Posts Tagged ‘WOD’

WoD or Die

February 2nd, 2011

Leading a normal life doesn’t mean living a stagnant life. You’re going to look ahead and you’re going to set your impossible goals that other people would say you can’t achieve. And you can go out and do it.Kyle Maynard

If you are not actively pursuing good health and fitness then you are pursing illness and obesity.  Be hopeful not helpless.  You are in charge.  Stop blaming, justifying, and complaining.  Martyr syndrome is a term that describes people who use self-sacrifice and suffering to control or manipulate their environment. It frequently includes being stuck in a victim mentality with resulting feelings of helplessness.  Accept that you have the power to change your behavior and habits.  Take responsibility.  Make fitness an absolute priority in your life.  We get one body.  Genetically we are all different and each of us must overcome our individual health obstacles.  No matter what you may be going through, it is possible.

We’re not asking you to come in here and be an athlete with perfect technique who can lift enormous amounts of weight, kip for days, and do walking handstand push ups. We’re asking you to come in and aspire to be better than you were yesterday. We all make mistakes. We all have obstacles to face. It is your response to those challenges in life that makes you who you are.

Go out and do the impossible.

~Kiki

WoD

Deck of Cards

Embrace the Paleoness

January 31st, 2011

We are really excited that the competition season is in full swing!  Our team is working hard and gettin’ it done.  I realize that just because you do CrossFit does not mean you are jumping up and down to enroll in the next contest that comes your way.  Here is something that may be more up your alley – The Spartan Race on February 26th!  I’ve done the Warrior Dash and although is wasn’t crazy challenging or anything, it was definitely a lot of fun!  I got to dress up for no reason and run through mud.  The Spartan Race looks to be a bit more challenging than the one I did so it should be even more fun.  You can find more information by clicking here.  If there is interest, I can contact them for a group rate.

Paleo Peeps ~  I am happy to report that I spoke with several members today who are already seeing results!  Woot woot!  Also, I have been getting specific questions regarding the diet which lets me know you are doing your research and finding the answers as best you can!  One question today was regarding Almond Milk.  You will find that depending on what website you go to, Almond Milk may or may not be considered Paleo.  Here are a few simple questions you can ask yourself to generally see if something is 100% Paleo:

*Does it go bad and die?

*Is it found at the perimeter of the store (fresh) or in the aisles (not so fresh)

*Did a caveman eat this too?

*Is this in it’s original form or has it been processed.

The above questions are not fool proof and there will be times when you will have to make your own decisions on a food item.  One thing I will say is…EMBRACE the PALEONESS over the next six weeks.  In other words, don’t try and eat Paleo by looking for every substitution and trick to make something taste or seem “un-paleo”.  I find sometimes with Paleo challenges there are people who focus on how to get around the Paleoness of the diet.  Give yourself six weeks of pure Paleo and you can thank me later :)

Jack

Complete as many rounds as possible in 20 minutes of:
Push press, 10x (115/75)
KB Swings 10x (blue/green)
Box jumps 10x

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

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

Mind WoD

December 2nd, 2010
The positive thinker sees the invisible, feels the intangible, and achieves the impossible.

Yesterday Andre posted a comment that got me thinking about how mentally sound we must be to push through these workouts…especially when we’re under pressure or under the impression the WoD was going to be “easy”. Andre explained, “I like to call those “sneaky WODS” because when you are starting round 3 and thinking to yourself what in the hell am I doing and why in the heck is this so hard? Those WODS are character buildersbecause you have an expectation of a level of intensity and difficulty and it turns out much worse than anticipated. I relay this specifically because of Kiki’s post on not sweating the small stuff. Everyone has or willexperience a character building WOD and it is during those WODS you find out what you are made of. Focus on form, cadence, breathing or anything that takes your mind off the pain and those voices in your head thatsay “I can’t or STOP”. The body has an amazing capacity for pain and endurance but the mind is what needs to be trained and that is what we work on every day.”

Here are a few tips on getting through a “Character WoD”:

Relax – You are not going to die. If you are having major anxiety about the WoD, take a step back calm yourself down, put it into perspective and then get right back into it. Even just a few moments away from the bar or rings can help you clear your mind.

Breathe – It is something we’ve been doing since the moment we entered this world. Breathe in…Breathe out…Wax On…Wax Of

Think positively – Positive thoughts can be extremely powerful. Willie Nelson said it well, “Once you replace negative thoughts with positive ones, you’ll start having positive results.”

Break the WoD down – If it says 20 pull-ups and pull-ups are not a strong movement for you, break the number down. Think 4 sets of 5. Give yourself numbers your mind can wrap around and execute effectively. Often times a WoD is a numbers game…what is the smartest break down of numbers I should set in order to get through it as fast as I can.

Motivation – What motivates you? Is it that six pack you want, the hot body in class next to you, or perhaps the fact that your freakin’ pants aren’t fitting. Whatever it is, keep your eye on the prize!

Keep building that muscle, metcon, and mind! Stay confident and compete like a champ. Good luck to everyone competing this Saturday we’ll be there to cheer you on ~Kiki

WoD

“Bulger”

Ten rounds of:

  • Run 150 meters
  • 7 Chest to bar pull-ups
  • 135 pound Front squat, 7 reps
  • 7 Handstand push-ups

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.)

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.

Back to Basics

October 4th, 2010

Just a few of the guys who lift HEAVY shit

As we mentioned, we’ll be holding a series of Back to Basics workshops at the box.  They are FREE to our members.  The first workshop will be held this Saturday the 9th at 10am and we will work on kipping pull-ups or butterfly if you’ve got your kip , press, push press, push jerk, and for those of you who’ve got a solid push jerk, split jerk.  We will also offer another opportunity, slightly condensed, for you to work on your kipping pull-ups and jerks on Monday night at 6:30pm.  Regular classes will be held.

New pics are up

In the interest of our members, we’ll be trying out some new things with the schedule to better suit your needs.  Schedule changes will be taking place next week… we will be adding a noon class on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday!  All 9am classes will be removed beginning Monday the 11th.  These changes will remain until further notice.

Partner WoD

For Time, 10 rounds of 500m row

While one person rows, the other does sit-ups and planks.

Rounds 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 Sit Ups

Rounds 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 Plank Holds

Don getting his 300# with planned training.

“Let me go ahead and distill this entire article to its essence: If you have no plan with regard to your training, you’re an idiot. Abrasive, I know, but this point needs to sink in. The idea that you can make maximal progress without a plan in any pursuit, whether it’s athletics, business, or space travel, is absurd. Can you make progress without a plan? Sure. You can pretty much guarantee some degree of improvement over a long enough period of time with consistent hard work. But being satisfied with minimal progress when greater progress is entirely achievable is just stupid. Without planning/periodization, we’re just crossing our fingers.

CrossFit is a somewhat nebulous program involving “constantly varied, if not randomized, functional movement performed at high intensity.” This notion of randomness has become an eclipsing focus of many CrossFit athletes and trainers. Quite possibly this is because approaching training randomly effectively masks a lack of programming ability and gives one a false sense of programming expertise. Anyone can throw a list of exercises and numbers on a whiteboard; far fewer can create workouts that, over a given period of time, ensure an athlete accomplishes his or her goals.

Being prepared for anything means balancing and improving equally, on average over time, the range of athletic traits. This balancing of traits is done by improving one’s weaknesses without sacrificing one’s strengths unnecessarily until every trait is within a reasonable range of equality, at which time elements can be trained in a more balanced fashion (although emphasis of certain elements during certain times will continue to allow greater progress even in a reasonably balanced athlete). How does one improve one’s lacking elements of fitness? By emphasizing those elements in training for given periods of time—not necessarily continuously—until they’re no longer weaknesses.

An entirely random approach to training…is a mistake. Being prepared for any random task is not the same thing as preparing randomly for any task. The importance of this point cannot be overstated.”

-Greg Everett, Catalyst Athletics, www.cathletics.com

Now that our 12 week strength cycle is over, we will transition over to a more GPP cycle. There will still be a strength component, but the lifts, reps, and schedule will be much more varied. These next six weeks will be focused in getting our athletes ready for the local CF competition. That will involve a heavy dose of Metabolic workouts. Even if that is not your goal, not to worry as you will still see impresive gains in aerobic/anaerobic conditiong, and some leaning out on the bodyfat.

Problems getting low enough in your squat?

“The third-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking with the majority. The second-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking with the minority. The first-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking.”

WOD

Rest day or make up one of the days you missed this week.

Not at your local Globo Gym

June 29th, 2010

MelMel 22.5# weighted chinup. Mel is that a 2.5# plate in the back of your pants? Another thing you will never see at your local Globo Gym. Chix doing chins with weight plates tucked in their lulus.

Again if you had a PR yesterday PLEASE POST YOUR OLD PR IN TO THE COMMENT SECTION ALONG WITH YESTERDAYS NEW LOADS. (ex. PC/DL/BENCH Old 205,375,225 New 230,400,250)

WOD

You have EXACTLY 50 minutes to complete the following movements in the exact order listed below. Coaches set the big timer for 50:00 when group is done with warmup. If you do not finish in the alotted time you do not pass.

Those who achieve the Pass/Fail numbers in parenthesis will get the sweet new “Black Belt” Orange Coast T shirt . If you pass write your name and numbers in RED on the whiteboard. If you dont even get close, dont worry and do your best.

A. Max 15x Front Squat (90% of bodyweight)

B. Max Rack Jerk (110% bodyweight)

C. Max Muscle Ups (Men 3, women 3 ring dips)

D. Max Strict Pullups/Chins (Men 17, women 5)

E. Max Kip Pullups chest-bar (men 20, women 5)