Set Higher Standards by YogiRavi

Ramblings from a 30-something ultra-marathoning yogi with a day job.

Archive for August 2006

Raw Food Diet – Day 50

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Looking at my journal, I realize that today is day #50 of my raw food experiment (50% of total food intake being raw). Observations I’ve had over the past few weeks:

  • The longer I’ve been on this diet, the easier it gets.
  • I’ve lost many cravings that I haven’t been able to shake for the past 5-10 years.
  • When I do indulge in a craving, I do so on my own terms. I still partake in coffee (once a week) and the occasional beer, but seem to have much less, much less often.
  • I am satiated with a much smaller quantity of food.
  • I have cravings for fruit (which I have never had before in my life!).
  • My energy levels of very high.
  • I’ve had noticeable healthier skin. In fact, A rash I’ve had on my arm since I was a kid has started to slowly clear up!
  • My teeth have gotten whiter, naturally (noticeable so).
  • I sleep less. On average about 1 hour a night less than I use to, and I feel much more awake. This is an area of my life I want to work on. I sleep on average 7 hours a night (even on weekends). I want to drop that to 5, which keeping energy levels up. Proper diet will help, but I have some serious mental prep to do before I get to this level.
  • I am much more mentally alert.
  • I have much more even energy levels, partically during the afternoon “slump” we typically feel at work. It is funny to see all my teammates run for a Starbucks at 2-3pm, which I reach for a couple bananas or a handful of almonds! :)
  • Losing bodyfat, gaining strength. I’ve been getting noticeably leaner. My bodyweight, however , is stable (I am 153lbs right now). Unless the gravitational pull of the earth has gone up, that means I am gaining lean body mass! Weight training has had a big impact no doubt, but I think diet has had an accellerating affect.
  • My intuition has been much more keen, pretty spooky actually. Hard to explain this one, u just gotta trust me on on this….or try the diet for yourself and see what happens!
  • Over the past few years I’ve had trouble just focusing on one thing at a time…call it ADD, call it lack of focus, call it a symptom of life at a fast-paced Hi-Tech company….but for the past 2 months it’s been much easier for me to sit still and get things done!

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August 12, 2006 at 9:32 pm

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Skier Outruns Avalanche

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Yoga class this morning was awefully good. Aweful because I was falling all over the place. Just standing up straight was hard. My diet has been great, but I think my body is a little beat up from the past week of hard workouts. Good because it was excatly what I needed. Feeling much better now. So while I am making excuses about my own lack of focus, inability to stand up straight, and patting my back for getting up at a reasonable hour…let’s watch this video of a skier who somehow manages to outrun an avalanche! Talk about playing the game at a whole new level!

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August 12, 2006 at 8:45 pm

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Chess Boxing – Mash Up Gone Bad

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World Chess Boxing OrganizationOK, a buddy of mine was telling me about this last night at dinner. I was 100% certain he was pulling my leg. I mean really, who would ever believe that people would actually mash these two things up?

Some things in life were made to go together. Running and hurdles? Certainly. Skiing and shooting? maybe. Boxing and chess? No way!
You gotta see this to believe it.

Check out the World Chess Boxing Organization website.

The video is absolutely hysterical!

The basic idea in chessboxing is to combine the no.1 thinking sport and the no.1 fighting sport into a hybrid that demands the most of its competitors – both mentally and physically.

In a chessboxing fight two opponents play alternating rounds of chess and boxing. The contest starts with a round of chess, followed by a boxing round, followed by another round of chess and so on. In every round of chess the FIDE rules for a ´Blitz game´ apply, in every boxing round the AIBA rules apply with the following extensions and modifications: In a contest there shall be 11 rounds, 6 rounds of chess, 5 rounds of boxing. A round of chess takes 4 minutes. Each competitor has 12 minutes on the chess timer. As soon as the time runs out the game is over.

A round of boxing takes 2 minutes. Between rounds there is a 1 minute pause, during which competitors change their gear. The contest is decided by: checkmate (chess round), exceeding the time limit (chess round), retirement of an opponent (chess or boxing round), KO (boxing round), or referee decision (boxing round). If the chess game ends in a stalement, the opponent with the higher score in boxing wins. If there is an equal score, the opponent with the black pieces wins.

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August 12, 2006 at 8:16 pm

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Where are my arms?

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OK, my arms are officially fried. After Wednesday’s workout with Steve, and today’s day of weights (lifting arms only) I could barely drive home. 8am yoga tomorrow should be an abosulte riot!

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August 12, 2006 at 6:11 am

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Flying the coop

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Seems as though many of the people I have known at my beloved Microsoft have changed careers lately. Some have left, others have moved around inside the company. I was just at a BBQ for a friend who is moving to Paris for a very cool new management gig. Looking around it was pretty clear that most of the folks around me (we were mostly Microsofties) would not be in same job 2 years from now.

In my 6 years at the company, I have had 3 different jobs, each with different titles, offices and peer groups. Granted, they have all been related by some common thread (business planning led me to product planning which led to product marketing). At Microsoft, 2 years seems to be the average tenure for someone in a given role. This is especially true amongst business-related roles. Ultimately, I think this cross-pollination is a help to the company. It keeps the “blood” moving throughout the business and helps to bring fresh perspective to lingering problems.

While having an entire management team leave your group at the same time is absolutely aweful (something I’ve had the pleasure of experiencing); a modest level of churn is definitely a good thing….especially if it means having to look at the Eiffel Tower every day from your office window!

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August 11, 2006 at 5:34 am

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Weightlifting with Steve

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Today I joined my buddy Steve for one of his crazy workouts. I had seen him running around the gym like a madman doing about 20 exercises in 45 minutes in the past, and decided to see what it was all about. It was one of the more intense weight workouts I’ve done in the past six months for sure.

We worked the entire body in one workout. With the two of us it took 60 minutes, including a 10 minute cardio warmup. The premise was to keep moving, and really never have downtime. For several of the exercises, you are also supersetting, where you alternate between two exercises that work opposing muscle groups. For example, we’d do a set of bicep curls followed by tricep pushdowns. For each exercise, we did 2 sets of 15 reps. The last few reps should be at or close to failure.

Halfway through I was breaking a sweat and it never stopped until the end. My heart rate was also pretty high (for a weight training session) the entire hour. While the workout was good, I do think that a bit more rest between supersets would have allowed me to lift more weight for a few more reps (which in theory would give better strength gains); but for an all-around workout is was great.
What we did:

  • 3 sets x 16 reps sit-ups on incline bench
  • 2 sets x 15 bicep curls immediately followed by an overhead press in a single compound movement
  • 2 sets x 15 step-ups on a tall step (like a lunge)
  • 2 sets x 15 hammer strength incline bench
  • 2 sets x 15 hammer strength pull downs

Superset

  • 2 sets x 15 cable pulls across the body (works the obliques)
  • 2 sets x 15 crunches
  • 2 sets x 15 hamstring curls

Superset

  • 2 sets x 15 lat pulldowns
  • 2 sets x 20 push ups with hands shoulder width apart

Superset

  • 2 sets x 15 bi curls
  • 2 sets x 15 tricep pushdowns

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August 10, 2006 at 6:20 am

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Vegan Bodybuilders

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I was in Portland this weekend visiting my sister and brother in-law; and hanging out with a group of Vegan Bodybuilders. I don’t consider myself Vegan right now, but back in 2002, I was Vegan for a few years. I had heard of several endurance athletes that were Vegan, but I always felt like bodybuilding and veganism were completely contradictory! After a few years, I slowly slipped back into my vegetarian ways….as the only vegan I knew, I just lost the motivation.
A few months ago, however, I ran across a website, www.veganbodybuilding.com, with many other vegan athletes, several of whom are World Class Natural Bodybuilders (i.e. are drug tested). This peaked my interested, as I am trying to gain muscle mass right now, while at the same time and reverting back to a more vegan diet.

For the past week, Robert Cheeke, founder of the website and top-ranked bodybuilder, hosted a Vegan Vacation in Portland as a way to get many of the website forum members, and the local Portland community, to get together to train, talk about vegan cooking and nutrition, and have fun!

I got the chance to meet several of the forum members, pick their brains for a few tips, and get inspired by being around people who have defined a much higher standard for their lives than most; especially when it comes to living and eating in a morally and ethically sound manner; while keeping their bodies in peak physical condition.

And if you still don’t believe that you can be very strong and vegan….check out these pics of Alex , whom I met this weekend. If you still aren’t motivated, more pics here.

Other posts you may enjoy:

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August 8, 2006 at 4:23 am

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Slacker

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Last weekend I slacked on my raw food. I was about 20% raw, as opposed to 50%. I REALLY notice the difference. I feel more tired. My brain doesn’t feel as sharp. I also feel hungrier. When I eat lots of raw food my appetite actually decreases. This is counter-intutive. With fewer calories one would think you would be a raving starving maniac, but the opposite actually seems true. When I eat a meal of mostly cooked food (especially grains or breads), I feel quite hungry 3 hours later. When I eat a meal of fresh greens and seeds (perhaps with a little tofu on top), I am satiated for 5-6 hours at least.

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August 2, 2006 at 3:52 am

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Financial Abundance on the SR520 Bridge

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Lamborghini

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August 2, 2006 at 3:51 am

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