WOD 10/1/10

“Death By Push-Press”

IMMEDIATELY followed by a 1 mile timed run

* Bar will start from the floor, NO RACKS

Welcome to Crossfit Talk

Caption:  Nick to Nick

“Dude, all I’m saying is your squat could’ve been tighter.  If you squeeze the bar back and down, and keep it high on your traps you’ll be money.  Also, the flatter the shoe the better!  Or better yet, get a pair of olympic lifting shoes.  It will change your life!”

4 tips for training around travel, etc

By Mike Robertson

We all have times in our life where training is a little bit more difficult than it should be.

Hell, I work in the fitness industry and there are still times when getting a workout in feels more like a chore than something I actually want to do!

At certain times of the year, my travel really gets cranked up.  I’m a creature of habit, and I definitely like my routines, so when I lose 2-3 days every week to travel, it gets harder and harder to get everything accomplished.

This post is for those of you that lead busy, hectic lifestyles.  Here are four quick and dirty tips I use to help ensure that I stay focused and on track, even around travel and other things that suck up my time.  Enjoy!

WOD 9/30/10

“Cindy”

AMRAP in 20 Minutes:

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

* post complete round + reps

Little blurs doing Tabata Air Squats at 5;45 pm class

Are you WOD drunk?

Are you WOD Drunk?

I came across this blog and realized that some of us are getting caught up in this condition known as WOD drunk.  WOD Drunk (adj.) : people so jacked up from trying to “score more points” that they don’t know who or what they are anymore.

Don’t do this, listen to your coaches, forget about the clock, about your score.  Work out mindfully and safely.  See your body respond, improve and make changes.

This is great reading.  Click on this link and read more about this condition and ask yourself if you get WOD Drunk.

http://sicfit.com/blog/16488-WOD-Drunk

- Kathy

WOD 9/29/10

Squat

Followed By….

7 Rounds for time:

7 Goblet Squats

7 Burpees


Nate from Derby City Crossfit gets his bench press on

Conditioning means nothing without a base of strength.  Strength will not happen if you cannot get your body into proper positions.

Increased work capacity is a valuable part of training, but there are certain elements of your training program that should be addressed first.

First you need to be able to move into certain functional positions.  Take the time early on in your training to regain, or enhance mobility so you can put your body in the positions such as a squat, or shoulder extension.  Next perfect mobility, basic movement patterns, and motor control.  Perfect the basics:  squat, lunge, push-ups, inverted rows, upper back work, strengthening the core.  The basics will carry over to the more complex, AND make more sense to boot.  Lastly, you will increase your base of strength through resistance training, whether that is body weight or external resistance.

Skipping steps will only hurt you in the long run.  You may be okay in certain areas, but others you may be surprisingly weak.  Work on those weaknesses, and it will take you far.  Jim Laird tells me very regularly, “you want to get better, work on your weaknesses.”  We do it.  You should too.  Don’t worry about taking a step back because eventually you will take two or steps forward.

- Freeman

BTW:  Barbell Club T-Shirts are in!

First come first serve.  We ask that you make your purchase with cash or check only.  All checks should be made payable to Kris Freeman.


WOD 9/28/10 – Happy Birthday Leah!

“Annie”

50 – 40 – 30 – 20 – 10 reps for time:

Double Unders, sub burpees

Sit-ups


A Call To Arms for Women To Lift Weights

“Dear Women Everywhere: unless you have male anatomy, lifting weights will not make you bulky any more than it will make you grow a beard. In fact, lifting weights will make you beautiful. Your strength and confidence will arouse onlookers of both sexes, and your ass will be a shining beacon of hope to women who have… not yet seen the light. And if anyone f—s with you, you can break them. So lift.”

Well said.

- Freeman

WOD 9/25/10

Share The Pain Saturday

Teams of 2, Complete 2 Rounds for time:

100 KB Swings

100 Pull-ups

100 Burpees

- only 1 working at any given time

- Any order & partitioning of reps IS allowed

All the cueing in the world means nothing without mobility

We can shout thousands of times: knees out, chest up, bring the hips, full extension, jump, on and on.  If you physically can’t get your body into position because of mobility limitations you are cheating yourself.  Not only is performing a movement with limited mobility not achieving full benefit, it’s down right unsafe to shove your body in a position it’s not ready for.  Why do we push mobility?  Why do we take weight of the bar?  Why do practice movement patterns many many times?  Why do we scale?  Why do we take you back a step?  TO KEEP YOU SAFE and make your programming more effective.  You can still do Crossfit without performing a power snatch if you’re not ready for it.

- Freeman

WOD 9/24/10

5 Rounds:

3 Hang Power Snatches

200m Run

15 Wall Balls

*Rest as needed between rounds for quality work

*Work on being explosive on your power snatches

*Continue your next round ONLY when you feel at least 75% recovered

“We are not anti-Yoga or anti-Pilates or even anti-Ballet. We are pulling from any discipline that uses functional movements, or intensity, or requires skilled control of the body. It’s all good.” – David Werner CF Affiliate

You may be thinking that you “don’t need yoga” or “yoga is for girls that don’t Crossfit”.  There has been tons of debate and discussion lately about why the main site and our affiliate is all of the sudden using more yoga type mobility moves and so I wanted to bring up the discussion at our box!

Lets break “Crossfit” down for a second:

CrossFit benefits mental health by making you so tired in ways you haven’t been since you were a kid, that you then, can get a good night’s sleep.  Ever felt that?

CrossFit promotes relaxation by making you work so hard your brain can’t get in the way.  Know what I mean?

It sure doesn’t do it via any relaxation poses. Agree?

However, yoga promotes a body awareness that benefits CrossFitters immensely.  Balance, coordination, flexibility and accuracy are all elements of fitness improved via neuromuscular adaptation.  Yoga addresses all of these.  Body awareness, or the ability to make your body do what you want when you want, is crucial in moving better.

What is CrossFit ultimately about?

Moving better so you can increase your physical work capacity.

Yoga can undoubtedly help a lot of people move better which can get you CrossFitting better.

Check out our Crossfit Yoga Classes with E….let her kick your butt for a change!

-Kelli and “Crossfit Works”

Diabesity: the #1 cause of death and disease?

Obesity, insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes have reached epidemic proportions. There’s not a person reading this article who isn’t affected by these conditions, either directly or indirectly. Yet as common as these conditions are, few people understand how closely they’re related to one another.

It is now clear that not only do these conditions share the same underlying causes – and thus require the same treatment – they are 100% preventable and, in many cases, entirely reversible.

Because of these similarities, Dr. Francine Kaufman coined the term diabesity (diabesity + obesity) to describe them. Diabesity can be defined as a metabolic dysfunction that ranges from mild blood sugar imbalances to full-fledged type 2 diabetes. Diabesity is a constellation of signs that includes:

  • abdominal obesity (i.e. “spare tire” syndrome);
  • dyslipidemia (low HDL, high LDL and high triglycerides);
  • high blood pressure;
  • high blood sugar (fasting above 100 mg/dL, Hb1Ac above 5.5);
  • systemic inflammation; and,
  • a tendency to form blood clots.

The subjective symptoms of diabesity include (but aren’t limited to):

  • sugar cravings, especially after meals;
  • eating sweets does not relieve cravings for sugar;
  • fatigue after meals;
  • frequent urination;
  • increased thirst and appetite;
  • difficulty losing weight;
  • slowed stomach emptying;
  • sexual dysfunction;
  • visual problems; and,
  • numbness and tingling in the extremities.

The term diabesity is misleading in one respect: it suggests one must be obese to experience the metabolic problems I just described above. That’s not true. Thin people can suffer from the entire spectrum of blood sugar imbalances, all the way up to full-fledged type 2 diabetes. The term sometimes used for someone who is thin, yet has insulin resistance, dysglycemia and dyslipidemia is “metabolically obese”. Their metabolism behaves as if they’re obese, even when they’re not.

It’s almost impossible to overstate how serious and far-reaching a problem diabesity is. It affects more than one billion people worldwide (1), including 100 million Americans and 50% of Americans over 65.

More than half of Americans are overweight, and a full one-third are clinically obese. 24 million Americans have type 2 diabetes, with one in three unaware that they have it. (2)

Diabesity is the leading cause of modern, chronic disease. The “diabese” have increased risk of heart disease, stroke, dementia, cancer, kidney failure and blindness – to name only a few.

In the U.S. today, every ten seconds someone dies from diabetes-related causes. (3) Diabetes and cardiovascular disease have now outpaced infectious disease as the primary cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. In Dr. Bernstein’s Diabetes Solution, Dr. B claims that diabetes is now the 3rd leading cause of death. But death certificates don’t list diabetes or hyperglycemia as the underlying cause of heart attacks, strokes or fatal infections. Nor do they consider the role of obesity, insulin resistance and inflammation in these conditions. If they did, it’s quite possible that diabesity is not only the leading cause of disease, but also the leading cause of death.

Diabesity is literally bankrupting our health care system. The direct and indirect costs of type 2 diabetes were $174 billion in 2007. The cost of obesity in that same year was $113 billion. So the total cost of diabesity to society can be conservatively estimated at nearly $300 billion per year. (4) To put that in perspective, diabesity has cost the U.S. $3 trillion over the past decade. That’s three times the estimated cost of fixing our entire health care system. And it’s only going to get worse. the projected cost of diabetes alone is expected to rise to more than $330 billion by 2034. (5)

With numbers like this, you’d expect a state of emergency to be declared. You’d think we’d be doing everything in our power to figure out the cause of these conditions and how to treat them successfully.

But the reality is that the conventional treatment of diabesity has been a dismal failure. This is reflected in the shocking growth of the conditions that fall under the diabesity umbrella over the past two decades, and the equally alarming projections for the future.

Recent reports suggest that one-third of people born in 2010 will develop diabetes at some point in their lives. (6) What is particularly horrifying about this statistic is that many of those who develop diabetes will be kids. Type 2 diabetes used to be a disease of the middle-aged and elderly. No longer. A recent Yale study indicated that nearly one in four kids between the ages of 4 and 18 have pre-diabetes (glucose intolerance). Some regional studies show type 2 diabetes in kids has jumped from less than 5% before 1994 to 50% in 2004. (7)

Each year, kids are getting fatter. Among American children 2-5 years of age, more than 10% are now obese. (8) Even more alarming is the rise of obesity in infants under 2 years of age. Research from Harvard shows infant obesity has risen more than 70% since 1980. (8) And this isn’t because babies are eating more donuts and cheese doodles while cutting back on their Stairmaster workouts, either. Clearly there’s more to the diabesity story than eating junk food and not exercising enough. But I digress. We’ll be covering causes in future articles.

From 1993 to 2008, the number of people in the world with diabetes increased seven-fold from 35 million to 240 million, and is expected to rise to 380 million by 2030. This is ten times the number of people affected by HIV/AIDS worldwide. In the U.S., the incidence of diabetes is projected to increase to 44 million in the year 2034. (9)

What accounts for such an explosion of new cases? One reason is that the standard treatment for diabesity is not only ineffective, it’s contributing to the problem. Once they have developed, diabetes and obesity are characterized by insulin resistance, which in turn results in carbohydrate intolerance. Yet prominent organizations such as the American Diabetes Association have been recommending a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet as a treatment for diabetes for decades. It didn’t work in 1985, and it still doesn’t work. Einstein once said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over, and expecting a different result. Clearly the conventional approach to treating diabesity is insane.

In this series, we’re going to get the bottom of the diabesity epidemic. We’ll leave the conventional model of understanding diabesity – which is now about 40 years old – in the dust and replace it with an updated 2010 model that reflects the current scientific literature. We’re going to uncover the real causes of of diabesity, and we’re going to find out exactly how it can be prevented and even reversed in the majority of cases.

As we go along we’ll be busting a number of conventional and alternative myths about diabesity. We’ll learn that:

  • Obesity isn’t as simple as eating too much and not exercising enough.
  • Diabetes isn’t always progressive, and can be reversed in many people.
  • Diabetes isn’t caused by eating too many carbohydrates.
  • A fasting blood sugar of 95 mg/dL and Hb1Ac of 5.5% isn’t “normal”.
  • Thin people can get type 2 diabetes.
  • And more…

As we begin, I’d love to hear from you. Do you have any specific questions about diabesity? Anything you’ve always wondered about but haven’t found the answer to? Leave a comment, and I’ll do my best to address it at some point in the series.

Article taken from Thehealthyskeptic.org

WOD 9/23/10

100 Burpees for time!

* Every minute, sprint down & back

Take 25 Minutes work on your GOAT

GOAT = Your main weakness/es

Examples of GOAT: hip extension mobility, ankle mobility, mobility in shoulder extension, ring work, barbell lift, pull-up, squat, single leg…..

Burpees for Concert Tickets!!!!

CrossFit Maximus members! We are giving away two free concert tickets for Randy Travis/LeAnn Rimes/Craig Morgan this Friday at Applebee’s Park…… They will be awarded to the Crossfit member who does the most “Coach Approved Burpee’s” in ONE MINUTE….. Deadline is Friday at 1pm…Come in anytime and grab a coach to certify your burpees, and have them write your total on the whiteboard! Good Luck!


We Miss You Bruce!!!!


I am going to fight my diet for the rest of my life.  It’s just that simple.

I am going to always want that ice cold diet coke on ice with two lemon slices, or want that beautiful bag of juicy red Twizzlers…yum!

But I have to take responsibility for my health & overall well-being, and as much as it pains me, Diet Coke, Twizzlers, and their other sugary friends aren’t the answer to a long, happy, healthy life.  But what is the answer?

Truth is it’s a raging debate in the nutritional world.  We all see commercials every day from different marketing campaigns telling us what is healthy and what will help us with weight loss, but it begs the questions “What did people eat before T.V. or the FDA or Doctors?”

A good friend of mine Jim Laird told me about a great blog article by Tim Ferriss that really lays out a new approach to common nutritional fallacies.  Remember, no nutritional plan is the gospel, but this a great article worth reading and thinking about.

“How to Keep Feces out of your Blood Stream (or Lose 10lbs in 14 days)”

For me, I want to see my daughter grow up, and show her an example of a health active lifestyle where I am able to chase her around the playground, and even more so chase her children around the playground in 25 years.  I don’t want to be on 12 different prescription medications for diabetes, depression, joint pain, blood pressure, insomnia, etc. etc.  Just want to be a happy healthier me!

The choice is yours, but I am going to fight & control my diet evils, and choose the paleo life.

So, as much as I love you; bye-bye twizzlers and the icey goodness of Diet Coke!!

- Jen Sharp


Official Kick-Off of Krav Maga Self Defense is this Saturday at 11:00 am at CrossFit Maximus!

This Saturday at 11:00 am marks the start of the most intense, and practical self defense fitness class available in Lexington.  Formerly at the Hit Center, Krav Maga of KY is now located at CrossFit Maximus, and will be offering classes in the Group X room during the following days:

  • Mondays – 12:00 pm
  • Wednesdays – 12:00 pm
  • Saturdays – 11:00 am

Evening classes will be added soon so feel free to email Dennis Smith for more information.

Classes are $45/month for CrossFit Maximus members, and $75/month for non-members.

WOD 9/22/10

 

AMRAP in 15 Minutes:

3 Strict Pull-ups

5 Push-Presses

7 Box Jumps 

 

 

The Shake Weight…guaranteed to make you look like a total douche-bag. 

Can you believe this is what passes as fitness equipment today?  As funny and stupid as this is, it is actually a great indicator of where we are as a culture in regards to physical fitness. Gone are the days of moving heavy shit to get strong and in their place are empty promises and bullshit shortcuts. As CrossFitters know, there are no shortcuts. Being physically fit isn’t easy. If it were, everyone would look and feel great. But instead most are obese, have little energy, and look to equipment (I use the term loosely) like the ShakeWeight.

- Matt

WOD 9/21/10

OHS Day

Then….

Teams of 2, Complete 3 Rounds for time:

200m Sandbag Carry

15 Push-ups (w/ release)

10 Knees 2 Elbows

* One person does a round, then the other!


Calm Before The Storm ……

Mindfulness” is the key to success.  According to WildMild.org, University of Massachusetts Stress Reduction Clinic founder Jon Kabat-Zinn discusses the topic of mindfulness. He emphasizes the importance of “Paying attention in a particular way: on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgmentally.”

I teach class each day and try to explain that you should be mindful of the exercise, “be in” the exercise, feel it, understand what you are working and how to properly execute it to get the most benefit.  Don’t get caught up in the clock or other people’s score.  Crossfit is about mastering the fundamentals then excelling at them as a whole.  Exercise should reduce stress not contribute to it.  Take a day and work only on the basics.  Listen to your coaches, approach the movements in a different way, learn what each move “feels” like when properly executed – be mindful – be successful!!

- Kathy

WOD 9/20/10

“Heavy Jackie”

For time:

800m Run

25 Thrusters

15 Pull-ups

New Crossfit Maximus (temporary) Sign

:)

Never Underestimate the Importance of Building a Base for Crossfit

Virtuosity, though, is a different beast altogether. Virtuosity is defined in gymnastics as “performing the common uncommonly well.” Unlike risk and originality, virtuosity is elusive, supremely elusive. It is, however, readily recognized by audience as well as coach and athlete. But more importantly, more to my point, virtuosity is more than the requirement for that last tenth of a point; it is always the mark of true mastery (and of genius and beauty).

There is a compelling tendency among novices developing any skill or art, whether learning to play the violin, write poetry, or compete in gymnastics, to quickly move past the fundamentals and on to more elaborate, more sophisticated movements, skills, or techniques. This compulsion is the novice’s curse—the rush to originality and risk.

The novice’s curse is manifested as excessive adornment, silly creativity, weak fundamentals and, ultimately, a marked lack of virtuosity and delayed mastery. If you’ve ever had the opportunity to be taught by the very best in any field you’ve likely been surprised at how simple, how fundamental, how basic the instruction was. The novice’s curse afflicts learner and teacher alike. Physical training is no different.

What will inevitably doom a physical training program and dilute a coach’s efficacy is a lack of commitment to fundamentals. We see this increasingly in both programming and supervising execution. Rarely now do we see prescribed the short, intense couplets or triplets that epitomize CrossFit programming. Rarely do trainers really nitpick the mechanics of fundamental movements.

- Greg Glassman

WOD 9/18/10 – Share The Pain

Share The Pain Saturday

Teams of 2 – 4 complete for time:

Buddy Carry 200m

100 Wall Balls

100 KB Squat Cleans

100 Pull-ups

Buddy Carry 200m

ROE’s:

* 1/2 Team working at a time

* Get the work done anyway, as long as buddy carry is before & after

30 more mats were adopted thursday!!!!  Thanks to our Crossfit Maximus Family :)

From your friendly CrossFitting Pharmacist

Hello all,

It stinks that I have a limited time ’cause I could talk all night! I got an email the day after I spoke and I thought what I wrote to your fellow bootcamper might help everyone….here it is:

Ok so here’s what I would recommend as far as quantities of food to eat…head to this site and check out the guy who wrote “the zone” books:
 
http://www.zonediet.com/RESOURCES/ZoneDietHints/tabid/79/Default.aspx
 
He basically says that you should get a plate and fill up 2/3 of the plate with veggies/fruit (1 veggie or a combination of fruits and veggies). This is your carb portion.
 
I tend to reserve fruits for snacks and I only usually have 1 or 2 servings of fruit a day (1 orange, 1 apple, 1 banana = 1 serving)

THEN, 1/3 of the plate should be a protein (meat) of some sort. This should be about the amount that fits in the palm of your hand (including the thickness of your hand).
 
Then you should add a “dash” of heart healthy fats (oil, avocado, nuts, seeds).
 
You should NOT skip meals, including breakfast. A lot of people tend to do this (females especially – sorry to point fingers) and if you’re trying to eat healthy, skipping meals tends to make you crave crappy foods. Eat 3 meals a day and 2-3 snacks. I also found that taking fish oil (2 grams) with each meal and at bedtime helps with cravings and not eat as much food.
 
Snacks should esentially include a protein fat and carb as well, just a small portion though. e.g. for snacks I tend to eat a couple handfuls of pistachios and a few pieces of beef jerky. Or an orange with some almonds.
 
DO NOT EAT SECONDS RIGHT AWAY! Your body’s mechanism to stop eating…your fat tissue secretes a few different hormones that tell your brain that you’re not hungry anymore (Leptin, PYY). The problem is that it is a delayed response: it takes about 20 minutes for the signal to go through your blood stream to its final destination in the brain to say, “you’re not hungry, quit eating!” Lesson: Wait 20 minutes before eating seconds period.
 
As far as the sweetener in the coffee, unfortunately all sweeteners do the same thing, they all tend to make your body secrete insulin and thereby inhibiting fat breakdown, even the artificial (no calorie) sweeteners to some extent. I guess if you ABSOLUTELY have to have something, go for an artificial sweetener of some kind but I would taper it off if you can. One thing that I HAVE heard some people do is putting heavy cream in their coffee with NO sugar/sweetener in it at all. I’ve heard people say it helps make the caffeine possibly work better or something (basically makes them more hyper) for some reason. Strictly anecdotal though, not sure why, how or even if that is true.
 
For weight loss purposes, your goal should be to try to string as many “good” days together as possible. Give your body a break from any type of sugar/sweeteners for a week if you can. That’s NOT to say that you have to stay away from fruit though.
 
One other thing that I recommend is every time you feel like you’re hungry, before you go right for food, have 2 glasses of water. A lot of times when we think we’re hungry we’re actually thirsty believe or not. Depending on how much coffee you drink, you might actually be making yourself thirsty because caffeine is a diuretic (makes ya pee!).
 
Another suggestion: fish oil…Our body is probably extremely out of balance as far as our Omega 3 to Omega 6 Fatty acid ratio due to the high consumption of Omega 6′s in the SAD (Standard American Diet). Due to the industrial age we live in we have polluted our oceans and made our fish toxic to eat, with high levels of mercury and PCBs. SO, take fish oil which has Omega 3 Fatty Acids. A couple GRAMS (1000 mg) 3 times a day (with each meal). If you have the problem of fish burps…here’s the 2 things that I did: I froze my fish oil capsules, this is supposed to help with belching so you are not burping and tasting that God awful taste all day and I also switched brands to one that is supposed to be more water soluble. I get it at walmart: nature made is the brand, you can get I think like 400 for 20 bucks. I have not had any kind of bad after taste with these.

Hope this helps, GOOD LUCK!

Seth

WOD 9/17/10

3 rounds for strength:

12 Wall Slides

5 Strict Chin-ups

Then …

10 Sandbag Lunges (5 ea.)

200m Run

10 Toes 2 Bar

STOP!  Collaborate and Listen!

Frequently  in a Crossfit world you find something that you are not mechanically sound at or needs some vital attention. This could be a multitude of items, ranging from flexibility all the way to skill work on a particular lift. More often than not these items correlate directly to injury, inefficiency of movement and a plateau in progress. For most it is a simple fix, some extra time spent on mobility or a yoga class, foam rolling before and after a workout consistently, a 1-on-1 training session with a coach for technique improvement, or maybe just de-loading on weight during a WOD to focus on form.

For some reason, even personally, I find the pressure of competing sometimes over-powering the side of me that says to be responsible. I try to do the prescribed “heavy” deadlift weight in a workout and end up paying for it. Instead of taking off weight and slowing down to do the lift right, I look at the scoreboard and go for the fastest time. Granted, I’m not saying to sandbag and go slow, by all means, as a coach I will always want you to go all out but do it at YOUR OWN level, at YOUR pace and INTELLIGENTLY!

This leads me to my next point, which is to not let competition interfere with your integrity. This means when you know you did not compete a rep, one must get completed to move on, when you chin does not go over the bar, another pullup should be required, when we do not jump and clap the end of a burpee, you should drop back to the floor and do it right! We are all guilty of some of this at some point, all we can do is be mindful and keep improving everyday.

- Jordan

Even more reasons to interval train.

Here are the Top Ten Benefits.

1. You feel amazing for the rest of the day. With interval training, endorphin production is ramped to the max. These naturally occurring opiates are produced in your brain in response to strenuous exercise. Interval training – due to its short bursts of intense activity – really get the endorphins flowing, and you feel fantastic.

2. Your resting pulse drops like a stone. When I’m doing consistent interval training, my resting pulse is 46 to 48. Resting pulse is a good measure of stroke volume – the amount of blood your heart pumps on each beat. The more blood pumped per beat the LESS your heart needs to beat each minute.

Cardiovascular exercise – over time – increases your stroke volume. Interval training is maximum cardiovascular exercise – and leads very quickly to increased stroke volume. Your heart rapidly increases its efficiency with consistent interval training. Your total lifetime fitness levels increase accordingly.

3. You save wear and tear on your heart. Because interval training increases your heart’s stroke volume, your heart beats less during the course of the day to provide the amount of blood you need flowing to your tissues. Less heart beats means less wear and tear. The hypothetical extrapolation is that your heart will last longer because you’re doing intense vigorous exercise. Pretty remarkable.

4. You get faster – which is why you’re doing interval training in the first place. Faster usually means funner – and you find yourself motoring along during your regular cardio training. Your regular cardio training becomes easier, and you’re having more fun while doing it.

5. Climbing hills is easier – this has all kinds of benefits. I used to run road races in Central Park in New York City. After I began interval training, I noticed that as a race went on – when we’d reached the parks’ infamous stretch of hills – I’d be passing all the people who’d passed me at the beginning of the race. I’d catch and pass them all on the hills. A great feeling! I developed a deep sense of race confidence I’d never had – all due to interval training!

6. You’re stronger and faster in every other form of cardiovascular activity. Having better endurance not only benefits hill climbing. Because your heart is much more efficient, swimming, cycling, cross-country skiing, and hiking all just got much easier. You can go faster, longer, and with better energy than ever before.

7. Decreased risk of high blood pressure. The evidence is in. Cardiovascular exercise has abundant medical benefits, including decreased susceptibility to heart disease. Interval training, being the most intense form of cardio, offers even greater benefits over time.

8. Lowered cholesterol levels. Again, cardiovascular exercise has consistently been shown to reduce blood cholesterol. Lower cholesterol has many medical benefits, including lowered risk of heart disease, arthritis, and other inflammatory disorders.

9. Stronger immune system. Your immune system responds positively to regular strenuous exercise. Interval training – due to its intense qualities – yields a heightened immune response. People who exercise regularly build-up a “shield” against colds and flu, and East Coasters often go through an entire winter without “getting sick”.

10. You get younger. Yes, really. The benefits of exercise are profound and impact both physical and personal aspects of your life. You sleep better. You wake up more refreshed. You skin glows. Your digestion improves. Overall, you’re healthy and well. Your attitude throughout the day becomes consistently positive. You have more ideas. You’re more creative. You’re more fun to be around.

And, all this is possible because you spent 30 to 60 minutes a day, four to six times a week, investing in your well-being!

David Lemberg
Author, speaker, educator
http://total-lifetime-fitness.com