Posts Tagged ‘Costa Mesa’

CrossFit Chaser

January 10th, 2011



Yesterday we were reading about the upcoming 2011 CrossFit Games… ain’t gonna lie, it got me excited!

We come into the gym, find their name on the board, and say to ourselves, “Gotta beat that number.”  Or maybe they come to OCCF at the same time as you and as they just pass you on the WoD you find yourself fighting for that extra hustle to move a little faster, just to beat… your chaser!  We all have that person we chase whether their times are found online or in-house.

A chaser, whether they chase you or you chase them, is a great thing to have.  What’s even better if you are friends and are able to support each other.  Every member here at OCCF is a potential friend who will be there to cheer you on or push you a little harder.

Yesterday we did CrossFit Total.   It was an opportunity for us to enjoy each others company in between sets.  And although you weren’t going directly head to head with each other, you still helped your work-in partner out by paying attention to theirs lifts and cheering them on to help them get that PR.  A little extra support always help get those extra lbs up.  Thanks to all of the the CrossFit Chasers out there that force us to go a little harder.

Announcements~

~OC ThrowDown is around the corner.  Volunteer meeting Thursday @ 6pm.

~Paleo Challenge coming up!

~Back to Basics workshop January 22nd @ 10am

“WoD”

A. “Isabel”

30 Snatches for time (135/85)

Rest 10:00

B. “Karen”

150 wallballs for time

Learning to SHUT IT DOWN

December 20th, 2010

Bigs with a 520# deadlift for a double!

I CANNOT STRESS THIS ENOUGH. REST TIME IS A MUST. GET OUT OF THE GYM AND GO OUTSIDE. DO AN OUTDOOR TRAVEL WOD IF YOU REALLY HAVE TO BUT EVEN BETTER: DO ANOTHER SPORT! I HAVE BEEN IN CROSSFIT FOR NEARLY 4 YEARS. THERE ARE PERIODS OF OBSESSION WITH TRAINING AND YOU SHOULD EMBRACE THOSE. THERE WILL ALSO BE PERIODS OF BURNOUT. TRUST ME IF IT HAS NOT COME YET, IT WILL. THERE ARE DIFFERENT LEVELS OF BURNOUT. DO NOT MAKE THE MISTAKE OF LETTING YOURSELF GET TO SERIOUS BURNOUT. THIS CAN BE AVOIDED BY TAKING PERIODIC TIME OFF AWAY FROM THE GYM.  THIS IS A MUST! EVEN DURING THE TIMES OF OBSESSION YOU MUST STEP BACK FOR A SHORT PERIOD FROM TIME TO TIME. THE HOLIDAY PERIOD IS A PERFECT TIME FOR THAT. IT IS A TIME FOR FAMILY AND RELAXATION. TAKE THIS BREAK AND COME BACK TO CROSSFIT WITH A RESTED MIND/SOUL/BODY. COME BACK IN THE NEW YEAR WITH A DEFINITIVE PLAN FOR WHAT YOU WANT TO ACHIEVE PHYSICALLY IN HERE AND ATTACK IT LIKE A MAD PIT BULL.

This article was written by a climber (Eric Horst) for climbers but pertains to CrossFit and CrossFitters perfectly.

“The Importance of an OFF SEASON”

If you are like me and many other climbers, you are mildly obsessed (or worse!) with climbing, and you mind and fingertips are never far from the rock. However, over the course of a year, accumulating physical and mental fatigue grows to a point that you can no longer recover fully just by taking a couple of days off. This is true for serious athletes in every sport, which is why allprofessional sports have an off-season. So let me ask you: When is your off-season?

The problem with us climbers is that there are just too many classic climbs, too little time to do them all! So, the tendency is to never take any time off and, thus, climb year-round. While this might seem like a good plan for maximizing technical gains and adding to your ticklist, the long-term effects of not taking a break from climbing can be injury, a drop in motivation, and a performance plateau. Any of this sound familiar? If so, part of the problem may be that you’ve gone too long without an extended break from climbing. Taking downtime is essential for all living things and it’s not something you can cheat on—if you don’t take some time off, you will eventually be forced to take time off!

Now, I bet you are already setting goals and planning roadtrips for next season—personally I’ve got three major climbing trips locked in over the next seven months. But before you start training for your upcoming trips, why don’t you do as I will do and take a break for a few weeks.

Following is a three-step process for recharging your motivation and refreshing your body during a self-imposed off-season from climbing. Individuals living in northern areas will most likely take this off-season break during the winter, whereas climbers in warm-weather climates may take their break during the peak of the summer heat. Ok, let’s get started.

Step #1 of the off-season renewal process is to pause and reflect on the past season.

With the year winding down, it’s always a good idea to take a mental inventory of accomplishments and experiences of the past year. Take a few days and dwell on all that was good for you in the past year—enjoyable roadtrips, personal-best sends, new friends made, new places seen, and such. For many amped-up climbers it’s tough to stop and smell the rose in this way, because they are so intensely focused on the next climb. Yes, it’s true I’ve been there; and I can tell you firsthand that being so intensely goal-focused and future-oriented is to miss out on some of the joy and experience of climbing. So, take some time to reflect on past climbs and really bathe your mind in the experience. Visualize a kind of “highlight reel” to your year in climbing—doing so will recharge motivation and help you tap deeper into the spirit of climbing. Remember, it’s not all about the send, it’s about the experience! The bottom line: Don’t be so quick to discard recent experiences in favor of future projects.

On a more global level, it’s also important to pause and your count our blessings. Natural disasters and tragedies of many kinds affect millions around the world, and even within the climbing community there’s been great loss this season. Take solace that your daily challenges are likely minor by comparison, and vow to wake each morning with an attitude of gratitude. Possessing this mindset will foster positive energy and a forward-looking vision of “possibility” that will grow personal happiness and help seed future successes.

Step #2 of the off-season renewal process is to rest and recover!

If you are like me, you’ve developed a few tweaks or pains this season. Yeah, I’m going on age 43 and the pangs seem to appear more frequently every year. Then again, I do hear from dozens—actually hundreds—of young climbers each year who are nursing finger, elbow, and shoulder injuries…so, maybe age has nothing to do with after all? But I digress.

Again, let’s use pro athletes as an analog—all professional and Olympic athletes take time off each year, and so should you! I suggest you schedule anywhere from a two-week to two-month break from climbing, and shift your focus and energy onto something else. This is a good time to get busy working toward some of your other life goals and to engage in different physical activity unrelated to climbing, such as snowboarding, skiing, or perhaps even playing a team sport for a while. Most important, however, you don’t want to do anything that stresses your body in the way climbing does—so that means no indoor climbing and training for climbing.

Of course, many climbers resist taking time off, saying they will lose strength and slow improvement. The truth is that any loss of fitness during a layoff of just a few weeks will quickly return upon resumption of training. Conversely, by not taking an a few weeks of rest each season you vastly increase your risk of a tendon or muscle injury that will force you out of climbing and set you way back. Clearly, the smart thing is to take a little time off each year and give your body a chance to recover from the accumulated fatigue and traumas of our rigorous sport.

As someone who is very serious about performance, it’s my MO to take few weeks off from climbing each year between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Such a break from training and climbing allows any tweaks or nagging injuries to heal. This year, I’ve developed some lower back issues as well as some slight pain in a couple fingers, so my self-imposed “off-season” finally gives my body a chance to correct itself. After a few weeks of frequent stretching, some modest antagonist muscle training, and active rest (in my case, playing backyard football with my sons), I should be ready to start a new season of training and climbing with a fully healthy body. You, too, can benefit from an off-season break from climbing—in fact, consider it mandatory if you have any kind of pain in your fingers, elbows, shoulders, or back!

Step #3 of the off-season renewal process is to reinvent your training and climbing.

After the off-season break, it’s essential that you return to climbing with a resolve to mix things up. First, plan a ten-week training cycle that incorporates new exercises and climbing drills. One of the biggest mistakes climbers make is to engage in the same training program year after year—which, of course, means they are limiting themselves and perhaps even locking into a performance plateau. Effective training must be progressive and ever-changing. Check out my book Training for Climbing for some fresh training and practice strategies that will help take your game to the next level.

It’s also important to somewhat reinvent your MO as a climber—that is to climb with some new partners, visit new crags, and possibly even shift your primary climbing preference for a while (that is, to switch from bouldering to sport climbing, or from sport to trad climbing, or whatever). This strategy of changing things up every few months—both your training and climbing focus—is one of the biggest secrets to long-term motivation and improvement.

Source: http://www.mountainzone.com/blogs/performance_training/2006/12/importance-of-climbing-off-season.html

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WoD

A. Hang Power Snatch x1 – Oh Squat x3 x5

B.  3 Rounds For Time:

Run 400M
15 Overhead Squat -( 105lbs/75) (intermediate 85/55)
15 Knees to Elbows
-
-
TD Krew
Part 1: A and B the same as group.
Rest 5+ hours
Part 2

3 rounds for time of:
40 wall balls (20lbs – to 10 foot target)
20 pullups

Fat does NOT equal Fat

December 19th, 2010

It’s been a popular misconception for a long time now that ingesting fat will MAKE you fat.  Unfortunately, this is not true and anyone subscribing to this theory is doing themselves a huge disservice.

Did you know that if you starve your body of fats, it will start to hang on to fat even harder, which makes it even harder for you to lose the fat on your body.  Don’t kid yourself.  Dietary fat is not the same as body fat.  Nowhere even close.

That being said there is a huge difference between the types of dietary fat you can choose to consume.  Some are very harmful while others are highly beneficial.  The trick here is to avoid hydrogenated oils and trans fats at all costs.  As a matter of fact, the main rule of thumb is to avoid anything that’s ‘processed’ and try to stick with oils and fats that are as close to their natural state as possible.

Here’s a list of good fats: avocados, nuts & seeds, coconut oil, organic unpasteurized butter & cream, fish oil, salmon & other fatty fish, and olives.

Often time when a package says “low-fat” it is loaded with sugar or man made chemicals that help with taste and texture.  Your food should be real.  Avoid processed food.  This weekend I watched the “McDonald’s Experiment” on you tube and was disgusted that after 3 months, those french fries never went bad.  How can our body process that?  It can’t.  What our body can process is real foods…meat, fish, veggies, nut & seeds, and some fruit.
Read more: http://www.articlesbase.com/nutrition-articles/dietary-fat-is-not-bad-for-you-1667030.html#ixzz18cjzFd7L
WoD

“The Smoking Gun”

Seven rounds for time:

4 Burpee deadlifts (60% 1RM C&J)

3 Burpee power cleans  (60% 1RM C&J)

2 Burpee squat cleans (60% 1RM C&J)

1 Burpee squat clean & jerk (60% 1RM C&J)

Your hands may not leave the bar and your chest must touch the bar for each burpee.

TDC

Part 1: The Smoking Gun

Rest 5+ hours

Part 2: 5 sets:
Row 250 m
9 burpees
35 double unders
rest 90 sec
(rest 10 min)
5 sets:
35 double unders
9 burpees
Row 250 m
rest 90 sec

Holiday “Gifts”

December 13th, 2010

So it’s the Holiday Season … and you may be receiving some unexpected gifts if you aren’t careful.  A new pair of love handles might be a gift coming you’re way if you go overboard with the Holiday Parties, dinners, and family get togethers.  Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying to not celebrate but just don’t throw away 12 months of hard work for one month.  If you choose to party a few days in a row learn from our vets (Andre, Kos, Olga, Walsh, and the ring leader Philip) …come in anyway.  I watched several members suffer their way through the Filthy Fifty but they all got it done!  Now if you are seriously hung over then do not come in because your body and mushy brain need to recover.

December/January can be sneaky because we wear more layers than usual but we both know that it doesn’t last long!  Be sure to get your WoDs in this Holiday season.

WoD

A1.Back Squat 5-5-5-5-5

Rest :10

A2. Ring Dips AMRAP x5

Rest 3:00 bw sets

B. ”Grace”

30 Clean and Jerks for time (135/95)

ThrowDown competitors

Same as group, then spend 10 minutes post wod working on one of your goats.

Max Fernandez, 2010 OC ThrowDown Men’s Elite Champion.

We’ve all been there…half a** CrossFitting.  Eating like crap, training 2 or 3 days a week, and wondering, “Why am I not seeing results??”  Well there is a formula for CrossFit Success and is goes like this – Eat Healthy, which also includes laying off the booze, and train consistently.  It is not rocket science.  It is HARD WORK, DISCIPLINE, and DEDICATION.  Those three words will take you places.  I understand that we all have our own genetic dispositions and respond differently to fitness in general but the whole point is to be fit and if you come here and throw it down, you will be fit.  There is no way you can come here regularly and NOT see results.

Yes the WoD always wins but, you will get faster, you will get stronger, and you will grow not only physically but mentally as well!  I suppose I should add that CrossFit is more than just diet and fitness, it is family.  Day in and day out we come together and share a common interest.  We sweat together and sometimes it feels like we die a lil’ together.   I say there are two ways to become instantly close with someone…you either cry together or CrossFit together!

Come Join the OCC Family…we don’t bite…well not often anyway. ~Kiki

Announcements:

Awwwwwww yeah!!  Christmas PaRtY 2011 is this Saturday at 8pm.  Rally at the Alley in your ugliest Christmas sweater, cutest elf costume, or sexiest Mrs. Clause get up!  It’ll be great to spend time with you all outside the box!

If you haven’t seen it yet, check out The ThrowDown website: www.octhrowdown.com

WoD

A. Shoulder to overhead anyway, anyhow, (155/105) 30x and every time you drop the bar, you do 5x burpees.

Rest 5 minutes

B. 5 Sets for time.

-30 total alternating Russian step ups unweighted – 24″ box

-10x Ring Dips

DON’T SWEAT THE small STUFF

December 1st, 2010

He who fears he shall suffer, already suffers what he fears.  ~Montaigne, Essays, 1588

I know there are those of you who are like me…overly hard on yourself.  There are times when I get caught up in the little things and worry about things I have no control of.  Other times I worry needlessly about things I wish I could control more…like my WoDs!  As many of you know I injured my wrist a while ago when I was doing Muay Thai.  Well the injury would come and go until finally it screamed loud and clear, “Take care of me!”  So I did just that.  I babied the heck outta my wrist for two months and guess what, it’s feeling light years from where it was.  Almost healed wrist, check!  Metcon down the tubes, check!

My first unmodified WoD back I was pumped to include pull-ups!  That excitement fled quickly as I got my butt handed to me.  Not too long ago I was able to do 26 pull-ups in a row…three days ago I was struggling to link 10 pull-ups together.  My first round down I found myself getting extremely negative and hard on myself.  If you are like me, then you are your own worst critic.  In the middle of my WoD I thought of this quote, “Wanna fly, you got to give up the shit that weights you down.”  ~Toni Morrison.  I realized that I needed an attitude adjustment and did my best to encourage myself along just as I do for you, our hard working members.  I would never tell you, “You suck, just quit!” so why on earth would I say that to myself?  When I started with a simple, “You can do this” my WoD didn’t become easier but the metaphorical “weight” of the WoD lightened.  We all work hard in here, regardless of level, so at the end of every WoD we should be proud of ourselves.  Don’t wish you did more or pushed harder…don’t hold anything back…let it all go and finish the WoD.

People are motivated in different ways and often times positive encouragement is exactly what one needs.  Others (aka Andre) like to be yelled at and called less than flattering things (which I admit, I sometimes I enjoy, ha!).  Approach your daily WoDs with an optimistic attitude and even if you aren’t able to do it just the way you envisioned, that’s okay.  Robert Eliot makes an excellent point, ”Rule number one is, don’t sweat the small stuff.  Rule number two is, it’s all small stuff.”  All I care about is that you are giving it your all.  Don’t feel sorry for yourself…grab yourself by your bootstraps and giddy up!  Keep chipping away at that WoD.  Keep working on the skills you want and don’t forget about the rest of your bag of tricks.  Eat healthy, come consistently, and bring a good attitude…you’ll go far here at Orange Coast CrossFit.  Thank you to all of our members who bring a smile and help encourage one another. ~Kiki

“The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing you will make one.”  ~Elbert Hubbard, The Note Book, 1927

Andre wrote a really good comment below.

Announcements:

CHRISTMAS PaaaaaRTaaaaY December 11th @ 8pm.  Drinks and apps on us but you gotta dress up…wrap yourself in some lights, paint yourself red and green, or put a huge bow on your lovely head!  We’re really excited to party with you all and can’t wait to get some quality time with you outside of the box.  Time to Rally at The Alley Christmas Style. HoHoHo!!!!

OC ThrowDown!  Both Men’s Elite and Intermediate are SOLD OUT.  We are going to need lots of man power to run this event…this mean YOU!  Please register here to volunteer.  If you’re a member of OCC and not competing, we’d love to have your help!

WoD

5 Rounds of:

12x Thrusters (125/75)

Row 300m

Rest 3:00 bw rounds (Hit each round hard and fast. DO NOT PACE THIS WOD. EACH ROUND ALL OUT!)

(Post time for each round to whiteboard.)

Have a Great Thanksgiving

November 24th, 2010

Elite mens heat battle it out for that coveted claim of “Fittest Man in Orange County”

Today we will have 6, 7am, and noon classes.  We will also have a class Friday at 12 noon.

According to Merriam Webster′s Collegiate Dictionary, an athlete is “a person who is trained or skilled in exercises, sports, or games requiring strength, agility, or stamina.

The CrossFit definition of an athlete is a bit tighter. We define an athlete as “a person who is trained or skilled in strength, power, balance and agility, flexibility, and endurance. The CrossFit model holds fitness, health, and athleticism as strongly overlapping constructs. For most purposes, they can be seen as equivalents.

There are three metabolic pathways that provide the energy for all human action. These “metabolic engines are known as the phosphagen pathway, the glycolytic pathway, and the oxidative pathway.The first, the phosphagen, dominates the highest-powered activities, those that last less than about ten seconds. The second pathway, the glycolytic, dominates moderate-powered activities, those that last up to several minutes. These are the “anaerobic pathways. The third pathway, the oxidative, dominates low-powered activities, those that last in excess of several minutes. This is the aerobic pathway.

Total fitness, the fitness that CrossFit promotes and develops, requires competency and training in each of these three pathways or engines. Balancing the effects of these three pathways largely determines the how and why of the metabolic conditioning or “cardio that we do at CrossFit.

Favoring one or two pathways to the exclusion of the others and not recognizing the impact of excessive training in the oxidative pathway are arguably the two most common faults in fitness training. Time domain matching of task or sport to training is the first step to effective, legitimate strength and conditioning.

WoD

A1. Deadlift 7-7-7-7

Rest :10

A2. 15 Burpees x4 sets

Rest 2:00

B. 3 Rounds for time

-10 barbell rollouts

-15 Knees to elbows

-25 Situps

Pain was their body’s way of telling them that they’d pushed themselves to their limits — which was exactly where they were supposed to be.

-Ernest Shackleton

Save the Date

November 21st, 2010

Introducing the flyer for this year’s OC Throwdown

We are excited to announce…Registration for the 2011 Orange County CrossFit ThrowDown will open at 12 noon on Tuesday November 23th!!  There are 125 spots this year and from all of the emails I’ve received this past month, I am sure they will fill up quickly!  We will be sending out an email to previous competitors with information on how to register and we will also post the info right here on Orange Coast CrossFit’s blog.  The website for the OC Throwdown is scheduled to be ready this week.  We will keep everyone posted!

Schedule for this week:  We will be CLOSED on THANKSGIVING and on the following friday the 26th there will not be any AM classes.

WoD

Round 1:

Max Thrusters in 3:00 (135/85)

Row 500m

Rest 5 minutes

Round 2:

Max Power Snatch in 3:00 (105/75)

Row 500m

Rest 5 minutes

Round 3:

Max Double Unders in 3:00

500m Row

Each round will have two scores: total reps in 3:00 and total time to complete each round.

Why Fitness?

November 16th, 2010

Our good friend Lamarr Smith of CrossFit Next Level Performance…looking a lil soft. You would never train with a fat trainer right? So come on Lamarr!! lay off the sweets and get into the gym! You gotta set an example for your members.

Two years ago I opened the door to this place because I wanted to have a place to create elite fitness. Not just drop a few pounds, that’s what LA Boxing is for. But a place to develop a fitness that is extraordinary and absolute. We have that. Orange Coast CrossFit is equipped with every tool needed to complete every single CrossFit workout as Rxd. That means that we can deliver the CrossFit programming pure to our athlete’s without substitutions. At OCC we are PURE CrossFit and I am very proud of this.

So why Fitness? Why spend all this time on improving our the physical domain. Coach Glassman says that the gym is a “testing ground for improving the will” and I agree with him. He goes on to say that, “CrossFitters see physical education as a primary vehicle for teaching virtues essential for achievement. For us, the world of physical challenge and achievement have become metaphors for harvesting life’s riches and battling its plagues…For CrossFitters, highly developed human performance is art and personal participation in these art, at all skill levels, is a transcendent experience.”

Here is the full article here. One that I printed out a few years back and have been drawn back to many times. Check it out!

WoD

A. Power clean 5-5-5 (keep hands on the bar at all times, no more than a 2 second pause at the floor. This is not 5 singles!)

B. Complete as many rounds as possible in 12 minutes of:
400 meter run
5 Deadlifts

(Deadlift weight is up to each athlete. Go as heavy as you can. Aim for 4+ rounds. Below are some of the top CrossFit athletes results for todays wod.)

Rob Orlando 405lbs, 5 rounds + 3 deads.
Tim Burke 405lbs, 5 rounds + 300m.
Pat Sherwood 405lbs, 5 rounds + 100m.
Kevin Montoya 345-415lbs, 5 rounds.
Rebecca Voigt 285lbs, nearly 5 rounds.
E.C. Synkowski 195lbs, 4 rounds + 300m.
Dave Lipson 500lbs, 4 rounds.

Sweet tooth…

November 15th, 2010

Sugar is BIG business. The average American consumes an astounding 2-3 pounds of sugar each week. In the last 20 years, we have increased sugar consumption in the U.S. 26 pounds to 135 lbs. of sugar per person per year!

These past couple weeks we’ve been getting the “What should I eat?” question.  What we put into our bodies is extremely important and directly correlates with our output.  If we put peanut butter into a brand new vehicle, that thing isn’t going anywhere!  Same goes for our bodies…if we’re eating fast food and things that never go bad, like twinkies, then we are in trouble!  Think about it, if there is something that has been sitting on the shelf for six months and still has 5 more years of shelf life, how can we expect our bodies to process that?  Almost everything we eat should be able to go bad and/or die.  CrossFit has kept it simple with the following:

What Should I Eat?
“In plain language, base your diet on garden vegetables, especially greens, lean meats, nuts and seeds, little starch, and no sugar. That’s about as simple as we can get. Many have observed that keeping your grocery cart to the perimeter of the grocery store while avoiding the aisles is a great way to protect your health. Food is perishable. The stuff with long shelf life is all suspect. If you follow these simple guidelines you will benefit from nearly all that can be achieved through nutrition.”

Sugar is probably the hardest thing to kick as it is practically in EVERYTHING!  Dr. David Reuben, author of Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Nutrition says, “…white refined sugar-is not a food. It is a pure chemical extracted from plant sources, purer in fact than cocaine, which it resembles in many ways. Its true name is sucrose and its chemical formula is C12H22O11.

It has 12 carbon atoms, 22 hydrogen atoms, 11 oxygen atoms, and absolutely nothing else to offer.” …The chemical formula for cocaine is C17H21NO4. Sugar’s formula again is C12H22O11. For all practical purposes, the difference is that sugar is missing the “N”, or nitrogen atom. …Refining means to make “pure” by a process of extraction or separation. Sugars are refined by taking a natural food, which contains a high percentage of sugar, and then removing all elements of that food until only the sugar remains. Studies show that “sugar” is just as habit-forming as any narcotic; and its use, misuse, and abuse is our nation’s number one disaster.

We know that glucose and vitamin C have similar chemical structures, so what happens when the sugar levels go up? They compete for one another upon entering the cells. And the thing that mediates the entry of glucose into the cells is the same thing that mediates the entry of vitamin C into the cells. If there is more glucose around, there is going to be less vitamin C allowed into the cell. It doesn’t take much: a blood sugar value of 120 reduces the phagocytic index by 75%. So when you eat sugar, think of your immune system slowing down to a crawl.

Here are a few helpful articles.

The Reclassification of Sugar as a Drug

Juice as bad as soda

This article gives a decent list of names for sugar on ingredients lists.  Disclaimer: Not a fan a stevia or any other “wonder” subsitute! Nor do I think “taking it slow” is the best idea because there will never be an easy time to “quit”.  Some good explanations under the comments sections why sugar substitutes are not okay!

Also on a side note, just because something says all natural or organic does not mean it is good for you.  I once had a friend who ate a ton of cookies from Trader Joe’s all the time.  She thought because they were all natural and organic that they were a-okay…NOT.

What are your thoughts?  Also any tips, such as recipes, for the newbs who are just starting out? – post to comments

WoD

Press 1-1-1-1

Push Press 1-1-1-1

Split Jerk 1-1-1-1