Golden Milk: Trust Me, It's Much Better Than It Sounds
With cold and flu season knocking at our back door, supplement companies are ramping up their marketing campaigns to flood the internet with biased information on what you should shove down your gullet to keep the sniffels away. Now I love my supplements as much as the next guy, but the idea of having to take a daily lemon-pledge-flavored shot of vita-chemicals to fight off illness makes me and my wallet both feel uneasy.
Enter Gold Milk:
I first noticed gold milk on my facebook feed. A colleague had posted an article on tumeric and the ridiculous amount of benefits that this spice has and there was a list of ways to add it to your diet without doing a yellow version of the cinnamon challenge.

I will be the first to admit that I spend the least amount of time possible on prepping my food. veggies, meat, fruit, done. I keep things as quick and easy as possible due to the fact that I'm out of the house 12 hours a day during the week. So most of my food prep is on the weekends and anything I make during the week usually doesn't surpass the complexity of a protein shake or PB&J. For this reason alone, most of the list seemed too fancy and too easy for me to screw up. Then I read, "gold milk" and my curiosity was peaked.
Since then, I've been drinking it every night and it adds a nice relaxing way to end the day. The flavor is almost similar to a chai tea, but it has the added benefits of freaking you roomates out as you sip on what appears to be raw eggs... They think I'm on a Rocky kick. The recipe is pretty easy, admittedly, the hardest part is getting the yellow stain of off whatever the tumeric comes into contact with. My spatula still looks like it was used to assault the yellow teletubby.
The recipe is super simple and is a two part process of making the paste then the the milk. I actually added a couple of ingredients to give it some healthy fats and more flavor. You'll see those as optional.
Ingredients:
1/4 C Tumeric
1 tsp Cinnamon(optional)
1 tsp coconut oil (optional)
1/2 C Water
1 C Fat Free or Almond Milk
A bit of honey
How to Make the Paste:
Step 1: In a small sauce pan, mix and heat the tumeric, cinnamon, water and coconut oil.
Step 2: Heat and continually stir the ingredients for about 7 minutes, until it becomes paste-like. If it seems too dry, feel free to add water as needed.
Step 3: Put the paste in a small storage container and refrigerate for when you want to make your single servings of golden milk. (I recommend a dark container that will not pick up the yellow stain.)
How to Make the Gold Milk:
Step 1: Nuke a cup of milk in a microwavable safe mug for 1-2 minutes.
Step 2: Add 3/4-1 tsp of the paste.
Step 3: Add honey for desired level of sweetness
Step 4: Drink and enjoy your yellow milk mustache.
Developing The Overall Athlete
Over the past 15 years a large number of parents and athletes have bought into the idea that in order to earn a scholarship athletes have to play travel ball and specialize in one sport. Sports specialization, defined as limiting sports participation to one sport where students train and compete solely in that sport year round, has fortunately worked out well for a small number of people like tennis greats Venus and Serena Williams and Tiger Woods. Unfortunately, this erroneous thought process has led to an ever-increasing number of athletes who have become little league and middle school studs who tapped out in high school either by nagging overuse injuries or by simply being burned out from playing too much.
Many of the greatest athletes took the opposite approach and played a variety of sports on their way to greatness. This list is long, but let’s name Lebron James and Bo Jackson as examples. They are both outstanding athletes to say the least. So what’s the point of playing multiple sports? The fundamental reason to play multiple sports is that you build a better athlete overall. The defensive slide used in basketball is the same movement a shortstop would use to intercept a ground ball in baseball, which is the same movement that an offensive lineman would use during pass protection in football.
There are also a number of additional health and wellness benefits associated with varied sports or physical activities including:
- Reduced risk of overuse injuries and stress from burnout
- Improved performance
- Leadership development by not always playing with the same group of girls or guys
- Athletes won’t shine at every sport they try, which teaches humility and keeps egos in check
- Kids have the opportunity to learn from different coaching styles and personalities
- IT’S FUN
If you are still hung up about the scholarship thing, Lax Magazine recently interviewed a number of top level college lacrosse coaches about their thoughts on recruiting multi-sport athletes. Click here to read that article.
All and all, I feel that in today’s social media-filled world where the best coaches are only 140 characters (Find us on Twitter @SAPTstrength) or a YouTube click away, if you can play someone will find you.
Overtraining Part 1
For the next month we'll have posts regarding the total athletic picture ranging from specific training techniques to what athletes can do outside of training to improve performance. Today we'll kick it off with a post about over training. Wha?? What does THAT have to do with athletic performance? Well, my friends, we live in an era where the attitude I'm-so-tired-I-can-barely-move mentality constitutes a "good workout"; an era where the adage "pain is weakness leaving the body," is plastered on every high school athletic t-shirt and perpetuates the notion that only utter exhaustion means "progress." This is not to say that no pain is warranted, but that excessive, persistent joint and muscle pain is NOT. We can be honest, who doesn’t enjoy a hardy work out? Who doesn’t like to train hard, pwn some weight (or mileage if you’re a distance person), and conquer the physical goals you’ve set for yourself?
I know I do.
However, sadly, there can be too much of a good thing. We may be superheroes in our minds, but sometimes our bodies see it differently. Outside of the genetic freaks who can hit their training hard day after day (I’m a bit envious…), most of us will reach the realm of overtraining. I should note, that for many competitive athletes (college, elite, and professional levels) there is a constant state of overtraining, but it’s closely monitored. But, this post is designed for the rest of us, including middle school and high school athletes (all of whom think they are invincible).
Hopefully, after today’s post, you’ll be able to recognize the symptoms and thus stop the process. Next post, we’ll talk about strategies to avoid over training as well as correcting and reversing the effect.
Now, everyone is different and not everyone will experience every symptom or perhaps experience it in varying degrees depending on your state of training. These are general symptoms that you/parents/coaches should keep an eye out for.
Symptoms:
1. Repeated failure to complete/recover in a normal workout- I’m not talking about a failed rep attempt or performing an exercise to failure. This is a routine training session that you’re dragging through and you either can’t finish it or your recovery time between sets is way longer than usual. For distance trainees, this may manifest as slower pace, your normal milage seems way harder than usual, or your heart rate is higher than usual during your workout.
2. Lifters/power athletes: inability to relax or sleep well at night- Overtraining in power athletes or lifters (any athlete outside of triathletes or cross country runners/bikers, I'm looking at you, playing-year-round-northern Virginia kids) results in an overactive sympathetic nervous response (the “fight or flight” system). If you’re restless (when you’re supposed to be resting), unable to sleep well, have an elevated resting heart rate, or have an inability to focus (even during training or practice), those are signs that your sympathetic nervous system is on overdrive. It’s your body’s response to being in a constantly stressful situation, like training, that it refuses to relax and stays in the sympathetic state.
3. Endurance athletes: fatigue, sluggish, and weak feeling- Endurance athletes experience parasympathetic overdrive (the “rest and digest” system). Symptoms include elevated cortisol (stress hormone that isn’t bad, but shouldn’t be at chronically high levels), decreased testosterone levels (more noticeable in males), increase fat storage or inability to lose fat, or chronic fatigue (mental and physical).
4. Body composition shifts away from leanness- Despite training hard and eating well, you’re either not able to lose body fat, or worse, you start to gain what you previously lost. Being overtrained results in elevated cortisol levels (for both kinds of athletes). Cortisol, among other things, increases insulin resistance which promotes fat storage and inhibits fat loss.
5. Sore/painful joints, bones, or limbs- Does the thought of walking up stairs make you groan with the anticipated creaky achiness you’re about to experience? If so, you’re probably overtraining. Whether it be with weights or endurance training, you’re body is taking a beating and if it doesn’t have adequate recovery time, that’s when tendiosis, tendoitis, bursitis, and all the other itis-es start to set in. The joints, muscles, tendons, and ligaments are chronically inflamed and that equals pain. Maybe it’s not pain (yet) but your muscles feel heavy and achy. It might be a good time to rethink you’re training routine…
6. Getting sick more often- Maybe it's not the flu, but perhaps the sniffles, a sore throat, or a fever here and there; these are signs your immune system is depressed. This can be a sneaky one especially if you eat right (as in lots of kale), sleep enough, and drink plenty of water (I’m doing all the right things! Why am I sick??). Training is a stress on the system and any hard training session will depress the immune system for a bit afterwards. Not a big deal if you’re able to recover after each training session… but if you’re overtraining, your body never gets that recovery time. Hence, a chronically depressed immune system… and that’s why you have a cold for the 8th time in two months.
7. You feel like garbage- You know the feeling: run down, sluggish, not excited to train… NOOOOO!!!!! Training regularly, along with eating well and sleeping enough, should make you feel great. However, if you feel like crap… something is wrong.
Those are some of the basic signs of overtraining. There are more, especially as an athlete drifts further and further down the path of fatigue, but these are the initial warning signs your body gives you to tell you to stop what you’re doing or bad things will happen.
Next time, we’ll discuss ways to prevent and treat overtraining.
SAPT's Advice for Strength, Health, and Jedi Skillz
Brevity is one of my virtues. Therefore, in that spirit, today's post will sum up how to get stronger, live well, increase you Jedi skill level by 1,000, and we’re doing it hiaku style. What can be more to the point than a haiku? Happy Friday! Strength:
Baby weights and fads. Ladies, please fear not.
Not the best way to gain strength. Weights will not make you manly,
Pick up heavy things. Pick up heavy things.
10 minutes to abz?
Train hard and consistently
Be patient, eat well.
NO.
Swing big bells daily
Strong glutes make strong athletes and
Desired booties.
Nutrition:
Five ingredients or less,
Eat lots of real food
Shun the short cuts.
Kale makes you healthy
You’ll punch sickness in the face
Load up on the kale.
Vegetables and fruits,
Proteins and good fats are the
Essentials to health.
Jedi Skills:
To use the Force, one
Must produce much force, thus lift
Heavy things a lot.
SAPT Presents: 3 Exercises to Make You Hate Life
Anyone else have a bit of a masochist streak in them? While you shouldn’t be burning yourself out every exercise, let’s admit it, that “burn” does feel pretty good afterwards huh? There’s a certain amount of satisfaction that accompanies the accomplishment of a particularly difficult exercise. I am feeling terribly generous today and would love to help boost your workout joy. Here are three lifts that will, without a doubt, make you hate life.
*Note: Please ignore my horridly kyphotic posture. It’s embarrassing. I'm working on it.*
Numero Uno: 1 and 1/2 Bulgarian Split Squats
Ugh. My legs are burning just from doing the demo video, as my face so clearly demonstrated.
Key points:
Keep your front heel down and push through it (thus activating your booty). Don’t put too much weight in your back foot, though tempting, it will not make the it any easier. Brace your abs to prevent wobbling during, but not the jelly-leg tottering walk afterwards.
Recommended set/reps- 2-3x 5 (easier), 3×6/side (you’re gonna be sore tomorrow), 3-4×8/side (lover of pain).
Second Torturous Task: Tiger Crawl into Pushups
Whoo boy.
Key Points:
Feet and hands move opposite of each other. Stop the pushups before they dissolve into utter poo. Leave one or two reps in the tank, not technical failure. (Yes, it’s hard, but that’s not an excuse to look like garbage.) Stay tight in your midsection throughout the crawl.
Recommended set/reps- 10-12 yards (winded), 15-18 yards (ok, that hurts) 20-25 yards (*gasp*)
Third Act of Crazy: Tempo Anything
Tempo training is exhausting. It’s also extremely versatile and can be applied to most exercises (excluding deadlift or swings). A favorite tempo of SAPT coaches is 2-0-2, meaning 2 seconds eccentric portion, 0 seconds isometric portion, and two second concentric portion.
Let’s look at the squat for example, lower in 2 seconds (eccentric) and without pausing in the bottom, immediately stand up again (concentric). Pull ups are absolutely miserable with this: pull up in two seconds, no pause at the top and lower in two seconds (stupidly hard. I had to use a band for this). You can also use tempos such as 4-0-2 (using the pull up example, this would be pull up in 2 seconds, no pause, then lower in 4 seconds). I’ve even tried 6-0-2 (that absolutely blows). If you’re looking to add some size to your frame, tempo work is a great tool to help with that as the time-under-tension is a lot higher than traditional work sets.
Here is a 2-0-2 tempo pushup.
And a 4-0-2 tempo squat.Key points:
Use a timer, it’ll keep you honest. We have a Gymboss that works well (or I’m sure there’s an app out there…). You can also use a stopwatch and place it where you can see it. The tempo during my squat demo is slightly off since I didn’t have my glasses on and couldn’t see the timer. This is when a GymBoss (which beeps at you) would come in handy.
Recommended set/reps*- 2-3 x 5-7 (surprisingly tough), 3 x 6-9 (I want to stop now), 4-5×8-10 (I. Hate. Tempo. Work.)
Throw those into your workouts for a little extra misery spice.
* the sets and reps ultimately depend upon the exercise selection. I don’t recommend a super high volume for things like pull ups as it can really irritate elbows and shoulders (speaking from experience). Just bear that in mind.
Looking For A Challenge? Try the Snatch Grip Deadlift
Do you think you’re rather adept in the weight room? Feel pretty strong? You approach the loaded barbell, it’s deadlifting time, oh yeah, you’re a beast at this. Suddenly, the door creaks open behind you… a slow cadence of footsteps approach (maybe there’s a jingle of spurs to add to the ominousness).
“So, *snort* you think you’re some-bod-ee huh?” says a raspy voice. “Heh, heh, heh, heh,” the voice laughs derisively.
Beads of sweat break out on your forehead and the chalk on your hands slowly starts to disappear on your sweaty palms. It can’t be. Not him. Not today…
The snatch grip deadlift.
Yes, the snatch grip deadlift, the most humbling lift to ever saunter into a weight room. O! The abhorred and feared snatch grip deadlift! The bane of lifters’ pride everywhere. Like Mad-Eye Moody, the snatch grip deadlift looks a little scary, destroys weakness with the fervor of Moody attacking Death Eaters, and will humble proud lifters by turning us into bouncing, white ferrets.
Thus, if you’re at all interested in improving athletic performance, growing stronger, and upping your Jedi Mastery, then the snatch grip deadlift (SGD) needs to be in your strength box.
Why do them?
- The SGD improves hip mobility and increases the posterior chain muscles’ (glutes and hamstrings namely) strength rapidly. The starting position of the hips in a SGD is much lower than in a conventional pull, forcing the hips lower than a conventional or sumo stance. (Hooray mobility!) The hips must go through a greater range of motion which stretches the glutes and hamstrings at the bottom thus increasing the demand on said muscles to produce force. If the initial pull off the floor in a conventional deadlift is the weak link, the SGD is an excellent tool to strengthen the hamstrings (which play a prominent role in the first few inches off the floor). *Note* if you’re hip mobility blows and you’re unable to get to the bottom position without crumpling your spine, elevate the bar to a safe height, work on your mobility, and gradually decrease the elevation.
- Due to the wide grip, it challenges the upper back musculature and increases muscle recruitment of the following: erector spinae, rhomboids, rear deltoids, and the trapezius. Fellas, if you’ve ogled Bane’s traps, the SGD is for you! Ladies, you should not shy away from a muscular and well developed back; we don’t have enough testosterone to look like Bane (though, in my head, I am the female Bane) so train hard and do not hesitate to add SGDs into your training!!
Strong backs = more pull ups
- SGDs increase vertical jump height (all the basketball and volleyball players just perked up their ears…) Wha? That’s right, a very good jumper Please note that there will be additional updates from Power charter school during roster verification. will rely hip extension, not knee extension, to grab some air. Hip extension is created by glutes and hamstrings where as the quads and calves are responsible for knee extension. As informed readers and lifters, you all know that the glutes and hamstrings are FAR MORE POWERFUL than the quads and calves, especially in jumping. Look at these two pictures.
Notice any difference? The first is knee extension dominant while the second is hip extension dominant. Olympic lifters train the SGD (since it’s part of their sport) and I think their verts are pretty good?
Hopefully by now you’re convinced that you should add SGDs to your training. Let us, therefore, speak upon the subject of form.
1. Choose a conservative weight. Anywhere from 50-70% of your max. Actually, I’d start even lower if this is the first time, but that’s your decision.
2. Set up like a conventional stance, feet somewhere around shoulder-hip width.
3. Find your grip width. Kneel by the barbell, spread out your arms. Bend 90 degrees at the elbow, and move your hands straight down. That’s your grip (or at least a good starting point. Depending on your levers, you may have to adjust). I would do this before you’re first rep just so you don’t feel funky at the top. I’d also do this when no one is watching because, as my husband pointed out, you’ll look like you’re trying to do the Robot.
4. Grab that barbell, deep breath and brace.
5. Drop hips into position. (Read Dip, grip, and rip)
5.5. (as you drop the hips) Pull shoulder blades down and together and try to bend the bar around your legs.
6. Rip that sucker off the floor. Repeat steps 1-6.
CLICK ME FOR VIDEO (curse the lack of embedding! Yes, I know my knees are a bit wide, but I have a funky hip that won"t let me pull my knee in more.)
DO NOT…
1. Round upper or lower back for the love of all things iron! If there’s rounding you need to either a) lower the weight or b) elevate the bar since your mobility might not be there yet.
2. Pop your hips up before lifting the weight off the ground. This movement is a sure fire way to piss off your back.
3. Rush your reps. NO BOUNCING the barbell between reps. Reset each time. Be patient, young padawan.
Tips:
- Practice your set up. Load the bar up heavy enough that you know you can’t pull it off the floor. Practice your grip and dip (see, you need to read that link about gripping, dipping, and ripping….). Pull yourself into the bottom position (maintaining a neutral spine) and hold for :20-:30. Repeat 2-3 times to work on the necessary hip, ankle, and upper back mobility.
- Use a hook grip. Not at all related to Captain Hook. (an actual hook would be rather useless in this case) Here’s a picture of the hook grip:
I switched to using it for my conventional deadlifts (to great success! Your grip is much stronger like this which negates the need for a mix grip (one hand under, the other over) the heavier sets.) and the SGD can produce a funky grip and it’s nearly impossible to use a mix grip on a SGD. The hook grip takes care of that. Though, it can be rather uncomfortable near the thumb joint (until you get used to it)
So, my fellow iron lovers, has the snatch grip deadlift won over your heart?