Thursday, June 12, 2008

The RESULTS!!!!

It's been a long, hard road full of highs, lows and everything in between. The original group of 12 challengers was slowly wittled to a hardcore group of six steadfast health and fitness enthusiasts. Each person endured their own hardships, but despite varying downfalls, still managed to pick themselves up and start anew each day. For that, the Springtime Showdown Challengers deserve a standing ovation.





Now, for the moment you've all been waiting for . . . the results of the final challenge!!!



















Body Fat: 38%
Arm: 13", 04cm
Shoulders: 46'
Chest: 42", 01cm
Waist: 35", 06cm
Navel: 40", 13cm
Hips/Butt: 46", 14cm
Thigh: 25", 15cm
Calf: 15", 14cm

BEFORE/ AFTER
Push up: 13/ 26
Run: 14:09/ 12:27
Pull up: 6(inverted rows)/ 1(pullup)
















BEFORE /AFTER

Body fat: 22% /20%

Arm: 9"12cm /9”12cm

Shoulders: 40"2cm /38”10cm

Chest: 34"9cm /36”

Waist: 26"12cm /27”

Navel: 27"15cm /26”10cm

Hips/Butt: 38"4cm /38”

Thigh: 20"4cm /20” 01cm

Calf: 14"2cm /14”02cm

Push-up: 42 /75


Pull-up: 1 /8

Mile Run: 10:00/ 6:04

















BEFORE/ AFTER
Body fat: 14% /13.5%

Arm: 12" 7cm /12”13cm

Shoulders: 46" /46”02cm

Chest: 38" 4cm/ 38”09cm

Waist: 33" /32”07cm

Navel: 32" 13cm /32”11cm

Hips/Butt: 38" 4cm /38”04cm

Thigh: 20" 8cm /21”01cm

Calf: 14" 8cm /14”06cm

Push-up: 68 /90

Pull-up: 16 /20

Mile Run: 6:53 /7:47
















BEFORE /AFTER

Body fat: 31% /28%

Arm: 10" 8cm /10” 15cm

Shoulders: 38" 8cm /39” 06cm

Chest: 36" 13cm /36” 09cm

Waist: 29" 4cm/ 28” 14cm

Navel: 33" 14cm/ 32” 02cm

Hips/Butt: 36" 12cm /37” 06cm

Thigh: 18" 14cm /17” 12cm

Calf: 12" 14cm /12” 10cm

Push-up: 21 /47

Pull-up: 1 /1

Mile Run: 10:19/ 9:07

















BEFORE/ AFTER
Body fat: 27% /24%

Arm: 13" /12” 12cm

Shoulders: 47" 12cm /48” 12cm

Chest: 42" /41” 03cm

Waist: 37"/ 35” 02cm

Navel: 39" /39”

Hips/Butt: 43" 6cm /43” 15cm

Thigh: 22" 1cm /21” 07cm

Calf: 15" 8cm /15” 12cm

Push-up: 42/ 47

Pull-up: 4 /5

Mile Run: 8:05 /7:37


















BEFORE/ AFTER
Body fat: 7.5%/ 7.4&
Arm: 12"8 /12”04cm
Shoulder: 45"6cm /44”09cm
Chest: 39"10cm /37”01cm
Waist: 32"1cm /30”11cm
Navel: 34"4cm /32”04cm
Hips/Butt: 37"9cm /36”01cm
Thigh: 21" /20”
Calf: 14" /13”1cm
Push-up: 50 /53
Pull-up: 20 /22
Mile Run: 6:56 /6:48

AND THE WINNER IS . . .

ANDREA who scored a whopping 479 points!! Congratulations, Andrea. Your hard work and determination definitely paid off. You are the winner of the Visa gift card. Now go out and buy yourself a new wardrobe to go with that new and improved body!

Here's how the rest stacked up:

Ryan: 458

Zakiya: 339

Rafa: 274

Marcela: 271

Luke: 63 (to be fair, Luke's journal was stolen and he wasn't able to tally his points from it. I'm sure he would have loads of points if it hadn't been for those lousy thieves!)

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

My Community Challenge... Rafa

For my community challenge, I decided to tap into a valuable resource: my activist friends. And one came through for me at the very last minute.

This year, The San Diego Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Community Center is holding a special event titled "Happy Birthday Frida: Art! Life! Tequila!" which will benefit the The Center's Latino/a Services Program.

I donated 6 hours of professional time to this event by designing 10 Frida magnets which they will be able to sell at this event and retain all profits. In addition, I will be offering my services for future events at the Center.

Created in 2004, the mission of Latino/a Services is to provide a safe, welcoming and culturally and linguistically appropriate space that allows our community members to accept and embrace all of who they are, including their culture, traditions, language, spirituality and sexual and gender identities. Latino/a Services offers a wide variety of services, including the following:
  • Drop-in center with culturally- and linguistically-appropriate resources
  • Referrals to culturally proficient agencies, providers and services
  • HIV/STD prevention and education
  • Health education and referrals to primary medical care
  • Support and discussion groups
  • Outreach to Latino/a LGBT community
  • Trainings for service providers on basic Latino/a LGBT and HIV issues
  • Case management and prevention case management
  • Social activities and events
  • Home and hospital visits
  • Family, individual and crisis interventions
  • Translation of documents
  • Speakers for community agencies, universities, and other service providers
  • Domestic violence referrals
For more information on the Frida event, please visit
http://www.thecentersd.org/calendar.php

My Points to date

Journal: 54
Water Intake: 74
Meditation: 26
Veggies/Fruits: 49
Exercise: 60
Alcohol: -56

Push-ups: 7
Pull-ups: 1
Mile Run: 3
Body Fat: Need my numbers

TOTAL SO FAR: 221 (This number is tentative.)

Last Words

Well, I'd like to say that I finished off this challenge feeling wildly successful. Switch out the "w" for an "m" and you'd have a more accurate interpretation of my experience. First, let's start with the positives:
Upping my fruit and veg intake was easy, peasy, and a very much enjoyable aspect of this challenge. I seemed to be able to work lots of good, healthy grub into my diet with little hesitation. I also noticed a bit of a difference and *gasp* dropped a few pounds as a result. Another benefit was the consistent vigilance regarding eating habits and other behaviors. The first month and a half proved successful as overall alcohol intake took a nosedive, however that massive C-37 caught wind and powered full steam ahead for the rest of the challenge. This is not something I'm happy about and I must take a better look at these behaviors. It is also interesting to note that I kicked ass on the mid-challenge update. My fitness capacity soared and I blew away my baseline results. At the end of the challenge I dopped below the mid-challenge results. Is there a parallel between drinking and smoking and diminished fitness capacity? It seems so. If anything, this challenge has taught me that such behaviors do have an impact on health and I need to work on improving my willpower in order to be in tip top shape.

I wasn't able to participate in any community service activity, even though it was my idea to add it to the challenge. I gave it a lot of thought and only realized what I'd like to do when it was too late. I do plan to regularly volunteer my time at an animal shelter in town; however I don't want to be a part of euthinization. If anyone knows of any shelters that don't kill perfectly healthy animals, let me know.

I suppose this is all I've got for now. I plan to work hard on maintaining each aspect of this challenge as I want to live as healthy a life as possible. I am honestly tired of my fitness pursuits being derailed by unhealthy, drunken Saturday nights.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Sometimes its the Thought That Counts - Zakiya

For my community improvement part of the challenge, my idea was to, with cooperation of the International Socialist Organization (I'm a member), silk screen T-shirts that say "Marriage is a Civil Right: Keep it Legal California" and give half the money we make from the shirts to an grassroots organization working on defeating any crazy propositions on the November ballot. In addition, during the T-shirt making event--this Sunday 6/15 at my house--we'd have a fundraiser for said organization. This would be part of an ongoing project to draw activists together between now and November (and hopefully beyond) and maybe even one day rebuild the  gay rights movement. Only one problem: I thought of it yesterday. 

So while 6 days is not quite enough time to build for a fundraiser, ISO members will be at my house this Sunday to make Marriage Equality T-shirts (designed by me!). I haven't yet identified the group that would receive the money though I've made a quite few phone calls. (The Center Advocacy Project is a possibility and someone from there will likely come speak at one of our public meetings in July.)

This doesn't necessarily fit the criteria that Ryan laid out since I've been a member of the ISO for awhile, but it was this challenge that gave me the idea for splitting the T-shirt money and having a fundraiser (which may actually still happen, only later) and taking on the unofficial role as point person on the issue for the ISO. I decided on that last part of few weeks ago, but in actuality I feel like I can't take too much credit since we work collectively and quite a few people in the organization felt this was an issue we should devote time and resources to. I actually think this approach--working towards a long term goal of building connections between gay rights activists and sympathizers--is more in the spirit of the challenge anyway. Just like a good work out routine, I won't see results overnight, but breaking down the legal barriers to equality is a goal worth striving for.

And since I'm taking a two-week break from compulsively calculating calorie, water, fruit, and alcohol intake, y'all feel free to stop by Sunday for some beers. 

I have to go make a stencil now. I'll blog about the other parts of the challenge tomorrow.

Friday, June 6, 2008

The End...

This is the end, my only friend, the end... Ok, I admit I dig The Doors.

SO, we are now nearing the finish line of the 12-week health, fitness and wellness challenge. I want to commend all of the remaining participants for your steadfast determination, and for not giving in when things got a little tough. Your resolve proves that you have a vested interest in your health, and I only hope that you take some of these challenges and continue to integrate them into your lives.

It's been a bumpy ride for most of us. I've got loads of scrapes and bruises from repeatedly falling off the wagon. But, you can either lie on the ground whimpering and whining, or stand up, dust yourself off and continue to trudge forward. As Thomas Edison once said: "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that don't work." We all have setbacks, challenges and roadblocks, but nothing should ever be considered a failure. Each day is a new chance to get back on track and find a new way to overcome obstacles.

I recently received an e-mail from the CEO of my company that I think pertains to this challenge. It's somewhat lengthly, but definitely worth the read. I will leave you with these words and I hope to see you Saturday at our FINAL CHALLENGE (see Rafa's post for the details).

In the past two weeks I have traveled from Florida to the Rocky Mountains and back to California. I have spoken to nearly every age group, gender, and color of American, literally from 18-80. What I heard was anger. Anger at, well, almost everything that is so obviously broken. But the most pervasive feeling expressed was that we are angry because we are scared. And the most heartfelt question people asked is what can I do to create a personal oasis in a world that seems to be becoming a desert? What can I do to create personal, financial, emotional, mental and spiritual sustainability even if the outer world is convulsing with financial bankruptcy, emotional drama, mental instability, and spiritual confusion? This is the real question for all of us all the time. As one 80-year put it, “Every generation has its great challenge; welcome to yours.” From a perspective of someone who’s lived through pre-antibiotic healthcare, a great depression, a world war, civil rights, riots, and the birth of Rock ‘n Roll, that statement is code for. “Quit whining and take care of yourself.”

That very night I found myself reading a great new book, The Art of Learning, by Josh Weitzkin who quotes a powerful proverb that fits today’s challenges. Life is a long road of thorns in which we are confronted with three options: 1) we can walk the road barefoot and bloody, 2) we can sit down, weep and wait for someone to pave it, or 3) we can make our own sandals.There have always been awful challenges. Plagues, earthquakes, wars, famines, and droughts. Job loss, divorce, death, and depression. Life’s question is “Are we willing to make sandals?” There are many ways to make them. One truism I have discovered in coaching others for three decades is that often a 5% change in our life will result in a 100% change in how we feel. Even though sandals only cover the “souls” of our feet, our entire body and mind rejoice at being relieved of the pain from the thorns of our life. Here is some “leather”—tough and strong ideas that may be of value.

1. Be physically strong. Our body is our greatest ally in making us resilient. We need to regularly get eight hours of sleep. We need to eat healthy, non-manufactured food. We should try to never go hungry and never be full. We need to train like athletes, get our heart rates up, lift some weights and walk with our back straight. If we are fit, our thoughts will be creative and our actions more collaborative. That’s the brain science according to Dr. Jim Loehr (The Power of Full Engagement).

2. We need to be emotionally centered. We need to elevate our moods by doing positive things we deeply enjoy. Activities of sport, art or learning that capture our full attention and help us grow. We need to do such things at least every other day.

3. We need to be fully present in relationships with people we trust. Refuse to take love for granted. Listen with your eyes and soul. Turn off everything else. The T. V., blackberry, and the noise of your inner chatter and really be with those whom you love.

4. Seek spiritual growth. Research tells us the happiest people in the world meditate 20 minutes a day. Join them. Help strangers and read what inspires you. Be open-minded. Inclusive. Love with your whole soul.

5. Regain your perspective. Take a news fast. No radio, newspapers, T. V., Internet, or magazine news for a week. Pretend you’re on an island in Fiji. Listen to music that soothes you.

6. Be an expert. If we are going to give our gift, we simply must be great at something we value. Educators say it takes ten years to become a true expert. And real experts are constantly learning because they love what they are doing. It’s not work. And when you fuse your personality with your expert knowledge or skill, you’ll be one of a kind. Your expertise will be work that you love doing.

7. Travel light. Get out of debt. Remember, there is nothing you can buy that is worth more than peace of mind. Nothing.

8. Commute and drive less. Bargain for one or two days of telecommuting. Combine trips. Nearly all of us can drive 25% less, which will increase our quality of life.

9. Be strong and be flexible. There are very happy people living under almost all circumstances. Change what you can and see the advantage in what you cannot.

10. Don’t take the external parts of life too seriously. The purpose of this amusement park called life is to love deeply, learn without stopping and develop inner character that brings honor to your children.If you’ve made some changes that have improved your quality of life, tell us about them. We need to share our “best practices” of life.

- Will MarreFounder, American Dream Project

Alrighty, folks. I hope you are well. Here's to everyone's success!!!

-Ryan

Thursday, June 5, 2008

How to figure out your points

Please use this point system to figure out your total points. Then, email or blog your total points by Wed, June 11.

JOURNAL
Give yourself 1 point per day if filled out completely. (Max 84 pts.)

WATER INTAKE
Give yourself 1 point per day. (Max 84 pts.)

MEDITATION
Give yourself 1 point per 10 Min. completed (No maximum)

VEGGIES/FRUITS
Give yourself 1 point per day. (Max 84 pts.)

EXERCISE
Give yourself 1 point for each hour-long exercise session; not to exceed 5 each week (Max 60 pts)

ALCOHOL
Give yourself points for staying below your goal of 7 alcoholic drinks per week (male) or 4
(female). Lose points for going over. No points for hitting your goal.

PUSHUPS
Give yourself 1 point per push-up above baseline.

PULL-UPS
Give yourself 1 point per pull-up above baseline.

1 MILE RUN
Give yourself 1 point per 10 seconds under original time.

BODY FAT
Give yourself 1 point per percentage improvement. We will be giving body fat measurements on Saturday, June 7, at 11:30 at Mission Bay Park. Please plan on attending.


ADDITIONAL POINTS TO BE AWARDED BY INDEPENDENT JUDGES
1. Overall improvement based on before/after pictures. After-pictures will be taken at Mission Bay Park this Saturday
, June 7, at 11:30am. Each participant will be awarded points. First place: 35; 2nd: 30; 3rd: 25; 4th: 20; 5th: 15; 6th: 10.

2. Community service points. Please email or blog your Inspire the Community challenge. Write a brief description on what you were able to accomplish. Winner will receive 25 points.

FINAL POINTS AND WINNER ANNOUNCEMENT
Final point totals and the winner of the pool will be posted on the blog once all points are submitted by each individual and judges come to a decision on Overall Improvement pictures and the Inspire the Community Challenge.