Book review: The Four-Hour Body by Tim Ferriss

If you’ve read this blog for an extended period of time, or if you know me personally, you know that I’ve followed Tim Ferriss for a few years.  I read his first book, The Four-Hour Work Week, and regularly read his blog which contains excerpts from his books, as well as dialogues between Tim and his readers in the comment sections.  You may also know then that I have somewhat of a love-hate relationship with him.  Mostly due to the cycle of reading something, wanting it to work and getting all hyped up for it, and then when I am just tired of hearing him talk about his success, it turns to hate.

Given all this history, there was no way I wouldn’t pre-order his new book The Four-Hour Body and read it immediately.  The book came out just before the holidays so it made for good timing with my travel plans to read on the plane.

I’m going to review this book from a few different perspectives.  Despite the fact that Tim has a loyal following already, this book is clearly targeted at all Americans, most of which fail at diets, fail at exercising, and are usually the ones suckered into the next infomercial that promises them results without effort.  I think that is one of the reasons why Tim went with this title of the book.  After I tell someone the name of the book, the next thing I have to do is explain the title.  Obviously the main reason the title was chosen is because of the familiarity with The Four-Hour Work Week, which was a New York Times best seller, but mass appeal isn’t a bad secondary reason.  I’d actually be curious to know what Tim would have named the book if he hadn’t had the success of his first book already.  We may never know.

For most of this review I will be coming from the position of an “average guy.”  If I wasn’t already doing Crossfit and following a mostly Paleo diet already, would I be jumping to follow this books protocols to a “T”?  Then I will also come at things from the perspective of a Crossfitter.  There will be things I agree with, and disagree with, but they are interesting for sure.  The same goes with the Paleo perspective.  There are many diet suggestions that Tim makes that fly in the face of Paleo, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t some things we can’t extract from it.  An example of this is adding cinnamon to your coffee.  I’ll go more into that later.

I changed my mind.  What I wrote above was my plan, but as I started writing I realized that there was just too much content in the book to keep going over back and forth from multiple angles.  Instead I am going to extract a lot of what I feel are the relevant highlights of the book.  Then I will probably make an additional post in the next few days that is more along the lines of “cliff notes for crossfitters,” which will serve the purpose of saving time for those who don’t want to read this entire review.

  • The Foundation

I mentioned that I wondered what Tim would have called this book if he hadn’t had the success of his first book.  My next question to him in an interview would be if he would have taken the time to write this book if he hadn’t already had so much of the research done?  The foundation of the book is Tim’s extensive data collection that he began at age 18, documenting every workout he did ever since.

The next step up the pyramid is the expertise of his sources, some of the leading weightlifting and athletic coaches in the world.  As a data fiend myself, I have an appreciation for the methods used in this book to not only test, but also measure the results.  What may be one of the most interesting thing about this book, is that Tim shares his methods with the reader, allowing them to execute the same methods themselves.  Whether its a decision of how to measure body fat, or what to look for in blood tests, the book covers it.

  • Minimum Effective Dose

I think the most popular take away from the book will be the concept of Minimum Effective Dose (MED).  The reason?  People hate to waste time/effort/energy and MED is all about doing the least amount of work will still achieving the desired result.  The example in the book makes this easy to understand.  In order to boil water, you have to heat it to 212 degrees fahrenheit.  If you tried to heat it to 250, it wouldn’t be any “more boiled”, it would just be wasted heat energy.  That’s the concept in a nutshell, now how do you convert that to a) losing fat, b) gaining muscle, c) both.  Throughout the book, instructions are delivered in a MED format which takes a lot of the guess work or individualization out of the equation.  Whether your goals are general, like losing fat, or specfic, like adding 100 pounds to your bench press, a MED exists and can be determined for you.  Any work you do above and beyond the MED, is wasted and in most cases will hurt your recovery times, which in turn slows your progress towards your goal.

  • PAGG Stack

The PAGG stack was an interesting “bonus” that came out of this book for me.  It’s not something that I was expecting to be in the book, but I am really happy to have discovered it.  I’ll write more on this in detail in late February or March because I’d like to incorporate the results of my using the stack in a detailed post.  First off, what is a stack?  A stack is simply a group of supplements that are taken together with the idea that the combination of them have greater effects than taking them individually and separately.  When it comes to stacks there is one that has been around forever and by far the most popular, ECA.  ECA stands for ephedrine, caffeine and aspirin.  The reason ECA is successful has to do with a lot of chemistry, but can be summed up by saying 1 ingredient increases fat burning at a chemical level, the second one prolongs the fat burning, and the 3rd one tells your body to allow this to happen.  Sadly, this stack consists of mostly stimulants, that taken over time can have adverse effects on the body.  There have been reports that link it to heart attacks and stroke.  Tim experienced extreme sinus infections and blockage when he was researching the stack for the book.  He set out to find a stack that was completely stimulant free, enter PAGG.

I don’t think I want to go line by line with the details of each of the four ingredients of the PAGG stack, because I think it would be fairly boring for most readers, but rest assured, the details are all in the book.  The ingredients, which you can all of at whole foods, gnc, etc, are Policosanol, Alpha-lipoic acid, Green tea extract, Garlic extract.  The stack is taken four times a day, with breakfast, lunch, dinner and before bed.  Like I said, I want to hold off on writing more about this until I am done with my 30 days, but things seem pretty good so far.

Possibly more popular than MED, for those that don’t exercise, will be the diet that Tim suggests as a means of losing 20 pounds in 30 days without exercise.  This probably won’t seem that relevant for Crossfitters who exercise regularly, but for those on the Zone diet, I think what Tim suggests would be fairly compatible.  The diet is based on a few simple principles:

#1 Avoid “White” carbs (sounds like little starch and no sugar)

#2 Eat the same few meals over and over again (sounds like weigh and measure your foods / spoiler: it isn’t)

#3 Don’t drink your calories (duh)

#4 Don’t eat fruit (some fruit)

#5 Take one day off per week (hmmm)

The big difference between this and the Zone is that Tim is anti-measurement.  The big difference between this and Paleo diets is that Tim is very pro-legume.  That said, there are enough similarities in the diets that they could work in conjunction with each other.  You can replace the legumes with more vegetables for a more paleo-style approach.  You could measure all the meals and avoid the cheat day for a more Zone-style approach.  However, Tim is fairly adamant both in the book and on his blog, that the diet is successful AS IS, and that changing it around can lead to less than optimum results.

  • Tips and Tricks

These things don’t really fall into one particular category, but I found them all interesting and, more importantly, compatible with my current diet and lifestyle.  Most of these are fairly easy to try and relatively low risk.  You can try them, if you get results, great, if not, it didn’t cost you much.  There are many more in the book than I have listed here.  These are just a few.

#1 Add cinnamon to your coffee.  The science behind this is that it can reduce the glycemic index of meals.  I’ve added a teaspoon (the print version says tablespoon, but Tim corrected on his blog that it’s a teaspoon) to my morning coffee.  Since I drink it black with no sugar, adding cinnamon to it wasn’t challenging, and I would think that is the case for most people reading this.

#2 Have some grapefruit juice with your coffee.  Grapefruit contains naringin which can extend the effects of caffeine in your system.  I have a small glass, or sometimes just take a swig from the bottle.  I’d be careful not to over do it, and make sure you don’t get some kind with extra sugar or corn syrup added.

#3 Fat burning fat.  For years there have been rumors of brown adipose tissue, one of the two types of fat cells, of being able to burn fat.  A lot of them turn out to be red herrings, and adults don’t have a large amount of BAT anyway.  What Tim has discovered, or claims to, is that cold temperature stimulates our BAT tissue (think goose bumps).  I’m skipping over the details, but he went through some painful ice bath experiments to discover, that just icing your upper back for 30 minutes in the evening can have similar (not quite as effective) results.

  • Summary

There is A LOT of information in this book.  There is a lot of data behind it all, either from Tim’s own research, or from experts in their fields.  One thing I can tell you is that the book is not designed to be read from front to back.  As Tim suggests, and I agree, after reading the first few sections, you should then jump to the sections that is of most interest or relevant to you and your goals.  There are seven different chapters on losing weight and/or fat.  There are 14 chapters on getting stronger and/or performing better athletically.

I’d recommend this book for a few different types of people.  Are you someone who is over weight and/or out of shape?  I’d recommend this book for you.  You are probably more overweight and out of shape than you give yourself credit for, and this book could really jump start your way back to health.  Are you someone who works out, but has stopped making progress or hit a plateau with your strength or speed? I would definitely recommend this book for you.  There are a lot of very specific protocols and routines from some of the world’s most highly-respected coaches.  Try following some of them and see if it works for you.  Are you somewhere in between these two types of people?  There is so much information in this book, that there is a good chance it would be useful to you.

I probably wouldn’t recommend it as much to someone who is already on their own routine.  If you are getting results with what you are doing, I wouldn’t want to divert you away from that.  If you are following a program like Wendler’s 5-3-1, or Louie Simmon’s conjugate method, then you are probably above the learnings in this book.  That said, you still may get some entertainment out of the chapters on how to give a woman a 15 minute orgasm or how to improve your sleep.

The Four-Hour Body is available at Amazon, and in all major book stores around the country.




List Price:$27.00 USD
New From:$12.75 In Stock
Used from:$12.13 In Stock
Release date December 14, 2010.

The benefits of cold and ice

Sometimes you hear or read something and you think, hmm I should try that.  And then sometimes you are flooded with something and you just can’t avoid it, so you reach a point where you are almost forced into trying something.  I wouldn’t say I’m quite at this point, but given the quality of sources, I’m ready to start icing up, A LOT.

Last week, John Welbourn made a post entitled “Regeneration” that talked about the benefits of alternating between hot and cold water baths.  It included an incredible story of a certain NFL football player breaking the single-game sack record after being out all night drinking and not sleeping prior to the game.

Then last night I was reading “The Four-Hour  Body“, the new book from Tim Ferris that just reached #1 on the New York Times best seller list for the advice category.  The book covers lots of things that people can do to gain strength, lose weight, have great sex, etc.  But one thing it specifically mentions is the benefits of icing.  Tim went through great lengths to document all of his experiments in the book, including a horrendous regiment of ice baths that he showed increased fat burn by stimulating BAT cells (basically brown fat cells).  For our benefit though, he also went through a much gentler regiment of icing his neck, back, and shoulders for 20 minutes each evening and had only slightly reduced benefits.  Following the 80/20 rule, Tim (and I), recommend the second, more humane approach.

I actually had Stacy grab an ice pack out of the freezer just after finishing the chapter.  As the snow flurries start to come down while we are vacationing in New England, I think it’s fitting that I’m now committing to icing down.  Once I get home and settle into a new regimen, I’ll document it and the results.  Crossfit Santa Clara is doing a paleo challenge for the month of January, so diet wise I am already dialed into what I’ll be eating, but there are more than a few tips and tricks in Tim’s book that I hope will put me on top.

I hope  you all had a great holiday, and are looking forward to a safe and fun New Year’s Eve, and a beast of a 2011.

P90X vs. Crossfit – An objective view from dual success stories

 

I know that I’m not the first person to write a blog post about this topic, and I also won’t be the last, but I feel as though I at least have something worthwhile to share on the topic.  A lot of the articles that I’ve read online are from one side of the argument.  Albeit from qualified fitness professionals, their bias shows through in the article.  I come from a (somewhat) unbiased position as I have had degrees of success with both programs. So without further ado…

  • In the beginning



Over the past few years, P90X has been all over television with their infomercials.  If you haven’t seen one of them, you are highly skilled at avoiding television during off hours.  P90X is a 90 day working program delivered via DVDs by a trainer named Tony Horton and a company called BeachBody.  If you are to believe their marketing, the success of P90X is due in major part to something known as “muscle confusion.”  The concept is based on changing the workout routines every 30 days, so that your body does not suffer from any plateaus in weight loss, strength, or conditioning.  These changes occur twice to complete the 90 day cycle.

In early 2009, I was faced with a dilemma.  I was a fat slob and I was about to get married.  Knowing that I would be looking at my wedding pictures for the rest of my life, I started going to the gym after work and spending about an hour on the elliptical machines.  With a string desire to not be photographed as a slob in a tuxedo, I realized the elliptical machine wasn’t going to cut it, so I acquired a set of the P90X videos, and I got started.  It was obvious right away how out of shape I was.  Being unable to do ten push ups in a row, or 2 pull ups is very eye opening.

The program is very easy to follow.  You press play on the video and you write down your reps on the worksheets that come with the videos.  Each time you repeat an exercise, you try and beat your last attempt.  This is very straightforward stuff, but it works, mainly because it isn’t easy.  The Chest and Back workout is an intense (although self-paced) amount of various pushup and pull ups.  The Legs and Back workout, which comes up later in the week, works squats, lunges and more pull ups.  The last of the “strength” workouts is shoulders and arms, and just like Tony Horton calls it, is a “glamour” workout chock full of bicep curls and tricep extensions.  Fans of functional movements are probably having a good laugh right about now.

The strength workouts are scheduled every-other day with “cardio” or stretching workouts in between them.  There are two main cardio workouts with P90X, a plyometrics workout and “Kenpo X“ which is basically a cardio-kickboxing hybrid.  The remaining videos on the program are Yoga X, Core synergistics and Stretch X.  After completing the first week, congratulations, you get to repeat the exact same routines for 3 more weeks.  The “muscle confusion” of P90X does’t begin until the 5th week, when the workouts are shuffled around, and instead of a workout of Chest and Bank, you do Chest and Arms.  These are the types of changes that I always came across in my time in and out of gyms since high school.  Some people would workout different body parts together, and it seemed to come down to preference, but I would always hear that  you should “change things up.”

  • Back to my story as a slob

I had about two months to get in shape for my wedding, so I didn’t even have the full 90 days to dedicate to my “transformation.”  In that time I lost twenty pounds, a couple of inches pretty much everywhere, and when it came time for my wedding photos, I was happy with the way they came out.  I’m not surprised that P90X has had a lot of success for two main reasons, first it isn’t easy and secondly there is an expectation that results take 90 days.  But what the program lacks most is motivation.  I brought my own motivation to the table.  My proof is in my post-wedding results.  By results I mean the slow nine month return to slobhood.  All of the weight and inches I lost before my wedding was back on by my one year anniversary.  Despite trying to connect with other people doing P90X in the beachbody.com online community, I know longer had any interest to put on the videos, listen to the corny jokes, and workout in my livingroom.

  • On to the next one

So what about Crossfit?  I started doing Crossfit five months ago, and one thing it doesn’t lack is motivation.  I took the plunge on a Saturday morning because Crossfit Santa Clara offers a free class that anyone can attend to give Crossfit a try.  I don’t remember the exact workout that we did, but I know it involved a lot of box jumps.  A lot of box jumps.  But I realized right away that this wasn’t like any other gym I had been to, because it felt like a community, not just strangers working out.  And it was also hard, but not like P90X was hard.  P90X is hard because you are doing pushups alone on your livingroom floor that you struggle with.  Crossfit is hard because you are working your body past points where your brain may have previously told you was the limit.

Why have I stuck with Crossfit so much longer than P90X?  I don’t have a wedding to motivate me anymore.  I don’t have any particular event in the future to be in shape for, yet I continue week after week to get in better shape than the week before.  I think a big piece of this puzzle is one of the biggest differences between P90X and Crossfit, and it comes from the first two words of Crossfit’s “definition,” CONSTANTLY VARIED.  Constantly varied, functional movements executed at high intensity.  When I show up at my Crossfit box, the chances are good that I will be doing a workout that I have never done before.  I now look forward to checking the web site before bed so that I know what tomorrow’s workout will be, and possibly dream about it.  I know for a fact I never dreamed about any P90X workouts.

I’m not trying to knock P90X here, because as the title infers, I consider my experience with P90X to be a success.  I had a goal and it assisted me in reaching the goal.  But if my goal had involved staying in shape for the rest of my life, it would have failed.  P90X has people that it appeals to, that prefer to workout at home, without heavy weights, etc

But too me Crossfit appeals to me on too many levels.  I already touched on constantly varied and how it is a motivating factor for me.  Another reason is the scientific look at “work.”  You are more likely to hear “force times distance divided by time” in a high school physics class than in most weight rooms, but it is right at home in a Crossfit box.  This, along with the idea of GPP or General Physical Preparedness, and “increased work capacity over broad time and modal domains” and you have completely won me over.  I’m a data guy.  I’m a statistics guy.  Getting in shape and allowing me to get nerdy with it, and I’ve died and gone to heaven.  I’ve probably lost a lot of readers at this point, so I will move on.

Another thing I prefer about Crossfit is the olympic lifting element.  In the short time that I have been doing crossfit, I have really enjoyed practicing my clean and jerks and snatches.  As well as all of the individual components of these like the front squat and overhead squat.  This kind of heavy weightlifting is entirely lacking from P90X, albeit by design, I still think this is a flaw of the program.  Though I wouldn’t recommend learning Oly lifts on a DVD either.

 

  • In conclusion…

In summary, there are reasons for choosing P90X and there are reasons for choosing Crossfit.  If price is important to you, then P90X may be your choice.  In this digital age we live in, any product can be stolen, but even if you purchase it from Beachbody, the costs aren’t that high.  On the other hand, Crossfit can also be free by just following the workouts posted on the main crossfit.com site.  Although you would need to provide any equipment necessary for the workouts.  On that note, here is a list of Crossfit workouts that don’t need equipment!   To me the choice is very easy.  I can’t see myself ever following video workouts again.  P90X, Insanity Workout, etc.  They just can not replace the expertise of on site trainers who specialize in functional movements, and develop programing for their community based on their proven results.

 

 

 

Paleo diet – 30 day review

So it is now November, which means my 30 days of the paleo diet have passed and I am pleased to be able to share my findings with you.  As I did with the 14 day progress report, here is a chart showing my daily weights(blue line) and 7-day average weights(red line) going back to this summer before I started crossfit and then when I started paleo (October 1).

 

 

Paleo diet 30 day progress

Paleo diet 30 day progress

  • The Good

As you can see, my weight continues to decline, and because of all of the exercise that I am getting from crossfit and some other things I’m doing, my strength and conditioning are at arguably the best of my life.  While I still weigh about 6 pounds more than I did last May when I got married, I would say that I am in better condition and health now than I was then.

I still continue to feel much better in the mornings when it comes to my knees and joints.  I am hungry much less often during the day, and enjoy being able to eat lunch when I want to or when I need to based on my work schedule, and not based on when my stomach pains begin at around 11 a.m.

This all led me to do things like I did this past weekend.

  • The Bad

It was definitely difficult to eat paleo when traveling.  Airports are not designed for cavemen to eat, so it’s best to be prepared and bring food.  Unfortunately, the paleo kits that I ordered hasn’t arrived before I went to L.A., so I had to make due with what I could forage for myself.  To make matters worse, I was traveling on business, and a lot of the meals were pre-arranged for a group of a few hundred people.  Luckily this means there was lots of food, but most of it I had to pick thru and fight off temptations to the best of my ability.  My saving grace was breakfast.  You can always count on a large portion of eggs, sausage and bacon on group breakfasts.

Then there was going out to a restaurant that your friend recommends.  When you go to a place like Animal and see what their menu offers, it’s hard not to cheat at least a little bit.  Overall I think I did alright at that meal.

  • The Ugly

The best part is there is no ugly.  I won’t lie, this past weekend my wife Stacy and I went out to a Mexican restaurant and got nachos and burritos.  And I treated myself to an ice cream sandwich.  But on Monday it was back to business. Eggs for breakfast, oops another burrito for lunch, and steak for dinner.  So it looks like I need to make sure to rope in those burritos.

  • What’s next

I’ve focused a lot on weight loss and conditioning since I started crossfit this summer, and since starting paleo things have really kicked into high gear.  I think that I want to shift gears a little bit and concentrate on strength for a while.  With winter coming, it’s probably a good idea anyway.  So I am going to continue with a modified paleo diet including dairy.    Over the past month I have been replacing milk with either almond milk or coconut milk.  I enjoy both of these, so they may remain in my diet to an extent, but I will be re-introducing milk to my diet, and probably a casein shake before bed as well.  I haven’t decided yet if I am going to jump back into the world of post-workout whey protein shakes or not.  I may evaluate that on a day by day basis.

I am however going to continue to keep corn and other grains out of my diet as much as I can.

The key for Stacy and I has been RECIPES! I tend to cook by just throwing ingredients together and seeing what works.  Stacy is the opposite, she wants a recipe to follow.  The more variety we can get from finding new paleo recipes the better.  That’s why we ordered this paleo recipe book.  There are also lots of great sites on the web like primal-palate.com, and others.  Please post links to comments for us to share!

 

Paleo Progress report – Day 14!

So as of tonight I am two full weeks into my strict paleo diet. So far so good on both how I’m feeling, and some other things too. First I’ll get to the results of the scale. I’ve been weighing myself daily for a few months now, long before I started the paleo diet, and long before I started exercising regularly again.

Paleo 14 day progress by weight

My daily weight and 7 day moving average

In the graph above, the blue wavy line is my daily weight. I weigh myself every single morning as soon as I roll out of bed. The scale is right next to the toilet, so after I empty my bladder, I step on the scale. Even with this consistent method of measuring, you can see that my weight fluctuates greatly. To help reduce the variability of the daily weight, I have added my 7 day average weight, which smooths things out a bit, but you can see that there are fluctuations as much as 7 pounds up and down within 2 days of each other.

The half green background that starts in July is when I started Crossfit. When I first began, I was going twice a week and trying to figure out how to balance Crossfit, work and grad school. Over time I started regularly making 3-4 times a week, and now I go between 4 and 6 times per week. The full green background is when I started Paleo 14 days ago. As you can see, the results so far have been great. I’ve lost about 10-11 pounds so far.

Now, if I had started it on a low point, instead of a high point, maybe I would have been down 4-5 pounds. We’ll never know, because I didn’t think about it, I just went for it. Along with the weight, I’ve also lost 3/4″ in my waist.

Next up I want to cover the challenges, cheats and mistakes I have made so far. I’ve only made one mistake really that I should have caught. One Monday night I had class after work, but I thought it would be a short one, and planned on eating dinner after it. When the class ran until 8 p.m. and the professor wasn’t done, I went to the vending machine on our break. Obviously vending machines aren’t a bastion of paleo food, but they did have beef jerky. I figured that would be my best bet to hold me over until dinner. After eating half of the bag(it was pretty small bag) I realized that the beef jerky had high fructose corn syrup. BUMMER.

dr. pepper and almond milk in the fridge

This soda has been in the fridge since before I started paleo.

As for cheats, the only thing I have cheated on is my sneaking protein powders post-workout. I ordered a new mix from true protein just before starting this(I modeled it after the Progenex formula), and a few times I have snuck a little powder in when I get home if I think it’s going to be a while until I can make breakfast or dinner is ready. For context, I have probably done this 2 or 3 times over the past 2 weeks. In general, I am letting go from my “addiction” to post-workout shakes, and trusting in the paleo meals for my protein. As you can see in the photo above, I’ve had a soda sitting in the fridge for the entire two weeks so there is plenty of opportunity to give in and cheat, but I am holding strong.

Speaking of supplements, I have really reduced what I had been taking. I rarely take my multivitamin anymore, I definitely never take pre-workout white flood anymore, and I stopped taking the creatine supplement I had because it has maltodextrin in it. I ordered some cheap creatine monohydrate to take in it’s place, but it hasn’t arrived yet. I’ve thought about resuming my casein powder shakes before bed, but so far I haven’t. I’ll probably wait until the 30 days is over so I can evaluate that independently, before deciding if I want to mix that into the program or not.

Then there are the challenges. Before I started paleo I knew the importance of a good breakfast. Even still, one of the hardest things for me was to figure out when to eat it, and what to eat, given that I worked out at 7 a.m., and still needed to get ready for work afterwards. On many days I just didn’t eat breakfast, instead having the post-workout shake, and holding off until lunch. I came to the realization that, barring an important meeting, I can always take a little extra time in the morning to make and eat breakfast, and get to work at a reasonable time. It might be 15 minutes later than before, but I can make up for that 15 minutes, where as I couldn’t make up for the missed meal.

The next challenge is lunch options. I am starting to run thin. My first week I hit the Whole Foods buffet almost every day. The next week I hit Chipotle for a steak bowl with guacamole, but no rice or beans. Luckily Apple has a great cafeteria with tons of options that I can make some great paleo meals out of. But I feel like I have reached the limit on choices, and I think thats due to a lack of creativity on my end. I know there have to be more options out there for paleo lunches.

Now for the things I think I am doing right. Documentation! I am taking a photo of every meal. If you don’t believe me look at my Tumblr. I usually post every meal there with some commentary on the ingredients and other nonsense. Another thing that has helped is finding recipes ahead of time. Since Stacy is home most days, she can prepare everything for dinner with the needed ingredients from the recipes we find online. Speaking of Stacy, that is another big help. When your spouse is also eating paleo, it makes things a lot easier around the house.

I think the last thing to cover is how I feel. Overall I feel really, REALLY good. One of the first things I noticed was I wasn’t waking up with sore knees. Before I would notice my soreness as soon as I walked down the stairs in the morning. That feeling is very much reduced since starting paleo. I guess you can call me a believer on the anti-inflammatory benefits of the diet. Secondly, and this took me a while to realize, was the amount of time I spent hungry was much less. Over the past few years I have been the epitome of the guy who is ready to eat lunch at 11:30 a.m. every day. Starting the day with a solid breakfast, really does keep me full until lunch time, which gives me the flexibility to eat it whenever I want to. The same goes for the afternoons. I’m no longer dying of hunger around 4 p.m. and thinking only about dinner. It’s amazing how much removing sugars from your diet, and replacing them with slower digesting foods can improve your hunger situation.

So I think that’s it. Full speed ahead. Any questions? Let me know in the comments.

Starting day 5, the weekend was a challenge

I just finished breakfast for day 5, some eggs, bacon and broccoli. Yesterday was probably the biggest challenge so far, but it wasn’t that difficult. My Sunday’s usually consist for running a 5K in the morning, and then watching football all day with beer and snacks. I ran the 5K, but then limited my intake to paleo foods. No beer, just water and almond milk. No snacks, just spaced out paleo meals. It was hardest because we didn’t have any concrete plans of what and when to eat. That’s something I have really come to learn to value of. Have a plan and execute it.

So far I feel really good. No loss of energy from not eating the carbs and sugars. This morning’s workout went really well. I made a new PR on front squats by 30 pounds more than my previous best. And then I put in a really strong effort on the WOD: 100 thrusters at 65# for time. But with 3 pullups every minute on the minute. My time was 12:43.

I’ll give another update later in the week on what I’ve been eating and how I’m feeling.