Bonus Sweat Session

Just. ONE. MORE!!!

Yes we are firmly fixed in October at this point. And is it just me, or do Mondays come way too quickly?!?

I wanted to post ONE MORE cycling workout today, as I really enjoyed this profile at the gym for several of my workouts last week.

This particular workout takes us away from the hills and that heavy resistance we’ve been pushing, and moves us into speed work. You are going to work out those heart muscles today on sprint sets, so I want you to look at where you want to ride. In terms of resistance, you should shoot to carry a middle level.

On a resistance scale of 1-10 you are looking for a 5, 6, or maybe a 7. Though your resistance is mid-level, your RPE or effort should still be solidly in the 7 or 8 range on the scale below.

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The key here is to pick a resistance level that you can surge and sprint on. A resistance where you can hit 85% + of your Max Heart Rate, that still allows you recovery in between. You also need to make sure you have ENOUGH resistance on the fly wheel that you aren’t spinning out of control.

Please keep in mind that this workout is transferable to a stationary bike, recumbent, elliptical machine, or your cycling trainer set up in your living room!

You will be doing 4 minute intervals. Each interval consists of two 30 second sprints, each followed by 30 second recovery; then you’ll hit a 1 minute sprint followed by a 1 minute recovery!

Warm-up

4 minutes stretch and warm up your upper body

4 minutes of pick-ups 30 seconds on then 30 seconds off

4 minute hill climb adding resistance every 45 seconds

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30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 1 minute sprint, 1 minute recovery.

30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 1 minute sprint, 1 minute recovery.

30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 1 minute sprint, 1 minute recovery.

4 minute climb. Add resistance. Take it slow. Contrast.

30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 1 minute sprint, 1 minute recovery.

30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 1 minute sprint, 1 minute recovery.

30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 30 second sprint, 30 second recovery. 1 minute sprint, 1 minute recovery.

*A note about music. I have yet to get a playlist laid out in one of these Sweat Sessions, but I cannot emphasize enough HOW WONDERFUL and IMPORTANT music is in a good workout.

For this profile, I simply loaded up 10 of my favorite 4 minute songs, and went after it!!!

Take Monday by storm!

XX, Megan

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September Sweat Sessions: Why Sweat?

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If you’ve been following along with my September Sweat Sessions we are finishing off the LAST, the FINAL– Week 5– of our challenge TODAY!!! Throw your hands up! I set a personal fitness goal to workout 5 times every weekday and up my activity on the weekends. I also committed myself to cleaner eating through September.

By cleaner eating I simply wanted to curtail my sweet intake and break my Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup milkshake habit! I wanted to re-commit to making meals at home and selecting healthier options at the grocery store– i.e. up the vegetable intake at my house!

Basically I wanted a re-set after a summer of un-careful eating and lax working out.

Thus far I have been able to achieve my goals with few exceptions. I can admit that due to travel or scheduling I’ve missed a few days at the gym. I chose to double up my workouts on other days to make up for any workouts I missed. I only had to do doubles twice.

While my track record was by no means perfect, I still feel more motivated to go to the gym or dust my bike off and hit the road on a daily basis. I still feel more conscious of keeping my body moving, active, and fit.

I consumed a few of those delicious Peanut Butter Cup milkshakes. But I certainly didn’t even indulge once a week! More like 3 this month, which I’m chalking up as a win.

And…Today I actually went for a run. It was amazing.

The Mind

The reason I even mention the run is that running used to be my daily jam. I was an every. single. day. runner for many years. And if you know me personally you know that my current calling in exercise is as a cyclist. I ride upwards of three times a week.  But my heart will always be the heart of a runner. I love to run.

In fact, I had the most wonderful conversation with a runner friend as we watched our kids play soccer last Tuesday. She said to me, “I don’t just run to be in shape. I run because it brings me balance. I run because it helps me to control my anxiety and depression. I run because I think it makes me a better person. And I want all of my kids to run for all of those reasons.”

I could not agree with her more. To me, running is the most straightforward and basic way to get a great workout. I should know. I ran in High School, all the way through college, and after a lapse due to major injury, all the way until my youngest was around 18 months old.

Like I mentioned earlier, my personal fitness journey began in High School. At the prompting of a friend, I singed up to run on the Cross Country team my freshman year. I had no background in running, so to speak. I hadn’t run in my childhood, though we’d hiked a good deal as kids. But I immediately found that I really enjoyed the challenge of the run.

I was lucky enough to run for a really great coach. A man who emphasized personal fitness in his own life, and who brought a lot of knowledge, skill, and quiet encouragement to coaching. He had fantastic workouts– fartlicks, hurdle intervals, hills sprints, even tire pulls, and seemingly knew every trail in the Great Basin. He also required us to run on our own through the summer months to prep for the fall Cross Country season.

I was never a GREAT runner. I’ve always been a reticent competitor, though I ran decent time in every High School race. Beyond the competition, I was already beginning to enjoy running for the endorphin release, the chance it gave me to workout daily, and even for the social aspect. Plus, now I understand that running in High School gave me a great foundation for further personal athletic endeavors.

As minimalistic as running is from the equipment standpoint– a good pair of shoes, a pair of running shorts, a bra, and a tank top and you’re out the door– running may appear deceptively simple. Instead, running (and all other sports and fitness challenges, I’d argue) requires you to pull, push, and stretch your MIND. It is a head game, a head trip, a battle of brain against pain, quitting, shortness of breath, injury, malaise, and general laziness.

To stick with running, you have to stick with yourself. You have to be present, you have to learn to push yourself. For me, running translated into every other part of my life. Initially I ran because it made me feel good. I ran because it cleared my head. I ran because it was a great way to set your mind to a task and achieve it despite sometime discomfort. I ran because I got hooked!

And THEN, I ran because I realized that running was making me stronger, not just physically, but mentally, too. (Cycling carries this same cleanse, I’ll touch on that later.)

The Body

I continued to run in college. I’d often run alone, or sometimes with a friend. But I ran simply for myself. I didn’t race or really even enter fun runs. I ran because it got me outside to see the sun, the sky, enjoy the air, listen to the birds, feel the breeze, see the views, and smell the seasons. Sometimes I was fast. Sometimes I was slow.

I’ll never forget running with a friend when I slipped on a curb and face planted into a rather full drainage canal in town. I was soaked head to toe like I’d taken a bath. Embarrassed and laughing, I jumped up and kept running.

Then in an instant one fall evening, everything changed. I went climbing with a good friend just outside of town. In a pair of brand new rent-to-own 5-10 climbing shoes.

I fell. I fell straight down off of the rock face I was climbing. I didn’t have one finger on and then slip. Everything gave all at once and 10 feet later I met the boulders below.

I hit the boulders right leg first. The force of the fall threw me backwards on to my back like I was on a pogo stick and really picked a bad angle. But it turned out, the pogo stick was my leg, and the damage was severe. Landing on  my back, looking up at both of my legs, I could see my right foot hanging limp and askew. My foot was intact, but no more ankle existed.

The fracture was compound, and I’m lucky I’m alive as my arteries were actually pinched between my collapsed leg bones, stemming the blood and probably saving my life that night.

Fast forward past an incredible save by my climbing partner, fantastic first response team, fire fighters, emergency medical team, and incredible orthopedic surgeon– Randy Delcore. I now have a gorgeously reconstructed ankle. Complete with screws attached to my tibia to hold on a piece of bone that completely fractured from my ankle, and a plate with 7 screws used to reassemble the shattered lower potion of my fibula.

My BODY was broken.

The Soul

I won’t mince words. I crushed a piece of my SOUL the night I shattered my ankle. There was no way I could know the ramifications of my injury then, but I am experiencing the affects now and definitely will for the rest of my life. It continues to be a firsthand lesson in the limits of mortality.

That said, my injury did not sideline me from the ranks of runners for all-time. I went on to return to running two years after I broke my ankle. I could not have been more excited. I could not have been more happy, or felt more gratitude to return to the road and the trail. My desire to run after my injury hand’t decreased, only increased. I set myself to some new challenges. I ran many 1/2 marathons and one full marathon in Moab, Utah.

I felt like I was given the WORLD to be able to run again– a new lease, a new life. I figured I’d take that lease and use it for all it was worth, and I did. I became a daily runner. After my marathon I didn’t enter more races, but I took the time every day to lace up my shoes, and later in life, strap my kiddo in his stroller, and eventually two kiddos in a double stroller, and head out for a run.

After another great eight or nine years running things began to gradually grind down. Literally. I began to experience more and more pain when I ran. The pain wasn’t necessarily part of RUNNING, but after long runs I’d return home to a leg that ached. My limp became more pronounced. My ankle swelled frequently, and I began to realize that I’d been experiencing after-pain for a long, long time. Now the pain was getting stronger.

I saw an ankle specialist at the Rosenberg Cooley Metcalf clinic in Park City, UT– Timothy Beals. He ordered new X-rays of my ankle, and we looked at them together that day. The joint was severely arthritic, he pointed out. The cartilage between the bottom of my ankle and top of my foot was practically nonexistent. I was running bone on bone.

The wonderful thing about Dr. Beals was that he understood. He understood why I ran, and my need to run. He understood how I could run through the pain day after day. I had really come to the clinic with one question. Should I continue to run, or should I give up running for good?

Already guessing at his answer, I explained that my husband was a cyclist and that I occasionally, amateurishly cycled on the side. Dr. Beals said, flat-out, that I had worn the tread off of my tire. My ankle was no good for running anymore.

“If I were you,” he said, “I’d go buy a bicycle.”

That’s exactly what we did. I drove home from that appointment that afternoon and met my husband at Slim and Knobby’s Bike Shop. We bought a Specialized Allez. Four almost five years later, I haven’t looked back.

The Why

One of the last things you find out about running– beyond the high, beyond the full-body workout, beyond the social aspect– is that you somehow become part of the Earth. Or at least, I did. I felt as though running connected me to the world around me in ways I have yet to replace.

I was MORE a part of the neighborhoods I lived in because I RAN. I knew the dogs, the kids, the dump trucks, the side streets. Now I am starting to sound like a creeper. But I could feel and was more closely in touch with the pulse of the places I lived. I knew the local birds, and insects. I knew the rhythm of the day to day, every run connected me more deeply to my community. That is something I NEVER expected to come from running.

I felt like running made me a better citizen. That is WHY I ran.

Cycling hosts a wonderful community of people too. Gradually I am integrating myself into that world. But it hasn’t come as easily. Partially because I am still extending my comfortability within the sport– meaning that I still get butterflies in the pit of my stomach almost every time I hit the road, because cars are close and sometimes inconsiderate, because I’m not yet prepared to sink into the drops and take the descent at 50 mph. But I am coming along just fine.

So why did I run? WHY do I bike? I do it because it is so damn good for me, and it always will be. Put yourself to the challenge.

You make up the rules, stick to your game, and you will see the results. Thank you to those of you who participated in the September Sweat Sessions. I hope you continue in your resolve to hit the road, hit the trail, hit the gym. The workouts I posted will never go out of STYLE! You can look them up again and again and again in the search bar.

Have a kick butt Friday!!!

XX, Megan

1800-female-cyclist

September Sweat Sessions: Workout 5

5iRXRy6RT

Woot! Woot! It’s MONDAY!!!

I’ll tell you why I’m so excited– I’ve already hit my workout for the day. That’s right. BOOM! It’s done. I’ve laid it out for your below. Yes, this is precisely the workout I did this morning and I loved it!!!

Okay, so it also felt good because I may have eaten a DELICIOUS Chocolate Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup Milkshake on Saturday. No regrets. And while that was probably my most indulgent moment, you CANNOT allow yourself to remain in the sugar haze. You have to break through and hit it hard on Monday!

Here’s the other reality, I RARELY workout in the early mornings. In fact, I’ve never really been someone who enjoys a super duper early morning workout. I much prefer to knock out my exercise in the evening, and I feel as though I’ve always felt this way. I still haven’t done enough research as to WHY I don’t feel at my best in the mornings.

But I can admit that AFTER working out in the morning, my days almost always roll out more easily. I feel great!!! Plus, when the clock strikes 5 p.m., and I’m still staring down the pipeline at an hour long workout, sometimes it can be a mood killer. As in I have to force myself to switch gears, dress for the gym and get myself and the littles out the door. It can be a challenge.

My point is simply that there are positives to EITHER end of the time spectrum for exercise. I have a lot of respect and admiration for folks who get up super duper early EVERY. SINGLE. DAY. To ensure that their workout is complete!

Whether you are a morning workout star, a 9:00 a.m. fitness fiend, or an evening knock-it-out-of-the-park kind of person, I hope you’re sticking with your fitness goals HARD CORE this fall/winter!

XX, Megan

RPEnew

Workout 5

For this cycling profile all you really need to find is a HEAVY hill-climbing gear that will get you to feel the burn. We are going to do a ladder where each successive hill gets just a little bit longer, and depending on how much you want to challenge yourself, just a little bit steeper!

So if we are using resistance levels 1-10 again, with 1 being almost NO resistance and 10 being so HEAVY you can barely turn those pedals you are looking for resistance in the 7,8,9 range. Remember that you can use this workout for indoor cycling, on a recumbent, with the elliptical machine, out of doors (if you have a favorite hill for your intervals), or even on your cycling trainer at home!

Warm-up

3 minutes, stretch those legs and warm your upper body

3 minutes, pick-ups 30 seconds on (increase cadence) and 30 seconds off (decrease cadence), 3 times

3 minute hill climb add resistance every 30 seconds until you’ve reached your heaviest resistance

1 minute flush, or fully remove all of your resistance, and then you’ll get ready to begin your first hill climb!!!

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2 minute hill climb on HEAVY resistance (a 7,8,9 on a 10 point scale of resistance!)

1 minute flush (remove all resistance from your fly wheel)

2 minute hill climb, HEAVY

1 minute flush (remove all resistance from your fly wheel)

3 minute heavy hill climb, 1 minute flush

4 minute heavy hill climb, 1 minute flush

5 minute heavy hill climb, 1 minute flush

NOW this is the TOP of your ladder, after your 5 minute heavy hill climb you are going to subtract once minute from your hill every set so…

4 minute heavy hill climb, 1 minute flush

3 minute heavy hill climb, 1 minute flush

2 minute heavy hill climb, 1 minute flush

2 minute heavy hill climb, 1 minute flush

Cool down and stretch

YOU’RE HOME!!! Way to ride!!!

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What Does the Fox Say

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I know that this “What does the fox say?” business is OLD. It is out of fashion. It is long cold on society’s weirdo finding radar. But my kids have somehow picked it up, and been saying it to one another. They’re asking me what the fox says. They’re asking Siri, “What does the fox say?”

Hence the post title. That and the fact that somehow this piece of quilted outerwear reminds me of a mid-century fox hunt. So there you go. So equestrian. I’m pretty set on vacillating between neutrals, jewel tones, and bright blasts of red all fall.

Thursday always feels SO CLOSE to Friday. It makes me happy. Plus the fact that I get to rock out with my cycling class and get our sweat on. Two thumbs way, way up! How will you spend this crisp fall Thursday?

XX, Megan

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Coat: Gap (similar on sale!, similar and similar), Shell: J.Crew (old, similar, similar), Pants: J.Crew, Boots: Madewell, Necklace: Gorjana, Lips: Buxom White Russian

Back in Black

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Fall means many things, and one of my favorites is taking some of my favorite warm weather clothes with me through the transition from summer to fall. Fall transitions can be as simple as adding a pair of your favorite boots and a trusty anorak to a more summery bohemian dress. Or it can be as easy as adding a darker more dramatic lip to your daily makeup routine.

Done, done, and done! I am loving this new to me wine lip from Clinique. It leans toward red in the wines, but I can also appreciate a true plum if you’re feeing more aubergine this fall. Here’s another one of my longtime favorites.

As a mom, I’ve found that dresses have truly been a saving grace when I need to throw on something quick and head out the door. I am more likely to look and feel put together in one step with a dress, rather than reaching for separates. What about you? Maybe a romper suits your throw-on-and-go fancy. I have yet to take part in the romper trend, thought I looked this summer. Never say never, they say!

XX, Megan

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Dress: Velvet by Graham and Spencer, Jacket: Gap (similar, similar with fur), Boots: Enzo Angiolini (similarsimilar, similar, or splurge), Necklaces: Gorjana (or here), Earrings: Gorjana (or similar), Lips: Clinique Vintage Wine