250216 "The Opens Are Upon Us"

The excitement, the challenge... it is now upon us. As I have said before, this time of year is like Christmas to me. Each week I get a new present of a Workout to enjoy and share with everyone. More importantly this is a chance for YOU to push yourself harder and farther than usual. That is how we live our lives to the fullest, that is how we find out who we truly are. For the best realizations are those that come when we reveal our deeper selves to each other!

2016 is going to be an amazing year of discovery, first times and lots of fun. I will be watching the open announcement show every Thursday at 3 pm so please feel free to come and join in .

Baseline:

Agility Warm Up/ Squat Flow

Skill Competency:

EMOM 12:

ODD: 7 Pausing Back Squats @ 40% (1,2,1)

EVEN: 50 Double Unders

WOD:

3 Rounds for Time

400m Run
20 Box Jumps 24/20"

Rest 1:00 Between Rounds

230216 "protein bars. Candy bars in disguise?"

As a traveler, on the go, starving most of the time... I sometimes reach for the pretty packaged bars at registers all over airports. The bars are packaged to be sold. They are always labeled with the good stuff like protein content and natural ingredients. But... How Good Are they really?

Sitting next to these bars are another very familiar bar. A candy bar. Though the wrappers are much more traditional, much of the nutrition facts seem to be quite similar. Lets explore... I researched the nutrition facts of a few popular protein bars against some candy bars on calorie count.com and found some similar facts.

First off, Protein content of the 'Protein' bars actually blew the candy bars away.. No surprise right. All bars contained 20g of protein and most Candy bars had only 3-5 g or less. So kinda good that at least you are getting that. But... how much are you absorbing ? WE will get to that in a second.

Fat. Saturated fat. That is really where Candy bars are stand out above most bars of the protein variety. Due to most ingredients in the Protein bars, the whey protein they use is low in fat compared to the oil content of the Candy bars.

Fiber... Yeah fiber. That good stuff that allows your gut to preform the way it should. You can eat all the protein you want but if there is no fiber in the Protein bar, it basically turns into a candy bar in the gut. Because most protein bars are built off whey protein with a high level of sucrose or fructose and not  many contain a 'high-level' of fiber.. 5+ grams; The result is an insulin spike the same way Candy bars react in the body. So beware that the brand you buy may not be giving you any more than a candy bar does!

Vitamins and Minerals is another realm of Protein bars that set them apart from candy bars. Some are fortified with supplemental vitamins and minerals and some also (like KIND bars) are naturally higher in minerals than others. Circling back to the Fiber amount, little can be absorbed without fiber so... there we go again.

At the end of the day I always look at monetary value. Am I getting the most protein for the money. Simply. The answer is no. Candy bars and protein bars are different and yet very similar. Shitty thing is also they are both expensive in airports!! Yeah like 3+$$ for a bar. Couple that with a bottle of water and a generic piece of fruit (apple or banana) and you are looking at a 10 dollar meal. For 10 $ I have found that packaged lunch meats and a bag of nuts or a sandwich is relatively the same price and offers a closer resemblance to 'REAL' food. Protein bars are still a processed food product and should be treated as such.

Baseline Mobility:

Banded Hip Distraction

Baseline:

3X
30 Double Unders
15 Banded Good Mornings

Skill Competancy:
3X8 *Alternating

Romanian Deadlift
Pendlay Row

WOD:

18 Min AMRAP
2 Deadlift 365/300
10 Bar Over Burpee
15 Sit Up

190216 "Muscle Up"

Attaining the Muscle Up is actually not that big of a deal.. Really.. Gymnasts use the muscle up as a way to just begin their routines. In CrossFit we idolize the Muscle Up because it is a great example of capturing body position, strength, and coordination.

Either on the bar or the rings, the complex dance that is a full Muscle Up can be broken down in much the same way that our complex Olympic Lifts are. And despite your obvious apprehension about learning the movement, I promise you that if you set your mind and body to the goal... it can be attainable.

Today we will practice the different segments of the Bar Muscle Up. The Bar Muscle Up allows us to pull ourselves up over an object in the same manner as we would use in real life. Jumping a fence, pulling yourself out of a pool... all muscle up variations. Pulling against a static object (in this case a pull up bar) requires strength in pulling through the back, strength in closing the shoulder, and strength in the tricep press.

Breaking down the elements help to target strength. My job is to identify the weakest points and guide you to strengthening them. I challenge you to set your mind and body on the path to the muscle up. There is no greater feat than to be towering above the gym after completing one in a workout. You are on top of the world!

Baseline:

400m Run
10 Samson Lunges W/ Pass Through
10 Push Ups
200m Run
15 Ring Rows
15 Push Up
30 Double Unders
20 Squat Therapy
20 Push Up

Gymnastic Skill Development:
Bar Muscle Up;

-australian Pull up
-Negative Pull UP
-Dips on Pull Up Bar
-Explosive Pull Up
-Tucked Lat Pull Down
-Jumping Bar Muscle Up
- Negative Bar Muscle Up
-Full Movement

WOD:

16 Min EMOM For Max Reps

Min 1: 50 Double Unders/ Max Muscle Ups
Min 2: Double KB Front Rack Lunges
Min 3: 10 Chest To Bar Pull Up/ Max Box Jumps
Min 4: Rest

180216 "Threshold Training"

Each week since the end of January I have been programming Threshold workouts that test your bodies ability to sustain maximum work output for a moderate duration. This week you have experienced one already..i.e. Cal Row/Deadlift/Wall Ball.

As we near the Opens season, (next week), I am going to give you a double dose of Threshold preparation. Just as the previous workouts, the skill and weight are not limiting factors. The threshold of your capacity is measured in your bodies ability to sustain repeated work load and your minds ability to prevail when your body begins to scream to stop.

Now I know many of you are not interested in the Competition side of CrossFit. But you all should be interested in finding out your limits. Your limits both physically and mentally. In everyday life you will be tested as your life meanders through its paces and circumstances dictate that you rise to the occasion.

I get it...It can be hard to correlate doing burpees against what you may encounter in life but I'm asking you to trust me on this. No matter the test or circumstance in your everyday life, mental and physical toughness will assuredly be required. My goal is not just to make you physically fit individuals but community leaders, social standouts, and moral champions. By testing yourself daily, you become stronger inside and out. This translates into a better you.. When a better you is realized, you are able to extend your reach into the world around you. Affecting Positive change in the world around you makes ripples in history... The process is tried and true. Look at any great leader.

So now you see my big picture. Doing CrossFit will change history... Haha kinda big thinking but hopefully you see my dream now!

Train hard and always train at your limits. Be the change you want to see in this world. It all begins here, in our CrossFit community.

Sign up for the CrossFit Games Opens HERE..

Baseline:
Lat Band Mobility :60 per side

Rotator Cuff Drillz and complex

2X
12 Plate Ground to Overhead 45/35
12 Plate Lunges
20 Lateral Hops over plate

Skill Development:
Pressing Complex
*Build for 12 Minutes
-3 Push Press
-1 Push Jerk
-1 Split Jerk

WOD:

8 Minute AMRAP

5 Hang Power Clean 135/95
7 Push Jerk
9 Burpee

170216 "Zinc, the hidden healer"

As we peruse the isles of our health stores or shop online for the perfect mineral supplement.. chances are you are not looking for Zinc. Other minerals like magnesium, calcium, and potassium are generally what the leafless highlight. But Zinc is the mineral that quietly hides, helping our body normalize and recover from our training.

To expand upon Zinc we need to first look at the metabolic process of the cells in our body. Zinc is a crucial element in our diet as it has a direct effect on the insulin/glucose relationship. With Zinc in the bloodstream there will be adequate insulin production. When insulin is able to bind with our cells, glucose can be taken up by the same cells; this ensures adequate energy production and normalized blood glucose levels. When Zinc is deficient, insulin production goes down and therefore more glucose floats around the blood causing a host of metabolic problems like obesity and heart disease.

Secondly, cells love Zinc as it is a natural anti- inflammatory. Zinc is good at working to bully out metabolic waste from training hard. By clearing cells of waste they can recover and prepare faster for the next training session.

Finally hormone health is crucial in training as well as overall health. I have noted in many previous posts about the gut and hormone balancing; if hormones are thrown off then the mind and body go into a funk. From the Pancreas to the Vagus nerve, Zinc helps to regulate the messages that are sent throughout the body keeping it on track and ready for whatever life throws at it.

Pure Pharma makes a 'M3' product that has a good supplementation of magnesium (important) and Zinc. I like and take this product. Grass Fed beef is also a good source of this mineral. Either way, put Zinc on your list of important minerals in your life. Your well being depends on it!

Baseline:

Pitchers Stretch 1:00
Bully Stretch 1:00
Tricep Band 1:00

Double Under Progression. 5/10/15/10/5 Single Unders /Double Unders/Burpee

Gymnastics:

Gymnasty 15

1 Legless
:20 Ring Support Hold
1 50' Handstand Walk
12 Candle Stick to Pistol

WOD:
Team WOD!!
Teams of 2,

Both partners run 400m Together, then 150 Double Unders. (split work as needed)
Then..
P1:40 Thrusters 95/65
P2: Front Rack Hold
(P1 may not work until bar is in rack, each partner must do 40 Thruster)
Then...
P1:30 Ring Dips
P2:Partner Holds Plank
(P1 may not work till plank is held, each does 30 dips)

150216 "5 steps to meal Prep"

Whether it is athletic performance or weight loss or just Healthy living; Meal Prepping can help you save time and money on your way to the goal.

As a dad and athlete I look for ways to save time and keep up with my diet needs. I have come up with a program that has worked for me. Breaking Meal Prepping down to 5 easy rules or steps keeps it simple for me and I am sure easy for you too!

1) Shop For Success. Good Food begin with good ingredients. When you are shopping for groceries, take advantage of the highest quality foods you can find. Remember that your Food is Fuel, not just products that fill our bellies. Good food tastes better when it is prepared and will last longer over the course of the week or days depending on how long you prep for. Organic, Non-GMO, Local; do your homework and don’t just walk around grabbing things at the store that ‘look’ good.
2) Don’t Forget the Macros. Simplicity is what works for me. I am not my wife. She can make masterpieces out of anything but for me it is much different story. When I am preparing a menu or shopping at the store I stick to my macros. Protein, Fats, Carbohydrates. I have meals that I like that combine all three with the appropriate amount of each. meals that are ready in your refrigerator with three easy ingredients takes thinking out of the equation. Easy. Simple. Effective. Also this helps cut out all the excess that may be hindering you from losing those extra pounds, and keeps inflammation down.
3) Start Small. A couple Meals at a time. Meal Prepping comes in all sizes. I prefer a couple days or meals at a time for space purposes in the fridge but it also can keep the food fresh and the menus changing. If you know you are home every day for Breakfast and Dinner, then prepping an entire weeks Lunches might be another option. 5 Tupperware meals ready to go saves time and takes the guess work out of what to eat.
4) Spice It Up! By keeping a bottle of Siracha, Tabasco, Soy Sauce, Mayo… whatever…. can help kick up the flavors of your meals in an instant. When prepping meals I try and not use too much salt or unnecessary flavoring so that I can add later. When reheating your meals I prefer to do it on the stove top so that the nutrients and favors remain a part of the food instead of getting nuked out of it. If a microwave is all you have, try and use glassware to store your food in rather than plastic. Plastic not only can release cancer causing chemicals but it also sucks flavor and freshness out of food when reheated.
5) Stick to the Program. Meal Prepping is badass. If you are determined to reach your goals, save money and live better; keeping your mind and stomach focused is vital. As I explained before, this stuff doesn’t have to be extreme. Rather, you can prep a couple meals at a time and start small. You will succeed in whatever you do if you stick to it. If you have questions please grab me and we can do this together!

Baseline:

Banded Hamstring/ Low back Distraction

3x
12 KB Sumo Deadlift
20 Mountain Climbers
12 Goblet Squat

Skill Development:

3X8 Romanian Deadlift

3X8 Pendlay Row

*alternate Between Exercises/ using the same weight for both.

WOD:

4 Rounds For Time

20 Cals Row
12 Deadlift 225/155
20 Wall ball 20/14#

120216 "Gut Bacteria and Weight Loss"

A staggering figure about the state of American Society. Over 60% of Americans are now Overweight or Obese. This figure is relative to a total population and is regionally fluctuating. Primarily the root cause for this is Poor Diet, Lack of Exercise, and Bad Genetics. What researchers are finding is that another cause, a desert situation inside the Gut.

Gut bacteria are (not-surprisingly) in control of how we store fat, the blood glucose (sugar) levels , and the hormones which control both. The Gut bacteria colonies begin as we are born, passing through the birth canal and then we are either fostering the bacteria or killing it off with every thing we do with our lives afterward.

What has been found is that lean people have a much more diverse bacterial flora. Lean people tend to eat  a diet with less processed food and more nutritious, fibrous foods that are high in probiotics. Researchers and frankly common sense can see that populations that eat 'dead' food or food that has little to no nutritional value will have poorer health. This poor health is now becoming clearer and clearer to originate with the tiny BILLIONS of Gut bacteria living in your large intestine, and mouth.

As I have written about before, there are some easy ways to make sure you are fostering your Gut Bacteria and helping you lose weight and maintain proper health. Fermented food like sauerkraut, pickels, Kim Chee, and Greek Yogurt are especially good. Eating Organic produce that is not processed will help with Fiber content and acts as a valuable Prebiotic.

If weight on the outside is what you are concerned about, I would highly recommend thinking before you put crap on the inside. Eat for good health!

 

Baseline:

3X
25 Double Unders
10 Standing Toe Touch W/ KB
10 Banded Good Mornings

WOD:

AMRAP 7
30 Hang Power Clean 185/115
20 Lateral Burpee Over bar
10 Bar Muscle Ups
*sub Chest to Bar Pull Ups

Rest 2:00

Against an 8 Minute Clock,
Build To a Heavy 2 RM Deadlift.

* This type of opens workout came out last year and it may pop up again???

110216 "Nutrient Timing"

Nutrient Timing and 'Re-loading' is crucial to optimize your training. Hopefully by now, many of you have developed a rhythm to a cycle by which you work and REST. Yes Rest.. It is just as important as the clang-n-bang.

Resting is vital and a great opportunity to restore your body to its full potential and mitigate any inflammation that may be happening. The concept is to stay conscious about your eating and adjust on days that you are not doing your normal activity.

On training days the demand for maximum protein fat and carbs are dictated by your training times and how you feel eating before or after your sessions. Rest days are a bit different as you need to keep the carbohydrates loaded with vitamins and minerals for optimum recovery. A typical plan would be to curb the sweet potato and rice on recovery days and load up the plate with lots of veggies and a diverse array of fats like nuts and avocados. Rest days are also a great time to plan out a big fish dinner, one that will give you the Omega-3's you will need for health and anti-inflammatory.

Training is all about balance and focus, if you want to stay on top and keep charging, you need to feel your body and feed it properly. Food is Fuel!!!!!
Baseline:

Hip Distraction/ Low Back Recovery

10X
:40 Row for Cals
:20 Rest

Midline Mania:

15-10-5
GHDSU
KB Windmills
GHDHE
Strict Ring Dip

WOD:
24-21-18-15-12

Cal Row
Wall ball
Double KB Step Ups

100216 "Changes for the week"

We have guests coming this week.

On Thursday Feb. 11 we will be closing the evening classes at Kukui'ula and hosting a Olympic Lifting Seminar with Coach Mike Burgener. Come and get coached up, you will get some good nuggets... guaranteed. The clinic will be at the Church Location.

On Friday Feb. 12th we are also going to close the evening classes at Kukui'ula for a Jump Rope Clinic provided by Rx Jump Ropes. The owner and staff will coach you guys up on the proper ways to jump, be efficient and more athletic. The seminar will be at 5pm at the Church Location.

We are blessed and lucky to have such a line up all in the same week. I highly suggest you take advantage of this opportunity and come to learn a bunch. These folks are the best at what they do.

Also, we are creeping closer to the CrossFit Opens season beginning on February 25th. If you still need to sign up click HERE. This is a 5 week party and no matter the skill level, there will be a workout for you!!

Baseline:

Rotator Cuff Mobility and Activation
3X
10 Banded Pull Aparts
10 Banded Good Mornings
10 Banded Pass Thru
10 Banded Row

Snatch Warm Up;
3 x romanian deadlift
3 x hang snatch high pull
3 x hang muscle snatch
3 x tempo overhead squat @ 53X1
3 x snatch balance
3 x hang power snatch to OHS (hold  receiving position each time, each rep little deeper)
3 x snatch pull under
3 x hang (squat) snatch

Skill Development:

Build to a heavy Snatch in 15 Minutes.

Beginner: High Hang Pull Under/ OHS
Internediate: Hang Snatch
Advanced: From the floor (full squat catch)

Skill Competancy:
EMOM 8
Odd: 20 Air Squats
Even: 10/6 HSPU
EMOM 8
Odd: 12 Alternating Pistol Squat
Even: 4 Snatch @ 70% of Previous

080216 "For the love of one another"

Sport is amazing and I believe essential for every person. The lessons you learn about selflessness, teamwork, patience, communication.. The list can go on and on. CrossFit and the community that has evolved from it has revealed these qualities to so many. Today, I want to express how CrossFit has taught me how to be a better and more selfless person and husband.

John, Chapter 4:7, "Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. The one who does not love does not know God, for God is love."

I have been involved in athletics since I could walk. Team sports helped me through adolescence, guided me in my turbulent teenage years, and focused me during my development in my 20's. But it was my first day in CrossFit, when I was broken down to a point where my mind was telling me to just quit and leave that I 'saw the light' in the faces of everyone I was working out with. The charged me with inspiration and pushed me to keep going. This was love. This set a blaze inside of me.

Many of you know this feeling. You have been down, you have wanted to quit.. But the love and compassion of your friends in CrossFit have kept you going. Powerful.

Years have passed and my role of athlete have transformed into role of mentor and coach. My goal is to now be the front line face to love, compassion and teamwork for my community. This has involved not only personal work inside the gym but outside the gym, staying conscious and developing my loving relationships with my wife and kids. It is hard as you all know. To constantly being a beacon of compassion and guidance is exhausting and many times you want to just shut down and hide instead of giving one more ounce of passion to others.

But the work must go on. You must constantly and unceasingly strive to develop the love for one another. CrossFit classes are the perfect opportunity for you to practice. I have found few other places where your chance to strive to be better is more accepted than in a CrossFit gym.

The result of spreading compassion and love through sport not only has profound effects on the individuals and community you are a part of but personally you will be elevated spiritually, emotionally, and of course physically! The work continues today with you. Every moment, every encounter you have. A chance to spread the love for one another.

If you can devote your life to bringing others up, it is much more rewarding than bringing yourself up.

THIS WORKOUT TODAY IS DEDICATED TO THE LOVE OF MY LIFE CRISTIN BOTSFORD...

BASELINE:

Mobility; Lat Band/ Relative Hip Flexion

25X
Samson Lunge W/ Pass Thru
Frog Jump Lateral
Reverse Hand Push Up

Skill Development:
Power Clean
5-5-5-5

*Building + Touch and Go

WOD:
'Cristin's Birthday WOD'

7X   :30 @ each Movement

Power Clean 135/95
Wall Ball
Toes To bar
Rest

*Score is total reps completed.

040216 "Eat Fat for Good Health"

Fat... The former Red-headed step child of the dinner plate. So vilified during the 70's and 80's that practically all food products still carry a low-fat or non-fat symbol on the packaging! The truth is, as far as Science tells us, Fat is actually 1) key for proper system function 2) essential for weight loss and overall health.

To give you a perspective of where the U.S. Government has determined our appropriate levels should be, let's do some number crunching. First off, the standard is 20-35% of total calories for the day. This is considered low fat dieting. This leave approximately 65% for protein and carbs.

Ok. Balance... I see their approach. But... in reality Americans consume probably a 45-50% ratio of carbohydrates and in the Fat category the 20% or so is primarily Omega-6 fats which is vegetable oils and some nuts. Omega-3 fats, our fish, coconut oil, nuts, flaxseed these are more expensive and consumed at a much lower rate.

Fats, still having a stigma and kinda confusing for most people are generally cautioned against. The health benefits of Good Fat is necessary for maintaining proper system function in the body. The Brain needs Fat to make brain connections and pass messages between neurons. Fat is necessary in the GI tract to keep the lining healthy. Fat is also ESSENTIAL for the Mitochondria in your cells. These power plants feed off fat in the blood system to keep healthy and reproduce ATP (energy) for you to keep going in a workout or life.

Without dorking out on you too much I will just tell you that Fats are also integral for weight loss! Carbohydrates do many things like destroy the lining of the GI system, spike the insulin levels in the blood, and are easily abused. All you have to do is look around right now and see what I'm talking about. Remember what I said about the 70's and 80's being a tough time for fats??

Well, Carbohydrates (especially the refined ones) quickly took the place of all fats for calories in food and it literally made Americans BALOON up and out of control. Obesity is higher in America than anywhere else and it is because we are told that fats are the enemy. I beg to differ.

Please understand I'm not asking you to lick the bacon pan every day but integrating healthy oils, nuts, and protein sources that are higher in GOOD FATS are a good start to develop a healthier you!. Balance is key, if you have questions just ask me.

Baseline:

Roll out and/or Band Mobility on Thoracic and Lats for 5 mins.
Rotator Cuff Drills.

5 Min Quality AMRAP
5 Ring Row or Pull Up Negatives
20 Plate Hops
20 Lateral Plate Hope Overs

Midline Mania:
3X
:45 Sit Up
:30 Superman Hold
:15 L Sit
1 Minute Rest

WOD:
3 Rounds For Time
75 Double unders
50 Mountain Climbers
25 Chest To bar Pull Ups

020216 "Drop the Zero,, Get with the Hero"

It is appalling what the Sugar Sweetned beverage companies are driving into humans. Through branding, product placement, and spokespeople, drinks like Rockstar, RedBull, Monster are pushing chemicals down throats and making millions doing it. When all you need to do for a 'pick me up' or a 'boost' is grab a delicious cup of coffee.

Coming from a studied Sports Performance and Nutrition student, I will tell you that Caffeine is probably the most studied and peer reviewed substance on the market. It can take many forms and be added to just about anything. The beauty of coffee is that it naturally has an adequate level of the good stuff without all the extra BS!

PLUS COFFEE IS FULL OF ANTI-OXIDANTS WHICH CAN WARD OFF DISEASE!

As a perfromance enhancer, Coffee is a stimulant and will increase your exercise production if taken at moderate levels. Caffeine in Coffee acts as a vaso-dialtor which opens the blood vessels allowing more blood flow. Coffee increases the blood pressure and heart rate which increases blood flow as well. Coffee also has an effect on the psyche. I know many friends, myself included, that get a heightened sense of well-being on coffee and a decreased sense of exercise exertion.

Now all that sounds fine but you still can overdo it, even with this 'Natural' product. If you have dabbled at all with fun espresso drinks or tried one too many cold brews you have probably experienced some of the side effects of TOO MUCH caffeine. The shakes, cloudy vision, headaches, upset stomach, and an overwhelming desire to repeatedly go to the BANO!

Moderation is key. On a quick search I found a number of 3-9mg of caffeine per bodyweight. Like that means anything. Lets put that into perspective. An average 'cup' of coffee  contains 150mg of caffeine. Daily, it is ok to consume 3-7 cups of coffee. (Except if you live in Iceland where they apparently drink upwards of 12 a day!!)

Now here comes the caveat to the coffee thing.....

1) Coffee is black, maybe with a little cream. Nothing more. You want to get serious, add some MCT oil and grass fed butter... But that is it!!! None of the BULLSHIT that Starbucks offers, SOY VANILLA NONFAT 3 PUMP SPICED HALF CAB FUCKING LATTE... That is shit and is really an uncarbonated soda. DOn't buy that shit. There is nothing performance enhancing in that garbage.

2) You cannot run on Coffee alone! You must first look to your WHOLE FOODS to help your body perform at its peak level. Proteins,Fats, Carbohydrates. Eat Correctly, supplement where needed and kick some ass. Even though the Bulletproof Coffee claim is that all you need is coffee, remember that he is a business man who does not work out like you do! Eat and Perform !!!

So ditch the energy drinks and buy an Espresso machine. You will have way more fun and will save a ton of money in the long run. If you need a partner to drink coffee with, hit me up.. Im always down for a coffee!

Baseline:

Squat Flow....

Partner Warm up;

P1- Row 20 Cals
P2- Sled Push or Sand Bag Drag
Switch and work for 6 Minutes.

Strength:

Back Squat Test Day!!!
(Week 11)
5,5,3,3,1,1,1,1
*Free Tempo, rest as necessary between reps.
*Focus on fast out of the bottom and tight midline.

Skill Consistency:

EMOM 10
Odd: 20/15 Wall Ball Shots
Even: 12 Sand bag Lunges

010216 "Why you Belong Here"

Never Back Down – Why You Belong In That Gym

by Lisbeth Darsh
Are you a natural athlete? Or, in the middle of the gym, do you sometimes feel like a monkey trying to give birth to a barbell?
I feel that way too at times. If I’m by myself, it’s one thing, but if I’m in a class, sometimes it’s harder.
When the coach speaks, I can’t always easily translate those instructions into perfect movement. I practice a LOT. Sometimes, I simply need help telling my brain how to make my ass move. (You don’t want to see me jump rope. Or dance. And, last week when a friend suggested I join her Barre class, I replied, “Oh, the world does not need me in Barre.”)
But the one thing I know for sure is that I BELONG IN THAT GYM. And, if I keep working, I can figure anything out.
See, sometimes, if you don’t feel like a natural athlete, it’s easy to think that your place isn’t in a gym. You get embarrassed that you’re not naturally good at everything. Your body feels too big or too small or just not … right. And you feel like you’re back in grade school playing kickball and you just got thrown out at first base. You start to think that your place is in a library or a courtroom or an operating room: any place but the gym. Your brain seems otherwise occupied. Why are you here?

Because the gym is a GREAT place for you!

Huh?

The gym is the place you belong, not only because you can get stronger and learn so much at the gym, but I’m going to let you in on a secret: the good coaches are happy to see you.
What?
Good coaches love to coach. And nobody makes you dig deeper into the how and why of a movement (whether it’s a back squat or a deadlift or pull-ups or ring dips or whatever) than someone struggling with a movement. This is how a good coach improves and this is how the rest of the class learns—by watching and listening to these teaching opportunities. If everyone does everything perfectly and there are no mistakes, the learning opportunities are greatly reduced.
Still, we can (and do) learn by watching the best athletes and beautiful movement. There is much to be said for studying the elites. But that’s only one way to learn, and it’s like learning art by studying the work of Picasso or Monet. Something different happens when you stick a brush in your own hand and try to paint. Here’s where art (and life) gets real. And get this:
Your imperfections are beautiful.
No, really, they are. Ever hear of the painter Edward Hopper? He was a great artist, but not because he was a technically phenomenal painter. Rather, his ability to convey emotion through his work eclipsed his ability to paint. As the art critic Clement Greenberg said of Hopper: “Hopper is simply a bad painter, but if he were a better one, he would probably not be such a great artist.”
So, be fabulous and original like Hopper, but be you. And when you go to the gym, don’t worry that you’re not Rich Froning or LeBron James or Serena Williams. (They don’t worry that they’re not you.)
Remember:
1.) Arrive with a positive attitude and a “Beginner’s Mind”
What’s that mean? Approach your gym time by being happy to learn. Just because you’re an adult doesn’t mean you have to know everything. Whether you’re learning from a person or a YouTube video, be receptive to being taught and welcome the instruction you’re receiving.
In the book “Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind”, Shunryu Suzuki talks about the importance of not getting caught up in the concept that you’re the best horse in the race or the worst one. He writes: “When you are determined to practice zazen with the great mind of Buddha, you will find the worst horse is the most valuable one … those who find great difficulties in practicing Zen will find more meaning in it. So I think that sometimes the best horse may be the worst horse, and the worst horse can be the best one.”
So too is it in the gym. Those who struggle the most with their squat may find more meaning in it. Ditto with the push jerk or the pull-up or whatever you’re trying to better. Practice can add meaning. Don’t worry about being the best horse or the worst horse. Just be a horse.
2.) Ask questions.
Really. Ask questions. This is how everyone learns. I have a friend who is a professional translator, so she’s used to asking questions when she doesn’t understand. She asks many questions in the gym. I love those questions (and so do the coaches) because we all learn more through the answers provided to those questions.
See, when you ask questions, you’re not “taking up time” so don’t be embarrassed. Good coaches welcome questions. And if your coach doesn’t welcome questions? Maybe she’s not such a good coach, and maybe you can find a better one.
3.) Try to relax.
I know that’s easy to say and harder to do, but it’s just the gym. Not an open heart on the operating table. Not a school bus on an icy road. This isn’t even spilling the last cup of coffee in your house on a bitter cold morning when your bedhead is frightful and you don’t feel like exposing the coffee shop to your hot mess. You’ve survived much worse than this in life. Remember, you got through grade school. Smile and kick the hell out of that ball.

Baseline:

Banded Hamstring/Lat Band Mobility

Running Prep:
Leg SwingsX10 Ea
Plyo Step X 20m
High Skip X20m
Seated Arm SwingX :30

Pull Up Prep:
Strict Ring Rows X20
Kipping Progression 1,2,3
Butterfly Progression

WOD:

8 Rounds For Time
400m Run
2 Rounds Of Cindy

*(5 Pull Up, 10 Push Up, 15 Air Squats)

290116 "Let's Talk Muscle"

"Negatives" .. What are they? Why do we practice them? That is a good Question. When we talk muscle development and strength it is worth looking at not only putting reps overhead or squatting a ton of weight over and over; we must also look at what happens to muscle when it actually lengthens against resistance.

This method of strength training is called 'eccentric' training. It is where the muscle is loaded and you as the athlete fight against the resistance on the way to lengthen the muscle. To give a couple examples; this is what we are training in our Tempo Squats, our slow lowering in the pull up, the power I'm looking for in the buddy pulls or sled pushes.

The strength adaptations when you train the 'eccentric' phase are both neuromuscular, and physiologically. Remember how the Tempo squats felt? Muscles that you never felt, ever, were suddenly screaming at you. That is denoting a firing sequence that doesn't always happen when you are just training the contraction phase. When your mind learns to fire certain muscles, it develops pathways which make those muscle accessible at all times.

Now muscle size.. Always gets peoples ears perked up. Well during the eccentric phase we can overload the muscle more than in the contraction phase so development of muscle fibers are quicker when you train this! Not only is the muscle getting stronger but the tendons and ligaments are also benefitting but overloading.

Combining greater and faster muscle recruitment with overall stronger muscles means that you get stronger... faster. Sound good? Well today we get to practice some of this in regards to strengthening our Muscle Up. Gymnastics and weightlifting illicit similar stimulus and our training will complement the muscle development well!!

Here's to Gainz!!!

Baseline:

Banded Bully Stretch/ Banded Pull Aparts/ Banded Pass Thru/ Lat Band/ Banded Across The Chest Stretch

Tabata Cone Touch: Linear and Lateral Agility

Gymnastic Skills:

Gymnasty 12
:05 Ring Dip Eccentric Lower
:15 Ring Support Bottom
15 Seated L-Sit Leg Raises over Slam Ball
12 Candle Stick to Pistol

WOD:

8 Min AMRAP
8 Slam Ball
8 Wall Ball Shots
8 Toes To bar

Rest 5 Mins

8 Min AMRAP
15 cal Assault Bike/ 200m Run
10 Overhead Squat 115/75
5 Muscle Ups/ 10 Dips

280116 "Your Brain on Food"

Eating correctly creates a hedge against aging and decrepitude in the same way that physical activity does for your bones and muscles. As the newest Science suggests, eating lean meats, nuts, seeds, little fruit, no sugar, and green leafy vegetables is the key to optimal health. What doesn't get much play is the benefits to brain health when you eat with this in mind..

Alzheimers and Dementia are diseases that are becoming more and more prevalent. I have written in the past about these understudied and little known brain diseases and how the GEN-Xer's and the baby boomers are showing staggering signs of the disease at younger and younger ages. I am revisiting this to emphasize the ongoing importance of everyday choices that you make in your diet.

I stumbled upon an article about a new "MIND" diet that closely resembles that of the 'paleo' or 'mediterranean' diets that we as CrossFitters have heard about for some time.This 'diet' was not pulled from cultural eating or anthropological evidence, but our of Harvard and Rush Universities. While similar, the standards are slightly different on intake:

Foods to Encourage and Limit on the MIND Diet
Optimal amounts of the 10 key food groups include:

1. Green Leafy Vegetables – six or more servings per week

2. Other Vegetables – one or more servings per day

3. Nuts – five or more servings per week

4. Berries – two or more servings per week

5. Beans – three or more meals per week

6. Whole Grains – three or more servings per day

7. Fish – one or more meals per week

8. Poultry – two or more meals per week

9. Olive Oil – primary oil used for food preparation

10. Wine – one glass per day

Foods to limit:

Red Meat – less than four meals per week

Butter and Stick Margarine – less than one tablespoon per day

Cheese – less than one serving per week

Pastries and Sweets – less than five servings per week

Fried/Fast Food – less than one serving per week

Simple guidelines for optimal Brain Health. Note that the fats, both Omega 3 and Omga 6's are stressed. And as I read the nitty gritty, it is more about the quality of fats rather than the quantity. Closely following the MIND diet reduces the risk of Alzheimer’s disease by 53 percent, which is similar to the reduction in risk from closely following a Mediterranean diet. The benefits lie in the cognitive memory and activity which are increased from a healthy fat intake.  However, even those who partially follow a MIND diet have a 35 percent lower chance of getting Alzheimer’s.

The other aspects of all the diets mentioned is the anti-inflammatory properties of all the foods. Berries have strong antioxidant properties, and consumption of blueberries in particular is shown to reduce the cognitive decline that occurs with Alzheimer’s disease. Vitamin E, found in nuts and whole grains, is particularly important as a powerful antioxidant and inflammatory agent with strong links to neuroprotection of the brain.

This is definitely food for thought, huh!! Eating correctly will keep the body looking good in the short term and the mind healthy for the long haul. No matter the name you put on it, purposeful eating will help you in innumerable ways. Think before you eat!!

Baseline:

Turkish Get Up Complex. 5 per Arm.

Kettle Bell Intervals:

3X :30 @ Each
Single Arm Swing "L"
Single Arm Swing "R"
Lateral Hops
Rest

Rest 1:00

3X :30 @ Each
Single Arm Press "L"
Single Arm Press "R"
Leg Pass Thru
Rest

rest 1:00

2X :45 @Each
Double KB Clean and Jerk
Toe Touch

Rest 3:00

3X
400m Run
20 KB Swing
12 Deficit HSPU 4/2"

*Scored on this final Interval

260116 "Positive Thinking"

A baseline objective of an athlete is to win the mind over. Yes, the mind. Your mind. The one inside your head. Though it may seem like it is on cruise control most of the time and constantly stuck on dwelling in the negative aspects of the day; Your mind is still YOURS and by Consciously thinking positive you can make major steps towards greatness.

Misery loves company, right? How often do we sit down with our friends, family, (especially) spouses and rant about the negative things that have happened to us. This is supposed to be making us feel better when in reality it is just driving the incidents or thoughts deeper into our consciousness and also infecting our sounding board with negative thoughts. What if you thought and then spoke? What if you started a conversation with positive greetings and thoughts rather than negative? Don't you think that would make any situation better?

As an athlete there is a lot of self-talk going on. It seems that it is YOU VS. BRAIN whenever you are about to compete, do a workout, perform a lift etc. Self Doubt sometimes takes hold of our thoughts. We think we cannot do something or lack the confidence in our performance. This is a manifestation of FEAR in our lives. And Fear... is many time just a figment of our imagination as we have never truly experienced the negativity that we are so clearly imagining! Winning the mind is crucial for athletic performance. Positive Self Talk, revisiting your Purpose, and Principles. Relying on your past accomplishments to guide you performance rather than your imagination. These tactics are healthier and will yield more success in the long run.

Positive thinking calms the mind and puts you firmly in the drivers seat. Surrounding yourself with people that live positively, think positively, and act positively will yield great things for you as an athlete. Luckily in CrossFit we have lots of these types of people. The change that you make by living and thinking positively has a greater reach than you think. You family, community, friends, all will benefit creating a environment where you and those around you are flourishing instead of faltering in life. Imagine the posibilities.

Now none is perfect but just like other aspects of your health and nutrition we start in small easy to swallow steps. Start with a few times per day to stop and think about the good stuff. Think before you begin conversations with friends.. Easy fixes that can amount to great things.

Baseline Mobility:

Squat Flow!!!

5X 50m Banded Buddy Pulls

Strength:

Back Squat (Week 10)
*Consistency and Deload week

3X8 @ 30-40% of Previous 1 Rm
*Use Tempo 3,0,1

2X15 Free Tempo @ 40-50%

WOD:
Partners "Sync'd" ... For Time...

50 Sit Up
40 Push Up
30 Front Squat 75/55
20 F.R. Lunges 95/65
10 Thrusters 115/75

250116 "Try Slow.. And Roll"

Picture your body system as a business. There is a CEO, COO, and Managers, and Workers. Well your  body works in a very similar way. At the very top is your CNS (Central Nervous System) and Neurons, next is your joints or skeletal system (articulators), and then your soft tissues (muscles, tendons, ligaments and fascia). To keep the big guys up stairs happy, and working well; you must keep the workers at the bottom of the chain healthy and doing their jobs. ROLLING OUT and other forms of Myofascial Release are vital for keeping the machine (or the business) on track for success .

It is no surprise that we as humans and as athletes are hard on our bodies. We push hard in our lives creating stress on the muscles, improper movement patterns due to working conditions, fatigue and muscular overload without proper preparation. This is life. This is also a very important factor in prioritizing some time for rolling before and after the workouts.

As you know I like to begin at least 2 sessions per week with some time on the ground with the roller. Not only does this help in opening the joints that we will use for the day but it gives you some ideas for self-release. The process restores joint mobility, improves the muscle length and decreases stress on the muscle but additionally this sends messages to your brain along the CNS which can improve performance!

Golgi Tendo Organs of GTO's are fibers which send very fine messages to the brain about specific muscle tension and length. By rolling out and increasing muscle length and decreasing tension, the GTO's let the brain know that the muscle is ready to go!

You may have heard me talk about muscles turning "on" and "off"... This is exactly what I am talking about. Overworking the muscle and not spending the time to release it can inhibit the firing of the muscle and on the other side o things, If you begin a mobility program you can actually 'turn on' muscles that may not be developed yet! Win..Win.

Some guidelines that you may not be aware of are:
1) Do not spend more than 2 minutes on a certain area. This ensures that muscles don't get overworked or beaten up by the roller.

2) Control the pain train. Manipulating the body to distribute weight on the muscle is key. You don't want to be too easy on it but you also don't want to smash the muscle to bad that it doesn't want to work.

3) If you are injured, don't beat the muscle up too bad. Injury and inflammation is why we roll but sometimes it is good to just let a muscle or joint rest. Find me if this is the case and we can discuss the appropriate actions.

4) Rest...Repeat. A couple cycles on your muscles is perfect for pre and post workout. Staying with it instead of just 1 time per week is going to be the ticket for success.

Keep healthy in and out of the Gym. Live your fitness, treat your body like a high performance machine!!

Baseline:

Spend 5 Minutes Rolling out the Lats and Hamstrings. Open the chest with lacrosse ball for overhead mobility.

:45 Jump Rope
1:00 Lunge Flow L
:45 Jump Rope
1:00 Lunge Flow R

Snatch Warm Up;

Romanian Deadlift
Down/Finish
Elbow Pull
Muscle Snatch
OHS
Snatch Drops
Snatch Pull Unders
Hang Snatch Positions

Skill Development:

'Snatch Complex'
Build to Heaviest in 18 mins

-3 Snatch Deadlifts
-1 Hight Hang Snatch
-1 Hang Snatch Below Knee
-1 Overhead Squat

WOD:
"Da Kine Monthly"

Row 2 mins For Max Cals .

#getsome

220116 "Tillman"

 

Pat Tillman was a Professional Football player for the Phoenix Cardinals who left a career to join the U.S. Army Rangers in 2002 after the Sept. 11 attacks. He was a man of high morals, who devoted his life to making change and committed to securing the security of every citizen of the USA. He was deployed and on a mission when he was killed in 2004.

His wife started the Pat Tillman Foundation which has given thousands of dollars to military members and their families in the form of Educational scholarships. This unique scholarship program has flourished over the years and has been very successful in helping people.

I program this workout in Honor of Pat twice a year as a way to honor this man who literally gave everything for the greater good. A man who truly believed that standing for something like the cause of freedom is greater than any fame or fortune. I admire that and I encourage you to do your own research into this hero as well as many others who have given their lives in the same way.

Baseline:

Banded Low Back Distraction stretches; Hamstring Pulls ,iron cross iteration, etc.

2X
15 Banded Good Mornings
10 KB Windmills
8 Pull Ups

WOD:

"Tillman"

7 Rounds For Time

7 Deadlift 315/225
200m Run
15 Pull Ups
:45 Rest after each round