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Jason Harrison

Are you busy or disorganized?

May 4, 2016 By Jason Harrison

There’s a group of people who pride themselves in the frantic nature of their days. When they’re in a meeting at work they’re also checking their email; when they’re checking their email they’re also walking to their next appointments, precariously navigating the work hallway or the streets outside; and when they’re driving to their next meeting, they’re clocking 45 miles per hour on Interstate 75 because they’re reading responses to the email they sent during their previous meeting; and on their way home they’re tapping out responses to those emails while swinging through the fast food drive thru because they forgot to prepare something for dinner.

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Any of this sound familiar? If so, you might not be busy. You might just be disorganized and chaotic. While this might make you feel like you’re a hard-charging, go getter who’s making things happen, what’s really going on is you’re allowing life to happen to you and wasting energy that could be used to enjoy life, fall in love, make love, learn a skill, serve your community, or explore a new neighborhood.

Chaotic people come to me all the time seeking personal training. Their calling card is rescheduled sessions, questions about things we clearly discussed in an email, and last-minute cancellations. It’s not that they don’t value my time or that they’re bad people. They just don’t have a firm grasp of their own time because they never slow down enough to take inventory. They live in a constant state of anxiety bubbling just beneath the surface because they’ve overbooked themselves, leaving too little time to get from one appointment to the next and not enough energy to be fully present at any given moment.

Training sessions with people addicted to chaos can be difficult because their minds are racing and I have to corral their energy and push them to focus. “Tell me that story after this set,” you’ll often hear me say. Or “PAUSE. Pay attention to what you’re doing here.” These sessions require more of my energy because these clients lack focus. One moment of me not paying attention can lead to a herniated disc, pulled muscle, or a dangerous fall.

Sometimes people will ask me why my business is called “Present Tense Fitness,” and at least part of the answer stems from my experience with clients addicted to chaos. In my gym I don’t have any clocks, and I quietly encourage people to store their phones out of sight (as I do with my own). Pay attention to what’s going on in your body RIGHT NOW. And if we can learn to do that in the gym we also can learn to do that outside of the gym. More people would eat well–or at least not eat so poorly–if they stopped for a moment or two to pay attention to the way that lunchtime fast food run actually made them feel.

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If you are addicted to chaos, here are some simple ways to begin to live a life more deeply connected to the people and moments that ought to matter.

1.) Use a calendar: I can’t stress this one enough. You need a calendar, electronic or otherwise. Start by blocking off seven to eight hours of sleep every day, schedule in when and how you’re going to eat, and then schedule in workouts. Only then do you fill in the rest. (“But Jason, if I filled out my calendar that way, wouldn’t my entire life be structured around wellness?” Why yes. You are on to me.)

2.) Put your phone away. Get your phone out of bed. Get your phone away from the dining room table. Keep your phone in your bag at the gym (unless you’re taking evaluative video of an exercise). For the love of god keep your phone away when you’re on a date or having dinner with someone you love.

3.) Give yourself enough time. One of the things I say to personal training clients about working out on their own is if you don’t have time to warm up properly then you don’t have time to work out. One could alter this slightly by saying if you don’t have enough time to get to an appointment without speeding or rushing, then you shouldn’t have made that appointment in the first place. Rushing to an appointment is the surest way you can bake anxiety, inattention to detail, and wasted energy into your day.

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4.) Value relationships. This is strongly related to the point about putting your phone away, but be mindful of where your attention is when you’re talking to someone. Are you listening to what they’re saying or are you planning your next meeting? What can you do to be present and make the most of the time you’re spending with this person? This can be more difficult at work than in our personal lives, but even in that command performance work lunch you couldn’t avoid, you’re still sitting in front of another human being. Connect with them. Listen to them. Exhibit empathy. You have to be there, right? So why not make it as authentic of a meeting as possible?

In case you’re wondering, it wasn’t just the chaos-addicted who inspired the name Present Tense Fitness. It was also the Pearl Jam song, “Present Tense.”

“Do you see the way that tree bends?
Does it inspire?
Leaning out to catch the sun’s rays
A lesson to be applied”

If your nose is in your phone, you can’t lean out to catch the sun’s rays, because you won’t notice them. If you’re rushing around, you won’t feel the warmth of that sun, nor will you feel the warmth of the people around you who want nothing more than to be with you because they care about you. If you’re not sleeping enough, eating well, and moving well, you won’t be able to reach for anything at all.

Aim in your life to be present.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, present tense fitness

About That Abs Class…

April 27, 2016 By Jason Harrison

The other night someone stopped by my gym to ask about what kind of training I do. After explaining that I focus primarily on personal training with a strength focus, the person asked if I do training sessions specifically focused on “abs.”

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This made me think about the gap between what people want and what they actually need. I can tell a lot about whether a person is committed to goals and process or their comfortable routines based on what types of exercise they do.

Generally, I’ve found that devotees to classes and cardio machines are addicted to their routine. They like their 7 PM Zumba class, their elliptical session while watching Morning Joe, or their abs sculpting class at noon. These things make them sweat and generally make them feel good. These aren’t bad things.

The problem is that they’re not going to be particularly effective either. Hopefully, you know me well enough to understand that I’m not here to shame or belittle anyone’s choice of exercise. I’m not. And hopefully, you also know me well enough now at this point to realize that I’m not dogmatic about exercise. My non-negotiable is that everyone ought to be doing some sort of progressively overloaded weight-bearing exercise, but that can look like a lot of different things for different people based on goals, interests, and experience.

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Zumba is only going to work for so long before it stops changing your body. It’s not that it’s not challenging, but that it’s difficult to progressively overload and it’s not weight-bearing in the sense that you’re targeting your central nervous system, bones, muscles, and joints for adaptation. One can lack mobility in significant areas but still complete a Zumba class. This is what makes it a great option for someone who’s never exercised–but not as their ONLY form of exercise. Because if one lacks mobility, one ought to work to gain mobility. That’s not going to happen in a class like Zumba.

Abs classes might make your belly burn, but chances are you’re not going to flatten out anything if you’re not also doing squats, lunges, presses, and pulls along with a healthy dose of well-balanced eating that includes a lot of vegetables. You might view your stomach as your “problem area,” but that pathway to a flatter midsection is paved in the kitchen and in the strength training facility or yoga studio–not the abs class.

That morning elliptical ritual you have is great if you’re using it to clear your head and get a good start on the day. But don’t think that you’re going to elliptical your way to the body you want without also a good bit of strength training or yoga. The more you use the elliptical, the more efficient your body gets at handling it–which is the death knell for forcing an adaptive response.

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My sense of why people opt for routine instead of actual change is they’re afraid that they’re somehow the people for whom fitness doesn’t actually work. Why commit to an actual goal only to be disappointed? This is fear talking to you. Don’t listen to it. I’m here to tell you that if you lift progressively heavier weights or practice yoga with a good teacher; if you sleep seven to eight hours a night; and if you eat vegetables and protein at every meal (and your protein can come from the right veggies) you can change your body.

Don’t resign yourself to routine when you can accomplish. Don’t settle when you can achieve. Don’t give up when you can succeed.

So before you sign up for that next abs class, ask yourself this: Do you want to do what you like? Or do you want to do what works?

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Family Conversations About Meals

April 20, 2016 By Jason Harrison

What are you having for dinner tonight?

You should know the answer to that question, even if your spouse is the one responsible for preparing dinner on this particular evening.

Lately I’ve been coaching a number of people who can’t answer that question, usually because they’ve outsourced all responsibility to their significant other. The problem with this scenario–even if, at best, it represents a mutually agreeable division of labor–is that it removes responsibility, buy-in, and empowerment from one half of the household equation.

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Most of the time–though not quite all–it’s us dudes who aren’t quite dialed into what’s at the table. I’m sure someone smarter than me could give you an entire socio-historical breakdown about why this continues to be the case in 2016, but for now let’s just agree that husbands and boyfriends ought to be a part of the discussion.

Food is such a source of guilt (I shouldn’t have eaten that), turmoil (read: picky child eaters), and judgment (I can’t believe you’re eating that) that I can understand why we avoid talking about it. By outsourcing the cooking duties to someone else, I think there’s a part of us thinking that we’re absolving ourselves of responsibility.

“I’d like to eat a little better, but my wife does all the cooking.”

“I’d like to eat a little better, but my husband usually does the grocery shopping.”

If you’re married with children, my guess is you spend some amount of time discussing college funds, vacations,  and visits from the in-laws. You have those discussions because navigating each of these things requires some degree of planning. I’m here to argue that food for your family is more important than all of those things combined–and requires no less planning than figuring out how to save for college.

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Too many people talk about food in terms of willpower and discipline, but in my experience the real issue around eating well is planning.

Who does the grocery shopping and when?

What’s going on this week?

Kids have a softball game on Wednesday? Cool–what’s for dinner?

Compulsory after work drinks with the new boss? Cool–what’s the plan for eating well so you don’t end up eating all of the mozzarella sticks?

Traveling for work? Have you checked Google maps to see where your hotel is and what decent food options are around?

We think we get stuck, don’t we? “Well, I only ate McDonald’s because we had the thing and then I got off of work late and then–”

No.

You ate McDonald’s because you didn’t have a plan, you didn’t have fresh food in the house, and you didn’t coordinate with your partner. It’s not because you’re dumb or because you lack discipline. It’s url-5because you’re a human being with responsibilities and the only way to eat well under such circumstances is to plan for it with the seriousness you apply to other important things in your life.

 

I’m in no position to be giving you homework, but I’m going to do it anyway. If you’ve never talked to your spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend about food, do it today. See where the conversation leads. You might be pleasantly surprised about what you’ll learn from each other.

Filed Under: Active Living Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Do You Have Any Rituals?

April 13, 2016 By Jason Harrison

Do you have any rituals? Bedtime? Work? Morning?

Life comes at us in waves, and we don’t often have the time or take the time to appreciate the details. One way to combat this passivity, this letting life happen to us, is to develop some rituals around the simplest day-to-day activities. My rituals may look nothing like whatever would turn you on, but I thought I’d share some of mine to give you an idea of what taking the time to smell the flowers can look like in your own life.

The Ritual: Morning coffee

Every morning I walk over to Press on Wayne Ave. to grab a coffee. I can make my own coffee at home (which would be a nice ritual in and of itself), but I make it a point to walk to Press, chat with the baristas, and take in the morning. My mornings sometimes start really early—like 6 AM early—so I’ll hit Press after my early clients.

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What it does for me

I get to drink a world class cup of coffee, but more importantly, I’ve found connections at Press that I don’t know I could have found anywhere else. I ALWAYS have interesting conversations there with the owners, the people who work there, or the diverse range of former Ohio State football players, musicians, artists, moms, dads, and occasional misanthropes one is likely to find there. This ritual is especially important if I’m having a bad day or I’m feeling especially stressed about running my own business. Sure, I can brew my own coffee at home, but once a day, every day, you’ll find me at Press. The ridiculously good coffee is just the starting point. I’m really there for the community.

The Ritual: Sitting and Reflecting

photo-1448998239730-7682a10fd814Lately, I’ve been finishing my training sessions and heading over to work on a new personal training studio in the Oregon District. Friday evening I finished at 6:30 PM and worked straight through the weekend until about 9 PM on Sunday.

But you know what? I finished every one of those evenings by just sitting. Running one’s own business can be stressful, time-consuming, and frightening, and it’s easy to get lost in those less-than-fun emotions. (Lately, I think I’ve mostly been frightened). So every night, no matter how late, no matter how tired, no matter how ready for bed and no matter how bloodied my hands (cleaning agents + dry hands + cinderblock walls), I just sat. Admired our work. Thought of the future. Imagined how happy my clients will be to walk into the space.

What it does for me

A funny thing happened when I allowed myself that reflection, which could have seemed like a frivolous waste of time. I relaxed! You might not be opening up your own shop, but at the end of your work day you can take a few moments in your cubicle, your office, or in your truck to take in the weather/view/birds/sunset/trees. I’m not saying you’ll be able to turn a terrible day into a good one, but that taking the time to sit with what you’ve done can be a great way to lower the temperature and remind yourself that you’re okay. I know I need those reminders a lot.

The Ritual: Writing for Dayton Most Metro

Every Tuesday evening I sit down to write this column whether I have the time or not. (Lately I have not had the time). I go through the usual writer’s process of freaking out because I’m worried people will hate what I write, freaking out because I’m not sure I have anything useful to say, and freaking out because that’s what I like to do.

Then I just sit and let my mind wander to what I’ve been thinking about lately. What’s been on my mind? What questions have I been receiving online or from clients? What do I want people to know?

And then it happens. I just start typing. And in the end, I’ve been delivering these columns once a week without fail since I signed on.

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What it does for me

Writing more than anything else is a discipline. Having this weekly deadline has forced me to be more mindful throughout my week about what I’m seeing, hearing, and feeling. I have to be aware of what the people around me are asking consistently because I know at some point I’m going to have to sit down in front of a blinking cursor.

Sometimes commitments can be soul-sucking regrets. But this Dayton Most Metro column has made me a better and more attentive coach because it has forced me to notice patterns, and the writing process itself has forced me to sharpen my own thinking around some complicated subjects.

Is there a project you can take on at work that would stretch you? A volunteer opportunity? Could you resolve to write a letter or an email to someone who’s been important to you at least once a week? The difference between an assignment and a ritual is mindset–and you’re totally in control of that.

Your rituals

The point of all of this stuff is to give yourself permission to notice the small, beautiful things that surround you every single day. We know the world is a cruel, hard place. And we’re here and often there’s nothing we can do about the cruelty or the hardness. But we do possess the power to take a moment every day to find what’s good in us and what surrounds us.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, present tense fitness

Let’s Talk Butt Stuff

April 6, 2016 By Jason Harrison

If you’re committed to the pursuit of strength, then you ought not worry about whether or not you’ll be able to fit into those skinny jeans. In fact, if you’re getting progressively stronger, more mobile, and healthier, chances are you’re NOT going to be able to fit into those skinny jeans. That’s a good thing.

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But I still have clients, mostly women, who worry about fitting into their same jeans after a few weeks of working out. They’re losing body fat, feeling stronger, and moving better, but there’s a connection between how and whether clothes fit some women and their self esteem that I’ve not been able to break, try as I might.

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So let me make the case for big butts. I’m not talking big butts from indulging in too many fried cheese sticks, but big, powerful butts sculpted from lunges, glute bridges, hip thrusts, and curtsey lunges.

The performance case

If you want to be a strong squatter or deadlifter, you’ll need a strong butt. These full body movements demand what we call a strong “posterior chain”–that is, the muscles that predominate on the back of your body from top to bottom–and your glutes are a relatively important part of that chain. Glutes are responsible for what we call “hip extension.” Want to pick up something heavy from the floor safely? Hip extension is a key part of the equation.

The metabolism case

The biggest mistake I see people making in commercial gyms when I’m traveling and working out in one is focusing too much time on minor muscle groups (biceps, calves, etc.) instead of major muscle groups (back, quads, hamstrings). People think the path to sculpted arms lies in things like tricep extensions, but really what they need to do is squat and deadlift more while eating more vegetables and balanced meals. This in turn will help you burn more fat, which will reveal the strong arms you’ve been building from your rowing and pressing. What you’re after if you’re trying to lose body fat is working big muscles every time you work out–and your glutes are among the biggest in your body. So having a big, strong butt will actually help you burn fat while you’re not working out.

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The aesthetic case

The old sexist punchlines centering on a woman asking her husband if “these jeans make my butt look big” ought to be dead if they aren’t already. The cultural tides have shifted–in a good way, in my estimation–away from the drive to be skinny and toward the pursuit of a strong, curvy body. Men and women alike seem to enjoy looking at “squat butts” more than ever. Fitness is my life, but I’m not naive enough to think that people aren’t working out in part to catch other people’s eyes. Filling out those yoga pants, jeans, slacks, or shorts with a big ole squat butt will definitely get you noticed.

Resources

Now that I’ve convinced you that you need a bigger butt, it’s time to put thought into action. How do you build a strong, big butt?

To answer that question, you really should start by reading and watching as much Bret Contreras content as you can. Dude has built a career out of building butts (and publishing serious research in fitness). Start here for his myriad resources on butt building.

I would also check out what TNation has done on building strong glutes. Within just the past few days TNation editor Dani Shugart wrote an entire piece on the how’s and why’s of building strong glutes. That article, “The Flat Butt Fix,” is here.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

You Changed Your Body. Now What?

March 30, 2016 By Jason Harrison

This week I’ve had more than one person express fear to me about their new habits. They’re lifting now, eating better, feeling better, and looking better, and just when you think things couldn’t be any better the old adversary pays a visit.

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Fear.

If you’ve done the hard work and engaged in the self-reflection necessary to change your body, you want to keep the “new you.” This desire can cause more than a little anxiety about slipping back into the old ways that yielded the old you.

I wish I could tell you or my clients that I can guarantee that you won’t slip back into the old habits, but there’s no guarantee for that. I can only share with you what I’ve seen from people who’ve successfully made dramatic changes and who continue living a healthy lifestyle.

A Focus on Strength, Not Weight Loss

Strength, and thus, muscle mass, is the best insurance policy against sliding back into an old unhealthy body that there is. If you’re continuously getting stronger, then it’s going to be difficult to simultaneously continue getting fatter. This doesn’t mean that you might not gain weight, but it means that your ratio of lean mass to fat mass should tip in your favor as long as you’re–

…Eating Vegetables At Every Meal

Tired of me talking about veggies yet? Sorry. I’m not going to stop. You need to be eating more vegetables. Right now, in fact. Seriously. Stop reading this post and go eat some damn vegetables.

If you’re getting progressively stronger and you’re filling half your plate with vegetables every time you sit down to eat, it’s going to be really, really difficult to slide back into your old ways. You’re going to feel too full to eat extraneous calories, especially if you stick to the rule: veggies at every meal. The corollary to this is that you also should be eating protein at every meal, but generally I’ve seen people fall short in the vegetable department. The key is eating balanced meals full of nutrients, the building blocks of immune health and muscle, and satiety.

photo-1418669112725-fb499fb61127The people I’ve known who’ve successfully changed their lifestyles have incorporated some sort of weight bearing exercise and eaten well. At least some of these people had tried the usual prescription of “eat fewer calories and do a lot of cardio” and failed before adopting the sustainable path built upon muscle mass and balanced meals.

When someone says to me that they’re nervous about returning to their old ways, often I’ll ask them to compare how they used to approach wellness to their new approach.

Old Approach

Often what I’ll hear about their old approach is that they counted calories, they ran a lot, and that they were injured a lot. I’ll hear that their weight loss journey generally made them miserable.

New Approach

In comparison, their sustainable approach often involves fewer workout sessions (but with more intensity), eating more often (but with nutrient dense foods rather than calorie dense foods), and feeling stronger.

So the fear usually stems from the fact that most of the time when people embark on a weight loss journey they’re engaging in behaviors that are patently not fun. Who wants to be injured all the time? Who wants to feel hungry all the time? Who wants to feel weak? Who wants to eat bland chicken and broccoli for dinner every night?

No one.

The most important thing you can do if you’re trying to change your body is ensure that the process you’re using feels good, tastes good, and is fun. You’re going to be sore if you’re new to working out–I’m sorry, that’s just the price of admission for the first couple of weeks. As you get stronger, however, as you walk up and down the stairs without pain, as you play with your children or grandchildren without tapping out because you’re tired, as your clothes fit better (even if the scale doesn’t change), you will feel good about yourself. And you’ll want that feeling for the rest of your life.

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Worried about the eating part of the equation? I promise you that a well-prepared home cooked meal will always taste better and make you feel better than fast food, processed food, or anything you can get from a big chain casual restaurant. What this means though is that you have to learn how to cook. The people I know who’ve changed their lifestyles sustainably have almost always incorporated more cooking into their weekly routines. This is not negotiable.

If you’ve changed your life using the sustainable path, if you’ve learned to cook, if you’ve learned how to get stronger, and if you’ve embraced the process–you have nothing to worry about.

If, on the other hand, you’ve dieted your way down to that dress size you’ve been chasing; you’ve been doing hours upon hours of cardio; and you’ve been counting every calorie, I can’t say that you won’t slide back to your old ways. I’ve seen it happen too many times.

Turns out you have to enjoy your body in order to sustain it.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Does Your Trainer Cancel on You?

March 23, 2016 By Jason Harrison

I recently had to cancel three days of clients because of some vile stomach illness I wouldn’t wish upon my fiercest of enemies. I hate canceling on my people, but the primary reason for my reticence to send that apologetic text may surprise you.

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I know from experience that once I cancel on people, I’ve sent a subtle signal that canceling our training sessions is okay. I fight hard to stay healthy, not just because it feels better for me—but ultimately because my clients’ success depends upon me being there. Every. Single. Time.

The personal training world gets a bad rap in part because it seems this don’t cancel on your clients policy practiced by every good coach I’ve ever known isn’t the standard it should be for many fitness practitioners. Sometimes I’ll take on a new client who’s used to working with a less than professional trainer, and they’ll begin the relationship with several cancellations. I have to have the conversation with them about how I will almost never cancel on them and in fact I expect the same courtesy in return.

Am I being prickly? Nah, because the truth is people know I have a 24-hour cancellation policy. So if they cancel on me late, I can still charge them for the session. I get paid for doing nothing.

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What’s really going on is I know just how important establishing the fitness habit is, especially in the beginning of change. If you hire me to train you and I cancel on you rather than keeping our appointments, I’m failing at a significant part of the job—which is literally just showing up for you.

Life happens, and some canceling is inevitable (as my three-day stomach bug vacation proves), but a successful trainer/client relationship depends upon a mutual culture built on keeping appointments. You have to show up for each other.

If you’re working with a trainer, here are some signs that you need to find someone who takes you more seriously.

1.) Do you have set appointments with your trainer, or are you consulting your calendar every week? For the most part you ought to have a slot that’s yours unless your travel schedule or shifting work schedule dictates moving appointments from week to week. What shouldn’t happen is that your trainer texts you on Sunday night every week attempting to squeeze you into slots.

2.) Your trainer should never—and I do mean never—no show you. I heard from a former client in another city recently who had to give up on his current trainer because of incessant canceling and no-showing. This is simply unacceptable, and it shows that whomever you’ve hired to help you on your fitness journey really doesn’t much care about whether you succeed or not.

3.) Last minute cancellations should be a rarity. I used to work with a guy who would text his early morning clients and check in just to make sure their 6 AM was still a go. This is ridiculous behavior that you shouldn’t tolerate. If you said last week that you’re training this week on Wednesday at 6 AM, well that’s exactly what should happen unless an act of God, family emergency, or illness intervenes.

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But it’s not all on your trainer. This is a partnership and the responsibility for your success can’t be all on her. Here are your responsibilities:

1.) Show up on time ready to work out. If you have a 12 PM session and you show up at 12:10 consistently, you’re sending subtle signals to the trainer that you’re not really invested in your own success. Early on in my career I used to show up for a 6 AM client at 6:03—until she rightly called me out on it. Frankly I was too grown to be acting in such an unprofessional and careless manner, and I’m glad she had the courage and self-esteem to say she wouldn’t stand for it. (She ended up being a good friend and one of my favorite clients). She was always on time, ready to work, and I’m a little embarrassed to think back on how I didn’t automatically reciprocate her behavior until she said something.

2.) Never no show, almost never cancel late, and rarely cancel at all. You’re not going to improve if you don’t show up. And again, the way you act toward your trainer sends subtle cues about how you want to be treated. The person who shows up a little early, ready to work out, always keeps appointments, and appears to be respectful of their trainer’s time is the person who will be rewarded with extra effort, extra research, and extra attention to detail.

My industry has failed a lot of you countless times because of a lack of basic grownup behavior. Early on in my career, when I still viewed fitness as a means to other ends (I’m going to be a writer or a journalist or an actor!), I was as guilty as the very people I’m criticizing today. You shouldn’t stand for this because your body is too important. But remember always to hold up your end of the bargain as well. A relationship this critical, this intimate, is based on mutual trust, respect, and professionalism.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Where You Spend Money Says Something About Your Wellness

March 16, 2016 By Jason Harrison

I used to work with a trainer who would tell his clients that they ought to leave their jobs if their careers didn’t allow them to live healthy lifestyles. I always thought this was ridiculous, impractical advice, but I’ve been wondering lately if I was too dismissive of this trainer’s logic.

photo-1454023989775-79520f04322cModern American life is replete with responsibilities, financial pressure, and seemingly unrelenting time-consuming demands. So I mostly try to offer advice that allows people to make the best of a suboptimal situation. Lately I’ve been wondering if this practicality actually is feeding into an unhealthy approach to life by justifying it in a way. “Listen, I understand that you have two kids, a mortgage, and college to save for, so I understand if you don’t have the time to cook three meals a day, every day.” That’s probably a version of something I’ve said before.

The problem with my approach, however, is that I’m not sensing that most of us are actually happy with the way we’re living. The parents I talk to say that they’re overwhelmed, and people seem to feel less in control as they rise through the corporate/government/organizational ranks. We get more, in a sense, and then we’re afraid of losing what we just earned.

When I ask people how they would like to be living, almost invariably they tell me they would like to be spending more time with their children, they would like to be exercising more, and they would like to have more time to cook. The conventional wisdom suggests that people are just idiots and that’s why they eat the way they do and avoid exercise. But I think what’s happened is we’ve bought a narrative about what our lives–and by extension our houses, cars, and clothes are supposed to look like. In short, I wonder how much our unbridled consumerism is linked to our declining wellness.

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By investing in stuff instead of experiences and our health, we’re voting for stuff in a sense with our dollars. Let’s take cable, for instance.

“According to estimates from the NPD Group, this year the average subscription pay-TV customer will pay an astonishing $123 per month for pay-TV. NPD estimated that same figure was $86 in 2011, which indicates an increase of 9.4% annually between 2011 and 2015.” —Motley Fool, February 2015

$123 a month seems high, but that’s not the only cost associated with that cable bill. There’s also the lost time with family, with books, with friends, with creativity, with love, with sex, with thinking, with doing, with our communities. $123 a month is almost $1500 a year. Once we start to appreciate how much money we’re essentially throwing away, then the choice to stay at that miserable, life-sucking job seems less like a sacrifice necessitated by saving for college and more like a silly choice to watch “Say Yes to the Dress” instead of spending time with our spouses.

I pick on cable television a lot, but there are other examples. We eat out at mostly terrible restaurants and fast food joints. We buy two gigantic cars instead of trying to make due with one. We even buy gigantic homes that are expensive to heat and maintain.

Lest anyone think I have some sort of superiority complex, I can assure you I’m guilty of wasting money on stupid things too. When we first moved back to Dayton I was a baby about how the water tasted. So I convinced myself that we “needed” to have water delivered every month. Several weeks ago we eliminated that water delivery service from our ledger, bought a filtered container at the grocery, and now we’re saving a lot of money as a result. (Bonus points too for eliminating the wasted energy used to ship water to me on a truck instead of turning a faucet.)

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I’m not telling you to quit your job. I am asking you to think about where your money is going. Could you make less money but live closer to your home, thus buying you valuable time with your family? Is there a walkable neighborhood to which you could move where you wouldn’t need multiple cars? If you took a hard look at things like cable service, could you reduce the amount of monthly costs?

When we think about our choices related to fitness and health, general we focus on nutrition and exercise. But I’m here to tell you that where and how you choose to spend your money is as much a wellness decision as what you’re having for dinner tonight.

So don’t quit your job…

…but think about how your life might be different in another one.

 

 

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

On Discipline and Fitness

March 9, 2016 By Jason Harrison

I keep returning to this theme of understanding, loving, and respecting one’s body because every week I’m reminded of how many people don’t fully grasp the ideas. So I try to come up with new ways of saying the same thing. You, the fearless reader, probably suffer from deja vu every day my column appears.

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Today I want to explore the ideas of discipline and norms as they relate to our bodies because I think there are some misconceptions packaged within these concepts that require some scrutiny.

I often talk to be people who tell me that they need to be more disciplined, and I’d say the majority of the time what they’re referencing is an inability to wake up early and work out. They think that fit people live like a boxer in the Rocky and Creed franchise, waking up at the break of dawn to run five miles, drink a raw egg, and do one-arm push ups. With this type of mindset–only slightly exaggerated here for underwhelming comedic effect–it’s no wonder that many people intimidate themselves out of getting fit.

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Not everyone reading this is a morning person. I happen to be able to function rather quickly upon waking, so getting in a workout in the early morning hours is something that’s doable for me. That doesn’t make me more disciplined, it just means that when I was in kindergarten the neighborhood mother who drove carpool called my mom to tell me once that she really loved driving me, but my energy and mouth were a bit much in the morning.

My point is that we are who we are to a large extent, so you shouldn’t beat yourself up if you can’t quite make the morning workout happen.

BUT, this shouldn’t be an excuse for staying up later than you know you should. Not being a morning person is one thing, but lacking the processes in the evening that allow you to get to bed at an hour that would allow you seven or eight hours of sleep is quite another. You might not be a morning person because no one is on five hours of sleep. If this sounds familiar, then maybe the problem isn’t that you’re not a morning person so much as you’re just not going to bed on time. Know the difference. If, even after a decent night of sleep, the thought of working out just isn’t something that’s going to work for you, then you need to troubleshoot ways of getting in a lift during the day or evening.

Now that we’ve dispensed with the idea of “discipline,” let’s tackle norms. During an initial consultation, new clients often will say to me preemptively, “well I know I should…” Sometimes they’re right, as in, “I know I should be eating more vegetables,” but often they’re wrong, as in “I know I should be eating low carb” or  “I know I should be eating low fat” or “I know I should be running more.” What they’ve done is adopted questionable conventional wisdom as an accepted fitness norm with little relation to the actual science. Worse, they beat themselves up for not following a norm that doesn’t really exist in the first place.

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When the idea of discipline meets false norms, fitness becomes an overwhelming, all-encompassing project rather than the beautiful, mind-opening, life-enhancing journey it can really be.

How do you know the difference between a true lack of discipline and a false narrative you’ve adopted?

1.) If you haven’t worked out at all in more than two weeks, then you need to troubleshoot what’s going on that’s not leaving you the time to care for the one body you’ll ever have.

2.) If you have worked out in the last few weeks, but your consistency has been sporadic, then you need to figure out why. Often this is a process issue–meaning, your days are not organized enough to allow you the time to be good to yourself. Do you use a calendar? How often do you check it? Better organization usually trumps discipline for busy people.

3.) Are you happy with the way you look naked? Do you have unexplained aches and pains? Do you have energy crashes during the day? A negative answer for the first question and affirmative answers for the latter two could mean that something needs to change in your diet. Remember, you have to be eating for YOUR goals. When I’m in a heavy training cycle, I’m eating as many potatoes as I can get my hands on. If you’re trying to decrease body fat to get ready for a photo shoot, then reducing the amount of starchy carbs you’re consuming might be a good idea. The key is to understand that there are different ways of eating for different people. There is no normative diet, in other words. There’s just the right way of eating for you.

 

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Let’s talk lunch in Dayton

March 2, 2016 By Jason Harrison

There’s an interesting diversity directly linked to geography that I’ve noticed while coaching clients around lifestyle issues in different parts of the country.

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Not the greatest lunch idea.

My New York clients ate well at breakfast and lunch because the range of healthy options available to discerning Type A personalities was plentiful. Dinners were most difficult for them because I trained a lot of people in finance and law, industries in which late nights, after work drinks, and sometimes gluttonous dinners were actually part of the job description.

My Washington, D.C. clients had a harder time with breakfast, I think in large part because of the long commute times in a notoriously terrible city for traffic. These clients often were government workers or lawyers who were trying hard to get a jump on their day and skipped breakfast as a result.

Perhaps counterintuitively, my sense of the nutrition picture for my Los Angeles clients was actually pretty good. The slower pace and less formal atmosphere among my many entertainment industry clients meant that people took the time to eat a healthy breakfast while sitting on their deck or taking a walk in the sunshine to grab lunch at a local, fresh eatery (where your waiter is probably the best looking person you’ve ever seen in person).

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Turkey chili recipe from the New York Times’ beautiful cooking app.

In Dayton I’ve noticed a trend both in my personal life and among my clients: eating well at lunch is difficult. If you have the time to go out with colleagues and sit at a restaurant, you’re probably in luck because there are some really good, local options. But what if you want something quick? That’s where things get more difficult, and that’s where I’m a strong advocate–at least for now–of almost always packing your lunch.

I’ve written before about “fast food” chains like Sweetgreen, where for around $10 you can grab a locally sourced salad with a fantastic balance of macronutrients (protein, carbohydrate, fat).   I’ve struggled in our city to identify the equivalent, where you can eat a veggie-centric meal that also contains protein and healthy fats. (If you know of any–please comment on Facebook!) For the most part, your “fast” lunch options in Dayton generally aren’t going to do you much good.

That leaves you with two options. First, you can still go out for lunch but make the best of the situation. Try eating mostly vegetables and make sure you’re getting protein and a healthy fat (like olive oil or avocado) as well. The protein and fat combination is important because that’s what’s going to help you feel both full and satisfied–avoiding the M&M bowl that Debbie keeps at her desk.

ten-creative-brown-bag-lunches-that-kids-and-adults-will-loveThe second and preferable option is for you to bring lunch from home. Now, some people object to this by saying that they “don’t have time” to pack a lunch every day. My answer to that in recent months has been the big batch, one pot meal. Think soups, stews, and Crockpot dishes. This turkey chili recipe from the New York Times has been getting a lot of run in my house recently, and I’ve recommended it to several clients. I like the recipe because of the great combination of tasting great as a leftover, not taking very much time to prepare, and being easily divided and saved for lunchtime meals. Make it on a Sunday and eat it for lunch throughout the week.

What about the boredom factor? People tire of eating the same thing every single day, but if you’re one of those people who are going out for lunch five days a week, then having turkey chili twice a week probably isn’t going to get old too fast–and you’ve reduced the amount of times you’re eating out by 40 percent. So if the one pot meal can get you to two times a week of packing your lunch, and you can make enough dinner one night to have leftovers for lunch another day, you’re up to cooking 60 percent of your lunch meals at home. Not bad, right?

The takeaway here is that I’ve talked to a number of people in Dayton over the last few months who want to bring their lunch more, both from a health standpoint and from a financial standpoint. Given that we don’t have a lot of great, quick, healthy options for lunch to begin with, you have some incentives to brown bag it. But the key in implementing this behavioral change is not biting off more than you can chew. Don’t make your goal 100 percent compliance with packing your lunch. Start off with two days a week. If you can do that, then you’re well on your way to saving money and eating well during your work days. Better for the body and the wallet.

 

 

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

What’s the Right Way to Work Out?

February 23, 2016 By Jason Harrison

One of the most difficult things for fitness consumers to do is identify the difference between objective best practices and the subjective preferences of various coaches.

I’ve used this space to argue before that it is an objective fact that everyone would benefit from doing progressively overloaded weight-bearing exercise. Everyone.

But hopefully I’ve also made clear that “progressively overloaded weight-bearing exercise” can take on many forms.

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Crossfit. Powerlifting. Weightlifting. General strength and conditioning. Pilates. Yoga.

Everything on this short list contains pros and cons. But they all involve some sort of weight-bearing aspect. The question, then, isn’t “which one is best?”
The question is, “which one is best for you?” based on your schedule, preferences, background, experience, likes, and dislikes. Fitness for busy professionals involves a balance between what we want out of our bodies and how much time we’re willing to spend on achieving those things.

Once you weigh all of those variables, generally the best option for you will emerge. But people confuse this notion with there being a best option for everyone.

I know dogmatic yoga people who tell everyone who will listen that yoga is the best—no, the only—way to achieve balance between mind and body.

I know strength and conditioning professionals who declare in no uncertain terms that if you’re not lifting weights then you’re a (what would Donald Trump call a political rival?)

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Don’t believe this con game. There’s no right way. There’s only the best way for you.

Now, this doesn’t give you carte blanche to do whatever the hell you want without regard for science or basic common sense. If you want a lean, more mobile body then Zumba classes aren’t going to do you much good for very long. That is an objective fact. If you’re new to fitness at some point you’re going to have to get comfortable being uncomfortable. Understand the difference between there being no one right way of exercise and the fact that there are some basic truths when it comes to fitness. Let me give you some concrete examples.

There’s no one right way to lift weights.

But there are generally accepted principles around how to do a barbell back squat.

There’s no one way to learn yoga.

But there are generally accepted principles around how to properly execute a downward facing dog.

There is no one right way to eat.

But there are generally accepted principles—on which both ardent Paleo enthusiasts and Prius-driving vegans can agree—that govern what the body does with macronutrients like protein, fat, and carbohydrates. (And almost everyone can agree that we all should be eating more vegetables.)

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There’s no right way to do cardiovascular exercise.

But there are generally accepted principles behind how aerobic exercise affects one’s body.

The dirty secret is that fitness isn’t all that complicated. While we’re learning new things every day, chances are the kettlebell guru you see on Facebook hasn’t discovered the best path to strength any more than the yoga expert has developed a system that works for everyone.

All of us fitness types try to bat 1.000. But none of us do. The best way for you to distinguish between a fitness pro who is secure and open-minded and an insecure dogmatic charlatan lies in the answer to this question: are they willing to tell you they’re not the best option for you?

They ought to be wiling to tell you you’d be better off going to a yoga studio.

They ought to be willing to tell you that you ought to go to a powerlifting gym.

They ought to be willing to tell you that you ought to spend your money on a nutritionist instead of personal training.

They ought to be willing to tell you that you’d be better off going to a physical therapist.

There’s no right way. There’s only the right way for you. It’s simple advice, I know. But more people like me need to be giving it.

Filed Under: Active Living Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Focus: From Your Toes to your Nose

February 17, 2016 By Jason Harrison

How many of our problems could we solve, from bad sex to bad cooking to bad relationships, if we just paid attention?

A lot of them. A lot of them is the answer you’re looking for.

feetMy own training space has yet to open, but I’m able to train my clients in a few different generous facilities in the area. For the places that have televisions, I’ve noticed that people spend an inordinate amount of time watching cable when they ought to be paying attention to what they’re doing.

A really good gym, in other words, like a really good bar, doesn’t have televisions. (Perhaps here it would be wise to make a distinction between say, a watering hole, and a Bar with a capital B. A watering hole is a place you go after work to knock a couple back and joke about Jim in Accounting’s propensity to fart silently in his cubicle. A Bar on the other hand, is a place you go to create, build upon, or re-establish intimacy. There are no televisions because you’re paying attention to the quality in your glass and the presence of your company.)

I’ve watched people all week walk into various health clubs and zone out in between sets, or worse, watch television while performing some sort of exercise. Sometimes you’ll even see a little television mounted on the treadmill, elliptical machine, or other cardio equipment.

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What’s wrong with watching a little television at the gym? After all, if I’m someone who hates going to the gym, why can’t I check out a home-flipping show on HGTV while I’m doing lunges?

The television-at-the-gym attitude stems from the old idea that you’re there to burn calories or lose weight. As long as I’m burning calories (and thus losing weight), the thinking goes, then I’m fine, television or not.

 

But that attitude misses at least half the reason why we ought to be going to the gym, which is learning how to operate our own bodies.

Yes, get stronger.

Yes, change your metabolism.

Yes, build stronger bones.

Yes, set and exceed personal bests for various lifts.

But don’t forget to learn how to MOVE.

Don’t forget to learn how to tilt your pelvis this way, or retract your shoulders that way, fight hyperextension in your spine another way.

Don’t forget to learn what it feels like just short of exhaustion.

Don’t forget to learn what it feels like to use your butt to squat.

Because that connection between brain to muscle is what will keep you injury-free and moving well as you age. If you’ve spent all of your time sitting on a machine and scrolling through Kanye West’s Instagram feed or watching Sportcenter in between sets you’re missing something.

During one of the most stressful years of my life, I would wake up occasionally from anxiety about having to face the day ahead of me. Somewhere along the line I learned about a meditation technique that never failed to put me back to sleep, and it had everything to do with listening to my body. I still use the technique to this day.

When I wake up in the middle of the night because of anxiety, I think about my body starting down at my toes. I feel the way the sheets and covers feel against my feet. And I don’t move up to my shins until I am sure I am really feeling my toes and feet. Once I internalize all of the senses involved in one body part, I move to the next.

This type of meditative technique works for two reasons. One, it gets me thinking about something other than what I’m worried about—which is almost certainly something about which I can do nothing in the middle of the night anyway.

Second, it reminds me of my body. Focusing on my body, my breath, and my aliveness all serve as reminders that I’m living and breathing and okay. I’m okay.

This is just one example of how tightening the connection between our minds and bodies can have a dramatically positive effect on our lives. What better place to begin closing that gap than at the gym?

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If you’re already working out, I implore you to turn away from the television set, away from your phone, and toward your body. Rest for that 90 seconds in between sets, and think about how your body feels. You’re alive. You are alive. And you are okay.

For extra credit, incorporate the same technique the next time you’re with someone you love or someone with whom you think love might be a possibility. Look into their eyes. Don’t be creepy about it, but watch their bodies, the way they tilt their head when you ask them a question, the way they talk with their hands, and the way they smile when they talk about their hobbies. Human beings can’t help but reciprocate this kind of connectivity. And I promise you that what follows will be more interesting and infinitely more gratifying than anything you’re likely to see on your phone or on T.V.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, Present

Strength, Individual Edition

February 10, 2016 By Jason Harrison

I used to write a regular newsletter for my business, but contributing weekly columns here largely has brought that output to a screeching halt. It’s not a complaint so much as an admission to my limited capacity for meaningful output. To the extent that I lament my newsletter’s slow demise, it’s because I miss having an avenue where I could explore broadly without fear of alienating anyone. That is, if you signed up for the Present Tense Fitness newsletter, you sort of knew that you were just as likely to get a think piece on street art as you were anything about squats.

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In this space, I know people tune in a least partially because they want to learn about something fitness related. I confess to being a little self-conscious about the sometimes tenuous connection between what I write here and straight up fitness. This self-consciousness is a close cousin to the insecurity I sometimes feel around my own accomplishments (or lack thereof) in the weight room. I’m not as strong as most well-known trainers, for example, and I’ve never competed in any sport at a high level. So why the hell should you even listen to what I have to say about fitness?

When I describe what I do, I try to be clear that I’m not the guy to go to if you’re trying to achieve a 600-pound deadlift. I can teach you how to deadlift, but if you’re looking for elite, I’m just not the right guy. Sometimes I feel that my niche–people who are new to fitness who are trying to live well-rounded, rich lives–is an excuse used to paper over my own lack of accomplishments. But then my clients remind me why I do this, and why the way I’ve chosen to use the space can be useful.

Earlier this week I was coaching someone who told me they “hate the gym.” We’ve been working together a while now, and this person is thoroughly convinced of strength training’s efficacy. That’s not in doubt. What is in doubt is whether this person will ever be the type of person to love driving to a place, maybe changing clothes and heading over to the power rack, and busting out some barbell front squats. That’s likely never gonna happen.

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But yoga, yoga is something this person has always loved. And having been convinced of why strength training is important and can measurably improve one’s life, this person sprinkled in some dumbbell work with a recent yoga workout.

And loved it.

Will this client ever load up 225 pounds on a bar and squat to depth?

Will this client deadlift twice bodyweight?

Will this client compete in a powerlifting competition?

No. I try generally to avoid words like never, but I can safely say in this case the answer to these questions is almost certainly “never.”

But can this person love the body they inhabit?

Can this person live a life full of passion, soul, and creativity?

Can this person with a combination of yoga and selected strength-training exercises mitigate bone density loss, enhance mobility, and increase the amount of lean body mass while decreasing fat mass?

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Yes. So much yes.

So whenever I get that imposter feeling, that feeling that I’m not really serving a purpose, and that I ought to use this space to break down the force vectors involved in a high-bar back squat, I remember conversations like I had this week.

Don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t find the right mix of exercise for you. That you shouldn’t run. Or you shouldn’t do yoga. Or that you’re wasting your time if you’re not doing X, Y, or Z. (Especially Z. Z is overrated).

I’ll say it again. Every person on the planet ought to be doing some sort of weight-bearing exercise at least two days a week. What form that takes though can be highly individualized. Chances are if you’re reading this you’re not getting ready for the Olympics, so your goal is to find the right combination of exercise that will allow you to live a life full of passion, soul, and as much creativity as your brain can handle. Live. Get stronger and go out there and live.

Edit: I actually sent out a newsletter ahead of this column. It was about songs with outer space as a theme. I’ll say you’re welcome in advance for not writing about that here.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Ignore the shame and just find what works

February 3, 2016 By Jason Harrison

Somewhere along the line–after I began personal training, but before I started taking the profession seriously–I noticed that if I drank more water, I felt better. My skin felt better, my trips to the bathroom were more, um, comfortable, and I had more energy in the gym.

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Rewind to about ten years or so ago, when I bought a souvenir “BPA free” water bottle at MIT during a quick trip through Boston. I didn’t think much about that bottle until I realized how much better I felt when I was hydrated, so I dusted it off and it never left my side for years.

I consumed plenty of water and always had my bottle at the gym, at work, and in the car during road trips. When we moved back to Dayton last year, however, I broke the bottle. No big deal, right? I had been drinking enough water for years now, and the habit was deeply engrained. Not only that, but I’m, like, a fitness guy. I KNOW the value of staying hydrated.

 

But my water consumption plummeted. In recent months I’ve knowingly watched as my digestion suffered, skin suffered, and overall wellness suffered. And this wasn’t some deep mystery: I knew exactly what was going on.

“I drank a lot more water when I had my green MIT bottle,” I’d say to myself. And yet the days would march on. I was smart enough to try different solutions, like other water bottles or even big glasses to sit on my desk while working from home. Nothing seemed to work.

Then it finally dawned on me. Why don’t I just order another wide-mouthed BPA-free bottle? I jumped on Amazon, placed the order, and received my bottle just a few days later. It’s the same water bottle I had been using for years, only without the logos or branding.

And guess what’s been happening the last the several days?

Yep, I’ve been drinking more water.

Let’s take a moment to deconstruct this. I know I need to drink water and I’ve experienced how good it makes me feel. I know that I drank more water when I had that particular bottle, and I was conscious of the fact that my hydration plummeted when I lost my MIT security blanket.

Yet I took no action, despite the fact that I placed probably a couple dozen Amazon orders between the time that I broke my bottle and when I finally ordered another one. The solution was right in front of my face, I was aware of it, and I refused to act.

Why?

I’m not sure, exactly. All I know is this is something that we all do. We KNOW we need to work out. We KNOW we need to eat better. We KNOW we need to get more sleep. Often the solutions are right in front of us, but we refuse to act. My theory is that in my case I was selling myself the fiction that my water intake couldn’t have been regulated solely by my water bottle. Certainly I could replace what worked with something else and get the same results. Right?

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I was wrong. I delayed solving the problem for months because I felt quiet shame about the silliness of a thing, an object, being so closely linked to a healthy habit like water consumption. Had I ordered a replacement bottle right away, I could have saved myself a lot of discomfort.

You might have something in your life like my MIT water bottle. Maybe it’s your favorite workout pants that you’ve stained and no longer feel comfortable wearing, so you’re actually working out less. Maybe it’s a kitchen knife that you somehow lost along the way and now you just don’t feel like cooking as much. Whatever it is, if there’s something in your life preventing you from doing what you know you need to do, but it’s something that you’ve labeled “silly,” I have some pretty simple advice.

Get over it.

Yeah, just get over it. Maybe there is something silly about the fact that I don’t seem capable of drinking enough water unless I have a very particular container. But it doesn’t really matter, does it?

Find what works, and do it–no matter how silly you think it is.

 

Filed Under: Active Living Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

Lifting Weights Isn’t Just For Competition

January 27, 2016 By Jason Harrison

The fitness industry has made great strides toward making women feel more comfortable in weight rooms across the country, but there’s still some work to be done.

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Twenty years ago fitness types were still selling women the fiction that they might “get big” if they lifted heavy weights and didn’t spend countless hours “doing cardio.” Based on what I hear from new clients this old myth persists among many women, but it seems to be dying a slow death thanks to fitness thought leaders like Jen Sinkler and Neghar Fonooni, among others. There still exists a subtle roadblock, however, that prevents more women from abandoning the elliptical machines and Zumba classes in favor of the efficient transformation technique that is weight-bearing exercise:

Competition.

I asked an acquaintance in the gym yesterday how her training was going, and she somewhat sheepishly replied that she was doing her best, but that she wasn’t training as hard as others. It was a revelatory answer to a throw-away question meant more as a means of polite conversation than a piercing inquiry. I know her a little, and she’s impressively strong and impressively conditioned–but she probably couldn’t place at an elite level of any sort of Crossfit, powerlifting, or figure competition. My unscientific analysis indicates that she’s probably fitter than 90 percent of the women in her age group, yet she was somehow embarrassed that this wasn’t “enough.”

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Strength training is among the most efficient delivery systems for body and health transformation that there is. You can develop your conditioning, change your body composition, and push a host of health markers in the right direction by incorporating things like squats, deadlifts, presses, and rows into your weekly routine. Yet I worry that somehow this message is getting garbled into the notion that barbell training is only for people interested in Crossfit, powerlifting, or Olympic-style weightlifting.

I think part of the problem is that most big commercial gyms lag behind barbell style gyms when it comes to stocking plentiful free weights, and the barbell style gyms that exist do tend to have at least somewhat of an emphasis on competition, personal records, and Instagram stardom.

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Barbell training isn’t just for competition. It can be an important slice–but just a slice–of an otherwise well-rounded and interesting life full of art, music, friends, and good food. Approaching the squat rack doesn’t mean that you have to buy knee socks and booty shorts. All it means is that you’re interested in the most important movement pattern you can learn to do well (squat), that you’re interested in building muscle and bone density, and that you’re interested in being strong and mobile well into your 80s.

One of my worries about this post is that it wreaks of condescension, that I’m presupposing that women aren’t competitive. I’m not arguing that women somehow aren’t as competitive as men. What I am trying to do is grapple with the reality that the fitness industry generally has been an unwelcoming place for women when it comes to strength training. While I do think some of those walls are coming down–having been smashed by the strength of female leadership–I do think that the correlation between barbell training and competition does prevent some women from feeling completely comfortable pursuing strength. And I happen think that’s a shame.

 

 

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, present tense fitness

Fitness Insecurities: Male Edition

January 20, 2016 By Jason Harrison

File this post under gross gender-based generalizations.

In my experience women are most insecure about what they look like, which leads to a host of issues around not eating enough, feeling shame, and misguided attempts to “lose weight.” Social pressures and cultural discrimination against aging women have something to do with this. Just ask any woman in Hollywood when well-written, three-dimensional roles start drying up. Amy Schumer hilariously skewers this hypocrisy in the definitely NSFW clip below (seriously don’t click if salty language offends you). The basic message in Hollywood is one that I think gets filtered through the rest of our culture, which is, “women, don’t get older.”

Men, on the other hand, tend to feel less secure about what they can do. My theory is that one can split men into two categories: men who go to the gym in their teens and twenties, and men who don’t go to the gym during that timeframe. The men who go to the gym in their teens and twenties spend a lot of time at the bench press and doing various curl movements to achieve big arms. The men who don’t go to the gym as young men perhaps never will, especially if they’re not able to perceive how their unfit status holds them back from enjoying greater quality of life.

I spend a lot of my energy with older male clients trying to get them to understand the benefits of gradually progressing, avoiding injury, and working on movement patterns instead of ego-boosting exercises like bench presses and dumbbell curls. They look over and see the kid in his early twenties pressing a bunch of weight over his head and they immediately think less of themselves if they can’t lift the same weight. I have to work hard to convince them to do things like warm up properly and stretch post workout. They just want to load a bar with as much weight as possible and move it, especially with their upper bodies.

photo-1444146644393-241099c1593d

That’s not the most difficult obstacle to overcome for me as a coach. The biggest hurdle consists of the guys who used to work out in their twenties but stop going to the gym because, well, they got older, and they’re not as strong as they used to be. So rather than face the indignity of a long warmup and lighter weights they just stay home and talk about their “bad back” or “bad knees.” Sound familiar? I spend a lot of time thinking through how to convince guys like this to go to the gym and most of the time I feel like Sisyphus pushing an Indiana Jones-sized boulder up a hill.

Women in my experience are more willing to ask for help in the gym because they haven’t internalized the cultural pressure to already know everything about it. Remember, a woman’s only job in our culture is to stay as young-looking and thin as possible. So for the women who seek out personal trainers, yoga instructors, or Pilates coaches they’re more willing to say “help.”

I’ll be forty next month, so I know a little bit about the aging male demographic. And I know more than a little about ego because I’m constantly battling my own in the gym. There’s a voice in my head who sees stronger men as confirmation that I’m less than rather than as an inspiration. It’s not difficult to see how this destructive thought process could turn–even subconsciously–into “I’ll just not work out” with some sort of half-baked justification thrown in to massage the ego.

I’ve had too many conversations with the children of aging parents who report that they just cannot get dads to pay attention to their health and wellness for me to stay silent or ignore gender-based culture differences. If I had one wish for my female readers it would be for them to learn how to love their bodies as they are. For the men? It would probably be to learn how to swallow their pride, ask for help, and learn how to get stronger step-by-step. (Actually, I’d have the same hope for women. The learning to love their bodies thing is almost always the first step toward a willingness to strive for step-by-step strength).

photo-1444069069008-83a57aac43ac

If you’ve been struggling to get your dad or grandfather into the gym, try talking him through the logic.

1.) He doesn’t have to wake up hurting every day just because he’s older.

2.) Strength training isn’t just for young guys. The benefits go well beyond the aesthetic and performance.

3.) He can still build muscle well into his 70s–it’s never too late to start. Even in his 80s, he can still see neurological benefits from strength training that will manifest as improved movement and strength.

As for the aging women? Let’s talk next week…

 

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, present tense fitness

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May 16 @ 11:00 am - 6:00 pm

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Sisters: A Cyanotype Series by Suzi Hyden

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Tie Dye 50K

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34th Annual Furry Skurry 5K

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What the Taco?!

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Greene County Farmers Market

May 17 @ 9:00 am - 1:00 pm

Greene County Farmers Market

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Hamvention 2025

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Hamvention 2025

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Spring Fest Parade

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Spring Fest Parade

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Good Neighbor 5k

May 18 @ 8:30 am - 5:00 pm

Good Neighbor 5k

Lace up for our Good Neighbor 5k on Sunday, May 18! Together with our friends at locally owned and operated...

$20 – $25
9:00 am - 12:00 pm

Plein Air Paint Out

May 18 @ 9:00 am - 12:00 pm

Plein Air Paint Out

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Free
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Hamvention 2025

May 18 @ 9:00 am - 1:00 pm Recurring

Hamvention 2025

Hamvention, the world's largest amateur radio gathering at Greene County Fairgrounds. Sponsored by Dayton Amateur Radio Association. Hamvention boasts over...

10:00 am - 12:00 pm

Goal Hike for Women-Owned Business

May 18 @ 10:00 am - 12:00 pm

Goal Hike for Women-Owned Business

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$20
10:00 am - 1:30 pm

Drag Me to Brunch

May 18 @ 10:00 am - 1:30 pm

Drag Me to Brunch

Art Central Foundation is pleased to welcome the incomparable Rubi Girls back to the stage of the historic Sorg Opera...

$30 – $45
10:00 am - 2:00 pm Recurring

The Grazing Ground Market

May 18 @ 10:00 am - 2:00 pm Recurring

The Grazing Ground Market

Welcome to The Grazing Ground Market, your local destination for farm-fresh eggs, seasonal produce, and handcrafted items. We take pride...

10:00 am - 5:00 pm

Raptor Photography

May 18 @ 10:00 am - 5:00 pm

Raptor Photography

May 18: Join us in the Baldwin Pond meadow for an opportunity to capture stunning pictures of hawks,owls, and falcons...

$50
11:00 am - 4:00 pm Recurring

Dayton Spring Home Expo

May 18 @ 11:00 am - 4:00 pm Recurring

Dayton Spring Home Expo

FREE ADMISSION This free event is the perfect opportunity for homeowners to save BIG on all home improvement projects and...

Free
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