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Wednesday 110608

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Five rounds for time:

10 Power snatches, 115#/75#
20 Double unders

Post time to comments. 

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Lara doing a little deload bench work… next wave starts after regionals.

Recently, I read a write-up about one of Mikko Salo's workouts during his championship push at the CrossFit Games in Aromas, CA.  The entry was written by Chuck Carswell, CrossFit HQ Trainer and resident badass.  In it Chuck refers to trip that many CrossFitters take where they leave the pain and suffering behind and focus on the task at hand. 

Reading this sent shivers up my spine, as this feeling is one that only those who have gone on this trip can describe or relate to.  It takes a while to get to this place, as it requires consistantly accurate mechanics and technique, as well as a grasp on the concept of pacing.  This is the journey of intensity. 

From time to time when a WOD is posted, fear overcomes you.  Not because it looks incredibly difficult ("Badger") or involved a movement or a load that is difficult for you.  Rather, the WOD is right up your alley – you can kill this one.  You're comfortable with the movements, the load, and the reps… it's begging you to throw everything you've got at it.  You await the words "3-2-1 GO!" and begin your journey.  At first it takes a second to get settled into the moment, but once you're there it's on. 

Chuck described this trip as "the one to the dark, cold but liberating place where ANYTHING other than the task at hand just doesn't matter."  Celebrate this moment and cherish it – you've made it!

Tuesday 110607

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Three rounds for time of:

400m Run 
21 Kettlebell swings, 24kg (16kg)
12 Handstand pushups

Post time to comments.

 
Inspirational video about injury.

Injuries are part of being human.  Some are preventable, some are not.  They are less then fun, I'd even call them un-fun and sometimes even scary.   After watching the above video some may say, well if Zach had never tried to lift that much weight he'd never had gotten hurt in the first place. He also would not have won a U.S. National Championship.  That's an easy enough rational for Zach, but what about us?  We aren't on track to win any Championships, we just want to be as fit and healthy as we can be.

I'm here to tell you that you are going to have injury set backs regardless of your elite fitness level.  ALL people do.  What is different is what shape the body is in before the set back, how well people listen to their body to nip things before they get worse, how quickly they heal and what they do in the process.  Fitness (specifically, I mean increased work capacity across broad time and modal domains) is your hedge against decrepitude.  Decrepitude is the logical path of an organism, humans included.

If you want to age gracefully, you have to run fast, push and pull your body weight around and lift heavy shit.  That's just the way it goes.  You know the saying, if you don't use it you lose it, period! 

So what do you do if you have a tweak, injury, are pregnant or have in-flexibilities?  First talk to your coaches, they will scale you so that you can still workout without injuring yourself further.  Shoot an e-mail to Joylyn and Cherie at info@crossfitverve.com explaining the injury.   If you really want to take the bull by its horns your going to need to set up a personal training to go over a rehab plan.  You'd be surprised about how an hour of talking about you and how to get you better can help propel your healing.  The bottom line is… TAKE AN ACTIVE ROLE in your healing process.  

We all have choices and though it lives in the un-fun category, re-habing yourself takes a TON of patience, time, pain and dedication.  No one is going to do it for you and you won't get better without addressing the problem.

Let's revisit the above video.  On 2/25/2010, Zach snapped both of his wrists on a 352# clean, told by his surgeon he would NEVER lift over 100# overhead again. His wrists just wouldn't be able to do it.  Two weeks later he was back in the gym.  Not using his wrists, but squatting, keeping the rest of his body strong. Six months later rehab on his wrists started.  All the while he had been continuing to "workout", absent the use of his hands.  Eight months later he defied the Doctors predictions and reached 110# overhead.  One year later he was cleaning the same weight he snapped his wrists with.  One year and one month later he qualified for the U.S. Nationals.  That year becoming the U.S. National Champ.  Finally after a series of personal records he put 423# overhead almost 2 years after the injury.  Now I ask you is Zach special?  Did he have any magic healing pills?  He had one thing for sure, he had a hedge built up.  But, he possessed something that we all can tap into; the will to work hard, smartly and painfully to an end that is far better then the place we may find ourselves in now.

No matter what life may throw our way.  It's always a choice to build the hedge back up.  Take responsibility for your outcome and keep heading back in after a defeat or injury, keep pushing and who knows you might just heal faster and stronger then you were before.  

Monday 110606

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Push Press 

3 – 3 – 3 – 3 – 3

Post loads to comments.

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 Happy Verve couple the Schultz's! 

We love reading other blogs, as it fuels ideas and helps us reflect on the training we are providing.  Here is a snippet found on CrossFit Invictus.  Thanks guys for a great post.

Fundamentals – Steps Back, Leaps Forward
Written by Mike Hom

Often times, we become overly involved in forward progress without regard to periodic re-evaluation. This happens with both experienced and inexperienced athletes. As an example, you may be decent enough at the air squat, which then allows you to be decent enough at the front and overhead squats, which results in you being decent enough at the clean or snatch. What invariably follows is decent enough progress until you hit a very tangible ceiling – the plateau, so to speak. The basic thought process is to examine how to create quick forward progress (to maintain momentum, of course) which, for most people, is the ability to move more weight. And, often times, the easiest conclusion to come to is to suck it up and try to increase the weight with your “decent enough” form.

Unfortunately, this is not the best approach to make progress.

Virtuosity is a subject we coaches like to hit on, repeatedly, from every angle. It gives us a base motivation to be better at something. That constant improvement is what keeps us coming back. Let’s go back to the example above: Everything about our overall performance is “decent enough.” It’s alright. It ain’t anything to write home about.

We DO NOT want good enough.

We want to be the best at what we do. We aspire not for a 10 on a scale of 1-10. We want to aim for 11. The question is, how do we get to 11 when we’re at a 3, 5 or 7? How can we make those leaps of progress? Sometimes we have to do what is hardest.

We have to take steps back.

Aside from being a coach, I try to maintain some modicum of athleticism. I have to be very honest with myself about where I stand with regards to my performance overall and with each discrete movement and exercise. I am good at some. I am OK at others. I am terrible at many. I can elect to only chase my strengths. That’s great for my ego. But to become more well-rounded – to become fitter by any standard – I have to buck up and work on the stuff I am simply not good at. It also means that I have to work on all of the constituent exercises that may lead to more complex movements – regardless of whether I am good at them or not.

Going back to the original example in the first paragraph, if I am only decent enough at the clean, I will work on not just my front squat, but my air squat! Why? Because it is principally the fundamental exercise. If I cannot improve my ability to brace as hard as possible, squeeze my glutes, suck my ribs down and keep my spine and hip wedded for integrated movement without load, it would be a good guess (not necessarily a law, though) that having a load across my collarbone and shoulders will not assist in the matter.

If chasing excellence leads to success, then chasing virtuosity leads to progress. Some could say they are the same, but I say they are similar with differences. Excellence is a state of superiority in some given quality – to go above and beyond. Virtuosity is having great skill in the practice of something – anything. You want to chase virtuosity in your movement to continually nurture the seed of progress. You want to use that progress to help you chase excellence in order to go above and beyond what you think you can do, and consequently, experience success.

Be excellent. Be virtuous.

Sunday 110605

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Ten rounds for time of:

15 Deadlifts, 135#/95#
15 Push-ups

Post time to comments.

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Pat is disappointed when you don't show up for a class you signed up for.

"Well, I'm not that coordinated yet."

I said those words when doing the rope climbs last week, and Cherie suggested to try them with my opposite leg.  I laughed and tried and failed and laughed, and said those words.  But I've been thinking about them all week.  That one little word sums up alot about what I love about CrossFit, what got me hooked in the first place, and what keeps me coming back.  

When I started CrossFit, I had a whole list of things I couldn't do:  I couldn't do a pullup, pushups were often from my knees, I hated running, I couldn't do ring dips, the list goes on…

But CrossFit doesn't care what you can't do, it's more concerned about what you CAN do.  Being scalable for everyone focuses on starting with what you CAN do, and then taking you on a journey to accomplish even more, YET.  Every day at Verve is another opportunity to try something new, to push yourself a little bit further, to pick up a little more weight, to get one more rep, to be just a little bit faster, and every day is a chance to make yourself just a little bit better.  

Granted, somedays may not be great, but sometimes the victory is in trying.  And somedays, it's a fun surprise to see what you can do when you just give it a shot!  Each day that we enter Verve, it's like a playground of sorts.  I had never tried to climb a rope before CrossFit, I had never thought about walking on my hands, or jumping backwards onto a box… but I'm thankful I have a wonderful home at Verve that not only provides me a safe spot to try, great instruction on technique, and encouragement and acceptance no matter if I'm successful or fail.  

Sure, I still have a list of things that I "am working on doing."  Because I know that it's just a matter of time.  Muscle-ups, mastering double-unders, handstand walking, swimming without drowning, to name a few.  I know it's just a matter of time for me to conquer another fear, or try something new, who knows what I can do yet tomorrow?  And speaking of that, I can't wait to see what you can do yet!

 

Saturday 110604

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Five rounds for time:

15 Thrusters, 95#/65#
15 Bar-facing burpees

Post time to comments.

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John, mid-swoop and halfway up the rope.

Friday 110603

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21 – 15 – 9 rep rounds for time of:

Box jump, 24"/20"
Power snatch, 75#/55#
Chest-to-bar pull-ups 

Post time to comments.

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Sit back, relax, and stretch those sore muscles post workout. 

Learn Something When You Least Expect It

I search for new information about subjects I'm interested in.  This search takes me to seminars, books, videos, articles, blogs…. you name it.  Yet sometimes the information I seek approaches me from very unexpected sources.  When this occurs, it's usually a bit humbling and exciting.

For example, once a week I go to a gymnastics class that is specifically directed towards adults.  The skills are pretty basic, but very useful and a lot of fun in a very laid back atmosphere.  Yet, often I prod for more information about how to perform movements more efficiently I come up empty handed.  

Well today was a completely different story.  I warmed up with the group and the trainer spent time with each of us practicing floor movements like front/back rolls, forward/backward handstand walks, cartwheels, roundoffs, and so on.  Then we broke out to work on specific skills.  I was wanting to perform a back roll to support and my trainer suggested learning a dislocate first.  Long story short, I couldn't get the timing right….. until a 7 year old boy made a few suggestions, which he went ahead and demo'd with ease.  He gave me a target to aim for as I opened my hips, made a change to my grip, and asked me to rotate my arms faster.

Within minutes, my dislocate improved greatly (after spending nearly 45 minutes working on it).  My point is, if I hadn't been willing to listen and learn from a 7 year old boy, I probably wouldn't have left the gym feeling very satisfied.  Be open to suggestions and learn from someone you least expect to carry the information you seek.  There are subject matter experts everywhere in life and they peek their heads out when you least expect it. Thanks kid – you made my day!

Thursday 110602

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As many rounds as possible in 15 minutes of:

15 Wallballs, 20# (14#)
1 Legless Rope Climb

Sub the rope climbs with legs or with ground to standing plank pulls at 5:1.

Post rounds to comments.

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Boom goes the dynamite.

The CrossFit Games Regional Competition are fast approaching and the event host needs volunteers:

They are looking for a few good men and women to help  them run the event.  They are especially short on the Thursday set-up shift and the Sunday evening tear-down shift.   Every volunteer gets free admission and a behind the scenes look at a world class event. If you are willing to help out, please contact  volunteer@frontrangecrossfit.com. Thank you.

You've gotta walk before you can run.

CrossFit is all about intensity right?  No, I'm not talking about the yelling, screaming, dumping weights from overhead, chalking you face, tearing your shirt off and pound on your chest sort of intensity.  I'm talking about measurable intensity - also known as power output.  The more intensity we're able to pour into a WOD, the more we'll adapt and benefit from it. But….

Yes, there's a but.  Two things must be in place before introducing the concept of intensity - sound mechanics and consistency of those mechanics.  We drill this into every athlete's head as they finish their foundations, but once you get sucked into the vortex of a group WOD, sometimes logic and common sense go out the window. Unfortunately, that's how people get hurt.

By taking the time to learn, practice, and perfect your mechanics on each movement, you're setting yourself up for success.  By being able to complete mechanically sound movement consistently well, time and time again – you've opened yourself up to the world of intensity.  What is your achilles heel?  Are you ready to work on it until it becomes a strength rather than a weakness? 

Housekeeping Note:  We have moved the stereo equipment out of the office.  Please Please Please DO NOT LEAVE anything on the shelves under the cork boards.  We have a beautiful bench cubby for all your wonderful things. I don't care if you are Mahatma Gandhi, this means you too. We thank you and our rave-tastic system thanks you! 

Wednesday 110601

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2011 CrossFit Games Regional WOD #6

For time:
20 Calorie row
30 Burpees
40 Two-hand dumbbell ground-to-overhead, 45# (35#)
50 Toes-to-bar
100 foot Overhead walking lunge, 45# (25#)
150 foot Sprint 

Post time comments.

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Even paradise is only as good as the people you share it with.

New Oxford Dictionary's word of the year 2007
Locavore:  someone who eats food grown or produced locally or within a certain radius such as 100 or 200 miles.  The locavore movement encourages consumers to buy from farmers markets, CSAs or even to produce their own food, fresh, local products are more nutritious and taste better.  Locally grown food is also an environmentally friendly means of obtaining food, since supermarkets that import their food use more fossil fuels and non-renewable resources.  Did you know that if not local, the food on your plate has traveled an average of 1500 miles to get there?

It's that time of the year when it becomes easier  to buy locally. Fruits and veggies are popping up ready to be devoured.  Below is a guide to Denver's Farmers Markets, that we hope can help you plan your summer delights. If you're on the outskirts of Denver check the links below. 

Highlands Farmers Market

Market Address: 1500 block of Boulder St. in Denver
Open: June – October, Saturday’s 9am-1pm.

The Highlands Farmers Market is committed to bringing you fresh, local produce and goods, including fresh breads, jams, flowers, ready to eat food and so much more. The Highlands Farmers Market will take place rain or shine!

Old South Pearl Street Farmers Market

Market Address:1500 Block of South Pearl, Denver
Open: June 15 – October 26, Sunday's 9am-1pm.

Old South Pearl Street is a quaint neighborhood market with 35 local vendors offering fresh produce, ready to eat food, cheeses, breads and much more.

This summers events:
Green Fair – June 5th
Health & Wellness Fair – July 17th
Eat Local Day – August 21st
Pet Fair – September 18th

Tamarac Square Farmers Market

 Market Address:Located at Tamarac & Hamden, Denver
Open: Monday's from 11am – 3 pm. Starts mid June

Want more choices and places to reach your local food?  A guide to Colorado Farmers Markets Here! or Here! or Here!

Tuesday 110531

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2011 CrossFit Games Regional WOD  #5

“Amanda”
9-7-5 reps for time of:
Ring muscle-up 
Squat snatch, 135# (95#)

Post time to comments.

 

Inspiration for today's WOD.

Spending a fortune on food?  Here are some tips to save some cash.

Waste not want not
The average household wastes 15% of their food.  That adds up to $15 for every $100 you spend on food.  Consider using your leftovers in lettuce wraps, omelets, crock pot surprises or soups (veggies that are about to go bad are great to add to the crock pot and soups).  Make your own stock out of your meat and veggie trimmings.  Clean out your refrigerator, you'd be amazed at how this helps decrease waste.  Take a day off from cooking, make your family forage to eat (no cooking, once a week) and find things you didn't know were there.

Cook whole foods at home.
At least decrease your going out to eat meals. Half of meals are reported to be eaten away from home.  Packing your lunch can be a great place to start.  While many people say they don't have time, it takes just as long to "go out" and costs more per meal and you get less.

Make batches.  
If you're going to make a nice lunch or dinner, why not make enough for another meal later that week?  Don't like eating the same meal twice in a week, freeze it.  It cost significantly less to buy a little more ingredients for one meal then it does to buy all the ingredients for another.  It also saves time. 

Fight the urge to BUY.
Keep a shopping list and STICK to it.  More then 40% of purchases at the grocery store are impulse buys.  Avoid shopping for food when you are really hungry.

Eat seasonally.
Fruits and veggies are cheaper in there are in season.  If you want something to do with the kids or are a stickler for free you can also "glean in season".  Call up local farmers and se if they take volunteers for picking and bring a lot of boxes!  Here is a great place to start: Local Growers Directory. Many times memberships to CSA can be reduced for volunteers hours.

Fill your life with vegetables.
Veggies are not only great for you but they ARE the cheapest carbohydrates around. Gobble them up and find a little extra in the wallet this month. 

Snack on real food.
Seems obvious enough but snack foods are a big budget drainer.  Prepare real food snacks like celery and hard boiled eggs or make your own snack mixes with nuts and coconut.  Homemade snack mixes are about 70% cheaper then store bought versions and you get to put in it what YOU want.

Folks it's a big fat lie that eating healthy is more expensive.  What's expensive is laziness.  Employ a few of the tips above and see an instant decrease in your ever growing food bill.

Friday 110527

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2011 CrossFit Games Regional WOD #4
For time:

100 Pull-ups
100 Kettlebell swings, 53# (35#)
100 Double-unders
100 Overhead squats, 95# (65#)

Kettlebell must be straight over the middle of the heel at the top of the movement.  Hip must be fully open at the top of the overhead squat.

Post time to comments.

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I really can't get enough of these running in the hail pictures.

So why no sugar substitutes?  Take for instance the dilemma of the diet soda.  Most diet sodas are calorie and carb free, caffinated, sweet and totally delicious (this can be debated).  At first glance, this sounds Zone perfect and a great alternative to that nasty water-stuff. 

Let's start with a very basic principle of the Zone - hormone regulation.  One of the primary benefits of Zoning is the hormone regulation that results from eating a low-glycemic balanced meal.  By controlling your carbohydrate intake and monitoring the glycemic impact of your carb choices, you limit the amount of insulin released by your pancreas.  This maintains a neutral to favorable insulin sensitivity (as opposed to insulin resistance) and circumvents excess carb storage as fat.

Enter the sweetener.  Sweeteners are just that – sweet.  When your tongue tastes something sweet entering the mouth, it talks to the brain (specifically the hypothalamus) and says "Hey, here comes energy!"  The brain then says to the pancreas "Yo, dump some insulin because here comes glucose!"  And there it is – a big insulin dump, but all for nothing.  The body is now very confused and unable to effectively regulate insulin and all because of artificial sweeteners.  Not to mention all the other chemical processes that get thrown for a loop! Just say no to Artificial Sweeteners!