Friday, 8 February 2013

An all-round good training

I decided that those smoothies I came up with were worth doing, and so, I now try to keep some fruit at home, some frozen berries and also canned fruit. It is a good thing to be able to get something so filling in the stomach right after training, and the mix of ingredients once again gives relief from muscle soreness. Thus I make a new smoothie every time I go to Kali Sikaran practice, and have a sandwich after every iaido practice. It seems to be working out rather well, so far.

We all train for different reasons. One of mine is, very clearly, that it makes my body stronger, which I definitely approve of. For various reasons. Once, I worked hard at it because if I was to be superior to my tormentors in school not just in mind, but also in body, well, I'd have to work for it hadn't I. So I did. Then my knees got in the way until I discovered iaido, and...
It occurred to me many years ago by now, how much better I feel after iaido, and it has at times been the only thing that kept me going. I get edgy and skittish if I am unable to go to practice or train something. It is oh so easy to just sit still and try to fill my mind with something, to make it not go haywire or hurt. But practice, oh, once I get into the swing of it, there is no thing as good for clearing the mind and giving me the strength to go on, as training!

Iaido is particularily good for cleansing the mind. Kali Sikaran too, it seems, has the effect to clear my mind and calm me down somewhat. It is social in a wholly different way from iaido, and I seem to crave that. We may hit, punch and kick at eachother, but it is always done with respect and in the interest of mutual benefit. And I get to use my muscles to the very end of their strength - and that, often, is just what I need. With the way the public transport runs now, I also have about half an hour extra after training has ended, and I use it for extra exercises and stretching, and some socialising, and perhaps a bit accidental extra practice.
Yesterday I found a new nice tool for training - I think it is called the "t-rex", and the basic idea is two handholds on one string each, and then there's all manner of things one can do with those. The core-strengthening exercises were particularly brutal, and therefore, I must of course feel the urge to get one myself. My shoulders, too, had a nice time of being savaged and thus strengthened. I do appreciate meeting others who train, and especially martial arts. One can always share and learn from eachother!

To me, iaido and Kali Sikaran complement eachother in just the perfect way for me. I am overjoyed at the snow outside, and will definitely be exploring the area behind the house to see if I can find some nice fields to make tracks along, now that it's stopped being all thawy and icky again. I cannot run, as the way they keep the roads here... argh. Honestly, making them all spongy and sploshy, instead of letting them get hard and fast, so that one can run properly! But I can run in the apartment - yes, indeed, I discovered this after I returned after the holidays. It's not a big apartment, but if Nelson Mandela could run two kilometres every day in his tiny cell, then so can I in my apartment... All right, so I do not run every day, but the point is that I can, and I do, just to assuage my burning desire to run outside.

I like a good overall training. I love "finding new muscles", so to speak, and to learn how to work them, too. It does require cold showers afterwards, healthy food and after-practice eating, and good stretching, but once one gets into the habit of actually doing some sort of working out, one can just keep adding more if one likes.

So, like I said - the things I practice complement eachother quite well. Do you think about this aspect of your training at all, do you do it without thinking, or is it perhaps something you ought to think more about?
And - what are your methods to avoid muscle soreness, if you get it at all?

3 comments:

  1. I honestly haven't thought much about how different forms of my training complement each other, but I am beginning to think that running is an excellent complement to just about anything. Even if I'm fairly exhausted afterwards, I cannot remember ever being this strong and endurant at fencing practise. The sword doesn't feel as heavy, and I have no problem in the world keeping up with the others during warm-up and strengthening exercises. And this after merely half a year of light barefoot running, not pushing myself but just trying to get into the habit of running two or three times a week.

    Regardless of that, I think the most important aspect when choosing forms of training is that it is supposed to be fun. Not only is it a good thing in itself, but it also helps one look forward to rather than dread training sessions, which is essential for motivation (except for the most disciplined of us, perhaps). It's really a good thing that I am slowly starting to like running, now that I have first-hand experience of how damn useful it is!

    As for avoiding muscle soreness, I apply much the same methods as you do. Taking the time to stretch (and boy, does it ever show the day after if I happen to miss an important muscle), and eating (preferably healthy) food after training. Smoothies is a pleasant invention, I usually go for one after having run in the morning. I have a habit of throwing some seeds (like flax or chia) or nuts in there for a protein boost.

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  2. Ah, a lovely circle of good things! Running's starting to be fun, and it helps your longsword practice, which makes running even more fun... I love it when that happens. Congrats!

    Aye, having fun is really important to me. I like knowing there's something behind why I practice, that it has some sort of reason or long-term usefulness, but, I also have to enjoy it! I am sure Wudan Tai Chi Chuan would have been useful... but I didn't enjoy it much. Kali Sikaran, now, I enjoyed from the start. And barefoot running - oh, I cannot wait until the uneven muck caused by the mainlanders' idiotic way of dealing with snow on the roads (the ratio and scheduling of plowing/salting doesn't quite work as well as it could do...) disappears, then I can go out and enjoy running again! More than when running to a bus or train, that is... which I do with far more glee than is proper.

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    1. Oh, the so-called 'dealing with the snow', tell me about it! Down here in the far South they seem to be terrified by a mere few centimetres of snow, and start salting like crazy. Which of course results in a layer of salty sleet reaching up to one's ancles December through March, when instead we could have had a firm layer of snow to run upon. I have been heading out running despite it all, but it is no fun at all ending up with soaked feet and half-frozen toes...

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