WOD 8/17/10

Press Work

Then ….

10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 reps for time:

Push-ups

KTE’s

Cashout: ????

How important is your workout to you?

Everyone has that day, the day that they realize how important their workout is to them.  If it hasn’t happened yet, it will, just wait.  You know the feeling…  It is the day that you leave the office early to make it to your WOD time but your boss stops you in the hall with a question.  The day you blow off cutting the grass to get to Maximus but she calls to remind you to get home before it rains.  What about the time that you tell your friend you will help them move expecting to make it to the 9:30 class but they need you at 9:00?  You know who you are…  You are in the final round of Fran and your kid scrapes a knee and wants a hug.  Dedicated, loyal, obsessed – you bet.  With a nation as obese as ours, be proud that CrossFit means that much to you.  We could rid our lives of many aliments if we all got a little obsessed about fitness.

Kathy ;o)

Lexington Fire Department’s 3rd Annual “Run to Remember” – September 11, 2010

Every year, the Lexington fire department honors the public servants who perished in the attacks of September 11, 2009 by organizing a charity run. This “Run to Remember” is centered around September 11 and is part of a larger program called “The Week of Giving,” created by the LFD chaplain to show the department’s appreciation for the support they received from the community following September 11, 2001. The run is 4.03 miles long, symbolizing the 403 FDNY, NYPD, and Port Authority personnel whose lives were taken on that day.  The race will be held at 8:00 am on Saturday, September 11, 2010, at Coldstream Research Park off of Newtown Pike in Lexington, KY.  All proceeds are donated to the UK Children’s Hospital.

Come and show your support for the Lexington Fire Department, and for all of the service personnel who put their lives on the line for their community. You can register here for the race, and you can click here to download a printable flyer.

Top 10 Best & Worst Protein Sources (vegetarians take note)

In all the debates this year about sugar (carbohydrates) and hydrogenated oil (fat), we forget that protein warrants consideration as well. Bacon, sausage, deli meat? No, thanks. The wrong proteins in the diet will quickly sabotage optimal health.

Many myths surround protein. For the record, vegetarians will not die of protein deprivation. I hope no one believes that anymore. It helps to understand that protein is a macronutrient. What we call “protein” is, in fact, a family of amino acid molecules. When grouped together in various combinations we get proteins. There’s no protein molecule hanging out in that hamburger; rather, the animal tissue is made of many different amino acid building blocks. Protein is just a catch-all term we use. This is why vegetarians won’t keel over as people once feared. (However, I still recommend meat consumption, and for a number of reasons: caloric efficiency, blood sugar management, and human biology. It takes more calories to get adequate amounts of protein on a vegetarian diet. Living on beans and tofu increases the amount of carbohydrates in one’s diet significantly. And the human body most certainly handles – and benefits from – a bit of flesh. But I digress.)

Here are my ten ideal sources of protein, and their popular but inferior counterparts.

10. Winner: Grass-Fed Beef

Loser: hamburger meat

I’ve discussed the problems with hamburger meat before. I will not eat a meal that includes parts of literally hundreds of dead beasts. I think that’s pretty heinous. That’s just me. Moreover, the average cow is raised on cheap grain that will kill it after about six months (they’re conveniently slaughtered before this happens – but not always). Hardly something I want to put in my body. Grass-fed, organic beef won’t make the vegetarians happy, but this beef is rich in beneficial fatty acids that are missing from the factory-raised cattle. It’s cleaner, healthier, more flavorful, and richer in nutrients. And grass-fed beef is typically raised in humane conditions. If you eat beef, grass-fed is a must. It’s getting quite easy to find these days, but you can order online from many outlets as well.

9. Winner: Organic Chicken

Loser: regular frozen chicken

No comparison. Did you know chicken has flavor? Yeah, bizarre, I know. Chicken raised properly (not shoved by the cluckload into dirty factories) is rich in EFAs and is one of the most efficient, lean sources of protein available.

8. Winner: Wild Salmon

Loser: farmed salmon

Fish is healthy, right? Don’t even bother patting yourself on the back for eating salmon if it’s from a farm. Farmed salmon is produced in a way that’s the seaside equivalent of a chicken factory. As a result, the fish are often sick and infected. They’re fed cheap feed that does not yield the desirable Omega-3-rich flesh. They’re miserable.

Stick with wild only. Most restaurants use farmed salmon, so you have to get a little aggressive about this.

Notice a trend here with my emphasis on good fats in protein foods? Source makes a huge difference in the quality of protein you get. Meat is – or was – a very valuable food because it’s so dense in nutritious fat and protein. What an efficient, rich source of energy! Helpfully, our modern factories have eliminated the nutritional value and left us with weak, flabby, carcinogenic, diseased patties and drumsticks. Hey, thanks, guys. (Although we consumers don’t get off easy: maybe if we ate less…)

I'm officially going to eat my screen.

This is Roboppy’s Flickr Photo

7. Winner: Tuna fish

Loser: fish sticks and popcorn shrimp

I don’t think I need to go into this one.

6. Winner: Organic DHA-Enhanced Eggs

Loser: egg substitute and/or regular eggs

If eggs were meant to be eaten as mechanically-separated, low-fat, chemically-altered whites in a carton, the chickens would have done it by now. But an egg is a chick in the making. It’s rich in antioxidants, good fats, vitamins, and – for the calories – a lot of protein. Things like Egg Beaters are the result of food manufacturers exploiting fears based on grossly inaccurate health information. There’s nothing healthy about such unnatural products.

5. Winner: Organic, Plain, European (Greek) Yogurt

Loser: regular yogurt

No comparison. The European stuff is richer, fattier, more nutritious and lower in sugar. Again, when choosing an animal protein source, choose one that also provides valuable fats to maximize nutrition. Don’t go for the conventional animal products that are high in chemicals, hormones, bad fats, and sugars. Yogurt isn’t a staple of my diet, but if I eat it it’s certainly not a plastic cup of sugar-infused strawberry dessert.

Dig in, the fat is fine!

This is DKJD’s Flickr Photo

4. Winner: Tempeh

Loser: tofu and “mock meats”

Fermented foods ought to be part of everyone’s diet, vegetarian or not. Tempeh is one that is chewy and delicious, even to die-hard burger fans. It’s healthy and a much better bet than heavily processed tofu or “mock meats” that are brimming with poor-quality modified proteins, sodium, chemicals and starchy fillers. In my opinion it doesn’t compare nutritionally or in taste to a juicy steak but as vegetarian options go it ain’t half bad.

3. Winner(s): Quinoa

Loser(s): green beans & any large, starchy bean: kidney, great northern, lima

Don’t get me wrong, green beans are decent veggies. But these “beans” contain very little protein. Kidney, northern, navy, lima and other starchy beans are also rather limited in their protein amounts and contain a high amount of carbohydrates. Quinoa (pronounced “keen-wah”) is a so-called “complete protein” grain – the only one of which I’m aware. Though I stay away from grains entirely, for a vegetarian protein option you could do much worse.

Yum!

This is Dan Mogford’s Flickr Photo

2. Winner: Almonds and Almond Butter

Loser: peanuts and peanut butter

Peanuts are one of the least nutritious nuts (and they’re not technically a true nut anyway). When adding a handful of nuts to your salad for protein, go with almonds. Almond butter is less toxic and allergenic than peanut butter, although the protein amounts are similar by comparison (between 6 and 8 grams, usually). Still, this is about quality protein, not necessarily the amount. When it comes to protein, people often think that “more is more”. A giant steak will certainly give you “more” protein, but if it’s conventionally raised and is an unreasonable portion size, it’ll give you a whole lot more trouble, too.

1. What’s your favorite protein source?

Give me a shout, Apples. What protein do you favor? What have I left out? (To comment, simply click on Comments below to log in to the blog forum, or proceed directly to the forum.)

Note: “Cows’ milk is for baby cows,” the saying goes. You’ll notice I left cheese and milk out of this list. I think dairy is less than ideal for human consumption, though I do like yogurt because it’s a fermented food. Raw dairy is healthy and enjoyable for many people, but generally, I think quality meat is better for you than quality milk. Less processed cheeses such as ricotta, buffalo mozzarella, goat cheese and mascarpone are superior to more heavily processed cheddar, colby and jack. I think a little cream and butter are fine in cooking, because I don’t fear saturated fat, but I am concerned about folks who substitute lean, nutritious meat with highly-processed cheese.

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WOD 8/16/10 Monday!!!

400m Run

21 OHS / 21 Pull-ups

400m Run

15 OHS / 15 Pull-ups

400m Run

9 OHS / 9 Pull-ups

“The best way to predict the future is to create it.”

Peter Drucker

Every day you come into CrossFit you are creating your future.  It is a decision that you have made to take control of your life.  So often when we look around the world we see people who have lost control of the very thing that defines them.  They have let their circumstances determine their path.  It is very easy to let the world decide for you, but typically those type people don’t tend to be in our ranks.

I know that CrossFit won’t guarantee success in all aspects in life, but those who come to battle it out everyday have been known to exhibit the same tenacity during the rest of their day.    

Commitment, Community, Results.

Matt

Working out for Two

by Lauren Joseph

Lauren Joseph CrossFits throughout her pregnancy and is back on the C2 only a week after giving birth to a healthy baby girl.

I had been CrossFitting for just shy of a year and when I found out I was pregnant, I knew a lot of research had to be done. I began by searching through the popular CrossFit Mom website and reading anything I could on the topic of “being pregnant and working out.” I didn’t want to do anything that could hurt the baby, but I also knew there was no way I was going to be able to train clients at the gym and not get my name on the whiteboard!

During my pregnancy I managed to never miss a day of training. I continued to follow three days on and one day off during the months of my pregnancy. While out of town I visited other CrossFit affiliates just to make sure I didn’t miss a day. I often heard on those visits that I was the first pregnant woman to work out in the box.

Most folks were astonished that a pregnant lady was still working out because a typical perception of pregnancy is that of inactivity until after the baby is born. Hearing that I was supposed to be inactive or stop training from various folks is what made me want to write about my experience. I want women to know you can still work out and be pregnant, you can still run a 5K at 39 weeks pregnant, you can still watch what you eat, and you can still do pull-ups!

I am not suggesting a woman already pregnant start CrossFitting now, but for those who have been CrossFitting and become pregnant, please consult your physician and continue at a rate at which you feel comfortable.

WOD 8/15/10 – Rest Day

Rest Day

Open Training 2 – 5 pm

Take Advantage Of The Knowledge Around You

Are you taking advantage of the knowledge around you? The coaches you see everyday know not only Crossfit, but specialize in many other things. From Kelli’s knowledge of massage and recovery, to Jim’s knowledge of everything strength, and Freeman who never stops studying a range of topics. Don’t hesitate to ask any of us questions that may arise.

Also, as most already know, the internet is an amazing tool. From our home website to other affiliate sites and the main site, there is more information than you could possibly take in at your disposal . Anything from new WOD’s, nutritional advice, or my favorite, any and all types of video.

Most exciting to me are the opportunities to find new motivation. Nothing gets me more charged to do a workout than seeing a new “Hero” WOD or watching a clip from the Crossfit Games. So I make it my goal to watch a video or read an article in the Journal everyday, not only for an adrenaline rush but to learn something new.  “I like to break a mental sweat as well” – White Goodman (Dodgeball)

- Jordan

WOD 8/14/10 – Share The Pain Saturday

“CF LA Flashback”

Teams of 2 complete for score

2 Rounds:

DL for 3 minutes

rest 1 minute

Burpees for 3 minutes

rest 1 minute

Pull-ups for 3 minutes

rest 1 minute

- Only 1 person working at a time

- Score = total reps for 2 rounds

“What did you say?”

CrossFit Acronyms and Abbreviations

AMRAP: As Many Reps (sometimes Rounds)as Possible

ATG: Ass to Grass

BP: Bench press

BS: Back squat

BW (or BWT): Body weight

CFT:CrossFit Total – consisting of max squat, press, and deadlift.

CFSB: CrossFit Strength Bias. A program developed by Jeff Martin and Darrell White, explained here. You’ll need a CFJ subscription.

CFWU:CrossFit Warm-up

CLN: Clean

C&J: Clean and jerk

C2: Concept II rowing machine

DL: Deadlift

FS: Front squat

GHR(D): Glute ham raise (developer). Posterior chain exercise, like a back extension. Also, the device that allows for the proper performance of a GHR.

GHR(D) Situp: Situp done on the GHR(D) bench.

GPP: General physical preparedness, aka “fitness.”

GTG: Grease the Groove, a protocol of doing many sub-maximal sets of an exercise throughtout the day

H2H: Hand to hand; refers to Jeff Martone’s kettlebell “juggling” techniques (or to combat).

HSPU: Hand stand push up. Kick up into a handstand (use wall for balance, if needed) bend arms until nose touches floor and push back up.

HSQ: Hang squat (clean or snatch). Start with bar “at the hang,” about knee height. Initiate pull. As the bar rises drop into a full squat and catch the bar in the racked position. From there, rise to a standing position

IF: Intermittent Fasting

KB: Kettlebell

MEBBMaximum Effort Black box, term coined by Mike Rutherford. Search the forum for it. Originally laid out in one of the early Performance Menu issues.

KTE: Knees to elbows. Similar to TTBs described below.

MetCon: Metabolic Conditioning workout

MP: Military press

MU: Muscle ups. Hanging from rings you do a combination pull-up and dip so you end in an upright support.

OHS: Overhead squat. Full-depth squat performed while arms are locked out in a wide grip press position above (and usually behind) the head.

PC: Power clean

Pd: Pood, weight measure for kettlebells

PR: Personal record

PP: Push press

PSN: Power snatch

PU: Pull-ups, possibly push ups depending on the context

Rep: Repetition. One performance of an exercise.

Rx’d; as Rx’d: As prescribed; as written. WOD done without any adjustments.

RM: Repetition maximum. Your 1RM is your max lift for one rep. Your 10 RM is the most you can lift 10 times.

SDHP: Sumo deadlift high pull (see exercise section)

Set: A number of repetitions. e.g., 3 sets of 10 reps, often seen as 3×10, means do 10 reps, rest, repeat, rest, repeat.

SPP: Specific physical preparednesss, aka skill training.

SN: Snatch

SQ: Squat

SS: Starting Strength; Mark Rippetoe’s great book on strength training basics. Available right here.

Subbed: Substituted. The CORRECT use of “subbed,” as in “substituted,” is, “I subbed an exercise I can do for one I can’t,” For example,if you can’t do HSPU, you subbed regular pushups.

Sadly, many illiterate posters get this bass-ackward, and claim that since they can’t do HSPU, they subbed HSPU for pushups. D’oh!

TGU: Turkish get-up (See exercise section)

TTB: Toes to bar. Hang from bar. Bending only at waist raise your toes to touch the bar, slowly lower them and repeat.

WO, sometimes W/O: Workout

WOD: Workout of the day

YBF: You’ll Be Fine (liberally applied in spray form)

Maximus ‘Endless Summer’ Boot Camp, powered by Kathy, starts Tuesday 9/7

Ready to finally get in shape, lose that baby weight, look great at your reunion, just feel awesome?  Come and try one of our very popular Kathy’s Boot Camps!  Boot Camps are powered by Kathy Childress, a Certified CrossFit Level one Coach at CFM, with over 20 years experience in the exercise/group fitness field.  Boot Camps are a perfect way to get you back into shape, introduce you to exercising, and change your life!  All it takes is some sweat and a little dedication, and you can be on your way to a healthier and happier person!

The next Boot Camp starts Tuesday, September 7th, and will run for four weeks!  It is a high-intensity core strength and conditioning program that delivers GUARANTEED RESULTS.  This one-hour workout will challenge your body in a variety of ways. Our program focuses on all ten components of optimal physical fitness.

*Check out the Maximus Boot Camp Facebook Page, and become a fan! You can ask Kathy any questions, meet all the other participants, and find out all the details about our next Boot Camp!

Check out our Boot Camp Blog on our website that will be updated regularly with news and info about our very popular and ever evolving Boot Camps!

If you are already a veteran Boot Camper, or know someone who is and would like to go ahead and register, follow this link and get registered.  See you in September.

Check out some pics from our previou Boot Camps!


Recipe: Fudge Babies

FUDGE BABIES

Ingredients:

  • 1 c walnuts (120 grams)
  • 1 and 1/3 cups pitted dates (230 grams) (If you want a sweeter result, up the proportion of dates.)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 3-4 tablespoons cocoa powder, depending on how chocolatey you want the balls to be (I used 4T extra dark)

Directions:
1. Chop/blend all the ingredients, using a food processor, Magic Bullet, etc.  (No need to blend the dates first; I just blend everything all at once.)
2. Roll into cutey-pie little balls.  (Use plastic wrap if you need to.)

3. Refrigerate!

-Crossfit Big Island Recipe

Phys Ed: Can Exercise Moderate Anger?

For years, researchers have known that exercise can affect certain moods. Running, bike riding and other exercise programs have repeatedly been found to combat clinical depression. Similarly, a study from Germany published in April found that light-duty activity like walking or gardening made participants “happy,” in the estimation of the scientists. Even laboratory rats and mice respond emotionally to exercise; although their precise “moods” are hard to parse, their behavior indicates that exercise makes them more relaxed and confident.

But what about anger, one of the more universal and, in its way, destructive moods? Can exercise influence how angry you become in certain situations?

A study presented at the most recent annual conference of the American College of Sports Medicine provides some provocative if ambiguous answers. For the study, hundreds of undergraduates at the University of Georgia filled out questionnaires about their moods. From that group, researchers chose 16 young men with “high trait anger” or, in less technical terms, a very short fuse. They were, their questionnaires indicated, habitually touchy.

The researchers invited the men to a lab and had them fill out a survey about their moods at that moment. During the two days of the study, the men were each fitted with high-tech hairnets containing multiple sensors that could read electrical activity in the brain. Next, researchers flashed a series of slides across viewing screens set up in front of each young man. The slides, intended to induce anger, depicted upsetting events like Ku Klux Klan rallies and children under fire from soldiers, which were interspersed with more pleasant images. Electrical activity in the men’s brains indicated that they were growing angry during the display. For confirmation, they described to researchers how angry they felt, using a numerical scale from 0 to 9.

On alternate days, after viewing the slides again (though always in a different order), the men either sat quietly or rode a stationary bike for 30 minutes at a moderate pace while their brain patterns and verbal estimations of anger were recorded. Afterward, the researchers examined how angry the volunteers became during each session.

The results showed that when the volunteers hadn’t exercised, their second viewing of the slides aroused significantly more anger than the first. After exercise, conversely, the men’s anger reached a plateau. They still became upset during the slide show — exercise didn’t inure them to what they saw — but the exercise allowed them to end the session no angrier than they began it.

What the results of the study suggest is that “exercise, even a single bout of it, can have a robust prophylactic effect” against the buildup of anger, said Nathaniel Thom, a stress physiologist who was the study’s lead researcher.

“It’s like taking aspirin to combat heart disease,” he said. “You reduce your risk.”

When the men did not exercise, they had considerable difficulty controlling their racing emotion. But after exercise, they handled what they saw with more aplomb. Their moods were under firmer control.

The question of just how, physiologically, exercise blunts anger remains open. Mr. Thom and his colleagues did not test levels of stress hormones or brain chemicals in the test subjects. But earlier work by other scientists suggests that serotonin, a neurotransmitter in the brain, probably played a role, Mr. Thom said. “Animal studies have found that low levels of serotonin are associated with aggression, which is our best analogue of anger in animals,” he said. “Exercise increases serotonin levels in the rat brain.” Low serotonin levels in humans are also thought to contribute to mood disorders.

Changes in the activity of certain genes within the brain may also have an impact. In a 2007 experiment at Yale University, researchers found that prolonged running altered the expression of almost three dozen genes associated with mood in the brains of laboratory mice. Mr. Thom says he hopes that future studies by himself and others will help to determine the specific underlying mechanisms that link exercise and a reduction of anger.

But for now, the lesson of his preliminary work, he said, is that “if you know that you’re going to be entering into a situation that is likely to make you angry, go for a run first.”

By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS of the New York Times, August 11, 2010, 12:01 am

WOD 8/13/10

For Time:

1,000m Row

5 Rounds

15 Box Jumps

15 Push-ups

It never gets easier… you just become more tolerant

That’s how I feel about Crossfit.  Sure some wods are more challenging than others, but they all present a unique training effect.  Some athletes like Mikko Salo seem like they breeze through every wod and come out on top.  Mikko is still fighting hard, he is one of the few that has a broken “off switch.”  When his body would normally tell him to stop because he is experiencing too much pain, he has enough exposure to this sensation he can quiet his mind and continue.

A lot of it has to do with positive self-talk.  I didn’t know this but apparently during the span of the average wod 15-20 minutes we say thousands of words to ourselves!  Thousands!  Imagine if a majority of these were negative.  Imagine on the flip side that the inner monologue was positive, wouldn’t that make tremendous difference in how you feel during the wod?

Man locked in unplugged freezer imagines himself freezing and dies!

A man finds himself locked in a walk in freezer; convinced he will die and begins writing letters with a final passage saying he can’t write anymore because his fingers are freezing. When they find him dead, they discover that the freezer’s temperature never dropped below 50 degrees..the man psyched himself to death.

Don’t psyche yourself out during your workouts.  Tell yourself positive things:  I can do this, 5 more reps and I’ll rest, I’m strong, I’ve been through worse, 2 rounds down only 1 round left, 90 degrees isn’t hot our troops are fighting in 140 degree weather in the middle east.

- Freeman

Most Common Complaint during Boot Camp

Sometimes it happens in the first week, sometimes later but inevitably IT happens!  Shin and calf pain.  It could be the result of inactivity followed by an intense 4 weeks of exercise or the result of a seasoned athlete that has increased their running regime.  In any case, we have some suggestions from the experts on how to make it better!!

http://www.coolrunning.com/engine/2/2_5/196.shtml

What Happens To Your Body Within An Hour Of Drinking A Coke

Don’t drink cola if you want to be healthy. Consuming soft drinks is bad for so many reasons that science cannot even state all the consequences. But one thing we know for sure is that drinking Coke, as a representative of soft drinks, wreaks havoc on the human organism. What happens? Writer Wade Meredith has shown the quick progression of Coke’s assault.

The main problem is sugar. It’s an evil that the processed food industry and sugar growers don’t want people to know about. Even dietitians, financially supported by sugar growers and sugary product manufacturers, are loathe to tell us the truth.

Don’t believe that dietitians are influenced by huge corporate concerns that feed people sugar, drugs and other health-defying ingredients? Go to their official website and check out the sponsors yourself. They are right there in plain sight: http://www.eatright.org/corporatesponsors/

When somebody drinks a Coke watch what happens…

  • In The First 10 minutes: 10 teaspoons of sugar hit your system. (100% of your recommended daily intake.) You don’t immediately vomit from the overwhelming sweetness because phosphoric acid cuts the flavor allowing you to keep it down.
  • 20 minutes: Your blood sugar spikes, causing an insulin burst. Your liver responds to this by turning any sugar it can get its hands on into fat. (There’s plenty of that at this particular moment)
  • 40 minutes: Caffeine absorption is complete. Your pupils dilate, your blood pressure rises, as a response your livers dumps more sugar into your bloodstream. The adenosine receptors in your brain are now blocked preventing drowsiness.
  • 45 minutes: Your body ups your dopamine production stimulating the pleasure centers of your brain. This is physically the same way heroin works, by the way.
  • >60 minutes: The phosphoric acid binds calcium, magnesium and zinc in your lower intestine, providing a further boost in metabolism. This is compounded by high doses of sugar and artificial sweeteners also increasing the urinary excretion of calcium.
  • >60 Minutes: The caffeine’s diuretic properties come into play. (It makes you have to pee.) It is now assured that you’ll evacuate the bonded calcium, magnesium and zinc that was headed to your bones as well as sodium, electrolyte and water.
  • >60 minutes: As the rave inside of you dies down you’ll start to have a sugar crash. You may become irritable and/or sluggish. You’ve also now, literally, pissed away all the water that was in the Coke. But not before infusing it with valuable nutrients your body could have used for things like even having the ability to hydrate your system or build strong bones and teeth.

So there you have it, an avalanche of destruction in a single can. Imagine drinking this day after day, week after week. Stick to water, real juice from fresh squeezed fruit, and tea without sweetener.
Primary Source: by Wade Meredith

WOD 8/12/10

4 Rounds:

AMRAP in 3 Min

5 Pull-ups, 10 Push-ups, 15 Air Squats

Rest 90 sec between rounds


Address, Evaluate, & Heal

If you have a nagging injury keeping reading.  If you don’t have a nagging injury, I am envious, but please keep reading.  I’m not telling you guys and gals to be hypochondriacs, or that you have to panic every time something feels unfamiliar.  But you need to listen to your body!  If you have an injury history (mine is extensive) the second you forget about your injury is when it will bite you in the ass.  There are certain things you have to accept once you have had an injury that is severe enough that it stops you in your tracks.

Step One

You have to stop and re-evaluate.  Sometimes this step can be the hardest, especially if you are stubborn like me.  See a doctor is necessary, try to get to the root of the problem, formulate a plan and/or timeline for the healing to begin.

Step Two

You have to give your self time to heal.  Depending on what it is that could be a short week off with light training, or it could be months!  This is a trying and difficult period for any athlete.  Motivation continues to wayne, symptoms of depression can appear, bitterness, etc. I could go on and on.  Working around an injury sucks, I will be the first to tell you.  You will see others doing what you want to do, maybe even think you can do and it’s upsetting.  Just remember that staying active during your recovery will speed up the healing process.  Think of all the extra blood that gets circulated through your body when you exercise!  I’m not saying you should exercise to the point your injury doesn’t heal or gets worse, you just need to work around it.

Step Three

Not over doing it, possibly the hardest part.  Once your injury has done a majority of the healing and it’s feeling “better.”  You feel like superman or superwoman!  The pain has dissipated, you are chomping at the bit to increase your training.  It’s is VERY EASY TO OVER DO IT!!!!!  If you increase your activity level too quickly you may not have any pain for weeks, but eventually it will catch up with you.  You have to gradually ramp up the intensity of your training.  Sometimes that is very hard in an environment like Crossfit, but you have to be disciplined and no your limits.

Step Four

Hardest of all is to BE PATIENT!  Take as much time as you need to heal, THE FIRST time you have an injury.  Otherwise you are setting yourself up for repetitive injuries that will make you feel like throwing in the towel.  Let’s take a look at this scenario:

Step Five

Once you have had an injury you have to pay attention to that area.  This may require pre-hab exercises once the area has healed, mobilization, regular soft tissue work, stretching, icing, extra warm-up time.  But if you forget about your injury it has a way of reminding you that it’s there.

Example Story

Injury – Slight Stress Fracture in right foot

Timeline to heal – Usually 6 – 8 weeks (that can seem like a death sentence to an active person)

Week 1 The athlete incurs stress fracture in right foot from recently increasing running mileage, wearing inappropriate footwear (old shoes, non-supportive).  The athlete realizes there is pain, but dismisses it as soreness or plantar fasciitis.  Week 4 the athlete has gotten worse, but his 10K race he has been training for is 2 weeks away and he has training blinders on.  He doesn’t stop training because next week he will begin to taper for the race.  At this time the athlete notices his gait has become uneven and he is noticeably limping.  Week 6 the athlete wakes up the day of the race, goes to get out of bed, puts one foot on the floor and falls over in pain.  He tries to stand and he cannot bear weight on his right foot without extreme pain.  He makes an appointment to see a podiatrist, but has to wait 1 week to be seen.  They do an MRI of his foot and the image shows stress fractures in the metatarsals.  He is placed in a non-weight bearing status for 4 weeks, after that he is allowed to walk around in an air cast only for 6 weeks.  At this point in time the athlete is allowed to resume normal weight bearing activities without high impact (no running, jogging, sports, jumping, load bearing).  Now let’s assume the athlete listened enough and he slowly increased his activity level and had no setbacks.

Timeline to heal – 17 weeks to resume low impact weight bearing activities.  Plus time to slowly increase activity level.

He took his 6-8 week problem and turned it into a 17 wk + ordeal!  Don’t be that guy!

How I learned this:

- Broken tibia/fibula with hardware fixation

- Broken femur with hardware fixation

- Broken radius

- Shattered olecranon with hardware fixation

- Fracture right clavicle

- impingement in right shoulder

- Removal of accessory navicular bone

- Repaired PT Tendon

- Sever plantar fasciitis

- Stress fractures in both feet at the same time

- Repeated stress fracture in right foot

WOD 8/11/10

Teams of 2

Complete 3 Rounds for time:

15 Thrusters ea.

15 Burpees ea.

400m partner Run

10 Baby Steps to Help You “Get Primal”

For this month’s 30-day challenge, we realize that everyone is starting from a different place. As much as we learn from our hardcore Grokkers, we welcome Primal newcomers with open arms and eager ears. We want to know their stories, their challenges, and the strategies that finally make it work for them. Some of us are the type to jump in the deep end of the pool and figure it out when we get to the bottom. Others of us dip our toes, scan the ladder placements, and study the grade of floor depth. Different strokes, we say.

Even as we accept that our own Primal journey will be different from the next person’s, it can be a little awkward or discouraging to be the one feeling out the shallow end while others are doing flips and belly flops in the deep side of the pool. We thought a post on baby-stepping, breaking down the transition into small and very manageable steps, might come in handy for many of our readers – newcomers, renewers, or even old-timers who are coaching friends and family in a Primal direction. Kick back and get brainstorming for your next baby step!

Re-make a meal

Not that a single meal doesn’t count for something, but we actually mean a meal category (or maybe snack) each day. Maybe you want to tackle your least Primal serving of the day first (if you’re still stuck in a carb rut at breakfast, say). On the other hand, perhaps you’re more inclined to take on the simplest meal and work your way up. (Morning snack first? Meat and salad for dinner?) Setting a consistent pattern for a meal each day not only gets you on a solid track; it offers the mental boost of daily accomplishment. Furthermore, it can serve as a template for tackling further food overhauls. Remaking one meal a day gets you in the mode of delving into Primal variety, trying new recipes and eating for health rather than habit.

Drop or swap a vice

Perhaps there’s a particular offender, a persevering and pesky element of your diet that will take special time and energy to ditch. We’re not talking here about an occasional indulgence item but a regular player in the lineup. Whether it’s your favorite creamy stout, morning danish or afternoon microwave popcorn fix, you might find it easier to isolate and conquer before expanding the battle. Some readers have shared stories of choosing “better” but not totally Primal alternatives for their old favorites first and then going back to phase out these “lesser evils” once they had the rest of diet more fully Primalized.

Give up a grain at a time

Those vexing little granules that litter the dinner plates of unsuspecting diners everywhere… We’re only half kidding of course. (You know our shtick on this subject.) Sure, not all grains are created equal. Some, like brown rice, don’t seem to do quite the same number on the intestines as others. Yet, at the end of the day they’re still the same insulin and inflammation inciters. As we’ve said time and again, they add little to a healthy diet and generally fill the space of more nutritious fare. Tick them off the list based on preference or prevalence in your diet. Or work your way through the grain chain with more of a mind to gluten, bidding adieu to wheat and its various derivatives first, then continuing onward through the inventory.

Sample a new vegetable (or other Primal ingredient) each week

Out with the old, in with the new as they say. Your Primal conversion shouldn’t be a story of the incredibly shrinking menu. Take a hint from those middle school food science/home ec journals and explore a veggie a week. Remember the color illustrations, origin histories and recipe lists? Of course, adding more than one new item a week is ideal (especially with the best of summer’s bounty). And there’s nothing wrong with mixing it up either with other new-to-you Primal fare like almond butter or less appreciated cuts of meat. Don’t worry if you have to do some less than ideal adaptations at first like hiding the new item in the midst of other ingredients or incorporating favorite dips or sauces. The idea here is to add, not limit. Your taste buds will adapt with time, and you’ll find yourself with less need for the camouflage or accompaniment strategies.

Ditch the deadbeat drinks

Now more than ever Americans get an enormous amount of their calories and sugar from drinks, an easily overlooked food category. (Too many people delude themselves into thinking liquids somehow don’t count!) With the likes of mega sodas, energy drinks, syrup loaded coffee beverages and alcohol, it’s not hard at all to drink your dinner: carbs and calories through the roof, nutrients generally nonexistent. Nixing deadbeat drinks and replacing them with water, tea (and a single cup of regular joe for a morning pick-me-up) can mean a major difference in your carb count for the day, not to mention your insulin response and “real” (as opposed to jacked-up) energy level.

Change one workout a week

Whether you’re stuck in the chronic cardio circuit, the heavy lifting mode or a plateau of the same low level activity, consider mixing things up. Exercise outside your comfort zone by venturing into a different part of the gym (yoga studio, free weights?), hitting a different venue (the trails, the pool?) or just slowing it down (you cardio addicts out there). Get up the gumption to try one of Mark’s sprints, join a casual sports league or let your hair down and initiate a game of flag football or Ultimate (Frisbee) with the family.

Add a workout a week

A logical permutation of the previous tip of course… If your situation isn’t characterized so much by too much cardio or an imbalance of lifting and low level activity, you might be looking at the need for simply adding workouts period. (No worries here: everyone starts somewhere.) The idea might be to just get moving. Low level workouts are generally easiest to incorporate. We’d definitely recommend trying to add more than one a week if you find yourself in this boat. If you’re already exercising a few times a week but know you’re capable of or ready for more, throw in a weight training or sprint session. Even adding an additional day of low level work can make a difference and can help up your game later with the time you’ve learned to set aside.

Start a supplement

Mark has said unequivocally that no supplement can be a stand in for a truly healthy diet and lifestyle. That said, a quality supplement can kickstart and continually enhance the biochemical balance that characterizes good health. As you begin your own efforts in the realms of exercise and nutrition, why not give yourself a leg up? Another benefit? A supplement can help mitigate the disadvantages of less than fully Primal living as you make your transition.

Make the mental – and logistical – commitment

Of course we all have a million excuses for not getting Primal even though we know it makes sense. We care about our health. We want to eat right and be in good shape. Right? But there are all those hours of low level cardio, the sweaty sprints and all that vegetable cutting…. Hmmm. How can I possibly fit in anything extra right now? Living Primally doesn’t require more time than any other active lifestyle. When you consider the lack of chronic cardio prescriptions and the short investments of sprints and targeted weight training sessions, you’ll likely be looking at less time expenditure. As for food, food shopping is generally food shopping. (And if you do the CSA/cowpooling/etc., it’s actually less weekly outlay of time.) Cutting, chopping and cooking might add a few extra minutes, but they’re well worth the extra energy healthy food will give you. Get more done in less time and sleep better when your head hits the pillow.

There are few moments in our lives when we can truly say we don’t have the time to take care of ourselves. The weeks following a death or serious illness of a loved one, the birth of a child maybe. Even in the most difficult times, however, we can make progress even as we give up the ideal of perfection (who ever said anything about being perfect anyway?).

In other busy but regular circumstances, we are able to consider what we want to bring into our lives (e.g. healthy living) and earnestly examine what we’re willing to give up to achieve this. T.V.? Wii? Getting through the whole newspaper in the morning? Ditching the car commute for a daily walk to the bus or a bike ride? Relocating nightly discussions to the kitchen while you put together lunch for the next day? Making family outings or time with the kids more active? It’s generally not an issue of giving up valuable activities or interactions in our lives but instead a challenge/opportunity to remake them into equally fulfilling and life balancing Primal adaptations.

Develop a personal Primal diversion

By all means, remake everyday responsibilities into time-saving Primal activities, but also find a bit of time and energy to initiate something new for yourself. Figure out what will “feed” your spirit in a necessary and vital way. For some it might be a meditation practice. For others it might be a new commitment to play – the enjoyment of a favorite sport or a relaxing, rejuvenating activity that fulfills a need for space, solitude or nature. Whatever your Primal diversion of choice is, enjoy it as a gift to yourself. Use it to recenter and rediscover self-care. The small bit of investment/indulgence will make the rest of your Primal commitment come more naturally. When you believe your overall well-being is worth the time and effort, you’re ready to embrace the steps toward Primal vitality.

Got enough to get you going? Comments? Feedback? Other baby step ideas you’ve used or recommended to inspire the Primal journey? Thanks for reading.

Courtesy of Marks Daily Apple


WOD 8/10/10

3 Rounds for reps:

1 Minute Ground 2 Overhead

Rest 1 minute

1 Minute of Dips

Rest 1 minute

1 Minute of KB Swings

Rest 1 minute

Sitting Will Kill You
Written by Danielle Dufrene

Have you ever stopped to ponder the number of hours in the day you spend sitting relative to those spent being active? I have and it is a rather scary thought. I workout as most of us do, 5-6 days a week for about an hour, sometimes a little more. But, when I look at that measly hour compared to how I spend the majority of my day, it is concerning. I drive to work (sitting), I have an office job (sitting), I drive home (sitting), make dinner, eat dinner (sitting) and often times wrap up my day by checking my email or reading (sitting). It doesn’t even out.

A study published last year tracked 17,000 Canadians for about 12 years, the researchers reported that those who sat more had a higher death risk whether they exercised or not. The research is still preliminary and health officials haven’t set guidelines for limiting the number of hours one sits in a day. What we can be quite confident in is that despite the fact we workout regularly the majority of our day is spent being sedentary. I don’t need anyone to do a scientific study on me to prove that the numerous hours I spend at a desk contribute to my rounded shoulders, lower back pain and tight hips. Doesn’t really take a rocket scientist to figure that one out.

What to do? The answer is simple inject as much activity as you possibly can in your day. Accept that one hour in your day isn’t enough and look for opportunities to choose activity rather than sitting. Here are a few suggestions to get you started:

Your commute: Recently I decided to buy a bike. I live in North Park and work downtown. I figure 3 days out of the week I can bike to the office. If I am destined to sit on my booty for 8 hours a day at least I can start and finish the day with activity. Maybe it isn’t practical for you to bike to work, but are there other ways you can increase your activity level? Can you take the stairs rather than riding in the elevator, park a little farther away and walk a bit more. Get creative. It doesn’t have to be a lot. The goal here is a little bit constantly throughout your day.

Micro-breaks: What is that you say? This is an opportunity not to break from work, but rather a break from sitting. I often take phone calls and conference calls out in our hall way, so that I can pace back and forth. Thinking of sending an email to a colleague or IMing them? Get up out of your chair and pay them a visit instead.

Rest-breaks: Every hour get up and take a break. It doesn’t have to be for long. Refill your water bottle, go to the bathroom. Whatever. And stretch a little. You don’t have to put yourself into some human pretzel position. You can do subtle stretches that won’t alarm your peers. The point is to commit to getting up and out of your desk every hour of your day.

Take back the lunch break: I don’t know about you, but I don’t really take a lunch hour anymore. I pack my lunch and snacks and bring them to work. Typically, I eat at my desk. Great for productivity and my pocketbook; however, that is usually the best time to get out of the office. Now, even if I eat lunch at my desk I try to go outside, take a 15 minute walk to get fresh air or run a few errands. Use this time to get outdoors and move, move, move.

Take the challenge. Commit to spending more hours in your day being active than you do sitting or being sedentary. And if you have good suggestions for ways to inject activity into our daily lives, please do share!

(And for more evidence that sitting will kill you check out “The Men Who Stare at Screens,” a recent article in the New York Times.)

Starting Week 2 of Boot Camp

Trista demonstrating a proper squat while working her inner thighs

What a great way to start week two of Kathy’s Boot Camp.  We are expecting temperatures to be in the mid-90′s with little chance of rain (sound familiar?).  I hope you all enjoyed your weekend off but also took my advice and found something active to do on at least one of those days.  School starts this week and we are all going to be busy.  Do your best to stay consistent.  Continue journaling and come ready to work hard tonight.

VIP registration is now open for the September Boot Camp.  September Boot Camp will run from September 7th-September 30th.  Be the first to email me and get your name on the list.  Registration will open on August 16th.  Discounts will be given to returning boot campers and members.  Stay tuned for more details.

WOD 8/9/10

Front Squat Work

Followed By….

4 Rounds for time:

20 Wall Balls

20 Pull-ups

Another Step Beyond Ordinary

We have an extraordinary thing here at CFM. However, it’s not because we have te coolest equipment or a huge arena. It’s because every single person that walks through our doors is willing to push themselves one more step. No one is making you take those steps and that is extraordinary.

So what’s you’re next step towards your fitness goals? Maybe it’s a dedicated effort to take care of you’re body through diet (See Seth D) or massage (See Kelli). Maybe you want to get a little more coaching on the side. Freeman or Jim could help you there. Maybe it’s just going for 10 more seconds before resting. Whatever you’re next step is, I challenge you to take it. In doing so you are pushing CFM one more step beyond ordinary.

- Bo

WOD 8/8/10 – Rest Day

Rest Day – Open Training 2 – 5 pm

Deloading for Optimal Strength & Speed

When you train hard for a long duration of time, you eventually have to take one step back in order to take two steps forward. Training should be planned around periodic deload or recovery weeks in order to allow the joints, tendons, muscles, and mind to regenerate and come back stronger than before.

What is a deload week?

A deload week is when you significantly reduce overall training volume, intensity, or frequency or a combination of different factors. I have used all three before in my own training and all hold merit. I personally favor reducing overall training volume but keeping the intensity on the higher end (75–90 percent range). This allows you to maintain strength from the loading or overreaching period in the previous phases while allowing your body to recover and express your true levels of strength, speed, and fitness. Honestly though, even if you were to slightly decrease training intensity (percentage of your one rep maximum), you aren’t going to lose much strength, if any at all.

How to deload

Luckily, this isn’t very difficult. You simply have to make minor adjustments to your overall training plan. (You do have a plan, right?) Let’s say for example that you’ve been training on a four-day upper/lower split.

During your deload week, you simply would reduce training volume by 50 percent and reduce training intensity to around 70–75 percent.

It doesn’t look like much, but that’s the idea for a deload week. You should be able to get in and get out of the weight room in less than 45 minutes tops. And that’s assuming your warm up is around 10–12 minutes. Every session should leave you feeling refreshed. You should also pay special attention to warm-up and regeneration techniques during this time. This is a week devoted to recovery, allowing the body to rebound from an intense loading phase.

When to deload and planning ahead

In a perfect world, the deload or unloading week typically occurs every 4–5 weeks, but everyone responds differently to training and loading. I’ve gone 8–9 weeks training very intensely without ever stopping to deload, but looking back, that was pretty foolish. So how is a deload week implemented?

In my opinion, you should allow yourself one week every fourth or fifth week during a training cycle to deload. Not only is this important physically, but it’s very important mentally and emotionally as well. So assuming you plan ahead by at least 12 weeks, you would reduce training volume and intensity every fourth week.

After a period of progressively overloading the athlete with volume and training that he isn’t typically used to, a period of regeneration and recovery time must be used in order for supercompensation to occur and the athlete’s true state of fitness to shine through. “Fatigue masks fitness.” In other words, you won’t allow yourself to truly express personal best levels of performance if you’re constantly in a state of overreaching and fatigue.

Plan accordingly for this to occur to help prevent injuries, keep the athletes fresh, and constantly look for new personal bests in strength and speed.

What to expect

If you’re doing it correctly, you’ll feel very refreshed and ask, “That’s it?” Again, don’t over think this and second guess yourself. Like Jim Wendler has stated on deload weeks, “You won’t get weaker during this period. If you do, it’s all in your mind.” Training is a long-term progression and should be planned with periodic recovery weeks that help prevent injury and constant overreaching or chronic fatigue.

Do this right and you’ll be on your way to feeling great, breaking records, and asking yourself, “Why the hell haven’t I been doing this before?” Until next time…

- John Cortese, EliteFTS.com

WOD 8/6/10

4 Rounds for time:

7 Shoulder 2 Overhead

14 Pull-ups

21 Slam Ballz

Crossfitter Miranda Oldroyd in Iraq helping coach a Crossfit Level 1 Certification

How cool is that!!??

Feeling lethargic throughout the day? Check the website too early and want to avoid the wod? Not seeing as many results as when you started? Why not switch up your training and try coming to a morning class?! That being said, here are 5 great reasons to workout in the morning.
1. Exercise in the morning “jumpstarts” metabolism. That’s means more calories burned during the day.
2. Over 90% of people who exercise consistently, exercise in the morning.
3. When you exercise in the morning you will be “energized” for the day. (I can vouch for this one personally)
4. Many people find that morning exercise regulates their appetite for the day. They aren’t as hungry and make better food choices.
5. Morning is a great time for some “me” time. Kids and wife are asleep, you can get away and take care of mind, body, and soul.

Classes in the am are @ 6:30, 7:30, 8:30, and 9:30

Jordan