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By Phil Argent
The podcast currently has 137 episodes available.
Lets say I made a school boy error, i thought I’d go and do some cross training and thought I’d except an invite to play 5 aside football.
That was a silly idea.
I pulled a hamstring. Luckily not to bad, I think I know exactly the movement that caused it, it was a powerful twist and turn to change direction.
Made me think, how good is it the idea to make a powerful twist and turn and change in direction in anything?
It’s always going to lead to an outcome you’re not expecting.
Perhaps If I’d given it more thought, made sure I’d given myself a better warm-up, knowing that the movements I was about to go through were not common to my fitness programs, perhaps I’d have either not attempted those moves or done them with less force.
Luckily I’ve had a strain before, I hope I know how to help it recover fast, but it will require putting my feet up for a few days, which isn’t a bad thing.
It’s going to give me time to reflect, be grateful for what I’ve achieved this year and perhaps I’ll reset for something new to get started when the leg is back tp full power.
Here’s today’s podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/137-feet-up-thinking
What about your fitness and rowing, are you ready to get started?
So, that’s the Saturday sessions done.
During todays sessions which were hard effort, threshold training, I was chatting about not giving in to the desire to stop.
It reminded me of a head race where our crew was absolutely flying, the effort going down was huge, and it was relentless, so much so that I knew at the half way point that I wanted to jump out of the boat, but you can’t can you.
I learnt on that day that the pain, adrenaline, and joy at the end of the row was addictive.
Here’s today’s podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/135-jumping-out-of-the-boat
What about your fitness and rowing, are you ready to get started?
Ok, let’s be honest from time to time getting fit is going to be hard work.
But you have to stay in the game to win right?
If there is one thing that I’ve seen time and time again it’s that constancy pays off.
Here’s the link to the podcast with Dan Carter I talk about in the podcast:
https://www.thehighperformancepodcast.com/podcast/dancarter
Here’s today’s podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/134-staying-in-the-game
What about your fitness and rowing, are you ready to get started?
Before you do a training session you think about what you’re going to do.
Before you take part in a race of any description you’ll think about the outcome.
You think.
You talk to yourself.
Sometimes you know exactly what the plan is, what the race will be like and what the outcome will be, but sometimes you won’t.
When you doubt how things are going to go, that voice that talks to you, talks a lot, sends in the wrong messages, creates the wrong processing, keeps you from performing what you really want to do, have trained to do and know you can do.
That voice is the chimp.
The chimpanzee is our primal behaviour, it’s the behaviour we have had as a human forever, it is the behaviour that keeps us alive, keeps us safe, limits risk, it processes situations fast, and highjacks our potential if not controlled.
We can learn to maximise our potential.
A book I’ve read on many occasions by Steve Peters, The Chimp Paradox which has sold over 1.4 million copies since it was first published in 2012 talks all about the chimp and how we need to manage it to perform to the best of our abilities.
Here’s today’s podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/133-chimp-paradox
What about your fitness and rowing, are you ready to get started?
Why we row?
It’s a question I often think about.
Why I row is simple, it’s good for my mind, my body and my mental health.
I think when I row, whether that be indoor on a rowing machine or on the water, it settles me.
It does this through the effort I need to put in to not only manage my body movements but it’s all about me “teaching” myself.
I get a sense of achievement when a session goes well.
Harry Parker who was the long standing heavy weight rowing coach at Harvard University talks openly about what he did for over 50 years in a video link is below.
I think he narrates what he sees as his job, and what he sees it doing for others.
You can forget the Harvard elite university link, best focus on Harry and what he says, a truly extraordinary man for how modestly he talk about simplicity, a simplicity that he has learned to teach over 50 years!
https://youtu.be/k5lXDcCdM8E
Here’s today’s podcast:
What about your fitness and rowing, are you ready to get started?
I haven’t told you yet but I have a day job and Get Fit To Row is my passion and side hustle, we all need one right?
Today the day job took me to an investors meeting and wasn’t that fun, it went as well as can be expected.
I needed to be able to clearly communicate “the plan”.
I needed to be well prepared for anything that could happen or be asked of me.
I needed to be able to visualise what I wanted to happen.
I needed to make it happen.
I needed to make sure others came along with me.
I needed to be patience.
I needed to play as a team but act as a leader.
I couldn't win without encouraging all of us to want to win.
I had to find a pace, set a rhythm and have a finish.
Most of all I needed to be 100% focused throughout.
Here’s today’s podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/131-im-focused-throughout
What about your fitness and rowing, are you ready to get started?
Here’s the thing, when I do long rowing machine sessions, I am quite often reminded that my hamstrings are short and need a stretch, and I should know better.
There are two ways I often get to know that they are, and both are uncompromisingly bloody obvious very quickly in the session.
One way is I get a small friction blister on my bum cheek by my coccyx bone around the area of my sacrum, and the other is I get a dull pain in my L3, L4, L5 joints in my lumbar spine.
And all it says to me is “you need to do some more work on stretching your hamstring out” and also “make sure to get some movement into the hip flexors”.
I should know better, maybe I should have stretched more after the long walk with Oban my dog!
Here’s todays podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/130-l3-l4-l5-and-that-blister
What about your fitness and rowing, are you ready to get started?
Have you taken the time to listen to a podcast by the BBC called 13 minutes to the moon?
The podcast goes through the last 13 minutes before the first man on the moon.
It’s extraordinary to listen to, to listen to the level of detail that went into making this event happen. It’s also fascinating listening to all of the subplots around the space race in the ’60s.
How did we get a man on the moon back then with the technology that was at hand is just incredible.
Now, to put this podcast episode into context, I’ve started doing 50-minute UT2 sessions and the 13 minutes to the moon podcast is just around 50mins long.
So I can listen to the podcasts, whilst doing my 50 mins.
I call that a win-win!
Here’s today’s podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/129-50-minutes-to-the-moon
#technology #podcast #event #rowing #rowingtheatlantic
Here’s the thing, I keep talking about the 8 x 500m session like it's my brand new toy.
I love it.
In podcast 110 I talked about self-belief being a superpower, it’s a superpower everyone can have.
But what I’m learning is most people I train need to be introduced to the idea of a superpower being inside them, then learning to find that superpower and then being able to harness it.
If you do an 8 x 500m session with me, you’ll learn to find it.
Here’s today’s podcast:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/8x500m-there-is-no-hiding
And a link to episode 110:
https://www.getfittorow.com/get-fit-to-row-podcast/110-self-belief-is-a-superpower
The podcast currently has 137 episodes available.