy to be around them. But I can't stop being happy when they aren't around. I can't lose myself because I found them.
I think that's a lesson that has presented itself to me over and over and over in my life, and I'm finally understanding in a more profound way. I can have friends that love me for who I am and love being around me when they are around me, but don't love me only for what I do for them or only in a one-sided way that I have to somehow keep afloat.
I can find people and find myself at the same time.
In his clear phase, he thought he had to atone for his lack of courage by killing all of the zombies and even the other people in his path in order to rid the world of suffering that came with this plague. He thought that part of his punishment including living alone and watching all of the suffering.
Then he was taught a different way that was the other extreme: all life is precious. He tried to not kill any human even in self-defense. This extreme caused unexpected conflict with the very people he was trying to protect and those he loved, causing even more internal conflict and confusion.
Something Morgan said when he decided he needed to leave was that he loses people and then he loses himself. He clung to his Aikido and all life is precious because he was afraid of losing more people and of losing himself again.
As I thought about loneliness (from yesterday's post) and I've been reading some books today about life and about happiness, I thought of Morgan. I believe that for me, when I find people, I lose myself. I need to find a way to find people and not lose myself.
Once you lose yourself, and focus on the needs and wants of other people or focus on the idea that other people and their reactions will somehow make you happy, then you become lost and lonely. Other people can't fill you and they can't be expected to.
It's an artificial high. And you need more and more to keep getting happy. There are always more zombies to clear. That doesn't mean I don't need people. I certainly do. And they can make me happy to be around them. But I can't stop being happy when they aren't around. I can't lose myself because I found them.
I think that's a lesson that has presented itself to me over and over and over in my life, and I'm finally understanding in a more profound way. I can have friends that love me for who I am and love being around me when they are around me, but don't love me only for what I do for them or only in a one-sided way that I have to somehow keep afloat.
I can find people and find myself at the same time.
Sunday, June 24, 2018
The Paradox of Loneliness
I know that yoga is about being in the moment and focusing on the breath. But being in the present in daily life has been something that has helped me so much in the last year and a half.
I think that I must have slipped a little in that focus on the present. I think that thinking too much about other people and maybe the future or things outside of my control can bring about that feeling of loneliness.
I spend a lot of time alone. I actually like being alone. That's not what makes me lonely. It's the thoughts that make me lonely. Things I wonder about. I wonder a lot. I wonder why people react to me the way they do. I wonder why people don't include me more.
I wonder why I am the way I am. It's tricky to want to be included and yet like to be alone. I wonder about how things will be in the future. But as soon as I put myself in the future too much, when I wonder too much, I get into trouble.
When I am in yoga, I'm not lonely. Today when I was washing my workout clothes, I was not lonely. When I was cleaning my kitchen, I was not lonely. I was not lonely when I was taking my shower. I enjoyed watching some old episodes of The Walking Dead on the marathon and talking to people on Twitter.
The more inward you go in yoga, the more at peace you become. The more you look outside yourself, the more insecure and anxious you become. Stay on your own mat! I need to stay on my own mat outside of class, too.
That doesn't mean I don't want to have friends and share things. It means when I think that looking to friends and sharing things is what is going to make me happy, I will lose my peace.
I need to go inward to become less lonely. Going inward can allow me to be present enough and available enough to go outward already happy and not lonely instead of searching to become happy and not lonely.
Thursday, June 21, 2018
KBuddah Training: It's Not Just a Workout is Not Just a Slogan
It's been almost a year since I started training with KBuddah Training! Recently I have been talking to a Walking Dead friend on Twitter who has been diagnosed with Fibromyalgia, Lupus and Rheumatoid Arthritis and is going through more tests after much distress trying to find out what was wrong with her and going through the crushing fatigue and pain that is familiar to people with chronic pain or any systemic or autoimmune condition.
She expressed her fear. A fear I remember well. Not knowing what was going to happen in your future. At the time you're finally diagnosed and taken seriously, you've been fighting through it and pushing yourself in silence for a good long time. You are used to making adjustments to make it through your days without letting on that you don't know how you're going to make it through the next day, never-mind thinking about how to deal with the future.
You are used to just not mentioning the pain. You are used to people judging. You are used to people giving every piece of advice they've ever heard or read, and you really get the feeling it is not advice to help you, but rather advice to get you to stop mentioning it. You are used to hearing that you just need to push yourself and lose weight and that everyone gets tired.
The weirdest part of this for me now as I talk to her is that I have empathy and I can relate from memory, but I have no emotional attachment anymore to those things because it has been so long since I've experienced them myself. I still get a little bit of people not understanding that my definition of pacing myself and rest is different from the normal person's. And that my definition of tired is a little different.
But even my own tired is not the crippling, incomprehensible fatigue that I used to experience. The last time I can remember crying from fatigue was actually about a year ago after I moved into my new place and I was out with my nephew, Jack. I remember telling him, that it wasn't him. He knew that. He's smart. I said, I'm just tired and in pain from the big move.
At that time I had lost almost 40 pounds. Losing weight hadn't helped my pain or exhaustion much at all. Then came training. I started slowly--twice a week. I trained and rested and that's about all I did. In a matter of a few short weeks, my pain subsided. This blog chronicles many of my experiences with emotional releases and all sorts of things that have happened as I've trained this last year.
Having my pain subside was most unexpected! I just wanted to lose some more weight. I anticipated training twice a week, resting, maybe gaining a little more energy and toning my body a little and getting out of the house to do something, but still being in pain and being exhausted. I never imagined I'd be doing the stuff I'm doing.
Now I train 3 times a week. I go to yoga 2-3 times a week and I go to circuit classes 2-3 times per week. My diet is under control, pretty clean, and I never feel overfull or uncomfortable. I don't eat sugar at all in the form of candy, cake, cookies, ice cream, etc., which I remember caused intense flares a few days afterward, but sugar used to be so comforting and it used to wake me up. As far as inexplicable Fibro pain now, my pain is essentially non-existent.
Training has changed everything. It's an experience that can't be explained. It really isn't just a workout. If you think about most of the things that have been life-changing experiences, whether they lasted an hour, a day or years, if you are pressed to say how or why they changed you, often you have to say, it's hard to explain.
Those are the best experiences. The ones that need no explanation and defy explanation. That are felt. That are just known. That somehow just happened. That when you try to explain them, you are either speechless and shrug and stammer an "I don't know," or you just go on an on trying to explain it and nothing even comes close to the real reason or explaining it adequately.
KBuddah Training: It's not just a workout; it's a bonding experience. It doesn't just change your body; it changes everything.
She expressed her fear. A fear I remember well. Not knowing what was going to happen in your future. At the time you're finally diagnosed and taken seriously, you've been fighting through it and pushing yourself in silence for a good long time. You are used to making adjustments to make it through your days without letting on that you don't know how you're going to make it through the next day, never-mind thinking about how to deal with the future.
You are used to just not mentioning the pain. You are used to people judging. You are used to people giving every piece of advice they've ever heard or read, and you really get the feeling it is not advice to help you, but rather advice to get you to stop mentioning it. You are used to hearing that you just need to push yourself and lose weight and that everyone gets tired.
The weirdest part of this for me now as I talk to her is that I have empathy and I can relate from memory, but I have no emotional attachment anymore to those things because it has been so long since I've experienced them myself. I still get a little bit of people not understanding that my definition of pacing myself and rest is different from the normal person's. And that my definition of tired is a little different.
But even my own tired is not the crippling, incomprehensible fatigue that I used to experience. The last time I can remember crying from fatigue was actually about a year ago after I moved into my new place and I was out with my nephew, Jack. I remember telling him, that it wasn't him. He knew that. He's smart. I said, I'm just tired and in pain from the big move.
At that time I had lost almost 40 pounds. Losing weight hadn't helped my pain or exhaustion much at all. Then came training. I started slowly--twice a week. I trained and rested and that's about all I did. In a matter of a few short weeks, my pain subsided. This blog chronicles many of my experiences with emotional releases and all sorts of things that have happened as I've trained this last year.
Having my pain subside was most unexpected! I just wanted to lose some more weight. I anticipated training twice a week, resting, maybe gaining a little more energy and toning my body a little and getting out of the house to do something, but still being in pain and being exhausted. I never imagined I'd be doing the stuff I'm doing.
Now I train 3 times a week. I go to yoga 2-3 times a week and I go to circuit classes 2-3 times per week. My diet is under control, pretty clean, and I never feel overfull or uncomfortable. I don't eat sugar at all in the form of candy, cake, cookies, ice cream, etc., which I remember caused intense flares a few days afterward, but sugar used to be so comforting and it used to wake me up. As far as inexplicable Fibro pain now, my pain is essentially non-existent.
Training has changed everything. It's an experience that can't be explained. It really isn't just a workout. If you think about most of the things that have been life-changing experiences, whether they lasted an hour, a day or years, if you are pressed to say how or why they changed you, often you have to say, it's hard to explain.
Those are the best experiences. The ones that need no explanation and defy explanation. That are felt. That are just known. That somehow just happened. That when you try to explain them, you are either speechless and shrug and stammer an "I don't know," or you just go on an on trying to explain it and nothing even comes close to the real reason or explaining it adequately.
KBuddah Training: It's not just a workout; it's a bonding experience. It doesn't just change your body; it changes everything.
Thursday, June 14, 2018
More Paradox: Why Personal Training is an Introvert's Dream
Before I started training, I never thought I would like a personal trainer. I thought it would be the worst thing possible for me as an introvert. I don't like spotlight. I'm not motivated by external approval or accountability. Often it's irritating to me; I don't like having to explain myself to other people. I don't like to be pushed or yelled at to do things I don't want to do; I'm very independent.
Now that I'm training, the things I thought I'd hate, I either love or they are not what I thought they'd be. Introverts don't like spotlight, but we like to be recognized and noticed in subtle ways and we like to enjoy time with people one on one.
Training is one on one. The spotlight isn't so bright that way. It's not the spotlight that you get when the focus is on you in front of a big group. This is very relaxed. It's personal. Introverts love personal.
You'd think an introvert would love working out alone, but the paradox for me is that I hate working out alone. I don't mind hiking or kayaking alone sometimes, but I hate working out at the gym alone. I love classes, group training, yoga and especially personal training.
In classes, yoga and group training, I still get to occupy my own space and have my own connection with the instructor, but I get to have someone guide me through the workout and give me cues and I get to experience the work.
When I go back to the information about the hero role in families of alcoholics, we don't know how to be part of groups. We know how to lead, but we don't know how to be part of the group. As an introvert, being in training and in classes is an in-between. I'm part of a group that I'm not leading, but I'm still by myself.
I'm getting the attention that I didn't get as a kid and that I don't get when I'm the leader giving the attention. But it's not too much attention that it's embarrassing or overwhelming.
I'm still learning how to be part of a group. But my introverted nature loves the personal attention that I get with personal training. I love the meditative nature of it. I don't feel like I'm being watched, but rather I feel like I'm being cared for and attended to and encouraged.
It's not about yelling at me to motivate me to get to some magic result. That's ego. That's the ego of the trainer. This is about respect for me and for the activities and for the trainer. Respect for body. For being gentle and caring and focused and calm and strong.
The most interesting paradox is that although I'm not really motivated by external forces--I won't do better because someone is yelling at me or because someone will be disappointed if I don't or someone says to keep trying, I actually will do better when I have someone leading me and paying gentle attention to me.
I like having the guidance and direction and support. I like having someone tell me where to put my feet and how to adjust my form. I like having someone be aware that I am there. I like being attended to. I like not being the leader. I like having a leader. And as an introvert, I don't fight it. I accept it. I enjoy it. I receive it. I actually crave it. Beautiful paradox.
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Beautiful Paradox: Meditation and HIIT Lessons
I love the word paradox. I especially like the concept that things can contradict themselves in a beautiful way, if you let them.
I just started reading a book about Buddhism and meditation. There is so much paradox in there. Just reading it is a meditation labyrinth. Meditation itself is a paradox: letting go, clearing your mind and watching your thoughts in order to bring clarity and focus and be present.
One paradox for me with meditation has always been that I'm not a visual person. I don't paint pictures in my mind. I don't visualize well at all. I'm very abstract. My pictures are more Picasso than Monet and even Picasso is more realistic than my visualization. I visualize in very blurred, unfinished and undetailed fashion.
That makes it difficult to follow guided meditations when they tell you to imagine being in a field of flowers or being at the beach or imagine being grounded into the earth and you are rooted like a tree.
The paradox comes because I am very auditory. I am lulled by words and voices. So even though the purpose is to have me visualize, I am able to get the result from the words and the voice and by saying the words in my head and focusing on my body without the actual pictures.
I can't really imagine being pulled from the top of my head with a string, but those words allow me to understand the concept and my body knows to lift my chest and get taller. My head knows to pull higher from the crown as if there were someone pulling it up, even though I'm not able to really visualize it that way. Beautiful paradox.
It's beautiful because I don't allow the fact that I'm not a visualizer to get in the way of me getting the results I want. Many times when reading about meditation, even in this current book, people get frustrated with meditation because they don't feel like they are successful at meditation, which is the greatest paradox in itself.
Meditation is about letting go of the idea of success and failure and letting go of stress. Letting go of stress and anxiety. Letting go, period. The hints people give you to get there such as focusing on your breath or clearing your mind or watching your thoughts are just that--hints. They are ways to help you let go. They are not mandates for successful meditation.
If you get mad at yourself because you forget to focus on your breath or mad because it seems like your meditation is boring or mad because you can't seem to clear your mind, you are not failing at meditation, you are failing at understanding what meditation is. You are still successful at meditation because you are thinking about trying to meditate and you are in that moment! Beautiful paradox.
The other day Khris set up a HIIT (High Intensity Interval Training) workout for me for training. At one point I was moving from one thing to the next and he said, "The workout is high intensity, not you." Beautiful paradox.
I don't need to be frantic to achieve the high intensity. The workout does that for me. The intensity comes from the activities, not being frantic. I still need to be slow and deliberate. I still need to inhale, brace and exhale. As soon as I start being crazed and moving and breathing too quickly, the workout becomes less effective and less intense because I'm not focused.
I need to take these lessons into life as well. I'm going to clean my house today. I need to be patient and focus. I don't need to be frantic. It will all get done. I need to take breaks when I need to take breaks. I need to enjoy and pay attention to the chore I am on when I am on it. Then when things are finished, I will enjoy the results.
That's a good mantra for life. The workout is high intensity. Not me.
P.S. After this blog entry was posted, this screenshot from Happier at Home by Gretchen Rubin about the Paradoxes of Happiness showed up in my Facebook memories!!
I just started reading a book about Buddhism and meditation. There is so much paradox in there. Just reading it is a meditation labyrinth. Meditation itself is a paradox: letting go, clearing your mind and watching your thoughts in order to bring clarity and focus and be present.
One paradox for me with meditation has always been that I'm not a visual person. I don't paint pictures in my mind. I don't visualize well at all. I'm very abstract. My pictures are more Picasso than Monet and even Picasso is more realistic than my visualization. I visualize in very blurred, unfinished and undetailed fashion.
That makes it difficult to follow guided meditations when they tell you to imagine being in a field of flowers or being at the beach or imagine being grounded into the earth and you are rooted like a tree.
The paradox comes because I am very auditory. I am lulled by words and voices. So even though the purpose is to have me visualize, I am able to get the result from the words and the voice and by saying the words in my head and focusing on my body without the actual pictures.
I can't really imagine being pulled from the top of my head with a string, but those words allow me to understand the concept and my body knows to lift my chest and get taller. My head knows to pull higher from the crown as if there were someone pulling it up, even though I'm not able to really visualize it that way. Beautiful paradox.
It's beautiful because I don't allow the fact that I'm not a visualizer to get in the way of me getting the results I want. Many times when reading about meditation, even in this current book, people get frustrated with meditation because they don't feel like they are successful at meditation, which is the greatest paradox in itself.
Meditation is about letting go of the idea of success and failure and letting go of stress. Letting go of stress and anxiety. Letting go, period. The hints people give you to get there such as focusing on your breath or clearing your mind or watching your thoughts are just that--hints. They are ways to help you let go. They are not mandates for successful meditation.
If you get mad at yourself because you forget to focus on your breath or mad because it seems like your meditation is boring or mad because you can't seem to clear your mind, you are not failing at meditation, you are failing at understanding what meditation is. You are still successful at meditation because you are thinking about trying to meditate and you are in that moment! Beautiful paradox.
The other day Khris set up a HIIT (High Intensity Interval Training) workout for me for training. At one point I was moving from one thing to the next and he said, "The workout is high intensity, not you." Beautiful paradox.
I don't need to be frantic to achieve the high intensity. The workout does that for me. The intensity comes from the activities, not being frantic. I still need to be slow and deliberate. I still need to inhale, brace and exhale. As soon as I start being crazed and moving and breathing too quickly, the workout becomes less effective and less intense because I'm not focused.
I need to take these lessons into life as well. I'm going to clean my house today. I need to be patient and focus. I don't need to be frantic. It will all get done. I need to take breaks when I need to take breaks. I need to enjoy and pay attention to the chore I am on when I am on it. Then when things are finished, I will enjoy the results.
That's a good mantra for life. The workout is high intensity. Not me.
P.S. After this blog entry was posted, this screenshot from Happier at Home by Gretchen Rubin about the Paradoxes of Happiness showed up in my Facebook memories!!
Monday, June 11, 2018
I'm Tired I Have To Push Through This
Perspective. When I started working out last August I decided that if all I could do was workout, eat, and rest, then that's what I would do. At that point I had already decided in January to start focusing on myself and focusing on living in the present. I had decided to push through my Fibro pain and fatigue in my own way.
This morning when I was doing push-ups. I asked Khris why I can't do them better. My push-ups are not pretty. I'm nice and flat. I have good position. I don't stick my butt up or round my back or anything. I just can't lower myself down very far and still push myself back up. It's like I do half push-ups. I can do about 10 of those, sometimes. I can do knee pushups a little lower.
He said because I'm tired. I do them in the middle of the workout after other things like battle ropes and chest presses.
He said instead of thinking why can't I do them better, I should just always think, I'm tired; I'm going to need to push myself through these.
It's funny. I love the variety of things we do in training. We move from one thing to the next all the time. The trainers on the internet and television do things and say 50 reps.
I've never done anything for 50 reps except for kettlebell swings and I don't do 50 very often. It's usually 10-15 and then something else and then 10-15 more.
It only takes 10 walkouts or burpees to get me sweating and working hard, especially if it's part of the entire workout. And while I love the fun and creative things the most, it's the basic things, like push-ups, that give me an idea of how I'm doing.
At home, it's the cool variety of things that are the most fun: reading, or blogging, or shopping, or swimming, but it's the basic things like laundry and cleaning and resting that let me know how I'm doing.
I have to change my perspective. I used to only do knee push-ups. Now I do knee push-ups and regular push-ups. I used to train twice a week. Now I train 3 times a week and go to classes 2 or 3 times a week and yoga 2 or 3 times a week.
I used to have a hard time taking a shower once a week. Now I take showers 2-4 times a week. I wash my workout clothes every week. I'm no longer in much pain. I'm happier. I'm way stronger in every way than I was a year ago.
When I look around and wonder why I'm not keeping up with my housework or why I don't have it in me sometimes to do more, I have to think, I'm tired, I have to push through this. I'm going to be tired sometimes and pushing through this looks and feels different now.
This morning when I was doing push-ups. I asked Khris why I can't do them better. My push-ups are not pretty. I'm nice and flat. I have good position. I don't stick my butt up or round my back or anything. I just can't lower myself down very far and still push myself back up. It's like I do half push-ups. I can do about 10 of those, sometimes. I can do knee pushups a little lower.
He said because I'm tired. I do them in the middle of the workout after other things like battle ropes and chest presses.
He said instead of thinking why can't I do them better, I should just always think, I'm tired; I'm going to need to push myself through these.
It's funny. I love the variety of things we do in training. We move from one thing to the next all the time. The trainers on the internet and television do things and say 50 reps.
I've never done anything for 50 reps except for kettlebell swings and I don't do 50 very often. It's usually 10-15 and then something else and then 10-15 more.
It only takes 10 walkouts or burpees to get me sweating and working hard, especially if it's part of the entire workout. And while I love the fun and creative things the most, it's the basic things, like push-ups, that give me an idea of how I'm doing.
At home, it's the cool variety of things that are the most fun: reading, or blogging, or shopping, or swimming, but it's the basic things like laundry and cleaning and resting that let me know how I'm doing.
I have to change my perspective. I used to only do knee push-ups. Now I do knee push-ups and regular push-ups. I used to train twice a week. Now I train 3 times a week and go to classes 2 or 3 times a week and yoga 2 or 3 times a week.
I used to have a hard time taking a shower once a week. Now I take showers 2-4 times a week. I wash my workout clothes every week. I'm no longer in much pain. I'm happier. I'm way stronger in every way than I was a year ago.
When I look around and wonder why I'm not keeping up with my housework or why I don't have it in me sometimes to do more, I have to think, I'm tired, I have to push through this. I'm going to be tired sometimes and pushing through this looks and feels different now.
Friday, June 8, 2018
Elasticity and Pranayama
When people think of yoga they think of flexibility. Flexibility is different physically for everyone, but being flexible is mental as well as physical and that's the more important lesson. Flexible in thinking. To be flexible in thinking we need to listen and let go. The more you let go, the more flexible you become and the more flexible you become, the more you let go and it doesn't matter how flexible you are. Who's on first?
Khris brought up the word elasticity today and how when you force your muscles and tendons to do things they aren't ready to do, you are actually making them lose their elasticity--that spring and recovery that makes them flexible and pliable!
Forcing anything makes things break. In Yin Yoga they compare it to taffy. If you try to force it to bend, it snaps. But if you warm it and massage it and go slowly, you can stretch it really well and easily.
Khris talked in his interview about basketball how strength and conditioning play a role in sports. Flexibility plays a role in anything we do physically. We want to have elasticity and flexibility so we don't hurt ourselves. Again, physical flexibility and mental flexibility.
We didn't have much time to talk during training, but as I tend to do, I thought about it a lot. With yoga, we have Americanized so much of it to make it faster because we are impatient and want it to provide cardio and strength benefits at the same time. Also, people tend to be competitive, which is anti-yoga and don't listen to their bodies or the cues and don't use props and force things. It's okay that things have changed. But we have to change, too.
For example, I think people need to be more flexible in the way they view blocks. Blocks are not bad things. Blocks are fantastic. We should be more flexible in the way we look at props. Props came about to help us with alignment. Straps and blankets are awesome, too.
We talked about pigeon pose and how your hips should be square and you shouldn't necessarily bend forward. I know my yoga teachers have always stressed to stay up on your palms unless you are very flexible and can fold forward and still keep your hips square. They also recommend putting a block under your thigh to support your leg. In yin yoga, they have you on your palms for a long time and then you breathe and maybe move down if you can to sleeping swan and put your forehead on a block.
Square hips are very tricky. Triangle, Pyramid and Warrior 1 are my most difficult poses because I really try to focus on keeping my hips square. I could bend farther into those poses if I let my hips shift, but I'd rather really keep the integrity of my hips and keep my chest open and focus on my breath.
I've always seen connections between my training and yoga, but I'm seeing them more than ever now. I take my yoga to training and my training to yoga.
Inhale, brace, exhale. That's the KBuddah Pranayama (breath regulation). It works great with back lunges and other training exercises and it works in yoga, too.
That Pranayama creates flexibility and elasticity and stability. Square your hips. Inhale, brace, and exhale!
Khris brought up the word elasticity today and how when you force your muscles and tendons to do things they aren't ready to do, you are actually making them lose their elasticity--that spring and recovery that makes them flexible and pliable!
Forcing anything makes things break. In Yin Yoga they compare it to taffy. If you try to force it to bend, it snaps. But if you warm it and massage it and go slowly, you can stretch it really well and easily.
Khris talked in his interview about basketball how strength and conditioning play a role in sports. Flexibility plays a role in anything we do physically. We want to have elasticity and flexibility so we don't hurt ourselves. Again, physical flexibility and mental flexibility.
We didn't have much time to talk during training, but as I tend to do, I thought about it a lot. With yoga, we have Americanized so much of it to make it faster because we are impatient and want it to provide cardio and strength benefits at the same time. Also, people tend to be competitive, which is anti-yoga and don't listen to their bodies or the cues and don't use props and force things. It's okay that things have changed. But we have to change, too.
For example, I think people need to be more flexible in the way they view blocks. Blocks are not bad things. Blocks are fantastic. We should be more flexible in the way we look at props. Props came about to help us with alignment. Straps and blankets are awesome, too.
We talked about pigeon pose and how your hips should be square and you shouldn't necessarily bend forward. I know my yoga teachers have always stressed to stay up on your palms unless you are very flexible and can fold forward and still keep your hips square. They also recommend putting a block under your thigh to support your leg. In yin yoga, they have you on your palms for a long time and then you breathe and maybe move down if you can to sleeping swan and put your forehead on a block.
Square hips are very tricky. Triangle, Pyramid and Warrior 1 are my most difficult poses because I really try to focus on keeping my hips square. I could bend farther into those poses if I let my hips shift, but I'd rather really keep the integrity of my hips and keep my chest open and focus on my breath.
I've always seen connections between my training and yoga, but I'm seeing them more than ever now. I take my yoga to training and my training to yoga.
Inhale, brace, exhale. That's the KBuddah Pranayama (breath regulation). It works great with back lunges and other training exercises and it works in yoga, too.
That Pranayama creates flexibility and elasticity and stability. Square your hips. Inhale, brace, and exhale!
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
Re-Revisiting Process: The Anti-Goal and Listening
I'm not very competitive by nature. That doesn't mean I'm never competitive, but competition is not my default position and it doesn't drive me. For some people competition is a great motivator and works wonders. It's just not what works for me. I have some theories as to why that is, but ultimately, it just is.
I'm an introvert so I don't have a lot of need for external approval. I know what I believe and like and want and what others believe and like and want for me doesn't influence me much at all. Actually, I usually don't even want to know. I want to be liked, I just don't want to be approved of. That's a subtle difference, but a big one for me.
I want to be liked for who I already am. If you like me because I've changed what I wear, what I like, or who I am because of your influence, that's false and it is more hurtful than you not liking me in the first place. So my self-esteem doesn't go up if I do or wear things you say you like and then you compliment me.
Another thing that occurred to me about competition is that I was the tomboy girl in the neighborhood that played in the street with all the boys, but the boys never wanted the girl on their team so I would be on both teams all the time. I'd be the all-time pitcher or all-time runner or all-time something. So I never was really invested in which team won because I was on both teams. (It was the 70s!)
So when it came to losing weight, dieting and exercising, goal setting and competing, even with myself, isn't a big part of my process. It's funny when other people ask questions because that's the first thing they ask. What's your goal? Or how many more pounds do you want to lose? Or if I say I'm down to 190, they will say, 175 is next. I'm like, no, 189 is next. (And maybe it will be 191 and then 189 and then 192 and then 190 and then 189.)
Something dieters are prone to saying is that maintenance is the hard part or that losing is easy it's keeping it off that's hard. I think that is because they have been too competitive and too goal-oriented during the process and haven't just focused on the process.
My trainer often talks about process. Many people like talking to him, but not that many people actually listen to him. People tend to like to show off what they know instead of taking in new information or a different point of view. That's another case where I think I have an advantage as an introvert. I listen. That doesn't mean I agree with everything I hear or I change what I believe according to the new information I get. It means I listen.
If what I'm hearing doesn't line up with something I know about myself, I don't feel the need to interject that. For example, when Khris first talked about the fact that he didn't eat meat, I didn't feel the need to broadcast that I was not willing to give up meat or I didn't think it was necessary to give up meat or that I loved meat or that I didn't have the moral conviction about giving up meat. I just listened.
At that time, I wasn't ready to give up meat. I had no reason to do so. I had nothing compelling me to do so. It was part of my diet and I was able to lose weight with it. I ate small amounts. I liked it. I still like it. What's different now is that even though I like it, I don't feel that great after I eat it.
That is a compelling reason not to eat it. So I don't or I don't very often. I won't declare myself a vegetarian or vegan because I don't have compelling enough reasons to think that I will never ever eat meat again. I probably will. And maybe every time I do, I'll feel crummy and decide to avoid it again. Or maybe I'll have a turkey sandwich once a month and I'll be fine with that. But listening to Khris and the way he presented things and not fighting him allowed me to discover that on my own.
Just yesterday when I did my kettlebell swings, Khris asked me what I ate before training. He rarely asks me about what I eat, but he did yesterday. I had eaten a protein cookie. It was convenient and I didn't have any protein shakes in the refrigerator or any bananas or any almond milk for oatmeal squares cereal and I didn't have time to toast a bagel and have that with peanut butter.
I told him that I haven't been eating meat, but I've been eating all grains and I haven't been eating fruit or vegetables. I've been neglecting my smoothies and just eating brown rice or veggie pasta or peanut butter sandwiches on multigrain bread and eating protein cookies and Triscuits and snacking on BelVita biscuits.
He told me I should add some fruit and I could start slowly by just adding an orange and some grapes and adding a little jelly to my peanut butter sandwich. I did just that. I didn't try to think about long term or anything beyond just doing that little change for now. I didn't fight with him about how I don't like fruit and I wish I liked more fruit and I hate the texture of fruit and lettuce. I didn't worry about why I could foresee problems adding more fruit consistently. I just did it. I did what I could.
He also told me when I left that I should stay home and not try to come to the Tuesday class if I was tired. It was like he knew that I needed that little bit of push to stay home. That permission.
I did. I stayed home. I slept in and this morning when I weighed myself, I was 179! I was under 180 for the first time ever, after hovering in the low 180s for over 2 months!!! I thought I'd never see the 70s. I wasn't worried about it. If I stayed at 180, that was fine. But listening and making a small change and allowing myself to rest was rewarded immediately.
Focusing on the process is the goal. The process never ends. The process continues forever. So maintenance and keeping the weight off shouldn't be any more difficult than losing the weight if the focus is the same. Losing weight wasn't easy, but it seemed easy because I was never focused on an end goal. I was focused on the process. I focused on the small changes over time.
I never got mad at myself or frustrated or thought I was failing. I never felt like giving up or pigging out or thought it wasn't worth it. Back in January of 2017, I decided to start focusing on living in the present and not in the past or the future. That was 2 months before I even decided to lose weight. I think that change in mindset served me well in my decision to lose weight.
I'm always in training. Process is a better goal than any goal you can have because it is always the same goal. You don't have to update your goal. It's self-updating. The updates reveal themselves along the way if you open your eyes, your ears and your heart and listen.
Previous Posts about Process: the Anti-Goal:
Revisiting the Anti-Goal-Next Level Shit
Process: The Anti-Goal
I'm an introvert so I don't have a lot of need for external approval. I know what I believe and like and want and what others believe and like and want for me doesn't influence me much at all. Actually, I usually don't even want to know. I want to be liked, I just don't want to be approved of. That's a subtle difference, but a big one for me.
I want to be liked for who I already am. If you like me because I've changed what I wear, what I like, or who I am because of your influence, that's false and it is more hurtful than you not liking me in the first place. So my self-esteem doesn't go up if I do or wear things you say you like and then you compliment me.
Another thing that occurred to me about competition is that I was the tomboy girl in the neighborhood that played in the street with all the boys, but the boys never wanted the girl on their team so I would be on both teams all the time. I'd be the all-time pitcher or all-time runner or all-time something. So I never was really invested in which team won because I was on both teams. (It was the 70s!)
So when it came to losing weight, dieting and exercising, goal setting and competing, even with myself, isn't a big part of my process. It's funny when other people ask questions because that's the first thing they ask. What's your goal? Or how many more pounds do you want to lose? Or if I say I'm down to 190, they will say, 175 is next. I'm like, no, 189 is next. (And maybe it will be 191 and then 189 and then 192 and then 190 and then 189.)
Something dieters are prone to saying is that maintenance is the hard part or that losing is easy it's keeping it off that's hard. I think that is because they have been too competitive and too goal-oriented during the process and haven't just focused on the process.
My trainer often talks about process. Many people like talking to him, but not that many people actually listen to him. People tend to like to show off what they know instead of taking in new information or a different point of view. That's another case where I think I have an advantage as an introvert. I listen. That doesn't mean I agree with everything I hear or I change what I believe according to the new information I get. It means I listen.
If what I'm hearing doesn't line up with something I know about myself, I don't feel the need to interject that. For example, when Khris first talked about the fact that he didn't eat meat, I didn't feel the need to broadcast that I was not willing to give up meat or I didn't think it was necessary to give up meat or that I loved meat or that I didn't have the moral conviction about giving up meat. I just listened.
At that time, I wasn't ready to give up meat. I had no reason to do so. I had nothing compelling me to do so. It was part of my diet and I was able to lose weight with it. I ate small amounts. I liked it. I still like it. What's different now is that even though I like it, I don't feel that great after I eat it.
That is a compelling reason not to eat it. So I don't or I don't very often. I won't declare myself a vegetarian or vegan because I don't have compelling enough reasons to think that I will never ever eat meat again. I probably will. And maybe every time I do, I'll feel crummy and decide to avoid it again. Or maybe I'll have a turkey sandwich once a month and I'll be fine with that. But listening to Khris and the way he presented things and not fighting him allowed me to discover that on my own.
Just yesterday when I did my kettlebell swings, Khris asked me what I ate before training. He rarely asks me about what I eat, but he did yesterday. I had eaten a protein cookie. It was convenient and I didn't have any protein shakes in the refrigerator or any bananas or any almond milk for oatmeal squares cereal and I didn't have time to toast a bagel and have that with peanut butter.
I told him that I haven't been eating meat, but I've been eating all grains and I haven't been eating fruit or vegetables. I've been neglecting my smoothies and just eating brown rice or veggie pasta or peanut butter sandwiches on multigrain bread and eating protein cookies and Triscuits and snacking on BelVita biscuits.
He told me I should add some fruit and I could start slowly by just adding an orange and some grapes and adding a little jelly to my peanut butter sandwich. I did just that. I didn't try to think about long term or anything beyond just doing that little change for now. I didn't fight with him about how I don't like fruit and I wish I liked more fruit and I hate the texture of fruit and lettuce. I didn't worry about why I could foresee problems adding more fruit consistently. I just did it. I did what I could.
I did. I stayed home. I slept in and this morning when I weighed myself, I was 179! I was under 180 for the first time ever, after hovering in the low 180s for over 2 months!!! I thought I'd never see the 70s. I wasn't worried about it. If I stayed at 180, that was fine. But listening and making a small change and allowing myself to rest was rewarded immediately.
Focusing on the process is the goal. The process never ends. The process continues forever. So maintenance and keeping the weight off shouldn't be any more difficult than losing the weight if the focus is the same. Losing weight wasn't easy, but it seemed easy because I was never focused on an end goal. I was focused on the process. I focused on the small changes over time.
I never got mad at myself or frustrated or thought I was failing. I never felt like giving up or pigging out or thought it wasn't worth it. Back in January of 2017, I decided to start focusing on living in the present and not in the past or the future. That was 2 months before I even decided to lose weight. I think that change in mindset served me well in my decision to lose weight.
I'm always in training. Process is a better goal than any goal you can have because it is always the same goal. You don't have to update your goal. It's self-updating. The updates reveal themselves along the way if you open your eyes, your ears and your heart and listen.
Previous Posts about Process: the Anti-Goal:
Revisiting the Anti-Goal-Next Level Shit
Process: The Anti-Goal
Monday, June 4, 2018
My Trainer Gets Happy for Me!
Training is still the best thing that has happened to me in the last year and my trainer is the best person, friend and surprise to come into my world in a long, long, time. We have become friends and that is a great thing in and of itself. But this blog is about training. And I'm still surprised at times by how Khris gets happy for me and the progress I've made.
I forget sometimes and I wonder if I should be stronger or better at some things. My pushups are not very low. I get out of breath easily sometimes. My rope work isn't always the greatest. But I never do things half-heartedly. I give it my all in training.
In the classes, I have to pace myself, but in training, I give what I have. I listen. I pay attention. I try my best. I never want to disappoint Khris or myself.
When I think of trainers, I think of the stereotypical push, push, push. Khris is very demanding in the best way. But he is also so good to me. He told me today that if I need to skip class tomorrow to rest, that I should do that. I don't need to come just to feel "accomplished". I've been doing something every day for the last few weeks.
During training today, he asked me how many kettlebell swings I thought I could do if I really pushed through them. I said 40. He said he thought I could do 50. I tried and I doubled over and dropped at around 48. Tonight he texted me and said that was the highlight of the day. That he was so happy about that and I have come so far.
That was a great reminder to me. I forget sometimes that I have made a lot of progress. I forget that I'm not 20 years old anymore and I was really, really out of shape and sick and tired and in terrible pain and couldn't even get up off the floor without help. It feels really nice to have someone be happy for me.
Thank you, Khris, for being compassionate. Thank you for being demanding. Thank you for being attentive. Thank you for being creative. Thank you for being observant. Thank you for being mindful, passionate and diligent. And thank you so much for being happy for me.
I forget sometimes and I wonder if I should be stronger or better at some things. My pushups are not very low. I get out of breath easily sometimes. My rope work isn't always the greatest. But I never do things half-heartedly. I give it my all in training.
In the classes, I have to pace myself, but in training, I give what I have. I listen. I pay attention. I try my best. I never want to disappoint Khris or myself.
When I think of trainers, I think of the stereotypical push, push, push. Khris is very demanding in the best way. But he is also so good to me. He told me today that if I need to skip class tomorrow to rest, that I should do that. I don't need to come just to feel "accomplished". I've been doing something every day for the last few weeks.
During training today, he asked me how many kettlebell swings I thought I could do if I really pushed through them. I said 40. He said he thought I could do 50. I tried and I doubled over and dropped at around 48. Tonight he texted me and said that was the highlight of the day. That he was so happy about that and I have come so far.
That was a great reminder to me. I forget sometimes that I have made a lot of progress. I forget that I'm not 20 years old anymore and I was really, really out of shape and sick and tired and in terrible pain and couldn't even get up off the floor without help. It feels really nice to have someone be happy for me.
Thank you, Khris, for being compassionate. Thank you for being demanding. Thank you for being attentive. Thank you for being creative. Thank you for being observant. Thank you for being mindful, passionate and diligent. And thank you so much for being happy for me.
KBuddah Training: My Trainer’s Thoughts on The Warriors, LeBron and the NBA Finals
My trainer, Khris Argue, is a sports fan as well as a trainer. He enjoys watching collegiate sports, wrestling, basketball, football, and baseball as well as playing Ultimate Frisbee and recreational basketball.
He likes a wide variety of teams for a wide variety of reasons, including traditions, energy, logos, and fans. He is a a fan of the LA and California teams in general, but who he shows interest in changes according to players, not cities.
Right now, it's NBA basketball finals time. Khris has a California team in the finals that he loves: The Golden State Warriors. Even though he thinks the Cavs may win the championship, he wants the Warriors to win. He likes the entire Warriors team, even the bench.
If the Warriors weren't in it, he would want LeBron to get it. But he said because of the Warriors, he can't care about LeBron winning, he wants the Warriors to get it.
If the Cavs do win, Khris believes that coaching will make the difference. He thinks that poor coaching in game 1 prior to the overtime, when the players were emotional and rattled and needed to be rallied and focused, was a big factor in the Cavs not being able to regroup and shake off the mistakes.
Khris has tremendous respect for LeBron and what he has brought to the game of basketball. The word Khris used to describe LeBron's gift is adaptation. His monstrous abilities physically and mentally and his approach have changed everything.
People calling him a crybaby or a flopper is a direct result of his adaptation to the league because he plows through everyone and nobody can run into him with the same type of force because of how he is physically perceived so he has had to adapt. LeBron can also play every position on the floor.
Khris also admires LeBron's character and called him the definition of a perfect human. He is a people person who doesn't flaunt his wealth and gives back to the community. You don't hear about scuffles or any garbage with LeBron. He speaks his mind. He's confident and matter-of-fact.
Someone once told Khris that training, strength and conditioning, have nothing to do with shooting baskets. As a trainer, Khris took a bit of exception with that philosophy.
He explained that strength and muscle work affect durability, precision, agility and stability. Conditioning affects how long you last. You know what's asked of you. It's your endurance. It's how you pace yourself and when you turn it on.
This is the first year that I've watched the basketball finals since I lived in Chicago and was watching the Bulls and listening to the fireworks outside my apartment. It's fun to get into sports again because I'm working with my trainer. I am enjoying getting to know some of these players and teams.
Based on verbal interview with Khris Argue on June 4th, 2018
Get to know my trainer a little better. Read another interview with Khris.
Check out my trainer's website!
He likes a wide variety of teams for a wide variety of reasons, including traditions, energy, logos, and fans. He is a a fan of the LA and California teams in general, but who he shows interest in changes according to players, not cities.
Right now, it's NBA basketball finals time. Khris has a California team in the finals that he loves: The Golden State Warriors. Even though he thinks the Cavs may win the championship, he wants the Warriors to win. He likes the entire Warriors team, even the bench.
If the Warriors weren't in it, he would want LeBron to get it. But he said because of the Warriors, he can't care about LeBron winning, he wants the Warriors to get it.
If the Cavs do win, Khris believes that coaching will make the difference. He thinks that poor coaching in game 1 prior to the overtime, when the players were emotional and rattled and needed to be rallied and focused, was a big factor in the Cavs not being able to regroup and shake off the mistakes.
Khris has tremendous respect for LeBron and what he has brought to the game of basketball. The word Khris used to describe LeBron's gift is adaptation. His monstrous abilities physically and mentally and his approach have changed everything.
People calling him a crybaby or a flopper is a direct result of his adaptation to the league because he plows through everyone and nobody can run into him with the same type of force because of how he is physically perceived so he has had to adapt. LeBron can also play every position on the floor.
Khris also admires LeBron's character and called him the definition of a perfect human. He is a people person who doesn't flaunt his wealth and gives back to the community. You don't hear about scuffles or any garbage with LeBron. He speaks his mind. He's confident and matter-of-fact.
Someone once told Khris that training, strength and conditioning, have nothing to do with shooting baskets. As a trainer, Khris took a bit of exception with that philosophy.
He explained that strength and muscle work affect durability, precision, agility and stability. Conditioning affects how long you last. You know what's asked of you. It's your endurance. It's how you pace yourself and when you turn it on.
This is the first year that I've watched the basketball finals since I lived in Chicago and was watching the Bulls and listening to the fireworks outside my apartment. It's fun to get into sports again because I'm working with my trainer. I am enjoying getting to know some of these players and teams.
Based on verbal interview with Khris Argue on June 4th, 2018
Get to know my trainer a little better. Read another interview with Khris.
Check out my trainer's website!