If I could give only one health tip it would be…

13 03 2012

Go to your doctor and get tested for vitamin D deficiency and anemia (especially if you’re a woman).  If you’re even more bold, you can do what my brother did.  Walk in and say, “test me for everything,” and then get 7 vials of blood drawn.

Why?  Because in modern society these are easy to develop, difficult to notice, have long term repercussions, and are easily treatable.

Vitamin D Deficiency

First, why should you care?

I can’t find the original article I’m basing this off of, but basically vitamin D has been linked to cancer prevention.  The daily recommended intake of vitamin D is a pitiable 400-600 IU.  Many of the scientists on the committee that set that limit LEFT BECAUSE THEY DID NOT AGREE.  If I remember correctly,t he human body will produce no more than 10,000 IU per day (your body will stop producing more even if you’re sitting in the sun all day), and you need at least 30,000 IU before you overdose.  In other words, it’s safe to take 4000 to 6000 of vitamin D per day.

Second, why would vitamin D deficiency be common?

Humans evolved under the Sun.  There would be no reason to evolve a mechanism to store serious reserves of vitamin D.  Let’s imagine the life of a hunter gatherer:

  • Wake up, spend the whole day hunting and gathering outside in the sun.  Eat all natural, fresh food which would be a good source of vitamin D, even if there is no sun.

Compare this with working in an office where you probably aren’t getting much vitamin D from the sun.  If you eat like a typical american, you’re probably not getting much vitamin D from your diet.  Let’s look at a typical office worker Bob:

 

  • Bob wakes up, gets ready, then enters his car in his garage and drives to work completely protected from the sun, where he  parks outside and walks into the office spending maybe 15 seconds in the sun, while fully clothed in business casual clothes.
  • At work, Bob sits in a cube and never leaves the office.  He decides to eat lunch outside and gets 15 to 30 minutes of sun.
  • Bob drives home, again protected from the sun by his car windows.
  • Bob gets home and stays indoors watching tv, on his computer, cooking, etc.  Bob has kids and wants to play outside with them, but it’s already dark so he doesn’t.
Get the idea?  Bob is essentially a cave man, experiencing almost no actual sunlight 5 days a week.  Here’s an article  which lists 7 ways to block out the sun, and 1 paragraph on the possible importance of vitamin D.
You can see there is a huge disconnect between the environment humans were evolved in and the environment they currently occupy (at least office workers).

Some info from WebMD.  You can see they recommend a really small daily dosage of 600 IU.  It’s up to you to decide if you take as much as I recommend (2 to 3 2000 IU tablets a day), and since I can’t find the original article that convinced me I have nothing to really support those numbers.  This article points out that studies of vitamin D toxicity had subjects consuming over 40,000 IU per day.  This article points out that the human body will not produce more than 10,000 IU of vitamin D per day.  In other words, taking 6,000 IU per day should pose no risk.

Anemia

Two of my female friends suffered from basic iron deficiency anemia, and based on my reading, it’s something I think everyone should get tested for.  Anytime you lose blood, you lose a bit of iron that needs to be replaced.  Mild forms of anemia are more common in women because they bleed during their period.  There is a lot more written about anemia than vitamin D deficiency so I’m not going to say much else on the subject.  If you want to learn more, this is the book I read that got me interested:





Switching Workouts

12 03 2012

I am switching my workouts from Stronglifts 5×5 to Madcow, check out my google doc to follow along.

Stronglifts 5×5 is a beginner program in which you add weight every time you go to the gym.  As you can imagine, this eventually becomes too much and your body can’t keep up.  I’m just about at this point.  From here you go to an intermediate program which you add weight every week instead of every workout.  I am going to be doing Madcow, an intermediate program recommended by Stronglifts.

I did Madcow last year starting on April 18th, 2011 and, as you can see below, my current weight/strength is at about the same level.  I also did GOMAD back then, so basically I’m just re-doing the same thing I did a year ago.  I could probably squeeze out a few more workouts of linear gains, but mentally it’s really hard, so I’m switching to Madcow now.

Madcow Spreadsheet 2011

If my weight follows the same growth pattern as it did last year, I will reach 180 pounds in a mere 5 weeks.  Depending on if I get a job or not, I may push my weight higher or stop there.  After reaching my goal weight, I want to experiment with other workouts.





If you’re on a diet, don’t watch the food network

11 03 2012

Both of my parents are on (stupid) diets, and in the past 24 hours I have seen them both watching the food channel.  Tip of the day: don’t stress your own willpower.

You can't have this

 





Self Experimentation/Demonstration: GOMAD, muscle gain, good health, etc

27 02 2012

Please read the whole article before commenting on how crazy I am.  But, feel free to post that.  It will just make it funnier in 2 months when I prove you wrong.

If you don’t know already, GOMAD = Gallon of milk a day.  Note: I’ve done GOMAD twice before so I pretty much know what to expect, which is why this is a experiment/demonstration.

Where I Am Now

Since new years I have been lifting lightly and slowly getting back into shape.  I’m finally at a reasonable point (Deadlift, 265, Squat 215, Bench 150, Row 150, Overhead Press 120) and am going to kick it into high gear.  I currently weigh 168 lbs, my goal is 175 lbs with a good body fat %.

My Plan

Exercise

Stay on my current linear progression lifting program (based on Stronglifts).  I will probably have to switch to an intermediate program soon enough.  See my current results as well as projected workouts here.

Diet

Eat my normal diet (low/slow carb mostly, but plenty of crap also), but add GOMAD.  Stay on this until I reach 180 lbs (should be 2 months), at which point drop GOMAD and cut down to 175 lbs while attemping to not lose any muscle mass.  I may do only half a gallon of milk on Sat and Sun since I don’t lift those 2 days in a row.

Health

For fun, after I reach my goal of 180 lbs I will get a cholesterol test to show you the reader what happens.  Either you’ll be surprised by awesome numbers or I’ll be surprised by crappy numbers.

Demonstration

I will try to photo every bit of food I eat until I reach my goal of 175 lbs and post the photos to my flickr account.  You can follow along with my workout progress here.   I took a video since photos are easily altered and posted it below, and I will repeat at 180 lbs and 175 lbs.  At the end of my GOMAD I will get a lipid panel (cholesterol test).

In the spirit of full disclosure I have a few extra things I do/don’t do:

  • Never work out within 30 minutes of waking up.
  • Never lift right after eating.
  • Sleep plenty.
  • Short warm up.

Things I’m Not Doing

People have a million and one (stupid) tips on how to lose or gain weight.  I’m not doing anything but what’s above.  Here’s a short list of things I’m not doing that you may have heard of:

  • Counting calories
  • Going out of my way to walk or jog or walk up stairs or anything like that
  • “Timing” my protein
  • Working out at a specific time (ie, workout before you eat breakfast or other such bs)
  • “Confusing my muscles” by switching exercises
  • Supplementing in any way (although I do take vitamin D3, vitamin B and fishoil for other reasons)
  • Substituting “healthy food” for other food.  For example, quinoa, low fat anything, etc.  I cook with real butter, bacon, etc.

Hypothesis

I have done this before, so I pretty much know what’s going to happen.  It should take a month or two to get up to 180 lbs.  From there it’ll take another month or two to drop back down to 175 lbs.  At 175 lbs  I will look noticeably more muscular than I do now, but still have a small belly.  Hypothesis for my cholesterol levels after reaching 180 lbs by drinking a gallon of milk a day: should be similar to my last test: total 185, triglyceride 84, hdl 68, ldl 100, (all mg/dL), December 2010.

Call for Comments

I really want to hear from you on what you think will happen.  I know this sounds crazy, so I’m hoping people post what they think will happen or not happen.





Self Experimentation: Productivity

22 02 2012

Lately I’ve been super lazy.  Waiting for something to happen.  Unfortunately, this is not a good way to get things done.  The other day Lifehacker had an interesting post on Jerry Seinfeld’s productivity method called “Don’t Break The Chain”.  The basic idea is to have a calendar with a clear goal and a minimum that must be done daily to reach that goal.  Every day that you complete the minimum step towards the goal, you put a big x across that date on the calendar.  The goal is to not break the chain of X’s on your calendar.

My calendars

The article suggests having 3 goals to start, but since I’m unemployed and have some easy goals, I have 5 for now.  I have listed them below with their minimum daily steps:

  1. Study programming and Java: read for 30 minutes
  2. Apply to jobs: apply to 1 job
  3. Blog: write or revise 1 article, work on the layout, or create 1 photo for later use
  4. Stretch: do 3 stretches from Pavel’s relax into stretch
  5. Clear my desk: clear my desk once a day

The article recommends taking sick days and vacation days so I’ll have an allowance for those, roughly 21 days per year is what I’m thinking for now.  For the programming goal I will only work on it during the week, while the other goals will be 7 days a week.

Updates to come monthly.