Tough Mudder

Hunter-Gatherer.com on NBC 1st Look

Welcome to anyone who saw John Durant on NBC 1st Look LXTV.

Simple message: Hunter-gatherers were tall, healthy, and strong.  Got issues with weight, energy level, depression, acne, inflammation, stomach problems, or auto-immune diseases?  Well, that's not normal. Time to take a page from the hunter-gatherer playbook.  Here are three ways to learn more:
 
1. Sign up for our monthly newsletter, Live Wild, at right.  The very best in Homo sapiens health.
2. Like Hunter-Gatherer.com on facebook and follow me on Twitter to hear about updates and blog posts
3. Or you can learn right now...

Despite everything you've been taught, you are a wild animal.  And you will be healthier when you start acting like one.  Replicate the most beneficial aspects of living in the wild.  Eat the foods humans have been eating for millions of years (a paleo diet), move in the ways we are adapted to move, go barefoot or wear minimalist shoes, get some sun, and so much more.

Tough Mudder not...tough enough

I received the following email from the Tough Mudder team yesterday.  The main feedback?  Make it tougher, longer (it wasn't a full 7 miles), and create more and longer obstacles.  Full email below.  (Apparently TM and I use the same shade of grey.)  You can see my prior comments on the race and actions shots

I'd like to know what percentage of runners finish a marathon?  What about triathlons?  Not the elite races, just the ones for the general population.

The bottom line: If they want the race to be tough, some people are not going to be able to finish.
 

 

Tough Mudder Action Shots with Commentary

#1:  This was a fun wooden hurdle near the end of the race.  Most racers were physically capable of vaulting the hurdle going at a decent clip, but many didn't.  They pretty much came to a stop and climbed over.  Why?  Because they never actually move this way at the gym, and so lacked the confidence to pull off an easy maneuver over a relatively low barrier.  This was Day One basics at one of Erwan Le Corre's MovNat clinics -- remembering that you have a body and that it moves in ways other than jogging, push-ups, pull-ups, and sit-ups.

#2:  Notice my bare feet with Vibrams in hand.  Focused on my landing.

 

#3:  Off to the races.  But notice anything funny?  Look closely.

The guy in black is only just landing!   He was ahead of me before the obstacle.  If you look at the first picture I'm only slightly ahead of him, but by the last picture, he hasn't even landed yet.   And he looks totally off balance and unsure of himself.  He looks trim and fairly muscular, but he's thrown off by an obstacle he's never encountered in the gym.

I work out at a gym too.  There is a railing that separates the stretching mats from the machines, and I sometimes use it to vault over.  Back and forth, back and forth.  You can find ways to move even in a gym. You'll get looks, but hey, that's half the fun.

(Thanks to Lisa for the screen grabs from her filming.)

Tough Love at the Tough Mudder

Today eight of us completed the first Tough Mudder.  Tons of fun.  It was a 7-mile race on the side of ski slope, interspersed with various challenges, like wading waist-deep through mud, army crawls under wire, and climbing over some walls.  I can see how this type of fitness events will continue to spread. A few observations.

 

VFFs / Barefoot running

- Lots of VFFs (Vibram Five Fingers), including 7 of 8 on our team.

- I ditched my VFFs for 3 miles of the race. Had to slow down a bit to avoid rocks, but my concentration level went up.  I felt less likely to twist an ankle.  You see guys with these big plodding shoes -- they aren't forced to focus on where they're stepping, and then when they land wrong, boom, they turn their ankle.  The foot can't adapt dynamically because it's locked up in the shoe.

- Your shoes get soaking wet at various points in the race, and your feet dry more quickly barefoot (and you're less likely to get a blister).

- That said, there were parts of the race where a normal running shoe would have been superior, due to the difficult terrain.  The most difficult parts for VFFs were man-made large-size gravel roads.

Functional Fitness

- You can't be a specialist.  The steep uphills kill the road runners and the treadmill aficionados.  People who had no upper body strength or co-ordination couldn't get over the walls.  One of our team members is not a good swimmer, so the water obstacles were a major challenge to him (but he kicked ass).

- If anything, Tough Mudder could make the obstacles longer and harder.  The hardest parts were the uphill climbs at the beginning, which wiped you out for the rest.

- There was refreshing emphasis on teamwork and camaraderie.  I could eventually see these events timed as a team, and including challenges that require all teammates to be present to complete.

Food

- Way too much carb-age.  Everybody was scarfing down bagels and beer right after finishing.

- I just don't believe that optimal endurance performance necessitates carbo-loading or heavy and consistent carb intake during the race.  If that's what your body is accustomed to, then yes, you better do it.  But from an evolutionary perspective, that's a dangerous dependency, and in tough times, humans who could perform optimally (i.e., survive) would live to bring home the bacon.

- See De Vany on "Lard as a performance fuel" (gated). 

Entrepreneurship

- The NYT had a great write-up on how Tough Mudder got started, and how they attracted over 4,500(!) participants for their first race.  The business plan was a semi-finalist in a Harvard Business School competition -- penalized since the judges thought they wouldn't be able to attract 500 participants.  Well, they were only off by an order of magnitude.

- Congratulations to Will Dean, Guy Livingstone, and the whole team at Tough Mudder for building a business that will benefit others by making fitness more functional and more fun.  (Not to mention the $150k+ that they raised for the Wounded Warrior Project.)

Hats off, guys.

Syndicate content