Saturday, June 23, 2012

Adapting to New Training Conditions


basic equipment that results in a great burn

When I am at home I have a regimented program that I use to keep track of my fitness activity and results.  I keep a daily log recording the number of minutes and type of training I do, I weigh in every Saturday and I track my protein, fat and carbohydrate intake.

free pass on line
fun to ride


a mega gym

The program can be followed while I travel however it is very difficult to consistently integrate the two. My recipe for touring is to put an impetus on my reason for being away from home, spiced with a dash of pleasure; a good meal, drinks and movies.  I typically allow myself to drop my fitness regiment and rely on my healthy habits to keep me on track. 


simple and free
beautiful beach









 60 days on the road has presented a number of challenges and required adaptations regarding my daily training regiment and weight control mechanisms.  

·         Making time:  Staying busy with everything but physical movement results in fewer burned calories.

·         Finding the right equipment: living in unfamiliar surroundings presents the challenge of locating recognizable apparatus to use for achieving my normal training results and regiment.

·         Getting the best results in the shortest amount of time:  I need to be flexible if I am going to get the most out of the time, space and gear I have available to me.

·         Breaking Barriers: Being open minded to new and different equipment and routines and turning a foreign situation into an effective, productive, enjoyable experience.
stadiums are great places to walk and have fun


I have found that long term travel with the changing of locations every two or three days presents the greatest challenge in controlling my food intake and accomplishing any type of fitness goals.

The first 30 days of this trip I only managed an average of 30 minutes per week of training.  The results were not pretty; I gained a whopping 7kg./15.4lb and ballooned out of a pair of my favorite shorts.

spanking some balls is fun and cheap
 PIAF

I am unwilling to accept the negative growth and results of my poor choices over the last month.  There are no short cuts and dropping gains is always slower than putting them on.  Getting started after a long layoff requires as much follow through as intent.  The only axiom for me regarding weight control is all movement is good movement and the journey begins with the first step.   

Plan: This is as simple as setting a guideline on the number of minutes or target muscle groups I want to train each day. 

Intention: Commit to achieving my immediate training goal.

Action: Think outside of the box, keep an eye on the prize and take the steps required to reach training objective set out by the plan.  While traveling this could be a few laps around the rest area, or a mall walk, a swim in the hotel pool, or meandering the local neighborhood for 30 minutes in each direction.

Follow through:  Movement is the physical element in health and fitness.  Self control and making the smart food choices is the mental part of the game plan.   Exercise and diet are equally important; the intestinal fortitude to follow the plan and reach the goal is where success is found.

I recommitted myself to a healthy lifestyle a week ago and in that time I have had fun, explored new areas and willed myself to stay on track more than the previous 30 days combined.  Here are a few ways I have burned calories.

·         Went on line and got a free 3 day gym pass to a mega gym and used it.

·         Went to the movies in a super mall and did a mall walk

·         Stopped at a road side park and used the fitness trail

·         Went to the beach and did a long beach walk

·         Walked to the baseball stadium and did a couple of laps around the stadium while I watched the game

·         Strolled through a neighborhood near my motel

·         Parked my car as far away from the store entrance as possible

·         Opted out of the shuttle bus and walked to my terminal.

·         went to the driving range and hit a bucket of balls

·         Focused on eating smart and cut back on my alcohol intake by 90%
public fitness trail

stop the car

All so simple and effective

At the end of the day success and failure in health and fitness is an individual sport.  I get frustrated with the yo-yoing; every gain is a loss and with every loss there is a victory.  Success all comes down to intention, the way is found in many techniques and the will is only from within.  

Go have some fun,
Clearwater beach

Geo

 












Monday, June 18, 2012

Transition Step 1


putting my toe to the sand
Change typically accompanies unexpected and unplanned challenges and pleasure.  It has been proven that during times of transformation our minds are more alert and creativity comes more easily.  Life altering paths also have the tendency to create a great deal of stress and instigate fright, flight and fight mechanisms. Change is a challenge for even the strongest of spirits.


 Dom and Tingyu enjoying the sun

My wife and I are following a 10 year plan and over the last 5 years we have gradually begun making the mental transition to American.   Our first step was taking Popee to the states for four months.  This trip was an opportunity for me to introduce him to the country.  Our first month was spent in northern California; from there we stayed in the Colorado Rockies.  After a month of mountain life we made a road trip down to Florida, up to Maine, north to Niagara Falls and west to Kansas City for a family visit and then finished off the trip with a hard push through the Dakotas and into Yellowstone and Washington State before returning south to San Francisco for our departure to Thailand. We clocked just over 15,000 miles on our drive and for the most part our mission was accomplished; Popee was exposed to the beauty America has to offer and the first step of our plan had been taken.

Savannah Ga. board walk
The following year, Popee, Phoenix, Donya and I returned and during the 30 days we were here we went to Southern California, the Rockies and to visited the Family in Kansas City.  D and I were not only vacationing we were also looking for possible homesteads.  After this trip D was leaning towards KC because it is where our family is and I was pro Colorado because it is beautiful and where family is.

following the sun

Our next step was to send Popee to KC for a full summer holiday with his cousins. There was a dual purpose in this move.  Many of our associates send their children abroad to boarding schools; Donya and I agreed that if Popee wanted to stay with his cousins we would consider that as an alternative plan. The boy had a great summer but was not willing to live without us in KC.

branching out
Realizing that time was of the essence Donya and I visited the east coast; NYC, NJ, VA, Florida and Kansas City and Colorado that autumn with the intent of locating our new base of operation. Our parameters became clear; good schools with smaller class sizes in or near a large population base.

Phoenix in the Hua Hin garden

2012 arrived and we were now only 8 months away from seeing a 120 month plan come together.  The final leg had arrived and we had not decided where we would root.  Breaking away from Samui was not going to be easy, our other business projects were beginning to gain momentum and we were comfortable.

leaving home
Experience has taught me that discomfort can results in great beginnings.  I booked my flights to the States with the intent that I would not return without locating our new homestead.  I searched each area with a critical eye and I tried to imagine what daily living would be for an 8 and 14 yr old boy.  At times I honestly felt like I was out of my depth; I am 56 yrs old, how can I comprehend what it is to be an 8yr old in 2012?    I released myself to faith and was led to Hilton Head Island in South Carolina where the schools are great, the beaches are long and white, the sun shines bright and the pace moves slow; it feels like a Fat Man’s Paradise.







New Beginnings
Operating in two continents at the same time presents more questions than answers and requires undoubting faith and responsible, pragmatic behavior. 


                                             papa was a rolling stone

Walking in faith lead me to Hilton Head Island, 3,665 days has ticked down to a matter of hours. There is no way to stop time, it keeps moving even when we don’t.  When we know what we want, living in faith will lead us to all our dreams.

Reality is what we choose to believe and nothing happens without movement.  Dream big dreams; roll up your sleeves, put on your boots, thank God for life and go make something happen.  It is your life, own it.  
Dom and Ting

Go have some fun,

Geo

   


Sunday, June 17, 2012

Pigeon Holed

Enjoying the sun at Hilton Head Island South Carolina
A person’s mental well being is equally important as the physical well being and over the last month I have been put through a considerable amount of undue stress which has affected my physical fitness and weight control.

The Old Grey Mare ain’t What She Used to Be











Moving to a country that is automated, credit generated and in financial decline presents issues that I did not anticipate. 

“Caveat Emptor” is no longer the way business is done in America.  The United States has become the poster child for litigious societies and “Seller Beware” is the situation today.  This may seem innocuous and simply suggest consumer protection however fear of loss is a very negative mind set to begin any business relationship and is not a healthy attitude. 


found this on Hilton Head but no idea of it's name, I call it pretty

Coming Home

I was attempting to have a friendly conversation with a rental agent and was unable to get a simple answer to a simple question such as; do many children live here?  This situation was repeated from coast to coast.  The fear of being sued for discrimination has paralyzed and traumatized the business community.

I have the benefit of nearly 20 years of self employment history in the United States and 16 years of business in S.E. Asia to surmise my opinion. 

The last 30 days in the USA has been a shocking revelation of how government has affected business in the United States.  The restraints put upon the sellers as to what they can and cannot say has reached the point of absurd. Fear has resulted in an effort to remove the human element consequently the process has become automated.   The human discretionary factor has been superseded by an automated scoring system.   Creative thinking which the basis of American business was is now the exception rather than the norm.

It is all good

The Pigeon Hole

I arrived in the USA with monies in hand and in the bank ready to do business yet for many of the agents I have met, international credit lines and currencies mean nothing.  In a credit driven society with an automated scoring system, cash is no longer king.  The impetus for most of the representatives I have spoken with has been trying to pigeon hole my lifestyle into something they can comprehend.

I have owned and operated a rental business in Asia for nearly a decade.   My residents originated from Europe, Australia, the USA and different parts of Asia.  When I interviewed prospective tenants  my only concern was their ability to commit to a long term contract and pay the deposits and rents I required.  If they had the funds and I felt I would enjoy their pool side company; I’d rent to them.  This system worked for me.  My hands were not tied by any legal issues preventing me from doing straight business. I could tell them what behavior I allowed and did not allow on my property.  I had the right to discriminate; and I did.  The rental terms were simple; pay as agreed or move.   In all the years I had tenants I only had two occasions where I asked people to leave and they left before absorbing their deposits.


Global Society

Most Americans I know are smart, clever, quick witted, hard working and self employed.  The simple minded Americans I have met seem to believe that credit and monies originated outside of the USA is not worthy of recognition within the States.  I find this naive and arrogant; these people simply do not understand what has happened to the value of the Green Back.  I have watched the US Dollar devalue against the Canadian Dollar, Australian Dollar, South African Rand, The Euro, the British Pound, and the Thai Baht, the Indian Rupee and the Indonesian Rupiah.

Wise Investors know they can get a better return in the Asian money market than in the USA; I can get a minimum of 3% on 18 mo deposits in Thailand; a 5 yr deposit in the USA won’t pay 1%.  The United States financial system is huge which makes its problems all the greater.  

In my opinion it is time for Americans to open their minds to alternative international life choice and embrace the value of cash; it’s all good and it all spends.  Look beyond the borders, invest globally and spend locally.

 Buyer Beware

Do not fall for all the propaganda promoting a paperless society.  There are alternative motives at play when paper currency is no longer looked at as an acceptable negotiable instrument.  The entities promoting Plastic cards as a way of tracking and doing your business are the true forces of evil.

Go have some fun,

taking a break on Virginia Beach boardwalk

Geo

hotovost je král