BB.

I pick things up and put them down.

  • 7th May
    2013
  • 07

So sore…

But my work jeans fit a little better today & I think I look cute. I told my mom what I ate yesterday and she’s like “Holy crap that’s a lot”…to which I just said “I AM A MACHINE”. Woke up really hungry though. I guess my metabolism has started working again…awww yee. Brb getting shredded.

  • 6th May
    2013
  • 06

Lifts/Food - May 6th

Good energy today. Still a bit hungry, so I may have a slice of toast with nutella before bed. Lifting was basically the shittiest ever after an 8 hour day of lifting heavy shit. Also - lifting during peak hours = ew. So I guess it’s 7 a.m. lifting for me (before work tires me out). I’ll only have 30 minutes, so I’m going to just do starting strength…easiest way to make the most out of that time :) Pictured above is the sunrise - 5:30 a.m. wakeup time for me, left photo is me enjoying my break & left is my prime rib dinner. Awesome monday :D

Food:

Breakfast: 1 egg, 1 cup of my sweetpotato hash (onions, peppers, mushrooms, sweet potato + balsamic vinegar), small coffee with milk and sugar from Second Cup

Snack #1: Banana

Lunch: Two small wraps, filled w/ about 3 oz. Grilled Chicken & a spoonful of baba ganoush, roasted kale salad, Oikos 2% greek yogurt

Snack #2: Fiber bar, Apple

Snack #3 (On the way home - after the gym): Chocolate chip cookie from Timmies, Small iced coffee

Dinner: 5-6 oz. Prime rib, ~cup of portugese rice

Snack #4: Nutella on Toast :)

Lifts:

  • Barbell Bench Press:
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+54 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+62 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+62 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+62 pts)
    • Crappy lifting day, but now I understand that my strength after the end of an 8-hour day of moving heavy shit is pretty nil. Going to try and lift before work on wednesday ( 7 a.m.). I have 30 minutes, so it’s just going to be SS for the next while because I think that’s all I can manage. When I mov
  • Barbell Squat:
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+46 pts)
    • 95 lb x 5 reps (+65 pts)
    • 95 lb x 5 reps (+65 pts)
    • 95 lb x 5 reps (+65 pts)
    • Depth/flexibility was no problem…just exhaustion.
  • Barbell Deadlift:
    • 115 lb x 3 reps (+60 pts)
    • 115 lb x 3 reps (+60 pts)
    • 115 lb x 3 reps (+60 pts)
    • No chalk @ this gym. Will remember for next time.
  • 4th May
    2013
  • 04
UpdatesUpdatesUpdates! :)So yesterday was my first day at work (at the machine shop). So glad to be back :) My entire body is broken lol Drilling through stainless steel all day with a cordless drill = dem isometrics be working baby. I almost passed out at 4pm when I was done…I think the greatest challenge will be finding the energy to lift after 8 hours of manual labour each day. Buuttt I got through third year mechanical engineering and I’m still alive so I’m convinced I can do anything :)I’ve made it a personal goal of mine this month to eat out as little as possible & find out an actual nutrition profile that keeps me energized and full. What you see above is my pre-work breakfast which worked quite well - except I think I’m going to skip the toast and actually just eat more of my breakfast hash thing & add more veggies & possibly some egg whites. It’s sweet potato + peppers + onions & bacon :) cooked in coconut oil. I cooked enough for three servings, and it actually tastes pretty good just zapped in the microwave for 30 seconds. For lunch I made wraps with chicken cooked with apples, carrots, onions and a baba ganoush spread…complete with a roasted kale salad. I just was looking for a change, and a shift in focus…I think the weight loss will come naturally as a result of more daily physical activity & eating of home prepared food instead of food-like products. Oh, and a HUGE decrease in stress…plus no birth control pill, and likely more sleep each night. Of course, I’m not going to “ban” foods or call certain foods “bad” or “good” because ultimately I’m in it for the long run…and if I want to go out for a fancy dessert crepe/waffle once a week with the roomies…then I certainly shall. 
Currently sitting in the backyard with a tall glass of ice water, enjoying some sunshine & lounging before I head off to my weekend burger-place job. I feel like I’m in paradise. It feels so nice to just sit and listen to the birds and read :)
You’ll hear moar about lifting on Monday, when I plan to return to the iron. For now - have a great weekend everyone :D

UpdatesUpdatesUpdates! :)

So yesterday was my first day at work (at the machine shop). So glad to be back :) My entire body is broken lol Drilling through stainless steel all day with a cordless drill = dem isometrics be working baby. I almost passed out at 4pm when I was done…I think the greatest challenge will be finding the energy to lift after 8 hours of manual labour each day. Buuttt I got through third year mechanical engineering and I’m still alive so I’m convinced I can do anything :)

I’ve made it a personal goal of mine this month to eat out as little as possible & find out an actual nutrition profile that keeps me energized and full. What you see above is my pre-work breakfast which worked quite well - except I think I’m going to skip the toast and actually just eat more of my breakfast hash thing & add more veggies & possibly some egg whites. It’s sweet potato + peppers + onions & bacon :) cooked in coconut oil. I cooked enough for three servings, and it actually tastes pretty good just zapped in the microwave for 30 seconds. For lunch I made wraps with chicken cooked with apples, carrots, onions and a baba ganoush spread…complete with a roasted kale salad. 

I just was looking for a change, and a shift in focus…I think the weight loss will come naturally as a result of more daily physical activity & eating of home prepared food instead of food-like products. Oh, and a HUGE decrease in stress…plus no birth control pill, and likely more sleep each night. Of course, I’m not going to “ban” foods or call certain foods “bad” or “good” because ultimately I’m in it for the long run…and if I want to go out for a fancy dessert crepe/waffle once a week with the roomies…then I certainly shall. 

Currently sitting in the backyard with a tall glass of ice water, enjoying some sunshine & lounging before I head off to my weekend burger-place job. I feel like I’m in paradise. It feels so nice to just sit and listen to the birds and read :)

You’ll hear moar about lifting on Monday, when I plan to return to the iron. For now - have a great weekend everyone :D

  • 30th April
    2013
  • 30
Hormones, Homeostasis, and Why You (Probably) Need Carbs

The last part of the article, I’d like to share with ya’ll if you don’t have time to read the whole thing:

What does it all mean?

Hello? Are you still reading? OK good.

Let’s talk practicality.

What can you do right now to address any potential hormonal problems that might have occurred with nutrient deprivation?

If you think you have a hormonal problem related to the above set of circumstances…

Figure it out

Get tested. I suggest a full sex hormone panel plus thyroid and 24-hour salivary cortisol. GH/IGF-1/somatostatin tests are less common and typically only used where docs suspect GH deficiency or excess, particularly in children/teens. Start with your doctor/endocrinologist or a qualified naturopath and see what you can negotiate.

Make a complete list of everything you’re experiencing. Even if it doesn’t seem relevant (like sleep, or mood, or cravings). Start to become an archaologist of your own biology. Dig shit up. Pay attention. Check in. Learn your physical and psychological cues, such as:

  • mood, anxiety/depression, mental health, cognition, irritability, etc.
  • energy levels and fatigue
  • quality and quantity of sleep; normal sleep-wake cycles
  • heart rate
  • body shape and normal fat gain patterns for you
  • appetite, hunger, and satiety
  • cravings and food behaviours
  • physical performance and perceived effort
  • immunity and injury/illness recovery
  • digestion and GI health
  • skin
  • reproductive cycles and libido
  • pain perception and awareness; shifting patterns of pain and/or inflammation
  • sense of overall wellbeing and mojo

Almost nothing, if it happens more than rarely, is irrelevant.

Low-hanging fruit

If you’re fasting regularly, stop. Now. Just stop. Especially if you’re relatively leaner and exercising regularly.

Eat relatively regularly, every few hours when you’re genuinely hungry. You don’t have to be rigid about this, just be aware of your physical hunger signals. If you’re doing this right, you should be genuinely physically hungry about every 3-4 hours. Eat until you’re satisfied.

Eat breakfast. The folks who seem to genuinely do well with breakfast skipping tend to be young male ectomorphs who may have a different GH machinery than you. Alwyn Cosgrove — who documents his clients’ progress obsessively and now has hundreds of data points — says that whenever he gets his female clients to eat breakfast, they start losing fat. True story. Hormones have a daily circadian rhythm, which can vary between individuals. A morning meal for someone who’s previously been nutrient-depleted can potentially fire up the furnace again, because it can send a signal of “Phew, food’s coming in, we’re going to be OK!” to a body that is feeling pretty anxious about famine.

Add a small portion of slow-digesting, high-fiber carbs to every meal. It doesn’t have to be a lot. A cupped handful will do. If you’re far enough into hormonal fuckedupitude that you’re dealing with insulin resistance, your body needs time to recover and respond properly. Depending on your individual dietary tolerances and food preferences, opt for things like:

  • sweet potatoes/yams
  • other starchy tubers such as yuca
  • potatoes
  • bananas (green or ripe), plantains
  • other fruit
  • beans, legumes, peas, lentils
  • whole, unprocessed grains (soak them first if possible)

My hunch is that starches work better than fruit here because of the way the brain perceives glucose vs. fructose. But don’t overthink this. Just put the frickin’ sweet potato in your appropriate sweet-potato-related orifice and get ‘er done.

Do your best to ensure good food quality here, and try to go as unprocessed and primal as possible (e.g. a baked potato beats a potato chip). I am definitely not giving you a license to go hog wild into the brownie tray. Keep it real and sane. Don’t bullshit yourself. But honestly, if you’ve been restricting like a mofo for a long time, the details are less important than just getting into the habit of steady carb intake. If you can tolerate bread with no ill effects, the occasional slice won’t kill ya.

Pay attention to how you feel. I know I already said that. But it bears repeating. By the time we start circling the hormonal toilet bowl, there’s a good chance we’ve ignored a lot of body cues.

Bigger-picture stuff

Review your eating habits and patterns. You may need to eat more in general, more carbs, and/or more often. There’s good news: Abnormalities in the GH–IGF-I axis are reversible with refeeding. Look at your intake and ask yourself: What might count as metabolic stress?

Remember that the cumulative load of stress is the real problem here. Being an anal-retentive dietary fussbudget will cost you. As will flipping out about every single fucking thing you eat. As will overtraining and under-resting. As will worrying about whether you’re going to die of face cancer from eating a bagel. Just eat the damn food and lighten up.

Kill stress. Kill it with fire. Root it out with extreme prejudice. Get real about your sleep, your psychological environment, your self-talk, your work habits, your training load and intensity, your (lack of) rest and recovery protocols, your expectations, your relationships, and everything else that could be draining your tank. Get over wanting to be a superhero and embrace your vulnerable humanity. It’s OK.

Stop reading shit on the internet (except me, of course, ha). Step away from the computer into the real world of YOUR body. Worry less about the details and more about the big picture. My whole hypothesis here could be totally useless for explaining YOUR situation. Doesn’t matter. Just follow the real-life evidence wherever it leads you. Got a theory? Great! How’s that working for YOU?

Stop saying “should” and start saying “is”. Maybe Dietary Protocol X should work according to Expert Y or Anecdotal Evidence Z… but if it doesn’t feel good for you, it doesn’t fucking work for YOU and YOUR body. That is what it is. If you argue with reality you will always lose.

Consider your unique “stress sensitivity” and metabolic blueprint. Again, forget about “should”. You are YOU. Special snowflake YOU. If you’re someone who’s typically more sensitive to other things like sensory input, light and noise levels, nuances of things, tastes and textures, drug doses, food intolerances, etc. there’s a good chance you’re more metabolically sensitive too. (Even if you’ve tried to kill your sensitivity, or numbed it out, or pretended to be a badass.)

Consider the source. If you’re a middle-aged woman, don’t listen to a damn thing that young males say, unless said young males have a wealth of hands-on experience and research knowledge in the field of middle-aged women’s health. And even then, be suspicious.

Match your body to the information. If you are female, start by understanding that hormonally and evolutionarily speaking, a female body — especially one of reproductive age – is not exactly the same as a male body. An older body is not exactly the same as a younger body. A body in 21st century Western society is not exactly the same as a Paleolithic body. A human body is definitely not a mouse body. (Yes, I know I mentioned a rat study above, but take it as a starting point rather than gospel.)

Think long-term. Something might be working great for you now. Will it work in a month? 6 months? A year? 5 years? Face up to the inconvenient question of sustainability.

Balance the seesaw. If you add stress in one place you must take it away elsewhere. If you’re trying to lose fat and/or training hard, you must actively chase recovery and restoration. You must also do de-stressing, parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) dominant activities such as low-intensity rambling (especially outdoors in nature while getting sunshine), yoga, relaxing swims, laughing, cuddling, meditation, etc.

Stay checked in. Calibrate constantly. Try something and observe how you feel. Remember that it may take time to notice the effects. Go slowly, step by step. Be generous with your time, self-love, and patience. If you’re deep into this thing, it’ll take you a while to get out.

YOUR body is your boss. Nobody else. Love it, and listen to it.

Final word: What’s the “best diet”?

OK smartass Krista, what do YOU think is the “best diet”?

Well, obviously, there isn’t a single “best diet”. But here are some guidelines.

Don’t be crazy. Like S/M, be safe, sane, and consensual. If food, eating, and reading/thinking/arguing about food/eating are taking over your life, that’s being crazy. Unless being crazy is your job, like me.

Lower the stress load. That might mean eating a little more carbohydrate than conventionally recommended by low-carb folks. It means eating enough to support YOUR needs, whatever those are. It means removing inflammatory foods (sugar, wheat, maybe dairy for some folks, etc.) as much as possible, calibrating based on YOUR symptoms and individual body blueprint. Both over-restriction and bingeing are stressful. Try to find a middle ground of…

Eat when you’re physically hungry, and stop when you’re satisfied. Learn the body cues that will tell you what both of these things are.

Eat real food. Not processed crap. Not “edible food-like substances”. Eat stuff that comes from the ground or the field or the water. Animals and plants will do nicely.

Help your body do its job of digestion and nutrient processing. Eat fermented foods and probiotics. Occasionally eat something from your garden without washing it (assuming no animals are using your soil as a litterbox). Keep your gut happy and healthy.

Eat slowly and mindfully, in a relaxed setting. Stress — of any kind — shuts down digestion and harms bacterial flora.

Chill the fuck out. Don’t overthink this. Be real. (See “Don’t be crazy.”)

  • 17th April
    2013
  • 17

Lifts April 17/13

MY LEGS ARE LEAD. WHY ARE BARBELL LUNGES SO DIFFICULT. HALP ME PLZ.

  • Foam Rolling:
    • 5 min (+11 pts)
    • warm up. Classes are DONE. In two weeks I’ll be done exams and then I can train all I want. Really looking forward to that…
  • Stretching:
    • 0:05:00 (+2 pts)
  • Barbell Squat:
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+53 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
  • Barbell Lunges:
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+82 pts)
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+82 pts)
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+82 pts)
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+82 pts)
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+82 pts)
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+82 pts)
    • Fuaarrrrrk these killed me.
  • Rack Deadlift:
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+33 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+46 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+46 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+46 pts)
  • Barbell Bench Press:
    • 47 lb x 8 reps (+54 pts)
    • 67 lb x 8 reps (+61 pts)
    • 67 lb x 8 reps (+61 pts)
    • 67 lb x 8 reps (+61 pts)
  • 9th April
    2013
  • 09
Tummy Tuesday ~190ish lbs, but I think I’m closer to 186. just some bloat from shark week & salty foods.
Y’know, despite holding onto a lot of chubs that I’d rather be gone…I’ve been feeling pretty comfortable in my skin lately. As I’ve mentioned probably a lot before, lifting has definitely done a lot to change my body shape quite a bit. My tummy is still pretty soft, but it’s also pretty shapely as well.
Things will pick up. The weather is getting nicer, school is almost done…and I’m eager to get outside. I’m looking forward to summertime & having no commitments in the late evening so I can lift and get HYOOGE. A proper diet will always be a challenge while I’m living at home, and in the mean time I am happy to indulge in just being active as fuark.  

Tummy Tuesday ~190ish lbs, but I think I’m closer to 186. just some bloat from shark week & salty foods.

Y’know, despite holding onto a lot of chubs that I’d rather be gone…I’ve been feeling pretty comfortable in my skin lately. As I’ve mentioned probably a lot before, lifting has definitely done a lot to change my body shape quite a bit. My tummy is still pretty soft, but it’s also pretty shapely as well.

Things will pick up. The weather is getting nicer, school is almost done…and I’m eager to get outside. I’m looking forward to summertime & having no commitments in the late evening so I can lift and get HYOOGE. A proper diet will always be a challenge while I’m living at home, and in the mean time I am happy to indulge in just being active as fuark.  

  • 9th April
    2013
  • 09

Lifts 04/09/13

  • Barbell Squat:
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+46 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • Feeling MUCH better than last week. Every rep looked the same. Spent 10 minutes stretching & foam rolling pre-squats and I think that helped quite a bit. Bumping these up to 105 lbs next week.
  • Barbell Bench Press:
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+46 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
  • Bent Over Barbell Row:
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+29 pts)
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+29 pts)
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+29 pts)
  • EZ-Bar Curl:
    • 12 lb x 20 reps (+18 pts)
    • 12 lb x 20 reps (+18 pts)

  • 8th April
    2013
  • 08

SUNDAY

My club’s powerlifting meet :D It was a HYOOOGE success! I can’t wait until the photos/video get uploaded because this was probably the most entertaining powerlifting meet in the history of ever…SO MUCH SCREAMING, SO MUCH LOVE. One of the lifters, who’s been super enthusiastic ever since day one wrote this on facebook following the meet:

Two years ago, Filip Nikacevic convinced me to get a one month membership to extreme fitness.

I struggled to squat one plate.
I strained and writhed about whilst benching 90.
My back was wrecked for a week after I deadlifted 170 with truly offensive form.
That’s a 395 total.

I got to work. I tried 5x5, 5/3/1, CnP, and a bunch of other programs. As a beginner, it seems like you can do damn near anything and make progress, as long as you try hard.

Today, I squatted 319, benched 213 (I have gotten 225 on an especially good day recently) and deadlifted 402lbs (after a ridiculous psyche up, courtesy of Zack Morrow).
934 total.

Nothing to write home about. But I know I’m getting somewhere. I’m still young money, so there’s plenty of time to get better.

Here is my message to the non-lifter: 
if you’re interested in lifting, just jump right in. With some dedication, a pinch of protein, and the will to lift heavy, you, too, can become far less weak than you almost certainly are now.


If you’re at U of T, join U of T Ironsports for a badass community, great information, and some friendly competition. If you’re at some other school, see if there are any clubs, or make some friends who share your interest. If you don’t go to school, find a gym.

The time to strike is now.

My dreams have come true :3 The community I set out to create in March of last year, has grown even bigger than I imagined it would be. Witnessing the enthusiasm and camaraderie + BIG PRs are the best gift anyone could ask for. I am so glad to have created this opportunity for so many to experience the fun that is lifting heavy sh*t on stage <3 AHHHHHFDJSKLFHJDS. Yeah, it was rad. 

  • 4th April
    2013
  • 04
Embracing the chunkiness today. Still sitting at around 185 lbs - 190 lbs. I was feeling pretty sucky. Like I said, my diet hasn&#8217;t been the best. It&#8217;s photos like this that motivate me to put my heart &amp; soul into my training&#8230;that make me feel like an athlete, like I&#8217;ve BUILT something over the past two years :)

Embracing the chunkiness today. Still sitting at around 185 lbs - 190 lbs. 

I was feeling pretty sucky. Like I said, my diet hasn’t been the best. It’s photos like this that motivate me to put my heart & soul into my training…that make me feel like an athlete, like I’ve BUILT something over the past two years :)

  • 1st April
    2013
  • 01
Just wanted to note I have the best friends evar :3 Ashley left me a note on my gym locker :&#8217;) &lt;3
Lifts 01/04/13

Barbell Squat:
45&#160;lb x 5 reps (+46 pts)
65&#160;lb x 5 reps (+53 pts)
95&#160;lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
95&#160;lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
95&#160;lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
First day of TM. Keeping it light as I&#8217;ve been sitting on my ass for two weeks.


Barbell Bench Press:
45&#160;lb x 5 reps (+46 pts)
65&#160;lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
65&#160;lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
65&#160;lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)


Barbell Deadlift:
90&#160;lb x 5 reps (+63 pts)
110&#160;lb x 8 reps (+82 pts)
110&#160;lb x 8 reps (+82 pts)
110&#160;lb x 8 reps (+82 pts)


Seated Cable Row:
45&#160;lb x 8 reps (+28 pts)
45&#160;lb x 8 reps (+28 pts)
45&#160;lb x 8 reps (+28 pts)

Just wanted to note I have the best friends evar :3 Ashley left me a note on my gym locker :’) <3

Lifts 01/04/13

  • Barbell Squat:
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+46 pts)
    • 65 lb x 5 reps (+53 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • 95 lb x 8 reps (+74 pts)
    • First day of TM. Keeping it light as I’ve been sitting on my ass for two weeks.
  • Barbell Bench Press:
    • 45 lb x 5 reps (+46 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
    • 65 lb x 8 reps (+60 pts)
  • Barbell Deadlift:
    • 90 lb x 5 reps (+63 pts)
    • 110 lb x 8 reps (+82 pts)
    • 110 lb x 8 reps (+82 pts)
    • 110 lb x 8 reps (+82 pts)
  • Seated Cable Row:
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+28 pts)
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+28 pts)
    • 45 lb x 8 reps (+28 pts)