Month: March 2020

 

Thoughts on The Coronavirus

I normally don’t watch the news, but unless you live under a rock you’ve likely heard the hysteria surrounding the Corona Virus. It seems that these things come along every couple of years to try and put us into a panic.

Hey, remember Sars and Ebola? How about the Bird Flu?

Now I’m not exactly a medical expert but it seems that the only people really at risk are the elderly, the very young and the people whose immune systems have been compromised by something else.

So is it a danger? Yeah probably. Though I’m not worried about catching it myself I do have a 6-month-old at home.

But even with the dangers posed to our babies, elderly and people whose immune systems have been compromised, it seems that people are panicked about the wrong things.

It’s the thing that’s not really discussed on the news. Heart disease kills more people annually than just about any other cause of death. And it has been the reigning champion for years.

Image result for cdc statistics causes of death 2019

And to a large extent, it is preventable with proper lifestyle choices. People know this, but doing and knowing aren’t always one in the same.

So the next time you’re in Walmart looking for facemasks to filter out the Coronavirus (it won’t work btw), ask yourself when the last time you trained consistently and ate healthily. If it’s been awhile your panic has been put into the wrong areas.

Fortunately, it’s not too late. Find a training and nutrition system and follow it consistently and you will be surprised what you can accomplish.

And at the end of the day, people who eat right and exercise regularly tend to have strong immune systems.


Eric Moss is a world-record-holding modern-day professional performing strongman, author, motivational speaker, and personal trainer. In the tradition of the strongmen more common during the turn of the century, he performs feats of strength such as bending steel and breaking chains as part of a show and speaks on goal achievement for corporations, nonprofits, government as well as for schools and universities. His exclusive personal training studio is located on Main Street in Boonton New Jersey, is close to Mountain Lakes, Denville, Montville and Parsippany New Jersey.

Turkish Getup with Pauses (exercise variation)

My personal training studio is right across the street from the Boonton Holmes Public Library. So I create presentations designed to teach people about various things relating to health and fitness, since if you want to reach people you have to teach people.

This past Friday I did a presentation about the Turkish Getup…an exercise very near and dear to my heart.

Following the presentation, one thing that was asked of me was how it would go in a “fitness boot camp” type of setting. If you are unfamiliar with fitness boot camps they usually reference some kind of circuit training type of format, often with timed intervals.

It doesn’t have to be since it’s really just an umbrella term that can refer to just about anything.

The Turkish Getup doesn’t really work with this sort of format since ideally, it would be done with grace and control as opposed to rushing through it as you would when under the stress of a timer. With the Turkish Getup, I like to have people try to go heavy (which normally needs adequate rest periods) and also recommend striving for mastery and grace.

Here is a version of the getup that promotes the latter of the two. It’s called the Turkish Getup with pauses.

When you are doing a getup, and you purposefully insert pauses during various portions of the movement, it forces you to own your potential weak points by building in speed bumps. You see, in weight training, there is something called the force-velocity curve. A quick way to explain it is that as you get the weight moving, your various muscles stop working.

Why? Think of it like this. There is a car stuck in the snow and five guys try to push it out. As they start pushing and the car starts moving a couple of the guys let up because the other guys have got it covered.

Your muscles work kind of the same way.

During your pauses, your muscles and your stabilizers are all working statically to hold you in place. It forces control in owning the movement, and when you want to go heavier, it helps you grind through the repetition because you’ll have built a bit of endurance.

And the recommendations of striving for mastery, grace and heavy are why I recommend against doing them as part of a timed interval. However, you could use it as the timed interval.

What I mean by that is make the Turkish getup itself the clock, although I still don’t really think it’s optimal, but still a decent idea.

I think it’s better to have everyone on their own custom program, just training alongside others, which is what I do. But hey, I’m biased.


Eric Moss is a world-record-holding modern-day professional performing strongman, author, motivational speaker, and personal trainer. In the tradition of the strongmen more common during the turn of the century, he performs feats of strength such as bending steel and breaking chains as part of a show and speaks on goal achievement for corporations, nonprofits, government as well as for schools and universities. His exclusive personal training studio is located on Main Street in Boonton New Jersey, is close to Mountain Lakes, Denville, Montville and Parsippany New Jersey.