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Thursday 171005

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On the minute for 24 minutes
Minute 1 = Muscle ups
Minute 2 = Double unders
Minute 3 = Toes to bar
Minute 4 = Rest

Post numbers to comments and BTWB

Squat party!! Partners anxiously waiting their turns for two minutes of max reps back squat.
Squat party!! Partners anxiously waiting their turns for two minutes of max reps back squat.

Following today’s workout there was some post WOD work regarding max length L sits. While going through a warm-up and progression that can be used to build up the L sit, I mentioned how huge of an ab exercise the L sit is. It requires parts of our abs that are not often addressed in other ab work, especially crunches. It involves strength in our hip flexors as well. I often get asked questions about the L sit when someone has trouble performing them, “I’m I just not flexible enough?”, “I think it’s because my hamstrings are tight, maybe?” The truth of the matter is, it’s a lack of strength in the two areas I just mentioned. We lack the strength in the lower abs and hip flexors to support the weight of our legs extended out straight ahead. A natural tendency is to quickly bend at the knee and bring the feet in closer, this is our body’s natural response to lower the weight, decrease the load. It’s like scaling a workout with an RX weight that’s too heavy. Someone eventually asked, “What can we do to make these better? Is there some other exercises that can target these areas as well?” I’m sure there are but the truth is more simple, do more L sit work. CrossFit describes the L sit this way:

“We not only contend that the L-sit is functional but that it is the most functional of all abdominal exercises.”

That’s right, the MOST. The CrossFit Journal publish an article in May 2003 (yes, you read that right) titled “3 Important Ab Exercises” By Greg Glassman, founder and CEO of CrossFit. Here is what he had to say back then about the L sit:

This exercise is remarkable from several perspectives. It is isometric, functional, and highly effective. Relatively unknown outside of the gymnastics community this exercise may be the most effective abdominal exercise we know of!

The L-sit is performed by supporting the body entirely by the arms and holding the legs straight out in front. The body forms an “L” thus the name L-sit. The exercise (we can hardly call it a movement) is isometric, i.e., it involves no joint movement. Being isometric, we quantify its performance not in reps but by time.

We not only contend that the L-sit is functional but that it is the most functional of all abdominal exercises.

Our justification for this contention lies in our view that the dominant role of the abdominals is midline stabilization not trunk flexion. Though trunk flexion is certainly important, midline stabilization is more important both to everyday living and athletic movement. The leg’s posture in the L-sit places an enormous, if not unbearable, moment or torque about the hip that must be counteracted by the abdominals to keep both the legs up and the spine from hyperextending.

As for efficacy, the L-sit may have no peer among abdominal exercises. We make this claim not on the basis of our position on abdominal muscle functionality but on the simple observation that athletes who have developed their L-sit to the point where they can hold it for three minutes subsequently find all other ab work easy. The gymnasts’ unrivaled capacity at hip and trunk flexion is in large part due to their constant training and practice of this exercise.

We mentioned early the ubiquitous phenomenon of the ab class instructor with the lower abdominal pooch – they cannot hold an L-sit. In fact, if you test the ab class instructor with the lower abdominal pooch for hip flexion strength you’ll find they are super deficient in this regard. You can perform a simple hip flexion strength test by asking the subject being tested to stand on one leg and raise the other knee to hip level while you press down on the knee to see how much, or little, force it takes to push the knee back down. Individuals with the lower abdominal pooch always have super weak hip flexors. We can drive their knee down with one finger. Try this test with someone who has developed the L-sit and you’ll find that they will tip over before the knee will drop. You will not find a three minute L-sit and a lower abdominal pooch in the same person, yet the world abounds with people who can perform thousands of crunches and sit-ups and still keep the pooch. It’s that simple.

Practice of the L-sit is for some very tough – they just can’t seem to find the muscles that raise and hold the legs. The key is to keep trying. Two successful approaches for working up to the L-sit include hanging from a pull- up bar and raising locked legs as far as possible and holding or working the L-sit by holding one leg at a time alternately in the L posture.

Though the L-sit can be performed from nearly any horizontal surface we recommend parallel bars, parallettes, and the floor as platforms for this exercise. The L-sit is hardest from the floor because the floor comes up quickly as the legs sag even a little bit. We use the parallettes for the very reason that it allows practice at less than perfectly horizontal leg position for the beginner, but measuring and competing at the L-sit should be done from the floor.

Measure your progress in the L-sit in 15-second increments. Give your self one point for every fifteen seconds you can hold the “L”. Twelve points is your goal and with regular training and practice you should be able to get to 12 points, or three minutes, within six months. During warm-up and cool-down is the natural place to play with this movement although the dedicated gymnast will find uncountable surfaces and opportunities to play with this superb exercise.”

Want to hear more about the other two important ab exercises, click here for the full article. 

 

 

Monday 171002

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In 15 minutes build to a heavy 1 rep back squat

Rest 5 minutes, then:
As many back squats as possible in 2 minutes with 80% of today’s heaviest lift.

*Bar has to remain on back the whole time and a consistent pace must be maintained for all 2 minutes

Post loads to comments and BTWB

Level 2 Certificate Course is coming to Verve.
Level 2 Certificate Course is coming to Verve.

Verve has a few seminars in the books over the next few months. These seminars are open to anyone interesting in furthering their knowledge in the world of CrossFit, programming, training, etc. These seminars are put on through CrossFit HQ and have varying registration fees. Verve is happy to provide the facility to host these courses. Here is what we got coming through Verve’s doors in the next few months:

Sport Specific Application Course, October 14th-15th

The Sport-Specific Application Course is designed to equip coaches and athletes with the tools necessary to train for performance in specific sports.

Participants will spend two days with 10-year NFL veteran John Welbourn and his team of performance coaches as they detail a range of topics including strength development for sport, programming for known domains, eating for performance and effective assessment tools.

Participants will experience drills that include effective warm-ups, sprinting and agility work, and strength- and power-oriented barbell movements, and attendees should be prepared for a highly charged, supportive environment that helps create the mindset necessary for unlocking potential. 

For additional information and to register, click here.

Level 2 Certificate Course, December 9th-10th

The Level 2 Certificate Course is an intermediate- level seminar that builds on the concepts and movements introduced at the Level 1 Certificate Course. 

This course is ideally suited for any CrossFit trainer serious about delivering quality coaching. Students enhance their understanding of the CrossFit methodology, program design and implementation, and they advance their skills while coaching others in movements and workouts. Students need to come prepared to be heavily engaged; each leads individual and small-group training sessions, and classroom sessions are discussion-based. Peers and instructors provide feedback and evaluation.

 

For additional information and to register, click here.

Verve will have abbreviated schedules  both weekends we host seminars. Please check MBO for class times in the mornings and stay tuned to blogs for continued updates.

Sunday 171001

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10 Rounds for time of:
10 Burpees to a 6″ target
10 Meter handstand walk

Post times to comments and BTWB

#SexyFaceSunday??? When you forget your workout shorts and have to back squat in pants, there are certain risks that will be assumed.
#SexyFaceSunday??? When you forget your workout shorts and have to back squat in pants, there are certain risks that will be assumed.

 

Thursday 170928

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Bench Press
3-3-3-3-3

Deadlift
3-3-3-3-3

Post loads to comments and BTWB

So much mobility being done by the guys at 5:30am.
So much mobility being done by the guys at 5:30am.

The 3 Lies of Fitness By Jon Gilson of WholeLife Challenge

Right now, you’re being lied to. 

The magazines are lying, your friends are lying, and the morning talk shows are lying. They’re telling you where fitness comes from — and they’re dead wrong.

It’s time to set the record straight. We’ll do it for the sake of our friends, our loved ones, and our own health. We’ll do it because fitness can only be enjoyed when the truth is known. We’ll do it in the name of sanity.

Here are the three biggest lies you’re being told. See them for the folklore they are, and follow my advice instead. Do it faithfully, and fitness will be yours.

Lie #1: The Scale

Perhaps the most insidious of the half-truths propagated by fashion, fitness, and your friends — that your scale weight indicates your health.

While this may be true in some limited circumstances (such as genuine obesity), relying on your scale weight to determine your health is like trying to determine your mile run time by measuring the circumference of your calves — it simply doesn’t tell the whole story.

Rather than worry about your scale weight, focus on your body composition. This is a much more comprehensive measure of your health, one that takes into account the underlying components of your weight: how much of your body is fat, how much is muscle tissue, and how much is bone, water, hair, and the like.

By focusing on body composition and working to reduce your proportion of stored fat to muscle, you’ll look leaner, you’ll be fitter, and you can safely ignore the scale. Here’s the rub — you may find you weigh more as you develop favorable body composition. You may even exceed your physician’s body mass index chart. Pay this no mind. When your diet and exercise are in order, muscle begins to replace fat, and your density actually increases, leading to a higher scale weight despite improved biomarkers.

This is where many fitness adherents, especially women, go off the rails. They dial in diet and exercise, they lift and run, and they find their scale weight stays the same (or increases), leading them to believe they’re not making progress.

This couldn’t be further from the truth. Clothing sizes may decrease as body fat vanishes, but the scale doesn’t necessarily follow suit — and once you’re healthy, it never will.

The Lesson: Stop relying on the scale. Get a caliper test from a qualified trainer. Do a DEXA scan. Rely on your tape measure. Just don’t believe a thing the scale tells you, and stop trying to please the weight gods — they’re the wrong deities, and they live in the wrong church.

Lie #2: The Comfortable Workout

There is an entire industry built on this lie — the idea that you can work out at moderate intensity, repeating a single stimulus, and achieve results.

This is the lie of the casual daily walk; of the long, slow run; of eight-minute abs. This is the lie of every device you see marketed at 3:00am. It is the lie of three-pound dumbbells and Shake Weights. It is the lie of routine.

Improving your fitness requires difficulty. You must run faster than before, you must lift more than before, you must do more work in less time than before. This fact follows from a fundamental principle of exercise science known as SAID, or specific adaptation to imposed demands.

Stated differently, SAID says you’ll get precisely the physical adaptation your workout demands of your body — and no more. Jogging three miles per day at a pace of ten minutes per mile will result in a body capable of precisely that, three miles in thirty minutes. It will result in a body-fat percentage, muscle mass, and aerobic fitness consistent with that pace. Once that adaptation is achieved through repetition, there will be no further gains.

And so you must push. If you want to get fitter, you must go faster. You must lift more. You must include variance in your “routine,” finding new ways to impose demand on your body. You must run short distances quickly. You must lift weights that push your capabilities. Above all, you must do things you don’t normally do, varying activities, rep schemes, loads, and distances to create new adaptations.

The lesson: There is no such thing as a comfortable workout that works. If you want results, you must seek the discomfort of new demands  — and beware of anyone who persuades you otherwise (especially if they have something to sell).

Lie #3: A Calorie Is a Calorie

Another lie with commercial underpinnings. We’ve been sold on the idea that we can eat whatever we like (and favorable health and fitness will result) so long as we stay within our predetermined calorie count.

This idea is the driver behind dietary abominations such as Diet Coke, Snackwell’s low-calorie cookies, and Breyers fat-free ice cream (low calorie foods with nonetheless horrific health consequences) — and it’s nonsense.

A calorie is not a calorie.

A calorie from chicken breast has a fundamentally different hormonal effect in our bodies than a calorie from M&Ms. A calorie from yogurt has a different hormonal effect than a calorie from avocado, and a calorie delivered via fruit juice precipitates a different hormonal effect than a calorie delivered via pistachios. These differences in hormonal effect render calorie count nearly meaningless.

In simplified form, here’s how it actually works:

  • There are three macronutrients: protein, fat, and carbohydrate. Each plays an essential role in hormonal balance and the subsequent regulation of blood sugar, and you need all of them. In my examples above, chicken is a protein source; M&Ms, yogurt, and fruit are carbohydrates; and avocados and pistachios are fats.
  • When you consume carbohydrates, your blood sugar rises. This provides energy for immediate use, with sugar being used first at local muscle sites and within the brain, with any remaining sugar then stored as body fat. Storage is accomplished via insulin, a hormone secreted by the pancreas.
  • When you consume protein, stored body fat is mobilized to provide energy. This is accomplished via glucagon, another hormone secreted by the pancreas. You can think glucagon as a counterbalance to the insulin storage mechanism.
  • When you consume fat, you slow digestion and increase satiety (the feeling of being full). In practice, fat consumption slows the rise of blood sugar in your bloodstream caused by eating carbohydrates, thereby slowing insulin release and limiting fat storage while simultaneously signaling that you should stop eating.

Generally, we want storage (via the carbohydrate/insulin mechanism) and mobilization (via the protein/glucagon mechanism) to be balanced. Too much storage, and you get fat. Too much mobilization, and you won’t have the energy reserves necessary to sustain daily activities. Further, we want to take in significant enough amounts of fat to curb our appetite and slow the entry of sugar into the bloodstream.

Notice that none of these effects are calorie dependent. Rather, they are determined by hormones.

It follows that it is not excess calories that make us fat, but rather a preponderance of storage resulting from repeated and unchecked rises in blood sugar. Therefore, the source of each calorie is profoundly important in determining body composition — and a calorie is (never, ever) just a calorie.

The Lesson: Forget calorie counting, and learn to balance your macronutrient intake, consuming proteins, fats, and carbohydrates at every meal. Aim for consistent protein consumption and eat low-glycemic index carbohydrates (such as fibrous fruits, vegetables, and leafy greens), and if you’re consistently hungry, increase your fat intake.

Three Truths of Fitness

Following the three lies of fitness, here are your countervailing truths. Follow them, and fitness will be yours:

  1. Ignore your scale. In fact, throw it away. You should worry only about body composition (your ratio of body fat to lean tissue). Improve that ratio, and fitness will follow. Of course, understand that the ideal body-fat level is not zero, and pursuing that end can be as bad for your health as worrying about your scale weight.
  2. Avoid comfortable workouts. Effective workouts are not easy. You will need to vary your distances, loads, and times. You will need to push yourself. You will need to lift, sprint, climb, and run long distances to create new adaptations, and you’ll need to avoid routine at all costs.
  3. Pay attention to your macronutrient intake. Health, fitness, and favorable body composition result from a balance in your storage and mobilization hormones, borne of a blood sugar level that is low, level, and steady. This can be achieved by eating high-quality fats, proteins, and carbohydrates at every meal. Forget you ever heard of a calorie.

 

Monday 170925

0

In 15 minutes build to a heavy 1 rep back squat

Rest 5 minutes, then:
As many back squats as possible in 2 minutes with 75% of today’s heaviest lift.

*Bar has to remain on back the whole time and a consistent pace must be maintained for all 2 minutes.

P0st loads to comments and BTWB

Chestee comes to Verve Tuesday!!
Chestee comes to Verve Tuesday!!

 

Tuesday, September 26th @ 2:00pm-6:30pm, Chestee has a trunk show at Verve. It’s not just a sports bra, it’s a Chestee™: patent-pending technology where fashion and function converge. The built-in collarbone guard is designed to help protect athletes against bruising from barbell impact. Alex, from Chestee, will be on hand with a table displaying several variety of Chestee products and answering any questions about them. Be sure to stop by and check out their products.

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Wednesday, September 27th @ 7:30pm, Verve’s own Paul Buono, also of Hatch Nutrition, will be giving the first of 3 nutrition talks on sustainable nutrition. Topics across all 3 talks will include: Talking about general health and wellness with the focus on habits that create long-term and sustainable results. The introduction of macronutrients and weighing and measuring our food. There will be talk about caloric deficits and the pros and cons of this. And how to eat to maximize performance in the gym.

These talks will build off each other, they are not repeat events. The first talk will be Wednesday September 27th at 7:30pm-8:30pm at Verve. The following talks will be approx 3 weeks apart. These talks are free to Verve members. The cost to attend these talks for non Verve members is $10/ talk. We will have a sign up sheet at Verve for Verve members to sign up on, non members will sign up in MBO.

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Saturday and Sunday October 14th-15th Verve will be hosting the Sport Specific Application Seminar. We will have a morning class at 7am both days, Verve will then be closed for the remainder of the day. We will not have any additional classes or open gym time. Are you interested in taking the Sport Specific Application Course? Click here for more information about it.

Sunday 170924

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7 Rounds for time of:
10 Kettlebell deadlift high pulls 53#(35#)
10 Push ups
2 Wall walks

Post times to comments and BTWB

Trevor showing us his actual sexy face for #SexyFaceSunday
Trevor showing us his actual sexy face for #SexyFaceSunday

 

Saturday 170923

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Bring a Friend to Verve Day workout:

In teams of 2 as many reps as possible in 20 minutes of:
50 10 Meter shuttle sprints
50 Supine ring rows
50 Burpess over your partner
50 Ab mat sit ups passing a medball 20#(14#)
50 10 Meter walking lunge steps with medball 20#(14#)
20 Meter parnter wheelbarrow walk

Post time and partner to BTWB

 

 

SWEET POTATO BREAKFAST SKILLET WITH BACON from: Allergy Free Alaska

Serves: 4 generous servings
INGREDIENTS
12 ounces of bacon, cut into 1-inch pieces
Additional bacon fat, lard, ghee, or coconut oil
5 cups diced sweet potatoes (about a 1/2 inch dice)
4 cups diced zucchini
1 cup chopped onion
1 red bell pepper, chopped
6 large eggs
Black pepper to taste

INSTRUCTIONS

In a 12-inch cast iron skillet (I use and recommend this pan), cook the bacon pieces over medium-low heat until crisp (cooking the bacon at a lower temperature will render more fat).

Use a slotted spoon to remove the cooked bacon from the pan. Set aside. There should be enough rendered bacon fat to coat the entire bottom of the skillet, about 1/8 inch deep. If your bacon didn’t render this much fat (it can vary from brand to brand), add additional bacon fat, lard, ghee, or coconut oil to your skillet until there is 1/8 inch of fat.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees (F).

Increase heat to medium-high and carefully place the diced sweet potatoes in the hot oil. Cook the sweet potatoes without stirring until the bottom of the cubes start to turn golden brown (this can take several minutes). Stir and cook until the cubes just start to soften.

Increase heat to high and add the zucchini, onion, and bell pepper to the skillet. Cook until the vegetables are just starting to soften.

Stir in bacon pieces. Remove from heat.

Make 6 wells in the potato and veggie mixture; break one egg into each well.

Place skillet in the oven and bake for 9-14 minutes, or until the eggs are set. Serve immediately.

 

 

 

Friday 170922

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For time:
Row 50(40) calories
40 Wall balls 20#(14#)
30 Kettlebell swings 70#(53#)
20 Box jumps overs 24″(20″)
10 Clean and jerks 205#(135#)

Post results to comments or BTWB

IF THAT LOWER BACK GOT YOU LIKE UGH from deadlifts.

Follow this flow routine, or even just pieces of it, to help loosen it up.

VERVE UPDATES

  • Bring A friend day TOMORROW!  Bring them to any class (excluding open gym).
  • Paul Buono Nutrition lecture – #1 will be Wednesday, September 27th @ 7:30pm  Stop in and get some nutrition knowledge bombs from Verves’ very own.

Thursday 170921

0

Row 5 minutes for meters
Rest 5 minutes
Row 5 minutes for meters
Rest 5 minutes
Row 5 minutes for meters

Post meters to comments and BTWB

The face only a mother could love. . . and a face you can trust with your nutrition questions.
The face only a mother could love. . . and a face you can trust with your nutrition questions.

Be honest, on a scale of 1- you haven’t left your house in several days cause you can’t walk down the stairs. . . , how sore are you??

If the answer is you’ve been working from home since Monday’s squat session, then you NEED to come in to Verve today. Rowing will be a phenomenal way to work that lactic acid out and start breaking the cycle of soreness. Thursday is your rest day?? Maybe change it up this week and head in for some rowing and the return of no fear when you see stairs. This will also help after yesterday’s deadlift workout. Do yourself a favor and sign up for class on this exceptional Thursday. And show up to said class. 😉

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The theoretical hierarchy of the development of an athlete.
The theoretical hierarchy of the development of an athlete.

In 2002 the CrossFit Journal published and article titled “What is Fitness?”. In this article Coach Glassman introduce the Theoretical Hierarchy of the Development of an Athlete, something that was depicted with the above pyramid. What it tells us is every level builds off the level below it. Nutrition provides the fuel and raw materials necessary for all of life’s processes, effecting every level above it. You can think of this as a house and nutrition is the foundation upon which you will build it. So it is entirely within your control to build the strongest foundation possible for optimal health and performance. That’s the good news and the bad news, because taking control of what we put into our pie holes tends to be an issue for some of us. 

We are constantly being bombarded with the false idea that our weight issues are merely one of an energy imbalance, in order to seek optimal health and aesthetics we simply need to have greater calories out than calories in. And while there is some truth to this, it’s not the whole truth. Because it’s not just a matter of how much we eat but more importantly it’s about what we eat. What foods we consume has a greater impact than just simply how much of it we consume. And this folks, this is what is truly difficult for so many of us. We are so willing to do “whatever it takes” to lose weight but really we aren’t. We are willing to do what is convenient and easy, and surprisingly sweating our butts off in the gym for an hour a day is more convenient and easy than not having a glass of wine or beer at happy hour with friends or skipping the wings on football night.

Truth
Truth.

Knowledge is not power. Knowledge is only potential power. Action is power. Now is the best opportunity for you to get the knowledge needed to take action. Verve’s own Paul Buono, also of Hatch Nutrition, will be giving 3 separate nutrition talks. Topics across all 3 talks will include: Talking about general health and wellness with the focus on habits that create long-term and sustainable results. The introduction of macronutrients and weighing and measuring our food. There will be talk about caloric deficits and the pros and cons of this. And how to eat to maximize performance in the gym.

These talks will build off each other, they are not repeat events. The first talk will be Wednesday September 27th at 7:30pm-8:30pm at Verve. The following talks will be approx 3 weeks apart. These talks are free to Verve members. The cost to attend these talks for non Verve members is $10/ talk. We will have a sign up sheet at Verve for Verve members to sign up on, non members will sign up in MBO. 

This information is not just for those that participate in CrossFit or any other organized fitness program. These talks are for anyone that recognizes they may need to make a change in their nutritional habits. Changes in our nutrition can help us get off of blood pressure medication, decrease the likelihood of getting type II diabetes, ward off high cholesterol, decrease body fat and ease joint pain. There are endless benefits to improving the quality of food we consume. And there is deadline to start. 

Got any questions, let us know in the comments. 

 

Wednesday 170920

0

As many rounds as possible in 5 minutes of:
50 Double under buy in
12 Deadlifts 185#(125#)
12 Lateral burpees over the bar
Rest 3 minutes
As many rounds as possible in 5 minutes of:
50 Double under buy in
9 Deadlifts 225#(155#)
9 Lateral burpees over the bar
Rest 3 minutes
As many rounds as possible in 5 minutes of:
50 Double under buy in
6 Deadlifts 275#(185#)
6 Lateral burpees over the bar

Post results to comments or BTWB

CROSSFIT COMMUNITY – full article found here

Community is what will change us and the world around us…. 

If there’s one thing that separates CrossFit from other strength-and-conditioning programs, it’s the community. In my opinion, this factor is just as important as technique, coaching and programming. The emphasis on community is what’s changing the mental health of the members at each gym and what has the capacity to impact the greater community of people in general.

Part of the problem with the hate and fear in our society is that people are no longer people; instead, they are online personalities without faces, feelings, struggles and stories. Hate and ignorance are products of people spending too much time isolated, without communities and new experiences. I believe that if you start to put people together, in front of other actual real people, and they start to learn their stories and their horizons start to broaden, humanity starts to re-emerge. It becomes harder to retain the ego that separates oneself from other people. Community reminds us all that we are the same, we’re all on the same journey, in the same struggle, and we all deserve the same respect.

Communities form at CrossFit gyms in the most random ways. People from all walks of life end up in a class together, sweat together, suffer together and work hard on weaknesses together. Through these experiences they become friends and walls are broken down. People become friends with people they never would have expected. All of a sudden, expectations people once had of themselves and other people start to change. Maybe they start looking at people outside the gym differently, as well, as if everyone is a potential friend or community member. People actually become people again.

WE ARE THANKFUL THAT YOU CHOOSE VERVE TO BE YOUR COMMUNITY!!