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No Brain – No Gain. Choose Intelligent Fitness!

A well-known fitness personality stated in an interview, “I never denied that this can hurt and kill you. I just said it’s the best way.” Perhaps he was telling the truth: perhaps his attitude is the best way to hurt and kill yourself.

But we don’t have to be suckered into believing that:

  1. Either you will face grave bodily pain and injury;
  2. Or you won’t ever tap your true physical potential.

This thinking defies basic neuroscience: that PAIN COMPETES WITH PRECISION PERFORMANCE. Pain gets to jump to the front of the line when you’re practicing any skill or exercise (which is a useful survival mechanism). But as a result, if you’re in significant pain, you don’t get positive results. You adapt to the pain not to the progress.

I couldn’t afford any more injuries. My body already had a propensity for them. I couldn’t defeat anyone with my “inferior genetics” so I sought to use my mind to find the smartest way to train, so I could prevent injuries and yet still lead the life of a competitive athlete.

What I discovered through my obsession with tracking and measuring data was that you can eliminate injuries and improve results in all tested metrics: weight loss, lean body composition changes, strength, endurance, speed and flexibility.

ELIMINATING INJURIES = GREATER RESULTS.

I have proven that at a government agency level with verifiable statistics.

You CAN enjoy kicking your own ass, but if you do so by training smart with an intelligently designed system of self-monitoring, you can do so without injuries. From a coaching psychology perspective, the body and mind CRAVE a good ass whooping IF you have the self-coaching skills to do it in a positive way.

It’s the basis of all operant conditioning: punishment is the least effective form of behavioral modification; positive reinforcement – the most effective. Since the mind perceives bodily pain as punishment, you CANNOT push yourself sufficiently to dig into the depths of your true potential.

That is what it means to train smart!

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

Ascending Your Mountains of Potential

Climbing the mountain of your potential can be a perilous journey with ubiquitous hazards. We make our trek, listen to the perennial wisdom, in an attempt to find the center in all the chaos of this tumultuous tugging, blasting, buffeting our lives a thousand ways at once.

We can get fixated on staring up at the summit. It’s when we become attached to “peaking” that we often fatigue and “fall” suffering the ilk of injury and setback. We then must camp and await convalescence. Sometimes we must even get help to trek back down to the base, to the bottom of the Valley due to the severity of these injuries.

No matter how much progress you see from a particular program, you must stop or change your program BEFORE you meet diminishing returns. It’s our collective challenge. You face it. I face it. The greed for “peaking” is very seducing.

But the “peak” is a trap. And you can avoid it if you stop before diminishing returns, and redirect your focus into a different area/venue. You can later cycle back to the original idea. What you discover is that you do not start at the beginning but rather you start at the beginning plus “a little.” I have learned that its more important to progress “a little” consistently and safely, than to lurch up at that perceived “peak.”

In physical Training, this refers to the boundaries of over-training. We must become in tune with our membrane between increasing our durability, our toughness, and the Ultimate Failure Point – the line of injury and illness. The allure of progress can and has taken many of us into the forbidden zone way to often. This is uncharted territory and you could become lost, injured, or worse.

Our climb is not a tender one. It takes determination and persistence to leverage ego and discard attachments. But we also need patience and compassion for ourselves.

The trap is that we never “arrive” at the peak. Life is a journey not a destination, a process not a product. It’s the expectation that gets us. It’s our attachment to what it must be like at the “peak” which undermines our fulfillment, replacing it with this insane desire. We climb to REALIZE our capabilities, to uncover our depth of talent, genius, and abundance. But the work doesn’t end there. Our mountain retreat is not a vacation villa, but rather a community service.

All of our lives we are taught that ascending the mountain of our potential is the end in itself. We become entrapped in a narcissistic feedback loop. We confuse a vantage point with ultimate purpose. We push that rock of our ego up the mountain only to get to the top and have it roll back down to the adjacent valley. We do this over and over, injury after injury.

The purpose is simply to stop pushing the rock, to climb our mountain, to help others along the way, and to ask for help when we unwittingly become snared ourselves in our own process.

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

Making New Year’s Goals Stick

Many make New Years Resolutions. Studies report only 12% of resolutions are accomplished. But one insight, when applied, accounts for almost all of the 88% of unrealized resolutions.

I was very fortunate to have childhood teachers and doctors claim I was genetically flawed. For many years, I sought to become what the labels were not: don’t be learning disabled, don’t be obese, don’t be joint diseased, don’t be impoverished. I could never negate those labels, because I had accepted them as defining me. How can you negate what you’re not?

You have to become what you are, instead of trying to not be what you aren’t. Focusing on the negative incurs three times the amount of energy, explains researching psychologist Dr. Barbara Fredrickson in her book Positivity. Focusing on the positive would require 1/3 the energy to realize my goals.

My head full of negativity had no space for positivity, and consumed three times the energy. So, instead of continuing to not be what I wasn’t, I focused on becoming what I was. How were my obstacles actually opportunities? How could I mentally reframe my circumstances to focus on the presence of positives rather than upon the absence of negatives.

I did not become what my labels said I was absent; instead, I adopted new, positive affirmations of what I was abundant.

Consciously focus, mindfully attend, and purposefully identify a positive affirmation in each resolute goal. Dwell on the positive factors of your life, and in 1/3 the time and effort, you will surpass your tipping point to achieve a new goal, and your intentions begin snowballing down the hill of their own accelerating inertia.

When you set your resolution, or if you have already, set it upon the affirmative rather than the negative. If you’re told, “Don’t think of a spotted elephant,” you do. Set a negative goal like, “Don’t be…” and you make your goal three times more difficult to achieve, decrease your self-gratification, lower quality of life, and increase the likelihood of backslide, for if you are trying to not be a label, you often eventually “fall off the wagon” because you have only defined yourself by the label.

When you begin to think negatively, stop thinking negatively and think awesomely instead.

When everyone around you and everything inside you RESISTS that positivity, remember that it’s a sign you are succeeding. That membrane of resistance represents the labels you have redefined and into which you are transforming. Be patient and persistent. Allow everyone the opportunity to be positive of your new definitions (or insulate them from impacting your growth until you feel strong enough to help them as well; though even those healthy boundaries will help them redefine themselves as well.)

Don’t define yourself by not a negative. Define yourself by a positive. Don’t be negative that you will not fail. Be positive that you will succeed.

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

TACFIT: It’s Not What You Think!

Since the creation of TACFIT® over 25 years ago, many “tactical fitness” organizations have appeared. Every single one begins the same erroneous premise: “Tactical Fitness is not about workouts, it’s about work… carry-over into real-life movements like lifts, carries, runs, rucks, swims, non-traditional equipment to lift and carry loads that are not equally balanced.”

Transferability of work to specific target skills is the basis of ALL proper exercise programming, not only tactical fitness. Carry-over, therefore, isn’t the defining characteristic of tactical fitness. Presuming that it is the “work” which distinguishes tactical fitness from other aspects of fitness correlates to why the problem is being exacerbated.

TACFIT is not about the work, but about the recovery. The work performed is only as valuable as the ability of the individually to fully and functionally adapt to it. This is the simplest and most defining distinction.

While other organizations view tactical fitness as specific exercises to build strength and conditioning capacity for tactical occupations, the TACFIT Academy focuses on optimizing the recovery of those who experience high stress. Those who experience the highest levels of stress, leading to a national average mortality rate of age 54 due to stress-related illness in the tactical community, benefit the greatest.

Current tactical fitness approaches do not contribute to the ability to manage stress, and they lack the capacity to address the performance longevity of those who experience high levels of stress, because they do not focus on recovery as their ultimate purpose. These stress management programs do not work effectively, because stress is believed to be a general malaise which can be lessened with strategies. However, the body only ever adapts to stress specifically, and the individual adapts to stress uniquely.

Therefore, TACFIT is about the specific recovery of the individual from how excess stress has caused dysfunctional adaptations – physiologically, neurologically and biochemically.

As such, users of this system beyond the tactical community now benefit from TACFIT because its systematic approach to recovery allows the student to benefit from all of the positive stress they experience, and to discharge excessive amounts of stress without adverse impact.

TACFIT as a system has been organized in this manner. The TACFIT Academy certification (New dates & announcements coming soon) are taught in a way to observe, intervene, interrupt, modify and recover how the individual is uniquely reacting to excess stress. The student is provided tools, tactics, techniques and technology to do so!

Stay tuned for updates and announcements about our 2022 TACFIT, FlowFit, Clubbell and Steel Mace Certification schedules!

Mobility Heals And Energizes

You need energy to spend energy! So if you’re stuck in a slump, recovering from an injury, overwhelmed by your tasks, flattened by over-trained effort, frustrated by lack of results or depressed by lack of energy, then… Don’t… Get… Up… yet. Build your energy where you are.

You may not know it yet but locked inside your compressed joints you can access a cold storage of chemically healing nutrients. How? When you can’t perform a movement, do mobility (Intu-Flow 101).

In only 8-14 minutes, you can release an espresso-like shot of healing energy into your fluid body through the bellows-effect of powerful exhalations, and by moving each major joint complex (neck, shoulders, shoulder blades, elbows, wrists, fingers, thorax, lumbar/pelvis, hips, knees, ankles and toes).

I discovered this when my back had been broken in martial art competition. The injury left me in agonizing restriction, plummeting me into depression. So I began to climb out by mobilizing one tiny joint at a time; starting with fingers and toes. By the time I had finally gotten to my lumbar and cervical spine without any spasm, I was finally able to get up and walk. Doctors said it would be weeks. Some insisted on surgery. Yet, I began walking pain-free in 5 days.

After standing, I then used my mobility approach to face jet lag, or an energy drain from an accidentally missed meal, to focus for an upcoming high anxiety speaking engagement, to decompress after a hostile encounter or to recover from an intense workout or martial art session.

After some time, my body adapted to releasing the stored energy upon rapid demand, so I now perform my mobility session with increased vigor, in low to moderate intensity exercise; resulting in a day long dynamo of energy generation.

If you can’t get up and get moving yet, stay there and get mobilized.

Mobility heals and energizes!

Very Respectfully,

Scott Sonnon

Finding Your Form, Freedom From Shape

“If I look like THAT, then I shall be healthy,” blips through the mental radar a thousand times a day. We each experience the bombarding rain of marketing spear-heads hoping to penetrate your defenses, pierce your Fear-Reactivity and activate your submission to purchase a product or program.

“If I look like THAT, then I shall feel good,” echoes through our viscera as our organs, muscles, even our brain aches from the merciless onslaught of stress. We pine for the fading memory of pain-free movement, pain-free digestion, and endless energy, that physical exuberance marking the life of every child!

“If I look like THAT, then I shall be happy,” screams through the anguish of a mundane existence. In the “adult world” we feel like we’ve somehow lost something precious, that ineffable quality of bliss we each experienced as a child at play, in awe of the world, and hoping the day would never end so we would never have to sleep and miss another moment of PLAY!

We are each an incomplete puzzle piece. Our unique characteristics hide from our view… because our tensions, fears, and traumas conceal our actual nature. If and when we remove our Fear-Reactivity, not only would we immediately know our unique form, but we would also immediately appreciate how we “fit” into everything and with everyone else in the world.

(TACFIT Has the Tools To Help You Discover Your Own Form Today!)


People constantly attempt to shape us… to place us within the box of their expectations. They express the sheer audacity to be surprised when we defy their attachments to an “image”… a “shape” that they craft in their minds of who they think we are. Anytime we feel imposed upon by conventional fitness rhetoric, we ought to reject their attempts to impose their “shape.” Continue to reveal your own true form, and in doing so, gain the ability to help others reveal their form.

One of the most impacting quotes I had ever read was from Horace Mann – “Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity.” For some reason, that resonated with me… Sometimes, honestly, it nearly drove me insane with the uphill struggle building a radical business founded upon play and community. I thank God for my family’s support to endure these trials, and for the blessing of being able to see today’s thousands of members as a result.

Stay focused upon the REAL GOAL, our true purpose – find your form… and help others find their own. That is what will make the world better… no matter how you express it, no matter what your vocation, no matter what venue.

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

TACFIT Teaches “You-Fu”!

I like to equate personal mastery not with some far off place, but with the ineffable quality of feeling “at home” because “it” is an intuitive, subjective experience that one intimately recognizes, rather than ‘learns’ (as we are led to believe in conventional martial arts and fitness propaganda.) Watch any group of people, and regardless of your ‘level’ you can instantly recognize who has ‘it’ and who does not.

Conventional martial art and fitness give you a lease, an apartment to live in. It’s merely a ‘building’ – a ‘house’ and although you can call it your ‘home’, you always somehow feel like a visitor. Some are rat-infested houses, some are large developments of identical white picket-fenced, row homes, and others are very expensive condos in the metro district “with a view.” But you are only ever a renter, a guest on someone else’s property. The only way you can own one of these rental units is if you stay in it for 20 to 30 years, and then you are given the option to purchase the unit.

TACFIT presents another path. If you’re studying any of the TACFIT materials, you’re discovering that you have an inheritance awaiting you, off in the country – a beautiful mansion that your family already and always owned. You can purchase a vehicle from TACFIT and you can drive it where ever you choose, because TACFIT supplies you with a map and an onboard GPS tracker, and even a cellphone to call for help if you need it.

That doesn’t mean that it’s easy to learn how to drive, to live life with the responsibility of the driver’s seat. It doesn’t mean that you’re following any “short cut.” Like being a driver rather than a passenger, if you’re a land owner instead of a renter, you know that it’s actually MORE WORK to be responsible for your own property… an incredible amount of daily personal maintenance (practice.)

But the difference between renting and owning is indescribable; a sense of belonging, a confidence, a relaxed ‘at ease’ peace that defies description if you were to try and explain it to your former rental-mentality. TACFIT is a transformative system of service which empowers people to be more of themselves, which helps them find their home, and passes along the news so that others can do the same.

You can’t give someone else directions to their “home”, because frankly, you don’t have a clue where it is. Every map is unique. And you can’t, nor should you try to, drive them there. The POINT is that they learn to drive on their own, and that they enjoy the process, the scenery, the exploration, the beautiful mystery of the journey our life can, should and deserves to be!

Everyone comes to a critical point in their lives where they want to control their own destiny, where they want to own, not rent; where they want their daily sweat to count towards their own development, rather than someone else’s; and trust in their own intuition rather than following someone else’s governance.

If you’re willing to suspend what you think you know about traveling as a passenger, and living as a renter, then you can use TACFIT as a vehicle to drive yourself and find your way home.

And more importantly, you can then help others realize that they can do the same!

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

The Neurochemistry Behind TACFIT

The following list includes some keypoints of why TACFIT is considered a system of recovery first and foremost. Using physical training as a tool to maximize the efficeincy at which our body responds to any and all stresses, physical, emotional and physiological. TACFIT is the only fitness system which focuses on RECOVERY, where all growth and development occurs. Where other “hard-­‐core, extreme” methods attempt to force you to exercise harder than you’re able to hold proper technique, in ways that hurt and injure you, TACFIT combines active recovery, recuperative breathing techniques, restorative mobility drills and compensatory yoga poses and flows.

  1. The same neurochemical phenomena experienced during high stress emergency crises and violent encounters can be produced through post heart rate maximum exercise. These psycho-trophic phenomena include tunnel vision, time warp (tachipsychia), auditory exclusion, cognitive dysfunction, short term memory loss, fumbling, feinting, loss of coordination in fine and complex motor skills.
  2. These phenomena do not happen below the heart rate maximum, and they are eliminated when the heart rate drops beneath maximum.
  3. Active recovery methods can be used to rapidly drop the heart rate under maximum; such as breathing techniques, biofeedback, vibration drills, mental strategies, et cetera.
  4. The nervous system cannot differentiate between types of stress; it only knows cumulative magnitude of stress.
  5. These active recovery methods re-stabilize volatile biochemistry irrespective of type of stress, and so can be internalized through practice during post heart rate maximum exercise stress.
  6. Since the nervous system cannot differentiate between types of stress, these active recovery methods practiced during exercise intensity transfer with accessibility during any high stress event, though the more specific the movements to the projected crisis, the faster the recall of the recovery methods.
  7. Reducing heart rate to beneath maximum has been proven to increase discretionary decision making skills, increase accuracy and precision, improve skill effectiveness and enhance survival.
  8. As stress-related illness and disease is the world’s number one killer, with the tactical community having a national average mortality rate of 54 years, improving high stress recovery skills has a direct correlation to improved health and longevity.
  9. Therefore, practicing rapid recovery methods from high intensity exercise using movements related to the expected crisis will improve survival, effectiveness, discretionary capacity, cognitive function, as well as health and longevity.

And you do not have to be a first-responder or military operator to experience the benefits. That is why TACFIT has proliferated from beyond the battle lines and into the homes, gyms, and training routines of people from all walks of life all around the world. TACFIT is performance optimization in every sense of our lives. Moving, thinking, deciding, reacting, and the list goes on.

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

TACFIT’S “Time Under Technique” Principle

The main problem in the past has been with the notion of Good Technique and Bad Technique. It was believed that if you used good technique, then you got results; and if you used bad technique, you didn’t get results. Unfortunately, you ALWAYS get results: both good and bad. So a better understanding would be that you have proper technique and improper technique, and to whichever you use, you adapt.

If your technique was so-so, think of it as 5 out of 10 being proper technique, and 5 out of 10 – improper. You get 50% of the results you want, and another 50% that you don’t want. In exercise science, we call this functional adaptation and dysfunctional adaptation. You want functional muscle, not adaptations which cause you poor posture, limited mobility, aches and pains, and catastrophic injuries. Unfortunately for many fitness approaches, HALF (if not more) of what they’re doing is working against them.

“Time Under Technique” differs from the obsolete notion of “Time Under Tension” because we want quality adaptation, not just random effort. With better technique comes deeper benefits and greater results, so increased time under tension is insufficient. It must be time under technique! Done improperly, it will waste your time, ingrain bad form, or eventually, injure you. This is a stark contrast to “Time Under Tension” which only deals with force. Yes, you can coach proper technique in such a system, but the emphasis is on “moving the weight” quickly and repeatedly, however it must be done.

Think of it this way, most programs only consider the total amount of work that you do, to be the physical work to which you adapt, but that could be your joints, tendons, ligaments, and fascia, not merely your muscles receiving the force of your exercise. Popular programs only use the concept of Time Under Tension, and value the total work that you physiologically experience, so although they target the tension placed upon muscle, it doesn’t sufficiently discriminate proper from improper technique.

TACFIT training uniquely allows you to focus on the kinesiological impact of your exercise; not just the physiological tension, but the bio-mechanical function of your body, and even the psychological capacity of your ability to recover and refine your proper technique.

Even our active recovery periods are not rest-breaks from tension. Recovery is NOT rest. It is a chance to regain or refine access to your technique. The better you recover – the better your technique becomes. And therefore, the better your results and benefit. Choose programs that teach you how to perform the movements with proper technique, and actively train recovery, to be able to perform the exercise as well, or even better, the next round, and the next workout.

Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

There Are No “Perfect” Fitness Programs!

In my early years in the industry I used to take customer complaints personally, as if they were trying to tell me that I wasn’t worthwhile. But those were my personal issues, and helping people means that you need to suspend your ego to do so. That can be a long and painful learning experience, if you do have the opportunity to learn from it. Thankfully, I have a “yoga” or “martial art” approach to business. I approach business as a method of personal development, of becoming a more socially useful individual. But swallowing the pride-punching lessons is never easy. That I know.

Yoga organizations, for instance, always assume that how yoga is taught in India is how it should be taught to everyone. But that defies reality. If you practice yoga from the age of four with perfect form and incremental development with a quality teacher, then you likely never encounter or understand the problems that a 50-something faces when she first enters class and attempts to perform a downward facing dog.

The same is true, for instance, in kettlebell or parallettes training (TACFIT Parallattes 101 Available Now!). Recommendations are based upon the fact that the coach practiced with perfect form and incremental development from an early age. Because the coach trained as a professional, they were not permitted to use poor form, or force advancement of weight because of ego. As a result, when some mid-40s fitness enthusiast picks up a “lightweight” kettlebell for the first time and starts following the program, they are plagued with lower back and shoulder pain.

Is it yoga and kettlebells that are the problem? No. The reality is that no program and no piece of equipment is perfect.

There is no piece of equipment and no training approach which, if followed, will not eventually lead to diminishing returns, decreased performance and eventual injury. Every program, equipment and protocol must specifically be compensated for. The law of SAID (specific adaptation to imposed demands) means that we always adapt specifically. If we adapt to only one thing, we become weaker to other things. It doesn’t matter if it’s dumbbells, barbells, kettlebells, Clubbells, sandbags, gymnastic rings, parallette bars, yoga, pilates, kickbox aerobics, etc. The nervous system cannot differentiate between pieces of equipment. It only knows (specific patterns of) resistance.

On top of this, we have the reality that people are unaware of this fact. So they move from one piece of equipment or one program to the next without compensating for the previous one, until they’re the walking wounded… and everything they touch hurts them.

Unfortunately, fitness companies feel that if they promote “compensatory programs” they’re suggesting that programs or equipment are inferior. What they fail to realize is that no matter what their customers do it must be compensated for, or their customers will not only lose their adaptation benefits, they’ll eventually lose their health. Realizing that is not weakness. It’s strength.

The benefit of programs within the TACFIT training systems, and the advantage that our instructors have over other fitness professionals, is that they are inherently compensatory. The approaches are crafted with compensation as its primary springboard, from which you jump and to which you always are pulled back: the stronger that trampoline, the higher you can go!

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

The Balance of “Healthy” Fitness

Hello Friends,

Like anything, if you don’t know where you’re going the unknown can hurt you. In fitness, if you listen to many so-called experts, they won’t tell you what you need to learn, they’ll tell you what they want you to believe.

The fact is if it is not “health-first” fitness, it is unbalanced fitness by definition. If it’s strength first, if it’s power first, if it’s stamina first, if it’s physique first, if it’s even mobility first, it’s not health first. If it’s not health first, it ain’t sustainable folks… and if you don’t eventually get ill or injured, you hit the genetic jackpot. Unfortunately it’s the genetic jackpot winners who put together these silly non health-first approaches, because they just don’t know any better.

To balance our fitness life we must first realize that we are unbalanced at any one point in time. Therefore balancing is the act that we do over the course of our lives. Because we are creatures who have the capacity to adapt to any stimulus that we encounter, we need to have as our starting point the following crucial question:

“At this point in time, what have I adapted to that is keeping me unbalanced in my fitness?”

It could be sitting at a desk 8 hours a day. Think of it as “Sitting Chair Asana” – a specific yoga pose that you hold for eight hours straight with little to no break. Now imagine that you did a handstand for 8 hours a day, every day, all of your life. You think you’d be pretty strong right? You’d also be very unbalanced, with loads of aches, pains and over-use injuries.

That’s what sitting behind a desk is like. We get so good at it that we create special over-compensations to hold that position in place. Those over-specialized adaptations make it hard for us to do different things, and they eventually lead to loads of aches, pains and over-use injuries. Most people don’t realize that it’s their unbalanced fitness which is the problem. They think that they just have bad knees or weak wrists or a bad back or a painful neck. All of these things are typically compensations from over-specialized adaptations.

Now, instead of a desk, substitute your favorite exercise: bench press, stair climbers, or cycling. Each of these exercises creates a highly specific adaptation which, if you don’t compensate for it, leads to problems. In other words, even if you are fit, you are not necessary balanced. And if you don’t have balanced fitness, you’re not healthy. If you’re not healthy, then whatever “fitness” exercise you’re doing is only going to eventually lead to injury and illness. That’s an undeniable fact, folks!

Healthy fitness, by incorporating a systematic approach through TACFIT, is as much art as science. Just enjoy the process of learning to balance. Don’t view yourself as trying to learn new skills, but rather as improving your talent at being you. Those who really come to reclaim healthy fitness aren’t doing XYZ, they’re just being healthy fit.

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon

3 Most Critical Exercise Mistakes!

Why do we face such distress when we begin a new exercise program or a new level or training? Why does it create nausea, vomiting, headaches, and body aches? How does exercise ACTUALLY cause us pain and injury? Why do we experience a cacophony of mental noise telling us to stop and quit?

The answers of these questions can be found in the Three Critical Exercise Errors people make. They allow their bodies to suffer Overuse, Misuse and Disuse.

Overuse:

We overuse our bodies when we repetitively perform a similar movement without sufficient time to recover. We neglect recovery because we don’t understand one very critical point: recovery is development. We don’t grow from work. We don’t adapt from effort. We don’t benefit from exertion. We grow, adapt and benefit during the period of recovery.

The degree to which we recover determines the growth, adaptation and benefits we reap. If we don’t restore and recuperate fully, we only gain a small percentage of development. But the corollary to that is, the degree to which we don’t recover equals the amount of overuse we suffer. We either have progress or regress from our efforts depending upon the degree to which we completely recover.

The body will do everything possible to stop you, including headaches, nausea, phantom joint pains, sweats, chills, et cetera. If you refuse to heed these warnings and persist, then your body will compensate for your overuse by making certain areas tighter and other areas weaker to make it less dangerous to your health overall. These leads to functional imbalances, ticking time-bombs which suddenly explode when you attempt even the most mundane tasks in your life.

Misuse:

We misuse our bodies when we try harder and more desperately with poor form. Though work ethic remains a critical ingredient to growth and development, hard work without good mechanics is like firing a cannon out of canoe. Struggling harder without effective mechanics to hold the effort is like pouring hot water into an overflowing teacup; it only wastes water, burns you and creates a mess.

Think of it this way: if on a scale of one-to-ten, you perform an activity with a technique level of eight (very good technique), you still have a “two” which is producing an unknowable, untrackable, and most likely an undesirable result. Most people don’t use very good technique, however. Most people use “so-so” form to do activities. If you use a “five” of good technique and a “five” of poor technique, then half of what you’re doing works against you, canceling out any benefits you may be receiving by your good work.

You don’t merely adapt to your good technique. You adapt to the poor technique as well. And it accumulates. Excessive stress wreaks havoc upon your form and you rely upon defensive reflexes. You adapt to both of the “5s” – and eventually that misuse will cause a catastrophic failure resulting in severe injury. But along the way, your misuse will cause diminishing returns, plateau, backslide into regress, then first aches and pains, and finally injuries.

Misuse will also cause illnesses and diseases if you persist beyond the injuries. Stress-related disease is the world’s number one killer; not bombs or bullets, not cancer or viruses. Excessive stress.

Disuse:

Move it or you lose it. Movement is life. Your nervous system craves complexity. Aging itself involves the loss of complexity, so as you don’t move, or as you take fewer risks, you age more rapidly. If you don’t keep moving in all the infinite ways that you were designed, those neurological pathways will become overgrown with weeds and briars, so when you eventually try to move into that underbrush, it will be slow, awkward, painful and hazardous.

Unfortunately, it’s even bleaker than the above. We think of sedentary lifestyle and risk aversion as inactivity, as “doing nothing.” But your nervous system doesn’t recognize it as inaction. It registers it as a highly specific action which demands adaptation (just like overuse and misuse). Disuse stresses your body, so if you’re sitting behind a desk, on the couch or in the car all day long, you will adapt to that specific stressor. Your nervous system will make it easier to use less effort to repeat the same position for longer. You become “chair-shaped.”

Disuse causes you to lose movement potential and it causes you to strengthen limitations. And like overuse and misuse will lead to imbalances, injuries and illnesses due to the excessive stress it causes.

Because of my history overcoming my joint disease, learning disabilities, obesity, and the environment of violence, anxiety and trauma in which I was reared, I’ve learned I have to look at the sum total impact of stress upon my life. It’s not like I could just go to the gym, and suddenly feel better. It often left me feeling quite worse, if not physically ill from the experience. I was forced to consider overuse, misuse and disuse purely from the quantity of stress it caused. And then I started to track and measure it through my journals, through biofeedback, and the tracking formula I learned from my coaches and teachers. And I have made it my life’s work to share these techniques and ideas with all of you – the TACFIT Community.

So next time you are aching, gasping for breath or grunting through discomfort in your training, consider these 3 critical errors and how they may apply to you. Then consider using a “health-first” approach to alleviate the underlying problems.

Very Respectfully,

Scott B. Sonnon