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Survival of the Fittest by Mike Hussle
When it comes to preparedness for disasters, people can be very imaginative.
Thinking through every possible scenario, difficulty or danger helps them in
choices such as, “what type of firearm is the most practical?” “What
medicines is it a good idea to have on hand?” Or, “where is a good
place to go if it is no longer safe where I live?” These questions are
all sound, practical thoughts for anyone who wants to be prudently prepared
for emergencies.
One factor, however, largely gets neglected, if not ignored. Perhaps that is
because you can’t simply purchase this most central and important factor
of preparedness: yourself! Fitness is a huge asset in any dangerous or challenging
situation, and is key to coming out on top of a survival situation. If you are
reading this but are out of shape, you have some work to do.
Another problem that needs to be addressed is identifying what, exactly, fitness
is, and what about fitness better prepares you for survival?
Fitness, like firearms, must be practical to be worthwhile. That is, it must
be functional. If it’s not, it isn’t doing you any good. So what
is functional fitness? What physical abilities and skills should every person
have? And why is this important for survival preparedness, above firearms, food
or any other supply gathering?
To demonstrate the point, let’s take a look at two scenarios. As a throwback
to many of our childhoods, they are written in a “choose your own adventure” style.
Scenario #1.
In the first scenario, you are walking down a street in the city. Times are tough,
and crime is on the rise. Due to legal restrictions, you are unarmed. While you
wait to cross a street, two men approach from your right. You turn, and see one
of them holding a knife down low. They demand your money. You decide to resist,
and in an instant, your plan is to strike the one with the knife and then get
out of Dodge.
Option A: Functionally Unfit: You’ve been taking yoga classes and maybe
some bicep curls and crunches a few times a week, and you feel pretty strong.
You wind up, and put those “strong arms” to use. The blow you land
surprises the man, but it barely moves him. You turn and run. Adrenaline’s
pumping, but after only fifty yards of sprinting, you’re winded. The two
men catch up. The End
Option B: Functionally Fit: You’ve been doing old fashioned core lifts
(dead lift, squats, etc.) along with gymnastic and military exercise, and even
interval running mixed in. You wind up- your powerful lower body muscles generate
a huge amount of force, transferring it through your strong core into your arms.
The blow you land comes from your whole body, which you have learned to use properly.
The man is on the ground with a busted nose. You still run, because the other
man might be armed, and knives cut strong people too. After a quarter mile, you’re
still going strong, but your assailants have slowed down, winded. You round the
corner and lose them for good.
Scenario #2.
During the Trojan War, Aeneas needed to escape the city with his family and other
survivors. The Greeks were massacring, raping, looting and destroying so to stay
was a death sentence. Aeneas’ father was an elderly man, incapable of keeping
up with the group as it fled the carnage.
Option A: Functionally Unfit Aeneas: Aeneas has a weak lower back, and cannot
lift his father, let alone carry him. He must choose to either abandon him to
a certain death, or walk slowly with him, until they are both captured and killed.
The End.
Option B: Functionally Fit Aeneas: Aeneas is of sound body, and is physically
trained and ready for battle. His strength is not about looks but about ability.
When his father falls behind, he picks him up, carrying him with his strong back
and legs, and not only keeps up with, but leads the others to safety.
These scenarios should hopefully paint a picture of how important real fitness
is in emergency situations. There is more to evaluate, of course. Ask yourself
the following questions: Could you subdue an attacker? Could you carry a wounded
person to safety? Save a drowning man? Can you lift a heavy load? Carry heavy
gear for a long distance? Are you capable of hard manual labor for long times?
Can you climb? Can you catch someone you’re pursuing, or escape pursuit
yourself? Could you survive in the wild? In an emergency, are you more of an
asset or a burden to others?
In evaluating yourself, are you sounding more like a warrior or more like a weakling?
Capable of coming to others’ aid, or incapable of even defending yourself?
The problem is, this is the point where most of us (guys especially) lie to ourselves.
Admitting weaknesses or even pulling your head out of you-know-where enough to
see your weaknesses is a difficult thing. As a man, I know that most of us guys
would prefer to ignore the question, or inflate our heads with bicep curls and
other non-functional exercise built for looks. For women, this is also a big
temptation- to either do nothing, or to do everything with their dress size in
mind instead of their overall athletic ability.
Functionality shines a light on our physical condition, and in a way, on the
condition of our character. Take, on the one hand, the couch potato. His flab,
his atrophied muscle and pathetic lack of stamina are the physical manifestations
of his laziness and lack of discipline.
On the other hand, you have the bodybuilder. He can bench 400 lbs, but he can’t
run a mile. He dead-lifts huge weights with a hex bar and a belt, but he can’t
lift a heavy object in real life without hurting his back. He works hard for
a beach body, but what good does it do him? His hard work has been for the wrong
reasons, and his lack of functional fitness is because he was too vain to let
go of exercises designed to make him look better.
Functionality brings clarity, helping us to see what’s important, and humility,
helping us to make an honest assessment of our own strengths and weaknesses.
Functional fitness is well rounded. Strength is important, but so is endurance.
Power is important, but so is stamina. There are multiple ways we can evaluate
our fitness. One very good list was written by Bruce Evans and Jim Cawley of
Dynamax, Inc. It has been adopted by well known groups and is a good, rounded
list of skills and capacities every person should have.
1. Cardiovascular/Respiratory Endurance - the ability of body systems to gather,
process, and deliver oxygen
2. Stamina – the ability of body systems to process, deliver, store, and
utilize energy.
3. Strength – the ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular
units to apply force.
4. Flexibility – the ability to maximize the range of motion at a given
joint.
5. Power – the ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular units,
to apply maximum force in minimum time.
6. Speed – the ability to minimize the time cycle of a repeated movement.
7. Coordination – the ability to combine several distinct movement patterns
into a singular distinct movements.
8. Agility – the ability to minimize transition time from one movement
pattern to another.
9. Balance – the ability to control the placement of the body’s center
of gravity in relation to its support base.
10. Accuracy – the ability to control movement in a given direction or
at a given intensity.
Having looked at what skills or capacities men should have, what exercises help
us achieve those? There isn’t room in one article to list and describe
all of the many great exercises that are functional, but for further reference,
we list, explain and discuss these, as well as daily workouts at my web site.
For
the
time being, we will list some fundamental exercises, and some basic principles
of
functional fitness. After that, we’ll take a look at how
this can be done at home, for little to no expense.
Example Exercises:
1. Front Squat
2. Romanian Deadlift/Deadlift
3. Kettlebell Swings
4. Overhead Press
5. Pullups
6. Pushups
7. Ring Pushups/Bench Press
Body Mechanics and the Real World:
Programs based on aesthetics tend to use movements that isolate muscles. But
the body was designed such that multiple muscle groups work together. Furthermore,
in real life, very seldom will you lift or move anything without using multiple
muscle groups. While this doesn’t mean every isolation movement is therefore
useless, it does mean that exercise should be focused upon compound and whole-body
movements.
Fiber Over Filler:
Most non-functional exercise programs utilize a 3x10 format: three sets of ten
repetitions ("reps") of each exercise. This is the bread-and-butter of a program
designed to maximize the growth of muscle cells mainly by way of the fluid in
the cell.
The
strength gains made this way are not proportionate to the size gains.
A functional exercise program chooses performance over appearance. To build strength
it utilizes a low repetition, high weight format. This maximizes the growth of
the muscle cell primarily via the number of muscle fibers within the cell. This
will build muscle size too, but it is primarily geared towards gains in strength-to-mass
ratio (i.e., how strong you are for your size).
Stamina
A functional program also makes use of very high repetition, low weight movements.
This is done to build endurance, stamina, etc. This cannot be overlooked, because
strength is only good as long as it lasts.
Intensity.
If the exercise you’re doing is comfortable, you’re not getting anything
done. Without challenging yourself - without pushing yourself to a level that
is genuinely hard for you, what are you doing? Because you’re not progressing.
Au-Natural.
In exercising - particularly in a functional way - you are saying you care about
your body, your potential, and living more as God intended. There’s some
irony, then, when our steps back towards our natural design and fulfillment are
made with machines, fancy equipment and chemical supplements. If we’re
moving towards a fulfillment of how we were designed, why do we need those things?
What we are able to accomplish with simple gear, our bodies themselves, and with
our surroundings in nature can be as good as and even better than with treadmills,
hydraulics, isolation machines and so on. Why run on a treadmill if you can run
outside? Why run on a flat surface if you can run on a trail? Why seek out fancy
or even gimmicky gear when simple, rugged, time tested gear - or even no gear
at all - can work so well?
Premium Fuel.
Closely aligned with the notion that the closer to natural movement, the better,
is the basic premise of simple natural diet:
If you can’t pronounce it, don’t consume it.
A simple diet consisting of as much whole foods and as little processed foods
as possible is a realistic step towards letting our bodies function as God intended.
Fueling our bodies with simple, natural foods will fuel us the same way we have
been fueled since the dawn of time.
Austere is Good.
Gym memberships are prohibitively expensive. Owning your own fancy equipment
is no better. Most people are at times like these scrimping to invest wisely
into supplies they may need in emergencies or hard times. Expensive gear just
doesn’t fit into that plan. However, as said above, expensive gear is neither
necessary nor what is best. So what are some types of gear that are functional
and inexpensive?
For those that can afford it, this gear is absolutely the best “bang for
your buck”:
1. Olympic lifting set- an Olympic bar plus solid rubber bumper plates. Nothing
beats this for safe, amazingly effective training. If not, an iron-set is an
ok alternative- just be careful with it!
2. Kettlebells - kettlebells are the “AK-47” of fitness. They can
be used for strength, power and stamina. They are getting more common on the
market, which means prices are coming down.
3. Pull-up bar- whether for hanging in a doorway or outside, a bar to practice
pullups on is absolutely essential for training those upper back muscles- so
important yet so underrated!
4. Gymnastic rings- these can be used for everything from pullups to other drills
to strengthen your chest, arms, and especially your core! Hang them from your
deck, rafters, a stout tree branch, and you’re good to go! Rings are also
very
portable, which is a plus for those that need a gym in a backpack.
5. Dumbbells- these are on the bottom of the list, but they are practical and
relatively easy to find. Even Wal-Mart has them. [JWR Adds: Used
weight sets are
often available free for the asking, via Craigslist or Freecycle.]
If you do not have any money budgeted for gear, or if you want to supplement
on the cheap, you can make very, very effective gear from items at hardware stores
like
Home Depot!
1. Sandbags- These are the biggest, most all around useful money saver in a do-it-yourself
gym. Get yourself an army surplus duffel. Better yet, get two. Go to a hardware
store and buy yourself several bags of either sand or wood stove pellets. If
you choose sand, wrap them again in contractor grade trash bags. Place the amount
of weight you want into your duffels. You now hold a super-tool. Any of the basic
Olympic, core strength lifts or kettlebell motions can be performed with this
ultra simplistic bag.
2. Pull-up bar- no, this is on both lists on purpose. You can easily make your
own pullups bar with some steel pipe from the plumbing section. Place it between
some deck columns, between rafters, etc. $10-to-$12 gets you a solid bar to strengthen
your upper body.
3. Your own body! While bodyweight training is not the end-all-be-all, it can
accomplish a very great deal. Gymnasts are incredibly strong, and this is with
years of bodyweight training. Your body comes with you, and any space where you
can move at all becomes the gym. Check out Fatal
Fitness for examples of bodyweight
training.
Sound Mind, Sound Body.
In training physically, you are also preparing yourself mentally (and in a way,
spiritually) for any difficulty that you might face. Overcoming extremely challenging
tasks, overcoming laziness, the need for comfort… all of that will form
your character, so that when exceptionally difficult times come, you will be
strong enough to adapt and survive. Improve yourself, harden yourself! Take on
the challenge; prepare yourself for whatever may come. Whether that means a survival
or emergency situation, or simply living your life more fully now, it is worth
it! Dive in to functional fitness, and watch as you begin to transform into a
stronger person, more able to deal with anything!
About the Author: Mike Hussle is Vice President of Fatal
Fitness. He has trained many people in strength and overall conditioning,
for sports, military preparation, and general health and wellness. He is also
the
founder of DailyStrong.com.
This article was adapted from a chapter of his
upcoming book, “Austerity.”