Tuesday, December 30, 2025

A Word to the Wise

 

A few weeks back I was experiencing severe knee pain and searched the YouTube videos on various opinions on the subject, and one of the more helpful tips on walking up and down stairs was to place the feet with the toes at a 45 degree angle to the stairs. I did that for a few weeks and it was moderately helpful in reducing the pain — but seems to require a lot of attention that never became natural and fluid. But then I added leaning my weight forward as I went up the stairs — and leaning my weight back as I descended the stairs — and it became a very natural and pleasant movement again.

Then, it seems like one is falling up the stairs, and properly resisting falling down the stairs. As one ages, I think they tend to get it backwards. Using hands is not cheating but what they are designed for.

Another popular idea for developing and maintaining leg strength for this ultimate daily test is the lunge.

Most people will find lunges very hard on the knees — done in the manner usually prescribed by exercise instructors — to produce maximum pain. The way to make them easy is to hold on to the back of a chair in a comfortable fore and aft leg position and gently rock back and forth with the knee moving over the toes and then back in alignment with the ankle to the extent there is no pain in the knee joint. But that gentle movement will cause the cartilage to secret synovial fluid into that joint — which is a form of mucus that is the lubricant for movement in the body, and why it also lines the mucus membranes that lubricates the digestive, respiratory, lymphatic systems, etc. The other major fluid of the body is of course the blood — which is more obvious in how it moves more forcefully and visibly.

However, the joints are not lubricated by the blood as much as they are by the synovial fluid effected by changes in the compression of the cartilage — preferably repeated many times rather than few repetitions with a heavy load. In this case, it doesn’t matter how hard or heavy a load the joint is bearing, as the simple movement throughout its full range — as in cross-country bicycling at a slow pace — enabling one to persist all day. That is the kind of fitness most seniors require to maintain an active life throughout their years. Nothing violent or heroic — unless they absolutely have to, otherwise, the difference is not how fast they can walk or run, but that they can still walk or run at all. Likewise, they don’t need to bench press their bodyweight, but just have the upper body strength to push open the doors, etc.

That is the difference that makes a difference — that they can do all the daily activities independently — for as long as they live — and not that they’re still competing in their age-class and risking debilitating injuries.  Easy does it.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Will We Need to Change?

  To be successful throughout life, a person has to be changing and evolving with the times and circumstances — and not thinking if they keep doing the same thing for time immemorial, it will be right for any time and all circumstances. That is the essence of life — and not having a fixed idea of perfection and never deviating and evolving a better response to the present challenges — then wondering what went wrong, and how one got so detached from reality and proper functioning. Then every day after that, their situation seems to get more dire and hopeless. Change is the way of life.

As people grow older, they can also grow wiser — but many will stay the same all their lives, and fare poorly because of that mindset and approach. Those who remain viable all their days are quicker to recognize what they thought worked, no longer does — if it ever did, and make the proper adjustments. It is the same with all aspects and activities in life.

In the case of the bodybuilders and weightlifters, they eventually come to realize that simply doing what they did when young, may be impossible when they are old — which doesn’t preclude everything else one has not tried before — including and especially, that exercise can be made easier and more productive, rather than continuing to beat themselves up the hard way, with less results, and more possibilities of injury — and reduced recovery ability until finally, they just give up entirely. Of course that is the worst case outcome leading to total disability.

One gets better at doing what one actually does — but when one is resistant to trying, nothing will be done. So rather than increasing the resistance, the proper course is to lower the resistance — or maintain the same level as one ages so that movement looks and becomes easier, and not more labored. That is obviously the reversal of what one has been taught to believe that one should be constantly adding as much resistance as possible at every opportunity to do so — infinitely. It doesn’t work in older people, and neither does it work in younger people. Because it was never that the resistance was so important but that the full-range movement itself produced the fullest contraction and the fullest relaxation of the muscle — which optimizes the circulatory flow that is health.

All the mumbo-jumbo, hocus-pocus, jargon, pharmaceuticals aside, that is the simple process ensuring health. Most bodybuilders and weightlifters condition themselves to the wrong things — and that becomes unsustainable in time and age, and is the primary reason they die prematurely at younger ages than their cohorts — usually from heart problems because they are overworking their hearts — thinking the harder the better. The primary value of exercise is not for the heart — but for all the other skeletal muscles that are not working unless one deliberately programs them to. The heart is always the hardest, most dedicated muscle of the body — and doesn’t need to be stressed harder or exclusively while the rest of the skeletal muscles continue to do little or nothing at all. And worse, some think it desirable to work the muscles against the heart to make it work even harder — endlessly until it fails. Of course, that is the ultimate failure.

Instead, one desires to learn to use the body and muscles so that it can sustain its functioning and activity as long as necessary — all of one’s life if possible. That requires a very different approach and mindset. That probably is the great challenge of conditioning activities of these times — not just for bodybuilders and weightlifters, but for everybody aspiring to achieve their best lives, for the rest of their lives.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Recovery Ability

 The best way to recover from the muscle soreness produced by a high-intensity exercise, is to do alternating muscle contractions and relaxations on the rest days rather than doing nothing — or complete abstinence from any exercise or further exertion. That is the main reason for increasing soreness in the subsequent days after a single high-intensity workout — until the recovery process runs its natural course in about a week.

The reason for the pain and soreness is inflammation — also known as swelling, that instigates the healing process. To speed up that process, the alternation of muscle contractions alternated with relaxations produces the flow of those waste products out of the muscle tissues back towards the heart and other purifying and recycling organs of the body. That is the primary function of all the muscles of the body that ensures its health — to produce that flow, or movement within the body. Without that movement, the body naturally dies, deteriorates, and malfunctions — because the optimal conditions for its operation are absent or lacking.

Every living thing is designed produce its own best health — or its life cannot be sustained. Even in medical interventions, the expectation is that the body will heal itself, and recover in the modified way intended. If it can’t recover from that procedure, then there is no point in proceeding further down that particular path.

But what has been noted for thousands of years, is that producing a flow of the body’s vital energy and resources, is what heals and makes the body stronger. The Chinese called it chi, and the Indians called it prana, and then modern medicine called it neuromuscular and cardiovascular — which are different names for the same thing. If they want to break it down further, it can be called acupressure, acupuncture, reflexology, meditation, etc.

The body is not static but a constant movement within — unless it is blocked or disengaged, frequently by one’s own actions and intentions. The obvious case are the top athletes who die prematurely from some heart condition — while thinking they can achieve immortality by pushing their bodies to extreme limits. Such individuals are usually born with strong hearts and prematurely wear them out by thinking it is the only organ in the body responsible for flow (circulation). However, all muscles operating as the heart does — alternatively contracting and relaxing — produces a flow, and when all the muscles of the body are in that synchronicity and synergy, then extraordinary feats are possible — and that body is even one with the universe, rather than struggling against it.

That was the ancient paradigm of life — that each individual was in a struggle against everything and all of life — rather than observing all of life, and finding a way to be in that flow of the greater reality. Surely, that would be the secret to living a long life in prosperity. A few are more gifted than others in every realm and activity so it is important to understand that everyone will not achieve the same results as all the others, but certain principles apply to all.

All living things have to respire — or exchange vital nutrients with their environment to maintain and optimize their health. With inflammation, the question is how to effectively get those accumulated waste products out of the body (tissues) to create the space for new life-giving nutrients to enter. But the equation has to be seen rightly — as first pumping out the old, and Nature takes care of the rest — for everybody.

Contrary to what many believe, you can’t force the heart to pump stagnant fluid out of the tissues. The skeletal muscles of the body are much more numerous — not simply for the purpose of lifting more weight but because operating as the heart does pumping blood back towards the heart, it creates a tremendous vacuum for which the heart has no resistance for its own work — and that is the whole purpose, and not simply to make the work the heart harder until it is the first organ to fail typically and fatally.

That is the lesson to be learned in the question of how to get rid of the pain caused by inflammation (the accumulation of waste products caused by regular metabolism as well as accelerated efforts such as high-intensity exercise. As was noted by Arthur Jones in formulating his Nautilus Principles of exercise, that was the missing link, and what made such manner of exercise unsustainable — but effective while it could be. That exercise had to be brief and infrequent — but even then, there was the inescapable pain and soreness of training that way. But that was negative conditioning — which the body will avoid as much as possible.

However, he didn’t realize he found the solution all along — in first identifying the position in which a muscle had to be fully contracted and what position it had to be fully relaxed. And that was what was important — and not providing resistance in going from one position to the other. The body doesn’t care about that. It is like the modern day computer or any modern appliance that only cares whether it is “On” or “Off” — and not the difficulty in moving from one position to the other.

Initially it might have mattered to prevent the switch from slipping too easily into the wrong position but now it doesn’t matter, and the same switch is used alternately to produce the “On” or “Off” condition. Muscles are that same way: it can be on or off — contracted or relaxed — and that is its power. It’s not the resistance in moving from one state to the other that has magic. Life is discrete and binary in that way — as is all of reality, night and day, up and down, left and right, high and low pressures making the world go round.

Or one can remain mystified by it all — as one more thing unrelated to all the others. Shit just happens — and there’s nothing one can do about it — and that is my excuse for everything.