Sleep: Key #10 to Summiting Kilimanjaro

KilimanjaroI am a big fan of sleeping, and have what have been called mad sleeping skills.

I almost always sleep on planes, and can nap on a moment’s notice. I’m definitely more on the 8-9 per night end of things, and I am outright cranky when I don’t get enough sleep.

Last week I even napped on an office floor because I was so tired. No, not recommended, but it worked in a pinch.

So, the idea of eight nights in a tent in freezing conditions didn’t thrill me. We weren’t allowed to use sleeping pills on the trail so it wouldn’t mask the signs of altitude sickness, and I’m a chronic night owl. So, knowing how wonderfully (NOT!) I perform sleep deprived, I was a bit anxious with long days in unknown conditions ahead of me.

Lack of sleep can be more dangerous than drunk driving

Lack of sleep is indicted in an awful lot of things. For my Kilimanjaro trek, there were only a few things I cared about:  [Read more...]

Vision: Key #7 to Summiting Kilimanjaro

Computer Eyes“The eyes are the windows to the soul.”

Most windows are two ways, and the eyes are also the body’s primary input for how it gets information about what is going on around us.

Two Eyes, One Brain (aka, how our eyes work)

A real quick anatomy lesson to explain why proper eye function was important on Kilimanjaro. I promise — this will be painless.

We have two eyes, right? But, we only see one set of information (right now, that information is what is on this screen).

When we are look around, the brain takes in the information from both eyes and matches up the information from each eye to create a single image. But, if your eyes aren’t working together your eyes will send mismatched information, much like when you take a photo with the camera shaking. When that happens the brain throws out one set of information to avoid giving us a giant headache.

So, now we are working with one data point, and not two. Just like you need three data points to triangulate on a location for something (I think I’ve been watching too many crime shows on Hulu), the eyes need information from both eyes to have depth perception.

OK, anatomy lesson over. Phew!

Lacking Depth Perception = Bad

If both eyes aren’t working together you don’t have depth perception. Not having depth perception when you are spending days on end climbing up and down rocks is ROUGH. Your body doesn’t reliably know how far up, or down, that next step is. So, you are foot strikes are more abrupt than they should be, you are missing steps, unsteady when your foot sets down, etc. Those little mis-steps accumulate, and when you are taking well over ten thousands steps per day — which we were — it can become a real problem.

In addition to growing up not breathing right, my eyes have also become wonky (that’s a technical term) from years and years at a computer. Fortunately, most eye function is controlled by muscles, and muscles can be retrained.

Vision training is a ginormous field of study that goes well beyond a visit to the optometrist. And, with that, there are countless ways to correct vision that don’t involve getting glasses, contacts, or surgery. We’re going to start here really small. If you want to know more, shoot me a note in the comments below.

Vision Training Drills

Pencil Push-Ups

This is a great exercise for getting the eyes better coordinated and working better at close distances.

  • Hold a pencil directly out in front of your face, tip up.
  • Slowly bring the pencil in towards the tip of your nose, keeping your focus on the pencil tip.
  • When the pencil tip doubles, then bring the pencil back away from your face.
  • Repeat 4-5 times

If your eyes are working well, then you should be able to get the pencil tip virtually to the end of your nose.


Eye Tracking

This exercise is great for getting your eyes muscles to work through all of the movements they are capable of.

  • Hold your finger out in front of you.
  • Take your finger and draw a large circle, tracking your finger with both eyes.
  • Continue to make a circle (you can change hands) or create other shapes with your finger for about a minute


While simple, they are really effective exercises designed to get both eyes working together and more accustomed to working in places and distances we don’t normally look.

Breathing: Key #4 to Summiting Kilimanjaro

Altitude sickness kills climbers.

Altitude sickness is caused when your carbon dioxide (CO2) and oxygen (O2) levels get severely out of whack in the body.

While it can happen at any altitude, it is called altitude sickness because you are more prone to it at high altitudes because there is simply less oxygen in the air there than there is at lower altitudes (where most of us live).

At the top of Kilimanjaro, there is half the amount of oxygen than I am used to living in Seattle (which is essentially sea level).

There are lots of symptoms, but the net of it is that coming down with mild altitude sickness makes you feel pretty lousy, and severe altitude sickness can cause you to lose consciousness and die.

Altitude sickness is the #1 thing that turns back climbers on Kilimanjaro (and every other peak). The research varies as to how many climbers on Kili come down with altitude sickness (my guess is that the inconsistent data is because symptoms can be quite mild), but studies state that anywhere from 50% to 90% of all climbers on Kili do suffer its affects.

Two Methods to Reduce the Effects of Altitude Sickness

There are two known means to reduce the likelihood of developing altitude sickness:

  • Ascend slowly to give the body time to adapt. My 7-day ascent was perfect for that (there is a direct correlation between the number of days on the ascent and the number of hikers that do not make the summit).
  • The second is to take a drug, diamox. I also took the diamox.

I Believe There is a Third Method

Proper breathing technique.

A significant portion of the population doesn’t breathe as effectively as they could. I’ve talked about breathing habits before, but the super-short version is that everything from bad accidents to chronic levels of stress and anxiety to poor food choices create less-than-optimal breathing habits.

Those sub-optimal breathing habits result in a condition of low-grade chronic hyperventilation, and we start living our everyday lives in a CO2/O2 imbalance. So, now, if you connected the dots you’ll realize that if we are heading to climb with the levels already out of kilter, what is going to happen when we start climbing? You are taking something that is already out of balance and making it worse.

My Breath Training

Breathing mechanics. Most people that don’t breathe right (which used to include yours truly) and only use their upper chest for breathing.

Your lungs extend all the way down to about the bottom of the ribcage, and we should be using our entire chest to breathe. At rest it’s not a huge movement and you don’t move a lot of air, but you should still use it all. When you limit your breathing to your upper chest, it causes two problems.

  1. You end up using what are meant to be your secondary breathing muscles (those around your shoulders and upper chest) to do the majority of the heavy lifting. So, now muscles that were never designed to work that hard all the time are. Oops.
  2. Your body isn’t exchanging all of the gasses it needs to exchange on each breath, which leads to faster breathing, which perpetuates chronic hyperventilation. Chicken, meet egg.

Breath retraining is a ginormous topic in and of itself, and I’ll be saying a lot more about it in the coming months, but an easy way to start is to simply make sure you are using your entire chest for breathing.

  • You can put one hand on your upper chest and one on your lower chest.
  • The upper hand should largely stay fixed while breathing, while the lower hand should move.

Since we breathe 22,000 or so times a day, you can’t just take three practice breaths a day and expect to correct this in a few days. Work up to 40 breaths twice a day, and expect the process to potentially take months — or even years. It took me about 18 months of semi-regular practice to correct my breathing patterns. But, before that number discourages you, know that you will start seeing results A LOT faster, and you can use this drill any time you need to to calm yourself down or reduce anxiety.

Strength training. No, I’m not talking about getting huge biceps. I’m talking about strengthening the muscles you use to breathe. The primary muscle in breathing is this large muscle that lives in the lower half of your ribcage called the diaphragm. Rather than describe how it works, I’m just going to point you to this great video clip so you can see it in action.  A really easy way to strengthen it is to take really slow breaths, about 2-4 seconds on the inhale and 6-10 on the exhale. Once again, we are talking 40 breaths, twice a day — same as above.  There are other techniques and devices on the market that I’ll be talking more about in the future, but this is a great way to start.

Oxygen debt. I’m kinda cheating here, because talking about oxygen debt really isn’t about breathing. Instead, it’s about adapting to CO2/O2 imbalances. The body is hard-wired for survival, so it is always learning, adapting, and coping to what we put it through so it can be more efficient the next time we do that same activity (because the brain is all about being uber-efficient). So, one of the best ideas I could come up with for handing the CO2/O2 imbalance I was going to encounter on Kilimanjaro was to try to recreate that imbalance at sea level. The best way I had of doing that was by doing some really hard interval work. The idea was that the exercise would cause my body to burn more oxygen through hard exercise, thus releasing more CO2, and create short-term imbalances that my body could adapt to.


Personally, I feel that my breath training should probably get an enormous amount of the credit for how well I felt the entire trip and how fast I was able to make the trip to the summit and back on summit day.

Vision Training for Nearsightedness

Vision TrainingWhat if you could spend a few minutes a day to make your nearsightedness disappear?

You can.

About 20% more Americans have been diagnosed with nearsightedness as compared to 30 years ago. While I’m all about blaming the industrial food complex for just about everything else, this one I’m going to have to largely blame excessive time on computers, video games, and watching TV.

I’m a pretty hard-core geek, remember fumbling around in DOS, have done my share of computer programming, and never leave town without my laptop, so this is NOT a rant that all computers are evil. Instead, it’s about taking the couple minutes a day it takes to undo what I call “computer eyes” – or the effects of spending hours at a time staring at what is largely a fixed spot.

So, how does this happen?

The eyes are controlled by muscles – just like the rest of our moving parts. In the case of our eyes, there are six oculomotor muscles that allow our eyes to look up, down, left, right, track moving objects, and let us glance from the speedometer, to the rearview mirror, and back to the road. And, just like the rest of the body, it’s a use it or lose it proposition. When we spend a lot of time doing one activity, in this case staring at a screen that is virtually always the same distance in front of us and in the same position, our muscles get really good at holding that position – and that’s about it.

Fortunately, alleviating computer eyes is more simple than you might think. Move your eyes!

I recommend:

1) Eye tracking drills

2) Eye massage

3)  Vary your work environment so you aren’t always staring at the same point

Interested in learning more about vision training and eliminating computer eyes? Drop me a note and let’s get started!


Move It Monday – American Heart Month

Do you know the numbers you should have to minimize your risk of heart disease?

February is American Heart Month, and the American Heart Association is looking for help with their amazing and ambitious goal:

“Today, our near-term goal is nothing less than a 25% reduction in coronary heart disease and stroke risk by the year 2010.”

Heart disease is the #1 killer in women, something that surprises many people. Unfortunately, it’s not a surprise to me. 18 years ago, my Mom died unexpectedly of a massive heart attack at the age of 47. She had all of the numbers working against her, but the heart disease in women wasn’t a public health issue in the early 1990s. Heart disease was still a “male disease.”

My Move it Monday request for this week, regardless of age or gender, is that you make an appointment with your health care provider to get your vital stats checked. In particular, according to the AHA, you should look for:

  • Total Cholesterol: Less than 200 mg/dL
  • LDL Cholesterol:
    • Less than 100 mb/dL: Optimal
    • 100 to 129 mg/dL: Near/Above Optimal
    • 130 to 159 mg/dL: Borderline High
    • 160 to 189 mg/dL: High
    • 190 mg/dL and above: Very High
  • HDL: 50 mg/dL or higher
  • Triglycerides: <150 mg/dL
  • Blood pressure: <120/80 mmHg
  • Fasting Glucose: <100 mg/dL
  • Body Mass Index: <25 Kg/m2
  • Waist Circumference: <35 inches

If the numbers above look confusing, don’t worry about it. Your doctor knows what they mean and can tell you if your numbers are within the proper ranges or not. Many insurance plans now cover basic bloodwork and preventative care, which the tests above definitely are.

Once you’ve made your appointment, drop me a note in the comments below and let me know. But, don’t do it for me. Do it for yourself, your friends, and your family.

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