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Nutrition without the Neurosis

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on July 22, 2020
Posted in: Beginners, How To/General Info, Motivational, Uncategorized. Tagged: diet, guidelines, healthy eating, howto, nutrition, stress, wednesday. Leave a comment

pexels-photo-3752834

In my experience, people who want to lose weight tend to go one of two ways with their nutrition.

They either:

A) Analyze every gram of x, y, z that goes in their mouth. “How many carbs was that?”

B) Adopt some kind of fad diet, usually whatever has been trending in the gym or in magazines.

I feel that neither of these methods is a good route to a healthy relationship with food and can either result in disordered eating or cause disappointment when we eventually cannot maintain our results.

People at my work find it quite amusing to see what I will eat next.  Sometimes it’s raw cucumbers and carrots, and sometimes it is a pint of halo top ice cream or a breakfast Kolache.  I still stay lean because the *majority* of the time I make healthy decisions. 

So then you may be wondering, “what SHOULD I be doing?” You aren’t alone. Healthy eating is such a common topic that I procrastinated almost a year writing this post. I feel that general guidelines are better than hard and fast rules. This gives us flexibility and accounts for human needs and life.

Here are my general guidelines to eating. Take whatever works for you and leave the rest.

  1. We are all our own worst critics – don’t beat yourself
    • You are not defined by your weight, your food choices or your diet. If you decide to enjoy a piece of cake, try to not beat yourself up over it. When we barate ourselves for the food we eat, it gets rid of the enjoyment and can cause a cycle of stress eating.
  2. Eat real food the majority of the time
    • If something doesn’t rot or takes a suspiciously long time… its probably not food.
    • The ingredients that are preventing nature from breaking preservatives down often keep your body from absorbing nutrients. Tried and true food preservation methods (canning, dehydrating, pickling) provide a better quality food than semi hydrogenated oils.
  3. Eat at home the majority of the time
    • Even a salad at a restaurant has more fat/salt/sugar and ultimately calories than if you made it at home. Thats not to say “don’t go out.” Because nutrition isn’t your only goal right? Socialization for example is a perfectly valid reason to go out to eat. If your goal for a particular meal is to fuel your body, skip the take out and make your food.
  4. Ask yourself “what is this providing me?”
    • Again, socialization/time with friends is a valid reason. So is taste. Are you craving the taste of a particular dish? Thats ok.
    • If your meal is to fuel your body, then the goal is nutrients. How well is your food doing that? A white castle burger is going to provide some protein, so will egg whites. But the QUALITY of protein is going to be a lot better with the eggs.
  5. Minimize drinking your calories
    • Drinks can have a ton of calories in them without providing much to keep you feeling full. There’s benefit in having foods that take time to break down because it takes longer before you start feeling hungry. If you are drinking high calorie drinks (in general) you will be hungry more often and will tend to eat above your energy needs.
  6. Only eat when you are hungry
    • A lot of my generation grew up being guilted for not clearing their plate. “There are kids starving in Africa.” Without tackling the social and ethnocentric implications of these statements, this has led to the unhealthy habit of eating everything we are served. We will do this even when we’re not hungry. Restaurant portions are 2 to 3 times larger than recommended portions which can cause extra problems when dining out.
  7. Take breaks and enjoy your food
    • This works in with number 6. Eat slowly so that your stomach can realize it is full. Experience your food. And then stop when you are full.
  8. Food is fuel (most of the time)

I don’t claim to be a dietician or life coach. The above are guidelines that I have developed which (mostly) keep me from being too neurotic about what I eat. The first point was very intentional. The biggest thing I have tried to incorporate over the years is that guilt, particularly over what you eat, is a toxic emotion. You are more important than a number on a scale. I hope you find this helpful. If you have anything that particularly works for you, please message me or leave it in the comments.

Best,

Nic

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Grief for the Normal

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on July 20, 2020
Posted in: About me, How To/General Info, Personal, Uncategorized. Tagged: 2020, acceptance, Buddhism, Buddhist, Coronavirus, Covid19, Grief, Humanity, life, quotes, This too shall pass, Thoughts. Leave a comment

As a person who has long prided oneself on not being normal I have to admit; I really miss it.

I miss being able to just get in my car and go to the store without anxiety.

I miss seeing friends whenever our schedules coincided.

I miss packed restaurants, bars and music venues.

I miss normal….

Ive been thinking about why everything and everyone seems so shitty this year, and I had a thought the other day that I can’t shake. I believe we are grieving. People are shitty when they are grieving and we Americans are, at best, entitled in normal times.

The order and nuances for the stages of grief can be argued by those more scholarly than myself; however, I do tend to see around me Anger, Sadness, Denial, Bargaining, Depression, and sometimes… Acceptance. I’m not sure if I’m ready to enter that last one but it seems that 2020 is trying to teach it to me anyway.

Since I had this realization a few days ago I have been trying to keep grief in mind when I interact with others. This is not only the understanding that I have grief and it affects how I interpret things, but that others do too. Their world’s have also been upended and they too miss their normal. Perhaps they are in denial that their normal is gone. Either way: understanding and sadness, or possibly just cognitive dissonance. I don’t feel that any of us are ok. Our new ‘normal’ requires changes, understanding and flexibility.

We may be tempted to ask “why me?” “Why should I be the understanding one?” Or even just “why did this have to happen to us, now?”

The best answer I have, and it is not perfect, comes in the form of a quote.

Frodo: “I wish none of this had happened.”

Gandalf: “So do all who live to see such times, but that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.”

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Why your knee pain isn’t getting better.

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on September 18, 2018
Posted in: Beginners, How To/General Info, Personal, Uncategorized. Tagged: advice, chronic pain, DIY, exercise, health, health and wellness, healthcare, how to, kneepain, movement dysfunction, pain, strength. Leave a comment

Have knee pain but didn’t suffer some kind of injury?  You’ve probably tried the standard interventions Rest, Ice, Elevation, Compression, maybe even a brace or KT tape.  Airrosti anyone?  Chances are, this hasn’t done anything for your problem, the pain keeps coming back, or any time you try to go without the brace/kt tape the pain comes right back.

Right behind back and neck pain the most common area I seem to treat in the clinic is the Knee.  The above is how the story usually seems to go.  The aggravating factors?…Squats & Stairs.  So why isn’t your knee pain getting better or why does it always come back?  Because you’ve been treating the symptoms rather than the cause.  We can’t just ice the knee without asking WHY is it inflamed to begin with?  What caused the damage?

The answer: Poor Movement Patterns. 

When your tires are wearing weird on your car do you just replace the tires or do you check the alignment?

Why?  – Inward Rotation of the Knee
This can happen either because of hip weakness, foot weakness, or both.

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from: https://goo.gl/images/cALrnH

  1. Weak Hips
    • It is very common for people (even frequent gym goers) to have weakness in the hips, specifically the muscles that rotate the leg outward. When these muscles are weak the thigh will rotate inwards as the hip flexes, causing the knee to ‘turn in’ or move inward in relation to the foot and hip.  If these muscles are very weak, this will happen when a person is standing on a single leg.

      glutues-medius-minimus-and-piriformis

      From: netter atlas of human anatomy

  2. Weak Feet
    • If a person has weak foot muscles their arch will collapse when put under increased strain.  If the foot collapses, the knee will again move in relative to the foot and hip.

      Image result for foot intrinsic muscles netter

      From: Netter atlas of human anatomy

  • Summary: The knee is the joint caught in the middle of two very problematic areas and when there is dysfunction, its often the knee that takes the brunt of it.

So the question is, when traditional methods fail what do you do?

  1. Form Check – Try squatting in front of a mirror or film yourself performing a body weight squat. Does it look like the picture on the left?  If so we’re talking about a movement impairment problem.

Runners-knee-diagram

http://www.aphysio.com.au/runners-knee/

2.  Strengthen

  • Hips – clamshell
    • Clam Shell

      Position: Laying on side, knees bent, feet together
      Heels, shoulders and hips aligned
      Tilt body slightly forward (pointing navel toward the floor)

      Action: Squeeze through your glutes (buttocks)
      Keep your heels together and lift top knee up.
      Hold 5 seconds, slowly lower to starting position. (In this photo I have a resistance band around my knees, this is a simple way to increase the challenge but is not necessary to benefit from this exercise)

      Form: Do not arch your back.
      Do not allow hips to rock back & forth.
      –You may want to perform with a wall or other straight surface behind you
      Keep glutes contracted the entire time.

      To increase the difficulty you can add a resistance band around the knees or hold for a longer period of time.

      20180706_1658223928457104468406484.jpg

    • Glute Bridge

      Laying on back, knees bent about 100 deg,feet on floor & close to the buttocks. Squeezing your glutes and ab muscles, push through heels & raise hips off the floor until hips and knees are in a line. (if you feel your back working, don’t lift your hips quite as high)

      Hold position 2 seconds

      Slowly lower hips back towards the ground and repeat. (you can add difficulty by placing band around knees.)
      Feet – 

image_062375.jpg

  • Foot Muscle Energy Technique 
    • Sitting upright, curl toes passively, using hand.
    • Remove assistance of hand and continue holding toe curl with muscles in foot.
    • Hold for 10 seconds.

       Toe curl and point

  • Sitting upright, leg extended out in front of you. Curl your toes around a small towel (dish cloth), you may need to bunch up the towel a little.
  • Keeping toes curled/holding towel with toes, extend your foot as if pushing a gas pedal. Try not to drop towel. Hold for 1 second and return to starting position.

from: HEP2go public

Towel Curls

  • While seated, place a towel on a smooth floor under the arch of the foot (heel is in contact with the floor). Curl your toes in pulling the towel back towards you.
  • Be sure to keep your heel in contact with the floor the entire time.
  • Place a small weight or bag of rice on the towel to increase difficulty

3.  Stretch

hep2go public

Standing calf stretch

  • Start by standing in front of a wall about an arms reach away, feet about hip width apart.  Step one leg back about 3-4 feet, keeping the leg straight.  Point the toe of back foot slightly in, plant the back heel.
  • Lean forward towards the wall as you allow your front knee to bend until a gentle stretch is felt along the back of your leg.
  • Hold for 1 min each side, repeat 2x.

– Credit to: www.enhancephysiotherapy.net

Lunge Stretch: Start in a lunge position, with the hip you are stretching as the back leg. Move your hips and torso as far forward as you can and make sure your back knee doesn’t slide forwards. Keep your torso upright and chest forwards. You can add more of a stretch by incorporating an anterior pelvic tilt – by tucking your buttocks underneath you and moving your pelvic bone towards you.

Related image

TFL Stretch – kneeling

  • Kneeling position, extend leg closer to the wall back and to the outside of the outer leg.
  • Bend front knee and lean hip that is being stretched into wall.

tensor fasciae latae stretch graphic

The backfixer.com

5. Support

  • If your feet are an involved component I highly recommend addressing your shoe-ware.  Unstable/soft shoes allow the arch to collapse if these are the shoes you wear when you lift, this compounds the problem.  Try buying a pair of “stability” shoes and using a pronation orthodic insert to help correct this.

Image result for stability shoes

Image result for powerstep inserts

The above interventions should get you on your way to correcting the ACTUAL problem rather than just treating the symptoms.  Fair warning: This is NOT a quick fix. Its not a magic pill.   It takes weeks for your body to build real strength and it takes many repetitions of doing something properly to make it habit.  The question is, is it worth it?  If the old methods aren’t working, isn’t it time to try something else?

Dr. Mims  PT, DPT.

 

 

 

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Being More than ‘Nice.’

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on September 9, 2020
Posted in: About me, Personal, Uncategorized. Tagged: #needcoffee, 2020, aboutme, acceptance, introspective, musings, Thoughts, wednesday. Leave a comment

Story time: one of the first transformative experiences that I had in college was in a history class titled Creating Contemporary America.

Dr. Pollock was not a woman to mince words, and so when WASP behavior, the creation of the American suburb, ticky tacky houses, and ‘nice work’ became the topic of conversation, she didn’t hold back. “What is the POINT of ‘making nice?’ why have pointless conversations about the weather or peewee sports to be likable?” Is never having a ruffled interaction worth a 100 non memorable conversations? What about 1000? A lifetime?

I realized it wasn’t. I have to assume that I only get one life, one chance to EXPERIENCE. I don’t want to spend it biting my tongue, telling half truths to lubricate interactions or feigning interest or sweetness. If someone doesn’t regard me in a positive light, why should I care? Why be ‘nice’?? Why allow your defining characteristic be a lack of interesting experience? I can think of fewer things more distasteful than for this to be my descriptor. ” For fucks sake, BE SOMETHING, anything else.” I told myself. I did not/do not want to be a glass half full, rose tinted glasses person, because this person is in denial. They live in a pleasant Matrix and for this they have my disdain.

To be clear, being KIND is not the same as being nice. Sometimes people need an unpleasant but beneficial reality check. To avoid it, is Nice. To tackle it for their benefit or others is kind. To fight for things that are right is kind, but it is not nice and is often unpleasant. Sometimes ‘nice’ masquerades as kind or kind may be mistaken for nice. The difference is in quality.

‘Nice’ is vanilla. It’s sweet without intensity. The remaining taste in your mouth after a ‘nice’ interaction is as much about what you don’t experience (challenge, intensity, excitement, anger, passion) as what you do.

Be brave.

See things as they are.

Have more depth than superficial pleasantness.

Be more interesting than everyone’s cup of tea.

Be more challenging than likeable.

Be more than nice.

For many reasons this thought has been working its way through my brain. Too many times biting my tongue in the hospital setting? One too many times hearing “but they’re soo nice” as an excuse?

Maybe it’s being passed over for the easier/more palatable option too many times that has effected this post. Regardless, I will continue to be more than just nice.

-NM

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When there’s nothing to do, do nothing.

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on April 25, 2020
Posted in: About me, How To/General Info, Motivational. Tagged: general health and wellness, health and wellness, lifestyle, meditation, overcoming challenges, self improvement. Leave a comment

With the recent pandemic inundating every part of our daily lives it is easy to become overwhelmed with the feeling of helplessness or insignificance. After all, how many of us are epidemiologists or biochemical engineers working on a cure? “You’re really telling me that all I can do is stay home, wear a mask, and wash my hands?” Yes. Therein lies the difficulty. The human disposition to strive for control in our lives hinders us in accepting that sometimes we have already done everything we can.

This is when it is time to be still and do nothing.

Have I mastered this ability? No, definitely not. However, it is something that the enormity of Covid19 is teaching me. I have recently begun asking myself “Will this action change anything?” Does it help for me to refresh my news feed, to check into a debate on Facebook, or to panic buy/stock paper goods? No. Well then, don’t.

What I can do that actually WILL help me is to learn to control how I respond to challenges. I can choose calmness, awareness, and patience. For me this meant an increased diligence with Zazen. Zazen is seated, quiet meditation, where the practitioner observes the breath, the mind, and the world without engagement.

This is difficult, and it looks a lot like doing nothing.

With practice and intention we can develop the mind, and we can change how we react to situations which may be out of our control. To this prodigal blogger that seems like an ability we could all benefit from in 2020.

Stay well, wash your hands, cover your face, and develop your mind. This too shall pass.

– Nicole Mims. PT, DPT

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Interview with Seismic Systems

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on October 7, 2018
Posted in: About me, Beginners, How To/General Info, Motivational. Tagged: aboutme, advice, exercise, health, informative, interview, life, motivation, professional, self improvement, training. Leave a comment

Adobe_Post_20180911_095418.jpg

Check out my recent interview with Owner/coordinator of Seismic Systems, Rob Kabrich.

Rob is a health and wellness advocate who, through Seismic Systems helps others develop patterns to achieve their health, financial, and professional goals.

 

Who is Dr. Mims?

Dr. Mims started as an RRCA certified running coach and a NASM certified PersonalTrainer before going to school for a Doctorate in Physical Therapy. When I was looking for a trainer to get me to that next level after a long plateau she was the most organized and motivating trainer I found. She structured a solid program for me and in the first 6 months I was in the best shape I’d ever been in my life. She also is excellent at explaining the science of what is going on in your body during each phase of the program and the fluctuation in nutrition needs. I wanted to share her story and also hear her insights on health and fitness.

How did you get into health and fitness?

I initially got into fitness because of my mom passing away.  She was a lifelong smoker. A short while after she passed I decided I was going to run a marathon.  To me it felt like the opposite of lung cancer & copd was running a marathon. The only thing I’d done before that was run track in high school.  I didn’t really know how to approach the marathon distance so I felt that the best way was to get some sort of coach or mentor so I didn’t hurt myself.  I was about 20.

How was the training for the marathon?  

It was a very daunting goal, especially as I had only ever run like 3 miles max so I decided to set a shorter term goal as a half marathon.   My coach, Narissa, was just coming back from a knee surgery and I was so impressed with her. I loved how she was able to lead the group and teach and work with each of us for our specific needs.

How long before you ran the half marathon?

It took about 14-15 weeks.

That seems short…

No, that’s not terribly short to do.  The first long run is about 5 miles. In a given week your mileage would be 20-40 miles with about a quarter of it being on the long run.  It gets technical if you want to do it right which is part of the reason why I appreciated having the group. The plan was kinda laid out for you, but 3-4 months is pretty doable.

So when did you get into lifting?

I started lifting initially in college but not seriously until after becoming a coach.  After the first year or so of running and being really inspired by my coach with RunOn I decided to go through a certification program offered by RRCA (Road Runner Club of America) so that I could do that for others. That was my first certification and I decided I wanted to coach and go the health and wellness route at that point. I had all but a semester’s coursework finished for my undergraduate and so it made sense to me to wrap up my degree and then go the fitness route after.

I graduated spring of 2010 and decided to move to Austin a few months later  both because I had friends here, and there was a good fitness community. I knew that I probably wouldn’t be able to make a good income only doing running groups, so I had branched out towards PersonaI Training and was studying for my Personal Training certification through NASM.  I took my certification after moving to Austin and then got a job working for Gold’s Gym. As they say, the rest is history.

So then what made you decide to pursue a Doctorate?

It was kind of a lot of different factors.  Training requires a lot of “selling” and it really didn’t let me have the work-life balance that I wanted.  I was also a bit bored. I was able to help people achieve their goals but it was often a method of ‘just apply the formula.’.  Another component was that the gym environment is very testosterone driven. Success and respect had more to do with how much muscle mass you have and not necessarily what you knew.  A person could be a twig but that doesn’t mean they don’t know what they’re talking about. Vice versa you can gain muscle mass while doing things wrong. Just because you haven’t been injured yet, doesn’t mean you won’t.  So it ends up that because women don’t have the benefit of testosterone…a lot of us aren’t taken seriously.

 

I didn’t feel like I was having as much impact on people’s lives as I could and Physical Therapy seemed like a way I could do that, without having to deal with the things I disliked about training.  

Tell me more about a trainer not looking a certain way, cause I’ve felt that way about trainers myself

It’s understandable to, for example, want to go to a hairstylist that has good hair but in the gym it went further, it went into being female.  I was pigeonholed into being more about fat loss because I was female…still am, last time I checked anyway. There are plenty of women that do just fine, but it was another thing on the laundry list.   Now I can say “I’m a Doctor here are my credentials.” Also in PT I don’t have to sell, they’re already there to see me. And there’s never a simple formula which keeps things interesting.

What would you say to people about having a trainer?

First it’s about getting the right trainer.  Having a good trainer is a very valuable resource.  

Because…?

Trainers, when they’re doing their job properly, have a plan.  They take the information, they do an evaluation, and see what you need.  Which is easier for them than it might be for you to do for yourself. You might think you need a bigger chest but really there is a posture issue and you need to work on your back so you aren’t hunched forward and essentially hiding your chest.  Hopefully they know what they’re doing, and they’ll be able to advise you on how to lift, not just what to lift. Ballpark estimate, 75% of the people I see in the gym are lifting poorly. Lifting with bad form won’t necessarily affect you today or next week but eventually you’ll bend down to pick up a pencil and that’ll be the day your back gives out.  It wasn’t the pencil, it was years of improper movement and lifting. A qualified trainer can help prevent that by adjusting form.

 

There’s the variety as well.  Not doing the same thing everytime you go to the gym.  Being taught how to do new things and lift in new ways, well.  Having accountability. A good trainer is going to take initial measurements and do checkin measurements along the way to see if you’re headed in the right direction.  They’ll also grump at you if you don’t show up. They’re also the one that is going to make sure you’re doing your homework.

Any person’s success in the gym, or anything else in life really, is consistency.  So if you’re not doing the things you’re supposed to do when you’re not with your trainer, you’re just throwing money down the drain…a good trainer will emphasize that to you.

What are some examples of homework?

It could be the dietary changes you need to make.  Most often it’s doing your lifts outside of when you see the trainer.  Most people can’t afford to see a trainer all of the times they should be at the gym.  Your homework would be doing the workouts in between the times you’re seeing the trainer.  That may be repeating a workout or doing some specific exercise classes.

For example with fat loss clients, I would often have them check in with me before they went to a spin class.  They were getting accountability for those other workouts.

What would you suggest for people that can’t afford a trainer?

Using the resources trainers use.  ACSM, NASM, ACE, there are even PT’s that do videos on youtube about how to do specific exercises.  You can get a training program from a credentialed person or a book and then look up how to do the exercises properly.  Main takeaway is to get a program from a credentialed person not just your fit friend, ‘Joe.’ Just because someone has muscle mass doesn’t mean they are educated or qualified to give advice for your specific needs.  

 

You want the resource that you’re getting fitness advice from to be evidence based.  So if your fit bro tells you that ACSM says to lift 3 times a week and do 150 minutes of moderate cardio…they’re not wrong, and they have a resource. When it comes to fitness in general, people need to get better about asking “what is your source?”  

 

One of the frustrations about health and fitness is that everyone has opinions about things but most of the time they don’t have evidence to back it up.  You end up with a lot of conflicting information.

What are the most common misconceptions you heard as a trainer?

whew….One of the biggest ones I saw and was guilty of believing in myself for a while, was that you should do everything minimalist in the gym.  Wrist wraps were bad, weight belts were bad, supportive shoes were bad, gloves were bad. All of the things that in these people’s minds kept your body from adapting were bad.  The idea was that if you did unstable lifts without any assists, then you would overall become stronger and more stable. The thing is, doing a lift unsafely plus weight doesn’t mean you’ll adapt, it just means you’re more likely to get injured doing it. Many other things aside, does this make sense in a risk/benefit ratio?  In the end isn’t health/muscle building without injuring yourself, more important than bragging rights about being able to do a deadlift without a belt?

How do you work around this bro mentality of “I know what I’m doing?” Even though it’s wrong?

Again, I’d go with seek out credible resources and be ready with them.  Has someone done studies on this thing you’re interested in? Is it a group that has done credible studies in the past?  Are they independent, or will they somehow profit from the results? If an independent group has done a study that x number of grams of protein after working out has a maximum amount of benefit that’s different than if a company that sells protein supplements says it. Also, how recent is your information?  If it’s older than 5 years, you may want to check out newer studies.

I remember you talking about how magazine’s job’s are to sell you magazines

A magazine tells you you should buy this new type of shoe because the shoe company pays for ad space.  

What about the workouts in these magazines?

It depends on their credentials, those articles are written by people.  If someone has the education or experience to back up what they are saying, they will include that in the article.  To be clear, education doesn’t necessarily mean a degree, it means certifications, experience, references, etc.

Any other common misconceptions?

Tons…”fat is evil, carbs are evil.”  “If you want to lose fat you have to eat under 1200 calories per day.”  One of the biggest ones, that’s a pet peeve of mine, is that if women start to lift they will look manish.  I can’t tell you how many clients I’ve had that were worried about this. If you find a way to bulk up like a bodybuilder on accident, I want you to call me because I will sell that shit.  Women bodybuilders that are at that level put in tons of time and focus on their diet to get specifically to that point. It’s disrespectful to those women to think you’re just going to wake up stacked one day.  I think that myth is dying off somewhat but it’s still a thing.

 

One misconception/fad that I’ve heard of recently is you’re not lifting heavy enough if you don’t lose bladder control.  

That sounds like a terrible idea…

Yeah, no kidding.  I think this was another one of those lovely fads we can attribute to crossfit.  Occasionally the pelvic floor can become weak in some people and they can develop what’s called ‘urinary stress incontinence.’  The person may have bladder leakage when they bear down during a workout….but this is by no means healthy or a sign of ‘trying hardest,’ and glorifying it causes people (women especially) to ignore a real health problem.

O_0….holy crap!  So, yeah, there are tons of misunderstandings about lifting and nutrition.  The successful people that I know have good eating habits. Nutrition is like a whole huge thing and we could spend another interview just to go into nutrition.

True, it’s a topic that can get very complicated, very quickly.  One of the few cliches I’ve heard in the gym that actually stands up is the one “you can’t out-exercise a bad diet.” Most people eat more than they think they do and burn less than they estimate with their exercise.  If I had to emphasize anything I’d say “be conservative with your estimates and make good common sense choices.”

 

Check out Rob’s website at seismicsystemswork.com 

If you like this article you may also like: Max Strength – ‘How To’ and Sample Week

Safely transition between phases of training.

How to survive a busy gym AND get a good workout!

I want to lose body fat!  What do I do?

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Lead by example

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on September 11, 2018
Posted in: About me, Motivational, Personal. Tagged: fitness, health, lead by example, lifestyle, motivation, self improvement, self love, wellness. Leave a comment

Many of our health habits we get from how we are raised and what we saw adults do. You can choose to be an example of what to do, or what not to do.

Make a healthy choice today.

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Max Strength – ‘How To’ and Sample Week

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on September 3, 2018
Posted in: Beginners, How To/General Info, Personal, Workouts. Tagged: advice, exercise, fitness, gym, health, how to, informative, progress, resistance training, self improvement, sports, training, weightlifting, wellness, women, work, workout. Leave a comment

Ever heard people discuss their “phase” or “stage” of training and wonder what the heck they were talking about?  Like a lot of fitness buzzwords, people like to throw these terms around without much explanation as to the what/how/why.  If you are fuzzy on the purpose of training phases in general, please check out my most recent article on what the phases are, and how to transition through them.

As I discussed previously, progressing through phases of training can provide a structured way to change up your routine and continually challenge yourself, provided it is done with planning and care.  I myself use my own modification of the NASM’s phases for my personal and my client’s programs.  One of my favorite phases to work in is the one I just started last week called Max Strength, and what that entails is what I would like to discuss today.

Why: The purpose of Max Strength training is fairly self-explanatory with the goal being to increase the maximum amount you can lift in a single repetition or very short period of time (__<6 reps).  You do this by performing a relatively LOW number of repetitions, at a high intensity, for a high number of sets.   This increases the density of your ‘fast twitch’ or explosive muscle fibers by placing short time/high resistance strain on the body.

What:  Exactly what do I do to place this kind of strain on the body? The breakdown of structure is as follows.

Sets Reps  

Timing

(Ecc/Iso/Con)

 

Intensity

% of 1RM

Week 1

4-5

6

1/0/1

85%

Week 2

5

6

1/0/1

85-90%

Week 3

5-6 4-6 1/0/1

90%

Week 4

6 4 1/0/1

90-95%

Week 5 *

6-7 3-4 1/0/1

90-95%

Week 6 * 7 1-3 1/0/1

95-100%

*Optional

How: What does this look like in a day to day? Now that you have a basic idea of what Max Strength Training involves, here is a sample using my personal workouts from last week.  If you were interested you could take this week as an example and repeat it across your entire phase, changing reps/sets/ and weight as needed.

Week 1 – Day 1: Legs

 

 

 

Super-set 1

Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5
Reverse Lunge 6/95# 6/95# 6/95# 6/95# 6/95#
Single Leg Calf Raise on decline 10/+20# 10/+20 10/+20 10/+20 10/+20
 

Super-set 2

Stiff Legged Deadlift 6/125# 6/135# 6/135# 6/135# 6/135#
Back elevated Glute Bridge, with band 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW
 

Final – Stand Alone

Sumo DL 6/155# 6/175# 6/155# 6/155# 6/155#

 

Week 1 – Day 2: Vertical Push/Pull (Lats, Shoulders, Legs)

 

Circuit 1

Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5
Wide Grip Lat Pull down 6/105# 6/105# 6/105# 6/105# 6/105#
Shoulder Fly/abduction 6/12.5# 6/12.5# 6/12.5# 6/12.5# 6/12.5#
Functional Squat (to 90 deg, band below knees) 10/ BW 10/ BW 10/ BW 10/ BW 10/ BW
 

Circuit 2

Neutral Grip Lat Pull down 8/105# 6/110# 6/110# 6/110# 6/110#
Barbell Shoulder Press 8/50#

*no 60# available

8/50#

 

8/50#

 

8/50#

 

8/50#

 

Single Leg RDL 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW
 

Circuit 3

Underhand Grip Lat Pull down 7/105# 6/110# 6/110# 6/110# 6/110#
Post Delt cable pull back 6/40# 6/40# 6/40# 6/40# 6/40#
Monsterwalks, heavy resistance band 8/BW 8/BW 8/BW 8/BW 8/BW

 

Week 1 – Day 3: Horizontal Push-Pull (Chest, Back, and Legs)

 

Circuit 1

Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5
Dumbbell Chest Fly 5/2×30# 6/2×25# 6/2×25# 6/2×25# 6/2×25#
Single Arm Dumbbell Row (lawn mowers) 6/50# 6/50# 6/50# 6/50# 6/50#
Back elevated Glute Bridge with band around knees 10/ BW 10/ BW 10/ BW 10/ BW 10/ BW
Jump Rope 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec
 

Circuit 2

Machine Chest Press (neutral) 6/80# 6/80# 6/80# 6/80# 6/80#
Machine Wide Row 6/2×50# 6/2×55# 6/2×55# 6/2×55# 6/2×55#
Monster Walks with heavy band 8 each direction 8 each direction 8 each direction 8 each direction 8 each direction

 

Week 1 – Day 4: Legs

 

Super-set 1

Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5
Hex Deadlift 6/155# 6/165# 6/175# 6/185# 6/190#
SL calf raise, on decline 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW
 

Super-set 2

Leg press 6/315# 7/340# 7/350# 6/360# 6/360#
Single leg RDL 8/ BW 8/ BW 8/ BW 8/ BW 8/ BW
 

Super-set 3

Sumo Dead-lift 6/155# 6/155# 6/155# 6/155# 6/155#
Jump Rope 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec
 

Super-set 4

Hip Thrust with Barbell 6/135# 6/155# 6/155# 6/155# 6/155#
Low Ab-roll 8/bw 8/bw 8/bw 8/bw 8/bw

 

* Here is a short video I took of myself doing HEX dead-lift that night.

 

 

Week 1 – Day 5: Vertical Push-Pull (Lats, Shoulders, Legs)

 

Circuit 1

Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5
Underhand Grip Lat Pull down 6/120# 6/120# 6/120# 6/120# 6/120#
Barbell Shoulder Press 5/60# 5/60# 5/60# 5/60# 5/60#
Functional Squat, band around knees 10/BW + heavy

Band

10/BW + heavy

Band

10/BW + heavy

Band

10/BW + heavy

Band

10/BW + heavy

Band

 

Circuit 2

Neutral Grip Lat Pull down 6/120# 6/125# 6/125# 6/125# 6/125#
Dumbbell Shoulder Fly 6/2×15# 6/2×15# 6/2×15# 6/2×15# 6/2×15#
Single Leg RDL 8/BW 8/BW 8/BW 8/BW 8/BW
 

Circuit 3

Wide-grip Lat Pull Down 6/105# 6/105# 6/105# 6/105# 6/105#
Posterior Delt Cable Pull back 6/35# 6/35# 6/35# 6/35# 6/35#
Back elevated, glute bridge. Band around knees 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW

 

Week 1 – Day 6: BEACH!!! (Arms, Abs, Calf)

 

Circuit 1

Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5
Cable Tricep Extension, forearm pronation (bar handle) 8/30# 8/35# 8/40# 7/42.5# 7/42.5#
Dumbbell Hammer Curl 7/2×20 7/2×20 7/2×20 7/2×20 7/2×20
V-up core 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW
 

Circuit 2

Standing, single arm Tri extension, (neutral forearm) 8/15# 8/15# 8/15# 8/15# 8/15#
Preacher Curl with bar 6/40# 6/40# 6/40# 6/40# 6/40#
Single Leg Calf Raise on decline 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW 12/BW
Leg Raise 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW 10/BW
 

Circuit 3

Classic Crunch 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec
Oblique Crunch Left 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec
Oblique Crunch Right 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec
Bicycle 30 sec 30 sec 30 sec
Clam 3 20/bw 20/bw 20/bw
Band resisted Glute Bridge 20/bw 20/bw 20/bw

 

Keep in Mind that these are my personal workouts, and thus what you can do in the gym may be much more, or less.  Go based on how you feel, but always try to challenge yourself.

I hope this was helpful.  Please leave any feedback in the comments below.

Best,

Nicole Mims.  PT, DPT.

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Safely transition between phases of training.

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on August 26, 2018
Posted in: Beginners, How To/General Info, Motivational, Workouts. Tagged: advice, DIY, exercise, fitness, health, how to, informative, progress, self improvement, training, workout. Leave a comment

Changing up how you train is an important component in preventing plateaus and continuing to make progress towards your goals.

contemporary gradient handrails perspective

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

In order to accomplish this in a structured way many trainers organize how they progress their clients through ‘training phases,’ each of which has its own ranges of sets/reps/and intensity (percentage of one rep max) meant to achieve a specific purpose. Each phase and its respective goals lead into and help you progress towards the next.  Every different trainer/ certification program has their own subdivided phases.

The primary phases of training that I use include:

  • Stabilization (muscle endurance, balance, joint stability)
  • Hypertrophy (gaining muscle size, building strength, some muscle endurance)
  • Max Strength (explosive strength, increasing the maximum you can lift in one rep)
  • Conditioning (power, fat loss)

phases of training

Changing up training should be approached carefully as you are (by its nature) putting a different type of strain on your body, and thus there can be a risk of injury. Here are a few guidelines to help.

1) Begin conservatively! You aren’t responsible to numbers. If, for example, the phase you are in has you lifting 65-80% of your 1 rep max, start off on the 65% end of this range and work your way up from there. If this feels easy the first day, give it a workout or so to see how your body responds and then increase.

2) Take rest breaks and days off as you need them (aka, listen to your body). Remember that even if you’ve been working out for some time (months, years, etc) changing your training places new stresses on the body and it might take a few days to acclimate.

3) Record your workouts including the weight/resistance you use for each exercise. This will help you track your progress and give you a good starting point the next time you perform that particular lift. For example, if I lifted 4 sets of 10 reps with 50 lbs last week, this week I might go for 4 sets of 12 or increase the weight by 5lbs.

4) Be patient to see change. It takes the body about four week to make visually noticeable changes. Don’t let yourself get caught up in measuring or comparing your physique everyday/ every lift. Instead set regular check in periods at the end of each phase or once a month. This will keep you accountable but prevent being disappointed because you can’t see a difference in your day to day.

This is my recent check in (about 4 weeks apart) and it was a huge motivator for me to compare these two photos.

5) Talk is cheap. Actually change your training! There are a lot of people who say that they are sick of plateaus; and yet they enjoy knowing exactly what they will do in the gym. “Bench at 135, then incline at _____, then triceps.” The idea of changing how they train and making gains sounds good, but its hard to break out of our comfort zones. When you get to the end of your cycle measure the change you made, review your previous workouts, and then move the f– on. If you stay in the gym consistently, your favorite phase will come right back around in a few months, and chances are good that you’ll perform even better the next time.

I hope you found this helpful and please reach out if you have any questions.

Nicole Mims. PT, DPT

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Break out of the Rat Race

Posted by Nicole Mims PT, DPT on August 19, 2018
Posted in: Beginners, Motivational, Personal. Tagged: #selfimprovement, advice, dedication, exercise, fitness, fuel, Sunday, training, Workouts. Leave a comment

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