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P90X2 Day 66: Happy Leap Year Day!

Imagine my surprise today, when I woke up 45 minutes late, without an alarm to help me. Oops. I guess I forgot to set the alarm… That eliminated most of my workout time. I decided to hop on the treadmill again, as I did last week, for a short walk/run. While I was there, I decided to watch a couple of the videos include with P90X2 which I had not seen yet:

  • How to Bring It Again (the introduction, which I never watched, believe it or not)
  • P90X One on One: 4 Legs, the first 10 minutes
How to Bring It Again contained a lot of the same information found in the workout and nutrition guides, with the benefit of Tony’s personal introduction, of course. The whole thing was about 10 minutes long, and the last part was an overview of the P90X2-related products available from Beachbody. Who knew they could make an infomercial, right?

P90X One on One: 4 Legs is one workout from Tony’s One on One series. I have seen previews of the series online, which features Tony with one or two cameramen in what looks like his (rather large) home gym. Maybe this is his response to the critics who claim he doesn’t do all the P90X workouts, he just demonstrates a little bit? In contrast, One on One (as the title implies) is Tony by himself, talking to the camera and the cameramen, and in the 4 Legs video he is going for an hour straight. I will definitely give this another look from start to finish, and maybe swap it for one of the P90X2 workouts soon.


Several times during the day, I got up from my desk, went to my favorite empty conference room (with no windows), and took a three-minute exercise break. Some Jumping Jacks, Steam Engines, and Burpees, then back to work!

Tip of the Day: When the unexpected happens, and can’t do your scheduled workout, do your best to substitute other activities. Be creative and have fun!

P90X2 Day 65: P.A.P. Upper

My first impression of P.A.P. Upper was “Look at all that equipment, again!” It’s an upper body workout (duh!), so we need the pull up bar, pull up assist, and/or bands, hand weights, towels, the foam roller, plus some items normally associated with the lower body (the plyo box and stability ball), and the weighted bar used previously in Recovery and Mobility.

The cast for this workout includes

  • Christina, a nurse and mom of five (including twins), who is not blonde by the way
  • Robert, from Texas (just look at his shirt), who accompanied Tony to Japan on one of his visits to the military
  • Wayne, an orthodontist who looks like he could pick up his patients in the chair and carry them around. I don’t know why that would be necessary, but you get the idea.
Tony’s tip of the day: Bring your swagger. In other words, don’t be afraid to work hard on each exercise and get some results.
Tony explains again, as in P.A.P. Lower, that each exercise set is a “complex” of four different moves (strength, core, plyometrics, or isometrics). Each complex is repeated four times
I did better on my first try with this workout than I did on P.A.P. Upper. Maybe I felt less rushed, although I did cut it a little short again. It’s easy to do, because of the repetition of exercises, so that I can put in a good effort and not feel as if I am missing anything. Of course, next time I want to do it all.

Some exercise notes:

  • Towel pull ups would definitely be more challenging using the bar, but I did my best with the resistance bands in a lunge position, as Christina demonstrates
  • The Medicine Ball Pike is a good example of an explosive core move
  • I was surprised to see the Roller Angel as an isometric exercise in the workout. It’s certainly challenging if I focus on keeping my lower back where it should be and keeping my hands and elbows behind me.
The stretches at the end are a little different than previous upper body workouts. Tony includes some neuro-integrated stretching with the stability ball.
During this workout and previous ones, Tony has mentioned Marcus Elliott and the Peak Performance Project. Steve Edwards from Beachbody mentioned the relationship between P3 and P90X2 in a recent blog post. I’m sure those of you who follow Tony and Steve know more about this, but I am interested to learn more about P3.

Tip of the day: Don’t be afraid to push just a little bit harder than you think is possible, with good form of course.

P90X2 Day 64: P.A.P. Lower and Phase 3 Begins

Welcome to P90X2 Phase 3! Looking back, the Phase 2 workouts provided a mix of strength, plyo, yoga, and recovery, which reminded me of P90X. As I said yesterday, Phase 3 looks a little repetitive, but I am willing to give it the old college try.

The cast consists of three “veterans” from P90X2, as Tony calls them: Cedric from Recovery and Mobility, Collette from Ab Ripper, and Adam from… what workout? Maybe V Sculpt or Chest, Shoulders, and Tris? We find out that Collette is a former Olympic-style weightlifter. We knew from R+M that Cedric is a Beachbody employee and a dancer. Adam is a former Marine sniper who “reads body language” according to Tony. I’m not sure if that was another skill he used in the Marines.

P.A.P. stands for “Post-Activation Potentiation.” I have no idea who came up with that one. According to Tony, it’s a combination of “Resistance, contraction, explosion, and stabilization.” It’s “what athletes do.” I guess that’s where Functional Fitness comes in to this one.

The workout is a combination of plyometrics and core. This is a similar approach to the Base + Back workout, which is a combination of plyo and pull ups. There’s no day dedicated to plyo, but it is included with another muscle group.

The warm up starts out very differently from the other ones so far in P90X2. There are Heel Walks and Feet Smackers, which are intended to work on the back and front parts of the feet. Near the end of the warm up, there are some plyometric moves (Slalom and Lateral Skater). The rest are familiar stretches and foam rolling (of course!).

Tony mentions footwear, as he does in all the plyometric workouts. This time he says “Don’t wear running shoes.” Interesting! Instead, he suggests “court shoes” such as might be used for basketball or tennis, I guess. Maybe these shoes are more stable for jumping from side to side?

The exercises are broken up into sets or “complexes” as Tony calls them. There are four moves in each “complex”, repeated four times, in the first half of the workout, then another “complex” of four different exercises is repeated four times. Basically, it’s eight different exercises, over and over again.

The first three exercises are a combination of plyometric moves, with a weight added sometimes, and maybe a balance component (on one leg). The fourth exercise is on the floor, similar to what we see in Ab Ripper. For example, there is a Side Bridge Leg Lift, which combines a Side Plank Hip Raise with a Leg Lift, for a 30 second hold.

I am having the usual first-time challenges with this workout, even though I watched it yesterday. I am stumbling around, not working as hard as I would like. I know I will get there soon enough. Unfortunately, I was also running late, due to circumstances outside my control this time, so I only had time for half of each “complex.” I didn’t even try the neuro-integrated stretching which is included here as it is in Plyocide. I will have another opportunity in a few days, I guess.

By the way, did Tony really say (during one of the core exercises) that he needed to “go check Collette’s form”? OK, that wasn’t one of his racier comments, but it could have been…

Tip of the Day: It’s OK to ease your way into a new workout, especially one that requires some coordination and proper form.

Bonus: Here is a P90X2 promo on YouTube featuring Collette and Anie:

P90X2 Day 63: Recovery

I did not do any foam rolling today. To be honest, my fitness-related activities included updating this blog, playing with my son, and previewing the P90X2 P.A.P Lower DVD for tomorrow. I’m curious to see how the Phase 3 schedule works for me, because on the surface it looks repetitive, to be honest:

Day 1: P.A.P. Lower
Day 2: P.A.P. Upper
Day 3: X2 Yoga
Day 4: Rest or Recovery and Mobility
Day 5: P.A.P. Lower (again)
Day 6: P.A.P. Upper (again)
Day 7: Rest or Recovery and Mobility

The theme for Phase 3 is Performance. Let’s see what happens. Tune in tomorrow to find out what P.A.P. means.

P90X2 Tip of the Day: Tony always has a trick up his sleeve, so don’t judge a workout schedule by your first impression.

P90X2 Day 62: Recovery Week, Day 6

I had a busy morning planned today, so I wasn’t sure if I would work out at all. As it turned out, I woke up a little earlier than expected (ugh!), so I decided to do something crazy again this week: Yoga, two days in a row! That makes up for the session I missed earlier in the week, I guess.

There’s not much to report in my progress compared to yesterday. Here are the highlights, such as they are:

  • I took a break for my shoulders during the “Double” of the Single Double Triple
  • My Warrior 3 sequence was improved by using the good old 2-liter soda bottle as a yoga block
  • I had a good time with the Crane pose, bouncing off my toes again
  • I did some (not all) of the Plough to Shoulder Stand
Tomorrow is a rest day, then it’s on to Phase 3, and two new workouts!

P90X2 Tip of the Day: A 2-liter bottle can substitute for a foam roller OR a yoga block. Who knew?