Turning 7's Into 10's

As Many Rounds As Possible in 15 Minutes:

10 Kettlebell Swings (70#/53#)
10 Box Jumps (24″/20″)
10 Ring Dips

Results

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KBS Box Jumps

Ring Dips

Yesterday the rep scheme was all 7’s. Today was all 10’s.

Wanna see Regionals footage this weekend? Check out the Live streaming or recap footage each day from various regions in action at the link above.

Jason Khalipa sets the CrossFit Games Regional Record “Jackie” time of 5:04NorCal Regional.

CrossFit: Turning Sevens Into Tens Promo

Nutrition:

Book Review:Paleo For Dummies by whole9life.com

Events:

Have a safe Memorial Day weekend!

Monday (5/27) we will run the annual Memorial Day Murph fundraiser workout.

For those unfamiliar with LT Michael Murphy, aka “Murph”, he was an American hero and Medal of Honor recipient and honored with one of the first CrossFit Hero workouts. If you register on the MDM website you will get the annual t-shirt with proceeds going to help three charities that benefit our troops/families of fallen vets.

Murph is a tough WOD. We will push for correct scaling for each person (such as a 1/2 Murph)! 

3 rules for any Hero WOD:
1. No complaining, bitching or whining.
2. No quitting.
3. Remember what this represents and honor those who have fallen. 

• Monday 5/27 we will be open for the morning only for Murph (along with 1/2 Murph – cut reps, runs in half)
• Class times will be 0830, 0930 and 1030 (Gym is CLOSED for all PM classes)
• Please sign up on the whiteboard IN THE GYM. If a smaller group is ready be prepared to go, as we will utilize upstairs if needed. 

“Murph” WOD (aka “Body Armor” – what he called it):
Run 1 mile
100 Pull-ups
200 Push-ups
300 Squats
Run 1 mile

* Break up the pull-ups, push-ups, and squats how you want. Wear a 20# vest if you have it.

"Josh"

Strength WOD:

3-3-3
Overhead Squat

Conditioning WOD:

“Josh”

21 Overhead Squats (95#/65#)
42 Pull-ups
15 Overhead Squats
30 Pull-ups
9 Overhead Squats
18 Pull-ups

Results

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Josh Hero WOD

SSG Joshua Hager, United States Army, was killed Thursday February 22, 2007 in Ar Ramadi, Iraq. Our thoughts, prayers, and condolences go out to Josh’s friends and family. Fair Winds, Josh.”

Notes:

Despite good form, Spencer still gets no repped:

No rep OHS

A word on scaling from journalmenu.com:

“Yeah, but I scaled.”

I hate hearing this – its usually at the end of a WOD, when someone just crumpled to the floor, dead last by minutes, breathing hard while classmates go up to congratulate.

“Dude, that was awesome, way to fight through”, “You did SO good!”, “That was amazing, great job today”, “Good job finishing, way to not give up!”

“Yeah, but I scaled.”

As if scaling is something to be ashamed of, as if scaling is for the weak and the untrained.

As if scaling means you didn’t do the workout – or your workout was less worthy because you scaled.

It isn’t.

We are all in a constant state of scaling – even the elite of the elite, even the few who make it to the finals at  The CrossFit Games.

Double unders are scaled triple unders, MU are scaled weighted MU, 15′ rope climbs are scaled 20′ climbs.

Sure, they aren’t called for in the WODs today, but what about tomorrow?

Scaling is how you get from where you are now to your future kickass self.

Scaling is how you stay safe and healthy.

Scaling is how you finish the workouts and feel obliterated after, using a band instead of just staring at the bar for 10 min willing yourself to get a pullup.

Scaling is how you improve your technique and learn to lift heavier.

Scaling, is not, however, something to be ashamed of or something that you can use to write off your WOD as a poor performance.

So next time you are crumpled on the floor gasping for air, be proud that you choose the right scale for you.

Be proud that you killed the WOD, and that the WOD killed you.

Snatch and Run

Strength WOD:

2-2-2-2-2
High Hang Snatch

* Vertical dip and torso (“Down and Up”)

Checkout WOD:

3 Rounds for time of:

400m Run
15 Squat Snatch (75#/55#)
9 Handstand Push-ups

Results

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Snatch Synch Snatch Synch 2

Getting back in the saddle has been slow this week but coaching good people again and getting a few days of sun has truly helped. Thank you all!

Got your Regionals tickets yet? Go here to buy them. We are not going to do a private box as the entry rules are limited to the specific ticket holders and we don’t want to sit in a box while not everyone from the gym could hang out. So get your tix and then we will carve out an area in the stands. 

Nutrition:

I know none of you would eat garbage from McD’s or let your kids do the same but if you were having a moment of absolute weakness or somehow forgot your common sense at home remember this:

14 Year Old McDonald’s Hamburger Looks Almost New foxnews.com

Cooking With Kids: Steamed Kale” with Lanette Doran, CrossFit Journal video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]

Set_Lisa

Back To Basics

4 Rounds for Time:

400m Run
50 Squats 

* Rest 2 minutes after above WOD then complete:

Max Reps Pull-ups (Single Attempt)

Results

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Coach Michelle and Couch RoRo brief the group before it’s go time:

Supine Coaching

3-2-1 Go

On Sunday we received a card that practically everyone from the gym signed and the gift of an incredible blooming magnolia tree that is the same as my mother’s favorite tree in her backyard. Knowing that it will be planted in our backyard to bloom each year is a heartwarming tribute to her and I cannot put into words how grateful I really am. I sent a picture of the tree to my brother last night and he was speechless. You all are amazing, generous and thoughtful people and true friends. The past couple weeks has been very hard with her passing but all of your support has helped in countless ways to buoy our spirits. Every time I look at that tree I will not only remember her but I will also remember what an amazing family SnoRidge CrossFit is. Thank you.

Notes:

I wanted to share this email Amy N. sent after the recent squat/rope climb WOD. I thought it was cool:

“Rope a dope – a WOD I remember very well. My #113 WOD in November of 2011 where I let my ego get the better of me. It’s a 7:00 pm class, Tom coaching and Buskas sitting on the bumpers…and me struggling! Seriously struggling to clean the 95#, failing it over and over. You coached me through the whole thing and I finished that WOD RX is 23.31.

In the end, I should have scaled and you tried to get me to during the WOD but I was stubborn. That night you blogged about picking the right weights and not letting your ego get the best of you and how if a Coach suggests you scale something, especially during a WOD, to do it. I felt like a total tool in the morning, like I just got bitch slapped by Coach Tom. Anyway, the whole point of this is. that this week we did Rope a dope again and I’m happy to say I did it in 13:29, didn’t fail one clean and did the back squats unbroken – I’ll take a 10 minute PR. Such a great feeling especially remembering the struggle the first time I did it. I love CrossFit.” ~ Amy N.

Nutrition:

Dr. Oz covered the Paleo Diet today with Dr. Loren Cordain. Let’s hope he believes it. If he does then maybe he can convince Bob Harper to stop selling oatmeal.


Barbell Chipper

Skills WOD:

8-10 minutes Muscle-up practice

Conditioning WOD:

For time:

10 Press (115#/75#)
15 Overhead Squats (115#/75#)
20 Push Press (115#/75#)
25 Front Squats (115#/75#)
30 Push Jerk (115#/75#)
35 Back Squats (115#/75#)

Results

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On Your Back

Tough chipper today using only a barbell. I think this workout surprised many. A physical and mental grind.

BB Chipper Back Squats

Quote of the day: “Last year and at the start of this year I felt the same…why pay money for workouts when I clearly won’t make regionals?!  I felt it was silly. Then someone said it was a way to support a sport you love!  It’s not actually that much money. Through out these past weeks its been much more. I’ve watched people push themselves beyond what they would in normal everyday wods. Some getting skills they never have had. I’ve also seen amazing camaraderie that can’t be matched.   I so don’t regret signing up. Even with the 150 wall balls, I would do it again.” ~ Teri R. on what the Open means to her. (By the way you are doing it again next year.)

Open WOD 13.5 announces tomorrow at 5pm. Who’s ready for these two epic final week match-ups?


Meg vs Jer


Josh vs Jer

CF Games:

Dave Castro Gives Insight to 13.5” – [video]

CrossFit Games Update: April 2, 2013” – [video]

Nutrition:

Top 11 Biggest Lies of Mainstream Nutrition by authoritynutrition.com

"Weighing in on Weighing"

Strength WOD:

3-2-1-1-1
Snatch

* 20 Minutes total

Conditioning WOD:

12-9-6-3 reps each of:

Power Snatch (95#/65#)
Burpees

Results 

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Set_Michelle

2012 Games flashback:

Froning Snatch

Quote of the day: “What we’re trying to do is get things fixed, not allow them to stay broke.” ~ Mark Rippetoe

If you are new you probably notice that we sometimes put goal times or additional instructions on the whiteboard for a workout.  This is in addition to the normal coaching we give everyone every day. Instructions include what movement to scale to if you are new, or what % or max load to lift. This forces correct scaling of weight or range of motion as well as ensures that the effect of the WOD is consistent across the board. Today the guidance on the checkout was to stay unbroken on the power snatches. It was designed to be a sprint and not a power snatch slog. Looking at the times it was just right. 

Oly Lift Technique

Schedule: 

STARTING TODAY on MONDAYS and WEDNESDAYS we have added….a 4:00 pm class!

We are testing out this time slot through March to see if people can make it.  
If you want to keep it, you better show up regularly.  

(CF Teens class is Tues/Thurs at 4:00 so we won’t be adding it then.)

Nutrition:

Teri participated in the Stop the Slop Nutrition challenge and got results in her body composition, PR’s in several WOD’s, and has stuck with many of her nutritional changes since the challenge ended. She also came to grips around her relationship with the scale. Making it a lifestyle is the whole point of our challenge and seeing the paleo approach continue well into February for her is a huge accomplishment!

Here’s her essay:

Weighing in on Weighing by Teri R.

            How much do you weigh? 
Are you 170 pounds of lean muscle or a saggy 135?  Do you weigh 150 in the dark on a full
moon?  What about 127 after having the
stomach flu?  Do you aspire to be a buck
o five?  This question used to consume
me.  While losing 60+ “baby” pounds back
in 2007-2008, I weighed constantly.    I loved saying I was down a pound.  I hated saying I was up a pound.  I have never enjoyed saying that horrible 3
digit number we call weight.  I don’t
even love saying it when it is what the world considers a “small” number.  One year ago at SnoRidge CrossFit, Tom programmed a WOD that required me to acknowledge my weight and then dead lift
it.  I hyperventilated.  I hid in the corner.  I cried. 
Tom talked me off the ledge and I ended up doing the WOD.  Although I didn’t like my weight written on
the white board for all to see, I was proud of myself because it wasn’t about
everyone looking to see what I weighed.  I
am certain no one else cared.  It was about
me working hard and getting stronger.  A
couple of days later, Tom posted an article that inspired me to throw out my
bathroom scale.  Yep, I did that.  Today I have no idea what I weigh.  Even though my family has since bought a new
scale, I do not step on it, ever.  I have
Tom to thank for that.  I am perfectly okay
with not knowing my weight.  I even turn
around so I can’t see the scale when I am being weighed in at the doctor’s
office.  For the purposes of this
January’s challenge, I chose NOT to weigh in.  Weighing in does not give real or valuable
information.  It leads to ridiculous,
obsessive behavior.  Weighing in isn’t
the only measure of progress and ultimately my goal isn’t to see a certain number
on the scale but to adopt a more healthy lifestyle.

                  First I would like to tell
you, weighing in makes me a crazy maniac. 
I begin immediately to base my self-worth on that number.  If I wake up and weigh two pounds more than
yesterday suddenly I consider myself “fat” or my personal favorite name to call
myself, “lard of the earth”.  If I wake
up three pounds less than last week, I am Olivia Wild and dang…you can’t touch
this.  These manic feelings begin to
drive me.  I begin to say things to
myself like–today stinks because I am lard of the earth, or wow, I can fulfill
any dream because today… I AM Olivia Wild. 
I begin to place too much importance on a number.  Reality says I am not lard of the earth or
Olivia Wild.  Really people, let’s get
this straight, the number on the scale does not correlate to my physical
appearance.  I have seen women who weigh 155
pounds that look “125”. Recently a woman I thought looked thin told me she
weighed in at 180.  The appearance of
these women didn’t change once I knew their weight.   These women are strong and beautiful.  Not weighing in has prevented me from turning
into obsessed Teri.  It also protected me
from my ridiculous “scale” behavior and reminded me that I am not a number.

                  Critics might ask me how I can
document my progress with-out weighing in on the scale.  There are plenty of ways.  I believe the best way to track progress is
to see how I feel each day.  Is my energy
improved?  How am I sleeping?  Where is my self-esteem?  Is my strength and flexibility (don’t laugh,
yes I am considering flexibility) improving? 
What about my complexion?  Am I
noticing improved cardio vascular health? 
It really didn’t take long for me to see all these areas improve.  Waking up and feeling great, ready to go with
lots of energy…extra energy to do all the burpees Deb McCracken invited us to
do with her… that’s progress.  Finally
after being in CrossFit a year and a half I was able to crab walk myself across
the floor, twice!  That is progress.  Walking into a work out and feeling strong
and fast (even if you come in last place) is progress.  Noticing less teenager-like acne is
progress.  Feeling great on your long run
is progress.  Another tangible way to
notice progress is through clothing fit. 
At the beginning of this 30 day challenge, I would put my jeans on and
oh boy, were they tight.  I would do
10-15 quick air squats and pray I wasn’t going to split them.  Now, when I put my jeans on, no squats are
needed and they are even a bit loose by midday. 
Loose jeans and baggy t-shirts are progress.  I can also measure my progress with
pictures.  Before the challenge, I
honestly hated the sight of myself in pictures. 
Now, I can see the progress I have made and I feel proud.  Other people are noticing a change in me too.  Many are complimenting me and saying that
they can tell I have worked hard.  That
is progress.  My husband has remarked
about my skin being less dry and a bit softer. 
People are asking me my secret. 
That is progress.  There is no
need to weigh in order to track these successes. 

                  Ultimately, I do not need to weigh
because my final goal was not to see a number on a scale.  My goal in the challenge was to make lasting
changes and gain a healthier perspective. 
The goal included giving the Paleo lifestyle a real, fair chance.  I am thrilled to say I have created new
healthier habits.  I am meal planning and
have become better about food prep.  I
even adapted some of my favorite recipes to be Paleo.  I know lasting changes take time and these 30+
days have helped me create a habit of being organized and prepared with the
right types of foods.  I am learning to
do Paleo all the way, with-out picking and choosing which “rules” to follow.  I have taken the full Paleo plunge, healthy
fats and all.  I have eaten a truck load
of vegetables cooked a billion and one ways. 
I have met my goal because I am living Paleo.  Having and reaching this goal of creating
healthier habits is far more rewarding than saying, “HEY….everyone, I weigh 110
pounds.”  I did not weigh in because a
number on the scale can’t tell me if I reached my goals.

                   At the end of this challenge, I am healthier,
happier and stronger.  I am not a
number.  I am a little less “saggy”.  I am a 40 year old woman living a Paleo
lifestyle.  Even though I know I am not
Olivia Wild, I feel amazing and have a desire to continue with this change
knowing that there will be ups and downs. 
I’ve learned how to clean up my diet. I know that when I fall, I can get
back up and I am not lard of the earth.  My
success is evident to me and that is more rewarding than a number on the scale.  Wouldn’t it be funny if I weighed exactly the
same as when the challenge began?  Would
I feel the same triumphal success if I didn’t even lose an ounce?  No one will ever know.

Human Shake Weights

Strength WOD:

1RM
Overhead Squat 

* 25 Minutes total

Conditioning WOD:

10 Minute AMRAP (As Many Rounds As Possible) of:

10 Overhead Squats (75#/55#)
7 Hand Release Burpees
5 Knees-to-elbows

Results 

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OHS - 4 OHS - 1

OHS - 2 OHS - 3

Watching people attempt 1RM overhead squats and back rack jerks is like watching human shake weights before they hold their breath. Lots of PR’s today but more importantly positioning and technique is improving across the board. Snatching pays off.

The checkout WOD was intended to keep everyone moving at a constant pace (similar to an Open WOD), with the hand release throwing something new in that made you focus while tiring your shoulders a little more.

Coaching points on OHS:

  • Jerk from the back rack off your shoulders (it doesn’t count if your arms are locked out and you take a bar already in the OH position)
  • Active shoulders overhead throughout the lift 
  • Armpits forward, chest is up
  • Tighten the core and inhale with a deep breath, held during the lift (this will reduce the “wobble” effect)
  • Weight in heels, hips begin the squat by pushing back then down
  • Knees out
  • Full depth
  • Drive up with the chest or push up on the bar as you rise, exhale at the top

“Coaching The Overhead Squat” with Justin Bergh – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]

Checkout

CF Games Open: 

Nutrition: “Junk” Food for thought…

“Today, one in three adults is considered clinically obese, along with one in five kids, and 24 million Americans are afflicted by type 2 diabetes, often caused by poor diet, with another 79 million people having pre-diabetes. Even gout, a painful form of arthritis once known as “the rich man’s disease” for its associations with gluttony, now afflicts eight million Americans.

The public and the food companies have known for decades now — or at the very least since this meeting — that sugary, salty, fatty foods are not good for us in the quantities that we consume them. So why are the diabetes and obesity and hypertension numbers still spiraling out of control? It’s not just a matter of poor willpower on the part of the consumer and a give-the-people-what-they-want attitude on the part of the food manufacturers. What I found, over four years of research and reporting, was a conscious effort — taking place in labs and marketing meetings and grocery-store aisles — to get people hooked on foods that are convenient and inexpensive.”

Day 50

Strength WOD:

5/5/3/3/1/1/1
Front Squat 

* 25 Minutes total

Conditioning WOD:

For time:

500m Row
150 Double Unders
50 Burpees

Results 

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Chest up and knees out:

James_FS

Day 50 of the Burpee Challenge today. This is the one WOD that they counted. Yay Burpees! Thanks to Debra for inspiring so many to do this challenge with her and props to all of you that completed it!

The Open starts in March. That means it’s time for the annoyingly excessive but midly entertaining return of Exercise Center: “CrossFit Games Update: February 19, 2013” – [video]

Front rack_Rob W

Christa participated in the Stop the Slop Nutrition challenge and saw significant progress in her body composition (weight loss/muscle gain) and PR’s in several WOD’s over the past month plus. High fives and keep it up!

Here’s her essay:

“Stop the Slop” by Christa F.

            Over the
last month, I cannot tell you how many times I have been asked, “Christa, you
look great… Have you lost weight?”  I
have actually lost count of the number of people who have commented (I tried at
first).  It’s only been 30 days.  I had no idea that my co-workers, friends,
and family members would notice such a drastic change in me over such a short
time.  I started wondering exactly how
much weight I have lost…. 5lbs, 10lbs, 15lbs…more?  I had no idea and I didn’t dare weigh myself
and break the contest rules.  I did know
that my work slacks were getting loose and shirts that used to be too tight
were fitting nicely.  What is most
amazing to me is that these changes happened during one of the busiest and most
stressful months of my life.

            This month,
I have worked an average of 30 hours per week on a new project (with free lunch
3 days a week that I did not eat).  I
have had school commitments 15-20 hours a week and then had to study at least 15
hours per week.  This totals over 60
hours plus an hour drive each way to Seattle almost every day.  I managed to get to a CrossFit workout at
least four times a week with a few workouts at home as well.  Usually, this high level of commitments and
pressure would have put me over the edge with stress and anxiety.  However, I have found that these fitness and
nutrition changes have kept me calm, organized and the stress level is much
lower than times with less activity.  I
know that the only reason I am doing so well right now is that I did make these
positive changes in my life.  I am not
relying on food, alcohol, and sugar to “make myself feel better”.  I now believe that they were making me feel
much worse, with drastic consequences.

            The
nutrition and fitness changes that I made were small, but the changes worked
synergistically.  My workouts felt great
and I was pushing myself to go faster and lift heavier with less resistance
from my body.  My strict food choices
were keeping my cravings low while also helping my workouts.  My workouts made my body want and feel good
about clean food. I have gotten to the point where I have stopped wanting and
even looking at the same things that I would previously love to eat on a daily
basis.  I made it a priority to get to
the gym as much as possible and was successful.

            Today, one
day after the challenge has ended, I looked at a cookie a lunch.  I thought to myself and laughed, “I could
have one if I want”.  And then I knew that
I really did not want it.  I want to be
healthy, get fit, and feel good about myself. 
I want my progress to continue. 
Even though I lost, “Just 7lbs”, I still feel like I succeeded.  In the fitness challenge, I was able to
decrease my time by a minute and a half when I felt like there was no way I
could go any faster the first time around. 
This whole experience has made me realize that little changes over an
extended period of time can make a huge difference.  If I can make positive lasting changes during
one of the most stressful times in my life, then I can certainly make this a
lifelong change that will continue to benefit me in the future.  My challenge is not over; it is just
beginning.  Thank you for the
challenge.  

"Pushing Helen"

Skills WOD:

12 minutes Muscle-up practice

Conditioning WOD:

3 Rounds For Time:

400m Run
21 Kettlebell Swings (53#/35#)
12 Handstand Push-ups

Results

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KB

Greg M. won our Stop the Slop Essay challenge. Here’s his story:

 “I think we’ll call it…” by Greg M.

“I think we’ll call it…”  Those 5 words concluded my first CrossFit WOD
– a DNF after 19 minutes of ‘Baseline.’  I
only completed the first round, plus the 400m run, 40 air squats, and 5 of 30
sit-ups in the second round.  Tom mercifully
ended the debacle at that point.  Thanks
to my cramping abdominals (a brand new experience for me) there was no chance I
could continue.  I embarrassed myself
countless times before that night and plenty of times since (teeth-to-bar
pullups anyone?), but the 20 minutes I spent in the fetal position on the floor
of the box, choking down some Vita Coco coconut water and trying to coax my
muscles to stop spasming are among the lowest moments I can remember.  I spent the subsequent 90 minutes on the floor
of my living room, back in the fetal position, alternating between tears and
curses towards CrossFit in general, my wife for convincing me to try CrossFit,
and myself for allowing  my physical
conditioning to deteriorate so terribly. 

Regarding my CrossFit
journey, “I think we’ll call it…” practically
dead on arrival.

Coach Glassman and Dave Castro
would have labeled me a deconditioned athlete. 
I think “deconditioned” is my least favorite word in the English
language.  It was the perfect, miserable
description of me just before I began CrossFit. 
Growing up, my entire identity revolved around being a highly
competitive athlete – multiple sports per season, multiple teams per sport,
travel and select teams alike, and accolades and trophies to fill my
bedroom.  After choosing academics over
sports in college, I no longer had the forced discipline of practices and games
to maintain my fitness.  Natural ability
kept me competitive in intramurals and pickup games, even when stamina and
strength began to wane.  The pounds
packed on, but there was no motivation to change things. 

Regarding
my fitness just before finding SRCF, “I
think we’ll call it…”
a lazy, lethargic descent to deconditioning.

I would guess I fit one of the most
common stereotypes for people who wash out of CrossFit boxes after trying it
for a short period of time – former athletes who overestimate their (long
dormant) abilities and underestimate the brutal “fun” of CrossFit.  In my mind, I was the same skilled, fit,
accomplished athlete that I was at 18. 
In reality, I was a career corporate desk jockey who hadn’t trained for
anything physical in over 10 years.  After
the first 2 OnRamp WODs (spoiler alert! Yes, I did drag myself back), I can
only describe my mindset as wholly discouraged. 
I wasn’t sure I could overcome the pain, embarrassment, and fear before
giving up on CrossFit.  My pride and
arrogance almost led me to miss out on a life-changing physical transformation
over the past 10 months, culminating in amazing gains (for me) over the past 30
days. 

Regarding the
chance to return to fitness, “I think
we’ll call it…”
nearly a missed opportunity.

Thankfully and fortunately, due to
the encouragement of my wife and coaches and the community of the kind folks at
SRCF, I downed a healthy dose of humble pie and kept coming back.  There are continuing low points – typically
involving long metcons, movements (nearly all of them) restricted by my
legendary lack of flexibility, and any WOD with lots of bodyweight movements.  I’m pretty sure just about every movement we
do at SRCF is still on my “goat” list… especially those damn bodyweight
movements.  But I also started to
experience some glimpses of progress and encouragement – especially when I felt
my long dormant athletic abilities re-emerging. 
A PR on a strength movement here, an unbroken set of wall ball shots
there, a progression from green to blue to red bands for pull-ups, a first Rx
WOD, or max effort shuttle runs (my freakishly long arms and legs give me an
unfair advantage on those shuttle runs – the only non-goat I’ve discovered so
far).  I keep hoping to walk into the box
and see “100 free throws for time” on the whiteboard.  Alas, Tom hasn’t read my mind on that yet
(though it would be interesting with the 20 pound medicine ball!). 

Regarding my
outlook on CrossFit, “I think we’ll call
it…
a corner turned.

More than the physical lows and
highs however, the greater revelation to me has been the intense mental battle
that accompanies each WOD.  Despite working
in the Internet and technology industries my entire career, I’m still not a
subscriber to Beyond the Whiteboard.  I
have the marble notebook on the box bookshelf to prove it, 143 workouts and
counting.  My fear is that I’ll see
workouts posted early in the day and mentally convince myself that I can’t make
it to the box.  So I’m sticking to the
old paper and pen tracking method for now. 
Everything on the whiteboard seems overwhelming at first glance.  But through a focused warm-up, consistent,
impactful coaching cues and encouraging compatriots, the mental battles become
easier and easier to fight even as my lungs and muscles scream for relief. 

Regarding the
challenges posed by CrossFit, “I think
we’ll call it…
more mental than physical.

                  All these
lessons led to this past month, the “Stop the Slop Challenge.”  It’s been a fascinating opportunity for me to
learn about and test myself – in what I eat, in how I perform, and in how I
respond to the cravings and challenges from temptations (I have a world
renowned sweet tooth, which wasn’t going to be satisfied by the Whole30).  30 days didn’t seem untenable though, so I
signed up.  On the eating side of the
challenge, I won’t hide the fact that it was a struggle and was interrupted by
a couple of birthday-induced cheats.  The
first week was an awful, detoxifying experience as processed sugars worked
their way out of my system.  I couldn’t
tell if I’d succumbed to the latest zombie virus going around, or if I’d really
eaten that much “poison.”  I can honestly
say though, that after 30 days I notice a clear difference.  I’m now at a weight not seen on my scale
since high school.  Despite struggling
with headaches my entire life (I carry Excedrin with me at all times), I’ve not
had one in weeks.  And I’ve also
discovered that, under the facial fat that melted away, I have actual
cheekbones (also not seen since high school)! 
On the performance side, I had a chance to revisit my old friend
‘Baseline’, who brought along her friend ‘Grace’.  As an indication of how far I’d progressed
from last April to early January, I finished the entire WOD faster than when
Tom called time on my failed, first WOD 9 months earlier.  After the re-test this week, I improved the
time by another minute and 17 seconds (but who’s counting?).  Not enough to take home the Performance
portion of the Challenge (did I mention I was formerly an athlete, and highly
competitive?), but a clear indication that fitness was returning. 

Regarding
my CrossFit journey now, “I think we’ll
call it…”
an amazing, frustrating, challenging, encouraging, and humbling work in progress, thanks to a
tremendous community of friends and coaches at SnoRidge CrossFit.  

PR Bell with Debra:

PR Bell

Upside Down

Skills WOD:

Every Minute On the Minute for 10 Minutes:
3 Handstand Push-ups

* Scale HSPU depth to parallettes, or use 1 abmat / kip, DB or KB heavy press

Conditioning WOD:

3 Rounds for time of:
12 Front Squats (135#/95#)
12 Burpee Box jumps (24″/20″)

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Down and Up

The PR’s continue this week as the recent dip/push-up skill work and overhead/push jerk focus has led to PR’s in knocking out handstand push-ups. If you just got them today keep practicing these regularly so the sub of strict presses will be a thing of the past.

PR:

HSPU Progress

Attention Stop the Slop Stragglers:

Thursday is the last day of make-ups/weigh-in’s if you paid and are participating in the challenge. If you haven’t paid your “buy-in” fee of $25 please do so this week before weighing in or completing the WOD re-test.

Due NLT Thursday last class:

  • Nutrition challenge you need to weigh-in ASAP
  • Performance Challenge you need to repeat the WOD
  • Essay Challenge you need to send us your essay on your 30 Day Stop the Slop or Whole30 experience. Write about what impacted you these past 30 days.
  • Once that is completed we will announce winners and prizes by Saturday

“Coaching the Squat: Points of Performance” with Katie Hogan – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]

CrossFit Barbie, an idea by my daughter (built with a little help):

CrossFit Barbie