Category Archives: Martial arts

Book Sales up 600%

CF_avatarI don’t know what happened.  Was it something I did, or something I stopped doing?  Whatever it is/was, but my book sales are up 600% in the last 30 days.

Now, when sales are as low as mine the figures are easily skewed by just a few sales.  That’s a fact.  But the trend has been up for several weeks in a row.  The increase — all of it — came from a spike in my martial arts books sales.  What is it about those that’s suddenly getting traction?  Search me.  All I know is, I’m thrilled.

If you’re a fan of my non-fiction martial arts books, let me first say thank you, thank you, thank you!  Which book was your favorite? Please comment below.

And, by the way, I have two fitness books in the pipeline — one on calisthenics and one on weight loss and getting cut.  Is either of those of interest to you?

 

Boka Kantina Review

Last Saturday night I ate at Boka Kantina and it rocked.  I opened with the crab rangoon which were stellar — crispy and creamy, with a sauce that was out of this world.  The Asian taco with kimchi was the standout on my plate.  The Mexican, although it was the weakest link, was still very good.

I’m not a foodie, so don’t ask me to break this all down like some fancy critic.   Let’s just say this place is different.  Original, counter-intuitive combinations abound on their funky menu.  I mean, who puts watermelon on a taco?  Well I had a bite of my daughter’s fish taco with watermelon, and it was outstanding.  I don’t know how they make these combinations work, but they do.

What you need to know before you go:  Service was super, atmosphere relaxed, music loud enough to hear without making it hard to talk.  I found their stuff to be hot enough to have some zip, but not hot enough to put off most folks.   They like the truffle oil and the ginger, so if you don’t like either, options will be limited.   Our meal ran $50 for three people including tip.  They do not serve coffee, or at least it’s not on the menu, which was the only negative for me.

Personal Appearances 2014

If you’d like to meet me in person and check out some of my real world merchandise, you’ll have two chances this year:

  • On Saturday August 9th I will be tabling at DC Zinefest  in our nation’s capital.  This will be my first time at at this event.  Come and see me, mention this post, and I’ll give you 50% off on whatever you buy.
  • On Saturday October 4th I will once again be tabling at RVA Zinefest in Richmond, VA.  In addition to manning my table I usually lead a workshop related to the writer’s craft as well.  This is a super event, always fun.

If you’d like to do more than shake my hand or get an autograph, you can come and train with me any time you like.  Simply stop by any Tuesday or Saturday and work out with my club — details here.

Zero Drop, Minimal Shoes: Ups and Downs

Update 7/28/19: I just noticed that scads of people are still reading my pre-Achilles-injury posts from years ago.  I’m no longer in minimal shoes.  In my opinion the whole minimal shoe thing is hocus-pocus.  Shoes were developed and universally adopted because they work better than bare feet.  Do what you want but don’t say I didn’t warn you!  


Original post from 6/8/2014

wpid-IMG_20130910_183710.jpg

My custom zero-drop boots.

Over the last year and a half I have written several posts about making the switch to minimal and/or zero drop shoes.  There have been some ups and downs, but the upshot is, if you’re over 50, I don’t recommend you try to make the switch. Regardless of age, if you decide to try it, go way slower than you think you need to.

Beware — You Might Get Hurt

Although I tried to make the transition from traditional shoes to minimal ones gradually, it didn’t prevent injuries.  I strained my right Achilles over a year ago and I am only now 95% healed.  I’m pain free, but I sometimes get a twinge after some workouts.  Thanks to the Alfredson Protocol (which is 12 weeks of hell, but it works) I can run a couple of miles at a moderate pace without discomfort, but I’m nowhere near being able to attempt any hill climbing sprints.

About a month ago, while doing lunges, I started experiencing pain in the joint where my left big toe attaches to the foot.  It got worse and worse.  Looks like I’m in Stage 1 of Turf Toe.  I had to stop all exercises that involve bending back or springing off the toes (no Lunges, Mountain Climbers, Jump Squats, etc.) and I’m wearing my boots pretty much 24/7.  I’m probably going to have to buy a set of shoe inserts to wear until it heals.  This injury is directly related to wearing thin shoes that allow greater range of motion in the toe joints.

What I’m Wearing Now

I have gone back to traditional shoes for workouts.  For hiking and long walks I sport my zero drop boots.  For work and casual wear, when the load is light and there’s no ballistic movement, I’m wearing very low drop shoes (Chuck Taylor’s around town, and to work a pair of very flat, black leather Keds-like shoes from Aldo’s).

The Final Analysis

So how do I feel about the entire experience, start to finish?  Injuries aside, my feet feel better overall.  The frequent arch pain and foot cramps I used to get are gone.  But I think that is attributable to (a) gradually going from a very high arch support to none, and (b) going up a half size in shoes to allow my feet to spread out.  If I had my ground to go over (pardon the pun), I would have stopped at that point and I would not have tried to make it all the way into minimal shoes.

My Recommendation

My recommendation is that you stick with traditional shoes for workouts.  Consider gradually reducing the amount of arch support to allow your feet to spread out and fill up a larger traditional workout shoe.  This will allow them to do their job more naturally and effectively.  When I say gradually, I don’t mean over the course of a few weeks or months — I mean over a couple of years.

Maybe if you start when you’re in your teens or twenties you could get into minimal shoes without the kind of problems I’ve had.  But if you’re over 50 like I am, stick with functional footwear.

Art!

This is called "art!"  For my first large, graffiti-style piece, it doesn't stink too bad.

This is called “art!” For my first large, graffiti-style piece, it doesn’t stink too bad.  It would’ve been much better if the white paint can hadn’t clogged.  Bummer.

Normally I spend Sunday mornings writing blog posts for the week.  Not today.  I decided to make art.

I often draw and paint (acrylics mostly), but I’ve always wanted to try my hand with spray paints.  You know, graffiti-style.  So I did.

Unfortunately the only can of white paint I had around the house got clogged.  I didn’t bother to run to the store for a new can.  This was supposed to be quick, spontaneous, and fun, not some major project.  It ain’t perfect, but it is what it was supposed to be.  Making the video and writing this post took longer than making the piece.  And it was a blast.

If you want to watch me paint it, I’ve included the video below.

http://youtu.be/LugKwlHChNQ

 

Psyathlon Workout

This is what my t-shirt looked like after martial arts practice on Tuesday.

This is what my t-shirt looked like after martial arts practice on Tuesday.  What does this have to do with the “psyathlon” workout?  Absolutely nothing.  I just couldn’t think of anything better.

I usually limit my workouts to one hour, but yesterday I felt like blowing it out a little.  I call this 90 minute workout a “Psyathlon” because it’s not a real triathlon (it’s too short and you don’t have to get wet, except from sweat of course) but it is at least psychologically similar to a real triathlon.

Psyathlon Workout

Full warm up from head to toe and then:

(1) 30 minute calisthenics “swim”: 30 sec/10 sec HIIT/Tabata of Prison Push-ups,  Swimmers (like a Superman but keep arms and legs moving like a swimmer), Flutter Kicks, Elbow Planks.
(2) 30 minute bike ride: Cover as much distance as you can in 30 minutes.
3) 30 minute run: Cover as much distance as you can in 30 minutes.

Enjoy, and let me know how it goes.

Firefly Cargo Boxes

wpid-20140526_182743.jpgI’m always working and doing things according to the plan.  Sometimes I’m such a freak about my goals — writing goals, workout goals, fitness goals, personal goals, business goals — that I forget to take a break.  Not this weekend.  I decided to do a fun art project on my extra day off.

I got the idea last week.  Someone at the office was talking about being a massive Dr. Who fan, and about costuming.  I mentioned that, if I was going to fall through the costuming rabbit hole again (which I’m not) I’d be a BrowncoatFirefly is in a dead heat with Star Trek (the original) as my favorite TV show of all time.

Anyway, I had some wine crates sitting around and I decided to make some Firefly-inspired cargo boxes to put next to my favorite chair.  Here’s how I did it.

One of the boxes is supposed to be an Independence ammo box, so  I glued and screwed a strips across the top and bottom to give it that WWII ammo box look.  Then I gave both boxes a coat of mud brown paint inside and out to seal them and hide markings and defects.

While that was drying I started distressing the hardware.  You can’t have shiny new hardware on boxes that are supposed to look used!  I put them in a bath of 50/50 water and bleach and boiled them for about 25 minutes.  If you try this, do it outside, be very careful, and use an old pan or a glass one.

The ammo box got a coat of green paint.  While that was drying, I started making stencils so that I could paint on “CARGO,” some random digits, the blue star, and so forth.  The other box I left brown.

Next  came the painting of the details and the hardware installation.  I used spray paint and masking tape.  I also found some cool decals online (thanks to all of the other Firefly fans who did the graphic design!).  I printed those and put them on with a glue stick.  I didn’t have time yesterday, but next weekend I’m going to use a dirty rag and some sandpaper to add a more distressed look.

These are actually really sturdy boxes — they were meant to hold heavy wine bottles after all — so I figure I’ll probably use them when I need to haul stuff to zinefests and what-not.

Sometimes you have to relax and nerd-out.  It’s good for the soul.  Look, these things were fun, and they add a nice touch to my relaxing spot.

 

 

Do Not Seek Outside Yourself

Swiping my way through my Twitter feed the other day I saw this:

Flashing back to my college years, I remembered being forced to read something by Emerson and having to write a paper.  I didn’t remember anything at all about what I read or wrote — other than the fact that I found Emerson to be a total snooze, and that the professor seemed to find it incredible that I wasn’t inspired.

But I did click the link and, to my shock and embarrassment, I realized that “Self-Reliance” was the piece by Emerson that had bored me in college.  Daniel’s article made it seem fascinating, so I found Emerson’s original online.  It opens with this:

“Ne te quaesiveris extra.”¹

“Man is his own star; and the soul that can
Render an honest and a perfect man,
Commands all light, all influence, all fate;
Nothing to him falls early or too late.
Our acts our angels are, or good or ill,
Our fatal shadows that walk by us still.”

~Epilogue to Beaumont and Fletcher’s Honest Man’s Fortune

Cast the bantling² on the rocks,
Suckle him with the she-wolf’s teat;
Wintered with the hawk and fox,
Power and speed be hands and feet.

Inspired, moved, I was sucked in.  How could I have been bored by this in college?  I can only say that I wasn’t mature enough to appreciate it back then.  Thirty-odd years of living, growing, and maturing have made “Self-Reliance” into a great essay.  I now wholeheartedly recommend that you read it in its entirety.

Note: The Beaumont and Fletcher quote from “Self-Reliance” echoes the opening lines of Crowley’s “Book of the Law.”  Here’s an idea for an article, blog post, or term paper: examine “Self-Reliance” through the lens of Thelema.  Emerson came along fifty years before Crowley…

1: “Do not seek outside yourself”

2: A bantling is a young child.  Probably has same root as bantam, meaning small.

 

Bite Off More Than You Can Chew

image

This time Finn may have bitten off more than he can chew.

There’s a lot to be said for biting off more than you can chew.

I’ve done that lately, and although it has caused me to be just a little too busy to blog the way I used to, I’ve gotten so much done: thousands of words written, quarts of sweat shed working out, and so on.  I’m looking at what I’ve achieved and thinking, “How the hell did I get all that done?”

I was setting goals the other day, putting deadlines in my planner and so on, and for a brief moment I thought, ‘some of these dates are a little aggressive.’ And then I thought, ‘aggressive is good.’  If I set a goal that’s twice what any reasonable person would believe achievable, and I fall short by 10%, then I’ve still achieved 190%.  But if I hit the goal I’ve achieved the impossible.

Why don’t you give it a try?  Here are a few choice quotes to inspire you to bite off more than you can chew:

“The best sauce in the world is hunger.” ~Cervantes

“Whatever the mind of man can conceive and believe, it can achieve.”  ~Napoloeon Hill

“What is the beautiful if not the impossible.”  ~Gustave Flaubert

“Everything comes to him who hustles while he waits.”  ~Thomas Edison

“If it was easy, anybody could do it.”  ~Old Proverb

“To infinity and beyond!”  ~Buzz Lightyear

 

 

 

How to use PTDICE to create HICT and HIIT Workouts

How to use PTDICE to create HICT and HIIT Workouts:  http://ow.ly/warBb