Listen to the introductory episode of our brand new Systema podcast (begins in earnest Friday October 6th 2017). Enjoy!
Comments and feedback welcomed.
Interview: Upcoming Seminar with Martin Wheeler
Last week, we took some time to chat with NC SYSTEMA Chief Instructor Glenn Murphy about our upcoming seminar with Martin Wheeler - one of the foremost proponents of the art in the USA, and described by Black Belt magazine as "the best-kept secret in the English-speaking martial arts world." Here's what he had to say:
This is the sixth time Martin Wheeler has come to NC Systema to teach a seminar. What has made his events so in-demand?
Aside from his extraordinary skill, I think Martin has a very broad appeal. Experienced Systema students get a lot out of the content, as he tends to frame everything within the wider context of how Systema works. But trainees from other styles - like karate and BJJ - also get a lot out of it, as he keeps everything relevant to fighting in a street or sport context. This speaks to his experience and background - which mixes decades of intensive training in judo, karate, boxing and Systema, and many years working as a bouncer in some of the roughest clubs in the UK and US.
What do you think makes Martin such an exceptional instructor?He has a very calm, focused delivery style, and gives very clear goals and objectives. He also has a great ability to teach difficult concepts through the use of comparisons and metaphors. Sometimes, it's a technical metaphor, like "You have to find a way to run three tasks in your background memory while you keep your real focus on the third".
Other times, it's more lyrical, like: "Breathing is the Rosetta Stone that translates thought into movement". This helps makes the abstract more concrete, I think. Every time he runs a seminar, you come away with at least two or three of these gems. They stay with you and inform your training for years afterwards.
What can we expect to learn or experience in this workshop?
Three things:
First, a serious physical challenge - in the form of strength and movement drills that will vex even the most avid Crossfitter.
Second, a substantial jump in your overall skill level, with respect to Systema movement and defense.
Third, at least one major paradigm shift in relation to moving and fighting. From striking and kicking to grappling and weapon defense - Martin has a way of improving you across the board at these seminars, in the space of a single weekend.What’s one of the most powerful lessons you’ve learned from Martin?
For myself, it's not to be too lazy or complacent. There's a great emphasis on relaxation in Systema. But as Martin likes to say "Total relaxation is good for health, but it's functionally useless. Relaxation in combat means being in control of your tension, rather than your tension controlling you."
Usually, this advice is offered as an admonition to those who freeze up or hold themselves too rigidly through fear or aggression. But it can equally apply to those who hold themselves too loosely in the face of an imminent threat.You have to find the selective balance between necessary tension and essential physical and psychological relaxation. Your body has to be poised, ready to move at all times.
This is a theme Martin returns to again and again, and one I know he uses with his elite NFL and NBA students at his studio in Los Angeles. It's a powerful lesson than applies to all forms of high-level physical activity, of which combat is just one. A concept worthy of study.
And worthy of study under someone who truly understands it.
Thank you!
Still time to sign up for our forthcoming seminar with Martin (Sep 22-23 2018, Durham NC). Click below to register online now!
Avoiding Self Sabotage (Part 3)
This April, I will be leading a 3-day Stress Proof Retreat in the North Carolina mountains, focused on the biology and psychology of stress, and how to build immunity to its powerful (and undesirable) effects.
As we discussed in previous posts, these methods offer relief from most forms of stress and anxiety, and a lasting solution to all forms of stress-related illness, ranging from joint pains and digestive disorders to high blood pressure and panic attacks. Yet for all the power inherent in methods like these, people can (and do) still find ways to sabotage their own development - trying hard for a short time, then burning out and lapsing back into self-destructive habits.
Over the last couple of posts, we have been looking at the four most common pitfalls associated with resilience training - or for that matter, any kind of lifestyle / behavior change. Namely:
1) Too much time awake
2) Too much artificial light
3) Too much sugar
4) Too much sitting
For a full description of pitfalls 1 to 3, see previous posts. Here, we will be looking at the final pitfall.
2) Too much sitting
Problem: Note the phrasing, here. In the first post in this series, we looked at the perils of sleep deprivation. But we didn’t state the problem in terms of “not getting enough sleep.” This is because absolute sleep requirements vary. They vary with metabolism, with activity, even with altitude, and even with environment.
I once did a wilderness survival course with legendary master of Systema Konstantin Komarov, we spent three days in a mountain forest - building shelters from foliage, learning to track and navigate and practicing combat techniques. In the cold, damp, hastily-built shelters, we averaged 2-3 hours of sleep per night. Yet we all left the camp feeling alert and invigorated. The explanation? The lush, green forest provided more available oxygen than most of us urbanites were used to. Hence, snatching 3 hours of sleep here was like getting 6 hours in the city.
As we said before, the real problem here is not the net amount of time you spend asleep, it’s the net amount of time you spend awake. With no opportunity to rest and recharge, your body has no chance to conduct essential housekeeping and repairs; your brain fails to “wire in” new memories and learning; and attention, judgement, and emotional stability all become impaired.
So it is with sitting. It’s not the net amount of time you spend moving and exercising that’s important. It’s the net amount of time you spend static and stagnant.
The average American spends 9-10 hours of their day sitting. This includes time spent seated at a static desk or computer, slumped on the couch at home, or sitting down to eat and drink. Sitting for such prolonged periods affects practically every system in your body.
Here’s how:
- In the musculoskeletal system, sitting weakens muscles and tendons, and leaves bones more porous and brittle - increasing your risk of osteoporosis and bone breaks.
- In the circulatory system, it weakens cardiac muscle, makes blood vessels stiff and inflexible, and decreases the oxygen-carrying capacity of your blood.
- In the immune system, it slows the movement of lymph to a crawl, making infections more frequent and harder to fight off.
- In the endocrine system, it elevates your resting levels of the stress hormone cortisol and makes your body more resistant to the effects of insulin - leaving you predisposed to obesity and type 2 diabetes.
- In the nervous system, it leads to the gradual loss of brain volume - especially in areas related to movement, memory, and learning - increasing your likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s Disease and other forms of dementia.
Compelling recent research has shown that chronic sitting increases your risk of developing your risk of developing diabetes by 100%, your risk of developing circulatory or heart disease by 150%, and your chance of dying from any given disease by 50%.
Now here’s the thing - even if you eat right and exercise regularly, this will not counteract the accumulated effects of sitting still for 8 to 12 hours a day.
This is why I have phrased this pitfall “too much sitting”, rather than “not enough exercise”. Chronic sitting has its own negative effects that are quite distinct from those of insufficient exercise. In fact, even if you exercise to the level of a competitive athlete, if it is done between prolonged bouts (8-12 hours) of sitting, you will still suffer most of the negative effects outlined above.
Solution:
1) Take stock of the amount of time you spend sitting still each day, and make an active decision to reduce it
2) If you have a sedentary job, make efforts to break up long periods of sitting wherever possible. Set your watch or smartphone to chime on the hour. When it goes off, stop what you’re doing immediately and move (if you’re in a meeting and can’t leave, just do all of this at the earliest possible opportunity after the meeting ends). Go for a 5-minute walk, or perform the 5-minute desk reset routine outlined in our Stress Proof classes and retreat. Done correctly, even a little of this type of movement is enough to reset your tension, stress and hormone levels, and counteract the worst effects of stasis.
3) Instead of snack breaks, take unscheduled movement breaks. Take every opportunity to move throughout your day. Phone calls to make? Batch them together, and do them all while walking outside. Stopping for gas on the way home? Do a few squats while the tank fills.
Watching TV? Sit on the floor, and you’ll feel more compelled to stretch or shift positions every once in a while. Implement all this, and you may well get some odd looks and comments here and there. But ask yourself - which would you rather be: weak, sick, and average, or strong, fit and stress proof?
There is still time to sign up for the NC SYSTEMA Stress Proof Retreat in the beautiful North Carolina mountains, Apr 28 - May 01. Learn the complete biology and psychology of stress, how to build immunity to its most damaging effects, how to become your own healthcare system, and how to ensure yours is a full and vibrant life. Sign up here.
