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Finally got a couple of posters for my home gym. No more bare walls!

home-gym-posters-01

Some people have suggested that I get posters of girls in bikini. But nah, there's no value in that.

I was thinking of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Franco Columbu or Bruce Lee posters. I even thought about picking up some mirrors for my home gym, either some used sliding closet door mirrors or huge gym mirrors that sometimes show up on Kijiji.

But I finally decided on these:

home-gym-posters-02

If I’m going to have a poster hang on my wall in my home gym and look at it all the time, I might as well learn something. I figure if I see these diagrams all the time, it’ll be a lot easier remembering the muscles, bones and ligaments.

The Muscular System Poster

muscular-system-poster

The muscular system giant chart measures 42” wide x 62” high…which is almost as tall as I am!

It’s pretty durable, and I can write on the surface with a dry erase pen if I wanted to.

There’s 3 holes at the top of the posters to make it easy to hang. I only used the center hole to hang on a nail, and used a pair of neodymium magnets to hold the poster onto the studs in the wall.

The Skeletal System Poster

I also got a Skeletal System 3D chart from the Dollar Store for $1.50, which is similar to the one listed here.

skeletal-system-3D-poster-01

It measures 16.5” wide x 22.5” high, which is a lot smaller than the muscular system chart. Maybe I’ll upgrade to this giant skeletal system chart in the future.

The lettering is in rainbow color for some reason, and there’s a blue cloud border, but for $1.50 (so cheap!) it really doesn’t matter.

skeletal-system-3D-poster-02

Now, I can lift and learn at the same time.

I’ve already learned something from these anatomy posters. Did you know that the “deltoid ligament” is in the ankle? I would have thought it would be located somewhere near the deltoid muscles (AKA shoulder muscles)!

My other wall is still bare, so I might get:

  1. Strength Training Anatomy Poster Series by Frederic Delavier
  2. MobilityWOD posters from Rogue Fitness
  3. Or maybe a Dim Mak chart to learn pressure points…just in case I need to perform the death touch in order to defend myself.

Believe it or not, but it’s been exactly 2 years since I first started taking strength training seriously.

That is, setting goals, having a plan, working that plan and keeping a record of my training.

I was about 183lbs at the time, and this is where I began:

Old_Training_Log (1)

Check out the training logs I kept in my Moleskine notebook while I was training and living in Bangkok, Thailand 2 years ago. Man, I can barely read my own handwriting!

Fast forward 2 years and ~20lbs later, here are my current personal bests:

Here are some random thoughts, opinions, lessons learned, and observations I have accumulated over the past 2 years:

Training

  • I should have started earlier.
  • The best time to train is after you take a crap.
  • 2 exercises per day can get great results.
  • Having a plan is key. I never have to go to the gym and not know what to do. You know what they say, failing to plan is planning to fail.
  • 5 sets of 5 reps for squats is a great stamina builder.
  • You don't need bumper plates to do power cleans.
  • You can deadlift more by making yourself shorter (ie. by taking off your shoes).
  • Injuries are educational. If it hurts, don’t do it. Figure out a way to train around injuries.

Big Box Gym Observations

  • “What supplements do you take?” seems to be a common question.
  • The overhead press is the manliest looking lift that rarely anybody does in the gym (that I’ve been in).
  • In my experience, it seems as though men & women stare at those moving big weights more than the guy with big muscles.
  • Guys pay more attention than girls to other men with jacked, muscular defined bodies.
  • Naked dudes walking around in the change room seem to be a North American phenomenon. I did not see this while I was living in Thailand…except for one guy. I think he was new to the gym and did not know that female and transgendered janitors regularly go in and out of the men’s change room.

Eating

  • You don’t need supplements to get results. I didn’t start taking any whey protein, creatine or other bodybuilding supplements until well after I squatted over 400lbs, benched over 300lbs, deadlifted 500lbs, and put on >10lbs in bodyweight.
  • Eating a light breakfast before lifting feels a lot better than eating a heavy breakfast.
  • I wouldn’t be where I am today without a rice cooker or slow cooker. Next upgrade: pressure cooker!

Success & Motivation

  • Discipline is required for the first few weeks. After that, it becomes a habit. In other words, it becomes "normal"...and it would be abnormal not to do it.
  • Success comes from focused, sustained effort to a measurable goal.
  • Continued progress and always trying to break my personal records is motivational.
  • Motivational pictures aren’t that motivating to me. Seeing videos of other people lift insane amounts of weights, or simply beating their own personal bests are more motivational than words on photos.

Random Stuff

  • Don't reinvent the wheel. By following a program, at least in the beginning, can probably get you better results than trying to do something on your own. Modifications can be done down the road.
  • Don’t believe everything you read on the internet. Especially from anonymous keyboard warriors on forums and Reddit.
  • Test things out for yourself.
  • There’s more than 1 way to skin a cat.

I love using a slow cooker. I can throw in some meat, vegetables and some sort of sauce, and in 7-12 hours have a lot of food that will last for a few days.

But the problem is, during the cooking process, it really makes the entire home smell like delicious food.

This makes me very hungry all day, and if it’s cooking at night, I find myself waking up way too early (and hungry) because of the smell of slow cooked pork and vegetables.

The solution: Put the slow cooker in the garage.

Doing this will minimize any delicious aromas from stinking up your home, and making you salivate and feel like eating all day (or night).

Slow Cooker In The Garage

Crock Pot In The Garage

Next time I’m going to open the garage door a little, because now my garage smells like pork, onions and Sempio Kalbi sauce.

LIGHT WEIGHT...ARGHH!

So after chatting with j0n on Facebook (who I know from Fitocracy) a few days ago about Crossfit, home gym, cardio equipment, heavy bags and boxing gloves, I decided to look on the online classified ads website Kijiji to see if there were any deals on a heavy bag.

I stumbled across someone selling a “Fight Monkey” 100lbs heavy bag along with a pair of Cleto Reyes 16oz gloves.

I contacted the seller, and made a deal to buy both the bag and the gloves for $120 CDN…delivered!

Fight-Monkey-Heavy-Bag

I never heard of the brand Fight Monkey before, but they market their heavy bags as “commercial” heavy bag. The retail price for the heavy bag is $249.99.

I’ve never owned a pair of Cleto Reyes gloves before, but have read only good things about them. The Cleto Reyes 16oz velcro training gloves go for about $150.

This totals $400 new, not including tax and delivery charges.

So $120 for the Fight Monkey 100lbs heavy bag and the gloves tax free and delivered to me is a pretty solid deal!

Now all I need to do now is figure out where and how to hang up this heavy bag…