Life Line: Mettle Maker #249

Life Line: Mettle Maker #249

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope or footwork (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Come in under the line. Set timer for 10 minutes and string up a line about jaw height -- hand wraps, jump ropes or Karate belts will do. Visualize opponent's head sitting on the line as you move forward and backward up the line, practicing lightning bolt movement and throwing combos from alternating sides of the line. Start with a jab-cross combo, then move to jab-cross-uppercut, jab-cross-hook, etc. No idea what any of this means? Links to home training options below.

  • Go for red line. As a training session finisher, complete one 50 yard heavy carry (BHC, FC, SC, etc.) at 2/3 of your PR. Walk it off for 2 mins. Then push up the weight to PR and walk to failure. If 2 sets aren't enough, you aren't doing it right (I picked BHC and did a #105 and then finished with #140 for 50 yards).

  • Go offline. When was the last time you put your phone on do not disturb, closed your laptop, shut off your tablet, and spent some time completely disconnected from glowing screens? Do it. A whole weekend would be great, but do the best you can. What do you do with the time? Cook a new recipe, read a book, play Master Mind (my favorite game) with your partner, or go outside and get dirty.

  • Fall in line. Last week we kept a notepad handy and gave ourselves demerits for behaving in a manner inconsistent with our precepts (the Five Vital Graces). That's top-down pressure, and it works. But this week, try using bottom-up pressure instead (see video below). Align yourself with goodness, truth and light like a string on a violin vibrating in accord with the others, or a compass needle lining up with the earth's magnetic field. Try to sense when you are "out of line." Common symptoms of imbalance are tension, worry, nail-biting, talking to yourself, cursing, impatience, anger, loss of focus, forgetfulness, drumming, and tapping your feet. When you manifest a symptom, slow down and search yourself for the underlying cause. Heed the answer, address it sensibly, relax, and move forward.

FIGHT DIRTY: METTLE MAKER #248

FIGHT DIRTY: METTLE MAKER #248

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Face some foul weather dirty work. I’m pretty accustomed to training outdoors. But this week the weather has been so completely icy, frozen and inhospitable that a couple of mornings I just couldn’t train out there. So every half our or so throughout the day I did 10 each of PUP and SQT. Be extra scrupulous about form and pace — 2-count descent, 1 count hesitate at the bottom, 2-count press, 1-count hesitate at the top.

  • 20 min. command and mastery knife pyramid drill. Get a dull training knife and a floor bag or grappling dummy. Set timer for 1o mins. Complete 1 of each of the following four exercises (a) 5 attacks to bag from Top Saddle, roll to bottom, 5 attacks from Bottom Scissors, Reverse back to Top Saddle. Do a Smearing Get-up (don’t forget the push-cut). (b) Sprawl. (c) Sit-ups with a double “X” air slash (step over bag, hook rear toes, and fall back into over/under Short Arm Bar position and work from there). Then do 2 of each, 3, 4, etc. until timer beeps. Finish that set, then descend. 50 Push-up penalty if the business end of the training weapon touches your body at any point during the drill. If any of this doesn’t make sense, sounds like you should enroll in the Cabal Fang distance learning program or come out and train!

  • Have you done this month’s constitutional twice this week? If not, get it done. If so, reward yourself with something nice, like a long walk, a new book, or a fun fitness tool, etc.

  • Do you know the prevailing wind direction for your home territory? In my area, the wind most often blows from the south in summer and the north in winter (see wind rose on the right). Find the regional climate center for your state, do a search, and generate the wind roses for you stomping grounds. If you know the ICAO code for the airport climate center nearest you, plug it into the URL from at the WRCC and you can get what you need, or if you’re in the SE, just go the the NCCO. You can’t rely on wind direction if you get lost, but you can use it as a backup, for support of a supposition, to determine if there’s a new weather pattern blowing in, etc.

    Fight as dirty with yourself as you would in self-defense.  Last week your assignment was to put one of the Five Vital Graces (Wonder, Sagacity, Frugality, Indomitability and Fraternity) into action.  This week be extra self-critical.  Keep a notepad or a scrap of paper and a pen in your pocket.  Write down the Five Vital Graces on the paper.  If you catch yourself behaving in a manner inconsistent with one of the five precepts, put an “x” next to it for that day.  Max score for a given day is 5 — one point for each precept you kept.  See if you get better over the course of the week.  “That which is measured improves.”

SLIP AND FALL: METTLE MAKER #247

SLIP AND FALL: METTLE MAKER #247

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Eight minutes on your slip ball. Set a timer for four minutes and get in front of your slip ball. Put in 4 minutes in your preferred stance and another 4 in reverse stance.

  • Hit the dirt and scramble for a loose weapon. If you are under attack and there’s a scramble over a loose weapon, be prepared to come out on top — without falling on a blade and injuring yourself in the process! Put on safety goggles and toss a rubber or wood training weapon up in the air about 6′ away. As soon as it hits the ground, dive forward and gain control of it with your right hand. Your enemy just missed — attack the imaginary killer two or three times. Stand up and repeat until timer beeps. Put in four more rounds, one right and one left with baseball slide and shoulder roll. That’s 6 minutes of practical self-defense action that’ll force you to practice all weapon grips with both hands while training practical movement. If you need training on the specifics on grips, pickup and/or movement techniques you’ll have to show up at Cabal Fang to learn them!

  • Learn to tie a trucker’s hitch with a slip knot and two half hitches. One of the most useful knots of all time, and my personal favorite. In the pics below I’m using the knot to lash a t-shirt to a backpack. But you could use this to hold a box onto a flatbed truck or to cinch down a tarp. See photo set below.

  • Don’t fall from grace — fall into one of the Five Vital Graces.  This month’s spiritual symbol is the Hand of Mysteries, and each one of its fingers equates to one of the Five Vital Graces: Wonder, Sagacity, Frugality, Indomitability and Fraternity.  This week, put one or more Vital Graces into action in the real world.  Need examples?  You could travel to a new place and experience its majesty (Wonder), install a security or smoke alarm (Sagacity), sock away some money in savings (Frugality), do something that you’ve been putting off due to fear or dread (Indomitability), or help out a friend in need (Fraternity/Sorority)

Handprints: Mettle Maker #246

Handprints: Mettle Maker #246

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Do the February constitutional. Calisthenics are the most efficient fitness investment when you factor in equipment cost, space, time investment, injury risk, and functional strength. Do this month's constitutional: 25 BRPs, 100 WTCs. 50 ZSQs, 25 CNPs, 100 JJKs, 25 GUPs, and 25 PUPs.

  • Put your hands on your floor bag and on the ground and make tracks. Get out your floor bag or grappling dummy and set timer for 10 minutes. Complete 6 Wrestling Shots away from your floor bag, Bear Walk back, and then pick up the bag and squeeze it as hard as you can using a Gable grip. When you gas out on the squeeze, put down the bag and repeat. Cycle through this as many times as you can in 10 minutes. If you aren't breathing hard when you get done, you are either a very fit person or you paced yourself. Note: This drill was ceated using Scufflin' Dice © -- available at Mitch's General Store. Use coupon code FEBFLASH at checkout to get any set of dice for 50% off.

  • Look for some handprints in the snow -- some critter handprints that is. As I mentioned last week, the snow makes animal tracks incredibly easy to spot and follow, and it's so much fun. Last week we tracked a raccoon. This week watch this video and go look at a rabbit and a squirrel to see if we can determine which way they're jumping.

  • Speak to the hand. The Hand of Mysteries that is. Watch this cool video about this remarkable symbol.

Alas, Flesh: Mettle Maker #245

Alas, Flesh: Mettle Maker #245

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Do some calisthenics. Calisthenics are still the biggest bang for your fitness buck in terms of equipment cost (zero), space (very little required), and functional strength. Do this month's constitutional. or dodge over to Mitch's General Store and use coupon code FLASH121 to get 50% off any fitness dice order (offer good until midnight 2/5/21).

  • Striking and self-defense movement drill. Set timer for 3 x 3:00/1:00 and get in front of your heavy bag. First round, strike with your focus on movement. Make sure that you are popping, weaving, dropping and twisting. For the break, practice your stalking steps. Walk the area like a crane stalking minnows. Second round, concentrate on striking with accuracy. For the break, practice your stalking low crawl around the training area. Move slowly and silently, keeping your navel within 2 inches of the floor at all times. Third round, strike with maximum power. For the break, practice your stalking high crawl on hands and knees. If you are stalking properly you should be exhausted. Not exhausted? Crawl slower and more quietly next time.

  • Go out your back door and see where your dinner is headed. Find some animal tracks near your home (trust me they're there!) and follow them as far as you can as if your life depended on it. In a survival situation there are no vegetarians because critters are more nutrient dense than weeds (not that weeds aren't yummy and great for fiber). Go get 'em, tiger. See video below.

  • Alas, you are only flesh. To quote theologian Paul Tillich, "Finitude in realization is anxiety." Sooner or later the realization of mortality will shatter your soul's pretentious façade and you will have to deal with the existential threat of death. Where is the solution to this ultimate reality? Our first clue can be found in the great Evelyn Underhill's definition of mysticism: “One of the most abused words in the English language, it has been used in different and often mutually exclusive senses by religion, poetry, and philosophy: has been claimed as an excuse for every kind of occultism, for dilute transcendentalism, vapid symbolism, religious or aesthetic sentimentality, and bad metaphysics…Mysticism is the art of union with Reality.” Write at least 50 words in your journal on this topic. If you aren't squared off and all set, schedule a meeting with me and let me help you get there.

Telos: Mettle Maker #244


Telos (/ˈtɛ.lɒs/Greek: τέλος, translit. téloslit. "end, purpose, or goal")[1] is a term used by philosopher Aristotle to refer to the full potential or inherent purpose or objective of a person or thing,[2] similar to the notion of an 'end goal' or 'raison d'être'. Moreover, it can be understood as the "supreme end of man's endeavour."[3]

Telos: Mettle Maker #244

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Do some purposeful fitness. What are you getting fit to do? How about real stuff in the real world. Set a timer for desired training length based on your fitness level and needs -- I did 10 minutes for maintenance -- and adjust weight of sledge and sandbags as well. Start timer. Do 10 Sledge Blows, 50 yard shoulder carry (I did #40 each shoulder), 25 weapon strikes per hand (I did live tomahawk strikes vs. a wooden pell), and 10 Step-ups (I used a 25" box). Repeat until timer beeps. Created using Frontier Rough 'n' Tumble dice available at Mitch's General Store. Use coupon code "SCUFF21" at checkout and get free shipping (offer good until 1/31/21).

  • Yank drill. Don't be one of those martial artists who fixates on fancy moves and neglects the blunt power of basic movements. Put a rope on your floor bag or heavy bag and practice yanking. Do not pull or reel. Yank with maximum violence. Imagine that you are pulling an attacker away from a loved one by taking hold of a wrist, arm, coat sleeve, shirt, etc. and yank with your entire body rather than just your arms. I try to put in a couple of rounds of yanking every week or two so that, if need be, I can yank as hard as a bayou 'gator. If you're doing it right, this is exhausting. Get there.

  • Make fire using natural materials only. You can use a commercial lighter, but don't use newspaper, sock lint, or anything manmade for tinder. I prefer cedar bark fluff and the bark of paper birch. If you need a little more detail see Chapter 7 of The Wildwood Workbook or, if you're all at sea, sign up for the Bobcat Frontier Rough 'n' Tumble Program. And please be sure to build your fire safely -- clear a large patch of dirt or build it in a fire pit, chimenea, fireplace, stove, camp fire ring, etc. away from combustibles and obey local ordinances.

  • Review your 2020. Sit down with your journal or diary and take a hard look at last year. Did you achieve the things you set out to do? What were your successes and failures? Evaluate your metrics. Did you use the right measurements and tracking methods last year? How could you improve your metrics this year? I've made slight adjustments, but mainly my metrics are staying the same for 2021. You can view them here. If you don't keep a journal or diary and you don't have any metrics, then how do you establish your personal teleology?


MARTIAL ARTS DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAM AVAILABLE. 100% free! Cabal Fang is martial arts for personal development, self-defense and fitness -- enroll today!

 
 

Vault of Reason: Mettle Maker #243

Vault of Reason: Mettle Maker #243

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Do some scufflin' fitness. Set a timer for repeating 1 min. intervals. Cycle through 1 min each of Sprawl 'n' Punch, Bear Walks and Heavy Bag Squeezes (use your floor bag and squeeze as hard as you can!). As a maintenance drill, run about 3 cycles (9 mins total) at moderate intensity. For something more strenuous, up the intensity and run more cycles.

  • Hike, vault, and roll. Put on a pack and hike to a place where you can practice your vaults and rolls. Take off your pack and put in a few minutes of movement practice. I used a couple of park benches -- see video below. When you're done, put your pack back on and hike home. Adjust weight and distance, and number and type of movements, based on your fitness level, training cycle, and so forth. See video on the right.

  • What plant is this? Here's a hint: it's the same plant the famous wand is made of -- the one Voldemort wanted to get his hands on so badly. It’s Sambucus canadensis or common elderberry.  Berries ripen from late July to August and should be cooked before eating, which explains why you always see elderberry jam, preserves, wine, etc.

  • Acknowledge your higher power. If you don't believe in God you might want to reconsider. Recognition of a higher power was central to the survival of our hominid ancestors when they were on the verge of extinction 70,000 years ago and is easily supported on scientific and logical grounds. Of the roughly 20 sound logical arguments for existence of God, the best, in my opinion, is...


    The Cosmological Argument

    1. Whatever begins to exist has a cause.
    2. The universe began to exist.
    3. Therefore, the universe has a cause.
    4. The universe began to exist at the point of the Big Bang.
    5. Before the Big Bang there was no time, no matter, and no causality.
    5. Therefore the cause of the universe is timeless, immaterial, and uncaused.
    6. A timeless and immaterial first cause is commonly known as God.

    The first classic rebuttal is "Not all things that begin to exist have a cause." But persons, animals and things are not popping in and out of existence all around us. If you insist on completely rejecting our current understanding of how things work, I can't help you. The only other avenue of escape from this argument is to dispute the standard model of the universe. But the standard model -- in which the universe had a beginning and will have a cold dark end -- has remained the scientific consensus despite all challenges thus far, including the Steady State Model, the Oscillating Model, the Baby Universe Model, the Multiverse Model, and so on.

    Based on the evidence and the current state of the scientific debate, we can say with relative certainty that the universe is of finite size, it had a beginning, it will have an end, and that only the Uncaused Cause – a.k.a God -- is infinite.  So start saying your prayers. It might feel a little awkward at first, but like anything else, you'll get better with practice.

 
 
 
 
 

The Ropes: Mettle Maker #242

The Cabal Fang monthly focuses are Self-defense vs. empty hands and the Rose.

The Ropes: Mettle Maker #242

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Do the monthly constitutional. Complete a 15-minute half pyramid of Sprawls, Mountain Climbers, Push-Ups, Slow Side Kicks, Drop Duck-unders, Steam Engines, Jump Squats (for split leg exercises and kicks L + R = 1). A half-pyramid is 1 of each, 2 of each, 3, 4, 5 etc. until the timer beeps.

  • 16 minutes of Frontier Rough 'n' Tumble mix 'n' match fitness.   Set timer for 1 minute intervals and cycle through the following four times: Rope Climbs, Bowie knife air strikes, Sledge Blows, and Wrestling Shots. 

  • Can you tie a taught-line hitch? It's one of the most practical knots known to man, useful for setting up a clothes lines, staking out tents, and so on. Knot slides easily but holds well under moderate loads. Steps below.

  • Say a prayer. If you already have an active prayer life, don't let me interfere. But if you don't, let me show you the ropes. Why? Because recognizing a higher power was central to the survival of our hominid ancestors when they were on the verge of extinction 70,000 years ago. Recognizing a higher power is step two in the Alcoholics Anonymous 12-step program -- the most successful mutual-aid, self-help program in history. And there are hundreds of reliable studies showing that prayer improves cognitive function and happiness quotient, reduces alcohol intake, fights depression, aids in psychological resiliency, and much more. Get started. If you've never prayed before, or you're rusty, start small. Say grace before meals, say your prayers before bed, or start your day with a simple prayer like, "Heavenly Father, I pray thee stand with me today, guiding my thoughts, desires, actions and beliefs so that I may walk in your ways in all I do and say this day." If you don't feel better I'll eat my hat.


Cut the Chatter: Mettle Maker #241

99% of what goes in the world is just racket.

Cut the Chatter: Mettle Maker #241

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Face the 25-minute "Stayin' Alive" drill. Set timer for 5 X 5:00. Round 1, run away from your training area. Round 2, run back. Round 3, shadowbox. Round 4, pick up your floor bag (a heavy bag with chains removed) and do not put it down until the timer beeps. Practice your stand-up grappling -- squeezes, Scarf Holds, chokes, etc. Round 5, wrestle the bag. Put it on the mat and practice your Bridges, Reverses, tackles, Bottom Scissors, etc. Click here for a video.

  • Pick a finisher. Cap off your training session with a quick "finisher" -- a short but intense contribution to functional martial fitness. Take your pick: (A) 100 yard heavy carry (choose a sandbag based on your fitness level -- I used #105), (B) 5 minute IMT run (C) As many kicks as you can in 5 minutes. That ought to "cut your chatter."

  • Do you know what bird this is? It's one of the chattiest birds in North America, and it's name comes from the Greek kitta -- "chattering bird." If you don't know its call, then you don't know one of your closest, most talkative neighbors.

Give up? Click here for the answer.

  • Cut the chatter and see how different the world looks. We are constantly awash in racket -- music and media of all kinds, T.V., YouTube, podcasts, books on tape and on and on -- much of it verbal. Words can be very useful. But pointless words are just noise. Shut off the media, go outside (or at the very least go to a quiet space), and silence your chattering monkey-mind with 10 minutes of contemplation. Set timer for 10 minutes and assume your posture of choice. Regulate your breathing to a slow, steady rhythm, making sure that you fully fill and empty your lungs with each breath. Keep your eyes open and do not fidget, wiggle, or scratch. Full instructions and more info in the video below.

Discern: Mettle Maker #240

DISCERN (Dis*cern", v. i.) 1. To see or understand the difference; to make distinction; as, to discern between good and evil, truth and falsehood.

Embedded in the phrase "pay attention" is the idea that the truth is something you purchase with your powers of focus.  It is no coincidence that wisdom is associated with vision and attention. Check out all of the spiritual symbols above that are associated with focus.

A friend said I looked like a silly turtle man in my last movement drill video.  I laughed and replied, "I know, it's hilarious. But did you try it though? Crawling low and slow is way more strenuous than you might expect. Same is true of IMT runs and runs with objects in hand (like weapons). Martial movements are very different than everyday movements and sports movements!"

A soccer kick is not roundhouse, and a punch you throw in aerobics class is not a strike, and so on.

The modern mind seems to be increasingly unable to discern with the power of the ancients.  My current working theory is that this is caused by "duality creep" -- the human tendency to separate body from soul, natural from supernatural, and metaphorical from material.  You don't have to chase the Mad Hatter down the MOQ rabbit hole in order to begin collapsing your duality. Just realize that nondual thinking leads to higher quality discernment.

Remember that shoulds and oughts are not the same thing as iss and ares.

Discern: Mettle Maker #240

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • 5 rounds on the heavy bag with a slip stick. Around here (per the S.A.F.E. M.P. protocol) we never just wail on a bag. Put a slip stick on your bag, set timer for 5 x 3:00/1:00. Turn down the power and work on form. Martial artists work a heavy bag far differently than fitness trainers do. See video below for instructions on making your own slip stick if needed.

  • 10 minutes of situational fitness. Do whatever fitness drill you want to do -- calisthenics, a run, pick whatever you want -- just do it impaired, distracted, or stressed. Put in earbuds and play annoying music, tuck one hand in your belt as if it's injured, etc. Pain and strain change the game. See video below from the club last week.

  • Go outside and sketch something. So what if you're not an artist? Get a paper and pencil or pen and sketch something. This will focus your attention like nobody's business. Relax and get into it. If you'd like to hone your outdoor skills, start keeping a sketch book. Once you've sketched a plant you cannot identify and then looked it up in a book, you'll never forget it. For more on this, see Chapter 18 in The Wildwood Workbook.

  • Nondual thinking changes how you see the world. Yesterday was Christmas, one of the most important holidays of the year for most of planet earth. Christmas is a celebration of the ultimate collapse of duality by means of the Incarnation -- when God becomes man so that man might become god through grace. Meditate on the below quote from a blog post by Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick.

"Athanasius the Great...was the hero of the First Ecumenical Council in 325, having been the one whose theological expressions won the day, sifting out falsehood from the truth and resulting in the first version of the Creed we recite in every Divine Liturgy. Yet for all that, he was actually only a deacon at that first great council, not even allowed a vote in the proceedings. He was there only as an assistant to his bishop, St. Alexander of Alexandria. He eventually succeeded St. Alexander on his throne, and as the Pope of Alexandria, in 367 he wrote one of the letters that came to be famous in Church history as the first known listing of the canonical New Testament books.

But Athanasius showed remarkable wisdom even when he was young. His most well-known work, On the Incarnation, may have been written when he was as young as 23. And it is on this work that I would like us to rest for a few moments today, particularly on its most famous sentence.

In the fifty-fourth chapter of On the Incarnation, St. Athanasius wrote a sentence that has echoed down through the centuries even into our own time as a brilliant summary of the Gospel. He wrote this: “God became man so that man might become god” (54:3).

This doctrine is called theosis."

~Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick, Ancient Faith Ministries


Selfless: Mettle Maker #239

Selfless: Mettle Maker #239

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • 5 rounds on the heavy bag. Around here (per the S.A.F.E. M.P. protocol) we never just wail on a bag. Set timer for 5 x 3:00/1:00. First four rounds for speed, aiming for constant contact. Rounds 1 and 2: Outside range hands -- Jab, Cross, Bolo punch, etc. Round 3: Inside range -- Elbows, Knees, Steam Donkeys, Crams, etc. Round 4: Outside kicks -- Roundhouse, Side, Piston, etc. Round 5: All-in for power -- work all ranges and aim for maximum punishment.

  • 10 minutes of "life in the balance" fitness. Set timer for 10:00 and cycle through the following: 1 Rope Ascent, 1 Crow Sit (until you tip over), 1 Wall Walk, 1 HSPU. Modify/Adapt/Overcome. If you can't climb a rope, hang it next to a wall or tree and use your feet, or just hold on until you gas. No rope? Use a pole or Pull-up bar. If you can't do a Crow Sit, put your forehead on a yoga block. If you can't do a Wall Walk, do an Incline Plank. If you can't do HSPUs, do a Pike Push-up. No excuses. Get there.

  • Do you know what the picture at the bottom of the page is? If not, you're missing a valuable survival skill. Turn to page 31 in The Wildwood Workbook or ask me in the comments and I'll tell you what it is.

  • Empty your cup to fill your cup. This month's symbol is the Chalice, which is often associated with the Holy Grail. In Arthurian legend, Sir Galahad is warned that he may lose himself by taking up the quest. He replies, “If I lose myself I save myself!” The chalice symbol embodies the universal medicine of self-sacrifice and the relinquishing of ego. The more we exalt ourselves the farther the grail cup recedes; the more we humble ourselves the faster it returns to us. If we lose ourselves like Galahad then perhaps there is hope that we can save ourselves. This is why we must relinquish our own wants and needs before we can accept the communion wine ("Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven"). This operation is depicted on the XVIIth key, The Star. Meditate on this pouring out and pouring in. Last week I suggested that you can't say "Yes" with all your heart without first learning how to to say "No." This week I'm telling you that you have to be empty before you can be full.

  • If it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal. Introspection, self-examination and measurement are the key to progress.

Fast and Dicey: Mettle Maker #238

Fast and Dicey: Mettle Maker #238

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • 10 minutes of command and mastery with your weapon of choice. Select a dull practice weapon (wooden knife, tactical pen, stick, rubber gun, cane, stick, whatever floats your boat) and set a timer for 8:00. Repeat the following until the timer beeps: Slip Ball or Air Strikes x 1o, Push-ups x 5, Reverses x 5 (if you can't do your wrestling moves with your weapon in hand you have a problem), Standing Broad Jumps x 5. This drill was created with Command and Mastery Dice ©. Click here to get a set.

  • 10 minutes of frontier fitness. Get yourself a sledgehammer and a sandbag and set a timer for 10:00. Climb a half-pyramid until the timer beeps of Shovels, Loads, Shoulder Rolls, and Air Strikes x 4 (Palms, Steam Donkeys, Caulks, etc.). This drill was created with Frontier Rough 'n' Tumble Fitness Dice ©. Click here to get a set.

  • Bug-out heavy. Don't assume you can quickly get out of trouble carrying a load. Slip on a backpack of at least #25 and hike for at least 20 mins. Do that weekly and work your way up to 1+ hours with #40+ so that, if you ever have to get out of Dodge you can do so. And, as an added bonus, it makes long hikes with light and medium packs really fun and easy when you go on adventures! See video below of my last adventure with my daughter Morgan and her fiancé Jack -- it's hilarious!

  • Empty your cup. The idea is an ancient one. If you fast from food and improve your ability to control what you allow into your mouth, you will also control what you allow into your mind, heart, and spirit -- and you might even be able to fill the empty space thus created with spiritual food and drink. This is why fasting is so prevalent in all traditional religions like Hinduism, Buddhism, and orthodox forms of Christianity. Assuming you have no precluding health conditions of course, try skipping one, two or even three meals (silly rabbit -- breakfast actually means "to break your fast" after a whole day of not eating). Consider a permanent change, like one of the traditional fasting forms (such as abstaining from meat on Fridays) or giving up something that you enjoy but you know isn't good for you -- like soda, alcohol, candy, or tobacco. Some folks think that you can't say "Yes" with all your heart without first learning how to to say "No."

  • If it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal. Introspection, self-examination and measurement are the key to progress.


 

Cup of Silence: Mettle Maker #237

Thanks to everyone who participated in Mettlecraft Month 2020.  Recap here.  Boy am I blessed to with a great bunch of crazy friends!

The December focuses for Cabal Fang are Situational Training and the Chalice.

The monthly constitutional will be a pyramid generated randomly at each meeting using PTDICE, and we'll be performing it at the beginning of each meeting rather than at the end.  Get yourself a set of PTDICE at Mitch's General Store  and create your constitutionals on the fly, or just pick one of our historical constitutionals from the list and do it it pyramid-style.

Why are we doing this?

  • It's cold outside and we meet at the park. Pyramids contain a built-in warm-up. We can put them at the beginning of each training session to get moving quickly without increasing injury risk.

  • Last month was killer. Pyramids are less strenuous that the conventional flat-out protocol, This month we need to dial it back.

Cup of Silence: Mettle Maker #237

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes (or skip the warm-up and do the first half of the following pyramid with low intensity). Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • 16 minute pyramid. Set a timer for 8:00. Complete one of each exercise, then 2 of each, 3, 4, etc. until the timer beeps. When it does, finish the set, then start counting down. You should finish about the same time the beeper sounds the second time. Total reps will equal the square of the peak, so if you do 1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1 you did 25 reps of each exercise, if you peak at 6 it'll total 36, etc. This week's exercises: Zombie Squats, Narrow Push-ups, Bicycles, Get-ups, Lunges, Diamond Push-ups, Back-ups.

  • Situational Drill #9 from the Cabal Fang Study Course. Do whatever you want to do - work the heavy bag, practice flow drills, submission chains or forms, etc. but with the addition of a distracting element. Turn on a strobe light. Crank up the music. Dump the contents of your gym bag -- gloves, mitts, sticks, padded weapons, etc. -- on the training surface to make movement difficult. The chance of you having to defend yourself from friends while in the gym is small. Think about it.

  • How's your stealth fitness? Watch video below. Don't assume you have ability to silently escape a dangerous situation, either on foot or crawling. You'd be surprised how strenuous it is -- how much strength and flexibility it takes -- to crawl silently. Set a timer for 3:00 and crawl as quietly as you can. Don't wuss out and do it on carpet either. Go outside and do it on leaves and grass. Every crunch will make you go more slowly and increase the difficulty. For extra credit, do another round crawling on your back using feet, shoulders and buttocks.

  • Meditation on the Chalice. Set a timer for 10:00 and assume your meditation posture of choice. Regulate your breathing to a slow and steady rhythm, and do not count, fidget, wiggle, or scratch. I advocate box breathing: about four seconds to fill the lungs, hold with airway open about four seconds, exhale in about four seconds, hesitate with empty lungs and airways open for about four seconds. Again, do not count. Visualize a chalice in your mind's eye, or set up a photo or quick sketch of the symbol if desired. Step into the idea of the chalice and fully experience it. Let the experience unfold...let a story play out in which you and the chalice are involved. If you're not a meditator, or if you want extra credit, read Sir Galahad by Tennyson.

  • If it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal. Introspection, self-examination and measurement are the key to progress.


Mettlecraft 2020 Recap and Final Results

Mettlecraft Month 2020 (a tougher challenge than we initially thought) is all done — see full and final recap below!

Well, it’s that time of year again — Mettlecraft Month!  Everyone — students past and present, old friends, new friends — please play along and share videos and/or photos of yourself facing the challenge.  Watch this space for updates!

So what’s the challenge?

12 MINUTES OF VERY BAD KARMA PLUS AS MANY KICKS AS YOU CAN IN 8 MINUTES

Like video? See below.   If you prefer written instructions:

  1. Set timer for two intervals — 12 and 8 minutes with no break. [Tip: if you only have a repeating countdown timer, just set it for 4-minute repeats and listen for 3 cylcles and then 2 cycles].

  2. “Very Bad Karma” from my e-book The Calisthenics Codex. Select a rep count for the four exercises — Sprints (12′ out and back = 1), Split Jump Squats (jump, switch, jump = 1), Get-ups and Knuckle Push-ups. I started with 5.

  3. Complete as many circuits as you can at your selected rep count in 12:00 minutes.

  4. Immediately start doing kicks. Do as many kicks as you can with good form in 8:00 minutes.

  5. Add rep counts together for your total score.

  6. Example: You pick a rep count of 5 — 20 reps per circuit. You complete 8 full circuits plus 4 Sprints before the timer beeps. That’s 164 reps. Then you do 180 kicks. Your total score is 344.


DECEMBER 1 AND FINAL RESULTS

Thanksgiving always throws a wrench in Mettlecraft month and thwarts last minute attempts to beat scores.  But this year, on top of that, Morgan hurt her wrist.  She had to take time off, get a brace, etc.  So we extended the month to 12/1 and took another run at it.  Jack had to work late and couldn’t make it, so it was Daddy Daughter Night.

Special kudos to Morgan for adding almost a hundred points to her previous score — and for beating my calisthenics count! — all while wearing a wrist brace.  She put up a very impressive score of 484!

I knew there was no way I was going to catch James, but I wanted to beat everyone’s kick number and break 400.  But alas, it was not to be.  I only got 365 and came in a measly 3 points behind Jack — beaten by a nose!

Great job everyone, and thanks a million for taking this ridiculous journey with me.  Everyone who took the trip goes in the Calisthenics Codex Hall of Fame!

Here’s the final tally:

James Williams — 228 + 398 = 626
Jack Bloor — 278 + 266 = 544 
Mitch Mitchell — 176 + 365 = 541
Morgan Mitchell — 189 + 295 = 484

NOVEMBER 30 RESULTS

James Williams — 228 + 398 = 626.  Apparently James was bitten by a radioactive spider, because he wrecked the challenge with a mindboggling score.  James takes the cake — and the plate, the silverware, the tablecloth…

NOVEMBER 24 RESULTS

Mitch Mitchell — 176 + 303 = 479

NOVEMBER 23 RESULTS

James Williams — 203 + 331 = 534

NOVEMBER 19 RESULTS

I tried to get 50 of each exercise in order to break 200 total reps during the Very Bad Karma phase.  Didn’t make it.  Here’s the video.

NOVEMBER 17 RESULTS

Mitch Mitchell — 150+ 250 = 400
Morgan Mitchell — 150+ 240 = 390
Jack Bloor — 278 + 266 = 544 

NOVEMBER 16 RESULTS

James Williams —  203 + 264 = 467

NOVEMBER 12 RESULTS

Mitch Mitchell — 176+ 263= 439

NOVEMBER 10 RESULTS

Everybody’s numbers came up this week!

Mitch Mitchell — 175+ 218 = 393
Morgan Mitchell — 162 + 236= 398
Jack Bloor — 240 + 259 = 499

NOVEMBER 3 RESULTS

Mitch Mitchell — 136 + 242 = 378
Morgan Mitchell — 160 + 200 = 360
Jack Bloor — 205 + 280 = 485  Way to go Jack!

Rigor Fortis: Mettle Maker #236

The title of this week's mettle maker is a play on the term  rigor mortis which literally means "stiffness of death" and refers to the tendency of corpses to become rigid for a fixed period of time after death.

Rigor fortis means "stiffness of strength."  Strength is mostly about suppleness, elasticity, and explosiveness.  But sometimes it also about setting your face like flint.

Third Annual November Mettlecraft Challenge is in full swing.

November is Mettlecraft Month at Cabal Fang.  Click here to participate if you dare!  Here's what we did in 2018 and 2019.  

Rigor Fortis: Mettle Maker #236

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF. If you really want to crush this month's mettlecraft challenge, do MBF every day and incorporate at least 2 of its exercises in each session. Frequent low-intensity work between high-intensity work will shoot you forward like a slingshot.

  • How's your pain tolerance? Half fill a large pitcher with water and ice. Set timer for 3 mins and plunge your open hand and lower arm into it to test your pain tolerance. Do not squirm, make faces, or utter a sound. If you can’t go the full 3 mins, practice daily until you can. Note: As shown in Mythbusters episode #142, holding a hand in ice water for ≤ 3 minutes is safe for people with no precluding health issues.

  • Five rounds of practical, solo grappling action. You're doing intense fitness work on account of Mettlecraft Month, so take it down a notch and work the dummy. Hang it up and set timer for 5 x 3:00 (beginners add breaks if needed). Rounds as follows: 1) Grinding and Gouging 2) Striking 3) Choking, Holding and Locking 4) Throwing 5) Yanking. See video below for details.

  • How's your weather wisdom? Do you know which tidbits of old-timey weather wisdom are reliable and which are merely myths? Is a read sky at night really a sailor's delight? Do trees really show the undersides of their leaves before a storm? Click the picture above enlarge and expand this excerpt from Robert Baden-Powell's Scouting For Boys (7th Edition, 1915). Which of these are reliable and which are not? Answers next week.

  • Can you set your face like flint? Has there been a time when you were beset by accusers, defamers, and smearers, by the cruel and the vindictive? If not, then you will at some point. Often this will happen when you are genuinely at fault to some extent. Blood gets in the water and the sharks descend. Mistakes are the best teachers and we all make them. But don't let yourself be broken by those who heap on a level of derision out of proportion to your error. Accept your mistake. Repent, do penance, and take action to correct and prevent a recurrence. Set your face like flint. Look them in the eye, not with anger, defensiveness, or denial but with calmness and courage. Meditate on a time when this happened and evaluate how you'd behave if happened again. If this has never happened to you, meditate on this and be prepared. We moderns have lost sight of the important of this type of practice. The ancients would have called it stoicism, controlling the passions, and so on.

  • If it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal. Introspection, self-examination and measurement are the key to progress.


MARTIAL ARTS DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAM AVAILABLE. 100% free. Cabal Fang is martial arts for personal development, self-defense and fitness.  What are you waiting for? Enroll today!

Steam Power: Mettle Maker #235

Steam Power: Mettle Maker #235

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF. If you really want to crush this month's mettlecraft challenge, do MBF every day and incorporate at least 2 of its exercises in each session. Frequent low-intensity work between high-intensity work will shoot you forward like a slingshot.

  • Could you climb a rope to save your bacon? Stuntmen on TV make it look it look easy. It ain't. Hang one up and give it a go. Start by trying to ascend a rope attached to a tree trunk or wall so that you can use your feet to walk up. When that's easy, move the rope away from the surface and work on climbing it without feet.

  • 4 rounds of wrestling flow. You're doing intense fitness work on account of Mettlecraft Month, so take it down a notch and work the dummy. If you don't have a dummy, make one. Building combos is part of the learning process. But if you're stuck try this 8 count sequence.

  • Can you estimate the height of obstacles, trees, etc.? What if you have to to figure out where a cut tree will fall, or estimate the amount of rope you'll need to lower down to your friends after ascending an obstacle? "To find the height of an object, such as a tree (AX), or a house, pace a distance of, say, eight yards away from it, and there at B plant a stick, say, six feet high ; then pace on until you arrive at a point where the top of the stick comes in line C with the top of the tree then the whole distance AC from the foot is to AX, the height of the tree, the same as the distance BC, from the stick, is to the height of the stick; that is if the whole distance AC is thirty-three feet, and the distance BC from the stick is nine (the stick being six feet high), the tree is twenty-two feet high." Click the picture to enlarge and expand this excerpt from Robert Baden-Powell's Scouting For Boys (7th Edition, 1915). Over 100 years old and still relevant.

  • Use steam power. Think of yourself like a kettle or, better yet, like a boiler used to power a machine by steam. The more you yakkety-yak about what you're going to do, the more steam escapes. It drains energy from the system. Shut your yap and act. Retain the the steam inside and keep the pressure on. See the video below.

  • If it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal. Introspection, self-examination and measurement are the key to progress.

Cross and Bush: Mettle Maker #234

Third Annual November Mettlecraft Challenge is in full swing.

November is Mettlecraft Month at Cabal Fang.  Click here to participate if you dare!  Here's what we did in 2018 and 2019.  

Cross and Bush: Mettle Maker #234

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF. If you really want to crush this month's mettlecraft challenge, do MBF every day and incorporate at least 2 of its exercises in each session. Frequent low-intensity work between high-intensity work will shoot you forward like a slingshot.

  • 4 minutes of jump and roll. Get on the grass or on the mats and set a timer for 4 minutes. Complete a Standing Broad Jump (a.k.a. "a big bunny hop"). Flex knees on landing, absorb shock, and shoulder roll from left palm to right rear hip. Turn around repeat, only this time roll from right palm to left rear hip. If that's easy, jog into your SBJs. For extra credit do this drill in the rain and mud wearing street clothes like I did. Real life doesn't wait for ideal conditions to confront you with survival challenges.

  • 4 minutes of weapon training on your heavy bag. Get yourself an 12" - 20" length of galvanized pipe, put on some safety glasses, and set a timer for 4 minutes. Hit the bag with max power but be conscious of your form. Make sure you strike like cavalry rather than cannon, that you draw the weapon at the end of each strike, and that you and avoid fantasy combos (like 2 to 8). If none of that makes sense, you might need to take a class.

  • Is this fall berry edible? In a survival situation it's a good idea to know your berries. This is the berry of Burning Bush (Euonymus alatus ), one of the most invasive species in the U.S., and its berries are not edible. All parts of this plant are toxic. If you find it in your yard, dig it up and burn it.

  • The power of four. One of the reasons that the cross is such a powerful symbol is that it holds ever-unfolding esoteric secrets. Like a compass, it reminds you to orient your thoughts (forehead), desires (heart), actions (right shoulder, sword hand) and beliefs (left shoulder, shield arm). It reminds you that there are four ways of knowing: propositional knowing (mind, forehead), perspectival knowing (heart), participatory knowing (right shoulder) and procedural knowing. The cross cries out that there are infinite ways to approach solutions, problems, and questions -- but they can all be laid out in four major categories. Watch the video below and apply it in your everyday life -- you'll be glad you did.

  • If it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal. Introspection, self-examination and measurement are the key to progress.

DRAGON WEIR: METTLE MAKER #233

Third Annual November Mettlecraft Challenge is in full swing.

November is Mettlecraft Month at Cabal Fang.  Click here to participate if you dare!  Here’s what we did in 2018 and 2019.  

DRAGON WEIR: METTLE MAKER #233

A weir is a low dam built across a stream or river in to raise the water level and create a body of water.  It manages the flow.

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • 12 minutes of “Very Bad Karma” plus 8 minutes of kicks. Even if you’re not going to participate in Mettlecraft Month 2020 you gotta do this thing at least once. Click here for details.

  • Work your flow. If you’re participating in Mettlecraft Month 2020 it’s important to make sure your training volume and intensity don’t rage out of control. Exclusive of your mettlecraft training, work in the 50 – 70% range. I’m doing lots of flow drills, slip ball, shadowboxing, MBF, and so forth.

  • Hold your position for 3 minutes. Another way to moderate your training this month — which is all about pushing the reps and the intensity — is to work on exercises that don’t involve any reps at all: pose-based fitness. Crow sits, Planks, Handstands, Wall Sits, etc. Set a timer for 3 minutes. Pick two or more poses and start your timer. Hold the first pose until failure, then move to the next, cycling through (or back and forth) until the timer beeps.

  • What tree is this? In a survival situation it’s a good idea to know your trees so that you can be sure to use woods suitable to your purpose. This is Sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua). In my opinion it’s perfect for nothing but passable for most anything. Some folks make bark baskets from them but I never tried.

  • Face the dragon. Mettlecraft Month is about building your indomitability so that, like a mythic knight, you can be courageous and indomitable in facing the dragon. The thing is, before you can face the dragons of the world you need to face the dragons within. How many times in the last week have you made excuses for not doing better — not just in fitness, but at work and at home, in your relationships? The scariest dragons are in you — lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, pride, and so on — and they are breeding in the caves of your subconscious. Fail to run them to ground every day at your peril.

  • If it ain’t in the training journal it didn’t happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal.

Round Three: Mettle Maker #232

The weekly training post has a new name!

This post is now the "Mettle Maker."  Why the name change?  The weekly post started as purely martial fitness (the "Workout of the Week"), grew to incorporate a spiritual/internal element (the weekly "Training Involution"), and now -- in Round 3 -- it contains even more more goodness.

What is mettle?

The word mettle is a variant of the more often seen metal.  A metal sword blade has a quality of temper and so does a human being.  That's mettle -- courage, character, heart and fortitude of mind, body and spirit.

I find the Englishman to be him of all men who stands firmest in his shoes. They have in themselves what they value in their horses, mettle and bottom. On the day of my arrival at Liverpool, a gentleman, in describing to me the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, happened to say, "Lord Clarendon has pluck like a cock, and will fight till he dies."  ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Manners"

We use the word mettle quite a bit in Cabal Fang.  Speaking of which...

Third Annual November Mettlecraft Challenge

November is Mettlecraft Month at Cabal Fang.  Stay tuned for details on this month's challenge. 


Round Three: Mettle Maker #232

  • Warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes. Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • 3 rounds of floor bag. Complete 3 x 3:00/1:00 with the floor bag. Scarf Hold the bag, squeeze AHAYC, and shift sides three times. Shuffle and bulldog the bag to the mat. Get your prop in tight, then shuck the imaginary arm and buck to tap. Go back to Scarf Hold. Slide out to Cross Body. Insert knee to take Top Saddle. Strike 1o times. Smear and pop up to standing position. Pick up the bag and repeat.

  • A three-fer of movement exercises. Set a timer for 8:00 and complete as many sets as you can of 5 Shoulder Rolls, 5 Get-ups and 5 HSPUs.

  • Reality check. This is the final post on October's spiritual symbol, the Luminaries -- the Sun and Moon -- which symbolize (among many other things) the relationship between reality (the Sun) and imagination (the Moon). This can be the map vs. the actual terrain, your self-conception vs. the real you, and so forth. Imagination is a great tool. It allows us to try things out in our heads without having to actually do them, which has had tremendous evolutionary benefits. What if we had to a jump in order to see whether or not a fall was deadly? The drawback is that we can mistake the imaginary for the real. How much of what we tell ourselves we're capable of can we really do? Find an assumption about yourself that you can test safely and do so. Don't assume you can get there. Actually get there!

  • If it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen. Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal.


Quizzical: Training Involution #231

Vote for the November Mettlecraft Challenge

November is Mettlecraft Month at Cabal Fang, and if you plan on playing along (here's what we did in 2018 and 2019), please make your suggestions in the poll by clicking here.  Pick one of the options or make your own original suggestions!

Quizzical: Training Involution #231

  • Do you warm-up thoroughly for at at least 8 minutes before you train? Do 2-3 minutes each of (a) jumping rope (b) light calisthenics and (c) shadowboxing, forms, or light heavy bag work, or 8 minutes of MBF.

  • Do you train with a purpose, or do you just sort of wing it?  Complete 3 x 3:00/1:00 max power rounds on the heavy bag.  Just because the monthly focus is wrestling doesn't mean you shouldn't practice your striking.  If you insist on maintaining focus, lay down your floor bag and get busy on some ground 'n' pound.  Whatever you, make sure the emphasis is on power this time, and always make sure you have a focus. 

  • Have you done this month's constitutional yet?  If so, pick one of the previous ones and do that (click here for previous ones).  If not, here it is: Sit-out Push-ups (25), Ploughs (25), Pikes (25), Neck Crunches (25 ea. direction), Zombie Squats (50), Bear Walks (100 yards), and Jackknifes (25).  Beginners,  go slow and just try to finish (but listen to your body and don't overdo it).  Intermediates, aim to finish in less than 20 mins.  Advanced, aim for under 15 mins and, if you succeed, go back and do 20% more (5 more of the 25-rep exercises, 10 more Zombies Squats, and so on).

  • Have you been outside recently?  Do something outdoors that your normally do indoors.  Read a book, eat a meal, play guitar, do arts and crafts, do your physical training, etc.  I recently moved all of my training outdoors -- 100%.  See video below. 

  • Do you guide your habits, or do they guide you?  Manipulate your subconscious using rituals and habits.  This month's symbol is the Luminaries and one of the many things the Luminaries symbolize is the relationship between your subconscious/body and your conscious/mind.  The conscious/mind ("the Sun") may want to stick with that diet, avoid that addiction, or adhere to that plan.  The Sun can shine as brightly as it wants.  But sooner or later night will fall, the Moon will rise, and the subconscious/body will be in charge.  Train your subconscious/body using the four tried-and-true methods that have been used since ancient times: contemplation, meditation, prayer, and -- perhaps the most powerful one of all -- ritual.  Allow the power of rituals and habits to provide direction to your subconscious/body.  Set and keep schedules sleeping/waking.  Do positive things in the same ways, at the same times, and/or at the same places -- join clubs with which you share positive goals, start going to church on certain days, and so forth.  Swap good things for bad and plug them into existing habits.  If you always stop for coffee and a doughnut on the way to work and you're trying  give up sweets for your health, try stopping at a different place to make a healthier choice.  If you always meet friends for beers on Friday nights, but you're trying to give up drinking, see if you can get them to join you for a run instead -- their choice might surprise you.   If they won't join you, widen the invite and be a leader.

  • Are you regularly writing in your journal?  Do the work, the external and internal, and write about what you did and thought in your journal (by the way, this is another way to train your subconscious).  And remember, if it ain't in the training journal it didn't happen!