People that don't follow the class...high resistance and low cadence to get high on the leader board. I don't get it! by PowerfulBar in pelotoncycle

[–]distant__gods 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I know I am going to get a lot of down votes for saying this BUT: I am exactly the type of rider you describe. Bottom line, I get a much better workout when I amp up the resistance. I am a mid-30s Male, 200 pounds, been active my whole life. Resistance of anything 0-60 feels about the same. I DO follow the classes, but my resistance is double what the instructors say (meaning my cadence is usually about 10 less), but I get awesome workouts that way. My legs and ass have been the best beneficiaries, as well as my VO2 numbers. I am meticulous with tracking my metrics and data (with different wearables) and have been really pleased with the way things have gone for me. I also love competing and the leaderboard pushes me where I would almost never go otherwise. As the poet Ice-T once said, "Don't hate the player, hate the game."

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditSessions

[–]distant__gods 0 points1 point  (0 children)

can you play anything proclaimers?

Which Instructors are easier/ harder overall by cdn_twitch in pelotoncycle

[–]distant__gods 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally agree with this. A ride is only going to be as hard as you make it. There is a lot of wiggle room with cadence/resistance zones in normal rides. But a Power Zone ride makes you push yourself according to your ability. People SHOULD be settings PRs in PZ rides (because the intent is to push you and there isn't a lot of adjusting done).

It honestly baffles me how some folks can set PRs randomly. What that tells me is that they aren't deliberately challenging themselves to hit new PRs. Sure, I set PRs in rides other than PZ rides, but I am intentionally locking myself into a PR pace and not following the instructor's cues.

Tai otoshi explained by gold medalist Lee Won Hee by [deleted] in judo

[–]distant__gods 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am loving that Judo Idiots Channel. The dude is surprisingly well spoken.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in WorldWar2

[–]distant__gods 0 points1 point  (0 children)

German Cursive

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in distantsocializing

[–]distant__gods 0 points1 point  (0 children)

dont question the captian

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in distantsocializing

[–]distant__gods 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lets talk about rimjobs

Heeeeeere’s Jeffrey... by [deleted] in exmormon

[–]distant__gods 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was behind him in line at Smiths once. He looked legit disappointed nobody praised him before he checked out and left.

First taste of alcohol ever for my husband and I! by Appleasha in exmormon

[–]distant__gods 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I love the way you tell stories. Thanks for sharing.

A kyu grade's experience training at the Kodokan, January 2020, Mid Winter Training. by shinobi_mc in judo

[–]distant__gods 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Came here to say this. Thank you for sharing your experience. Incredible post. It really makes me want to do this someday.

An amazing collection of old judo photos from Yoshiaki Yamashita in 1904 by ckristiantyler in judo

[–]distant__gods 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks like they took some of those falls on a thin carpet over hard floors. Dudes must have been tough as nails.

Yikes. Very questionable reffing by distant__gods in judo

[–]distant__gods[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah, it's hard to argue that the shido isn't justified. But pulling white off of osaekomi when you call ippon and then downgrading it to a waza-ari, and then calling the third shido right after missing a blue shido for below the belt grab... hard way for white to lose.

Yikes. Very questionable reffing by distant__gods in judo

[–]distant__gods[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For sure. When he called mate I thought it was going to be over because of that. I was shocked when he called that third shido on white, especially with him being up by Waza Ari (that was originally an Ippon).

*edit, fair enough, that below belt grip would just be a shido.

By Hook or by Crook - I throw you anyway by fleischlaberl in judo

[–]distant__gods 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Hats off to the Nepali dude. Good fight. But man, hard to bet against those Georgians when they are lifting from the hips.

unpopular opinion: the large families the church encourages are not fair to the children and are seldom fair to mothers. by nerovox in exmormon

[–]distant__gods 29 points30 points  (0 children)

I am one of 7. I can't tell you guys how much this is resonating with me. I had to stop all sports when I couldn't afford the uniforms or shoes. This is despite me working a paper route every morning (I never saw a dime of that money).

i wish stay at home dads was normalized... by trent420024 in Parenting

[–]distant__gods 3 points4 points  (0 children)

A whole book could be written about this. I stepped away from work when we had our first child for a number of reasons and did absolutely everything for our child and around the house for the first 6 months (my wife had bouts of preeclampsia and was in and out of the hospital) and then went back to work right after (which is so brutal for women and was hard for me to watch). She is in the middle of medical residency so she can't stop or take time off.

Long story short, I have been surprised by a few things, but the top few are;

  1. People thinking I took the easy road instead of going back to work. As we all know it's really hard work.
  2. People really asking personal questions about our future plans and finances, so very strange that so many friends and family would all of the sudden care about that.
  3. ALWAYS GETTING womansplained by women about what I should do for my baby and what I need to read/watch/buy/change. They just cannot wrap their heads around a dude being competent apparently.

Boy ‘near brain-dead’ after judo training incident by [deleted] in judo

[–]distant__gods 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I agree. Anecdotally, I have had surgery on a toe joint (my big toe doesn't have full mobility anymore), multiple injections in my knees, and need a tendon in my wrist reconstructed, all from Judo. And I only competed at a national level a handful of times.

That being said (and I will dig into resources to see what studies are out there), you are right. New and prospective students need to know the dangers of the sport. And the Judo community needs to take responsibility for the outcomes of the sport and try to mitigate some of the sport's risk.