The Machine Principle: Training for Function, Performance and Longevity

We use machines on a daily basis to do our work, to make our lives easier, to entertain ourselves, but we fail to recognize the similarities between machines and our bodies. Both are used to accomplish the tasks that we have deemed necessary to meet our goals, and while we didn't design our bodies like we designed our machines, they are still comparable in the way that neither one can be wholly changed, but instead can be upgraded, modified, and improved.

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The Machine Principle draws its core concepts from the obvious parallels between our bodies and machines. These concepts serve as guidelines to help people shift their minds from "I am my body" to "My body is an instrument to accomplish my purpose." While it won't delve into your "purpose" (God forbid that someone turn this into a crazy cult), it will help you change your body to accomplish your purpose of a strong, powerful body by providing proper maintenance, care, and overall improvements.

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Core Components of the Machine Principle:

Strength: An underpowered body limits your abilities and is injury prone in real-world situations.

Conditioning: Gassing out at the wrong moment is dangerous (and sometimes pathetic).

Movement: A body that doesn't move correctly is malfunctioning or will malfunction because of improper use.

Joint Mobility: Proper lubrication of your joints prevents breakdowns and extends the functional life of your body.

Longevity: Efficient training with precise form is essential for optimum performance, constantly running your body hard will lead to a shorter functional lifespan.

Nutrition: In order to perform optimally, your body needs proper fuel.

Strength

Have you ever driven a car that didn't have enough power? Going up a steep incline is stressful, changing lanes is a pain in the ass, and trying to get on the freeway is terrifying. Additional strength can do more than just enhance your sport, profession, and outdoor hobbies, it can improve your entire life, both physically and emotionally. How much better would you feel driving your car if you knew you had an extra 300 horsepower under the hood? You may never use that power (although if you follow all the principles you would certainly know how), but you would gain a lot more confidence with every move you make. Strength and power in your machine will transfer to every aspect of your life. Here is how the Machine Principle addresses the Strength Concept:

Progressive Strength:
You can enhance your strength by making your workout progressively harder. While there are many ways to accomplish this, the core methods based on Progressive Strength are: adding weight, adding reps, or increasing exercise difficulty.

Dynamic Strength:
You need strength from every angle. You are not a specialized machine; you have a thousand duties and must be strong enough for them all. For that reason, you must vary the angles of your exercises, hitting more than just your large muscle groups. It's great that you can lift a thousand pounds Deadlifting and Squatting, but what if you have to move side-to-side?

Programmed Strength:
More than simply "living a life of fitness," the Machine Principle incorporates the physiological effects of muscle memory (the consolidation of a specific task into memory through repetition). Studies have shown that strength training helps to enhance the communication between the nervous system and the muscles being used, and have also shown that strength is impacted by inner neural circuitry BEFORE external changes in muscle size. Programmed Strength involves sets of specific movements and exercises repeated over a minimum of two weeks prior to progressing.

Strength Training Methods:
While the Strength Concept can be applied to almost any training method, the Machine Principle focuses primarily on Kettlebell Training and Bodyweight Training. Progressive, Dynamic, and Programmed Strength aspects can be easily applied to kettlebell and bodyweight workout plans, require a minimal amount of equipment, incorporate hundreds of exercises, and allow for maximum gains in the shortest amount of time.

Conditioning
If you've ever owned an older laptop, you know what a pain in the butt a short-lived battery could be. The battery holds such a small amount of juice that when you want to move from the living room to the bedroom, you're worried that the computer will shut down! The entire point of owning laptop versus a desktop is for the freedom of movement; therefore, that machine is pointless because it can't even move a little bit. When you treat your body like a machine, you make sure it has enough juice to make it through the task. Just like a laptop with a bad battery, what good are you if can't accomplish your task because your conditioning level is too low?

For athletes and fighters, running out of steam means you lose the match. For law enforcement personnel, fire fighters, and soldiers, gassing out at the wrong moment could mean you (or someone else), might die. Less dangerous (but WAY more pathetic) is someone who is so out of shape that they might be concerned about needing a break when they park too far away from the grocery store. So, to increase your body's conditioning level, the Machine Principles follows these guidelines:

Concentrated Conditioning:

By focusing on short bursts of intense training, you can gain rapid increases in stamina without too much wear and tear on your joints. Sets are usually timed and Concentrated Conditioning workouts usually last from 20 to 35 minutes, although supplementary Concentrated Conditioning can be as short as 4 minutes (the Tabata Protocol). Concentrated Conditioning sets are usually done with bodyweight exercises like Burpees, Mountain Climbers, Up Hill Sprints, and Deck Squats.

Limited Sustained Conditioning:

While short sprints can give you most of the desired gains in conditioning that you're looking for, Limited Sustained Conditioning can prepare you for real life situations that call for a prolonged physical effort. This concept is related to muscle stamina, or the ability of a muscle or groups of muscles to sustain repeated contractions against a resistance for an extended period of time. This is achieved through high rep kettlebell circuits with exercises like the Swing, Snatch, High Pull, Clean & Push Press, and Clean & Jerk.

Weak Area Conditioning:

It is important to identify your weaknesses and strengths, then condition accordingly. A proper conditioning workout should include exercises to increase strength and muscular endurance in the muscles of the lower leg and feet, the muscular corset (core control), the hip muscles, and the shoulder and scapula muscles that are used when supporting the body on the arms. It should also use exercises to release and lengthen muscle groups that tend to be tense, also focusing on hip flexors and outward rotators, plantar flexors, and the shoulder girdle elevators and forward tilters.

Respirational Conditioning:

Proper respiration is a key component in the whole body relaxation, progressing to isolated release of over-active muscle groups, and maximizing your effort while increasing conditioning levels. A great amount of oxygen can be obtained by breathing through your stomach (diaphragmatic breathing). Deep breathing will increase relaxation and oxygenation of the body while also allowing you to enhance your conditioning levels.

Movement

Expensive wrist watches use hundreds of components, precise engineering, and complicated calculations that allow them to keep track of years, months, hours, minutes, seconds, and a whole lot more, all without the use of electronics. They do this through the exacting movements of gears and other mechanisms. Even more complicated than these intricate machines is the human body. It's comprised of thousands of moving parts, all working together to help you function, and when used correctly, thrive.

Proper movement is an underrated concept for those outside dance and the martial arts. For these people, movement is the epitome of function; the strength, conditioning, and physique that go along with it are simply byproducts. Moving correctly allows the human body to do amazing things, moving incorrectly leads to dysfunction and injury. The Machine Principle addresses movement in the following ways:

Multi-Joint Movements:
When you look at typical strength and conditioning programs, you will find that they are heavy on movements that are single joint, muscle-specific, and single plane. Unfortunately, these programs do not accurately replicate sport specific or the functional movement needs of daily life. The Machine Principle utilizes exercises that involve a variety of muscle groups, requiring movement on multiple planes. An example would be the Six-Count Burpee. The movement engages core muscles, chest, arms, shoulders, and legs with challenges to your strength, balance, and overall agility. Multi-Joint Movements are utilized throughout each aspect of training with the Machine Principle in both strength and conditioning training.

Multi-Planar Movements:
Multi-planar movements involve exercises that move the body on one of the three planes of movement: sagittal (front to back), frontal (side to side), and transverse (rotational). The hardest and most most prone to causing injury is the transverse plane. Too often, we overwork our muscles on the first two planes, which limits our functional range of strength and motion, and leaves us susceptible to injury, commonly with the lower back. Multi-Planar Movements are utilized throughout each aspect of training with the Machine Principle in both strength and conditioning training.

Proper Exercise Movement:
Just like a machine, improper alignment can lead to additional wear and tear, limited performance capacity, and sometimes a complete breakdown. Proper form for both bodyweight and kettlebell training is essential to the Machine Principle. Without proper form, you cannot progress very far. For example, while you may be able to perform a Kettlebell Clean improperly when you start training (you'll know you're doing it wrong from the bruises you get on your shoulder and forearm), you will not be able to: 1) Move up in weight; or 2) Increase the difficulty of the exercise through grip variation. Proper Exercise Movement is addressed by the Machine Principle through exercise difficulty progressions. For the Clean, you would start with the Clean from the Ground, then to a Hang Clean, then to a standard Clean. Each beginner-variation teaches proper movement (for the Clean, each variations reinforces a straight back, tight core, and a tight yanking motion).

Balanced Movement:
Without proper balance you can't expect to enhance your performance. Have you ever walked through a pitch-black room and tried to find your way? It wasn't simply difficult because you couldn't see objects in your way, it was hard because you lack information in regards to your body parts and their relation to each other and your environment. Without a specific focus on enhancing balance, you're doing the same thing with your training. The Machine Principle addresses Balanced Movement with balance-specific bodyweight and kettlebell exercises like Handstands, Frog Stands, One-Legged Twists, and Pistols. However, increased balance will also lead to enhanced performance in all other aspects of the Machine Principle, especially strength and conditioning.

Joint Mobility

You've seen the commercials where the industrial robots with multi-linked manipulator arms put doors on cars, paint exteriors, and weld frames. How possible would any of that be without properly greased joints? Each movement they make depends on proper mobility, just like our bodies. Without proper joint mobility, machines (and our bodies) gradually wear away at each component until finally the component needs to be replaced or no longer functions.

While all the concepts apply to everyone, the Joint Mobility Concept is especially applicable to older, out of shape individuals who are most at risk for injuries due to improper mobility. Just like an industrial robot, what do you think is cheaper: proper maintenance and care, or replacing unnecessarily broken pieces? The Machine Principle addresses the Joint Mobility Concept by:

Specific Joint Mobility:
Each joint must be isolated and worked independently in multiple ways. You always want to make sure to take the each joint into its fully available range of motion; this will help with the prevention of tightening and shortening of muscles, as well as the prevention of adhesions that can grow across the ligament or tissue, thereby limiting the mobility of the joint. Muscle spasticity (contraction) can occur and interfere with movement when responding to an increased resistance. When working through your range of motion, you want to incorporate anatomical planes of motion. This includes the saggital plane (divides the body into two longitudinal parts), front plane (separating the body into front and back halves), and transverse plane (divides the body into upper and lower). By performing Range of Motion exercises, you can increase joint movement, flexibility, and the strength of muscles and joints.

Frequent Joint Mobility:
Joint mobility routines need to be performed on a daily basis (at the least). Joint mobility routines include rolls, bends, stretches, and a variety of movements starting from your neck and moving down to your toes. If a specific joint is having a problem (tight and immobile wrists are a common issue), that joint must be thoroughly worked for a sustained time or a large amount of repetitions (100+). Frequent Joint Mobility requires a minimum of 10 minutes per non-workout day and 20 minutes on workout days.

Longevity

High-speed race boats, cars, and airplanes depend on crazy amounts of power, precision engineering, and vast sums of money. Highly trained specialists build them, test them, and maintain them to ensure that when race day comes, they can perform to the max. During this process, do you think they run these million dollar machines unnecessarily with little regard for breakage? Or do you think they plan, strategize, and test them to make sure they don't waste time and money without reason?

Many individuals that require a high level of physical activity (such as athletes, law enforcement, soldiers, etc) think that they can run their bodies senseless on a daily basis, use inefficient and harmful training methods, and still perform when game day arrives, and for a while after that (some even disregard the future for what they believe are worthy gains now, unfortunately, these people are ESPECIALLY wrong).

Treating your body like a machine means that you tune it to perform properly while also increasing the longevity of your body through the most efficient methods available. Do you think a race car's lap time would be better just because it did 10,000 laps? Or would it improve because it was tuned correctly and driven to maximize the use of its assets (i.e. strength, endurance, and handling)? The Machine Principle addresses longevity by:

Planning for Longevity:
Proper workout and nutrition planning will improve the longevity of your joints, muscles, internal organs, and your motivation to continue enhancing your health through diet and exercise. Workout plans need to be based on specific objectives (you can't accomplish everything at once) and continue for at least four weeks at a time. They must take your current skill level into consideration and incorporate the myriad of concepts present in the Machine Principle (no easy task!). Fortunately, the first-ever Machine Principle-compliant workout plan is contained in this issue.

Rest and Recovery for Longevity:
Rest and recovery is just as important as exercise. If you follow all the other objectives of the Machine Principle (especially those regarding strength and conditioning), but fail to incorporate rest and recovery into your regimen, the entire system will break down. Rest and Recovery for Longevity includes a 3-on, 1-off, and 2-on, 1-off day workout schedule, a minimum amount of 7.5 hours of sleep nightly, proper nutrition and supplementation, and mental relaxation periods on a regular basis (i.e. meditation, Holosync, progressive muscle relaxation, etc).

Tracking for Longevity:
It's impossible to know where you're going if you don't remember where you have been. Workout and diet journals do more than simply keep you accountable, they provide an accurate history of what worked (and didn't work), ensure proper weight, rest, and exercise difficulty progression, and help you formulate new objectives based on past experience. For workouts, make sure you record each set, exercise, number of reps/time, weight used, and rest period. For diet, make sure you record the time you ate, what you ate, and how much you ate.

Performance Testing for Longevity: On a quarterly basis (any more often than that and you'll hinder your body and throw your workout plans off), it's important to test yourself to see if your workout and diet regimen is working. Performance Testing for Longevity is broken down into three categories and should be completed within a 72-hour period. The categories include Strength Testing, Endurance Testing, and Agility Testing. Go to MyMadMethods.com to find out more about the tests and average test results to see how you measure up.

Nutrition

Rockets incorporate highly volatile, specifically engineered fuels to break free of Earth's gravity. These special fuels are designed to maximize thrust while also being efficient enough to fit into a rocket without adding too much weight or taking up too much space. Similarly, your body needs fuel in the form of nutrients to perform optimally. Note the word "fuel," because that is what food should be considered 95% of the time.

Necessary Nutrition:
If the sole purpose of rockets was to provide entertainment and enjoyment for people, they would be run off of cookie dough so the launch pad and the surrounding area could have the lovely smell of freshly baked cookies. But instead, they serve a much greater purpose, so they don't. If the sole point of food was to make you smile, all food would be comprised of fat and sugar. Treating your body as a machine means you give it what it needs to perform its function: nutrients in the form of whole foods and supplements when necessary.

Personalized Nutrition:
There are a number of questions to answer when designing your diet, such as: what you enjoy, where you live, do you have food allergies, medical issues or medications, etc. The two basic questions that could help simplify the process are: "What is your objective?" and "How fast do you want to get there?" These two simple questions will dictate what you eat, when you eat, and how much you eat.

Consistent Nutrition:
It is best to stick with a strict regimen for at least 3 weeks before making adjustments and changes. Improving your performance is a blend between implementing correct physical, mental and nutrition principles. With that in mind, nutrition begins far sooner than most people realize. In fact, without proper daily nutrition, training sessions will not be at 100%, energy levels will decrease, and recovery will take longer.

Water Intake for Nutrition:
Just as stated by millions of other people, water is essential for proper nutrition. You must drink at least half your bodyweight in ounces (more on workout days). You must also drink water on a consistent basis; chugging a half-gallon of water before or after your workout is not going to cut it, you need to drink throughout the day and hydrate properly before bed (you should be going at least 7.5 hours without water!)

The Machine Principle: Training for Function, Performance and Longevity
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