Posts tagged Fitness/Exercise
Double Unders & Sit Ups – Yeah, that’s the WOD
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By 1p yesterday, I was wiped out. The Fran workout yesterday may be a quick one – but it takes you down. There have been a few WODs recently that totally wiped me out and by mid day, all i wanted to do was crawl into bed.
For today’s skill we worked on gymnastics and rings. One of the athletes, Gerald, said ‘who would have thought we would be doing this at 6a this morning?’. And that right there is one of the things I love about CrossFit. It is like being on a playground as a kid. Reliving those times when you just hung out and played around at the local playground for hours and hours — we are older now so hours and hours is ONE HOUR or so –but for me, it’s the same feeling.
Today’s workout seemed fun at first glance — Double Unders and Sit ups. Piece of cake — but this is CrossFit. Nothing worth anything comes easy unfortunately.
Warmup
800m run
—
x3
5 Cobras
5 Pass Thrus
5 OHS
5 Good Mornings
Skill
Inverted rings
skin the cat
WOD
2m Double Unders
2m Sit ups
90s Double Unders
90s Sit ups
1m Double Unders
1m Sit ups
30s Double Unders
30s Sit ups
total: 236
So — Double Unders. With this WOD, you only count DUs –so if you cant do them, you cant get any #s and if you do attempts, they don’t count either. So thankfully I am getting better at doing them even though my form is all wonky. I am hoping that once I am comfortable with just doing them – modifications to my form can come next and easier. Let’s keep our fingers crossed! I am just so happy that I can even do DUs…
I have also been making a point of doing a few hand stands off the wall before I leave CFI to practice. I can totally see an improvement in my overall form and can even do a few seconds regularly off the wall into a real handstand! Whoo hoo.
Minimalist Shoes
0Gear: Shoes for not-quite-barefoot running
Barefoot running has become a hot fitness trend thanks to evidence that it can reduce injuries and strengthen feet. But ironically, many “barefooters” prefer to keep their feet covered. Fear of injuries from broken glass, rocks and other sharp objects inspired the invention of the “minimalist” running shoe, whose essential feature is a thin, tactile and flat bottom that lacks the elevated heel cushion typically found on running shoes. This category — pioneered by Vibram’s popular FiveFingers individual-toed shoe-glove four years ago — now includes styles that enclose all five toes together. Hard-core barefooters will scoff at any shoe, even these stripped-down alternatives to traditional running shoes with generously padded soles. But for those who want the benefits of barefooting with some protection, the minimalists have you covered.
CrossFit Girl: Kelly
0Those girls of CrossFit are Nasty. The last time I met Kelly was in February — and for some reason today’s meeting did not go as well as our last – by 40seconds. That’s not acceptable! But holy hotdog – this WOD was tough. 5 rounds – keep moving – don’t stop – go go go. If I had not mentioned this before – the longer workouts give you a mental workout as well as a hard body beating. At the end, we were all drenched in sweat, lying on the floor. My arms were screaming during the last round of wall ball shots — you know what? It was GREAT!
Warmupx2
10 Pass Thrus
10 Push Ups
10 Sit ups
10 OH Squats
5 Pull Ups
Skill
Goblet Squat (Kettlebell held like a goblet, squat)
WOD
Burpee Love WOD
0I knew it was time to get organized when my garage would make a perfect scene for the next episode of Hoarders! So I spent the better part of 3 hours yesterday going through the crap – organizing, sweeping, cleaning, throwing things out — it looks really good. Do you ever notice after you clean like that – you start to feel a sense of calm? I do.
I was hoping we wouldn’t do pull ups today because Saturday after the WOD, I practiced them a ton with some of the CFI athletes and they hurt – the calluses are multiplying. Coach Marc said that give it a week of pain – it won’t be so painful anymore. I usually use gloves but I took them off on Saturday to see if it made a difference. Well, the only difference is my hands are freakin killing me.
But – Guess what?? No Pull ups during the WOD!! Only during
the warmup — wishes do come true!
Warmup
Run 800m
x2
Sampson Stretch
10 Good Mornings
10 Pull Ups
10 OHS
10 Push Ups
Skill
Deadlift
WOD
5 RFT
5 Deadlifts (ladies:185lb Rx’d – I did 135lb)
10 Burpees
time: 5:56
So I loaded up 185# and tried it once — I lifted it. I decided to lower the weight because looking at the workout – burpees kill me and 5 rounds — I would rather be able to continue through the workout than have to stop continually. I probably could have gone up a bit more. Even though the workout was only 6m total – it was a killer and I definitely was spent at the end.
Rainy Day Workout
0Vacation can’t come too soon for me — I am running on empty. Work is busy, home life is busy — I am thankful that I have CrossFit though. It really helps me with stress management and it’s a super fun way to start my day. I highly recommend it. And it’s been raining the past 2 days — pouring rain too. Makes it harder to get up and start your day on the right foot.
Warmupx2
20 DUs
10 OHS
10 Ring Rows
10 KTE
Skill
Front Squat
Shoulder Press
WOD
5×2 Shoulder Press (3 at 75lb, 2 at 65lb)
5×3 Front Squat (105lb)
Tabata Burpees = 45
4m total (20s of work, 10s of rest)
So – something interesting I found out with me and Double Unders. I can do a few in a row if I close my eyes!! How funny is that??!! There must be something to do with how I am visually processing the experience that messes me up! I have tried it over and over again with my eyes closed, and sure enough! I can do it! Anyone else out there have that same experience?
Monday is Funday!
0Not sure what’s going on with me but I kept waking up last nite with achey joints — especially my wrists. Not sure what that is all about – when I woke up for good this AM, it didn’t seam to be an issue.
Todays workout was in honor of –
Narcotics Detective and Special Assignment Unit Operator Carlos Ledesma, 34, of the Chandler Police Department, Chandler, Arizona, was shot and killed by drug dealers on July 28, 2010, during an undercover operation in Phoenix, Arizona. He is survived by his wife Sherry and sons Luciano and Elijo.
warmup
sprints
backpeddles
side shuffle
skips
skill
med ball cleans
wod
20 AMRAP
5 hspu
10 ring 2 toes
15 16lb med ball cleans
total = 8+
Finding your ‘CrossFit’
0This weather is great and perfect for working out. Other than allergies, I love springtime in Virginia. I also love ‘springtime’ in Arizona –which is where i will be heading in a few short weeks for spring break. Heat, sun and time to recharge –
Warmupx2
run around bldg 1x
sampson stretch
10 pass thrus
10 OHS
10 pull ups (2min deadhang)
10 ring dips
WOD
21,15,9
(Rx was 115/63)
115lb dead lift
73lb OHS
time: 10:13
Ouch! My wrists hurt after those OHS. It actually was the hardest part of the OHS for me! But I am proud of myself — I did heavier than prescribed (Rx’d). So yeah for me!
I wanted to share a story about a friend of mine who is in the midst of a life change. Let’s call her ‘A’. She has had some things happen to her recently that have made her take a good hard look at where she is in her life. Probably the same sort of stuff that happens to us all around our age (40s). Her career hasn’t quite traveled the path she thought it would , she is going through the motions in her day to day life, Has a lot of stress on her shoulders — her husband travels a lot, has 2 kids. Probably sounds like most people you know — well I had been encouraging her to try CrossFit for a while, but she was always intimidated. Thinking you have to be hard core — even though I told her that I wasn’t like this 3 years ago when I started. Then a sign –A Groupon deal for a local CrossFit appeared in my inbox and i forwarded it to her — she bought it, which was progress, but waited 3 months to try it. But — last week she did it. She and her husband tried it and sure enough — she could do it. It was ok and it was scaled for her abilities. The smile on her face as she came over to tell me that morning was something I wish I took a picture of!
That set a spark inside her — and she went last week, and is going this week. She was telling people about doing pull ups this week. I can’t even begin to share how proud of her I am. The only thing I want for her and anyone else stuck in a rut, is to find their “CrossFit”. And I am not talking about it as a place — just finding their passion, something that shocks their core into realizing that they are not doing anyone any favors by neglecting themselves. If you could see her the past 2 weeks — she is full of possibilities, pride, and confidence in the future. That’s what it’s all about — not only for her, but for her family as well! Think about how her 2 daughters are seeing their Mom now!
Hats off to my friend ‘A’.
Components of A Successful Fitness Program
0For best exercise, don’t be lonely or late
Activities done in groups and early in the day seems to show the best success rates.
This article is completely in line with my own experience. I work out early in the day with the same group of people — it creates a routine and a community – 2 important components of finding a successful fitness program.
Thinking about starting an exercise program to help lose weight? If you find some activity that allows you to regularly work out early in the day with the same group of people — and it’s something you like — then you’re well on your way.
Conversely, if you plan to exercise at the end of the day at home, alone, on some machine you bought from an infomercial, prepare to continue being fat.
Social context, self-control and positive reinforcement play critical roles in exercise adherence, and the data provide interesting insight that can be used to increase your likelihood of following through.
Get a Grip
0Losing your grip? It could be a clue to your health
Grip strength can indicate overall muscle tone and, according to one study, even suggest how long you might live.
Getting a good grip on your health may mean … getting a good grip. The force you can muster when squeezing an object or a weight doesn’t only reveal how strong your hand and arm are. It can be a measure of overall muscle function and — according to one recent study — even portend how long you’re likely to live.
That’s not as nutty as it seems, says Richard Bohannon, a professor of physical therapy at the University of Connecticut. “Grip strength reflects your overall muscle status and a general sense of how much muscle mass you have” he says. “If you have more muscle in your upper body, you probably have more in your lower body as well.” And if your muscles are wasting, you’re further down the road to frailty.
Definitions of ‘fit’ and ‘fitness’ vary from person to person
0Definitions of ‘fit’ and ‘fitness’ vary from person to person
Think hitting a fastball or catching a touchdown pass is tough? Try settling on a definition for the term “fit.” Nowthere’s a moving target.
In truth, fitness is an exceedingly slippery concept, one whose meaning varies from person to person and doesn’t rest solely on firm, quantifiable standards. Some pin fitness to athletic ability, holding up the likes of Lance Armstrong, while others equate it to overall health.
Yet for all its vagueness, it’s also widely linked to appearance, in that many of us wrongly associate fitness with a certain look or physical trait.
“Many people look at [fitness] magazine covers and think that’s what they’re supposed to look like,” says Heather Nettle, an exercise physiologist at the Cleveland Clinic’s Sports Health Center.
“I think that’s a misrepresentation. Fitness doesn’t mean you’re excelling in performance. It means you’re doing what you’re supposed to be doing.”
At 5 feet 5 inches and 170 pounds, the former rugby player doesn’t have the lean, sculpted look of an athlete or a stereotypically “fit” physique. Her body mass index (BMI, a measurement of the relationship between weight and height) falls at the upper end of overweight, just a hairbreadth from obese.
But anyone who saw Neimeister in action would undoubtedly describe her as fit and athletic. At a recent CrossFit fitness competition, Neimeister blew away even the most ripped of competitors by dead-lifting 345 pounds and doing 27 pull-ups. Last year, she ably completed a half-marathon run with only minimal training.
“I don’t feel obese,” says Neimeister. “I feel fit. I do get jokes about having a big butt. I’m not a small girl. But I know I could probably beat anyone. I can go out and do whatever I need.”
Another athlete used to taking people by surprise is Craig Ihms, 37, of Rocky River, communications director at Enspace Inc.
At 5 feet 11 inches and 200 pounds, with substantial shoulders, Ihms more closely resembles the soccer player he used to be than the hard-core cyclist he is today. Like Neimeister, too, he’s “overweight” in BMI terms, and he admits to a fondness for beer.
But when he rides with guys who’d easily blend in at the Tour de France — with big legs, thin arms and small chests — he has no trouble keeping up. Sure, he’d be faster if he dropped a few pounds, but on flat roads, he’s almost unbeatable, and for him, covering 60 miles in under three hours is routine.
Are you fit?
Find out how you rate — by age and gender — in these fitness tests
“I’m more like a diesel locomotive,” Ihms says. “Some people hate the way I ride. But the place I really pay is on the climbing. I get harassed a lot.”
Partial blame for such apparent discrepancies between size and fitness belongs to the BMI equation. Nettle says she believes the measure is only marginally useful.
“It would misrepresent probably half my patients,” she says.
And forget looking to the dictionary for clarification. All you’ll find there under “fit” and “fitness” are relative benchmarks.
Several things factor in
That’s not to say it’s impossible to measure fitness. On the contrary, there are multiple standards for determining whether or not a person is fit, and an array of physiological tests, including body-fat percentage, resting heart-rate and aerobic capacity, can be especially revealing.
It helps to think of fitness as a composite of several factors. To be fit, in other words, you don’t need to be skinny or buff so much as healthy and able to perform a broad variety of tasks. You can also be more fit in one category than another.
Most professional football players, for instance, would fail the weight test instantly. No one questions their fitness, though, because they’re so obviously athletic and muscular. At the opposite end of the spectrum is the trim person who never exercises and whose body composition is in fact highly fatty.
Few would look at Ed Jones, center, and immediately label him fit. But the 48-year-old Air Force reservist has never had trouble passing military fitness tests, and now hes thriving in a boot camp class at Euphoria Health and Fitness. On either side of him are Shearer and Neimeister.
“There is such a thing as a skinny fat person,” Nettle says. “Looks can be deceiving.”
Nettle says she prefers to define fitness in terms of functional ability. In her mind, a person is fit if they’re logging at least 150 minutes of moderate exercise per week, or three 30-minute sessions that are more vigorous.
Additionally, they’re doing some basic resistance training twice a week and taking steps to maintain flexibility and balance. This person would meet most of the benchmarks set by the American College of Sports Medicine.
“If they’ve got all those components, they’re doing pretty well,” Nettle says. “To have overall fitness, you need all those things.”
Some factor in emotional measures. Cortney Myer, a physical therapist at Akron Children’s Hospital, says she considers happiness and confidence part of the fitness equation, especially for older adults, for whom athletic performance typically matters less than overall wellness.
“Fitness to me is a good balance,” she says. “It’s about psychology as well as exercise.”
Most high-level cyclists have small chests and thin arms. Not Craig Ihms. But if you doubt his fitness, try keeping up with him on the road.
Developing competence in several areas
But just as the fitness realm is broader than many people realize, it’s also full of room for error and mistaken beliefs.
Endurance athletes, for instance, are prone not only to dehydration and stress fractures, but also to high cholesterol and high blood pressure. Burning tons of calories keeps them skinny, but if they eat poorly, they’ll still suffer adverse consequences.
“They assume because they run so much they can get away with unhealthy food,” Myer says.
Others are deluded by physique. Myer says she regularly encounters athletes who appear fit but in fact haven’t developed what their activity truly requires. They may have large pectorals or biceps but weak abdominal muscles or rotator cuffs.
Bill Russell, co-owner of CrossFit Cleveland West in Lakewood, says many at his facility begin believing they’re in great shape but fail the second he introduces a movement they’re not used to.
That’s why CrossFit promotes “multimodal” fitness. Rather than working to excel at a single sport, CrossFit trainers aim to develop competence across the 10 so-called “fitness domains.” Their goal is to enable people to do everything from move a couch to defend themselves.
“People stay away from things they’re no good at,” Russell says. “And you can’t tell just by looking at someone what they don’t do well. It’s about life. We always say we train in the gym to be better outside the gym.”
It’s worth noting here the difference between fit and conditioned. Everyone should try to be fit, according to the measures outlined above, but only athletes striving for distinction have reason to aim higher.
Then there’s the issue of comparing fitness. Think of children debating which superhero or arch villain would win a battle: Is it possible to name the world’s fittest person?
Not really, Nettle says, mostly because there’s no one standard applicable to all the world’s elite. “You have to make sure you’re comparing apples to apples.”
Still, for the rest of us, it’s possible to draw a few broad conclusions and piece together a working definition of fitness.
Weight is certainly a factor, but it’s not the only one, and it may not even be the most important. Don’t define yourself by your BMI. Neither is athleticism alone a fair measure.
No, being fit means being happy, widely capable and physiologically sound. It’s not a contest or a question of resembling models. Furthermore, it’s a goal without end. There’s almost always room to raise the bar.
“Appearance plays no role,” Myer says. “A little insulation isn’t necessarily bad. If people are wondering about their fitness, and reflecting on how they’re incorporating it in their lives, that’s a great thing.”

Few would look at Ed Jones, center, and immediately label him fit. But the 48-year-old Air Force reservist has never had trouble passing military fitness tests, and now hes thriving in a boot camp class at Euphoria Health and Fitness. On either side of him are Shearer and Neimeister.








