Back squat
5 – 5 – 5 – 5 – 5
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Why Nutrition is So Confusing: Fact vs. Conjecture By Chris Slaughter
Back squat
5 – 5 – 5 – 5 – 5
Post loads to comments and BTWB
Why Nutrition is So Confusing: Fact vs. Conjecture By Chris Slaughter
5 Rounds for time:
10 Deadlifts (225#/155#)
50 ft Handstand Walk
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Eight rounds of the interval:
:30 Max Thrusters (75#/55#)
1:30 Recovery Burpees
Score = total thruster reps
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EYE OF THE TIGER
Many people wonder or simply do not know where they should be looking during the Clean, Snatch, Jerk, and Deadlift. First, your eyes should not be looking in the same place for all of the aforementioned movements. Below is a short article by Donny Shankle regarding where your eyes should be during the Olympic lifts:
Looking forward will help tighten up your back at the start of your pull. Of all the musts to be applied, this is the easiest one to change which will give you instant PR’s. If you have a habit of missing forward then check on where you are looking at the start. If you are looking down, you will always miss forward because the back is not straight. Draw an X on the wall across from where you are lifting to remind you to pick your head up and look forward. Looking down at the start of your pull usually comes from people walking in front of you when you lift. The movement is distracting and in order to avoid this distraction you start fixing your eyes on the floor. Practice good etiquette in the gym. Don’t walk in front of anybody when they are lifting. Even on the jerk looking straight ahead is crucial. If you have a habit of looking up at the bar when you jerk, you will always miss out in front. This comes from a lack of confidence in putting the bar over your head where you can’t see it. Your eyes want to follow what you are lifting because this helps direct the muscles’ job. Your sense of awareness needs to improve and you have to get comfortable with putting the bar overhead without actually seeing it. If you look up at the bar the head will not come through the LOB. You may even end up pressing your jerks. Keep your eyes looking forward or slightly up but never down.
Regarding the deadlift, eye positioning should be set so that you can keep a neutral spine. This point of performance can be controversial, like the Roe v. Wade of weightlifting, but let me elaborate with a morsel of information from Breaking Muscle. By looking up when you start your deadlift you expose your neck to a ton of pressure, but when the neck is kept neutral that pressure goes into your shoulders and upper back. When you are in that proper position you can effectively brace your spine and transfer force from your legs into the bar, not using the neck as part of your force transition. Keep your chin tucked when you pull and look forward at the top. Again your neck simply stays neutral. Your neck is not your core, and it just holds your head up. When you here us yell “Relax your neck” during your deadlifts, this is the reason why.
DON’T FORGET TO SIGN UP FOR THE NEXT VERVE GATHERING SATURDAY, MAY 3RD @ 3PM!! The sign-up sheet can be found at the front of the gym. We would really like to know how many people to expect ahead of time so we can pre-purchase tickets and have them ready before hand. E-mail annam@crossfitverve.com if you need anymore details
Hydrostatic BodyFat Test sign-up sheet here! Don’t be late. Bring your swimsuit and towel.
Verve Lean and Mean Nutrition Challenge Sign-Up Sheet here!
Haters gonna hate, potatoes gonna potate. By Courtney Shepherd
6 Intervals of:
2:00 of the following work:
12 Medball cleans
6 Hand stand push ups
As many reps as possible of Muscle Ups
Rest 2:00
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“I’m good enough, I’m strong enough, and gosh darn it, people like me”
I had the opportunity to attend the Crossfit Competitors Course this past weekend. First let me say, I HIGHLY recommend attending that course if you have any interest in competing, coaching, or just motivating you to achieve your goals. Second, the topic of positive self-talk and the power of thought was discussed. I am an admitted culprit of mentally abusing myself like a red-headed step-child if a workout isn’t going my way, so this topic was of great interest to me.
During the discussion, Matt Chan mentioned having a personal mantra to keep you focused when things are going haywire. Example: When you are in on your fifth round of a 400 meter run just after doing 20 over-the-bar burpees and all you want to do is walk around the last corner, a personal mantra can snap you back to reality and keep you focused on your ultimate goal. After looking online and researching this topic, crossfit979 had some great information on setting and using your very own personal mantra. Here are some details on setting your personal mantra:
What is a mantra? A mantra is a sound, word, or phrase used to aid in meditation or to snap you back into focus at any point in time.
Why create a mantra? This is a great tool for reminding us why we are diving into the suck of a workout and pushing ourselves beyond a level we think we can achieve. Mantra’s can influence our subconscious to keep us moving on. By repeating your mantra over and over, in some cultures hundreds of times a day, you program your subconscious to always have your intentions in your head and it begins to influence the actions you take throughout each day.
We encourage you to define and utilize a personal mantra for yourself. Think about the stresses in your life, the goals you have to overcome them, and the things you want to achieve and create a phrase you can use to focus your intentions. Remember that your mantra should be personal, it should be 1-5 words that are meaningful to you. Your mantra should be written in a manner that is similar to your own verbiage; if you’re not a Greek philosopher and don’t speak latin, your mantra probably should not have that in it. Your mantra should be a motivator, or a reminder of who you want to be or what you want to accomplish this year or could define your dreams, goals and passions. The key is that it has meaning, it defines you and expresses the things you are going after.
“Create your mantra, program your mind, and get ready to be the best you’ve been in your entire life! The power of a mantra is immense!”
Here are some great examples of of some mantra’s that you can feel free to claim as your own:
“I am enough”
“I have come this far, I can go all the way”
“Yesterday I did, today I do, tomorrow I will”
“No regrets”
“Keep Breathing”
“I am stronger than I was yesterday”
“I will beat Clancy”
Take a second to write your personal mantra in the comments below.
As many rounds as possible in 20 minutes:
Row 300m
8 Good mornings, 135# (95#)
8 Bent over rows, 135# (95)
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The Protein Balance
There seems to be a protein pendulum today. On the one side, you have people who focus their diets on calories, as opposed to macro-nutrients. The idea is, limit your calories, and weight loss ensues. So, the person eats whatever they want, so long as a certain ceiling of calories isn’t reached. Often, this strategy is carb-rich. To be fair, I get it. I don’t want to be overweight, either. People are to be commended for at least trying something to improve themselves. But a low protein/high carb diet will force the body into a high-insulin, low-glucagon state. Bottom line, this is state of body that lends itself to obesity, and diabetes, among other things, regardless of caloric intake.
On the other side, you have individuals who are so pro-protein, you’d figure that there is no other food on this planet. They have found the latest, greatest protein supplements. They drink egg-whites out of the carton (Gross. Though I have done this.). Protein is king because they want to gain muscle. It’s all about muscle. And hey, I get it. I want to be huge too. I then want to buy shirts that are one size too small, and contort myself into flexy poses throughout the day to show off my hugeness. But eating too much protein with few carbs does us no good at all. Excess protein in converted into fat. So… you go off on protein to get your hugeness on, but your body says to you, “Sweet mother this is a lot of protein. Whatsoever shall I do with this?” It responds to itself in kind, “Ah. I shall store it as fat. For later. Cuz who knows, right?”
Obviously, these extremes don’t cut it. Number one, they are not practical, number two, they often don’t work. So something must be missing here. If limiting protein in the name of calories doesn’t make me lose weight, and eating protein in excess doesn’t make me gain muscle the way I want, then what’s the answer?
You probably could guess, it’s somewhere in the middle.
We prescribe the Zone Diet. The Zone prescribes a protein intake as being 30% of your daily munchiness. It also prescribes not eating protein by itself. Protein, carbs, and fat, all eaten in ratio’d quantities, which leads to hormonal balance, which leads to the body being able to accept and process the food you eat the way you want it to be accepted and processed. Which means the protein you eat will actually go to muscle building and restoration. BOOM! Moderation leads to a better existence.
Please join us Wednesday evening 7pm for a Free Nutrition Workshop by Matt Chan. We’ll be discussing Zone and fine-tuning your diet to improve your performance. RSVP on MBO. This event is free and open to the entire community.
People ask us all the time, “What do I eat? How should I eat?” It always comes back to how you are fueling your body. If your performance stinks or plateaus, think about what’s going into your mouth. If you aren’t happy with your body composition, think about what’s going into your mouth. You know that saying about “Not being able to out-train or out-exercise a bad diet.” Well, it’s true.
World Class Fitness in 100 Words:
“Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat. Practice and train major lifts: Deadlift, clean, squat, presses, C&J, and snatch. Similarly, master the basics of gymnastics: pull-ups, dips, rope climb, push-ups, sit-ups, presses to handstand, pirouettes, flips, splits, and holds. Bike, run, swim, row, etc, hard and fast. Five or six days per week mix these elements in as many combinations and patterns as creativity will allow. Routine is the enemy. Keep workouts short and intense. Regularly learn and play new sports.”
~Greg Glassman
Also, please join us for monthly Happy Hour this Friday at 5pm at Jake’s patio up the street at 38th and Walnut. We’ll be celebrating the awesome weather this week and getting the weekend started off right!
7am WOD only at Verve.
In teams of 2 complete the following for total reps, 1 working at a time: