Joe Hannan

Writer | Journalist | Consultant

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I didn't feel like working out. So I worked out.

April 21, 2016 by Joseph Hannan

The temptation to not work out was strong this morning. I knew I'd be going to late-night jiu jitsu. I'd get my exercise. I'd be sore later in the day. I'd be tired on the mat. Easy to rationalize exercise away.

I was giving myself a pass. I was cutting myself slack. I can't allow slack.

As Jocko Willink has pointed out several times on his podcast, if you have the ability and the time, there's no good reason not to train. Life builds in breaks. There will always be the day when your car is in the shop, or the kids are late for school, or the hot water heater breaks. Those are the kinds of days when I take breaks. Today was not one of them.

The workout above is a good no-excuse routine if you already have a baseline level of fitness. I came up with it this morning. All you need is a kettlebell and some room to jump and move. Perform each of the moves in order, taking breaks as needed. The goal is to get through five sets as quickly as you can while maintaining good form. I made it through in just under 19 minutes. Think you can beat my time?

April 21, 2016 /Joseph Hannan
fitness, kettlebells, motivation, workout
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Jocko Willink-x.jpg

A skeptic's guide to New Year's resolutions.

January 04, 2016 by Joseph Hannan

Happy new year. As much as I loathe to write it, this is a post about resolutions. You're probably thinking, loathe is a strong word. Here's why I chose it.

I don't believe a new calendar hanging on your wall is the best reason to resolve to change. I think the best time to initiate change is right now. Or, more accurately, the best time to change was yesterday.

However, after spending time with Marcus Aurelius' "Meditations," I've come to appreciate that the nature of the universe is change. It's a constant. And to stand in the way of change -- particularly any reason at all to change for the better -- is to get crushed under the weight of the universe.

For the reason at the beginning of the previous paragraph, I've never had a new year's resolution, and I think that has been to my detriment. This year, I have nine. These are the big four:

  1. Be more useful to others.
  2. Blog three times per month.
  3. Mediate for at least five minutes, three times per week.
  4. Read a book per month.

You'll notice a common thread with three of four: they're measurable. I'm using Way of Life, a fantastic habit building and breaking app I heard about on a recent episode of the Tim Ferriss Show, to track my progress. Four days into the new year, all systems are go. Keeping things measurable has been critical. Here's why.

Before broadening my fitness horizons, I was a gym rat who dreaded the first week of January. I didn't dread it because the gym was crowded, or because the new members didn't know what they were doing, but more so, it was because the majority would be gone by the next week.

What was especially frustrating and depressing was that with a slight adjustment to their approach, I knew their new habit would stick. Here is an example of an adjustment I made to one of my other resolutions. Italic type is the rough draft. Bold type is the final cut. 

  • Get better at Jiu Jitsu and earn my blue belt.
  • Train Jiu Jitsu at least three times per week.

First, the obvious: one is measurable, the other isn't. Second, not so obvious. Let's look at the philosophy in the rough draft. It's goal-oriented. I'm a goal-oriented person (it's something I'm trying to change, but that's a post for another day). But getting to blue belt, or any belt -- or really, any arbitrary milestone in life -- has a way of leading to shortcuts and a loss of appreciation for the journey.

It also sets you up for total derailment if you hit a setback. What if I trained every day and didn't get the promotion? I'm more likely to give up on the resolution, or maybe on Jiu Jitsu.

By resolving to train three times a week, I'm better positioning myself for success for three reasons:

  1. I can measure my progress.
  2. I'm likely to better appreciate the journey.
  3. I'm likely to absorb more Jiu Jitsu because I'm grounded in the present, not looking ahead toward a milestone.

Back to the gym example. Instead of resolving to lose 15 pounds (measurable, but not unlike my blue belt example) or resolving to get fit (kind of like resolving to get better at Jiu Jitsu), I'd advocate for resolving to exercise three times a week. Tying exercise to a place -- the gym -- adds another point of failure to the fitness equation. Besides, you can get better exercise for free all over the internet. I'd recommend getting yourself a light kettlebell and checking out Fitness Blender.

This concept doesn't just apply to fitness. The same is true of my mediation resolution. The bar is set low: only five minutes, only three times a week. That's intentional. I've made the onset of forming the habit as easy and accessible as possible. I know I can manage five minutes, and that makes me optimistic that I'll work up to longer sessions at greater frequency.

Of my big-four resolutions, the first -- be more useful to others -- is neither specific nor quantifiable. That makes it difficult to sustain. However, it's supported by the next three -- chiefly, blogging three times per month. It's my hope to make this blog more useful to you in 2016. My deepest thanks to you for reading. 

January 04, 2016 /Joseph Hannan
fitness, jiu jitsu, change, jiu-jitsu, BJJ, kettlebells, motivation
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What's stopping you.

April 24, 2015 by Joseph Hannan

Right now, there's something you'd rather be doing. Right now, there's something in your life you want to change. There's a job you hate. There's a few pounds you want to lose. There's a room that's begging for a coat of paint. There's a loved one you've been meaning to call. 

What's stopping you? Well, you are.

I know because I'm what's stopping me. I sat on my ass most of tonight, watching the Yankees crush the Mets, waiting for something to come to me that was worth writing about. But that's the writer's struggle, isn't it? Waiting for inspiration to light up the synapses in your brain.

That's bullshit. That's giving in. That's letting me stop me, just like you're letting yourself stop you. 

It's getting late. But as soon as I punctuate this post, I'm going to write for an hour. And I'll get an hour less of sleep tonight. But I'm still going to wake up and swing that 35 pound kettlebell around in the morning (me and the 35 pounder aren't on speaking terms). I'm still going to go to work  in the morning and put out the best Sunday papers I can. And I'm going to come home, open a beer, and write for another hour.

Because if I don't, I'm letting me stop me. And I'm not going to let myself do that. Are you going to let yourself stop you?

April 24, 2015 /Joseph Hannan
motivation, kettlebells
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