Thank You, Mrs. Obama – Let’s Move, and Partnership for a Healthier America

Michelle Obama, wife of our President, is taking a stand for physical education and fitness.

She’s started an initiative called Let’s Move!, that has a website to boot!

The group has four initiatives – Healthy Choices, Healthier Schools, Physical Activity, and Accessible and Affordable Healthy Food.

Yes, let's!

“To support Let’s Move and facilitate and coordinate partnerships with States, communities, and the non-profit and for-profit private sectors, the nation’s leading children’s health foundations have come together to create a new independent foundation – the Partnership for a Healthier America – which will accelerate existing efforts addressing childhood obesity and facilitate new commitments towards the national goal of solving childhood obesity within a generation.”

Partnership for a Healthier America

Linked to in the header above, the Partnership is composed about five founding organizations.  It’s a way to provide additional support, financial and outreach, for the Let’s Move! project.

Ok Pepsi, let's see what you've got!

Pepsi, On the Bandwagon

Pepsi Co. has announced that it’s going to support Mrs. Obama’s initiative a few ways.  First, they’re changing the way they list calories on their container.  They’re also going to provide funding for some movement initiatives.

The Old and the New Me

The old me would be suspicious, and doubtful of any change coming from this type of thing.

The new me – or, rather, me, now – sees any effort toward a positive direction as a good thing.

Please support the Let’s Move! initiative by going to the site and subscribing to the blog roll, and enter your email address to receive program updates as they come out.

It only works if everyone pitches in…

Fat Kids, Their Parents, Nature Deficit, and the Future

So many articles on overweight/out-of-shape children popped up on my Google alerts yesterday that I have to post about it.  Not that I don’t want to, you know.

The kids in Sacramento are terribly unfit, and getting less fit by the year.  The Sacramento Bee article linked to above does a good job of showing how most “physical fitness” data ignores socioeconomic data.  It’s essential that we start putting these things together, to be able to see the bigger picture.

You see, poor kids are typically less fit than kids from more wealthy families.

One of the schools mentioned also had to reduce the presence of their “physical fitness specialist” from five days per week, to two days per week.  I’m sure that kind of thing is happening all over the country.  “PE” isn’t valued in our culture.

Great Britain is experiencing the same symptoms.  The article says, though, tat the biggest cause is a lack of regular physical activity by the children.  Sounds good.  Again, though, it’s only part of the argument.

This recent article in Scientific American points out how being in nature or in a natural setting not only reduces stress markers, but also creates value change in the people involved.

Out in the Wild, people naturally become more “other-focused,” and less “self-focused.”  Further, our motivational drive switches from an extrinsic drive, to a more intrinsic drive.

In all of these articles, though, where are the parents?

I mean, why aren’t fingers being pointed?  And pointed where they should be?

Socioeconomic status notwithstanding, parents play a huge role in getting their kids active, and into nature.

I suppose what I’m saying is this – we always look for the “cause” in the immediate present.  But those things are just symptoms.

What happened in the parents’ generation that has led them to care less about physical activity and nature?  Or at least, to be less involved in those things, or have their kids less involved?

What happened back then?  Treat the cause, not the symptom…

Exuberant Animal East Coast Jam – November 7 and 8

Hi!

Exuberant Animal is holding its first ever East Coast event on the weekend of November 7th and 8th, at the Gerstung Intersport Center, in Baltimore, MD.

The event is only $150, and includes 2 full days of play and learning, dinner on Saturday night, and a party.

Jump For Joy!

Click this Picture to Download the Event Flyer

For those of you who don’t know, Exuberant Animal is a group founded by Frank Forencich that promotes health, vitality, and happiness, through physical activity – in particular, in play and play-based movement.

EA is built around a concept of fitness that comes from an evolutionary perspective of the human animal.  We advanced through eons of development by being playful – inquisitive, adventurous, daring – by experimenting with new ways of doing things.

This evolutionary perspective is a large part of the EA mission, and includes addressing not just the ills of sedentarism, but also the ills caused by some of our modern “conveniences” – shoes, computers (and other devices leading to repetitive stress syndromes), hard flat surfaces, etc.

Because of this, you find people as diverse as Mick Dodge (the Barefoot Sensei), Barefoot Ted McDonald (barefoot running expert, and one of the cast/characters in Chris McDougall‘s new book “Born to Run“), Kwame Brown (neuroscientist, child-development expert, and board member of the IYCA), Dr. Stuart Brown (head of the National Institute for Play).

As different as we are, we all share a common belief in the benefits of play for all people.

For me, being a part of Exuberant Animal has been a transformative process.

Having been in the fitness industry for 9 years now, and involved in play (in every aspect of life) and physical activity for my whole life, I’d come to a point where the traditional approach of sets, reps, and boring static exercise using machines, dumbbells, and other equipment, just wasn’t making sense anymore.  I could feel the boredom flowing between my clients and myself after their umpteenth set of squats, bench press, or other “traditional” exercise.

Taking the reps/sets out of exercise, and injecting play in its place, brings diversity to movement.  From that diversity, happiness grows.

As anyone knows who ever played competitive sports, you were at your peak when you weren’t focused on how much conditioning you did that day, but on how much you were “in it” – in the flow state.  This is the state of play – where possibilities are open, you are unselfconscious, able to enjoy using your body in the moment to have fun and accomplish your desired goal.

In my experience, what most clients suffer from is a lack of motivation.  Then, they come into the gym and we put them into bizarre circumstances where we’re observing and correcting them, making them even more self-conscious.

EA provides alternatives through fitness “games” that make the process interactive, playful, and most of all FUN.  You still get to work people in all three planes of motion, you still get to use whatever equipment you like the most, but now you also get to engage your client’s spirits in their workouts.

If you’re on the East Coast, and you’re at all interested, go to the EA website, check out the details, and register for this event.  It’s going to be great – and even greater if you’re there!

I’ll see you there!

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OCD-land

I’m convinced that one of, if not the, defining element of current American (US) culture is OCD/ADHD.

It’s everywhere.  People want to count calories, count repetitions, count weight, count volume, count miles run, count times, compare times, compare weights, compare reps, compare sets, count cancer cases, count bees, count count count count.

And it doesn’t change anything.  In fact, I’m not sure it does much at all, other than to perpetuate the counting.

Let’s take exercise as an example, since that’s what this blog is purportedly about.

Do you burn more calories when playing a game on a playground than you do on a treadmill [most likely]?  What is the optimal work/rest interval to burn the most calories (on the playground or on the treadmill) [no such thing exists]?  Exactly how many pitches can little Johnny (or Beth) sustain before he (or she) suffers overuse injuries in the rotator cuff [one too many for him/her]?  How high must one be able to jump in order to be a pro basketball star [vertical leap is poorly correlated with basketball performance]?  When is the best time to start lifting weights [whenever you feel ready]?  How frequently should I workout every week [whenever you feel up to it]?  How much cardio should I do [as much as you feel like doing]?  What type of weight training should I do – bodybuilding, Olympic lifting, powerlifting, corrective exercise, fitness training, Crossfit type stuff [whatever floats your boat]?

I’m still trying to come up with a single answer to all of these questions.  I know it’s out there.  It’s something like this – “Do whatever you feel like doing.”

Now, there is a problem, in that many people will attempt to do things they have no experience with and get injured.  It’s like wanting to do some underwater welding, going out and buying the equipment, and jumping into the lake with it.

“What the heck?!  It can’t be that hard to figure out!”

So I’ll give you that one.  It is hard to figure out.  Especially when you have no experience.

But the solution to that part is simple – find someone who knows, and ask them.

Then you have to do something.  You either have to take their advice, and do what they’re telling you (for better or worse), or look for another opinion (for instance, find someone who says you CAN get washboard abs sitting on your couch!!!!), or do nothing at all.

I think what bothers me is that no one teaches THE BASICS.

Here are THE BASICS as I see them:

  1. Understanding your body
  2. Learning to listen to and hear your body
  3. Doing things that are agreeable to your body

That’s it.  At any level, you can go as deeply as you choose, getting a PhD in each, if you wish.   But you must engage in those three steps in order to succeed – and success here, is being a healthy human being.  Beyond that, you don’t have to do anything.  You don’t have to count calories, or miles jogged.  You don’t have to have a workout log, or go to a class every week.  You don’t have to do anything in particular.  But you must do something.

Yes, Josh, but what does that have to do with OCD?  Well, once you practice those three things, you don’t have to count anything anymore.  You don’t have to obsess.  You don’t have to be distracted.  In fact, once you do those three things, you don’t even have to do those three things anymore!

Note – This post brought to you by the mother at Jackson Playground this morning who told her maniacal kids “If you don’t calm down, I won’t let you watch TV when we get home.”

Dear playground-mom, the solution to our shared misery is simple – you didn’t run them enough at the playground that you were then rushing to leave, only to sit their unexhausted minds down in front of the boob tube…

A New Way to Play…

I went to the field where I lead a play-based fitness group the other day, and saw this at the baseball diamond:

HOME!  NO!  BACK!  NO!  WAIT!  RUN!

HOME! NO! BACK! NO! WAIT! RUN!

If you can see it, someone got creative with the chalk lines the day before, and basically scribbled all over the field!

Immediately I imagined two teams coming to the field that day, ready for battle, finding the rules slightly changed…

Then I thought of how much fun it would be to play on a field like this, especially after weeks or years of the same old straight lines connecting first, second, third, and home.

My friend Charlie Reid was at this park with me a few days prior to the development of the new baseball rules, and we watched a little league team playing.

“How boring,” I said.  All of the kids stood in the outfield and waited in line for their coach to pop fly balls out to them.  I presume it was for practice, but it could’ve been some kind of weeding process as well.

“Yeah,” Charlie said.  “It would be so much better if you rotated positions every play, like you do in volleyball in high school.  If no one had a set position, everyone would have to adapt to the demands of new positions.  No one would get stuck in the outfield, or on the bench.”

“Wow!  That’s a great idea!” I said.

We watched the kids in the outfield, standing in line, waiting for fly-balls…

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Play-Based “Bootcamp”

I’ve been leading a play-based “bootcamp” (let’s call it a “foot camp” from now on) going on four weeks now, and it’s AWESOME!

First off, what is a “play-based foot camp?”  Well, the easiest way to describe it is this – go to the playground and watch what the sweaty kids are doing.  That’s what we do, plus some!  We play a lot of the games highlighted on the Exuberant Animal site, as well as some more traditional games, and some other, new activities.

As many know, and everyone in the camp is starting to find out – play-based exercise not only offers all of (if not more than) the strength, endurance, and awareness benefits of “regular” exercise, but is also FUN!

We’ve been playing like there’s no tomorrow.  The highlight for me, so far, was last week, when we had six people – three adults and three kids – playing duck-duck-goose.  The way we made it fair was by making the tag/chase a bear-crawl!  That made it challenging enough for the adults that they were on par with the kids!

Something else happened Friday that I have to mention – I got stung by a bee!  Actually, I stepped on one when we were playing a game in a clover-patch.  Poor bee!  But MAN, that hurts!  I can’t remember the last time I was stung by (or stepped on) a bee…it’s been a while.  No wonder little kids cry!

I really just want to say thanks to everyone who has come out to the camp these past four weeks, and has made it such a wonderful, enriching experience for me.  I hope that you’re getting as much out of it as I am!

For anyone who wants more information about the camp, contact me, and I’ll be happy to speak with you about it.

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Egoscue, pain free, and real movement…outdoors even

I love the video on this site – http://www.patchfitness.com/

As an aside – I would bet that an assessment of a modern NFL combine test-day would provide you with significantly worse movement patterning than this video does.

But I really LOVE that video because of the awesome footage of the Polish weightlifting team practicing. They do everything – run stairs, throw LOGS, sprint, tumble, flip, play other games…THEN they hit the weightroom.

Check out these kids, on an indoor replica of Egoscue’s original “patch” log course – http://www.egoscuefoundation.org/programs.php

Absolutely inspirational! Of course, I’m slightly saddened that the logs have to be recreated in plastic, and that the wonderful variability of outdoor terrain is exchanged for two-dimensional “perfection” of the school gymnasium, but hey, it’s a place to start!

While I haven’t read any of Egoscue’s books YET, I am so impressed by these presentations that I’m ready to read them all (and I just bought them all on Amazon). Of course, I’ll provide complete book reviews when I’m done!

In the meantime, get outside, play around a little bit. Do whatever you feel like! Throw some logs and some junk! Have FUN!