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Tuesday 160614

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20 Minutes to work to a heavy complex of:
1 Hang power clean + 1 power clean

then every minute on the minute for 7 minutes
3 Hang power cleans @ 65% of today’s heaviest complex

Post weight to BTWB

Josh taking care of some accessory work!
Josh taking care of some accessory work!

Reminder that this coming weekend we are hosting the CrossFit Football Seminar on Saturday and Sunday.  We have reserved the track at Manual High School from 9:00 am – 11:00 am for both days.  We won’t be bringing much equipment so plan on taking advantage of the track and field for some good old fashion sprinting and running.  Make sure you bring sunscreen as they are forecasting temperatures in the upper 90’s with plenty of sun.  I take about 10 – 15 minutes before I start to get burned so if you have some fair skin like me, best be prepared.

This past weekend was the CrossFit Cherry Creek Triple Threat competition.  The two day competition featured 6 teams from Verve having some fun in extreme heat.  One of our teams had to withdraw at the last minute due to injury.  We had a few members that competed in a CrossFit competition for the first time and the feedback was all very positive.  Anyone that tells you they don’t get nervous is lying to you, but once the clock starts it’s like any other workout.  The weights feel lighter once the clock starts and all the butterflies disappear.  For anyone that hasn’t competed in a local competition, I highly recommend getting involved in one of the local team competitions that seem to be happening each weekend in and around Denver.  

We post flyers for local competitions around the gym but there are also resources online and on Facebook.  If you have a competition you’d like to participate in make sure you post to the comments on the blog or on Verve’s Facebook page so others are aware.  

Verve is hosting the Femme Royale competition in August.  The competition is for women only and they have different divisions available (Fun, 50/50, and Rx) to make the competition as inclusive as possible.  Stay tuned to Verve’s social pages and the blog for more information about the Femme Royale and consider competing with a friend.  This one is at Verve so you’ll be familiar with the equipment and surroundings so it would be a great chance to try a competition if you so choose.

This week’s Everyday Warrior Team Battle Series workout will be our class WOD on Friday due to the gym being closed for the seminar this weekend.  This week’s workout is an 11 minute AMRAP so you don’t have to worry about a 30 minute treat this week.  

Monday 160613

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For time:
20 Handstand push-ups
30 Supine ring rows
40 Kettlebell swings 35#(26#)
50 Ab mat sit-ups
60 Burpees to a 6″ target
50 Ab mat sit-ups
40 Kettlebell swing 35#(26#)
30 Supine ring rows
20 Handstand push-ups

Post time to BTWB

Joel, Adam, and Mick doing some heavy sand bag clean and jerks.
Joel, Adam, and Mick doing some heavy sand bag clean and jerks.

Congrats to everyone that participated in the CrossFit Cherry Creek Triple Threat competition this weekend.  Really amazing to see all the Verve athletes throwing down.  Thanks to everyone that came out to show some support.  Love seeing Verve always bringing the support.  

Next weekend we are hosting the CrossFit Football Seminar so Verve will be hosting our workouts at an outdoor track.  Safe to say there might be some running in the workouts.  These will be the only workouts for the day.  There will NOT be any classes at the gym.  

A lot of people have asked when we were getting in some new Verve gear.  Well the time is near.  In the next coming week you’ll begin to see blogs and social media posts about our new shirts.

We are going to be doing a pre-sale for the new shirts.  If you would like to buy a shirt you will have to pre-order it through Square system.  We will only be ordering the shirts that are pre-ordered.  If you like the shirts and would like to get your hands on one, stay tuned for information about the pre-sale.  

We are working with a new printer and doing the pre-sales will allow us to refresh our gear more often. Again this will require everybody interested in buying shirts to pre-order rather than just grabbing them in the retail room.  We’ll make sure to keep reminding you about the pre-order so you don’t miss out.  

Stay tuned this week to find out about more about the new shirts and when they go on pre-sale.  

Saturday 160611

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Everyday Warrior Battle Series Workout #2
As many reps and rounds as possible in 30 minutes of: (Partners Switch Every 25 Calories)
300(250) Calorie Row (partners much switch every 25 calories)
Then,
3 Rounds:
30 Overhead Squat, 95#(65#)
30 Toes to Bar
30 Box Jumps Overs 20”

Post rounds and reps to comments and BTWB

Two of Verve's favorite guys. . .  being smothered by Paul and Clancy.
Two of Verve’s favorite guys. . . being smothered by Paul and Clancy.

 

This weekend is the Cherry Creek Triple Threat. The Open division competes today, the RX division competes Sunday. Between the 2 divisions Verve has 7 teams signed up. Stop by the event and cheer them on!!

For more info about the event, click here.

June 18th & 19th– It’s Father’s Day weekend and. . . . Verve is hosting the CrossFit Football Seminar. What better gift for the dads in our lives then a weekend seminar where participants learn to be a more powerful, explosive athlete. They will be taught the fundamentals of sport-specific training, including sprinting, basic movements, warm-ups and cool downs, change-of-direction and agility drills, jumping and weightlifting. Click here for more information and to get registered.

July 30th- It’s Paleo Pop-up time!! Come hang out and chat with vendors from all over Colorado, introducing various paleo products, and discussing all things health and nutrition. Click here for more info.

August 13th- Verve is hosting the ladies only team competition Femme Royale. This is a one day event that brings ladies from all over the state to compete, cheer, and inspire each other. There are 3 divisions ensuring anyone and everyone is able to participate. Click here to register.

 

Thursday 160609

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5 Rounds for time:
200m run
20 Deadlift, 135#(95#)
10 Chest to bar pull-ups

Post times to comments and BTWB

CrossFit Teens summer camp is in full effect. They started their first class getting lessons in all things agility with Lillie.
Verve’s teens summer camp is in full effect. They started their first class getting lessons in all things agility with Lillie.

 

Mechanics, Consistency, Intensity, Oh my! As imagined by Courtney Shepherd and with the technical sounding language from Kelly Starrett

Hopefully everyone, at some point in their time at Verve, has heard about the idea of mechanics first, followed by consistency, and lastly adding in intensity. Good old MCI. But why pray tell is Mechanics first? It may be obvious to some but for those who find themselves scratching their heads and putting a good hard think on it, I would like to turn to Dr. Kelly Starrett and his book Becoming a Supple Leopard, to help answer that question.

Without actually using the words/ phrase Mechanics, Consistency, Intensity, Kelly addresses the importance of body positioning in the first few pages of his book. He starts first by saying that our bodies will take a ton of abuse for a really long time before it finally gives up the fight.

“Our bodies will put up with our silly movement and lifestyle choices because they have a freakish amount of functional tolerance built in. We shouldn’t however, make the classic error of confusing this miraculous genetic inheritance with a tacit rationalization for eating, sleeping, or moving however we please.”

We can move incorrectly, put our bodies through a ton of stress, and continue to get fit but to a point. That point is pain and injury. Kelly classifies pain and injury into four categories: 1) Pathology, 2) Catastrophic injury, 3) Overtension, and 4) Open-circuit faults. Categories #3 and #4 combined account for 98% of all pain/ injury we see in athletes. I would like to specifically address #4, Open-circuit faults, which is just a fancy way of saying “moving in bad position”. Examples of Open-circuit faults includes: rounded back, shoulders rolled forward, hyperextension of the lower back, feet turned out, head tilted up or down, and elbows flared out. Sound familiar? Possibly like positions we attempt to address and correct during our warm-ups and WODs?

“The problem is that the body will always be able to generate force, even in poor positions. This is not unlike being able to temporarily get away with driving your car with no oil in the engine or with a flat tire. Sure, you can do it, it just gets expensive.

Herein lies the problem: We have confused functionality with physiology. Positions that have served us functionally, like jumping and landing with feet like a duck’s, quickly become a liability when speed, load, or fatigue is introduced. Sure, you can lift heavy loads with a rounded back for a long, long time, but at some point your tissues will fail, resulting in some kind of injury.”

There is no magical way to fix this. This post will not provide a one sentence cure to bad positioning and henceforthly bring all future injuries to a halt. The key is to working on and mastering our technique/ mechanics, our good body position, without the load, speed, and fatigue. We must first start in good position, we can not have good movement out of bad set up. After addressing our set up then we can slowly add in the load and speed, all while still maintaining an awareness of our mechanics. When the mechanics breaks down, we need to take a step back. This step back does not equal failure, being weak, or losing out on the intensity of the WOD. This step back is designed to generate several future steps forward. As we strengthen our good set ups, we generate more force and power, and we can do more work. All good athletes hit a plateau, the really good athletes know they need to address their technique to continue to climb.

Practice doesn’t make perfect. Practice makes permanent. Perfect practice makes perfect permanent. Focus on the mechanics. Work to make those mechanics consistent. When the good mechanics are consistent, then let’s add in some intensity. MCI Baby, YEAH!!

*Quoted portions of this post were taken directly from Becoming a Supple Leopard by Dr. Kelly Starrett.

Wednesday 160608

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With a 3 minute running clock x 4 rounds:
20 Wallball shots, 20#(14#) to 10′
20 Ab-mat sit-ups
AMRAP Double unders
Rest 2 minutes

Post Scores to BTWB.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2yz_RH4Ka0

Hopefully you have all gotten the chance to meet resident 9am-er, Alex Wolfson. If not, here are some of his sweet new ninja tricks that we were practicing yesterday, let’s make sure his main sponsor Reebok doesn’t get a hold of this video. 

Now, for important things. I want to spend the rest of this blog post talking about nutrition, again. Last week I touched upon a couple reasons why dialing in our nutrition may fail us. One of them is our priorities. Some have trouble managing social situations with their nutrition goals. Precision Nutrition lays out three different strategies to get your friends and family to support your healthy lifestyle. Here are some ways to have your cake and eat it to:

1. Accept that you may not be “right”.

Step back and embrace some hard truth.

How much of the friction you feel from others… is actually created by you?

Even if you mean well, and even if you are absolutely, 100% correct (yes, smoking is bad; yes, vegetables are good)…

How often have you been judgemental? Insistent? Preachy? Self-righteous? Dismissive? Over-enthusiastic? Maybe even a bit…culty? (That t-shirt that says “Kale University”? We see it.)

Conversely, how often have you been curious? Interested in others’ perspectives? Able to deal with diversity and tolerate various viewpoints? Open-minded? Empathetic and compassionate? A good listener?

Consider this: Maybe “right” isn’t so obvious.

All behaviors and choices have a reason to be there. You might not know the reasons; you might not quite understand the reasons or even agree with the reasons.

But whatever habits your loved ones are practicing, they are doing them for a reason. In some way, their habits are “right” for them. They may have only a limited toolbox of options or coping skills.

This means:

  • understanding that your brother feels panicked and crushed under work stress, and sees drinking as the best way to cope.
  • having compassion for your best friend, who is terrified to confront her body, and therefore gets defensive and critical every time you bring up your new health regimen.
  • understanding that your parents were raised to respect traditional authority figures, so they still believe margarine is better for you than butter, because that’s what their doctor drilled into them 30 years ago.

When we focus on defending our “right-ness” and proving our loved ones’ “wrongness”, our perspective becomes very narrow and our relationships become oppositional.

However, when we let go of judgement and choose compassion and empathy, we make room for understanding.

Understanding dissolves conflict, because it usually shows us that, at our cores, we are all dealing with the same themes — we’re more alike than different.

Understanding helps us collaborate instead of clash; connect instead of criticize. We start to ask questions that, instead of inducing blame and shame, invite connection and support:

Why are they so different from me?
becomes
When have I dealt with something similar?

How do I get them to stop the bad habit?
becomes
What problem is the bad habit trying to solve?

What is wrong with them?
becomes
What might they really need?

As your loved ones begin to feel more understood, and less judged, they may begin to practice more flexibility and less judgement toward your new habits and beliefs too.

(And by the way, it’ll serve you immensely to practice non-judgement, compassion, and understanding on yourself too.)

2. Be persistent, not pushy.

Resistance more often comes from fear than from true philosophical opposition.

Change can feel scary. It can bring up issues of control, security, and identity, and it can also bring up painful emotions like anxiety, panic, shame, or loss.

When our loved ones resist change (in all the creative ways they can come up with — consciously and unconsciously, kindly and unkindly), what they might actually be feeling underneath it all… is fear.

Their fear can be the result of thoughts like:

  • What if you become a different person?
  • What if this new food tastes gross?
  • What if your healthy habits make me confront my unhealthy habits?
  • What if people don’t accept us?
  • What if you judge me or don’t love me anymore?
  • What if I can’t keep up with you?
  • What if life gets uncomfortable?
  • What if I lose you?

Just like a scared child, resistance and fear in their adult forms don’t respond well to rational arguments and pushing.

So while you must press forward with the changes you’re trying to make for your own well-being, you’ll more likely get support if you practice persistence rather than pushiness.

Pushiness means attempting to force friends and family to join/agree with you, and accepting only a rigid set of compliant responses.

Persistence means continuously offering opportunities for your friends and family to join you on your quest for a healthier life, and yet remains open to a wide range of responses to any given invitation.

So be persistent:

  • Keep offering healthy dishes at the dinner table.
  • Keep inviting your friends and family to join you on runs, hikes, and exercise classes.
  • Keep having conversations about nutrition, healthy body image, and what it means to have a truly good, capable life.

Prioritize positivity and connection when you present these options, and expect resistance, sometimes over and over and over again.

As much as you can, take the drama and emotional charge out of these conversations. Validate your loved ones’ reasons for staying the way they are, and don’t push back.

Perhaps, when their fear subsides and they realize it’s safe to dip their toe in the land of green smoothies and box jumps, your loved ones will join you, and you’ll ride off into the sunset (on your recumbent bikes, drinking coconut water) together.

3. Just “do you”.

Change is difficult.

In order to overcome the many bumps, blocks, and blusters inherent to significant lifestyle change, we need to be anchored to a deep, internal, personalized “why” that will pull us through.

You can’t manufacture this type of motivation for someone else. No matter how hard you try to coerce your kids, spouse, parents, and friends to change, they may have none of it.

And in fact, that may be a good sign. Because that means they know that in order to make the kinds of changes you’re making, they have to want it too.

We call this “intrinsic motivation” — a connection to one’s own, internal reasons for doing something. Research shows that intrinsic motivation leads to change that’s longer-lasting and more self-sustaining than extrinsic motivation, which is based on the desire to obtain external outcomes such as good grades or the approval of others (ahem).

Intrinsic motivation requires deep thought and reflection, and may take longer to develop.

So respect that your loved ones may take time to connect to their own reasons for eating and moving better.

Meanwhile, just “do you”.

Focus on your own intrinsic motivations. Stay connected to what’s driving you, deep inside, to make these personal changes.

Without ignoring your natural love and concern for loved ones, let your attention turn inward. Spend more energy on your own growth and development.

Which could lead to something else amazing…

Think about how you feel when you watch someone you love work toward a BIG goal with heartfelt determination, grit, and bravery.

Think about how you feel when you watch that person persist despite setbacks, failures, and fears.

Think about how you feel when you watch that person triumph, however messily and imperfectly, over adversity.

You feel inspired.

You feel like anything is possible.

You feel like maybe you could do something great too.

And that is the beautiful irony in “doing you”:

By working toward and achieving a healthier, happier, more confident and capable version of yourself, you become the inspiration, the positive influence to your family and friends.

And it all comes full circle when that little healthy-lifestyle wave you started attracts other riders, builds, and then become a huge tidal of momentum to carry you to your final objective — a fit, healthy you — and keep you there.

Influence happens in both directions, remember?

Lead the way.

Saturday 160604

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Everyday Warrior Battle Series Workout #1
In teams of 2, as many reps as possible in 15 minutes of:
100 Double Unders
30 Snatches 75#(45#)
80 Double Unders
25 Snatches 135#(75#)
60 Double Unders
20 Snatches 165#(95#)
40 Double Unders
15 Snatches 185#(115#)
20 Double Unders
AMRAP Snatches @ 205#(135#)

Post reps to comments and BTWB

Nick holding strong in his ring support during "Tabata This".
Nick holding strong in his ring support during “Tabata This”.

 

What is going down this summer at Verve? Sooooooo MANY things.

The Everyday Warrior Battle Series began May 30th. This is an online team (2 men or 2 women) competition. One workout will be posted every week for 4 weeks. Verve will be programming these workouts on:
Saturday June 4th
Saturday June 11th
Friday June 17th
Saturday June 25th

Click here to get registered.

June 11th & 12th- Cherry Creek CrossFit is hosting the Cherry Creek Triple Threat. Verve has 7 teams signed up for the competition. Come check out the action and get your cheer on! For more info about the event, click here.

June 18th & 19th– It’s Father’s Day weekend and. . . . Verve is hosting the CrossFit Football Seminar. What better gift for the dads in our lives then a weekend seminar where participants learn to be a more powerful, explosive athlete. They will be taught the fundamentals of sport-specific training, including sprinting, basic movements, warm-ups and cool downs, change-of-direction and agility drills, jumping and weightlifting. Click here for more information and to get registered.

July 30th- It’s Paleo Pop-up time!! Come hang out and chat with vendors from all over Colorado, introducing various paleo products, and discussing all things health and nutrition. Click here for more info.

August 13th- Verve is hosting the ladies only team competition Femme Royale. This is a one day event that brings ladies from all over the state to compete, cheer, and inspire each other. There are 3 divisions ensuring anyone and everyone is able to participate. Click here to register.

 

Friday 160603

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Take 15 minutes to work to a heavy single back squat

Then, 4 rounds for time:
400m Run
10 back squat @ 70% of today’s heavy single

Post load to comments or BTWB

Team Real Deal Holyfield completed Everyday Warrior Workout #1, did you??
Team Real Deal Holyfield completed Everyday Warrior Workout #1, did you??

NO MATTER HOW MUCH MOBILITY I DO, MY SQUAT ISN’T RIGHT!! – Anna Mattson

You do your due diligence, spend a good amount of time mobilizing everyday AND have a standing desk but your toes still flare out when you squat or your chest still dives forward….. WHAT’S GOING ON??  This is a very frustrating situation.  One thing you need to consider above and beyond your mobility is your anatomy.  Perhaps your hip socket is shaped so you HAVE to bow out your toes to get full depth, but how do you know?  This article from The Movement Fix shows us the different hip sockets and how to test to see if you fall into that category.  You can see the full article here

The Best Kept Secret: Why People HAVE to Squat Differently

There is absolutely no one size fits all squat position. If you don’t believe me, you are in for a treat. This article will help show you why athlete comfort should dictate squat width, why some people’s (not EVERYONE) feet point out (no matter how much “mobility” work they do), why some people have a really hard time squatting deep, and why some people are amazing at pistols while others can’t do them at all.

Basic Anatomy
The hip joint is basically made up of a “socket” on the pelvis (called the acetabulum) and a “ball” at the top of your thigh bone (femur), which we call the femoral head. Around the hip joint are a lot of muscles, a joint capsule, and connective tissue. There are many other anatomical considerations when considering a squat, but let’s focus on the hip.

Anatomical Variations
When someone has difficulty squatting, or their feet turn out, or they like a wide stance, we all want to jump on the bandwagon and say “your hips are tight, you need to mobilize them”. If we say that without considering anatomical variations of the hip joint, we can be misled.

Let’s take a look at this first picture. Here we have two femurs from two different people. One points more upwards, the other points more downwards. Do you think these people will squat the same when they have that much bony difference?

hip #1

Again we see the difference in how much of the hip socket we can see. There is no way these two people will squat the same. The bony anatomy literally won’t let them.

Hip #2

How will you know if you have “special” hip anatomy without an x-ray or becoming a test cadavor?

Conclusion

Athlete’s won’t squat the same, and they SHOULDN’T! I hope I shed some light on the WHY. Athlete comfort will dictate the stance that puts their hip in a better bony position. There are narrow squatters and there are wide squatters. That may have nothing to do with tight muscles or “tight” joint capsules and have more to do with bony hip anatomy.

Very few people are at the end range of their hip motion, so hip mobility drills are definitely a good idea.

VERVE UPDATES:
-Tomorrow we are doing Everyday Warrior Workout #1 in class.  If you haven’t had a chance to sign up already, grab you same-sex buddy and go to this link

Thursday 160602

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4 Rounds for time:
10 Power clean, 155#(105#)
3 Rope climbs

Post times to comments and BTWB

#tbt to when Verve trainers spent a Saturday getting CPR certified. Be scared, be very scared.
#tbt to when Verve trainers spent a Saturday getting CPR certified. Not sure if Verve members should feel comforted or possibly scared.

 

Your third installment of intensity, this time courtesy of Miranda Oldroyd. . . and a few opinionated comments from me.

Over the last two weeks the word intensity has come up quite a bit in my weekly blogs. Two weeks ago I addressed the method behind the madness that is Verve’s programming. Our goal is for every athlete that walks through Verve’s doors to give 100% intensity from the warm-up, to the workout, through the cool down/ post WOD. Last week, with the help of an awesome article by James Hobart, this blog addressed the concept of volume in training. Who needs it, who doesn’t, is it better to work out for two hours at 60% intensity when working out for one hour giving 90% intensity would have yielded better results. Now I want to bring up another buzz word that I think goes hand in hand with intensity. . . consistency.

How about doing both consistently?
How about doing both consistently?

 

Have you seen this meme going around? I saw it posted several times from Facebook to Instagram. I get its message and I find a lot of truth in it. However, I don’t think either of those things are as difficult as doing them consistently. We can workout and we can eat healthy. . . . but if we do it for a couple of weeks and then we go on vacation, and then when we get back and it’s Memorial Day weekend and all the BBQs, and then. . . . . all the “and thens” continue to put very large gaps in our consistency. And it’s the consistency in both intensity and monitoring what we eat that really gets us our results.

Several months ago a verve athlete came up to me after a class and asked if they could have a few minutes of my time. In a few minutes time this athlete wanted me to give them “a couple of quick exercises” they could do to give them six pack abs. Their goal was to look like Brad Pitt in the Fight Club. Seriously, I get it. Who doesn’t want a six pack like that, but it’s beyond important for everyone to know there are no quick exercises any one can do and suddenly develop a six pack. Paul’s blog yesterday hopefully started to shed some light on the fact that there is no quick way to achieve these aesthetic looks. It takes time, it takes some sacrifices, and it takes a great deal of precision in your diet. Oh, and it takes intensity. (I feel like you saw that coming)

I want to tag onto Paul’s post with an article posted by Miranda Oldroyd several weeks ago, “I Only Look Like This Because of Good Genetics. . . “. This is an amazing post that highlights several misconceptions about Games athletes/ highly competitive athletes, how they train and why they look the way they do. This information is coming from a women who is a Games/ highly competitive athlete and happens to be so many people’s #WCW when they describe how they want CrossFit to make them look. I would highly encourage everyone to give it a read (click here), because I am going to skip to her 5th and final misconception. Miranda is going to drop a truth bomb that will absolutely blow more than a few people’s minds:

Misconception #5 – You have to train like a Games athlete to be “fit” and to look good. More is better.

Truth: There are 3 things you need to see amazing results from training (CrossFit or otherwise), and it’s not steroids, or more volume, or amazing genetics. Here it is…

  1. You need intensity. You need to GO HARD in your workouts. And you need to stop thinking that 45 min EMOMs and Chippers are the key to the goods. You need to take off the weight vest, and stop adding weight until you start seeing times that would rival Regional level athletes. Until then – go faster.
  2. You need to eat better. I didn’t say less. For many of you (women especially) it might even be more. One thing you can bet is that Games athletes eat to perform. You should do the same thing. You need to weigh and measure your food and have some sort of tracking system that works for you. Use that information to tell you whether or not you are on the right track, then keep making tweaks until you get it right.
  3. This one is the most important…and you’re not going to like it…. YOU NEED TO BE CONSISTENT WITH 1 AND 2 FOR A LONG ASS TIME if you ever want results that actually stick. I am no scientist, but it is my belief that you can change how your body responds to training and nutrition if you keep reprogramming it over and over again for years.

Is training difficult? Yes. Is eating right difficult? Yes. But the hardest part is doing them consistently. Create your goals. Rally a friend to make you accountable, set yourself up for success. Come to the gym and don’t worry about how many workouts you need to do, worry about crushing just one, and I mean crush it real good. Go home and have a complete, balanced meal, AND THEN. . . rinse and repeat, a lot. 

Wednesday 160601

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Bench Press 2-2-2-2-2-2-2 reps

Post Results to BTWB.

CostofGettingLean

As  fitness professionals, our job is to help clients reach their goals. However, there is a lot that comes into play with this – mainly in the sense of goal setting. When asking someone their goals, I always like to ask “Is the juice worth the squeeze?”

I think Precision Nutrition published a fantastic article a couple months back named “The cost of getting lean. Is it really worth the trade-off?” (which you can find here). In this article it describes what it will take to reach certain aesthetic and body fat goals. I think it is super helpful to have a chart written out to explain to someone what work it will take to reach specific goals. It’s unrealistic to ask someone that is trying to just live a healthier and more balanced lifestyle to eat the exact same as someone that is trying to go on stage for a bodybuilding competition. So, below I am going to add a couple things from that article. 

So, what goal should we strive for? Healthy, athletically lean, super lean? It all depends on your OWN priorities and goals. Here is a nice little guide to helping you figure out the next steps:

1. Figure out your priorities. 
2. Decide what work you are willing to put into your nutrition.
3. Decide how consistent and precise are you willing to be with your nutrition.
4. Decide what you are not willing to do, or what you are not willing to give up.

Not being willing to change certain things does not make you a bad person, it makes you human. However, if your goal is to be the most ripped person on the beach, then you are definitely going to have to give up some of life’s pleasures. On the same note, if your goal is to be performing at a high level in the gym, then there will have to be some sacrifices outside the gym in order to make sure you are recovering from your workload properly. 

Posted above is one of my favorite charts, it shows the benefits and tradeoffs for both men and women at different body fat percentages from below 6% to above 30%. Have a look and hopefully this will help you with your own goals. 

Saturday 160528

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3 Rounds for time:
30 Medicine ball clean, 20#(14#)
15 Toes to bar
800 Meter run

Post time to comments and BTWB

Eric, Garret, Jorge, and Nick just hanging out on the rings during "Tabata This".
Eric, Garret, Jorge, and Nick just hanging out on the rings during “Tabata This”.

 

**Memorial Day is this coming Monday and Verve has the workout “Murph” planned during our abbreviated schedule. Doing “Murph” on Memorial Day is a way for us to pay our respects and say thank you to the men and women who gave their lives while in the service of their country. “Murph” can be done with a weight vest, if you have one at home we would encourage you to bring it as Verve has a limited supply. Again, please look at MBO to see our shortened class schedule and get signed up for the class you want to attend. 

**The Everyday Warrior Battle Series begins May 30th. This is an online team (2 men or 2 women) competition. One workout will be posted every week for 4 weeks. Verve will be programming these workouts on:

Saturday June 4th
Saturday June 11th
Friday June 17th
Saturday June 25th

Click here to get registered. 

**Now that Mother’s Day is over, some of you may be thinking about what to get dad for Father’s Day. Get them registered fro the CrossFit Football Seminar being held at Verve during Father’s Day weekend. Learn to be a more powerful, explosive athlete. They will be taught the fundamentals of sport-specific training, including sprinting, basic movements, warm-ups and cool downs, change-of-direction and agility drills, jumping and weightlifting. Click here for more information and to get registered.