Saturday, August 24, 2024

Daily Mobility

I try to do these everyday. It has been my evolving warmup routine for running. 1 and 2 I do in that order. 3 and 4 I randomly depending on time.

1. Foam rolling or massage gun (~5-10 minutes)

  • Target: feet, calves, hamstrings, quads, IT bands, and lower back.
  • Sets and Reps: Spend about 30-60 seconds on each target area. If muscles are tight or sore, spend more time. If muscles are very tight or sore, repeat multiple times throughout the day.

2. Dynamic Stretching (~5-10 minutes)

  • Standing Thoracic Rotations
  • Cat and Cow
  • Good Mornings  
  • Hip Circles
    • Standing: 10 circles each direction, clockwise and counter clockwise.
    • On ground: Lift one knee off the ground and move it in a circular motion, trying to draw as large a circle as possible with your knee. 10 circles in each direction, with each leg.
  • Lunges
    • 4 variations: front, front with twist/rotation, back, and Side. 
    • 5 reps each leg, each direction.
  • Leg Swings
    • Side swings and front/back swings. 10 swings with each leg, each direction. 
    • Repeat 1-2 times if hips/legs are tight.

3. Fascia Training- I following a different plan, but it's close enough to the video. The key is getting the toes to move properly.

4. Balancing and Light Upper Body Exercises- I do these most days I do not go to the gym. I use 15 and 30 pound kettle bells, but dumbbells or no weight works too.

 

Friday, August 23, 2024

The Plantar Fascia Plan


Prevention is the goal, but whether you're doing prevention or rehab the following plan below will be helpful. Before the plan, here is the most basic guidelines to avoid injuries. I'm in my 40s and this is specifically for a couple friends in their 40s, but it generally applies to everyone.

  1. Many injuries can be avoided by gradually increase loads and intensities. A lot of time less is more in the long run. Be patient and you'll be fitter in the long run.
  2. One thing leads to another: Problems in one area of the body create problems in other areas of the body. If you're sensing an injury, explore and identify root causes, like muscular imbalances or inflexibility.
  3. Pain not equal to tissue damage. Pain is a signal telling you something is wrong. If you've been resting for months and you still have pain, the tissue may be repaired. See a professional if you can,  and they will assist you with steps 1 and 4.
  4. Be proactive! Rest won't cure all injuries. You'll most likely need to strengthen something and or increase mobility to fully recover.

Now for the Plantar Fascia Plan. 

What is the plantar fascia?

The plantar fascia (PF) is not a tendon (tendons connect muscle to bone, like the achillies tendon) and it isn't considered a ligament either (ligaments connect bone to bone). The technical name for the plantar fascia (PF) is aponeurosis.

The PF is a dense connective tissue made of collagen fibers, mostly Type I collagen. The PF connects the heel bone (at the calcaneal tuberosity) to the balls of the foot (metatarsal bones). It supports to the arch of the foot, provides shock absorption, and stores and releases elastic energy.

Why does my plantar fascia hurt?

The pain is probably in your heel and it's probably your plantar fascia.

As mentioned above, you overloaded the fascia by some combination of overuse, excess strain, or biomechanics (inflexibility, most likely in the foot, calf, or hamstring). You can't undo the past. But you can identify the issue. Check the flexibility and mobility in your feet, ankles, calves, hamstrings, and might as well check the hips too. Look back at your recent actives/training/work/etc. Have you increased volume and or intensity? Do you have tightness or other problems putting extra strain on your foot?

Flexibility Diagnostic

Test yourself on the following. If you do not have at least the minimal flexibility, you should work on increasing your flexibility. If you have the minimal flexibility, then you're fine and don't need to work on increasing your flexibility for running.

How long will it take to heal?

It could take weeks to months. There are three phases to consider: inflammation phase, repair phase, and remodel phase. People with chronic heel pain are probably well past the inflammation phase.

The first few days are the inflammation phase. The body is sending blood, cells, and nutrients to the damaged site. The heel might feel painful, but many runners will not notice the inflammation phase. There may be redness and swelling.

The next couple weeks the body repairs the tissue. Fibroblasts are working to create new collagen fibers. The new fibers (Type III collagen) are weaker than the original Type I collagen that was damaged. New blood vessels form to aid in supplying oxygen and nutrients. Scar tissue forms to assist the healing. The PF may feel stiff and painful, especially in the morning or after prolonged sitting.

The next months the new tissue will be remodeled. The Type III collagen matures into Type I collagen. The fibers realign and become stronger. The excess scar tissue breaks down. The fascia gradually regains its normal structure and function.

Expect even a mild plantar fascia injury to takes months to heal. For more severe and chronic cases it can take over a year to recover.

During these phases the injured person should work on strengthening and stretching.

What can I do?

  • Remove the stress causing the injury and do not reinjury the fascia.
  • Get appropriate sleep.
  • Eat a healthy diet.
  • See a medical profession, like a physical therapist.
  • Massage and roll the plantar fascia and achillies tendon (AT). The AT and PF are closely connected, both anatomically and functionally.
  • Follow the following exercise plan. 

The Plantar Plan

Depending on how much time you have, make a plan using the following exercises. If you can, formally set time for 5-15 minutes 2-3 times a day, that's 10-45 minutes a day. 

If not formally, informally make time by doing the following. Balance on one foot while you brush your teeth. Roll your feet on a baseball or frozen water battle while you work at a desk. You can do the towel curls without a towel on a rug or hard floor. Find other ways to work in the following exercises into your current daily routines. If you watch TV or browse the internet you have time! You can do towel curls in your car while you drive. Here is a good video that covers most of the exercises. The bolded exercises below are primary and the unbolded are secondary. There's overlap between the exercises too.

  • Plantar Fascia Stretch- breaks up scar tissue, see above, and improve mobility of toes and ankle
  • Calf Stretch (video)- similar to above
  • Towel Curls (video)- strengthen muscles in feet
  • Slow Calf Raises (the slower the better, 4-10 reps, do 60 seconds) strengthen AT and PF
  • Single Leg Balancing (lots of options here)- strengthen feet, hips, core, stabilizers,
  • Roll and Massage- break up scar tissue and alleviate pain

 Plantar Fasciitis Exercises - What You Need to Know

Why Stretch the Plantar Fascia? - Blog

Thursday, August 22, 2024

Yoda: The Empire Tells the Truth

This is part two of The Jedi Suck Trilogy. Click the link for part one, Kenobi: A New Lie, why Obi-Wan Kenobi sucks. Stay tuned for the finale.

Yoda doesn't suck, he's no Kenobi, but he represents the suckiness in the Jedi. Yoda is the Jedi most responsible for the fall of the Jedi Order.

Yoda is supposed to be one of the wisest and most powerful Jedi. He survives Order 66 and a battle with Darth Sidious/Emperor Palpatine. If Yoda is the wisest and most powerful Jedi, then he is most at fault for the fall of the Jedi order. Even though Yoda shows skepticism in the Star Wars Pre Trilogy (PT), he fails to step up and alter or correct the Jedi's mistakes. Yoda and the Jedi fails to do the following:

  1. Identify Palpatine as the Sith: it is Palpatine who reveals himself to Anakin Skywalker and Skywalker tells the Jedi. The Jedi couldn't figure it out on their own.
  2. Oppose Senator Palpatine: The Jedi are wary of Palpatine. The Jedi and Yoda do not like Palpatine's rise in power, but they go along with it. They go along with it for years as Palpatine rises in power and makes political gain after gain. When the Jedi finally learn that Palpatine is the Sith master, it is too late. The Jedi Order is physically fractured across the galaxy, fighting the Clone Wars. A group of Jedi try and fail to arrest or stop Palpatine. After the attempt on Palpatine, Palpatine ascends to Emperor and officially destroy the Jedi Order.
  3. Address the obvious weakness in the Jedi order: When Jedi learn about their inability to protect the Republic, they decide to conceal their deficiencies. At that point, it may have been too late, but still, the Jedi didn't have any significant response to their obvious decline.
  4. Prevent the Clone Wars: Yoda leads the Clones into their first battle. The Jedi go from being peacekeepers to generals in a galactic civil war. The Jedi are a powerful force in the Republic (pun intended). Where are they when it is time to prevent a war?
  5. Teach Anakin Skywalker: Yoda initially rejects the Skywalker. Yoda senses Skywalker's fear and anger. This creates a bad relationship. The Jedi don't want Skywalker and he knows it. Later, they know Skywalker's attachment to a hot young senator. What do they do? Send them alone together without supervision. Skywalker wasn't raised a Jedi. And still, the Jedi fail to see that Skywalker has different needs than the typical Padawan. They sense Skywalker's pain and trouble and they neglect giving him the proper counseling and Jedi Council. The Jedi struggle to conform Skywalker which ultimately leads to his fall and their own destruction.
  6. See the value in attachments: Attachment makes us human. Denouncing attachment brings imbalances in the force. It allows the rise of a Palpatine and the fall of a Skywalker.

Pick any problem with the Jedi in the PT, and Yoda is more to blame than any other single Jedi. Yoda is close 800 years old. He failed with Anakin Skywalker and then he repeats the mistakes with Luke Skywalker. Yoda doesn't learn from the Jedi's mistakes.

Yoda continues the strict teaching of the Jedi. Yoda tries (not does) to get Luke to "unlearn what you have learned." Luke, like Anakin, isn't the traditional Padawan. And Yoda still tries (not does) to train Luke by the traditional methods. Yoda wants Luke to detach from his friends and emotions. Yoda was raised a Jedi. He is stuck in the traditional Jedi ways. He can't see the value in what makes Luke and Anakin the ones. It's attachments. Luke's attachment's to his friends and then his father eventually save Anakin Skywalker and restore balance to the force.

Like Kenobi, Yoda has and withholds the truth from Luke. Once again, Yoda doesn't trust Luke, just like the jedi didn't trust Anakin. Palpatine won over Anakin because Palpatine manipulated Anakin with trust. He told Anakin what the Jedi wouldn't tell him. Anakin shouldn't have trusted Palpatne, but he had every right to mistrust the Jedi. The Jedi rejected him over and over. They didn't want to train him initially. They didn't trust him for important missions he was qualified to command. They didn't trust him with the title of "Master Jedi." And Yoda repeats this mistake with Luke. He doesn't trust Luke. He hides the truth from Luke because he doesn't trust Luke. Yoda fears Luke will fall like Anakin did. Yoda is wrong.

Luckily for the galaxy, Luke ignores Yoda's advice. He confronts Darth Vader, who tells Luke the truth! It's the truth and Vader that give Luke the key. Luke needs to rescue his friends. Luke needs to learn the truth about his father. Luke needs his attachments. Once again, another Jedi is wrong and the evil Empire has to step up and tell our hero the truth.

To be clear, Yoda is a product of his environment. He is a product of a declining Jedi Order. Simply more proof that the Jedi suck.

Conclusion

Take what is useful from Buddhism, but remember humans are social animals. Give whatever metaphysical explanation that floats your spaceship, but remember attachments are a net positive for humanity.

The Shitty Thrilogy (Star Wars Episodes 7-9) (ST) made a huge blunder by neglecting the idea the unified the Original Trilogy (OT) and Prequel Trilogy (PT).

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

2024 Five Star Rereads (update)

Update on a previous post. I want to reread all my favorite books. My friend AJ joined me. We were on a roll and then fell off. I recently started again. See here for my mid way response to It's Not About the Bike.

5 Stars to Reread 2024
  • Half a Yellow Sun
  • Waiting for the Barbarians
  • Zen in the Martial Arts
  • Dispatches
  • Song of Solomon

5 Stars Reread Results

Here are my five star rereads that kept their five stars:

The following are still really good, but not five stars after rereading:

Here are the nowhere near five stars:

So far, my original five star ratings are shooting nine for thirteen (~69%), with 12/13 being at least really good, not bad.

Rereading Lance Armstrong

Update on a previous post. I want to reread all my favorite books. I'm currently rereading It's Not About the Bike: My Journey Back to Life.

It's interesting. I can see why I loved this book so much in the past. For obvious reasons, it doesn't read the same as it used to. Not just because Lance Armstrong has been exposed as a cheater, and worse a person willing to attack and attempt to ruin other people's lives to keep his lie. Those bits of the story are very prevalent between the lines. But there is something else too, I'm going to keep reading and come back to it with a better explanation.

This book will not maintain it's 5 star rating, and I'm going to finish it. 

One interesting aspect is the writing. It's grammatically correct and all, but it's not well written, which is funny because Sally Jenkins is a great writer. The voice feels off too. It is like Jenkins is trying to make Armstrong more readable, but she is stuck with what he has to tell her. I've heard interviews with Armstrong and he doesn't use the words Jenkins writes. I've read other writing of Jenkins and she tells a lot more interesting stories. The story told by Armstrong is boring. Not the whole book but the chapters about cancer are. He doesn't teach readers much. There are insights into cancer and the struggles with the process, but nothing worthy of a bestseller. The dialogue is flat. It comes off as if Armstrong is telling the story with a thesaurus.

It's so ironic. This book was a #1 New York Times bestseller. People loved the book and Armstrong for the fairy tale story of the guy who almost died from cancer and then came back to be one of the greatest athletes in sports history.

It makes me wonder if Jenkins knew part of the lie. And maybe this motivated her to keep the voice and story subpar. That's all folks.

Until I finish the book... that's it.

Monday, August 5, 2024

Running and Compound Interest

I've always liked running faster than slower. My favorite workouts were hill repeats and track intervals. Even before I knew that intervals provided the best return on investment for time and distance, I like those type of workouts best.

But, there's always a but, those workouts are the most dangerous. The quality aspect of the running increases the risk of injuries from the increased stress of the faster running. With age, and decreased running, intervals helped me maintain my fitness with less mileage, but eventually the intervals just lead me to injuries.

After several years of injuries and inconsistent running, I was able to build a decent base over the last 18 months. I never fully realized the value in building a running base. Intervals get you fitter faster, at a risk, but running slower and injury free compounds over time!

This post is a follow up to this previous post.

My Anecdotal Evidence

Everything is relevant, but most people and runners would agree I was fast in my 20s. Here were my running PRs (personal records).

5k- 16.42
10 mile- 60.15

I realize that some of my 2024 gains were building on my 2023 fitness, but still I think the running below speaks for itself. In 2024, I didn't do more intervals or tempo runs than I did in 2023 (I would have but I got plantar heel pain, see below). I just ran a lot more. And the more I ran, the easier running got. My HR decreased and my cadence increased. It didn't just change in the races, it changed in all my runs. See my running tables below.

I wasn't completely injury free, I ended up getting plantar heel pain. It's hard to say why because I added 3 different stimului all around the same time (which I know and knew was a mistake, but I was feeling really good and the plantar crept in on me). I added a weekly hill repeat, strides, and structured weight lifting (deadlift, squats, and cleans two times a week). I eased into each activity, but I didn't consider the effects of easing into all three activities at the same time. I ended up dropping the hills and strides and keeping the lifting.

Conclusion

Consistency wins! Any sport or exercise, the results and effects compound with time doing the activity. It's innumerably better to start slow and build up than to get injured and or quit. 

Good luck and I hope I can help anyone reading this learn from my mistakes.

2023 Training

2023 Highlights
Benchmarks
Date
Time
Distance
Elevation
Flat Equivalent
Flat Predicted HM Time
Ave HR
Ave Cad
Cooper Test (12 min)
122900 m0on track1.39.11154180
Longest Run
1.30.1110.2659--145170
Lilac 5k
20.245k9820.061.32.21170175
Buffalo HM
1.40.0713.12591.39.141.39.14165174
Running Volume
Sep-6.89

Oct-0.53
Nov-2.5
Dec-5.3
Jan-26.3
Feb-31.86
Mar-47.95
Apr-24.18
May-55.58
Total Mileage201.09

Highest Weekly Mileage

15.9

Average Weekly Mileage Jan -May

8.45

2024 Training

2024 Highlights
Benchmarks
Date
Time
Distance
Elevation
Flat Equivalent
Flat Predicted HM Time
Ave HR
Ave Cad
Cooper Test (12 min)
12.093100 m0on track1.33.00166184
Longest Run1 May2.00.0214.69547--146178
Lilac 5k19 May19.115k6219:001.27.14161184
Buffalo HM26 May1:30:4213.11971:30:061:30:06165181
Running Volume
Sep-39.92

Oct-63.68
Nov-66.23
Dec-83.03
Jan-86.72
Feb-74.39
Mar-67.81
Apr-105.43
May-120.53
Total Mileage707.74
Highest Weekly Mileage35
Average Weekly Mileage Jan -May20.68