Krasnayafleur's training #2

so tired that i feel sick… weekends are supposed to be for sleeping but i have been waking up several times in the middle of the night each night lately, and giving myself headaches from clicking my teeth and clenching my jaw.

i need to caaaallllmmmm down. tonight i’ll just do some elliptical to loosen up and get ready for another training week. Captain’s practice starts tommorow, but i really would rather keep working out on my own. we’ll see.

really i sort of want to crawl into bed right now instead of starting in on the impossible mountain of work i have to do this week.

sometimes college really just sucks :eek:

Nice display, u never cease 2 amaze me. :wink:

a weird day

I have been sleeping strangely, as I mentioned, and after not catching up on sleep over the weekend I was feeling pretty crappy when i got up this morning. I went to tutor, then came back and ate and started feeling nauseous and got worried I was going to trip and fall. so i went back to my room to lie down for a bit and of course ended up falling asleep for 3 hours. It felt nice to have a nap, but I am starting to panic about the amount of work I have this week and I can’t really afford to just sleep as much as I want to. Although by the same token i get really moody when I don’t get enough sleep and I start feeling like i’m going crazy… kind of like right now :eek:

anyway, i got up all groggy and went to run:
-5 min WU jog
-12x1 min on, 1 min off
-CD to round out 35 min

lower lift:

-snatch grip deadlifts on top of a box: 2x7@45k, 1x5, 1x6@47.5, 1x5@50; 100s btw. again, my actual grip getting tired is more of an issue than my legs dying- frustrating.

-DB lunges 4x7 each leg @50, paired with
-leg curls 2x6, 2x8 @45 w/5s negative. 90s btw.

-hanging garhammer 2x10, 1x12, paired with
-glute-hams: 3x6 w/10lb plate, 90s btw.

-SL calf raises: 2x10 @35, 30; 1x12 @30 paired with
-tibia raises 3x12 @13

I didn’t have a shake because I was planning on eating dinner right away, but the line at the dining hall was so long that I went to my room and didn’t eat for another 45 min. I’ll have to rearrange how I schedule my workouts so that this doesn’t keep happening.

I suppose I ought to start in on my two papers, lab report, and huge exam… as well as my normal weekly reading load. soooooo much coffee. :cool:

That display pic… :cool: grrr Lol.

haha thanks… part of a “field hockey” set :rolleyes:

I just had a conversation at length with a friend who has expressed concern about my diet being unbalanced when it comes to carbs. I periodically have a sort of food paralysis- I read so much info on nutrition and diets that I feel like nothing is really safe… which is kind of silly, but at the same time leads to some distorted perceptions. Periodically I update my typical diet, and since I am back at school now I generally eat the same things at the same time every day.

diet is generally as follows:

breakfast btw 8:15 and 9:30 depending on the day:
-coffee, water, multivit, calcium, flax seed oil
-egg white omelet w/veggies, small bowl of fruit (pineapple, strawberries, or a small plum)
I will have toast w/whole eggs once and raisin bran w/skim milk once during the week to take a break from omelets.

lunch btw 12 and 1:
-small bowl (cereal-sized bowl, if that is some kind of standard) of salad: spinach, mushroom, cukes, bell peppers, black olives, olive oil
-1/2 turkey sandwich on wheat bread w/ 1/2 piece of cheese, no mayo or anything
-fruit: 1/2 apple or a plum or 1/2 banana
-if they have cookies i’ll take the smallest one I see, break it in half, and then have half of that.
-water
Sometimes if there is good soup I will have a cup of that, and eat my turkey straight without bread.

pre-workout around 3 or 4 only if I am really hungry- probably 3 or 4 days out of the week:
-water, small fruit

post-workout shake: 1 scoop protein, 1 scoop endurox carbs:
-if my run was done earlier and I am only lifting in the afternoon, then I will take a shake after my lift and then wait about an hour before eating dinner. If I lift after dinner, obviously I have my shake afterwards. I often do both my run and lift in the afternoon and then go straight to dinner, in which case I have not been having shakes.

dinner btw 5:45 and 7; almost always around 6:
-small bowl of salad: roughly same as above but with lettuce instead of spinach, adding peas, and with balsamic vin. in place of olive oil
-the plainest chicken or fish I can get- if everything is covered in sauce then I opt for plain chicken and/or tuna from the salad bar
-whatever cooked veggie there is: occasionally I’ll take small portions of brown rice, and there is usually something else like green beans or squash.
-gatorade if post workout, water, tea, multivit, calcium, vit E for my burn scar

I have gotten into the habit of taking plain turkey/chicken and raw veggies out of the dining hall in bags, so most nights I have a couple slices of turkey and some veggies as a snack while I am studying. If I am craving chocolate, which is a lot of the time, then I will have some dark choc. hersheys… yumm

Of course there are some variations, but in general that is pretty representative of what I eat. I have some food rules which some people think are weird, including:
-I will not drink fruit juice
-no fruit in the evening unless it is immediately post-workout
-I almost never eat pasta or potatoes, I don’t eat a lot of bread, rarely cereal, and never in the evening

I have other little weird things like not eating bananas and apples in the same day… which i have largely resolved by eating neither particularly often. I will eat more bananas when I am in season, but lately I am all about pineapple. The only meats I eat are chicken, turkey, seafood, and pork rarely (i.e. maybe once or twice a month, if that) and I don’t drink milk unless it is in cereal and skim. When I get the chance to go to the grocery store I pick up yogurt and cottage cheese, so those are things I will eat as available… I just don’t really go for the soy yogurt in the dining hall; the cottage cheese is alright and I could probably eat more of it.

This is kind of a long post- carb comments or general comments welcome.

U should be eating bananas more regualarly. Their real good for u. Trust me, I would know, its my country’s main agricultural export and part of my regular diet.

Banana
Wonderfully sweet with firm and creamy flesh, bananas come prepackaged in their own yellow jackets and are available for harvest throughout the year.

The banana plant grows 10 to 26 feet and belongs to the same family as the lily and the orchid.

The cluster of fruits contain anywhere from 50 to 150 bananas with individual fruits grouped in bunches, known as “hands,” containing 10 to 25 bananas.

Health Benefits
Description
History
How to Select and Store
How to Enjoy
Safety
Nutritional Profile
References
Health Benefits
Creamy, rich, and sweet, bananas are a favorite food for everyone from infants to elders. Sports enthusiasts appreciate the potassium-power delivered by this high energy fruit.

Cardiovascular Protection from Potassium and Fiber
Bananas are one of our best sources of potassium, an esssential mineral for maintaining normal blood pressure and heart function. Since the average banana contains a whopping 467 mg of potassium and only 1 mg of sodium, a banana a day may help to prevent high blood pressure and protect against atherosclerosis. The effectiveness of potassium-rich foods such as bananas in lowering blood pressure has been demonstrated by a number of studies. For example, researchers tracked over 40,000 American male health professionals over four years to determine the effects of diet on blood pressure. Men who ate diets higher in potassium-rich foods, as well as foods high in magnesium and cereal fiber, had a substantially reduced risk of stroke.

A study published in the September 8, 2003 edition of the Archives of Internal Medicine also confirms that eating high fiber foods, such as bananas, helps prevent heart disease. Almost 10,000 American adults participated in this study and were followed for 19 years, during which time 1,843 cases of coronary heart disease (CHD) and 3,762 cases of cardiovascular disease (CVD) were diagnosed. People eating the most fiber, 21 grams per day, had 12% less CHD and 11% less CVD compared to those eating the least, 5 grams daily. Those eating the most water-soluble dietary fiber fared even better with a 15% reduction in risk of CHD and a 10% risk reduction in CVD.

In addition to these cardiovascular benefits, the potassium found in bananas may also help to promote bone health. Potassium may counteract the increased urinary calcium loss caused by the high-salt diets typical of most Americans, thus helping to prevent bones from thinning out at a fast rate.

Soothing Protection from Ulcers
Bananas have long been recognized for their antacid effects that protect against stomach ulcers and ulcer damage. In one study, a simple mixture of banana and milk significantly suppressed acid secretion. In an animal study, researchers found that fresh bananas protected the animals’ stomachs from wounds.

Bananas work their protective magic in two ways: First, substances in bananas help activate the cells that compose the stomach lining, so they produce a thicker protective mucus barrier against stomach acids. Second, other compounds in bananas called protease inhibitors help eliminate bacteria in the stomach that have been pinpointed as a primary cause of stomach ulcers.

Improving Elimination
Bananas are a smart move if you suffer from elimination problems. A bout of diarrhea can quickly deplete your body of important electrolytes. Bananas can replenish your stores of potassium, one of the most important electrolytes, which helps regulate heart function as well as fluid balance. In addition, bananas are a good source of pectin, a soluble fiber that absorbs fluid, thus helping to normalize movement through the digestive tract and ease constipation. In bananas, pectin is combined with a good supply of starch, supplying complex carbohydrate for slow-burning energy.

Protect Your Eyesight
Your mother may have told you carrots would keep your eyes bright as a child, but as an adult, it looks like fruit is even more important for keeping your sight. Data reported in a study published in the June 2004 issue of the Archives of Opthamology indicates that eating 3 or more servings of fruit per day may lower your risk of age-related macular degeneration (ARMD), the primary cause of vision loss in older adults, by 36%, compared to persons who consume less than 1.5 servings of fruit daily.

In this study, which involved 77,562 women and 40,866 men, researchers evaluated the effect of study participants’ consumption of fruits; vegetables; the antioxidant vitamins A, C, and E; and carotenoids on the development of early ARMD or neovascular ARM, a more severe form of the illness associated with vision loss. Food intake information was collected periodically for up to 18 years for women and 12 years for men.

While, surprisingly, intakes of vegetables, antioxidant vitamins and carotenoids were not strongly related to incidence of either form of ARM, fruit intake was definitely protective against the severe form of this vision-destroying disease. Three servings of fruit may sound like a lot to eat each day, but by simply tossing a banana into your morning smoothie or slicing it over your cereal, topping off a cup of yogurt or green salad with a half cup of berries, and snacking on an apple, plum, nectarine or pear, you’ve reached this goal.

Build Better Bones with Bananas
Build better bones by eating bananas? Yes, enjoying bananas frequently as part of your healthy way of eating can help improve your body’s ability to absorb calcium via several mechanisms.

Bananas are an exceptionally rich source of fructooligosaccharide, a compound called a prebiotic because it nourishes probiotic (friendly) bacteria in the colon. These beneficial bacteria produce vitamins and digestive enzymes that improve our ability to absorb nutrients, plus compounds that protect us against unfriendly microorganisms. When fructooligosaccharides are fermented by these friendly bacteria, not only do numbers of probiotic bacteria increase, but so does the body’s ability to absorb calcium. In addition, gastrointestinal transit time is lessened, decreasing the risk of colon cancer.

Green bananas contain indigestible (to humans) short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) that are a favorite food of the cells that make up the lining of the intestines. When these cells are well-nourished and healthy, the body’s ability to absorb nutrients such as calcium can increase dramatically.

Research published in the March 2004 issue of Digestive Diseases and Sciences underscores just how much bananas can improve nutrient absorption. In this study, 57 male babies (5-12 months) with persistent diarrhea of at least 14 days duration were given a week’s treatment with a rice-based diet containing either green banana, apple pectin or the rice diet alone. Treatment with both green banana and apple pectin resulted in a 50% reduction in stool weights, indicating that the babies were absorbing significantly more nutrients.

Also, to check how well their intestines were able to absorb nutrients, the babies were given a drink containing lactulose and mannitol. Lactulose is a compound that should be absorbed, while mannitol is one that should not be. When the intestines are too permeable, a condition clinicians call “leaky gut,” too little lactulose and too much mannitol are absorbed. After just one week of being given the green banana-rice diet, the babies’ were absorbing much more lactulose and little mannitol, showing that their intestines were now functioning properly. Some banana cultivars are also rich in provitamin A carotenoids, which have been shown to protect against chronic disease, including certain cancers, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. How to identify which bananas contain the most carotenoids? Check the color of their edible flesh. Bananas whose flesh is more golden contain the most carotenoids.

Reduce Kidney Cancer Risk
About 190,000 cases of kidney cancer are diagnosed each year. Risk factors include smoking, high blood pressure, obesity, exposure to toxic chemicals such as asbestos and cadmium, and a high intake of fruit juices.

Research published in the January 2005 issue of the International Journal of Cancer suggests that regular consumption of whole fruits and vegetables, especially bananas, is highly protective. The results of this large population based prospective study (13.4 years) of 61,000 women aged 40-76, show that women eating more than 75 servings of fruits and vegetables per month cut their risk of kidney cancer 40%. Among the fruits, bananas were especially protective. Women eating bananas four to six times a week halved their risk of developing the disease compared to those who did not eat this fruit.,

Salads, eaten at least once a day, were associated with a 40% decreased risk. Among vegetables, frequent consumption of root vegetables and white cabbage offered the most protection, providing a 50-65% decrease in risk. The conclusion drawn by the researchers: frequent consumption of fruits and vegetables, especially bananas, cabbage and root vegetables, may reduce risk of kidney cancer. Why these foods? Bananas and many root vegetables contain especially high amounts of antioxidant phenolic compounds. Cabbage is rich in sulfur compounds necessary for efficient and effective detoxification of potential carcinogens.

Description
Bananas are elliptically shaped fruits “prepackaged” by Nature, featuring a firm, creamy flesh gift-wrapped inside a thick inedible peel. The banana plant grows 10 to 26 feet in height and belongs to the family Musaceae. Banana fruits grow in clusters of 50 to 150, with individual fruits grouped in bunches, known as “hands,” of 10 to 25 bananas.

Bananas abound in hundreds of edible varieties that fall under two distinct species: the sweet banana (Musa sapienta, Musa nana) and the plantain banana (Musa paradisiacal). Sweet bananas vary in size and color.

While we are accustomed to thinking of sweet bananas as having yellow skins, they can also feature red, pink, purple and black tones when ripe. Their flavor and texture range with some varieties being sweet while others have starchier characteristics. In the United States, the most familiar varieties are Big Michael, Martinique and Cavendish. Plantain bananas are usually cooked and considered more like a vegetable due to their starchier qualities.

History
Bananas are thought to have originated in Malaysia around 4,000 years ago. From there, they spread throughout the Philippines and India, where they were recorded growing by Alexander the Great’s army in 327 B.C.

Bananas were introduced to Africa by Arabian traders and discovered there in 1482 A.D. by Portuguese explorers who took them to the Americas, the place where the majority of bananas are now produced.

Bananas were not brought to the United States for sale in markets until the latter part of the 19th century and were initially only enjoyed by people in the seacoast towns where the banana schooners docked; because of the fruit’s fragility, they were unable to be transported far.

Since the development of refrigeration and rapid transport in the 20th century, bananas have become widely available. Today, bananas grow in most tropical and subtropical regions with the main commercial producers including Costa Rica, Mexico, Ecuador and Brazil.

How to Select and Store
Since bananas are picked off the tree while they’re still green, it’s not unusual to see them this green in the store. Base your choice of bananas depending upon when you want to consume them. Bananas with more green coloration will take longer to ripen than those more yellow in hue and/or with brown spots.

Bananas should be firm, but not too hard, bright in appearance, and free from bruises or other injuries. Their stems and tips should be intact. The size of the banana does not affect its quality, so simply choose the size that best meets your needs.

While bananas look resilient, they’re actually very fragile and care should be taken in their storage. They should be left to ripen at room temperature and should not be subjected to overly hot or cold temperatures. Unripe bananas should not be placed in the refrigerator as this will interrupt the ripening process to such an extent that it will not be able to resume even if the bananas are returned to room temperature.

If you need to hasten the ripening process, you can place bananas in a paper bag or wrap them in newspaper, adding an apple to accelerate the process. Ripe bananas that will not be consumed for a few days can be placed in the refrigerator. While their peel may darken, the flesh will not be affected. Prior to consuming refrigerated bananas, for maximum flavor, remove them from the refrigerator and allow them to come back to room temperature.

Bananas can also be frozen and will keep for about 2 months. Either purée them before freezing or simply remove the peel and wrap the bananas in plastic wrap. To prevent discoloration, add some lemon juice before freezing.

How to Enjoy
In addition to being eaten raw, bananas are a wonderful addition to a variety of recipes from salads to baked goods.

A few quick serving ideas:
A peanut butter and banana sandwich drizzled with honey is an all-time favorite comfort food for children and adults alike.

Add chopped bananas, walnuts and maple syrup to oatmeal or porridge.

Try our Tropical Breakfast Risotto in the Recipe File

Safety
Bananas and Latex Allergy
Like avocados and chestnuts, bananas and plantain contain substances called chitinases that are associated with the latex-fruit allergy syndrome. There is strong evidence of the cross-reaction between latex and these foods. If you have a latex allergy, you may very likely be allergic to these foods as well. Processing the fruit with ethylene gas increases these enzymes; organic produce not treated with gas will have fewer allergy-causing compounds. In addition, cooking the food deactivates the enzymes.

Nutritional Profile
Introduction to Food Rating System Chart
The following chart shows the nutrients for which this food is either an excellent, very good or good source. Next to the nutrient name you will find the following information: the amount of the nutrient that is included in the noted serving of this food; the %Daily Value (DV) that that amount represents (similar to other information presented in the website, this DV is calculated for 25-50 year old healthy woman); the nutrient density rating; and, the food’s World’s Healthiest Foods Rating. Underneath the chart is a table that summarizes how the ratings were devised. Read detailed information on our Food and Recipe Rating System.

Banana
1.00 each
108.56 calories
Nutrient Amount DV
(%) Nutrient
Density World’s Healthiest
Foods Rating
vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) 0.68 mg 34.0 5.6 very good
vitamin C 10.74 mg 17.9 3.0 good
potassium 467.28 mg 13.4 2.2 good
dietary fiber 2.83 g 11.3 1.9 good
manganese 0.18 mg 9.0 1.5 good
World’s Healthiest
Foods Rating Rule
excellent DV>=75% OR Density>=7.6 AND DV>=10%
very good DV>=50% OR Density>=3.4 AND DV>=5%
good DV>=25% OR Density>=1.5 AND DV>=2.5%

Banana Profile

Check out the link and scroll to the bottom to get an indept nutritional profile if u want.

What are cukes Krasnayafleur?

Cocoa butter is good for scars.

cucumber…

this burn sucks, i burned myself on the tailpipe of a motorcycle! It isn’t that big but it is fading very slowly.

Do you feel things are unbalanced? Do you find yourself getting hungry at any point during your day?

Try some pasta or potatoes post work out (after hard work outs)
And why don’t you eat bananas and apples on the same day?

Cocoa butter will take a scar from an inflamed red/purple colour to near your natural skin colour.

I’m guessing it’s not size reduction you’re bothered about?

Why/How does your friend think your carb intake is ‘unbalanced’?

re: bananas and apples- and potatoes for that matter, I have this idea that the stuff is all starchy and starch = bad. I won’t just eliminate any one food, but it just works out that I tend to strictly limit apples, corn, rice, pasta, cereal, etc. My thing lately has been to eat small amounts of fruit, tons of veggies, tons of plain chicken and turkey, and a fair amount of eggs. As far as my carbs being “unbalanced,” there was concern about the intensity of my workouts vs. very small amounts of grains and pasta and whatnot.

I do find that my energy level fluctuates a fair amount without warning, and I often have trouble concentrating, especially at night. I am starting to become dependent on caffeine, which is nottttt good and also has been mildly disrupting my sleep. I have actually been having dreams about food lately- last night I dreamed that I was eating pizza and I woke up all worried until I realized it wans’t real. :rolleyes: I generally eat at the same time every day, so I don’t get excessively hungry- I am most suceptible to cravings and chocolate-eating late at night when i’m studying, maybe since I eat at 6 or 7 and then stay up until 12 or 1. I have been trying to alleviate this problem by taking lean meat and veggies out of the dining hall.

for my workout:
-half hour steady run
-hurdle mobility
-6x 40-50m barefoot strides

upper lift:
-mid-grip flat bench: 1x8, 1x6, 2x5, paired with
-supinated chins, 4x2-4 w/30s negatives. 90s btw
-1+1/4 incline DB press: 2x8, 1x7, paired with
-ext. rotators: 1x10, 2x8, tripled with
-incline powell raises: 3x8. 60s btw

Got the timing right for a small shake after my lift, then iced my right hammy which was hurting a bit.

I have already made progress getting the upper strength back :smiley: and moved up a bit in either weight or reps in every exercise. Soon I will be back to a point where I can post the weights themselves without feeling embarrassed.

Later tonight will be 10 min core and a 10 min stretch, which has been my new calm down before bed routine… it feels nice to work on some flexibility.

Have you considered adding more salads to help when eating foods that are a little high in carbs? I am sure adding 2+ a day would help via the thermogenic effect. Eating more fruit is one of the best things I’ve done. For taste and overall feeling.

I already eat salads at both lunch and dinner, plus extra veggies at dinner and raw veggies at night. I have been eating fruit at breakfast and lunch, and occasionally pre-workout, but mostly in pretty small portions.

I am actually pretty happy with my diet right now, but given my past distorted perceptions regarding food i thought it might be productive to throw it up here and get the general opinion. :slight_smile:

Dont neglect eating red meat for your creatine lvls unless your supplementing. We had a vegetarian train with us and the minute we started taking creatine he had massive games cause his body had non for use.

I don’t eat red meat at all, I wasn’t really aware of the creatine issue. I am good about getting iron from elsewhere, but do you know if I could avoid red meat and still avoid supplementing w/creatine? I get a little hazy on this point because even though my diet probably has some flaws, I use the weight room as an indicator of any major problems, and as long as I am still making strength gains I figure there can’t be too much awry… or is that not really enough?

Of course recurring injuries and poor running are indicators too, but do you think the point that I should start supplementing more would be the point where I stop gaining strength, or is it even worth gaining even more mass? After the high lifting volume helped crush me last year I worry about gaining too much non-functional mass.

The problem with evaluating this way is that I have a good capacity for weights and I was able to make consistent and substantial strength gains the summer before college when I worked out for 2-5 hours a day and ate 1,000 calories a day or less. I was probably the skinniest I have ever been, and perhaps my lifting upper body only had something to do with being able to make big gains there- but at a time when you would have expected strength gains to stop, I was the strongest I’ve ever been. :confused:

RE; the strength gains - see Pavel Tsatsouline’s work on gtg…
RE; naturally occuring creatine - someone correct me if I’m wrong, but most of the “meatier” fish (salmon, tuna, swordfish) tend to have substantial amounts.

I’m not sure if fish and such have creatine, but I know the person who trained with us avoided all meat and he could gain in the weight room of course but had issues transfering energy for a 3day high intensity training program that had weights and runs on the same day. Upon taking simple Whey a small dosage of creatine and ZMA his grains where massive.
a 135 bench went to 225 single his clean got to 235 dbl and his sqaut to 325 to the floor. The proof is in the pudding lol

True about salmon and creatine…