My current health plan is:

-Eat real nutrient dense foods.

-Intermittent fast for 12–16 hours per day. Vibes based. And sometimes go multi-day.

-Go for long walks or bike rides in the sun daily. Touch grass and do stuff. Often you can combine this with business meetings.

-Sprint a couple times per week.

-Do cold plunges a couple times per week. Seriously, this seems easy to skip and it’s hard. But if you want to triple dopamine levels for the working day without later downsides, putting yourself in freezing water is the thing.

-Do some squats and pushups. And then deadlift your own body weight for several reps.

-Even then you’ll potentially fail. This isn’t one of those meme posts. I used to be utterly ripped in my competitive martial arts days in my late teens until my mid twenties. But then I got distracted, mainly due to a broken leg and lack of direction. Over the past several Covid years, I’ve weakened, and had trouble hiking mountains. I still have visible abs but they feel fake now. But I focus on a couple things amid my crazy work, which I have ingrained now. The first is intermittent fasting. It literally fixes all my other errors as a baseline. I can fuck up for a year and not gain weight because I only eat in 6 or 8 hour windows. Or even 10 hours. The rest of the time trains the body to burn fat. Next is I do a reasonable baseline of pushups, squats, and sprints per week. Nobody can make me choose to. It’s just my baseline. Last is I do a lot of squats and bicycling to keep my leg muscles interested, which have been mediocre. So if a new martial arts leader has a plan, I’m happy to listen.

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I am doing most of the same routine, I promise you they are really good for your health, and I don’t have any belly anymore 😁

I’m no martial arts leader but kettlebells have a lot of bang for their buck- simple & sinister🤙🏼

Have a dog

Agree, I walk so much more everyday now after we adopted a puppy. She needs multiple miles every day just so she isn’t a nut

Sounds very interesting. The fasting thing. How you get enough energy from food to train if body has to constantly deal with preping for fast? I do amateur level crossfit and without food I can't go.

For five years, I trained 3-4 times a day, about five days a week, all while fasting for 16 hours a day.

Although I no longer compete in MMA, I still maintain a daily workout routine and live a very active lifestyle. In addition to my workouts, I walk for two hours each day and coach hockey, which involves skating 3-4 hours daily. I continue to fast for 16 hours a day.

When I first started intermittent fasting, I used to feel weak until I ate. One day, I realized that I felt significantly better after just one bite of food. This made me wonder—how could I feel that much better after just one bite when I hadn’t even absorbed the nutrients yet? I also noticed that I would get hungry at the same time every day.

That’s when it clicked—I wasn’t actually hungry; my body was just following a schedule. It's similar to how my dog knows exactly when it’s time to eat at 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. without ever looking at a clock. And, of course, he’s a bit of a pain when the clocks go back an hour!

From my experience, that feeling of weakness or the belief that you can’t perform physically without eating is due to the body being trained over years to expect food at specific times. Breaking that rhythm is the hard part.

If you're interested in learning more about intermittent fasting, I recommend The Complete Guide to Fasting by Dr. Jason Fung. It's a solid resource that explains the science behind fasting, covering 16-hour fasts, 24-hour fasts, 48-hour fasts, and even week-long fasts. It’s a quick and easy read, and the audiobook is equally breezy.

Thx! Will read this one. So you eat within 8 hour window and the rest is fasting. What hours would that be and how many meals?

Thinking about it now, my eating window is actually smaller. I'll eat between 3-7pm, with some rare exceptions.

Typically, my first meal is around 3, where I'll have eggs and a peanut butter berry mix. Then, I'll eat again around 6-ish for dinner.

There are exceptions. If I feel like having breakfast, I won't stop myself. It's rare, but it happens. If I go out at night and we end up having a late meal, I won't stop myself either.

I see it the same as working out. I do it every day, but some days I'll just take off. Since I do it so consistently, I don't feel bad about deviating from my routine for an odd day.

So no breakfast 🥞🤯. That must be hard to get used to. How is that with lifting heavy?

I always worked out in the morning before breakfast in the past, so nothing really changed for me.

Respect!

Great comment!

Just curious but why such long fasting periods? Blood cleansing?

Avoid cancer. Reverse insulin resistance. Express genes that would be otherwise never expressed. Many good reasons to fast. Humans didn't evolve eating three meals per day, or even one meal every day of the week.

Im aware and I fast that’s not what my question was. I asked about the frequency for the long fasts/ie days without eating.

All good info tho 🤝

When do we get a video doing some martial arts? At this point I am expecting that your master Shifu beside training you went on about #BTC and sound money.

Lyn Alden vs Cyborg friendly sparring coming soon.

hey nostr:npub1a2cww4kn9wqte4ry70vyfwqyqvpswksna27rtxd8vty6c74era8sdcw83a !! i recently listened to a podcast by andrew huberman with a female doctor mentioning how cold plunges and fasting before activity can actually be detrimental for women! i’d recommend a listen. i’m still learning and trying to check out other sources as fasting and plunging do feel pretty cool, but after trying out what the podcast says for about two months, i feel stronger during my workouts, and i even gained more muscle. check it out :)

Impressive. I need to be more disciplined with diet and exercise. Thanks for sharing. Gives me motivation. 👍

If i can do it, you can do it too. I'm the laziest person i know but if you start really small and make it a habit it will become easier.

Start with the thing that seems easiest to you and keep a log of when you did it. Soon you will be on a streak and the discipline required will become much less.

Don't pile up more but start adding super small things as soon as you feel like you made something a habit. Most things will take some 10 weeks to become habitual but it will depend from person to person.

Sounds really good. I do most of these things too, most for several years, some more recent (a year or slightly more).

I go to the gym a minimum of 2 (but striving for 3) times a week where i do full body one day and mostly bodyweight upper body the other. Third is mostly random but try to incorporate a conditioning aspect.

On the days i don't go to the gym i do back/shoulder/hip stretching exercises to combat the stiff backside of my body. And additionally i do 40 navy seal burpees on those days.

I walk for 30 minutes on weekdays during lunch but in a fairly high pace walking 3.5km during that time.

I've been meaning to try and add some squats but since i do most of these things during lunch (while also having my first meal) the ritual sometimes becomes a lunch of 1 to 1.5 hours and i don't want to make it much longer.

I could try and learn to rise a bit earlier (6:00/6:30 now) and do some of these things right after getting up but i really lack motivation at that time.

You are on a good trajectory. The appeal of intermittent fasting/proper food mix is you can screw up one day and it really doesn't matter. Just dust down and get back to it. Ideal :)

Sounds like a very good plan.

Fasting does wonders and has changed my level of focus. Established habits 👍

It’s a been of the same story here, having been very active in my youth, then slacked too much (sedentary work + all sports replaced by video-games), and now I’ve been as active as ever.

So after my youth, when I started working, I went through ~10 years of low to no physical activities, which obviously wasn’t good for my health.

So I’ve decided to have a baseline of doing physical activity again (about 10 hours per week, mostly cardio sports like soccer) + going 95% vegan after having read The China Study, which led to a big weight loss and no visible health issues.

Then I got bored with running and our soccer mates also lost interest, so I picked up CrossFit 5 years ago, doing about 4 hours a week, and ramped up to 6 hours per week over time.

I was in the best shape of my life overall, and then Covid hit, which put a big damper on exercising, but I managed to train at home or outside at night like an outlaw. I also picked up intermittent fasting, and swapped from Vegan to a full-on 90% meat based diet, which led to a noticeable mass increase, again with no health issues (so far).

I’ve dropped intermittent fasting after 1000 days because as I’ve kept ramping up exercising (so, more mass increase, I saw I had low energy levels in some on my workouts compared to my mates, and because I had increased my training time to about 10h again per week.

Now I’m loading up in the morning with eggs and bacon, or fruits and honey if I’m exercising very early. I notice that carbs that you take in the right quantity at the right time (about 1h) before working out have a big difference on your energy level during your workouts.

And this year I’ve picked up weightlifting because I much prefer lifting heavy stuff than doing gym work, along with CrossFit which I’ve toned down a bit.

I think we are about the same age, and what changed over time for me was realizing my body wasn’t going to get younger by itself, and that I needed to keep it in the best shape possible if I wanted to have the best life possible, both physically and mentally.

Now I plan my days where I always put a baseline of allocated time for the following, in that order :

Family time (spend time with kids and wife), physical workout, mental workout (learning Spanish at the moment), and then the rest of my day is spent either working, reading, spending time with friends… depending on whatever is most urgent.

In the end, I think that the more you plan ahead and arrange your priorities, and the more you can get into the same routines/flow daily helps you manage life without feeling mentally overcrowded. I don’t think daily about what I’ll need to do because I plans my days to not having to think about what to do, which leaves me the most mind space available to be present with the people around me and just focus on the things I do one at a time.

Sounds like a very solid plan Lyn! 🧡

If You have time to incorporate a few more exercises here is what i would do:

keep your Pushups

add some type of Rowing movement

TRX / Ring Row / db Rows / bb Rows

add an Overhead press either db or bb

and a Lat pull down / pullups (assisted / bw / weighted)

keep the Squats (maybe alternate between back and front squats)

and the Deadlifts

next two are optional if You feel extra energized that day:

Kettlebell swings

db walking lunges

___

If You are short on time superset the exercises i put together 👊🏼

Do this workout 2 to 3 times a week with enough rest days in bewteen.

Do 3-4 sets of each exercise with 2 minutes rest in between sets.

Rep range depends on your goal

Do You want to get more stamina?

Do You want to build muscle?

Do You want Strength, Power, Explosivity?

Hope that helps! Feel free to try and see if You liked it. Also everyone in the comments that wants to try something new 🙌🏻💯

Solid routine 🤜🏻🤛🏽

sounds reasonable...🌝

Lyn Alden about cold plunges in her health plan 🩵

"Do cold plunges a couple times per week. Seriously, this seems easy to skip and it’s hard. But if you want to triple dopamine levels for the working day without later downsides, putting yourself in freezing water is the thing."

nostr:nevent1qqsfp225nscg3nlxpjwcay9he4xcwpnya8w7e3qw5z22et7cq95x4qqppemhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mp0qgswmux63w7muyget7ugvxt2htl4s65sjtxue8qqz7mnhkvckfjjlgcrqsqqqqqpwc8fnt

nostr:nevent1qqsyaw47h6zumc88hlwr083fcnds92ucxgye4zxv8muf2tl0lh4kzqgpzpmhxue69uhkummnw3ezumt0d5hsyg82krn4d5etsz7dge8nmpztspqrqvr45yl2hs6enfmzexk84wglfupsgqqqqqqs0fzg5g

Nostr Lyn 💎🤍

Try #carnivore #diet as real nutrient densiest food and #OMAD within 1 hour window and you’ll be back to your teens body feeling in a few months ⚡️

Simple #yoga

Sun Salutations

5 Surya Namaskara A

5 Surya Namaskara B

#Hatha or #Ashtanga versions. I prefer the latter, followed by the Ashtanga standing sequence, followed by 10 minutes in #meditation.

Open the body. Twist and turn. Stretch and squeeze. Flex and extend. Link each movement with an inhalation and exhalation. Focus the mind, here, now.

Hey Lyn, make sure your posture is perfect before loading your musculoskeletal system. Otherwise you only creat more imbalances and pain going forward. I highly recommend The Egoscue Method https://egoscue.com

This book might as well change your life 😊 https://www.amazon.com/Pain-Free-Revised-Updated-Second-dp-1101886641/dp/1101886641/ref=dp_ob_title_bk

Good plan

Exactly, simple daily health small wins : eat real food, avoid seed oils, build lean body mass/resistance train, get out in nature, abundance mindset, build meaningful relationships, move your body, intermittent fast and your reward will be in your physical and mental health for many years !

Good plan, don't forget to train your abs, not for aesthetics but to support your spine during deadlifts.

My hack for exercise. I do VR games that make me move. A lot of moves. I added kickbox resistance straps which add strength training to the aerobic exercise and gaming it makes it fun instead of suffering.

Adding video of how it looks and heart rate monitoring of my 49 years old personhttps://m.primal.net/LBch.mp4 .

what suits you best is the best

For fitness and for superb writing, you should check out www.nonprophet.media

And for a deep rabbit hole, not ad supported, on what we should be eating check out Dr. Michael Greger's book (fully cited) https://nutritionfacts.org/book/how-not-to-die/ and tons of videos etc at the site https://nutritionfacts.org/

The Iceman, Wim Hoff, has a book and YouTube channel as well...breating plus cold https://www.wimhofmethod.com/

Not interested in building muscle for longevity?

Any recommendations on a cold plunge?

Studies have found that it's enough to have 11 minutes per week of cumulative exposure to cold water where cold means anything below 18°C. So you'll reap the same benefits of spending 30 min per week in 5°C water as if you would spend 11 min/week at 17-18°C.

And it doesn't have to be 11 min in one go. You can spread it apart in smaller chunks every day 1-2 min per day.

Short. Useful. It really works. Start with at least one of those today. Add another next week. Stick to it until becomes second nature. ✊

nostr:nevent1qqsyaw47h6zumc88hlwr083fcnds92ucxgye4zxv8muf2tl0lh4kzqgpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhsyg82krn4d5etsz7dge8nmpztspqrqvr45yl2hs6enfmzexk84wglfupsgqqqqqqsuqc469

This resonates. Things I gravitated to in the past few years:

- Morning run 5/7 days; always outside, rain, sun, snow, doesn't matter

- Vary the run; sometimes slow, sometimes faster, sometimes intervals; 30-50 minutes; nose breathing when the pace is slow

- Intervals: used to Tabata style only but have now started experimenting; currently doing 2mins fast, 4mins slow, 4-6 reps; this has had a big impact on VO2 max; Tabatas are great but I don't always have the raw will to do them

- Doing mostly functional strength training, sometimes with a personal trainer for guidance and to learn new exercises; huge impact on my posture and overall strength despite weights that would make most people chuckle; expensive but worth every cent in my opinion

- no calories after dinner (which we eat around 630pm); breakfast after the run - makes for a natural daily fasting period of 13-15 hrs

- bfast is a shake with macadamia, cashews, spinach, 4-5 types of fresh fruit, some protein powder (only the best kind, no flavors), some creatine, camu camu berry powder (highest vitamin C content with all the other co-nutrients)

- zero sweet drinks (obviously), including pressed juices

Hard to make this work if you work in the big corporate hamster wheel but I don't 😀

Cold plunges are sooooo key

I've been following a similar plan... body turns into a fat burning machine! I also started eating sardines 💪👏 and infrared saunas

For me I have to fast 18 hours to get the results I desire