Summary: Fit as a Navy SEAL
My personal journey to overcome Crohn's Disease and become as fit as possible.
I want to start playing soccer again once I get in shape, so I have
decided to do some of the work that we used to do before
soccer practice back in the stone ages. I am not sure what
most of the exercises are called, but they wear you out very
quickly.
The first is called the Mexican Hat Dance (at least that's what
Coach Jeff used to call 'em). You put one foot on top of the
ball, and then jump in the air. As you are doing this, you take
your foot off of the ball and bring the other on top. As soon
as you touch the ball with the second foot, you switch back.
You wind up jumping up and down switching feet very fast
(once you figure out the motion). This will wear you out
quicker than you realize, and the ball is usually rolling around
the floor, so you have to chase it while jumping. This is a
very good exercise for building your touch skills on the ball, and
of course it is a great aerobic workout.
I call the second exercise the triangle, but I'm not sure what the
actual name is. You kick the ball a little ways out in front
of you with one foot, then bring it back with the other foot.
You then kick it laterally back to the first foot, where you
proceed to kick it out in front of you again. When you do
this correctly, the ball goes in the shape of a triangle, hence the
name.
The third exercise has no name as far as I'm concerned (except
maybe "The Crazy Ass-Kicking Exercise"). It is very simple,
yet very effective. You spread your legs out a little, and
kick the ball back and forth between them. It sounds simple,
but when you go as fast as I do, it kicks your ass.
All three of these exercises are meant to increase your ball
control skills, but I am using them to get back into shape right
now. As stated before, I want to start playing soccer again,
so of course these exercises will help with that.
I can't wait. I haven't played soccer in years, and it will
be great to get out on the field again.
Do you know about soccer? If not,
go here. They've
got all the information you could ever want, and then some.
Date Published:
{EAV:cd71cbbb8fd78efb}
Date Published: Dec 27, 2011 - 12:22 pm
I think this is what I will start doing for
cardio instead of getting on the damn
treadmill.
HIIT Stands for
High Intensity Interval Training, and involves performing
30 - 60 seconds of extremely high intensity work with the
equivalent amount of time as a break. Basically, if you run
for 30 seconds, walk for 30 seconds, then start over. You can
also take longer breaks if you need to, but no more than 4 minutes
at a time. This should go on for 8-10 minutes. if you
can't do that much, cut back on the duration of the high intensity
portion just a bit until you get used to it, then start
periodically moving up the amount of high intensity and cutting
back the amount of low intensity, continuing to stick to
the 8-10 minute time.
The opposite of HIIT is LIT ("Cause I'm all
lit up again, on my couch, in my be..." Sorry,
Got carried away). LIT stand for Low Intensity Training, and
it is what you generally see at the gym when people walk 2 miles
per hour on the treadmill. The problem with LIT is
that you only burn calories right now. If you burn off 200
calories, you only burn 200 calories. You can eat 200 less
calories that day and have the exact same effect.
When you perform a HIIT workout, you not only
burn calories now, but you continue to burn them for up
to 24 hours. See, HIIT boosts your metabolism, while LIT does
not. High intensity training is anaerobic, which means
that it does not use oxygen. This helps to increase your
VO2
levels, among other things, and raises your metabolism to help you
get the power needed to perform these types of activities.
Low intensity exercises burn much more fat, but do not
increase your
metabolism. So when the two are combined, you
are burning fat, boosting your metabolism, increasing stamina,
increasing lung capacity (VO2), and basically
kicking ass.
I think I will start including this in my workouts. I plan to
start slowly, of course, to make sure that I don't hurt myself.
I have already received permission from both of my
doctors to workout, and both know that I used to workout and play
soccer, so I understand what my body is trying to tell me. I
know when to slow down, and I know when I can speed up. Its
the reason that I got better much, much quicker than the doctors
thought I would, so they give me a little leeway. As long as
I'm not stupid about it, anyway. I'll never be healed as
Crohn's has no cure, but I can get better than where I am
currently.
I usually work lower body on Monday and Thursday, upper body on
Tuesday and Friday, and intense cardio on Wednesday. I think
I will switch around upper and lower body days so that I can start
including HIIT training 3 days a week. I will do this on
upper body days so that I'm not overworking my legs, which means
that I need to start doing upper body on Monday and Friday, and
legs on Tuesday and Thursday. HIIT, of course, will be done
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday on the treadmill and anywhere else
that I can think of. I might also see about including some
circuit training some days, as well. But that's another
post.
I'm the sick one, so I take working out much, much more seriously
than does my wife. Man, is Jessi gonna hate me.
Date Published: Dec 26, 2011 - 7:00 am
Wow, its been a loooong time since I've logged my workouts, or
anything else, for that matter. Hopefully I will be able to
remember to do so from now on since it really helped me do better
when I knew I would be help accountable.
Quick history to help you get caught up:
- Have Crohn's Disease
- Almost died
- Had lots of surgeries
- Got better (well, kinda)
- Now working out at Max
Fitness on Highland Rd. in Baton Rouge
Okay, so that covered the last 3 years. It went a lot
faster than I thought it would!
The last few weeks have really sucked as far as working out is
concerned. We have averaged once a week since Thanksgiving
(its currently 2 days before Christmas). For the
record - we went at least 5 days a week every week for a little
over 3 months prior to this. Thanksgiving week sucked
because we had to go out of town. The next week I was sick.
The week after that was finals. the week after that,
Jessi was sick. And since then, Jessi has been at work all
day everyday (retail at Christmas time - not good) and I have
been spending all day everyday trying to write content for my
future website. Hopefully the next two weeks won't suck.
My son will be staying with us until it is time for him to
go back to school, so I want to see if I can bring him to the gym
with me without it costing me an arm and a leg.
My weight has done crazy things since I started this blog.
I was really fat when I first started it since I wasn't
able to do anything but was able to eat a lot. I lost a
bunch of weight once I was able to be active again, but then
gained a good bit when I actually started working out.
About 10 pounds of that weight was muscle, and I think the
other 5 pounds was fat. When I workout I eat a
whole lot, and I don't think I have been burning off as many
calories as I have been consuming.
I know things will get better once school starts again.
I just hope it can get better now, as well. Talk to
ya soon.
Date Published: Dec 23, 2011 - 2:35 pm
I found this routine at www.bodyweightculture.com. I really
don't think that I will be able to do 100 pushups in 10
weeks (considering my current condition), but hey, its worth a
shot! Even if I fail I will still be in much better shape
than I'm in now, so either way, I win. At the moment I feel
weird trying to do one pushup, so anything will be better than
nothing.
When you start, don't worry,
they don't have to be perfect pushups. You're not entering a
contest to see who can do the best pushup. I really don't
think it really matters what they look like as long as you use
proper form, and neither should you.
I have included the routine here so that we can easily keep track
of it (it was originally posted in 2006 in a forum, so might not be all that easy to find
again). Bodybuilding, and workouts in general, is much
easier when you actually know what you are supposed to do!
I love these types of
exercises because they can be done at home and don't require any
weights, gyms, or awkward stares when you can't do as
much as the next guy. I'm big so I look like I could push a
lot of weight, but I'm a wuss thanks to having been sick. So
yeah, I get weird looks when I lift half the weight of
someone else my size, and it only gets lifted for half as
many reps!
And for anyone that actually
wants to join the Navy SEALS, this is a great exercise routine to
get you ready for boot camp.
Everything after this came
directly from the website linked to above. It is verbatim
from the site, and I do not know who to credit it to since the name
is listed as "guest". Oh, and any typos are theirs, not
mine!
_____________________________________________
100 Pushups in 10 Weeks
Week one
-
Monday:3 Maximum sets of standard pushups. 90 Second in
between sets.
Tuesday: 3 Attempts at flex arm plank, standard
grip. 90 Seconds in between attempts.
Wednesday: 3 Max sets of horizontal pull
ups/horizontal rows. 90 Seconds in between sets.
Thursday: Perform one set of 40 percent of the
maximum. Second set should be 60 of the maximum. Third set
40%, fourth 60 and so on. 30 Second rest after 40% set and 45
second rest after 60% set. Continue set up to the point of
the second set failure.
Friday: Same as Tuesday
Saturday: Same as Wednesday
Sunday: Rest
Week two
-
Monday: 3 Max set of standard pushups 80 sec
rest
Teusday: 3 Attempts at plank. Narrow, wide,
regular. 80 Sec rest.
Wedensday: 3 Sets maximum sets of rows. 80 Sec
rest
Thursday: 30-70% of maximum. Odd sets are 30% and
even sets are 70%. 15 Sec rest after 30%, 60 sec rest after
70%.
Friday: Same as Teusday.
Saturday: Same as Wedensday.
Sunday: Rest
Week three
-
Monday:4 Maximum sets. 70 Sec break.
Teusday: 3 Sets at 90% each. Narrow pushups,
lower half portion of the movement. Wide, complete movement .
Regular grip, Middle 50% of the movement.
Wednesday: 3 Max sets of rows 70sec breaks in
between rows.
Thursday: 40% alternating with 70%. 15 Sec rest
after 40%. 60 sec rest after 70%
Friday: Same as T.
Saturday: Same as Wednesday.
Sunday: Rest
Week Four
-
Monday: Start with one rep rest 5 seconds, than do
three reps rest 10 seconds. Keep adding 5 second of rest and
two repetitions. Stop at first failure to finish set.
Do this prior to breakfast and prior to dinner.
Teusday: Alternate set of inline pushups (feet
above head) and decline pushups (head above feet.)
Incline are feet on the chair and decline are hands on the
chair. Use 40% of total when performing the inlcine, use 60%
when performing the decline. Only 20 seconds rest.
Rest for 5 minutes after first set fails. Repeat again.
Wednesday: 3 maximum sets of rows. 60 seconds
rest in between. First set is narrow, second is wide and
third is standard/ regular.
Thursday:Same as Monday
Friday:Same as Teusday
Saturday:Same as Wednesday
Week five
-
Monday: 4 Maxium sets 60 seconds break in
between.
Teusday: 3 Sets of push ups. Narrow, wide,
regular grip. 5 seconds upward count, 5 seconds downward
count. 60 second rest in between.
Wednesday: Regular grip rows. 3 Attempts at
holding the arms flexed and chest next to the bar for as long
as possible. 60 seconds break in between. 4th attempt is arms
straight, but shoulder blades squeezed together.
Thursday:Same as Monday
Friday:Same as Teusday
Saturday:Same as Wednesday
Week Six
-
Monday: Start with a maximum set. Rest 110 seconds.
Next set should be 90% of the max, with 100 seconds rest. Next
set should be 80% of the max with 90 seconds rest. Every set
deduct 10% and 10 seconds of rest.
Teusday: Perform inline push ups in alternation
with decline pushups. Only half the movement should be used.
When performing the inline pushups the hand should not be on
the floor. They should be on two sets of books or objects 3-6
inches high. The feet should be on the chair. Only lower half
of the movement should be performed. (Head touching the floor
to elbows right angle. Elbows should not extend past the
right angle. They should not approach the straight line.)
This is very important. 40% of the total maximum per set.
Decline push ups is done with feet on the floor and hands on
the chair. Only the upper part of the movement. (Elbow right
angle to hands straight.) 60% of maximum set. Stop when the
second set fails.
Wednesday: Regular grip horizontal pull ups/rows.
Start with 1 repetition and increase by on each set.
(1,3,5,7,9, etc) First rest is 10 seconds, each concecutive
rest should add 10 seconds. (10 sec, 20 sec, 30 sec. )Stop
when the second set fails.
Thursday:Same as Monday
Friday:Same as Teusday
Saturday:Same as Wednesday
Week Seven
-
Monday: Two work outs. 30 Minutes before breakfast
and 30 minutes before dinner.Each workout; 3 sets of plyometric
push ups. Stop 2-3 reps before failure. 60 second break between
sets.
Tuesday: Same Tuesday of the previous week.
Wednesday: Horizontal pull ups, rows. 3 maximum
sets. 5 seconds up count, 5 seconds down count. 60 seconds
break.
Thursday:Same as Monday
Friday:Same as Teusday
Saturday:Same as Wednesday
Week Eight
-
Monday: 5 Maximum sets 45 sec rest.
Tuesday: 3 work out. 30 Minutes before breakfast,
lunch and dinner. 2 sets per work out. 75% of maximum on each
set. 30 rest between sets.
Wednesday: 3 Sets of Horizontal pull ups/rows.
First set 10 second count up and 10 second count down. Second
set as fast as possible. Third set medium comfortable speed.
60 second rest.
Thursday:Same as Monday
Friday:Same as Teusday
Saturday:Same as Wednesday
Week Nine
-
Monday: 6 Sets of push ups.Set 1 and 3 – Quarter
Dive bomber push ups. Get into the Downward facing dog
position. Your hands are together. Begin a standard dive bomb
pushup, stop when your face is right above your hand. Come back
up to the starting position. Repeat as many times as possible.
Set 2 and 4- Fingers pointing down push ups. Place your hands
next to your rib cage with your finger pointing toward your
feet. Do regular push ups in this position. Set 5 and 6 Regular
maximum sets.
Tuesday: 9 sets. 3 sets prior to each meal.
Breakfast, lunch, dinner. Each set should be 75% of
maximum.
Wednesday: 4 Sets of standard horizontal push
ups/ rows, 30 seconds apart.
Thursday:Dive bomber push ups. First set- one pushup
and 5 second break. Second set 3 push ups and 10 second
break. Keep adding two repetition to each set and 5 seconds
to each break. At first incomplete set stop. Rest for 5
minutes and repeat starting with one push ups and adding two
reps.
Friday: Same as Wednesday.
Saturday:Burpees and pushups. 1 Burpee,1 pushups, 1
burpee and 2 push ups, one burpee and 3 push ups. Till
failure. 5 Minute break and second attempt.
Week 10
-
Monday: Before breakfast. Lower half narrow grip
and 15 second rest, Lower half wide grip and 15 second rest,
standard grip lower half and one minute rest. Repeat the
sequence. Before dinner. Repeat the same as before
breakfast.
Tuesday: Inline push ups 3 sets with 30 seconds
break. Chair dips 3 sets 30 seconds break.
Wednesday:Rest
Thurstday: 5 Maximum sets of rows 15 seconds
rest.
Friday: Burpees with push ups. 1 Burpee 2 push
ups, 1 burpee 4 push ups and so on. After first incomplete
set rest for 5 minutes. Second attempt 1 burpee 1 push up, 1
burpee 3 push ups and so on.
Saturday: Start with a close grip. Perform a push
up and jump up with your hand. Spread your hands a little bit
more out. Perform a push up and jump. Spread your hand a
little bit more out. Do this five times. The fifth time the
hands should be very wide. Now do the five plyometric push up
bringing your arms a little closer every time. The fifth one
should be with your hands next to each other. Continue this
way till failure. Rest for 30 seconds, make another attempt.
Rest again for 30 seconds and make another attempt.
Sunday and Monday rest. Tuesday is also an optional rest.
After rest test yourself.
Most people in 45- 50 range should be able to perform 100 push
ups with this ten week program
Date Published: Mar 11, 2011 - 4:06 pm
NO2 (nitric oxide) is a great supplement for energy, focus, and
longevity when working out. Nitric Oxide is not to be
confused with Nitrous Oxide (N2O), which is used as laughing gas,
or Nitrogen Dioxide (also NO2), which is an air pollutant.
The most common active ingredient is
L-Arginine (in the form of
Arginine Alpha-Ketoglutarate), one of the 20 most
common amino acids. NO2 is a vasodilator, which means that
it widens the blood vessels allowing more blood, and with
it more oxygen, to travel through the body. This puts more
oxygen into your muscles, allowing you to work harder, for a longer
period of time, without fatigue. This influx of blood to the
muscles also helps to increase the "pump" of your muscles generally
received from working out.
Nitric Oxide side effects include:
- Slight tingling feeling in the hands and face (usually goes
away after 20 minutes)
- Headaches
- Nausea
- Diarrhea
- Allergic Reactions
- Asthma can be made worse
- If you have herpes, this can make it worse. The herpes
virus uses L-Arginine to multiply.
- Most of these seem to be temporary, and should go away after
a week or so of use.
Always make sure to check with your doctor before starting to use
any supplements, even a multi-vitamin. This is not a
complete list of nitric oxide side effects, but these are the
most common. Take it from me, if anything feels wrong, get
to the doctor. If it turns out to not be from NO2, oh well
- better safe than sorry. I almost died because I didn't go
to the doctor when I first started having stomach problems (from
my Crohn's) because I was too damn stubborn and macho to go.
I have used other brands of nitric oxide before (and absolutely
love it), and have recently heard some great things about Jack3d,
by USP Labs. I just ordered it, so I will let everyone know
what I think of this particular brand in a few days. If it
is as good as everyone is telling me, then this is probably the
one that I will stick with from now on. I'll let you know.
Date Published: Feb 28, 2011 - 8:30 am
I received an e-mail about this stuff a few hours ago, and after
doing some research, I've decided that I'm going to try it.
Most of the sales pages that I've seen say that anyone 30
and over should take it to keep their heart healthy and I am 30
years old, so I guess that means me!
CoQ10 is short for Coenzyme Q10. According to
Wikipedia, the name means this:
Uhhh, sure. If you say so.......
For those of you wondering exactly what coenzymes are,
click here. Chemistry is not my strong suit,
so I'll let them explain.
CoQ10 is said to help with high blood pressure, macular
degeneration (very common in Crohn's patients), Alzheimer's,
Asthma, exercise performance, and a host of other things.
Most of these statements need to be further researched, but
the initial trials have been positive for many of these.
I am buying mine from Amazon, as they are one of the most
reliable sites on the Internet.
Here's the link in case you want to check it
out.
Date Published: Feb 21, 2011 - 8:31 pm
Well, its finally February. Time to start busting my ass.
I've decided that I will use the next month to get into good
enough shape that I can really start pushing myself for the 3
months after this (March- May). I will probably have to have
another surgery this summer, so I need to get into the best shape
possible to reduce the recovery time. I DO NOT want to sit on
my ass AGAIN for 6 months, so this time I plan on being prepared.
I have to build muscle so that I can move around easier, and
I need to lose weight so that my scars don't look so bad this time
(I gained a lot of weight before the last surgery, so they
look weird right now).
I have been doing a lot of research on this topic, and plan to
start including the best of what I find here to help those of you
who are also looking to get in to shape. If there is anything
that you would like for me to write about please let me know.
I have been working out and playing sports all of my life so
I am already knowledgeable about many aspects of this
topic, and can easily find out anything that I don't already
know.
Date Published: Feb 01, 2011 - 10:36 pm
Well, I haven't worked out in a few days, but I did walk more
yesterday than I have since before my last surgery. Jessi was
off yesterday, so after class we went downtown and did a bunch of
stuff. We went to the top of the capitol building, which is
the tallest in the country. You can see for miles, and you
get some views of Baton Rouge and the Mississippi River that are
gorgeous (well, except for the northern side, which is nothing but
oil refineries).
We walked all around Arsenal Park, then walked all the way to
Schlitz and Giggles to eat. We had pizza which of course is
not good, but then we had to walk all the way back, so I don't feel
quite as bad.
Before we went downtown, we walked all over LSU campus. Jessi
needed some school supplies, so she came with me to class and we
walked a whole lot (car to the Union, then to class). After
class we went to see Mike the Tiger, but he wasn't out. they
had to clean his cage, so he was in the building when we got
there.
We then had to walk all the way back to the car, and then went
downtown.
All together, I think we probably walked 4-5 miles, which I had
absolutely no idea I was capable of doing. My legs hurt so
bad today that I can barely walk, though. My calves are
hurting just thinking about it!
Date Published: Jan 28, 2011 - 7:26 pm
I decided to change up my workout today. I want to start
playing soccer again once I get in shape, so I decided to
do some of the work that we used to do before soccer practice back
in the stone ages. I am not sure what most of the exercises
are called, but they wear you out very quickly.
The first is called the Mexican Hat Dance. You put one foot
on top of the ball, and then jump in the air. As you are doing
this, you take your foot off of the ball and bring the other on
top. As soon as you touch the ball with the second foot, you
switch back. You wind up jumping up and down switching feet
very fast (once you figure out the motion). This will wear
you out quicker than you realize, and the ball is usually rolling
around the floor, so you have to chase it while jumping. This
is a very good exercise for building your touch skills on the ball,
and of course it is a great aerobic workout.
I call the second exercise the triangle, but I'm not sure what the
actual name is. You kick the ball a little ways out in front
of you with one foot, then bring it back with the other foot.
You then kick it laterally back to the first foot, where you
proceed to kick it out in front of you again. When you do
this correctly, the ball goes in the shape of a triangle, hence the
name.
The third exercise has no name as far as I'm concerned (except
maybe "the crazy ass-kicking exercise"). It is very simple,
yet very effective. You spread your legs out a little, and
kick the ball back and forth between them. It sounds simple,
but when you go as fast as I do, it kicks your ass.
All three of these exercises are meant to increase your ball
control skills, but I am using them to get back into shape right
now. As stated before, I want to start playing soccer again,
so of course these exercises will help with that.
I also did 10 push-ups. It was very hard to do those, so
immediately after I dropped my knees to the floor and did 6 more
girly push-ups.
It has now been ten minutes since I finished my workout, and my
arms and legs are not working properly. It's amazing that I
used to drive home from the gym feeling like this almost
everyday!
Update - Dinner consisted of great northern white beans with
sausage over rice. Cornbread would have been really good with
this, but the meal was already fattening enough.
Since I've been eating better lately, the grease left after
draining the sausage actually made my stomach a little upset.
Its been a very long time since that has happened. With
me it usually only does this when my stomach is no longer used to
the grease. This is a good sign.
Date Published: Jan 25, 2011 - 6:32 pm
Worked out again. The video requires that you have a workout
ball, but I do not have one. I finally decided to see if a
pillow from the couch would work, and it does! I'm not sure
how it compares to having one of the workout balls since I always
let Jessi have that, but it worked good considering.
It probably wouldn't work very well for someone in
descent shape, but I am disabled (read: very weak) so I can get
away with not doing as much at the moment (and it still kicks my
ass!).
I haven't really followed any type of diet lately since the term
"diet" generally means that it has a beginning and an end. I
have been trying to consume less crap (junk food, sodas, etc), and
eat smaller portions at each meal. This
has apparently worked, since I have lost 5 pounds in the
last 2-3 weeks.
The biggest problem that I've had lately is coffee. I drink a
lot of coffee, and I have a tendency to include lots of sugar and
creamer. I like plain coffee, but it tastes soooo much better
when you add so many calories that it basically turns into a meal!
Regular black coffee is supposedly good for weight loss since
it raises your metabolism and only has 4 calories per cup, but
I don't know if it's consumption has any negative effects (it most
likely does).
Date Published: Jan 22, 2011 - 6:10 pm
Well, we just worked out, and now I'm eating cereal! Wow, I'm
on the right track!
Since I am still in a lot of pain, I have been doing an aerobics
workout with Jessi. This is only the second time that I have
done it, but she's done one of the workouts almost every night for
the last two weeks (there are 15 workouts total).
I think my abs will be sore tomorrow, but hey, no pain no gain.
Date Published: Jan 20, 2011 - 9:13 pm
Wow. The last post was on June 14th of last year.
Around that time I developed fistulas in my abdomen (due to
the surgery and a subsequent infection), and that basically killed
my workouts. In fact, there have been some days where I could
barely walk. But I am finally starting to get back to a point
where I can do a little bit, and am very tired of not working
out.
Jessi has started doing the Bender Ball aerobics workout, and I
have been doing a little bit of that with her. I can't do
much because of my stomach, but I'm doing what I can, and trying to
build up my strength so that I can start doing some real
workouts in the near future. School has started again, so I
am hoping to be able to go to the Rec Center within the next 2
weeks or so.
Our friends are getting married on a cruise, and we are trying
our damnedest to get the money together to go.
Jessi wants to look good in a bikini by that time
(beginning of October), so this means that I have someone else
working out, which will make me much more likely to do it even
though I'm hurting. I think that getting into shape will help
me get rid of these stupid fistulas, so this is definitely a good
thing. Even if it doesn't, being in shape will help with so
many other things that it will still be worth it.
Date Published: Jan 18, 2011 - 8:05 pm
I am sick and tired of sitting in the house!!!!! I have to
wait 8 weeks before I can do any kind of physical activity, and its
only been 3 weeks since my surgery.
I'm bored as hell, and want to do something. Jessi's car is
STILL broke down, so she is STILL taking my car to work. The
only thing that I can do is walk around the apartment complex, but
the heat index has been around 100 everyday so thats not happening
much!
The main thing that is keeping me off of my feet is a pain in my
side (literally). I'm guessing that it is a tendon since the
pain is constant. I had to sleep in my recliner last night
because the pain was so bad. I was tossing and turning and
was afraid that Jessi would wake up.
But overall I'm doing good. everything is healing up nicely,
I don't have much pain other than that listed above, and I am able
to go places with no problems (well, when I have a car). I
was able to do 4 push ups the other day before the pain started, so
thats a plus. Actually, I might try to do some more now!
Date Published: Jun 14, 2010 - 10:56 am
I am finally starting to heal up. I can move around very
easily and I can actually sleep in bed again (as opposed to my
extremely uncomfortable recliner).
I went to my brother's house this weekend and slept on the couch
both nights. I had normal pains on Saturday, but I didn't
even have to take any pain medicine on Sunday, and thats after
drinking beer the night before and spending the night on a couch
that is about 5 inches too short.
The doctor said that I can start lifting weights, etc after 8
weeks, so I currently have 5 1/2 left. I plan on starting to
walk around the apartment complex on Wednesday (after next doctor's
appointment).
I am going bat shit insane right now due to the endless hours of
sitting on my butt in the house, and so need to figure out how to
be allowed to do something other than watch TV. If I see one
more crab pot, I might just kill someone.
And yes, that damn show is on as I type this. And the remote
is across the room. Damn.
Date Published: Jun 07, 2010 - 2:03 pm