I was distracted from mentioning this earlier, but Student Bloggers again referenced a blog post I wrote. Here's a snippet:
American Independence Day is coming up soon, but we gotta give it up to our neighbors to the north on this July 1st, Canada Day. [Geoff at Mount Allison]gives us some video reflection on the US-Canadian relationship on this day and [GR-E.G] may be American, but is sending her love as well.
Another song...I could be sharing one of the thousands of songs I was given to listen to this summer...but this one I found by chance (humm...what doesn't happen except by chance?) really stands out. Lyrics included below for your convenience. Enjoy.
Silversun Pickups - Lazy Eye
I've been waiting I've been waiting for this moment all my life But it's not quite right
And this 'real' It's impossible if possible At who's blind word So clear but so unheard
I've been waiting I've been waiting for this silence all night long It's just a matter of time
To appear sad With the same 'ol decent lazy eye Fixed to rest on you Aim free and so untrue
Everyone's so intimately rearranged Everyone's so focused clearly with such shine
Everyone's so intimately rearranged Everyone's so focused clearly with such shine
Locked and loaded Still the same 'ol decent lazy eye Straight through your gaze That's why I said I relate I said we relate It's so fun to relate
It's the room, the sun, and the sky The room, the sun, and the sky
I've been waiting I've been waiting for this moment...
Edit: Apparently people still use myspace and this video is available there as well.
Apparently more than me, myself and I look at this blog. My video of Pete Kilpatrick Band at Old Port Festival was apparently good enough to be highlighted by authentik artists, Pete Kilpatrick Band's record label and posted about on their facebook fan page. Interesting how that worked out, eh?
Video of Pete Kilpatrick Band at Old Port Festival posted July 6, 2009 by Bob Video of Pete Kilpatrick Band’s recent performance at Portland, Maine’s 36th Annual Old Port Festival has been posted. View photos and a short clip of the band’s performance here.
This summer I've been working on losing all the weight I gain at Mount Allison my first year and getting back in shape. I've been eating right and exercising at home since the beginning of the summer but it wasn't enough. With plenty of encouragement from a friend (something along the lines of "Don't be lazy, join a gym") I decided to start really working out. I first went to the gym on June 24th to get used to the equipment but didn't really start working out seriously until the following week...but just for the sake of having a nice round number let's start from June 25th (the first picture day) and count ten weeks until September 3rd (two days before I leave). Assuming I look presentable by the end of this I may be posting the changes of the next nine weeks in September.
I was given pretty good advice on what I should do in order, but needed a bit more guidance on how to do things safely...and then I found Vic Magary's GymJunkies.com. I don't normally endorse anything on here...but gymjukies had exactly what I needed. How to do simple strength training exercises safely and effectively. I've decided on focusing on the Bench Press, Pullup, Squat, and Lunge and they were clearly explained, photographed, and recorded for display on gymjunkies.com:
Bench Press:
Proper Bench Press Form
To perform the Bench Press...
Lay on the bench and make sure the bar is at proper height. A bar that is too high above the bench will make it hard to rack which is very unsafe and could lead to serious injury.
Put your back on the bench and feet on the ground. Start with your arms about 25 inches apart or so. The hand placement will vary, just find something that is comfortable. Make sure to grip the bar with your thumb around the bar. Don't use a thumbless grip.
Bring the bar out and slowly lower it to your chest at about nipple height.
Once it touches your chest, push back up making sure to keep your butt on the bench and your feet on the floor. Lock your arms all the way out at the top.
Common Bench Press Mistakes
Bringing your feet off the floor - Your feet should stay on the floor at all times when bench pressing. This is usually a common mistake when you are lifting a weight that is very heavy for you.
Bringing your butt off the bench - This is a major trap that many people fall into when benching. When you arch your back, your butt comes off the bench and you are putting a lot of excess stress on your body that can lead to injury.
Short range of motion - Make sure you are going all the way down to your chest and pushing the bar all the way up. Shorting the range of motion is keeping you from getting the full benefit of the lift!
Grip the bar with a palms facing out grip, or a palms facing you grip. Either one works...
Extend your arms all the way, and hang from the bar
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Pull your body up, and make sure your chin goes above the bar
Slowly drop back down to a hanging position with your arms fully extended (don't cheat!)
Common Pull Up Mistakes
Full range of motion - This is the most common problem people have with the pullup. Make sure you go all the way down, and all the way up when you do a pullup. Don't short the range of motion at the bottom and hold yourself part of the way up. If you do, you're only cheating yourself of the full benefits of the exercise.
Muscles used when doing Pull Ups
Latissimus dorsi
Teres major
Rhomboids
Trapezius
How to make a pull up harder
If a pull up is relatively easy for you and you can do 12 or more in one try, it's worth it to increase the difficulty of your pullups to increase your strength gains. There are a few ways to increase the difficulty of your pullup...
Wear a weighted vest (or bookbag) - A weighted vest is a great choice, as you can switch the weights in and out very easily. The only downside to this is weighted vests are slightly expensive (usually $100+). A good substitute is to use a good book bag and add weight plates to it.
Wear a weight belt and hang weights - Some gyms will supply these belts. If they do, they will come with a chain hanging from them. Just attach weight plates to the chain as needed.
Add resistance with bands - Attaching a band to the squat rack, and putting it behind your neck is a great way to add resistance to your pull ups.
Get underneath the bar and place the bar across the top of your posterior deltoids. Your arms should be out and gripping the bar about 5-7 inches outside your shoulder. The bar should be trapped between your hands and your delts. Your wrists should not be underneath the bar supporting the weight.
Unrack the bar from the power rack and take a step back (always unrack and step backward, never unrack the bar and walk forward). Some readers have noted that they think our picture is telling people to unrack the bar and then spin their body 180 degrees. This is not what we are recommending. Its very dangerous to try and spin with a bar on your shoulder (our pics are setup like this to provide the best pics for you)
Start with your feet about shoulder width apart and angled out about 30-45 degrees
Your butt should be slightly out, your eyes should be facing forward. Squat down, making sure to not round your back or bend over too far at the waist. For a full squat your hip crease (where your legs attach to your hip) should drop below the top of your knees.
Make sure your knees track your toes. This means your knees should be on the same path as the toes (not bending in, or bending way outside)
When you get to the bottom, you're going to want to drive back up with your hips. This is very important! The hip drive is where all of your power will come from. A great tip I picked up from Mark Rippetoe is to think of someone pushing on the lower part of your spine. When someone is pushing on this part, your goal should be to push that hand up by driving your hips upward.
Continue to drive up and return to the standing position with your body fully erect.
Common Barbell Squat Mistakes
Knees not tracking the toes - Make sure that your knees follow the same alignment that your toes are positioned in. Don't bend your knees to the inside.
Leaning over at the waist - Many people perform their squats like a "Good Morning". Do not bend over at the waist and allow your back to absorb all the weight. This is very dangerous and can lead to a serious injury. Keep your back tight and straight with your chest out and shoulders back.
Putting your weight on your toes - The squat should be performed with most of your weight balanced and towards the heels. Putting weight on your toes, will put added stress on your knees which can lead to injury.
To perform the lunge, start with a barbell on your shoulders with your feet about hip width apart. Your shoulders should be back, your chest should be out and your eyes should be looking directly ahead of you.
Take a large step with your left leg to start, and make sure your left shin is almost perpendicular to the ground.
The trail leg (right leg) should stretch out and your knee should barely touch the ground.
Return to the standing position by driving through the heel of your lead foot (left foot) and pushing yourself back to a standing position with your feet hip width.
Common Lunge Mistakes
Bending over at the waist - Your upperbody should stay straight throughout the whole movement. The most common mistake with this is bending over at the waist and rounding the back. Keep your back straight and your eyes forward. This is prevented by sticking the chest out and throwing the shoulders back.
Taking a short step - A short step places a lot of added pressure on the knee, and does not fully work your butt like a full step lunge does.
Full range of motion - Make sure you are stepping all the way forward and that your trailing knee is touching the ground or almost touching the ground.
It is July 5th and I spent part of the day enjoying the sun and I manged to finish reading Douglas Coupland's Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture which I borrowed from the library months ago. It was great novel...I really ought to read more this summer.
Anyway I was on the porch looking around and I noticed all the American flags I could see...and realized this could be any town...not that Boston could be Anytown, USA but the area I live by, the homes with the small fences and the American flags out front and the small yard out back could be placed in towns across the country and not be all that out of place.
Maybe I was thinking that way because I spent last night at a traditional 4th of July Celebration in Newton, Massachusetts. Here's a few pictures:
Judging from my earlier post partially about obesity you can't spell American without fried dough. Although some may say it's no longer cool...this 4th of July really was one of those idyllic family moments.
And what we waited all night to see (better than expected):
...hopefully I'll truly celebrate Canada Day next year.
This weekend was one of sleeping in...and having concerns (about work, travel, friends, family) but it felt like...hey...all of that can wait. I've gone five days without shaving...something I can't do at least for another 61 days. It's the 'calm before the storm' I suppose.
Tomorrow is the beginning...the final run up to Berklee's 5-Week Performance Program. We are preparing for 1000+ students to arrive, check in, and want to be entertained.
It is the middle: chronologically it is just over the half way point of the time I've had off from Mount Allison and it feels as thought it's about halfway in terms of me physically getting back in shape.
It is also the beginning of the end-I know what I'm doing at work by now...and things are getting down to 'crunch-time' this week and again in August when waves of young adults arrive on campus.
Near the beginning of this summer (the end of April for me) this was little that needed to be done...and as I moved to Boston about ten days before I moved to Mount Allison I did not know anybody in the city. But now this solitude gives me the freedom to talk to those that I want to, to not have to decide between people; to have a break from much of the drama that accompanies college life. It's been slow at times but the next nine weeks won't be.
I'll be working overtime, going to New York City alone (maybe not ideal to some...but I feel it's great to get away from the familiar and be on your own...and it's New York City...I'm probably not going to have the time/money/proximity to see it any other time. I'll probably reread The Catcher in the Rye), maybe spending a weekend with friends on vacation at 6-Flags, and finally getting re-certified in CPR among other things.
It feels like it's getting closer to the end because almost all of my 'free time' has been scheduled and filled. It reminds me of early November and early March (at least at Mount Allison) when you know what you have for the rest of the year-what final essays you have to write, and which when your final exams are (for me: fall orientation). Eight weeks from Saturday morning is still a ways off but it'll go by more quickly than the last eight weeks have.
About a month ago I took a trip to visit up a friend in Portland, Maine and we spent a little at the Old Port Festival...a family-friendly type one day festival. There was some fairly good music and it was nice to see a bit more of what there is in New England besides Boston. Sorry it's a bit late...a month turnaroud just shows you how busy things are here. Well it's not much but here it is:
At the docks.
Pete Kilpatrick Band
Playing Hotel California...realy authentic... straight "from the Andes"
A couple seemingly unrelated things I'd like to comment on...first of all: people who read this blog. Since I began keeping track on October 21, 2008 with Google Analytics this blog had had 7,014 visits from 90 countries/territories (including places as far removed from the content of this blog as Hong Kong, Trinidad and Tobago, Mauritius, Ghana, and Iran (must have been before Iran tried shutting down internet access)) but not a single visit from the Great State of Wyoming. I'd been looking as maps like those below and just wondering how I could have attracted people from eastern Europe to visit my blog but not any from a state in the western United States.
The second topic is that of obesity...I haven't noticed nearly as many overweight and obese people in Massachusetts than I did in Illinois...and was curious enough to look up the statistics and it turns out that for the 2008 rankings, Massachusetts is the 48th fattest state in the union while Illinois is 27th. Wyoming was 33rd, with 1 in 4 Wyomingites (yeah...seriously Wyomingites...but that's better than Haligonians from Halifax) being obese. Maybe that's something that will get their attention.
CASPER, Wyo. (AP) - A new report says nearly 1 in 4 Wyoming adults are obese.
That's about the same rate as in last year's report by the Trust for America's Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
The obesity rate among Wyoming children also has held steady.
The sixth annual report, "F is for Fat: How Obesity Policies are Failing America," showed obesity on the rise in 23 states. No states had significant decreases in obesity.
The report shows Wyoming does well in preventing overweight youth. Wyoming has the fifth-lowest rate of youth who are overweight or obese.
Living in the U.S. current most people here haven't heard much about Canada since...well this:
on this the 142nd anniversary of the Union of Canada (roughly modern day Ontario and Quebec), Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick I'll give you one better:
Times have changed, our kids are geting worse. They won't obey their parents: they just wanna fart and curse! Should we blame the government, or blame society? Or should we blame the images on TV?
NO! Blame Canada! Blame Canada! With all their beady little eyes And flappin heads so full of lies Blame Canada! Blame Canada! We need to form as full assault, it's Canada's fault
Don't blame me for my son Stan, He saw that darn cartoon and now he's off to join the Klan! and my boy Eric once had my picture on his shelf, but now when I see him, he tells me to (expletive) myself
Well Blame Canada, Blame Canada It seems that everything's gone wrong Since Canada came along Everyone: Blame Canada Blame Canada Some Guy: They're not even a real country anyway Ms. McCormick: My son could've been a doctor or a lawyer it's true Instead he burned up like a piggy on a barbecue Everyone: Should we blame the matches? Should we blame the fire? Or the doctors who allowed him to expire? Sheila: Heck no! Everyone: Blame Canada Blame Canada All their hockey hubbabaloo And that (expletive) Anne Murray too Everyone: Blame Canada Shame on Canada
For The smut we must stop The trash we must smash the Laughter and fun must all be undone We must blame them and cause a fuss Before someone thinks of blaming us
This is a personal weblog. The opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily those of Mount Allison University. For official University policy visit their website.