Wednesday 26 August 2009

Did You Disappoint Your God?

What's it like when you die?
Do you live on in memories?
If you can, I wanna try
I didn't get nothing done in this life

I need to try
I need to try

I was right from the start
You get a knife in your heart
You want a wife and a car
You want the right to go to war

The Jealous guy gives you the nod
Did you disappoint your God?

Sorry I couldn't be there when you needed me
I barely can hold the pen through the flames that I'm seated in
I wait, but wait don't kill the pain

I was dying for a piece of it
Was crying for release, then it was gone
But I can't die
But I was crying for release
But I was dying for a piece and now it's gone

It's so easy, it's so easy
To give in, to give in
It's so easy, it's so easy
To give in, to give in
It's so easy, it's so easy
(i was dying for a piece of it, was crying for release and now it's gone)
To give in, to give in
It's so easy, it's so easy
(i was dying for a piece of it, was crying for release and now it's gone)
To give in, to give in
It's so easy, it's so easy
(building a dream, building a dream)
To give in, to give in
Building a dream

www.youtube.com/watch?v=abxRNHu88_I

Monday 24 August 2009

Ramadhan Mubarak!

Well today was the third day of fasting for Ramadhan, I was speaking to a non Muslim about it on a forum, and he exclaimed that giving up food and drink for the daylight hours for a month was far too difficult, that he couldn't even imagine trying it. Does it really sound that daunting to people? No food or drink for just over 16 hours. Yes it's hard work, but a billion people are managing just fine. Many poor people around the world manage to survive on little food for the entire year.

Why do muslims fast, I've been asked several times. Well the most direct answer would be because God told us to!

O who believe, fasting is decreed for you as it was decreed for those before you; perchance you will guard yourselves The month of Ramadan is the month in which the Quran was sent down, a guidance for the people, and clear verses of guidance and criterion.)[Quran 2:183]

Previous religious communities have fasted, and this tradition is carried on in Islam. Fasting teaches us to be grateful for what we have, and to feel pity for those who go without day after day, and increases our self control. The resulting state of ketosis also induces a more spiritual frame of mind.

Well as usual, the third day has hit me pretty hard, I;m tired and worn out. Tomorrow will prob be bad too. After that, it tends to get easier as you settle into the new routine of less sleep, food and drink.

I haven't quite settled into the more spiritual aspect. So far have only been to the mosque once for the additional taraweeh prayers, during which they recite 1/30th of the Qur'an per night, thus reciting the entire scripture over the month. I am doing the dawn and sunset prayers at the start and end of each fast, but haven't really gotten into the swing of achieving more of the Five daily prayers which are required throughout the year. Let's just say it's a work in progress.

I am missing the gym already. I tried some of the mobility exercises instead from Eric Cressey's Magnificent Mobility DVD. I think I need some serious work on some dynamic stretches.

Thursday 20 August 2009

Today was actually a good day

I managed to finish on time yesterday AND today, and get a pretty silver stained gel and a nice Western Blot = figure for my thesis. I even have gone out for dinner both days in a row - OMG , a social life! What is my life coming to?

Now if I can only make this the norm rather than the exception. Work and Life in a happy balance.

Training on hiatus

Since the fasting month of Ramadhan is approaching,I have decided to put training on hold for now. Since the muslim lunar calendar is 11 days shorter than the solar year, the dates for Ramadhan move backwards relative to the common Western calendar, so fasting will be during the long hot days of summer. With that and work pressure, I've decided training would be counter productive. I just hope I don't go stir crazy in the meantime!

I first started thinking about weight lifting when I was about 17 and bought my first issue of the UK edition of Mens Health. Before that, I probably had not really considered worrying about my general bodyshape or physique all that much. That changed. Thankfully I have never become overly concerned or neurotic about it. In those days, MH magazine was of a much better standard than it is now, with better articles on training, and fewer ridiculous claims like "Get ripped in 7 days while eating pizza!"
or the like. I decided to go buy a set of weights with dumbells and barbells from Argos. I didn't even bother thinking about how I was going to get 40kg of weights home. Cue me struggling, dragging it from the shop for 5m, stopping to rest, drag another 5m, rest..... I bumped into a friend who took pity, and called a taxi for me. Used the weights for a while to train in my bedroom, but with no bench, training was limited.

I truly regret not learning more at the time, and wasting the years that followed. While at Uni, I trained only intermittently at the gym, with no real progress, and no clue as to what I was doing. Diet was not even considered at all. At 5'8'', I weighed 57kg.

It went on like that in the years that followed. I did make some progress during 2006, getting my weight up from 57 to 67kg. It wasn't until I signed up to http://www.mansized.co.uk/talk, and read up on training, that I finally started to learn something. In February 2008 I finally moved from machines to more free weights style, and actually saw some real progress. Finding the stronglifts program (http://www.stronglifts.com) made the biggest change, I went from 67 to 75kg. Improving my diet went a ways too.

SInce then, various pressures (usually work) have kept me from going much further. At the moment, my personal bests are

Bench 60kg
Squat 95kg
Deadlift 120kg

I am still learning, and I hope that after Ramadan is over, I can get back into training with purpose anew, and eat, train and sleep properly to achieve my best. There are various programs I want to try out, will probably have a go at Eric Cressey's book Maximum Strength,

Monday 10 August 2009

Content?

Thanks to Lijit, I know that some people at least are reading this blog - there are actually a few hits each day (one day had as many as 17 people visit here)!

Based on the title, I would think I should aim my posts to be either about my experiences in the lab or about my views of life as a muslim. But that's incredibly limiting, and makes it sound like those are the only aspects of my life which shape my viewpoint, which is untrue. On the other hand, I don't want to turn this into some rambling never ending monologue about life, the universe and everything.

If you are reading - thoughts?