Devon White blog
October, 22, 2008

Moving beyond the “i’m a scientist, NOT an artist” aesthetic of the site’s owner, this page really puts things in perspective. Check it out.

Right Now:

The Earth is revolving around the Sun at a speed of about 18.5 miles/sec (30/km/sec).

At the same time, the Milky Way, of which the Earth is only a microscopic element, is traveling at about 155miles/sec (250 km/sec).

The Milky Way is only one in a group of galaxies called Local Group. The Local Group is traveling at close to 185 miles/sec (300 km/sec).

That means that even when you’re sitting still, you’re moving faster than you can comprehend.

October, 20, 2008

I always knew I was going to be rich. I don’t think I ever doubted it for a minute. - Warren Buffet

MODEL THE BEST

October, 20, 2008

Knowing how to appropriately grow a well-formed child starts the moment our children are conceived…perhaps even earlier. Knowing how babies work is the foundation for raising them in the healthiest possible manner. The more you know, the more capable you are…the better your child’s Human Operating System will be. Here’s some of the best baby-tech i’ve seen. Thanks to Mike for sharing it with me.

For weeks my good friend Michael has been telling me that for my next kid, i must buy Harvey Karp’s Happiest Baby video. Now here’s the video to demonstrate why and how…it works.

October, 15, 2008

Reality Bending is easier the more you know about where we’re going. Here are some previews of what’s coming:

Building Up:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIWWetAw6h0]

&

Podcars

October, 07, 2008

With the Human Operating System well under way, i’m getting ready to release two of the primary components needed for you to install it in yourself.  To give you a taste, i’ve uploaded the  first track off Installing Inner Game - just click the image below to hear it. Headphones required. Let me know what you think.

Click the image to listen

Click to listen

Also, if you’re interested in knowing when it releases, drop your name and email at this link.

October, 06, 2008

The Human Operating System runs on the premise that your central nervous system is embedded in the muscles and tissues of your body. As expressed in my last post, your somatic form is the operating platform of your identity. In the domain of somatics, knowing thyself happens your muscles. Therefore, the more you know about your muscles and the more you are aware of your muscles, the more precisely you know yourself. Here’s an interesting article in that vein (warning - this is a long article):

Training To Muscle Failure vs. Not Training To Failure

Is “Failure” Necessary
Do you need to “go to failure” on every set?

By Pete Sisco
Lifetime Strength

I have counseled the practice of going to failure as a means to ensure muscle growth stimulation. (Failure refers to performing a set until the point of being unable to complete one more rep, despite all effort you “fail” to complete the last rep.) But over the years much confusion has developed regarding the use of this principle. Having a clear understanding of the failure principle will save you wasted effort and prevent you from accepting what has become dogma as scientific fact.

Over the last thirty years a great deal has been written about going to failure during weightlifting exercises. Like nearly every other aspect of bodybuilding, the concept of failure is one that has fallen victim to misapplication, misunderstanding and improper logic. Used properly, failure can serve as a useful tool in guiding progress. However, there is no valid reason for its near mythic importance to some bodybuilders who believe that progress cannot be made without employing this principle. In point of fact, exercising to momentary muscular failure is not, and never has been, a requirement of stimulating muscle growth.

The fact is, outside of a gym, there is virtually no human activity that involves going to failure. For example, a person who makes his living by digging with a shovel would never dig to the point where he could not lift one more shovel of dirt. He would never swing a pick ax until he could no longer lift it to complete one more “repetition”. And yet, people who perform such manual labor can develop tremendous muscularity. How is it that they can develop above average muscularity without ever, in their life, going to failure? Similarly, a sprinter is distinguished by his tremendous hamstring and quadriceps muscles compared to the nominal muscularity of a distance runner. This is because sprinting requires a great amount of muscular work in a unit of time. But who sprints to failure? Who crosses the finish line and cannot take one more step?

Indeed, you might even find a weight lifter in your own gym that made great progress in his size and strength gains without ever exercising on a program that prescribed sets to failure. All of these people have the ability to stimulate new muscle growth without every going to “failure”. So how can anyone characterize failure as an indispensable requirement of stimulating muscle growth? All the evidence, not just some evidence, but all evidence goes against that assertion.

The human body operates by  complex mechanisms that are always taking averages into account. In a normal day your body is adjusted to accept “x” amount of sunshine, “y” amount of temperature variation, “z” amount of humidity, etc. for hundreds of different environmental and biological variables. For every variable the body makes complex calculations and adjustment to characteristics like our blood viscosity, hormone levels, degree of skin tanning and muscle growth. If, on average, you are exposed to the same amount of sunlight every day of the year, your skin will darken to the point where it has sufficient protection from that average level of sunlight, but no more. Similarly, if you lift weights on a regular basis with the same amount of intensity every workout your muscles will develop to a point where they can comfortably handle the intensity of lifting that they are, on average, subjected to, without unduly depleting its recovery resources.

In order to increase the thickness or viscosity of your blood it is not necessary to subject your body to the absolute coldest temperature that it can withstand before losing consciousness. Nor, if you want to increase the darkness of your tan, is it necessary to subject your skin to the most intense sunlight it can withstand up to the moment before blistering. Muscle growth stimulation operates on the same principle. Consequently it is not necessary to operate a muscle to its absolute limit of muscular failure in order to stimulate new muscle growth.

You may have seen a new product on the market that utilizes a wristwatch style of device to use while sun bathing. It is designed to monitor and measure the intensity of sunlight that your skin is subjected to and compare that intensity to user provided information like color of skin and the SPF of the sunscreen being used. The device calculates the safe interval of sun intensity and rings an alarm when limits have been reached. Bodybuilders would greatly benefit from the same style of device if it could be adapted to measure the intensity of muscular output. Leaving aside the technicalities of measuring the intensity of muscle groups, imagine if you could wear a wristwatch style device that monitored and measured your average muscular intensity throughout the day. Suppose at the end of the day the device indicated that your average muscular output was one hundred pounds per minute. Let’s call that your base line muscular intensity. If every day for the next six months you engaged in an amount of muscular activity that caused the device to register a one hundred pounds per minute average every day, you would not increase in your muscle mass because there would be no reason (no requirement) for your body to grow new muscle. Now suppose that each day you engaged in an amount of muscular activity that caused the average intensity to rise by 5% every day. (i.e. 100, 105, 110, 116, 122, etc.) At the end of thirty days, if you were able to sustain such a steady increase your average muscular intensity, your wrist monitor would indicate 412 pounds per minute of average muscular intensity. You can see that in order to safely cope with 412 pounds per minute of muscular output your body would have to make itself substantially more muscular that it has to be to cope with one hundred pounds per minute of muscular output.

Using Power Factor principles, if you were to construct a month worth of bench press exercise routines you could begin by establishing baseline Power Factor and Power Index numbers which represent a measurement of the muscular intensity that you are capable of generating in that exercise. You could then engineer a number of workouts to perform over the next month ensuring that each had an intensity 5% higher than the last. That progressive increase in muscular intensity would be all that is required to ensure steady increases in muscularity. It would not be necessary to go to failure, it would not be “necessary” to perform one set only, two sets only, three sets only, eight reps per set, twelve reps per set or any of the other so-called “requirements” for growth. It would also not be necessary to perform four different exercises in addition to the bench press, it would not be necessary to “periodize” your workouts by including several workouts at twenty to thirty percent below your baseline intensity, it would not be necessary to stop all aerobic exercise for a month. It would not be necessary to work out three days per week. It would only be necessary to increase the intensity of that exercise on a workout to workout basis.

So What Good is Going to Failure?

While failure is a crude gauge, it can be used as an effective tool in finding your baseline of intensity. For example, if you are performing three sets of fifteen reps with 200 pounds and during your first set you perform fifteen, your second set you perform fifteen but on your third set (to failure) you perform twenty six reps it is an indication that your first two sets were at sub maximal intensity and that you should be using a heavier weight or performing more reps. The limitation here should be obvious. How much lower was your intensity compared to what it could be? What are the units of measurement? How high is high? How low is low? When you use Power Factor and Power Index numbers in place of these vagaries your training is imbued with a precision behooving a proper science.

Furthermore, if you are seriously overtrained you will reach failure at a point lower than the progressive intensity that you require in order to stimulate new muscle growth. For example, suppose that you started with a baseline intensity of one hundred pounds per minute and a few sessions later your intensity is 160 pounds per minute in the same exercise. At this point you become overtrained and next time in the gym you go to “failure” at 140 pounds per minute of muscular intensity. There is no possible way that can stimulate new muscle growth despite going to failure. Why? Because going to failure is not a requisite of muscle growth stimulation. Progressive intensity is!

To exaggerate the point, consider what your strength is when you are recovering from a serious bout of flu or perhaps a stay in the hospital. You can return to the gym and take every set to failure but the intensity will be so low that it cannot stimulate new muscle growth. That’s the reason why some people can train to failure on every exercise for month after month and never show any sign of progress while they are convinced they are going all out and delivering 100% of momentary muscular effort. It’s irrelevant since what matters is a tangible progression of overload intensity. Since the Power Factor and Index measurements exist there is no excuse for a rational person not to employ these more precise measurements of muscular intensity into his or her workouts. No reason except blinkered dogmatism and a blind adherence to tradition and “the way its always been done”.

Is the Last Rep the Most Productive?

Advocates of training to failure, particularly those who adhere to the Arthur Jones model of only one set to failure, believe that the last rep is the most productive rep of the set. As the rational goes, the first reps takes very little of your effort, the second, third and forth reps take corresponding more effort until you reach that last rep which requires all the effort you can muster and yet can not be completed. This most difficult rep is considered by some to be the most productive rep in the set as it is the one that triggers muscle growth stimulation. However, as we have already discussed, it is the progressive increase in intensity that triggers muscle growth and since that increase can be reached without ever going to failure, the last rep (as it’s described as being impossible to complete) can be entirely unnecessary. For example, if the required increase in intensity would have been reached at the sixth rep of that set then the sixth rep is the one that triggers growth. The reps beyond the sixth were not even necessary to perform. If you have a baseline intensity of one hundred pounds per minute and you have set a goal intensity of 110 pounds per minute then the moment you reach 110 pounds per minute of intensity you can stop the exercise even if you’ve only completed five and a half reps. The number of reps is irrelevant, failure is irrelevant, it is the amount of intensity generated that is the only relevant factor.

And how does a scientific mind measure intensity? With a mathematical Power Factor and Power Index. How does the unscientific mind measure intensity? Be feel, by burn, by pump, by soreness, by failure, by rep count, by set count, by vague, non-specific, irrelevant intangibles that are not indispensable conditions of growth stimulation.

In science we measure the intensity of light, not by squint factor, or headache potential but by Lumens and Candle Power. We measure the intensity of sound not by ear pain or stomach vibration but by Decibels - precisely defined measurements that can be compared mathematically and used to discover other properties of the science. Anyone who claims there is a “science” of bodybuilding but rejects an objective measure of muscular intensity is a poseur and a dogmatist.

Train Smart.

Pete Sisco
Lifetime Strength

October, 06, 2008

The following is from a conversation on the Yahoo! Mythoself Group. For further reading, i encourage you to join the group or simply visit Joseph’s blog at www.josephriggio.com.

Benefactor

My Benefactor, Joseph

“Position” is a word I’ve been using since I began training in this
work, as in, “Operating Position.” This refers to the internal
position that an individual is operating from at any given moment in
time. The operating position is the sum total, cumulative organization
of the individual’s system in any given moment neurologically,
physiologically and somatically. In essence the way I use this is to
state that “WHO” a person IS in any moment is a function of the
position they are operating from, i.e.: the Operating Position, the
operating position is the ontology of the individual in any given
moment.

This is what I organize my ideas of ontology around, specifically
state in terms of the idea that the MythoSelf Process is an
ontological vs. an epistemological process. Again, the idea here is
that epistemology follows ontology. What makes this so powerful is
that the ontology remains constant, while the epistemology remains
fluid, i.e.: open to change and maintaining a massive respond-ability.
This is at the core of what we call the Ready State in the MythoSelf
Process.

The power in this system, i.e.: the MythoSelf Process, is that it is
based in the oscillation between ontology and epistemology that
generates behavior, and subsequently performances leading to outcomes.

From a pragmatic point of view ontology can be thought of as a
manifestation of the somatic form, i.e.: the totality of the somatic
form expresses the ontology of the individual isomorphically. In other
words, the ontology of the individual is expressed as the somatic
form, as the somatic form of the individual expresses the ontology.
When you set the totality of the somatic form into a particular
position you are expressing an particular ontology as well.

So in terms of becoming an exquisite performer yourself or working
with others to induce exquisite performance, operating somatically is
the most precise, effective, efficient and powerful means of attaining
the ontology necessary to producing exquisite performance. When you
know how to set the position you stabilize the ontology and produce an
extremely powerful operating position from which anything becomes
possible for you as an individual.

For the sake of clarity, “anything becomes possible for you as an
individual” means anything you are capable of doing within the limits
of your being, i.e.: your neurological, physiological and somatic
limits and in relation to your learning, i.e.: knowledge and skills as
expressed behaviorally, with the conditions of behavioral expression
including cognition and speech acts.

As a final point for now, position is accessed and set somatically.
Within the scope of the MythoSelf model you are led to an explicit
awareness of the somatic expression of the operating position of the
Ready State and from there taught how to re-access and sustain it at
will. This position is then further enhanced, expanded and stabilized
through the use of mythological form linking it deeply to the
epistemological operating structures accessed when operating from this
position.
> >I also have a question as to how to maintain the largest narrative
> > bound for the neurobiologic position or state. With any narrative
> there
> > are boundries and a set container. From a well formed story or
> myth or
> > narrative how do you set the story to keep the best state at it’s
> optimal
> > position.

The first thing you want to put in place if you are considering your
question on the basis of my work, i.e.: the MythoSelf Process model,
would be that narrative always flows from the operating position. The
consideration of how the neurological form and function are operating
is a function then of epistemology. By default epistemology always
arises sequentially after the ontology has been set. The particular
manner in which the ontology is set and sustained defines the
beingness of the individual in that moment, i.e.: WHO they are being.
The individual awareness of being and the system that contains the
individual who is aware would then be what we refer to as the
epistemology of the individual. Within this structure narrative form
is a function of epistemology, as epistemology is a function of
ontology.

Ultimately your question refers to the iterative and recursive nature
of narrative in terms of the epistemological form. Specifically, any
perception, experience and/or event can be perceived and experienced
from multiple perspectives.

Within the NLP model for instance the perspectives they consider
include at least the idea of the filters of the representational
systems (V-A-K-O/G) as organized in term of strategies, i.e. the
specific sequencing of the representation systems in terms of the
perception and cognition of an event either real or imagined. NLP also
includes the idea of perceptual positions in terms of the
interpersonal position of perception from which an event is considered
where ‘First Position’ is defined as the consideration of the event as
though from the perceptual position of the individual experiencing the
event first-hand, ‘Second Position’ is defined as the consideration of
the event as though from the perceptual position of the individual/s
with whom the individual is having the interaction with, i.e.; “as
though through the eyes of the other/s” and ‘Third Position’ is
defined as a perceptual position once removed from the event as though
from a perceptual position of an observer observing the event others
are engaged in experiencing.

Within the MythoSelf Process model we consider events in terms of
holographic representations that are topologically organized.
Specifically, WHERE the representation is located in relation the
perceptual position of the individual considering it will determine
what the representation “IS” for/to them, i.e.: the “semantic form” or
“meaning” is a function of location. Another way of thinking about
this would be to say, the angle of approach will determine both what
and how you experience any event to be in relation to your experience
of it. Taking this idea of a bit further we could say, the holographic
form contains the entirety of the experience and the position you
encounter it from in relation to your angle of approach will determine
what projects from the holographic form giving meaning to the event
contained within it.

Without going any further than that what I’ll add simply is that the
narrative form describes the angle of approach in vector terms with
regard to the holographic form being considered. So essentially the
narrative you are operating through, in terms of mythic form,
determines what the events of your life will be experienced as being
for/to you. When considered in this way establishing powerful
narrative structures becomes essential to manifesting potent
performances, i.e.: mythic form determines behavior, which in turn
determines performance, which in turn determines outcome.

I’ll simplify that beyond the explanation:

“If you want to create extraordinary outcomes first put an
extraordinary myth in place about what and how in relation to the
outcome you want to create.”

That alone should pretty much sum up your questions about the
narrative form, at least from within the structure of the MythoSelf
Process model.

How about we leave that as ‘good enough for now’ and we’ll save any
conversations for function and belief for another time after you’ve
had a chance to digest what I’ve written here and commented on that
should you choose to first?

Best regards,

Joseph Riggio, Ph.D.
Architect and Designer of the MythoSelf Model

http://www.josephriggio.com

September, 30, 2008

Greg was energized, “In the Army, the athletes flourished. The team spirit…they thrived. At the end of a day, you’d have forty minutes to yourself, and after working out all day, we’d use that time to work out.

If you want to get bigger, you need to work out until it hurts every day. You need to work out until you have complete muscle failure. A lot of people work out and it will hurt for three days and their numbers are getting bigger, they can put more up, but if you want to look bigger you need to rip your muscles every time. It’s the shredding and regrowth that makes you look bigger and more chiseled.

In high school football my coach said to us, ‘Work until it hurts and then keep going. I can’t be any more literal in what i’m saying. And i’m choosing my words specifically.’

It took me a little while to get what he was saying. Cause it always ‘hurt’. But after a few weeks in the gym at school i got it but i don’t think i really got it till i was in the Army.

But some people skate by in the Army. You know, there’s only 1 drill Sargent and 40 guys. You can make it look like you’re working hard during PT (physical training). And some people do. They didn’t get it - that they were in one of the greatest training programs in the world. So they didn’t use it.”

The same is true in most of life. As a reality bender the most important thing you can do for yourself is learn how you operate when you’re at your best. Learn the operating position and all it’s characteristics, including:

  • The sequence and organization of your five senses (v-a-k-o/g)
  • beliefs
  • rhythms - of your speech, breathing, scanning, etc.,
  • your posture
  • the sequence and configuration of your muscles
  • the story you tell yourself about yourself - your myth
  • the frequency
  • your assemblage point
  • how the world ’shows up’
  • how you relate to others in general and in relation to each specific person

Discipline is key to true mastery.

September, 26, 2008

since feeling is first - e.e. cummings

since feeling is first
who pays any attention
to the syntax of things
will never wholly kiss you;

wholly to be a fool
while Spring is in the world

my blood approves,
and kisses are a far better fate
than wisdom
lady i swear by all flowers. Don’t cry
–the best gesture of my brain is less than
your eyelids’ flutter which says

we are for each other: then
laugh, leaning back in my arms
for life’s not a paragraph

And death i think is no parenthesis

September, 08, 2008

Since i first laid eyes on it’s simple, colorful homepage, with it’s nerd-hip name, Google has been my favorite Internet company. When i found out their corporate motto, “Don’t be evil,” I knew it was love.

Though i know i swallowed the Kool-Aid long ago, the idea of a monopoly is much less impending when thinking about Google than when i consider corporations like Microsoft or Verizon. For years, Google has proved themselves responsible corporate citizens. They’ve added value to the world, to the lives or me, the end user, and to their employees - whether it’s been free meals and snacks, adventure-trips to Google headquarters around the world, or April Fools Day jokes.

In creating a tradition of corporate responsibility and excellence Google is a pioneer. I hope when the lawyers get their hands on it, that is taken into consideration. In our movement forward as a species, Google has the power, sway and continued character to do what’s right. It’s a company of pathbreakers, dedicated to going beyond good and bending reality into a future better than 99% of the world has imagined.

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    Devon White is the lead developer of the Human Operating System, a performance coach to people who kick ass (or want to kick ass), a professional neurohacker, a dedicated father and a loyal friend and teacher. Want to know more? Find it here.
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