Author: nikhathi

Dark Sky – Vivid (Live)

I love discovering new artists out of thin air. Here is one of my recent favourites, London based Dark Sky.

From beatport: “Tom Edwards, Matt Benyayer and Carlo Anderson together make up the London based production and DJ unit Dark Sky. Having met at music college, Dark Sky formed in 2009 out of a mutual love for the ever evolving London electronic music scene, a love that the trio have always reflected through not only their DJ sets but also their productions, drawing influence from everything from original UK garage through to house, via jungle and disco”.

Here they are at the Converse Red Light Sessions in Amsterdam performing their track, Vivid. Gives me chills…especially at 3:25.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ss1gWsGLWU]

Miami Horror – I Look To You (ft. Kimbra)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jna2r56EXTg]

Melbourne based Miami Horror combine their indie electronica jam with Kimbra’s youthful, wonderfully jazzy tone (you might know her from that Gotye track…). The result is an extraordinarily good NuDisco. This track is old but it never seizes to lift my spirits. Every time I hear this track on a dancefloor, I die.

The future we’ve found
To stay here on higher ground

Enjoy!

The Top 5 Things I’ve Learned About Losing Weight

“There are no shortcuts to any place worth going” – Beverly Sills

This isn’t an article that will help you lose weight fast. Neither is it going to provide you with tips on how to lose weight in some specific way. Instead, I am taking a different approach than the myriad of detailed articles out there on the interwebs. I am going to give you the cold hard truth.

Losing weight is HARD F**KING WORK.

Many people who have known me for some time now know that I have fluctuated quite drastically in appearance over the years. Upon arriving home recently I realized I needed to take control of my life, now or never. In the past 2 months I have renewed my spirit and eagerness to do so and I am happy to report that I am now back on track to winning the war once and for all. I have dropped 8kg (18lbs) in 8 weeks. Throughout my short adult life I have lost, gained, lost again, and re-gained approximately my entire ideal weight. That’s 75kg (165lbs) in total. I’m not a nutritionist, I’m not a scientist, I’m just very experienced with doing and trying it all (almost).

In life we must strive to seek for what we want in three key areas: emotionally, intellectually and physically. Here, I am going to aim to do my best and help you understand how to get the most out of what YOU want physically, and for a lot of people, that means losing weight.

Still interested?

Here is what I have learned…

1) Understand the Math

I hate math. But, with your body, it’s important to understand where you fit in the ‘benchmark’, a benchmark that a bunch of dudes with PhD’s invented.

Thankfully these PhD types out there have figured out the formulas for you. All you gotta do is google them, and you can get a quick overview of your situation. I’m not going to spend time going over this in detail, you can look them up to get a better idea of what they mean.

The indexes you should pay most attention to are the following:

BMI – This is just an indicator, and if you’re overly muscular you can have a high BMI, it’s not a true reflection, but a crucial guide.

BMR – Your Basal Metabolic rate is the minimum level of energy  your body needs when at rest to function effectively. Essentially, if you consume the amount of calories that equal your BMR, you will remain at a constant weight. It’s affected by your age, weight, height and sex. The level of daily activity also influences your BMR.

Lean Body Mass – Your lean body mass is the amount of weight you carry on your body that isn’t fat. Basically, the weight you would be if you had 0% fat. But 0% fat is impossible and low percentages are extremely unhealthy. Bruce Lee had 2%, but that’s Bruce Lee.

Body Fat % – This is crucial to know. When we talk about losing weight, we’re really talking about losing Fat %. Everything you do revolves around this. So here is a basic approach.

I got myself a smart scale that calculates all of this for you. Highly recommended.

Let’s say you are 80kg, and you figure out you have 20% body fat. 0.20 * 80 = 16kg. That means you have 16kg of fat! Now you know you want to get down to 10% body fat, which means you need to lose 8kg of just fat. 1kg of fat = 7,700 calories, this means you have to burn off 7,700 * 8 = 61,600 calories.

So, losing 8kg of fat in 1 month is quite radical. Think about it:

61,600 / 30 = 2,053 calories burned / day. Of pure fat. This means if your BMR is 2053, you’d have to either not eat at all OR eat your 2,053 calories and run approx. 20km. Every day.

Not realistic. You’re going to injure yourself or just lose muscle mass and not fat. So, understand the math, and apply a proper diet. Give yourself a realistic goal!

2) Calories mean nothing

So then comes the question, if I monitor all these ratios / numbers carefully, and I apply Calories In < Calories Out, I will definitely lose weight, right?

In other words, Calories Out (Exercise + BMR) > Calorie In (Diet) = Weight Loss. Quite simple really. In fact, some people have proven this with crazy experiments, but it simply doesn’t work like that!!

Ok, you ought to burn more calories than you consume, that is a sure way of losing weight. But, there are instances when the food you take in actually requires more calories by your body to digest them, and this is a fundamental thing to understand. Whole grains, raw foods like nuts and seeds as well as leafy green vegetables make your body work harder to process and digest them. Calcium rich foods are a good example.

Everyone is unique and there is no cookie cutter mold or diet that works best for everyone. You have to spend time understanding what foods you love, what you can work with. Heck, I love sweet stuff, I love cooking. It’s no fun downing a green shake if you absolutely hate the taste, you will never enjoy it and you will always associate the negative feelings and emotions with that experience when it comes to ‘dieting’, it shouldn’t feel like a chore, you need to enjoy it. Calorie counting is stressful, I’ve been there. It sucks. You spend more time figuring it out and measuring portions than actually enjoying your food. Eat smart, in moderation, and stay AWAY from sugar. If you’re going to replace any calories, it should be calories from sugar. Watch this movie and learn.

What I found useful is downloading some sort of calorie app, after a few uses you start to realize what types of calories your favorite foods actually contain and from there, you can make smarter judgements. Instead of measuring out a tea spoon of ice cream or always logging your intake, you will just instinctively know that a few bites is quite enough, or sharing a dessert with a friend is enough.

Live to eat, don’t eat to live. Seems counterintuitive, but you will be happier in the process.

3) Listen to what your body is telling you

Understand that your body is a system:

system

ˈsɪstəm

noun

  1. a set of things working together as parts of a mechanism or an interconnecting network; a complex whole.

Got it? Ok good. Your body is your vessel. Think of it as a sinking ship. In life we go through ups and downs,  and so does our body. Stormy weather, calm seas, Ebola….

Unfortunately, we can’t just buy a new vessel, we are stuck with a ship that was manufactured on your D.O.B and as we go through life this vessel of ours continuously breaks down bit by bit. It is our job and our job alone to prevent these breakdowns rather than finding patch up solutions.

Fad diets that asks you to starve yourself are wrong. Skipping breakfast, lunch OR dinner, is wrong. Ironically, it works. I did this 3-day diet once and I lost 7lbs, amazing. But who cares? I put it all back on the next week…do you see where I’m going? There are so many studies, there are so many doctors and nutritionists saying this is wrong. I’m just a somewhat regular guy, and I’m telling you, this is wrong!!

When your body tells you it is hungry, it’s probably right. Unless you’re drunk or whatever…but if you’re hungry, eat something. There are so many healthy snack options I don’t need to get into that. For heavens sake if you want a small piece of chocolate, have it. But don’t eat the whole damn bag. If you’re tired and you feel like you’re going to die, then maybe go to sleep! Rest! If your knee hurts, your ass hurts, rest it, ice it, put on a brace (not an ass brace).

The trick here is to not over do it. There really is NO short cut. Slow and steady is the best way and the only way for long term benefits and real results. There is a specific reason why even professional athletes take sufficient rest days. Your body is a vessel, and even the most well travelled vessels need to dock at port and resupply.

4) Find the right motivation

This is perhaps the most important factor of them all, and I hardly see anyone talking about this. Your motivation has to be realistic, and most importantly, it has to be driven by you and you alone.

You see, we have two types of motivations: internal and external.

External motivations are based around validation we receive from any and all external sources. It’s powerful.

The way our clothes fit, the compliments we get, the suggestions we get from media, family, friends, the way we feel good because our spouse or loved one suddenly feels more attracted to us. I’m no stranger to this feeling, it’s addictive, and it’s very useful to help you keep on track and give you the initial boost. But it cannot be the only motivation. You may have a wedding to go to, you need to squeeze into that dress. Perhaps your trying to hook up with that guy/chick and you think that losing a couple of pounds will help you gain confidence and make them want you more. I have news for you friend, sure it helps, but it’s actually the confidence you gained that makes them like you more, not so much your new pack of abs. If they’re only looking for abs then, once you get said person in bed and the abs are gone, guess who else is gone?

On the flip side, there is severe external de-motivation. “I’m embarrassed to go to the gym”, “I hate the way I look, people will laugh at me”. Ok, maybe. But you know what? 90% of people will actually respect you for doing something about it. Which leads me into internal motivation.

Internal motivation is necessary, it is everything. Until you can learn to accept that you are doing this for you and you alone, for your health and your happiness, only then will it stick. It’s a eureka moment. This type of motivation doesn’t come easy, and this is what I mean by losing weight is hard work. It’s hard, physically and mentally. My girlfriend once told me the most reassuring words when I realized I wasn’t taking care of myself properly, it made me realize how important internal motivation truly is. She said: “I don’t care that you you don’t have a six pack, but you need to exercise, I want you to be healthy, YOU need to want to be healthy.” And I realized, shit, she’s right…I do want to be healthy, who doesn’t? She could’ve just as easily said, “you’re fat..”, but that’s just negative external motivation that doesn’t help.

Who am I kidding, I know she’d love it if I had a six pack, but if I am happy and healthy, she still loves my Keg.

5) Diet. Exercise. Isn’t it obvious?

So we come to the final point, but I don’t want to just reiterate what everyone else says. You know what healthy food is, and if you don’t I suggest you start here.

You see the key is knowing and applying. Let’s be real, it’s so easy to say stay away from alcohol, but alcohol is fun (sometimes). And if you’re serious about your career ambitions then you know you can’t avoid it time to time. Just replace soda based mixed drinks, stay away from fancy cocktails and stick to natures best like wine, beer and whiskey. The truth is however, the diet is 70%, exercise is 30%. Tried and tested, just believe me.

The real deal on exercise for losing weight? 6 days a week, no more, no less. I’ve tried so many combinations, but ultimately what works best for you is different to your neighbor, cousin or aunt. You can find so many sources of different types of exercise, the real deal is keeping your body confused. Mix it up, combine different exercises. Personally I love to run. I have Nike+ data points dating back to 2008 and I can clearly see the months that I stopped running correlate directly to my waistline. It’s fascinating.

4-5 times a week of pure cardio for 45-60 mins is a great way to burn good amounts of calories, but strength training is the most important. Your body needs muscles too, and your skeletal muscles that hold your joints together burn the most calories. Combine strength based and interval based exercises like martial arts, weight training & circuit training with cardio and lower intense exercises such as yoga and swimming and you have a good winning combination. Again, 6 times a week, this is it. My current routine consists of 4 (5-7km) runs a week, 1 Muay thai session and 1 strength session. Sometimes I switch a run with a swim session. But I find swimming boring.

Drink water, please. Water is life, your body is composed of almost 70% water. On a daily basis we are supposed to drink approx. 2L of water, but if you are regularly exercising and losing weight, you HAVE to bump this up to at least 3-4L of water a day. When I was in the Army I realized that I was losing so much weight because we were forced to start our day by downing 1L of water. You literally sweat out the fat. There is enough proof about empty calories in juices, sodas and other sugary drinks. Just add lemon or lime to your water.

Remember, have fun. Nobody ever said  “Exercise is so much fun!”. What’s fun is the process, not the chore. You can make it more enjoyable. Join a class, do stuff with friends and let yourself get off track from time to time. But if you have that last cookie, make sure you set your alarm early the next day and pay for it. Strive to validate your intentions internally and be happy with the little wins. It takes time, effort, and hard work.

If you do nothing else important in life but you manage to win the battle of ridding the unhealthy version of you. You win.

Good luck.

Chelsea Wolfe – The Warden

Just discovered this beauty. Sacramento native Chelsea Wolfe has a penchant for atmosphere that crafts together her gospel like voice inside her goth-flavored concoctions of industrial rock, a dash of melodrama and jiggers of synthpop. She admits to being influenced by black metal, doom and drone music, as well as Scandinavian folk, which probably explains her array of styles. Here is one of my favorites from her album released last year ‘Pain is beauty’

I give you, ‘The Warden’.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fiwBe8GX-HU]

Jamie Antonelli – Divine (Original Mix)

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=31TsRNC1OUc]

It’s been a while since I posted a track, so kick starting this baby again with a track I discovered last summer. Every now and then you come across a track that samples another track and just does it so much better. This is Jamie Antonelli’s original mix  of the classic Meat Katie & Elite force track of the same name. Vocals by Roland Clarke, lyrics below 🙂

“Last night I had a vision of a disco in the sky. I saw angels and saints dancing together, like a mystical dream inside of my mind. I remembered to move, I remembered that groove, I remember the thump of the bass and the pump of the kick, because my heart was almost out my body. I felt free, I felt joy, I felt things I never thought I’d feel before. It was deep, it was soulful, it was techno… it was disco. A kaleidoscope of sounds, it was truly underground. It was an essential mix in the clouds, where we could dance and sing out loud, and everybody loved everybody else. There was no hurt, there was no sorrow, there was no pain. And like children we danced and we laughed, and we played without a care in the world. Without a flicker of despair, it was all about music. It was that thing that we shared. A tribal feast of rhythm, a ceremony of sound in my mind. I must of went to music heaven… because nothing is that divine.”

The ‘Hyperlapse’ race and why Instagram has won

[vimeo=104409950 w=500&h=280]

If you haven’t heard by now, Instagram released an app a few days ago known as Hyperlapse. What many people don’t know however is that there has been a secret race behind closed doors to get-to-market with an app or concept that will be widely used and appeal to a mass market. Thus far, the hyperlapse technology has been utilized by researchers and very technical film makers to create vivid timelapse videos and beautiful moving landscapes. In fact, the term was first coined by an American filmmaker about 2 years ago named Dan Eckert. Other filmmakers have also done such experiments but the use of the word Hyperlapse didn’t become mainstream until about a year ago – TechCrunch picked up a story about Canadian design team Teehan+Lax that were experimenting with google street views 360º cameras to create amazing cinematic timelapse videos that took the boredom out of exploring the street view one click at a time. You can view that here.

These guys were nice enough to release their entire source code on GitHub and so you can imagine what all the hipstergrams decided to do! They stole it! Ok, technically they didnt steal it, and at least they too shared the love and released some engineering notes behind their app.

A brilliant team at Microsoft even took a stab with their their own version of the hyperlapse project using GoPro cameras about 2 weeks ago. But…unfortunately, in this hyper race to hyperlapse, Instagram and therefore Facebook, has won. Most people will now always associate the word ‘Hyperlapse’ with Instagram and our newsfeeds are going to be full of people speeding up their rides to work or school or god forbid, their gym workout routines. Then again, with the proliferation of smartphone use and increase of teenage tech-geek aficionados I’m sure we’ll see some brilliant material that should give Vine a run for its money and put Instagram back in the video content game.

My Sales Experience @ Startup Institute

Here is a blog post I originally wrote for the Startup Institute Blog.

At noon on Friday June 28th the Sales and Business Development students were presented with a challenge: to open and close as many deals as we could resulting in a slew of freebies for all students and staff at Startup Institute. The rules were simple, open as many deals by 5pm and close them within the week. If we closed the deals by the end of the afternoon that was just a bonus, but the scope of what we could acquire was limited only by our imagination. Popular items in the past included free food, free merchandise and even a boat cruise around the Boston harbor for all 70 students and staff!

My mind began to race with ideas; thoughts of offering the entire development team for a weekend to produce the most beautiful e-commerce website resulting in a free skydiving trip for everyone resonated in my head.  The catch however was we could not offer anything of value in return. This meant my sweatshop idea went down the drain. The only proposition allowed was social media promotion through the form of twitter. Go figure.

This of course was a game changer and presented a daunting and unrealistic goal I was terrified of taking on. Here I was sitting amongst my peers, some of which had years of sales experience under their belt. I thought to myself, how the in the World am I going to accomplish this? I barely even managed to listen to the rest of the instructions as my mind began to be consumed with facing the consequences and embarrassment of being the only guy in the Sales track not completing the challenge within the given time frame. As I awoke from the confusion the last thing I heard was the one sound advice I took to heart and acted on almost instinctively: “In the past, those who were most successful with this challenge were the ones that just went out there and did it.”

After a brief 5 minutes of pre-planning, I packed up my bag and my dying iPhone, and decided I would just head out and give this a go. There was no direction, no final aim or solid plan of action, after all I had nothing to lose, in my mind I was already at a disadvantage. But I didn’t let this get to me, instead I tried terribly hard to keep a positive attitude and just go to the one restaurant I probably would have the best luck at, Moby Dick of Boston. For the past 5 years as a student in Northeastern University I had frequently visited this humble Persian food spot and gotten familiar with the owner and head chef, Moti. Moti is a living testament to the American dream – she brought her family to America from Iran to pursue the freedoms that far too many of us take for granted. Moti played by the rules and always has. She came over and became part of this country legally and quickly found that making ends meet with a young family is not so easy. 20 years later she is still around and her legacy continues. I don’t think Moti ever knew my name but it was a casual relationship, I knew her face, she knew mine. I always enjoyed her food and she recognized I was a valuable customer. It was one of the only factors that gave me the confidence I could close this deal.

Motis Moby Dick

As I approached the Symphony stop on the infamous green line, my heart was racing –  “what the heck is she going to say?” I thought to myself. Knowing her strong personality and direct nature of doing business I was sure she would laugh at my face at the thought of providing over $1000 in food and drink to an unknown group of individuals for literally nothing. “Twitter?” she asked, “What is twitter?”

I was right.

But it didn’t end that way. After explaining my story more and what startup institute was about Moti listened intently. I began to gather in my head all that we had learned about finding pain points and determining some area of interest so that Moti and I could see eye to eye on this situation. Instincts took over once again and I began to tell her more about the challenge and how much she would be helping my future if I could prove to people that someone with no sales experience could pull this off. This got her attention.

“So, how many people are in this program with you?” Are they all students?”

Yes, I said.

“Insha’Allah, God is great and I love to help students. If this is what you tell me then this is what I like to hear. I have four children and I know how hard it is for students, anything I can do to help students means I am happy. If I go to bed tonight I am happy just because I know I am helping you achieve something that is important. That is all I need to say yes, not twitter, not advertising. 20 years I’ve been in this business I never advertise. Not once”

My face literally lit up, I had to pinch myself. It was a complete 180° from the last 5 minutes of our conversation which seemed to be going in all the wrong directions. Within 15 minutes I had closed my first deal!! Moti had agreed to supply everyone with her famous chicken and vegetable biryani dishes, 35 of each, and 5 gallons of her ‘Natural homemade energy drink’. I was ecstatic. So was she, needless to say.

What did I learn from all this? Many things. Aside from a huge confidence boost I realized one fundamental thing: people genuinely want to help people. It’s human nature to want to feel valuable, to help others and ride a wave of good vibes knowing that you helped someone get somewhere. More often than not though, we evaluate the risks associated with doing someone a favor more than the benefits. It’s because the benefits tend to not have some substantial immediate impacts. I realized that with will, determination, some guts and more importantly, being genuine, you can feed yourself for the rest of your life. But seriously, it was a valuable experience that made me realize negotiation is both an art and a science. I almost lost the deal, but when I continued to apply my learning and expressed a genuine interest to help her I managed to reveal pain points in her business that ultimately led to her key motivation to help me help her. It wasn’t money or more customers; it was something so much more meaningful that I wouldn’t have figured out had it not been for being relatable. I walked out that restaurant that day with a huge smile on my face and 15 minutes later closed another deal with RodDee 2 for Thai food the following week.

It was by far the best Friday I’ve had in a long time.