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Archive for the tag “Dumbbells”

Open Canvas

selfie 7

Previously written, but freshly revised.

I check my email everyday to see what the newsletter from Ballet Beautiful brings.  When I’m angry or sad I now look to have my alone time with Mary Helen Bowers.  I connect an HDMI Cable from my phone to the television in order to see Mary and hear Mary at the utmost capacity I can endure.  I lose myself in challenge, in burn, in precision, in stream, in flow, in ballet-inspired motions and emotions.

For the past 7 months I’ve switched my training course.  I’ve been able to keep my motivation full of momentum.  I acquired new goals, new functions, new visions and new approaches.  I work on accessory muscles.  I work on finer details – you know the kind of muscles that add finishing touches.  I work on engagement.  I work on balance.  I work on coordination.  I work on intense body awareness.

There’s no surprise with the newer smaller muscles strengthened how much they propel my bigger muscles in being stronger and healthier in ways where movements (I train at least twice a week) such as Bent-Over Rows, Shoulder Presses and Squats are now enhanced.  Every exercise feels easier.  I move through them in flow.  I used to have a love/hate relationship with Squats and now I can say for the first time in a long time my Squats feel a thousand times better.  I feel lithe in action and my body responds effectively with countless muscle fibers igniting at once like electricity.

For the past 7 months my training hasn’t consisted much of what I call compound movements with heavy barbells or dumbbells.  Decreasing my weightlifting training has taken me a long time – mentally – to be fine with.  Of course, most of the movements I deal with on a regular basis are multipurpose anyway, but there’s also a higher caliber of isolated action, unlike compound activity.

For over a decade I’ve used external equipment on top of my already petite yet heavy solid and periodically doughy frame (160lbs, 180lbs, 200lbs +).  I know what compounds bring and I also knew I needed to shock my body to work for me in a whole different direction.  So I couldn’t wake up 13 years later to tell myself I’m going to cut back on weightlifting because I just didn’t know how I was going to put what I considered to be my religion on hold.  I couldn’t see it possible in my mind.

But, things take time.  Life happens and sometimes people suffer poetically during an ankle break.  Too many things broke down in my life, and the last two years I’ve been working to get back on top emotionally, mentally, spiritually and physically.  It seemed the only way for me to start was by starting small.  I remembered when relearning how to place weight through my ankle and on my foot again that walking a single block was hellish and too much for my lower back and ankle to bear.  During this time, weightlifting seemed like a big monster, it was too much to tackle.

So, I found solace in a new world that allowed me to start small.  All I had to do was a few minutes a day.  I didn’t even need to stand to perform these exercises.  I just needed to start and needed to commit to a thousand reasons bigger than myself as to why it became highly important for me to move my body.  That’s when I came across Ballet Beautiful by accident.

The minimalist appeal and whiteness of the set and such spoke to me.  It became an open canvas where I gave myself permission to leave my old fitness self behind.  I perceived the white to be virginal, a clean slate.  I analyzed the BB videos.  I analyzed Mary Helen Bower’s body of curves and (almost) hidden ballerina muscles and it was a new kind of strong and a new kind of fitness.  I started on the purple Mat.

Still I was selfishly deep into my depression and couldn’t get myself moving, let alone play with dumbbells.  Out of reach like an island I’ll most likely never visit – Plyometrics movement became removed from my workout regimen.  So, it made sense for me to try smaller workouts so I could pace my body and mind, even though I had an old school frame of mind where longer workouts like an hour plus is what I’ve been taught to perform.

The first small workout I tried was a 7 minute Swan Arms Ballet Beautiful workout.  I shit you not I thought flapping my arms up and down would be as simple as breathing air but I was mistaken.  It turned out I couldn’t even perform these swan arms for 20 seconds at a time.  My bodybuilder frame and over 30lb weight gain made sure my arms felt like wooden logs.  I was frustrated and wondered how I was supposed to get the maximum benefits out of these 7 minutes if I couldn’t even make it through the first minute straight.  But like everything, practice makes perfect.  I know I didn’t learn how to bench or overhead press over 90lbs on my first day of training.

I had to start from the beginning, which for me I kept looking at it like the bottom.  It took me months to get better and be able to do an entire 7 minute swan arm video without a single pause.  Imagine how thrilled I was when I did!  This meant the next best thing to do was to tweak my form.  I wasted no time in buying up Ballet Beautiful DVD’s overnight.  I made it a point to learn as quickly as I could.  I no longer thought about losing motivation.  Or if my workouts were going to be short or long.  The focus became about doing multiple workouts a day and night.  Mostly because I love a body challenge.

I was, and still am super high in love with Ballet Beautiful.  When the 5th month mark came around, I became confident with muscle memory and was able to perform videos and segments without pause I decided to subscribe to Ballet Beautiful’s Custom Workout Membership.  The only decision that seemed difficult to make was putting my gym membership on freeze while I use the gym money for my Ballet Beautiful subscription.  Well, I never thought I’d do that!  But it made sense, as every day multiple times a day I was dedicated and devoted to ballet-inspired workouts.  I was painting the new canvas with a fresh fitness brain.

-Ms. Hall

Reflecting Meathead

Is it true once a meathead always a meathead? 

I’m not entirely sure but I have been testing it out on a weekly basis.  During the week I perform multiple Ballet Beautiful workouts, however in the weekends (and one day a week) I save my weightlifting sessions and treat them like royalty.  I savor every exercise and every rep even though I changed my rep style and training techniques.

Since my goals are different my programs consist of higher rep ranges than what I’m used to, also more circuit-training style and also tri-sets/giant sets.  The rest time has been super short and interesting.  Ever since I started spreading out my Ballet Beautiful workouts throughout the day – I became comfortable with doing quicker workouts.  I also became addicted to a different kind of fascinating localized burn.

For a long time I used to perform 2-3 hours in the gym on weightlifting and cardio sessions but now I’m on to doing everything different.  To be honest, I don’t think I enjoy long workouts at the moment.  At the moment it feels like getting my workouts done quickly is a new accomplishment.  I do have to control my breathing as I’m dying half the time, with or without digesting caffeine.  On this note:  The last few years I actually enjoy taking caffeine for workout sessions because there are times when it blunts the hardcore pain and burn – it makes it easier to get through difficult super intense workouts.

I’ve broken up my weightlifting/strength-training bouts typically into these body parts:  Shoulders, Traps & Back, Chest & Back or Chest, Squats & Arms or Legs, Glutes and Arms.  It’s very typical of me to do any body part along with Back (and I’ve been trying to get out of this habit) because I love training back!  Then there are times when I throw in many different push ups at one time and bang them out as quickly as possible while aiming for 100 reps or higher as a round 1 or round 2 of my workout in the day.  I have a soft spot for push ups because being a woman it proved difficult for me to get to a place where I could do one push up, so now generally I go buck-wild doing them because I can now.  It keeps the upper body and core strength high anyway.

This past weekend I performed Barbell Bent-Over Rows (underhand), Dumbbell Shoulder Press, Bent-Over Rear Delt Flyes and Dumbbell Bicep curls one after another.  I’ve never been a big fan of tri-sets or giant sets back in the days – here and there they were a once in a blue thing, but for the most part straight and supersets were always my go to with rest-pause/staggered sets.

Back to the weekend, I dug my feet into the ground and got into a perfect 90 degree with my body so my hamstrings are stretched yet contracted isometric and pulling underhand for the Bent-Over Rows.  I felt absolutely amazing!  It’s like an invisible breeze flowed through my hair, although it felt like a sauna in the room.

And I felt wild fire spread across the forest of my muscles.  I love when it feels like my entire body grows swollen in a matter of seconds and the delts start to fill like balloons.  I love when the body comes off as if it’s hitting muscular failure when each set goes on and the pull of the motion seems to get jerky and doesn’t feel as smooth yet the reality is you’re not jerking your body in a discombobulated fashion.  You’re just becoming one with the mind-muscle-body connection.

Then I moved right into the Standing Dumbbell Shoulder Press as my abdominals pulled itself in while the glutes keep taunt and super tight to aid in a strong soldier position.  I pumped out reps and focused on maintaining good breathing techniques as my heart raced and raced and raced.

My lats became a passionate bonfire while in the Dumbbell Bent-Over Rear Delt Flyes.  I got into the perfect 90 degree, and my hamstrings are stretched yet contracted isometric again, but this time I have to pull back almost in an arc.  I fought through the raging flame.  I fought through gravity.  I fought through the speeding heart.  I grinded my teeth.  My cheeks puffed up like a hamster binging.  My mascara sweated and burned in my eyes.

Then quickly I moved into Dumbbell Bicep Curls and smiled at myself in the mirror.  My delts are pumped and I could see these lines embedded in the top of my traps every time I alternated curling and squeezing for two seconds before coming back down.  And it’s in these times where I realized how much I’ve busted my ass training with the first loves of my life:  Dumbbells and Barbells.  This is true resistance.  I love the iron and nothing can ever take its place.

I felt the rush of blood raged through my veins rep after rep after rep as I moved and grimace on to each exercise until I finally took a rest for a few moments before I had to hit it again for another 3 more big sets.  This was another reminder that once a meathead is always a meathead.  It’s a drug.  It’s an addiction.  It’s something my body and my mind calls for without a shadow of a doubt.  This is true love.

Weightlifting gives me a different outlet by allowing me to tap into various types of emotions that dwell within me.  When I want to feel like a hungry beast, when I want to take my aggression out, when I want to tighten my skin, when I want to swell my body parts like I live off a tank of helium and when I want to feel like my strong self again – I have weightlifting to count on.

Ballet Beautiful allows me to feel feminine and it provides contrast for my weightlifting.  Weightlifting makes me feel masculine – and if this sounds sexist to you – then that sounds like a personal problem.  I embrace both essences of gender.  Both training systems work for me in different ways, like I work on bigger muscle with weights and smaller ones with Ballet Beautiful.  They both have everlasting techniques and history.  They both share technique, strength and grace.

I acquire distinctive endorphins from both training systems, but it seems like weightlifting is what makes my blood fire instinctively and it makes me feel powerful and invincible – capable of anything and everything.

-Ms. Hall

Training Wise: Nowadays

ILB

Things come and things go.

Things that are true to your heart remain dear and the things that didn’t work (or you outgrew) gets thrown into the garbage along with your ex’s and fake friends.  Here’s a current list of 10 things I do and currently don’t do anymore regarding matters of training.  Some of these things are subject to change because who wants to remain the same when life is about creation, opportunities, new energy and more.

P.S.  When you hit the end, maybe you can tell me one thing you currently do or don’t anymore that applies to fitness or any other aspect of life you feel like sharing.  Thanks for reading!  🙂

1.  I don’t spend 3 hours at the gym anymore.

2.  I don’t stretch for an entire hour after any training session.

3.  I don’t go to the gym most of the time (subject to change).

4.  I don’t train when my body is burnt out.

5.  I don’t train when my bad shoulder decides to throw a wrench in my exercises.

6.  I don’t spend time giving out free training or diet advice because the average person isn’t serious about body business.

7.  I don’t lend an ear to people who are full of excuses as to why they can’t train or add vegetables to their diet.

8.  I don’t write every training session I perform in my workout book.

9.  I don’t fuck with everybody or anybody who trains.  Just because they train doesn’t mean we’re diehard friends or fans of one another.

10.  I don’t care for the Fit Family as much anymore online (especially on Twitter), since many acted like I didn’t exist because I couldn’t workout or inspire their fit accounts because I had a broken ankle.

*


1.  I do take my workouts serious in the apartment and have been purchasing heavier dumbbells and plates for my barbell to train with.

2.  I do perform mini workouts scattered throughout the day from early day to late night, as well as 1 hour (or longer) sessions.

3.  I do become creative with programs I write at the house ranging from calisthenics to ballet workouts.

4.  I do watch what I eat once again:  Carbs around workouts, plates of veggies in the evening, eating whole foods, may have 1-2 snacks.

5.  I do eat burgers and put cream in my coffee.

6.  I do train others because in doing so it continues to inspire me.

7.  I do call myself a fat ass to make sure I have a mind-frame that corrects me when I want to cheat.

8.  I do take photos to see how fat I look and compare them to when I owned less bodyfat so I can maintain the correct train of thought.

9.  I do continue to use my anger as a form of fuel, dedication and therapy for most of my workouts.

10.  I do allow my training to inspire my writing and my writing to inspire my training.

-Ms. Hall

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