Showing posts with label coaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coaching. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Why I don't watch 'Biggest Loser....


I choose to watch some TV programs and,  even if only by exclusion, not others - such as 'Biggest Loser'.

Rather than whinge about the show, I change channel or find something more exciting or entertaining to do - like watch night arrive.

Confession,  I did see 20-30minutes of one episode in it's 2nd season, and occasionally see/hear a snippet or ad.

Given my line of work - sports coaching, fitness coaching and Physical Education teaching - I'm asked what I think about BL. "Not much!" is my double-gilded reply.

I'm not saying the show is good or bad, or shouldn't be produced nor viewed.
I'm simply explaining my reasons - right or wrong - for choosing not to watch it.
If it floats your boat or 'inspires' you...great!
If it makes you feel good about yourself, well, umm...errr, good for you too.

Me though, "I choose not to watch it because..."

Ethics:
I find it difficult to see individuals, families, parent & child or towns taken out of their 'normal' contexts, put through a series of exercise, nutrition and weigh-in charades, and compete for money in front of cameras and crowds. 
And...then have it portrayed as REAL. 
REAL(ity) TV, bahaha.


"We're changing the world" I've heard one of the trainers say.
I  passed out laughing, "yeah, right, but you have no idea how!"

What of those who don't make it through the screening process -  for entertainment, current or past emotional wellbeing, or health reasons? Why are some chosen and not others? Is it because some are likely to be a better story or show than others? Who has the right to say that those "reality TV" show are more-or less real (or deserving) than others - TV producers, scriptwriters, production designers, and sponsors? Not in my world. REAL life is neither screened, edited, scripted, post-produced, marketed and sold. It's usually what we make of it.

What about the liability waivers, exclusivity rights, and back-room sponsorship deals and editing? Oh sure, the story-telling makes it more "real". Life changing, huh?

And the scales? In the 21st century is weight still the cornerstone of "health"? Is this the same television station that, in other productions (shows) aims to discourage the focus with thinness, wellbeing, advertising magazines, models as messages sent to youth? What messages does BL send to youth about health, weight, exercise and 'shame'? Maybe BL is a synonym for hypocrisy.

What about  blood cholesterol, triglyceride and glucose blood levels, and blood pressure as indicators of cardiovascular health;  coritsol and urea levels - indicating the enormous catabolic and physical stress their bodies are going through? And the injuries, and puking, and feinting?
Not one off success-cases...ALL participants.  Where are those "real" results?

I'd like to know the REAL figures on how many apply, then screened are rejected - yup that'll make them feel great about themselves! And, how many successfully maintain their weight loss, and lifestyle change. I'm tipping those figures aren't too high, maybe inversely proportional to ratings.

Sure, aspects of Western/consumer culture is competitive and, unfortunately, people are exploited - some knowingly, others unwittingly. That doesn't mean I have to or should watch it on TV.

Exploitation:
 I'm appalled by what I've seen and heard in the manner and tone in which the trainers push, prod, cajole, force, undermine, embarrass and ridicule the participants - both to their faces, and in personal interviews - all under the guide "don't be a failure". Finish that rep, climb that step, do it with pep and make money for the TV station's owners, shareholders and advertisers.
No wonder they're called "trainers". Give them a whip and send them off to the zoo - apologies to all animal lovers, and m my pets.

Money, entertainment and careers are being made on the participants' waivers, sweat, ridicule, life history, emotional wellbeing, and shame - all where exercise has come to be viewed as excessive "working out" and accepted as normal.

When is it okay to shame, bias, discriminate and exploit by race, creed, religion or gender? But it's okay to do it by weight and fatness and emotional fragility, on public television? Hmm.

I'm sure the trainers are doing well for themselves too. Good luck to them. Like all of us, they have a right to make a living, and rub shoulders with celebrities. I hope they feel good and sleep well at night exploiting the participants the way they appear to, and undermining the good work many health professionals do in instructing and educating about sustainable lifestyle choices, habits and routines by exploiting the myths, misperceptions and fallacies about what is 'appropriate' and 'normal' exercise and nutrition for individuals.

And what of the viewers? Exploited too. Sponsors? Ditto.

Professional Prostitution:
The BL exercises, activities, motivational strategies and nutritional practise are neither mainstream nor professional. They're for drama and ratings. Don't view and accept this as standard practise by most certificated PTs or by more appropriately trained and qualified health, exercise and nutrition professionals

First and foremost the most important principle of (fitness/exercise/sport) training is individuality - what suits, works for and is effective and sustainable for some, isn't for others. Arguable, some will say specificity is most important. Ok, sure, be specific to the background, current capacity, lifestyle, motivation and goals of each participant.  

For supposedly professional PTs on a national television show, where is the individuality? Activities and exercises are "one for all" on BL. That is neither ethical, professional nor effective.

For years, organisations have worked hard to improve the qualifications, experience and application of professionals who work in health, exercise and fitness- related areas. ACHPER (the Australian Council for Health, Physical Education & Recreation) is one, albeit predominantly aimed at 3 and 4 year graduates and those who practise/teach in schools.
I wonder what ACHPER members think of BL?
I'd assume health and PE teachers would use BL as a great resource to be 'critically examined' with students.

ESSA (Exercise & Sport Science Australia) is another, promoting 3-4 year trained graduates (as a minimum part registration requirement) to work predominantly with health-related issues and allied practitioners as different to sport science, sports conditioning and generic fitness.
ESSA members must (or, should) shake their heads in BL disbelief.

Then there are the Personal Trainers who may complete a weekend, 20-40 hour, and/or online course to become registered. I'm sure some PTs do a great job, yet I see EVERY day - in gyms, parks, pools and beachside - PTs explaining, prescribing and instructing things that, well - to be kind - probably should be modified. Yet, I digress...

That said, the "in your face", "attitude", "bad ass", "one more rep/step", "failure now means failure forever", "you're fat, lazy and dishonest" approaches that seem to dominate BL practise are not the way most PTs, PCs or coaches practise. Be wary assuming and accepting that it is.

The exercise routines, circuits and activities of BL are certainly not standard practise either. Of course, most are devised with drama, the story, viewers, and ratings in mind.

And the dominant  motivational tactics of shame, ridicule, embarrassment, isolation, peer pressure and failure is shocking.  I know who the Big Losers are.
Yet, the reps must be done, the food shunned, and the drama must rate!

Similarly, although areas overlap, PTs, Instructors, Teachers, Coaches and Educators aren't the same things, nor strategies used. Aim to be educated, not trained.

Does anyone know if the doctor/s and nutritionist/dietitians, who support these charades, have never shown their faces and/or real names? Surely, given the risks the participants go through, there is professional medical and nutrition advice?  If they don't exist, how do you spell 'liaBiLity'?

Dramatisation:
From an ad. 

On the possibility of a 20+yo being evicted, a teary participant says, "this opportunity means the difference between life and death for me".

Puhh-leeez...that opportunity presents itself EVERY time we all sit down or drive-through to eat, snack, binge or drink; say 'no' to exercise, find the closest car-park to a destination, or take the escalator instead of the stairs; or, won't consider getting 'real' and professional help.

I've already commented on the motivational shenanigans the trainers use to dramatise the compulsion that the participants "must do one more rep, or one more step, or be a failure for the rest of your life".

Choices. First, honesty. Second, professional help and guidance. Third, moderation, Fourth, persistence and patience. Limit the drama.


Misappropriation:
(noun) to put to a 'wrong' use.
'Wrong' comes in various shapes, sizes and guises.

That said, from my perspective(s), I feel what is portrayed as professional, normal, respectful, and just is simply not indicative of "real life" for those who may be challenged by health, emotional, and discriminatory issues associated with weight, body fat, and exercise.

In some ways this encapsulates the reasons why I won't and don't watch BL.
In one sense I wonder who the Biggest Losers are - the participants for losing weight at the expense of drama and being shamed and exploited; the viewers for accepting that it is real and what is being done is professional, safe and standard practise; the PTs for their "do it my fail or fail forever"  portrayal of health, exercise and professional practise; the producers and sponsors who may simply make ratings and dollars from exploitation, dramatisation, professional prostitution and call their entertainment 'reality TV'.


Maybe I'm the Biggest Loser. 
Maybe I've got it wrong, and am missing out by not buying in.
Maybe.
Yet, I choose not to watch. 
And, now you know why.



Tuesday, December 10, 2013

The Sports Gene and Gifts...


Kids inherit all sorts from us: genetic gear and gifts; values, attitudes and beliefs

Ensure that those genes aren’t spoilt by

DNA DNA (Do Not Aspire, or Do No Activity)
DNA DNB (Do Not Battle)
DNA DNC (Do Not Create, or Do Nothing Challenging)
DNA DND (Do Not Dream)
DNA DNE (Did Noble Excuses, or Did Not Encourage)

DNA DNF (Did Not Finish, or Did Nothing Fun)
DNA DNG (Did No Gymnastics)
DNA DNH (Did Not Handshake)
DNA DNI (Do Nothing Interesting)
DNA DNJ (Did Nameless Junk)

DNA DNK (Do Not Know)
DNA DNL (Did Not Learn)
DNA DNM (Does Not Mess-up)
DNA DNN (Do Nothing New)
DNA DNO (Disown Noble Ownership)

DNA DNP (Did Not PLAY)
DNA DNQ (Do Nothing Quick, or Quirky)
DNA DNR (Did No Running)
DNA DNS (Do No Skill-training)
DNA DNT (Did No Team-things)

DNA DNU (Did Nothing Uncertain)
DNA DNV (Did Nothing Venturous, or Virtuous)
DNA DNW (Do Nothing Wholeheartedly)
DNA DNX (Do Nightly X-box)
DNA DNY (Do Not Yearn)
DNA DNZ (Did Nothing Zany)


Let's ensure they can play, experiment, battle, dream, aspire, try and fail, fall and recover, yearn and learn, and work and create. They're not little adult athletes, they are the future. So, as our gift...let’s guide them to it with confidence and competence to approach and shape it…

Thursday, October 17, 2013

The smarter starter...

You've realised that to begin, you simply begin.

You've taken stock, and done your homework. You've found inspiration, enlisted support and ensured that success is just out the door...

My 10 Tips to help you start - successfully, speedily and safely:

  1. Take Stock
  2. Do Some Homework
  3. Be Inspired
  4. Make a Decision
  5. Enlist Support
  6. Build-in Success
  7. Some is Better Than None
  8. Find a Coach or Mentor
  9. Hang In There
  10. Sometimes Less is More

You've got out the door, and you've been going for a week or two. Yet, you have a busy few days ahead. Keep the momentum, and remember...

7. Some is Better than None:
  • 5 minutes is better than none - after starting, keep the momentum.
  • after starting you'll find you want to continue, and that you can - go at any time
  • this helps keep the motivation and inspiration - and by keeping your habit or routine - you keep moving forward
  • keep it simple: anyone with a little knowledge can complicate something simple, yet only the wise can simplify something complicated
8. Find a Coach or Mentor, or Training group
  • they add the spice of human support, companionship and inspiration to the bland how-to and when-to stuff
  • someone who's been there and done/doing that - someone who helps and guide others could help you
  • be wary of quick-fixes, secret systems and one-size-fits-all approaches
  • consider face-to-face individual or group coaching, or coaching be remote (online, phone)
  • ask about their experience and qualifications, and their philosophy and principles - if they can't explain them for you to understand, think twice
  • ask to trial a session or two - see how the coach and other runners relate to each other - if in doubt, walk out
Running is often something we do solo, although millions do it. Running with, beside and around others can provide support, motivation and inspiration.

Yet, getting out the door and doing some is better than staying in and doing none.

If the going gets a little tough...


Thursday, August 29, 2013

The Secret to Better Running...

Thirty-two years and 835,000+kms of running, and 25 years of coaching I've learnt a few things.
And, I' still learning; the more you learn the more you realise there is to learn.
I could say I know a thing or two.

I've even learnt a secret or two. Yet do they remain secrets if I tell you? Maybe, maybe not.

There is a secret to becoming a better runner.
It may be a secret you already know.
It may not.


For you, I've compiled over 300 ways to become a better runner. Here...distilled into nine:

  1. better training - better progressions, better variety, better pacing
  2. better 'smarts' - better strategies, better reviews, better habits, better knowledge
  3. better competing (and racing) - better awareness, better strategies, better execution, better fight
  4. better plans - better long-term perspective, better structure, better flexibility, less short-cuts
  5. better movement: better mechanics, better technique, better form
  6. better balance - better life-balance, better balance of all training components, better load & recovery balance
  7. better culture: better awareness, better leadership, less following, better fad-detection
  8. better coaching - better relationship, better communication, better lesson-learning
  9. better self 
Which strikes you the most? Which can you best become better at?

Whichever you choose, there it is -  your secret.   And that's mine, shared with you.

The secret to better running and becoming a better runner is better choices.

But you knew that, right!
Not knowing what you don't know smarts, as does realising that you already know what you wanted to know.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Planning: from Hope to Happening


“Plan your work, then work your plan.”
“Failing to plan is planning to fail.”

You’ve heard them all before – the mantras about the importance of planning. You plan your holidays, plan your budget/s, plan a weekend away, plan a night out, plan a trip to the countryside or the city. You most likely follow plans at work. And, have plans for your kids’ education.

What about your training? And racing? Are they planned?
Maybe you follow a weekly training schedule or routine out of habit, and then “hope” that you race faster. Or, a monthly program rehashed from the internet, a magazine, or a squad coach, again provides your race-day “hope”.

Most recreational runners (triathletes, cyclists) simply want to be fast(er) now. They think that if they train a little further or longer, a little harder, for more days of the week, and take less rest, that they can have those big PB’s, stay ill-health and injury free, have life-balance, and get better from year to year. All in “hope”.

During running Performance Reviews, Program Revisions, and in developing Strategic Performance Plans for individuals, I always ask to see their  (current) training plan.

In some cases, I get a vague outline of a week’s training sessions. Sometimes I see a print-out of a loose schedule or routine. Or, 3-4 week’s of sessions presented in A4 landscape. Beyond going a little further or faster each week, each session is essentially the same. Again, in “hope”.

Sometimes I can tell the software program, book, or squad they’ve got it from. “Thanks, a program. Yet, where’s your plan?”

I often get “Oh, I thought this was a plan?”. Let’s clarify:

A training plan is a bigger-picture guide. It may be a Long Term Athletic Development plan over 6-8 years for a very good junior athlete/runner. It may be an Olympic or quadrennial plan for an elite competitor. It is usually an Annual or Yearly that guides and directs most triathletes toward and through their next competitive season. A triathlete that travels from north to south hemispheres may have two race-season planned into a year. These, along with extended lead-up periods of time to (longer events) of, say, 16, 20, 24 or 26 weeks duration, are usually referred to as macrocycles. Each of these plans are premised upon an aim, training objectives or outcomes, and various (objective) performance goals.

A training program supports the direction of your plan. It commonly, but is not limited to, 3-4 weeks of structured training sessions aimed to support key elements of your performance improvement. The sessions should not be ad hoc, nor should they simply require you to go further or faster in a weekly format. Each program should be reviewed, assessed and revised at it’s end, and the outcomes fed into the structure, content, methods and loading of the next program – yet, still based upon the direction of your plan. Ego interferes here.

A training schedule is a 5-14 day period of time where various training sessions are completed to meet specific outcomes. For most, given the structural demands of modern life – a job, family, study etc – a 7 day schedule is used. Different sessions, methods of training and loading (patterns) are used on different days to develop or maintain particular training outcomes.

A training routine is a training schedule where the same type of session is followed on the same day of the week. For some, it’s the same session from Monday-to-Monday or Tuesday-to-Tuesday and so on with 1 or 2 more reps, a few extra kms, or the same reps a little faster.

A training session is the working and practical component of your schedule. It’s work time. It, and it’s smaller training units, are what over time, should take you from HOPE to HAPPENING.

All that said:
  •  a novice - a newbie - to running or, in particular, triathlons, without much of an endurance fitness background, will get better regardless of what they do – some training is better than none
  • runners and triathletes improve over their first 2-3 years as they accumulate race-experience, and their body adapts to the increased demands of regular training
  • habits are set up over the first few season/years too – some positive, some aren’t. The most common habit that has infiltrated running and triathlon training: “if some is good, more must be better”
  • plans should not be too prescriptive. Providing guidance and direction, they’re structured to ensure you do appropriate types of training and recovery in optimal proportions, at strategic times, for defined periods of time…to ensure improved performance “happens”
  • not all sessions should be strictly defined and have measurable outcomes. Many runners do train for enjoyment, fun and social reasons – don’t lose perspective on these
  • a good plan, program and supporting schedule or routine, has built in flexibility



If you’re serious about getting better and being more competitive - plan your training, then train to your plan. Enjoy your training and racing more, and minimize burnout, boredom, ill-health and injury – plan your training, then train to your plan. Planning training and training to their plan/s – is bread and butter for true competitors and the elite. They make it “happen”.


Train smart. Train with purpose, and enjoyment. Plan. Training to ensure you don’t race in hope, train to ensure you improve and the racing will take care of it self. Make it happen