Saturday, April 30, 2011

The Metro Dash Obstacle Course Race


  • Ladder Climb – Climb the ladder and touch the top support structure
    while maintaining 3 points of contact at all times.
  • Ball Sprint – Pick-up a 30lb medicine ball, sprint down and around the
    designated cones, and return ball to starting position.
  • High Wall – Scale over the wall without using the wall’s support structure.
  • Tunnel Crawl – Crawl through a 10-foot tunnel.
  • Stutter-step Tires – Stutter-step your way through each and every tire.
  • Cargo Net Climb – Climb up and over cargo net, while maintaining 3
    points of contact at all times.
  • Box Jump Pyramid – Jump on top of each box jump in your row, landing
    on the top with both feet and on the ground with both feet in between
    each of the box jumps. (We stress box JUMP this is not a step up and
    over)
  • Tire Flips - Flip the tire end-over-end down to the designated cones and
    back to the starting position. (there will be different distances marked for
    males and females)
  • Wall Climb – Scale over an 8’ wall without using the wall’s support
    structure.
  • Push-Pull - You must pull the weighted sled hand-over-hand to the
    designated line. The sled must break the plane of the line. Then push the
    sled back to its starting position.
  • Shuttle Run –Transfer the blocks from one line to the other and then back
    again, picking up only one block at a time.
  • Over/Unders – Jump over the wall and pass under the hurdle, without
    using the wall’s support structures.
  • High Hurdles – Jump over each hurdle, with both feet touching the ground
    in between hurdles.
  • Hill Run – Run up and over, staying on the obstacle from start to finish.
  • Balance Beam – Cross from one end of beam to the other without your
    feet touching the ground
  • Monkey Bars – Swing from rung to rung, catching each bar. Skipping
    rungs is not permitted.
  • Log Climb – Climb up and over, covering entire distance of logs. Jumping
    from end log is not permitted.
  • Low Wall – Scale over wall without using the wall’s support structure.
  • Low Crawl – Crawl under this entire obstacle.
  • Strongman Shuffle – Carry a total of 3 odd-shaped objects from one
    location to another, carrying only one object at a time.
  • Wall Traverse – Traverse the entire distance of this wall, side to side. You
    are not permitted to touch the top of the wall.
  • Window Jump – Jump up and through a window opening without using
    any of the support structures.
  • Farmers Walk - Carry 2 - 16kg kettlebells down and around a cone.
  • Rope Wall – Climb up and over the 12-foot wall using the attached rope.
    You are not permitted to use any of the support structures.
  • Ramp Jump – Go up and over this obstacle
  • Black Hole – Crawl the entire length of the obstacle
  • Log Carry – Pick up a log and sprint carrying the log down and around a
    cone. Team logs are chained together.
  • Rope Swing – Swing on a rope to clear the wall obstacle. We suggest
    using a little momentum, as you are not permitted to use any of the
    support structures and no part of your body can touch the top of the
    wall.

Reflection

This was a fun event that I did with some motivators today. We were all able to do it for free thanks to my good negotiation skills. It was a good and quick workout that kept the heart rate up.

Quote of the Day

"Victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be; for without victory, there is no survival."
~Winston Churchill

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Kettlebell Snatch WOD and Tabata Cardio

20-15-10-5 reps
Kettlebell Snatch (50 lbs) Right and Left
Games Style Push-Ups
Completed in 7:24
Tabata is 20 sec on and 10 sec off for 8 rounds (4 min)
Tabata Row (1083 m)
Tabata Jump Rope (mixed different jumps)
Wheelbarrow Walk (on hands) for 50 m
Double Under Practice for 10 sec on and 10 sec off for 4 min
Reflection
I did a kettlebell workout today and I would like to include more kettlebell work into my training. I did some tabata cardio which was a good change of pace.
Quote of the Day
"So many people spend their health gaining wealth, and then have to spend their wealth to regain their health."

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Cycle/Run/Cycle (Brick)

Cycling for 20 min
4 mile Run/Walk
Cycling for 20 min
Reflection
I am not sure if I was just fatigued from previous training, cycling, or I am just really de-conditioned as far as distance running. I could not run very far without feeling pain mostly in my ankles. I wasnt breathing heavy and my legs felt ok but my ankles were feeling bad. I am going to really focus on distance/long duration running, cycling, and even swimming. I have to dial down the strength to increase this. However, I will still include the olympic lifting and the heavy back squatting. I have some long distance running events that I plan on doing in the next couple months and even a duathlon and triathlon. I have the 10 mile Broad Street Run this upcoming Sunday, which is one day after The Metro Dash, a crossfit obstacle course.
Quote of the Day
“The greatest mistake you can make in life is to continually be afraid you will make one.”
by Elbert Hubbard

Why do I run?

Monday, April 25, 2011

Gymnastics Met-Con and Strength

Strength
Power Snatch for 1,1,1 at 135#
Back Squat for 3,3,3 at 235#
Gymnastics
Met-Con
10,8,6,4,2,8,6,4,2
Ring L-Pull ups
40 inch Box Jumps
Ring Dips
Reflection
I felt good on my back squats today. I will keep plugging away at them until my weakness in squats becomes a strength. I also worked in some power snatches which are also a weakness. I did a gymnastics met-con that was challenging and kept the pace fast while allowing time in between rounds to rest as needed. Ring L pull ups demolish my core. But I have been wearing gymnastic grips that save my hands from getting torn up. I need to do some endurance running and cycling.
Quote of the Day
“Blessed be the LORD, my rock, Who trains my hands for war, And my fingers for battle; My loving kindness and my fortress, My strong hold and my deliverer, My shield and He in whom I take refuge, Who subdues my people under me.” Psalm 144:1-2

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Staying in the Fight (Part 2 & 3)

excerpt from Mark Divine, US Navy SEAL and founder of SEALFIT

Set Goals the right way

Yes, I know. Goal setting is mundane isn’t it? Come on Mark, you can do better than that. Have you reviewed yours today? Have you worked on the #1 thing today that is going to move you closer to your major goal tomorrow? What happens when your goals fail to be realistic? Do you have a method for checking it against reality? Are you tracking them?

Goal setting is a very powerful tool, and it is useless when done willy-nilly. Goal setting helps us to maintain a positive and forward momentum, a way to track our progress, and a way to focus our efforts on the important, rather than just the urgent, things.

Proper goals are stated in precise and positive terms. They are measurable and have a modest time frame associated with them. Too short and either they are not meaty enough, or you are setting yourself up for failure. Too long and you lose the urgency and they fall off the radar.

Goals must be achievable, in that you have the potential to accomplish them with the skills and resources available. Also they must be realistic, even if achievable, are they realistic for you to even go for it? I may be able to achieve a 400# deadlift someday, but it is not realistic a goal for me at my age to spend the time and injuries to achieve it.

When the going gets tough, goals take on a whole new level of importance. In Hell Week, we were not setting our sights on “being a Navy SEAL” or even “getting that trident.” Either of these is a SMART goal when I was preparing for BUD/s. But during Hell Week or any arduous situation, we require a different method.

In the tough spots I recommend to collapse your goal setting to the very near term. I call these “micro-goals.” The great thing about micro-goals is that they lead to “micro-victories.” You stack up enough micro-victories and pretty soon you have achieved a huge milestone!

Back to the Hell Week example. A terrible goal would be to “make it to Friday.” When you are in the depths of despair on Monday morning at 4am, colder than a surfer in Anchorage, sleep deprived and depressed, Friday seems a very, very long way away. A better goal would be to make it to sunrise. The sun has a remarkable ability to both warm you up, and cheer you up. Things suddenly don’t look as bad at 7am as they did at 4am. Micro Goal. Micro Victory. Next.

The hidden secret with micro-goal setting is that it forces our monkey mind to focus on what is happening right now, rather than what may happen in the future where it wishes to be. Focus on the next meal, the next event, or even the next footstep. These short and achievable goals help to enlist our monkey mind to be an ally versus enemy in our fight.

That’s it for this week folks. Next week we will continue our discussion of Staying in the Fight with a look at Positivity. I hope you find this helpful as you focus your efforts on your 5 Mountain journey.

Keep Positive!

As we discussed in our lastedition, the hidden secret with micro-goal setting is that it forces us into the present.Forcing our monkey mind topay attention to what is happening right now, rather than what it hopes to happen in the future or what happened in the past.Collapse your focus to the near present, suchas making it to the next yummy MRE meal or through that miserable evolution andyou achieve victory where it is at - right here, right now.

The wandering mind is the devils play ground.The nature of the outer,conscious mind (the 12% brain) is to dwell on the negative and obsess aboutit.Often that which is the obsessionbecomes the reality.Once you begin tofocus on the present, the requirement then is to keep your mind in a Positive State.

We call this Positivity.

Positivity can be likened to anelectrical charge.Are you positively charged, or negatively charged? How big of a difference would it make in your life if you learned to keep your mindand body positively charged all the time? My guess is a big difference.

Back to basics.Ensure that the mind is focused on the present and propelling us forward with Positive Self Talk.Positive Self Talk is akin to a battery that positively charges your energy, emotions and the very air around you; so that you attract the positive success you seek.At the basic level, it keeps you feeling good, strong and able to set a "positive example" for your teammates (who draw strength from you and vice versa. There are some nuances:

First, you must learn topay attention to your energy, whether it is positive or negative.At SEALFIT we use a simple question to draw focus to this:"what dog you are feeding?"This question refers to the two dogs we have in our outer mind vying for feeding:The dog of FEAR and the dog of COURAGE.

Our minds are energized witheither courage (positive) or fear (negative) which manifest their influence inour lives in different ways.Our basicemotional "feeling" states can be generalized into these two broad categories.We could actually replace "courage" with"love" but for this discussion courage is a more powerful descriptor.

Fear is the dominant energy in most because the outer monkey mind is generally negative in nature.It is constantly filled with negative programming from numerous sources - friends, family, news, TV, and our own self talk.By paying attention to what dog you are feeding, you will start to notice the patterns.

Next, as soon as you noticenegative patterns, you must use a pattern interrupt to immediately stop andre-direct them.At SEALFIT we use Power-statementsas pattern interrupts for this purpose.Power statements we use include some classics such as: "Hooyah,""Easy Day," "Get some," and "Aint Nothin but a thing."

These power statements interdict negative thinking andreplace it with a powerful and positive mood.

Finally, power statements are not enough to do the job alone.Ourbodies must also get in the game.A PowerPosture reinforces the power statement.Saying "I am going to crush this" while slouched in a defeated, fetal position just doesn't work!Yoursubconscious mind will call bull and continue to feed the negative pattern.You need to pull yourself up by your bootstraps and mirror the power statement with a power posture.

Often in the middle of a grueling workout, I or one of my coaches will shout power statement, coupled withpowerful gestures, when we notice the fear dog nipping at the trainees.Everyone's mental attitude and bodies respond immediately as if jolted by a bolt of positively charged electricity.It is great to watch and be part of. Soon we are all laughing and cranking away atthe workout, having left the worst behind us.We have learned to allow positive self-talk and powerful body postures tocondition our minds for positive outcomes.

One final comment about Positivity: the mind will easily slip in and out of negative situations basedupon external stimuli.You must trickyour conscious mind to remain positive by reciting Powerful Mantras.A mantra is simply a short statement that haspositive meaning to you.When I was in BUD/s, on long runs I would recite over and over "feeling good, looking good, ought to be in Hollywood!"Corny as heck butit worked...though the Hollywood part remains elusive.The power of positivity cannot beunderestimated and I highly recommend you start practicing these techniques nowif you are not already.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Staying in the fight (Part 1)



Mark Divine, Founder, SEALFIT

What separates survivors from quitters in extreme challenges? When you look at the tactics used by successful SEALs, SEALFIT graduates, Ultra Endurance athletes and survivors of natural disasters, they are surprisingly similar.

In the case of BUD/s selection or SEALFIT Kokoro camp, the option to quit means that you get a blanket and cup of coffee. However you must then deal with the long-term pain of regret. In the event of a firefight, accident or disaster, the stakes are much higher - life or death. Quitting is simply not an option there.

So how can you learn to treat every worthy obstacle with the same “hair on fire” intensity as the life and death ones? The answer to this question is the holy grail of Mental Toughness research. How can we train ourselves to make both minor and serious decisions with the same clarity and strength as when we are strong, but in our weakest moments? A single bad decision, made in a moment of weakness, can have disastrous consequences.

Here are some tactics we teach at SEALFIT to help stay motivated, clear-headed and in control of our decisions, so we can stay in the fight when it gets really shitty.

Never give up on yourself. Quitting is simply NOT an option

Pain is temporary, quitting is forever. Whether it is the pain of seeing a long, complex project through to fruition, or the pain of getting through 50+ hours of hard core physical training, simply removing the quit option is the first step to ensuring victory.

Ultra Runner and SEALFIT coach Scott Morgan encourages us to endure through our darkest moments and hold off on making serious decisions at night, when things are at their most difficult in a race. Wait until the warming rays of sunlight peek above the horizon! Never giving up means that you permanently remove “quit” from your vocabulary, and do what is necessary (morally speaking) to survive (or accomplish a really difficult task).

Examples of those who did what was necessary to get the job done include:

· Marcus Luttrell, the “lone survivor” SEAL who fought his way out of what most would consider a no-win situation, outnumbered and outgunned 100 to 1. He beat the odds through shear tenacity, mental toughness and not ever quitting.

· Aron Ralston sawed his arm off to survive after he getting it trapped beneath a boulder. Would you?

· The Apollo 13 crew never gave up, even when everyone was gearing up for the inevitable news that the moon mission was lost in space. Through intense focus, creativity and never giving up in the bleakest of circumstances, they were able to navigate their tin can of a spaceship back to Earth. Really amazing!

On the other end of the spectrum is a peer of mine at Officer Candidate School named Bush. He was as gung-ho of a SEAL candidate as any who could “out-PT” me on any day. Yet Bush quit during our very first PT of BUD/s! Wow, I could not believe my eyes. “I just can’t do it” he said.

“What do you mean? We have been doing this every day for that last 4 months!” Still he quit. He left a back door open which he literally ran through at the first sign of serious hardship.

You must be like Luttrell, Ralston and the Apollo 13 crew, not like Bush. Close all doors to quitting. Remove it as an option. Never give up until you succeed, or die trying.

20X Factor: you are capable of 20 times more than you think you are

During Hell Week I heard this quote from an instructor. It stuck, and sure enough, by Thursday of Hell Week I was actually getting stronger and having fun. Most of my class had quit. What was going on? Once the mind accepted the new circumstances, it adapted and started to work with it.

I found myself enjoying the humor of the crazy instructor staff, and I was astounded how my body, despite 100 hours of no sleep and non-stop training, was getting stronger (though I admit there were moments of delirium as my mind struggled to deal with the lack of sleep).

Bottom line, this is the same experience ultra-runners and those who do extreme events have – a break down, then building back up as the body and mind adapt to the new, harsh reality of the circumstances. Through this you learn that you are truly capable of at least 20 times more than you previously thought. You undergo a psychological and physiological paradigm shift. After this experience, anything less than Hell Week looked easy. Our SEALFIT Kokoro camp is built upon this same concept. Don’t accept your self-imposed limitations. Dare to discover what you can truly accomplish!

Friday, April 22, 2011

PFT and Strength


Physical Fitness Test (Marine Corps)
19 pull-ups
100 crunches in 2 min
20:26 min 3 mile run
Score: 280/300 (Personal Record)
Strength
Off the Rack Back Squat [parallel] for 8(135#), 5(175#), 3(195#), 1(225#)
Weighted Pull-Ups for 5,3,1 (55#,65#,75#)
Fixed Bar Turkish Get-Up for 1 rep with 80#
Reflection
I did well on the pull-ups for the PFT today but I still need to work to get down quicker because I often go slow on the negative. I REALLY need to work more running into my training. The 3 mile course was different than before but I still did poorly. I want to be down to 19:30 min. Especially with the races and OCS coming up. I have been doing a lot of strength training. I will have to scale that a little back to make room for running and work capacity training.
Quote of the Day
"Don't aim for success if you want it; just do what you love and believe in, and it will come naturally."
- David Frost

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Tempo Run



Tempo Run for 40 min
Reflection
I ran from Temple U. to City Hall and back with a few breaks in between. I did it with my new camel back. I went at a good pace with a training partner. I had just eaten buffalo beef and had done heavy box squats yesterday. So that could have partially effected my poor performance. I felt like I was going to vomit and my legs fatigued fast. I have been running but not as regularly as I want. I have not gotten any long runs in which I think really benefit me personally. I hope to do ok in my 3 mile run (PFT) this Friday. I will take it easy tomorrow.
Quote of the Day
"I will pour out my wrath upon you and breathe out my fiery anger against you; I will hand you over to brutal men, men skilled in destruction."
~Ezekiel 21:31

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

"Lynne" (BW Bench Press and Pull-Ups)

Strength
Back Box Squat with mini bands for 5x3 with 185#
"Lynne"
Five rounds for max reps of:
Body weight bench press (195#) for 9,8,7,7,5 reps
Pull-ups (kipping) for 17,11,13,12,10 reps
*Rested about 2 min in between super-sets
Foot to Bar Hanging Straight Leg Raises for 2x12
Reflection
I did CrossFit WOD, Lynne, today. Doing the pullups after bench pressing my body-weight was tough because I already felt fatigued. I allowed myself recovery between rounds so that I could push for more reps. I am not sure if that is how the workout is supposed to go but whatever. I did not push any of the rounds to complete muscle failure or else my other rounds would suffer. I will try to get some running in tomorrow hopefully. And maybe some gymnastics and a quick met-con.
Quote of the Day
"As to methods there may be a million and then some, but principles are few. The man who grasps principles can successfully select his own methods. The man who tries methods, ignoring principles, is sure to have trouble."
- Ralph Waldo Emerson

Monday, April 18, 2011

Active Recovery (Mountain Biking)

Active Recovery
25 HSPU (Hand Stand Push-Ups) in sets of 2-3 reps
50 Rolling Rocks for time (1:55)
50 games style push-ups for time (1:57)
Reflection
I got a little training in today while allowing my body to recover from the Field Exercise. My right heel (my foot) has a 2 inch in circumference blister. It makes it a little uncomfortable to walk. I walked on my toes to avoid the discomfort which made my calf muscles very sore. I learned from the FEX that I have to study and practice a lot more Marine Corps things. I wil try to include this on my blog to motivate myself to do it. I am not sure exactly if I have a PFT this week so I do not want to train my legs into an oblivion. I will try to get my hands on a mountain bike soon. I would like to do trail running and then mountain bike in between running the trails.
Quote of the Day
"Do you know the difference between education and experience? Education is when you read the fine print; experience is what you get when you don't."
- Pete Seeger

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Marine Corps Field Exercise (Friday-Sunday)



I am going to be on a Marine Corps Field Exercise in Quatico,VA from Friday morning until Sunday afternoon. I will be leading patrols, running Small Unit Leadership Evaluations (SULEs), obstacle course, land navigation, and other fun stuff like that. The thing is that I actually semi enjoy some of this stuff. But what I really HATE is being sleep deprived and being cold/wet from rain for several hours/days. I can't complain because US Marines have had to endure MUCH worse. We will be flying in on a Helicopter and we will be able to listen to some TBS (The Basic School) Instructors. It will be a good experience. I hope to learn a lot so that I am prepared for Officer Candidate School on July 8th-August 20th.

"Our Country won't go on forever, if we stay soft as we are now. There won't be any AMERICA because some foreign soldier will invade us and take our women and breed a hardier race!"
LT. GEN. LEWIS "CHESTY" PULLER, USMC

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Olympic Lifting and Gymnastics Met-Con

SWOD
Back Box Squat with mini bands for 3x5 with 175#
Power Snatch for 3,3,3 with 115#
Snatch Balance for speed 3,3,3 with 135#
Gymnastics Met-con
7 Rounds: 7 ring pull-ups and 7 ring push-ups
Completed in 14 min
Reflection
I hit some olympic lifting and a gymnastic met-con with rings today. I also did Back Box Squats with mini bands. I will work these into my training to improve my squat while minimizing soreness. I have to keep doing olympic lifting to build the skill and improve my strength.
Quote of the Day
"A successful man is one who can lay a firm foundation with the bricks others have thrown at him." - David Brinkley

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Miss Fisher WOD

SWOD
Power Rack Bench Press with Bands and fat gripz for 5,5,5,5 at 205#
Conditioning WOD
Front squat/Push press/Thruster with 95#
“Miss Fisher”
10x Front squat/10x Push press/10x Thrusters/2x Chest to bar pull ups/2x Box jumps/2x burpees
8x Front squat/8x Push press/8x Thrusters/4x Chest to bar pull ups/4x Box jumps/4x burpees
6x Front squat/6x Push press/6x Thrusters/6x Chest to bar pull ups/6x Box jumps/6x burpees
4x Front squat/4x Push press/4x Thrusters/8x Chest to bar pull ups/8x Box jumps/8x burpees
2x Front squat/2x Push press/2x Thrusters/10x Chest to bar pull ups/10x Box jumps/10x burpees
Completed in 16:37
Reflection
This was a tough workout that knocked the wind out of me. I had done this one many months ago but I am pretty sure that I was much faster this time. I tried to keep the pace going but had to get oxygen at certain points in the workout. I need to incorporate more met-cons because I have been really focusing on strength. I cannot neglect my conditioning.
Quote of the Day
“Strength does not come from winning. Your struggles develop your strengths. When you go through hardships and decide not to surrender, that is strength."
~Arnold Schwarzenegger

Video: Josh Wagner explains interesting tips on squatting. I met Josh at his box, CrossFit Apex, when participating in The Disposable Heroes WOD.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Strength Training (intro to Adventure Racing)


SWOD
Back Squat for 6x1 at 235#
One Arm Dumbbell Side Press with 85# for 2,3,4,5 reps
Weighted Dips for 3,3,3 with 125#
2 finger pull-ups with re-grip for 3x10
Hanging Foot to Bar with straight leg for 3x10
Reflection
I was sick today with a bad migraine. I get them when the weather changes like it did today at a high of 80 something degrees. I had to force myself to vomit out my almond butter, coconut milk, and blueberries/peaches smoothie. Afterwards I had to force myself to sleep off the migraine. I felt foggy for the rest of the day but decided to do some strength training at night. I will try to do some trail running in boots if weather permits and some crossfit conditioning. I would like to do an adventure race that invloves trail running with land navigation, mountain biking, and canoeing. There is a 100 mile race coming up next month. I need a mountain bike though.
Quote of the Day
"Don't be afraid to give your best to what seemingly are small jobs. Every time you conquer one it makes you that much stronger. If you do the little jobs well, the big ones will tend to take care of themselves.” ~Dale Carnegie

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Trail Running in Wissahickon Park and Strength Training

Trail Running in Wissahickon Park at a good pace for about 30 min.
SWOD
Box Squat with mini bands for 1,1,1 for 205#
T-Bar Row for 1,1,1 for 280#
Overhead Squat 1,1,1 for 185# (PR)
T-Bar Barbell Row Pyramid Down with 135#
One arm row 5 reps, switch hands 5 reps, switch hands 4,4,3,3,2,2,1,1 then two handed row for 20 reps
Reflection
Today I ran through Wissahickon Park outside of Philadelphia. The trails were really nice and scenic. Many of the trails were built for Mountain Biking. I would like to try out mountain biking soon. It looks like a good workout. I PRed on the Overhead Squat which will hopefully translate in my olympic lifting. I will implemenet box squats more often because I read that they help to minimize soreness which is important so that I can run.
Quote of the Day
“Example is not the main thing in influencing other people; it’s the only thing.” ~Abraham Lincoln

Watch this inspiring video on Navy Seal, David Goggins, who I actually met once at a Naval Academy vs. Temple Football Game.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Paleo Video

10 rounds of Cindy
5 pull-ups (alternated pull-ups with a 15 ft rope climb)
10 push-ups
15 air squats
Reflection
Today I did a light Cindy workout. I need to recover but I prefer an active recovery as oppose to an entire day off. I have been eating very Paleo for a while now but slip up on weekends. I feel relativly lean yet I am tipping the scale at 199-200 lbs. This is more than I have weighed for a while. I do not know if it is because of the occassional splurges that I have on the weekends or if it is muscle mass but I desire to be in the low 190 to maybe even late 180 lbs. I will dial in my diet. I will continue to train the way I am but make some changes and focus on my goals and weaknesses (goats). I have to take care of my hands by soaking them in hot water and trying to take off the calluses. The wounds hurt my training more than they hurt me.
Quote of the Day
"Clocks slay time... time is dead as long as it is being clicked off by little wheels; only when the clock stops does time come to life."
~William Faulkner

In this video: The Primal/Paleo/Caveman Eating Habit in a nutshell. Enjoy!

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Strength Training and Rowing/Push-ups

SWOD
Barbell Military Press for 1,1,1 at 155#
Hang Clean for 1,1,1 at 175#
Back Squat for 6x2-3 at 225#
Tactical Pull-Up (up to one side down, up to other side counts as 2 reps) 4x8
Rowing
15 min amrap
250 m row
25 push-ups (chest to deck to full elbow extension)
Completed 6 rounds (Total: 1500 m row and 150 reps)
Reflection
I did some strength training in which I got a PR in the Military Press at 155#. I will now be shooting for 175 lbs in the military press. I still need to pound my back squat to make improvements while allowing recovery. I did a quick and intense rowing and push-up workout that I have done before in the past but I went much harder this time.
Quote of the Day
"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give."
~Winston Churchill

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

100 m Repeats and Legless Rope Climbing

MAX REP Pull-Up for 5 sets
Stadium Stairs for 10 min
Running
10x100 m recovered by walking back to start (about 14 sec sprints)
Gymnastics
Muscle Up Progressions
Legless Rope Climb (35-40 ft) for 4 ascents
Reflection
I felt very sore today and could barely walk this morning because of the heavy back squats. I will continue to focus on doing heavy squats but also allowing recovery. It is going to make it hard to run when I can barely walk after a heavy squat workout. I will just have to perhaps arrange running before the squatting. Tomorrow I hope to do some more heavy training and olympic lifting maybe even going to Iron Sport. I also would like to do a met-con and or rowing/swimming.
Quote of the Day
"He who makes a beast of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man"
- Samuel Johnson

Mark Rippetoe on the Barbell Squat

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

BS + PP and Heavy Thrusters

Skill
Double Unders for 5x20 with 1 min rest
SWOD
10 min on the min alternating exercises
Back Squat with 205# for 5 reps
155# Push Press for 5 reps
then
155# Thrusters for 8x3 with 1 min rest
Tactical Pull-Ups (pull-up to one side and move head to the opposite side while over the bar) for 6,6,7,8,8 reps
Turkish Get-Up MAX for 1x1 with 90#
Bottoms down 50# Kettlebell One Arm Overhead Press for 5, 7, 8 reps
Captain of Crush #1 Gripper for 3x9
Reflection
Today I did some strength training but kept the pace fast. I need to work on my back squat because my strength in that exercise is pathetic. I will maintain strict form breaking parallel unless purposelly doing partials. It should also help my olympic lifting if I get my Back Squat (BS) weight up. I need to maintain/increase running frequency to maintain/improve running ability while BS training.
Quote of the Day
"There is an immutable conflict at work in life and in business, a constant battle between peace and chaos. Neither can be mastered, but both can be influenced. How you go about that is the key to success."
- Philip Knight

Monday, April 4, 2011

Strength Training

SWOD
Weighted Dip 1,1,1 (145# may not have reached 90 degrees)
Sumo-Deadlift 1,1,1,1,1,1 (405#)
Snatch Balance 1,1,1 (175# need to work to get deeper squat)
Gymnastics
False Grip Ring Pull-ups to low chest
HSPU Work
Reflection
I had to make-up for some strength training from last week. I had to cut back on some training today because of school. I hit some good numbers for strength and I will be getting some new gear soon. I would like to work on my double unders, gripper strength, and olympic lifts.
Quote of the Day
It is only through labor and painful effort, by grim energy and resolute courage, that we move on to better things.
~Theodore Roosevelt

Coach Burgener - Olympic Lifting

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Fitness Goals from April to June

Gymnastics
• 1 muscle up on rings
• 15 Handstand Push-Ups against wall
Olympic-Lifting
• 205 lbs snatch balance
• 225 lbs clean & Jerk
Power-Lifting
• 175 lbs Military Press
Sprinting
• 25 sec x 200 m
• 1:05 min x 400 m
Endurance
• 19:30 x 3 mile run
• 45 min x 6 mile run
Military
• 50 burpees in less than 3 min
• Rope Climb x 10 without stopping (15-18 ft rope)
Practice
• Double-Unders 3x a week
• Kipping 2x a week
• Strongman 1x a week
• Snatches 2x a week
• Back Squat 1x a week
• Trail Run in boots 1x a week

Gymnastics and Trail Running in boots

Morning WOD: Gymnastics Density for 20 min (alternating A & B) with 1 min rest at 10 min
A. Ring L-Pull-Ups for 5 and Broad Jumps for 3 on the min
B. Handstand Push-Ups for 2 and 115# Overhead Squat for 3 on the min
Afternoon WOD: Trail Run in combat boots for 3x5 min intervals with 2 min recovery
Reflection
I hope to be able train hard this upcoming week. I will be changing my training template around a little bit the week after next.
Quote of the Day
"You were born to win, but to be a winner, you must plan to win, prepare to win, and expect to win."
-- Zig Ziglar

Temple University Gymnastics

Friday, April 1, 2011

Strength Training

2x20 dubs
SWOD
Barbell Floor Press 1,1,1,1,1,1,1 (265#)
Clean 1,1,1,1 (185#)
Weighted Chin 1,1,1,1,1,1,1 (100#) minor leg kick – thin bar
Reflection
I still felt very sore from my workouts on Wednesday. My hands were also still tender so I believe that is why some of my lifts were not as strong as I wanted them to be. I also have to scale back the training from what I was going to do originally. I gave in and ate some bad things today. I have just been stressed about things lately. I will keep on this type of training for another week and alter it afterwards. The below video offers a tutorial on the muscle up. I will be working to get my first muscle up. Check out the video.
Quote of the Day
"He would bring to it all the skill that practice had brought him. And he would stand, whoever fell." - Upton Sinclair