I want to
share a strategy I’ve accidentally stumbled across purely out of the result of
reaching an inevitable conclusion in my own lifestyle that, in turn, I’ve
actually adopted as an intentional strategy.
Holy crap that opening sentence is awful, but we’re rolling with
it. Basically, I never set out to use
“bookending”, it happened on accident, I didn’t realize I was doing it until I
stopped and looked, but now that I’ve done that I realize it’s a pretty solid
approach for success.
Some of you folks that grew up with a different background may not be able to appreciate this book centric post
Ok, what the
hell is “bookending”. I realize, in this
digital world, many of you may have never seen an actual bookcase before, but
back in the day, when one had a physical library of many books, to hold them
all in place on a shelf, one would employ “bookends”. These were solid structured objects that
would stand on either side of the books to keep them in place, and were
typically ornate and cool looking. If
I’m still confusing you, think of the books as the meat and the bookends of the
bread on a sandwich. And if you’re keto:
think of books as the cheese and bookends as the fried chicken tenders on a KFC
doubledown.
What does
bookending have to do with getting bigger and stronger? Aside from the fact that a lot of folks out
there need to read more, what I’m getting at is the notion of things occurring
at the start and the end, specifically of a day. And getting more specific, I apply this
principle to training AND nutrition.
As soon as
my day starts, I do SOMETHING physical.
Now, being fully transparent, I’ll get downstairs, feed my dog if it
didn’t sleep in with the Mrs, take some apple cider vinegar per Jon Andersen’s
recommendation and, depending on the next part, either have a very light meal
(typically some keto pancakes with sunbutter) or go fasted. At this point, a whopping 10 minutes has
passed since I woke up, and now I head into the garage and do SOMETHING. Sometimes, it's a full on lifting workout. Sometimes it’s prowler work (requires me to
drive out 3 minutes to a parking lot).
Sometimes it’s a conditioning workout like Tower of Babel, Kalsu, Faust,
etc. Sometimes, it’s only 2-4 minutes of
conditioning. But either way: I do
SOMETHING physical to start my day. In
doing so, no matter WHAT happens for the rest of the day, I can say “At least I
got in A workout today”. And aside from
the mental assurance that I didn’t spend the full day as a slug, I get blood
flowing through aching muscles and connective tissues, my heart rate elevates,
I get more awake, I’m limbered up (way better than mobility work), and my
metabolism is fired up and ready for some nutrients, and, quite frankly, I
don’t care if that statement upsets someone with a scientific background that
feels otherwise.
After that
physical part, the nutrition book ending begins. I have a VERY substantive breakfast. As I’m currently in a phase of training where
volume is high, this is what I eat as “breakfast 1” (not counting the quick
meal eaten before lifting, nor the post workout shake I’ll drink of 10oz of
drinkable egg whites mixed with a scoop of whey isolate)
* An omelet of 2 whole eggs (organic, pasture raised, because I’m special), 1
egg white (eyeballed), dice tomatoes, 2oz of red meat (either grassfed beef or
bison) and grassfed butter. I take this
omelet and put it on top of an egg white wrap that is slathered in sunbutter,
and then top it with some sort of fat free cheese (I like feta these days),
half an avocado and some sort of sauce (tatziki sauce with the feta) to make a
morning breakfast burrito.
* 4-6 celery
sticks, all slathered in Nuts n More (half in a peanut based one, half in an
almond based one)
* 2 keto
pancakes or a slice of keto toast slathered in sunbutter (assuming not eaten
before training)
* 3/4 cup of
fat free greek yogurt mixed with a serving of naked PB powered peanut butter,
an equal serving of some sort of protein powder, cinnamon, salt, and sugar
free/fat free jello or gelatin (for texture and extra calories)
* 1 cup of
cashew milk
This is an
undertaking, and I’ve had to really develop my multi-tasking ability to turn it
out in a reasonable timeframe. I have
almost the exact same meal even when I’m traveling: in which case I’ll make it
the night before with my 4” skillet and just eat it cold. But there’s a method to the madness. This meal has a TON of protein, and ALSO a
great amount and variety of fats, to include saturated fats from the eggs and
red meat and poly and monos from the avocados, sunbutter, and Nuts n More. Once again, this is setting me up for
success, because if, for some reason, my day turns to complete and utter chaos
and I end up going from breakfast to the evening without a chance to eat, I
KNOW I got in a ton of protein and a lot of beneficial fats at the start of my
day. I’m not leaving anything up to
chance.
Onto the
bookending aspect of this: at the end of the day, I eat almost the exact same
meal. There’s a slight variance: I swap
out the butter with 1/4 cup of grassfed cottage cheese, I get rid of the egg
wrap, I cut out the fat free cheese, I don’t do the yogurt mixture, and I’ll
include 2 slices of keto toast with 1 slice with natural peanut butter and 1
slice with natural almond butter. I,
truthfully, “developed” this meal to help combat some insomnia I was dealing
with while I was at my leanest: basically giving my body a lot of slow
digesting nutrients to keep it fed at rest.
Lots of fats and slow digesting protein in the cottage cheese. HOWEVER, what this meal REALLY does for me
is, once again, work as “nutritional insurance”. I can make all SORTS of mistakes during the
day and it won’t matter because I know I’ll have this meal to fall back on when
I get home. If I under-ate, I can just
add more food. If I decided to have some
sort of big cheaty meal that day, I can trim this down. It also means that, when I DO go out to eat,
I don’t need to rely on that particular meal to meet any sort of nutritional
demands. I don’t need to look up the
menu ahead of time, throw crap into a macro calculator, determine which
particular item best fits my diet, etc etc: I just eat what I want to eat and
know that, when I get home, I have a meal waiting for me that will take care of
anything I may have missed. Again: we
bookended so that we could let the middle be what it may.
However, when this bell sounds, all bets are off
When it
comes to bookending the physical training, this is more of an “as needed”
basis. Anyone that follows my training
log knows that I tend to have 1 big workout in a day followed by several
smaller “extra workouts” ala Westside Barbell.
The large workout will be like an hour of lifting or conditioning, and
then throughout the day I’ll accomplish my daily work (previously written
about, but 50 chins, 50 dips, 50 pull aparts, 40 reverse hypers, 30 GHRs, 25
push downs, 20 standing ab wheels and neck work), and then some short-ish
conditioning work or a longer walk (with or without a weight vest). Quite often, that daily work will get pushed
to the end of the day, or I unwind with a walk, or I end up getting in a 2
minute workout of Keg Grace or 4 minutes of Tabata burpees, but once again I have
it in my head that, no matter what, SOMETHING will get done at the end of the
day. In turn, I waste no brain power
wondering about managing my schedule, working around obligations, etc etc: I
know that I started off my day with some activity and, if I need more, I will
get it there at the end.
This was
honestly incredibly self-indulgent, but I wanted to write about it and hope it
provides some help. Much like my “start
with a win” post: succeed as soon as you possibly can upon waking, and end the
day with a victory as well. Whatever
happens in between will become immaterial.
As I was reading this reminded me of the start with a win post but its still different enough to thoroughly enjoy as a read. Ill be [digitally] bookmarking this post for future reference. Cheers
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated dude. I tend to get into thought ruts and will write around the same topic for a chunk. In this case, "Start with a Win" was something of the origin thought, and then it evolved. But much like 5/3/1, I'm sure people will wonder if Start With a Win still applies, haha.
DeleteI remember when you were the target of r/nattyornot (or whatever the sub was called) way back when. I wonder if any of them even understood the amount of work you put in on a daily basis, because there's no way those turds have ever tried it. Lol I'm pretty sure you're getting in more work in a given day than I do over a week
ReplyDeleteMan, no joke. I've been posted there a few times now, haha. On one occasion, a dude made the claim that my gains were "unnatural" because I was willing to push myself to the point of injury to grow, and that it was unreasonable to expect that of anyone, haha. People place so many rules and limitations on themselves that are just limiting them SO much. I'm real big on "why not" and "get to yes" at this point.
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