Wednesday, July 7, 2010

River WOD

Workout of the Day

AM – WOD 1:

Back Squat 3, 3, 3+ @ 70, 80, 90% 1RM

Glute Ham Raise 10, 10, 10, 10

Plyo Pushup 15, 15, 15, 15

PM – WOD 2:

3 rounds for time

150 meter run

100 meter river swim

30 ring dips

50 air squats

I visited my friend Justin today at CrossFit East Sacramento excited to catch up on things since last summer. John and I headed over there in between classes at 11 and, I have to say, the place looked great. Justin has made some improvements, not the least cool of which were the eye bolts drilled into a couple of tractor tires. The guys run rope through them and run sprints dragging the tires plus extra weight behind. AMAZING idea. Can’t wait to try it out.

The strength work went okay, but not great. Was hoping to get 5 repetitions @ 375 for my top set of squats but was only able to get 4. Only one more squat session before I taper for the games so I’m looking forward to bouncing back then.

In the afternoon John and I headed back up to Lake Natoma for a major outdoor challenge. The water up there is flowing out of the bottom of the Folsom Dam, making it extremely cold and fairly fast moving. Estimate water temperature was hovering around the mid 50’s—NOT your childhood bathtub. Anyways, I loved this WOD because it really simulated something that you might have to be able to someday and I learned a lot. The first round I was amped up after the 30 foot cliff jump into the river that I barely felt the icey water. I freestyled through the current and made sizeable headway upstream before hitting the opposite bank and climbing up to the ring station. The second time around was a different story entirely. Now considerably more out of breath, freestyle was out of the question and breaststroke just wasn’t getting it done. My lungs refused to expand in the cold water and my arms were getting heavier and heavier. I decided to ride the current down to a nearby rock and take a break. From there I side-stroked the rest of the way—much better plan. This enabled me to lengthen my body and get air to my lungs without going so slow as to be carried away by the river. I used this method on the final round as well to much success.

The dips, squats, running portion of the WOD were as expected, but the river proved much more difficult than anticipated. Huge learning experience that I’m grateful to have had. And… looking forward to doing it again soon, hopefully in warmer water. I attached a video of John and I doing this WOD below.

Monday, July 5, 2010

July 4th

Workout of the Day

4 rounds for time:

15 shoulder to overhead (50 kg)

15 box jumps (36 inch)

50 meter cement bag carry (90 lb)

As today is the 234th birthday of my homeland, most of its hours were spent celebrating rather than training. I was, however, able to squeeze the above metcon in before things got too out of hand. The jumps were by far the most difficult part. Using John’s backyard as our gym, we moved around quite a bit and used his 3 foot retaining wall as our box for the jumps. I finished the routine in 6:20. John wrapped it in 8:17. Total sprint the whole way—felt good to keep my body under control during a short duration effort.

Afterwards we headed over to a buddy’s house for beers, barbeque, and lawn games. Awesome day, including some pool basketball (pictured above). Felt good to get athletic over some water. This is such a fun holiday every year and I am so grateful for everything that it represents. Tomorrow I'm going on a hike with the family through Salmon Falls up near Folsom Lake. Hoping not to run into any rattlesnakes and to enjoy a stretch of wilderness. Pictures to come.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Fitness is…

Identity.

It is recognizable not just in an individual’s stature or beauty, but in his/her attitude and behavior as well. Take the person who gets winded on the walk from his house to his car or has to brace himself every time he sits down on the couch. He does not lead a confident life, I promise you. He will avoid activities that expose his physical limitations and withdraw from interaction with people who engage in them. Psychologically he is stunted because his mentality is always governed by what he cannot do.

Instead, observe the individual who actively trains and reaches physical goals. He is buttressed by a history of overcoming obstacles, a past filled with things he once could not do but now can. This person is far more willing to take risks. He entertains ideas that push his limits and remains open to experiences a fearful person may never have considered possible.

This type of confidence infects people. The first time someone does Fran, they walk a little taller. When they PR their deadlift by 20 lbs, they’re made of steel all week. If they’ve just run 5 kilometers faster than they ever have, meeting a deadline for a worrisome client isn’t so insurmountable. Everything gets easier when you believe in yourself, and that’s what fitness does. It re-shapes your identity into one of confidence and self-belief.

This can easily be observed in people who go from being de-conditioned to physically active. If you’ve ever had a relative or friend that has lost a lot of weight, you’ll know what I mean. They suddenly become more outgoing, more fun, and more self-assured. They dress different, walk different, and, really, are different. It’s like they’ve become a new person. But such transformations have very little to do with gravity’s reduced strain on a person’s bones. Rather, they are the result of tangible physical successes and the psychological reinforcement such successes solicit from the outside world. Clothes fitting different, less fatigue during the course of the day, more attention from co-workers… These things add up quickly and contribute to the shaping of a new, confident identity.

Now, I’m not claiming this is foolproof, or that by simply running a few miles each day every person will suddenly feel invincible. I wish it were that easy. But even doing just that is a step in the right direction. Taking control of your body gives you a foothold with which to tackle the rest, and believe me, the process is accelerative. I had a client who looked at me crooked when I told her she would have to lie down and get up 10 times in a row. Now she’s writing me emails about doing burpees and double unders on a city street corner because she was waiting for a tow truck and needed to get a workout in. My mother has gone from walking the treadmill for 45 minutes 2 days a week to doing kettlebell progressions and overhead squats without difficulty. The conversations we have now are just as often about what new ways she can challenge herself in the gym as they are about anything else.

And such stories are the rule, not the exception!!! Really, this is a very logical progression. When people see themselves succeed they feel good. Naturally they want more. Slowly, they grow less inhibited and more daring in pursuit of this success. As they push their limits farther and farther they are able to accomplish more and more, thus, inevitably, they become more successful. Because this train of improvement is so rewarding, it re-molds their self image from one of limitation and self-doubt into one of confidence and potential. This, to varying degrees, colors their new identity with curiosity and determination, powerful drugs in combination.

Knowing this progression to work as it does, I find it incredibly painful, almost nauseating, when I hear people say, "I'm not a gym person... it's not in my DNA... I'm not that disciplined... I'm too busy..." Really? It's not in your DNA to move properly or to feel good about yourself? Too busy to grab hold of one thing in your life so that you'll become better at all the rest? I'd hate to be so presumptuous as to conclude that you are not the only person in the world dealing with such problems. NEWSFLASH: No one is naturally a "gym person." No one is inherently disciplined. Some have simply been conditioned to become so because they have seen success and decided they want more. Get on board and find a foothold.

A positive self-image is one of the most powerful effects of training, yet it is far too often misunderstood as a cause. Effort, motivation, and dedication are all learned capacities we pick up through the course of our lives in response to positive or negative outcomes. This means that everyone's past is necessarily different and has shaped their identity to this point in a decidedly unique way. This is unavoidable, but too many use it as a justification to fail, to continue to see themselves as unfit, obese, or physically unable. It's as if God had given them low self-esteem and massive insecurity and its their duty to accept it. No identity is etched in stone. No one is fundamentally anything except what they do.

Remember that.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Prowler!!!

Workout of the Day

5 rounds for time:

6 Muscle Ups

20 GHD situps

80 meter Prowler push (180 lb)

I was back down at Midtown Strength today with Camillo and Chad looking for a high heart rate effort. No better way to get that done than the prowler. I haven’t done much of this stuff, so today was hard. It really just gasses the lungs and burns the posterior chain like few other things. Since Camillo is competing in an event this weekend, it was just Chad and I getting after it today. He’s a fire captain for Sacramento City Fire and a serious stud. By round 3 of this routine I was eating dust and struggling to keep up. It wasn’t until the final round of muscle ups that I was able to close the gap. We wound up finishing 2 seconds apart at 16:42 & 16:44, respectively.

Pretty toasted afterwards. I was definitely feeling psychologically exhausted as well after the long day yesterday. Hoping to rest up tomorrow and go big on the 4th. Only 2 weeks left.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Climb Something

Workout of the Day

AM – WOD 1:

Deadlift 3, 3, 3+ @ 70, 80, 90% 1RM

Strict Press 3, 3, 3+ @ 70, 80, 90% 1RM

Good Morning 10, 10, 10

Square bar chinups 10, 10, 10

Dips 15, 15, 15

Hanging L sit holds 3 x max

PM – WOD 2:

Go Climbing

Only 2 weeks and change until the games and information continues to leak out slowly. Apparently there will be no WOD announcements until 1 hr before each respective event. I love this. No planning. No strategy. No sweating it out. Just get out and go.

This morning I met my boy John at his gym for the beginning of week 6 in my run at the 5/3/1 strength program. I can’t say enough about the results that seem to be coming from this outwardly simple program. Today I finished the deadlift set with 6 repetitions at 395 lbs, 20 lbs more than I lifted for the same reps last week. The overhead presses I only managed 4 reps at 170 lbs, but felt strong enough to get 5. Afterwards John and I supersetted the good mornings and chinups, then moved to dips and L-sits. All of this assistance work went well and I expect to feel the effects tomorrow.

In the afternoon we headed over to Negro Bar on Lake Natoma in search of some outdoor bodyweight challenges. On the Folsom side of the water we found a steel gazebo that was perfect for climbing. We did spider climbs, ninja warrior-style lateral scaling, and a whole host of other stuff. We also strung up the rings and practiced handstand pushups on them. Definitely glad I did this because it’s a lot trickier than I thought.

Overall today’s training was hard work in the morning and loose fun in the afternoon. Nice balance in combination. Additionally, the location was beautiful and will set up perfect for a future WOD including a river swim. Really looking forward to that one.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Back to Midtown

Workout of the Day

AM – WOD 1:

6 rounds for time

15 meter underwater swim from push start + 10 meter freestyle

10 poolside muscle ups

10 pushups (sets 1/4) situps (sets 2/5) squats (sets 3/6)

PM – WOD 2:

Clean and Jerk 3, 3, 3, 3

Snatch Balance 3, 3, 3

Got back to the pool today and, with a little help from my friend Kasper, set out to do the above workout. No diving allowed at the Lembi Park lap pool, so I had to do all the underwater stuff from a push off, making it much harder. This was a great element because holding your breath while you’re out of it is just not something that you ever really have to do. It takes a lot of concentration and a lot of stamina. Beyond that, this workout was really all about the muscle ups. The pool I use is 7 feet deep, but the ledge to the pool deck is probably closer to 8 feet from the bottom. This means that you can hang straight armed on the edge of the pool without touching the bottom. Totally submerged, your body is light. Every inch you lift it out it gets heavier. Nice way to train a taxing movement like muscle ups. My upper body was so fried after 6 rounds of doing this that I had trouble toweling off. My time was 10:15.

Later in the afternoon I shot down to Midtown Strength and Conditioning to catch up with friends and owners Camillo Gutierrez and Tara Getty. The place looked great, even better than I remembered it from last summer. Together with another friend Chad, Camillo and I proceeded to tackle some heavy Olympic lifts. These guys had already done about 20 sets of snatches before I arrived, so I was just stoked that they stuck around, let alone trained alongside me. Having them there gave me a little extra push and I managed an 11 lb PR at 255 for 3 reps clean and jerk. Honestly, it's like the atmosphere at Midtown is so great you can't help but set records. Can't wait to go back.

Another great day has me feeling like things are really moving in the right direction for Carson in a few weeks. Resting tomorrow and then a great series of challenges over the holiday weekend. Bring on the heat.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Workout of the Day

@ Red Rocks Amphitheater

55 lb fireman carry to the top

15 Handstand Pushup

80 lb fireman carry to the top

15 Handstand Pushup

120 lb fireman carry to the top

15 Handstand Pushup

Today was my last day in Colorado and a group of us decided to head over to the famed Red Rocks Amphitheater to check out the scene and figure out a creative workout. Luckily for me, my family loves to get involved. My three cousins Ainsely, Zoe, and Lexie were all willing to take part, so I devised a way to include each. The first time up the amphitheater I carried Ainsley over my shoulders, the second time I carried Zoe, and the third time was Lexie. Going from youngest to oldest meant that each time up was a little heavier and a little harder, but the 6000 foot altitude started to feel better. It took me a little less than 15 minutes to finish the entire session and it was so much fun. Loved using my cousins as weight and the scene was so beautiful. I absolutely will come back here for a concert sometime in the near future.

Monday, June 28, 2010

When you're hungover, do bear crawls

Workout of the Day

20 minute AMRAP:

20 meter downhill bearcrawl

20 meter uphill walking lunge

10 burpees

After a long night of celebrating my cousin Tylor’s high school graduation, which included an 8-0 beer pong performance turned in by Aunt Shelby and I, things were feeling pretty groggy. Luckily my family is all about getting involved so I had 5 others joining me in the back yard for the workout: my cousin Brad and his girlfriend Megan, my mother and sister, my cousin Bailey, and Tylor’s friend Danielle. We were quite the motley crew out there to say the least. To make things even better, the rest of the family was lining up on the deck and in lawn chairs to witness the spectacle. Besides my mother, not one of these people had ever done a proper CrossFit workout, but they were eager and excited. Much of this boiled off by minute 5 as everyone was sucking fruitlessly at the mile high air, but still, props to everyone for being fearless in the face of nasty hangovers. So much fun.

I finished 12 rounds in the 20 minutes and could feel some residual soreness in my legs from Friday. The burpees were rough towards the end and the downhill crawls while dodging dog shit got interesting at times, but overall this wasn’t too bad. Certainly felt better than the run in Tahoe last Thursday.

Tomorrow we are all heading to Red Rocks Amphitheater for an excursion and I can’t wait to see what we get into. Always wanted to see this place.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Rest Day

Resting for the day in Colorado with my cousins and family, but looking forward to some great workouts the next few days. Possibly including a trip to Red Rocks on Monday. Also want to extend a big thank you to Umberto and Maurizio at CrossGym in Milan for their support. Check out the video we made below.

Friday WOD

Workout of the Day

AM – WOD 1:

Back Squat 5, 5, 5+ @ 65, 75, 85% 1RM

Bench Press 5, 5, 5+ @ 65, 75, 85% 1RM

Glute Ham Raise 10, 10, 10, 10

Plyo Pushup 15, 15, 15, 15

PM – WOD 2:

For Time…

30 Squat Snatch (95 lb)

40 m sandbag hill carry (50 lb)

30 Power Clean & Jerk (95 lb)

40 m sandbag hill carry (50 lb)

40 m oh hill carry (95 lb barbell)

Not nearly as sore as I expected after the mountain run, so I came into the day excited about lifting some heavy weight. It’s been a few weeks since I squatted last and I was hoping the time away had stored some strength. Turned out to be fairly accurate. I got 7 repetitions at 355 lbs for my last set, which is the most repetitions at that weight I’ve ever completed. Similarly on the bench press, an exercise I’ve only done once in the last 4 months or so, I pressed 7 repetitions at 265 lbs—also a record. As disappointed as I was in my ability to run up the mountain yesterday, I was as happy with my strength today.

In the afternoon I met up with my friends John and Elzy at a local park to do something a little more creative. We threw a barbell and some 25 lb bumpers in the truck next to a pair of 50 lb sandbags and headed over. The idea was to test my already fatigued legs with light to moderate weighted resistance after having ran distances and lifted maximal loads.

I broke the snatches into sets of 10, hoping to stay smooth without wasting too much time. This worked well the first two sets, but I found myself sucking some wind on the third section and broke the last 10 into two 5’s. I finished the 30 in just over 90 seconds and started heading up the hill with the 50 lb bag immediately. MUCH harder than anticipated. The hill was really steep and the footing not so clean, combining to make climbing with heavy legs less than fun. I got a little recovery on the way back down the hill and I did my best to get right on the bar and start lifting. The plan was the same, 3 sets of 10. The outcome was also the same: 10, 10, 5, 5. The power clean and jerks took much less out of me than the snatches but it didn’t seem to help the sandbag carry. That still hurt like hell. Surprisingly the overhead carry wasn’t so bad. I honestly think it was easier carrying that 95 lbs overhead up the hill than it was carrying the 50 lbs of sand on my shoulder.

After everything my time was 6:55. The big challenge was managing the breathing while keeping forward motion in the workout. If you have a hill and some weights, go there and combine the disciplines. Very fun and very effective. I’ve attached a video link below.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Run the Mountain

Workout of the Day:

2.8 mile Tabata mountain run

EEEK. Safe to say I am not sufficiently conditioned to handle serious altitude. Orrr serious inclines. Today’s workout proved these facts brutally.

I had run this route along the Angora Ridge in Lake Tahoe before, but never with a planned interval. The reason for trying this today was to improve my work threshold for continuous running uphill. The trail I took wound for 2.8 miles (as measured in the car beforehand) and climbed approximately 1000 feet. This means that it was no Esja from Iceland, but nothing to spit at either. Plus, this was all happening at 7000+ ft above sea level.

The initial part of the run was relatively flat so the first few minutes felt okay. My pace was fast on the runs and I recovered decently on the walks. At about minute 3 I hit the first of the major inclines and quickly realized how much harder this was going to get. My lungs just couldn’t get the air they needed as I tried to maintain my steady pace. 10 seconds was feeling shorter and shorter and the climb just never seemed to end.

12 minutes in I was ready to die. My work intervals were lasting between 16-17 seconds now, rather than 20, but I still managed to run them every time. This was a major mental victory. Forcing myself to start running when the rest period felt so short took some determination.

At around 19 minutes I hit the top of the climb and things began flattening out. I think my heart rate was steady over 200 by this point but the mere lack of incline quickly brought it down. The remaining distance my pace picked up again on the runs and I hit the finish line in 25:16. Keeping to the Tabata sequence the whole way was tough, especially during the steeper parts. It’s unforgiving because the watch does not care what the terrain looks like. You’re running or walking based on time, not preparedness or geography. I was simultaneously very happy and a little dismayed by this workout. Happy that I didn’t bitch out and finished hard. Dismayed that I am in such poor cardiovascular conditioning. I’m afraid the ankle injuries have taken more of a toll than I expected on my ability to run for long distances. With only a couple weeks to go before Carson I don’t think there’s much to be done about it either.

I’ve got a double day tomorrow and then off to Denver for a cousin’s graduation. Looking forward to more exploration at altitude and maybe hitting a local box or two.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Get in the Pool

swim.jpg

Workout of the Day:

Swim 500 meters without stopping

Went to Lembi Park today in Folsom and got myself a pool pass for the summer. Outdoor swimming is just the best. Even though you’re dying for breath and dragging through the water at a snail’s pace, the sun and blue sky offers some consolation. I don’t know exactly how long it took me to finish but I think it was pretty quick. My endurance felt great and my stroke was decent throughout. No Michael Phelps, but not bad either.

Tomorrow I’m heading to Lake Tahoe with my good friend Denise from DC and looking forward to some exploration and some good mountain running. Hoping the ankles feel good enough to really go for it. Also have a great WOD planned Friday back here in Sacramento—trying to get as much work outdoors in the heat to prepare for the elements in LA next month.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Workout of the Day

AM – WOD 1:

Deadlift 5, 5, 5+ @ 65, 75, 85% 1RM

Strict Press 5, 5, 5+ @ 65, 75, 85% 1RM

Chinups 10, 10, 10, 10, 10

PM – WOD 2:

With a partner and a 20 minute cap, row 5K

One person rows until the other has done 10 DB burpees (20 lb ea) and 10 situps, then switch.

Back to the heavy lifting today. After the wedding on Saturday and the hangover on Sunday I was feeling a little tired. Getting motivated to go work hard after all that can be tough.

I re-calibrated my 1RM totals for the 5/3/1 program to their actual values rather than 90%. I got 6 repetitions at 375 lbs for the DL and 6 repetitions at 160 lbs for the presses—felt pretty good with both of those numbers but definitely like the last couple days took their toll.

This evening I did the partner workout with my dad which made things really fun. Things started off fast… I kept my pulls at a 1.35 pace until the third round when I just couldn’t sprint anymore. The DB burpees weren’t too bad and the situps felt easy. The nuts of this was definitely keeping my legs from rowing themselves out and keeping my breath between exercises.

We wound up hitting 20 minutes with about 800 meters to go, so not quite the best performance but we were laid out at the end. Really exhausted after this and can’t wait to go to bed.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Friday WOD

Workout of the Day AM - WOD 1: Snatch 3, 3, 3, 1, 1, 1 75 meter truck pull PM - WOD 2: 3 rounds of 10 pullup, 20 box jump, 30 ring dips, 40 air squats This morning was amazing. Trained at my buddy John's house--he has a full bumper set and doesn't mind throwing weights around so it allowed me to lift heavy in a non-gym setting. I got 90 kg for a 3 RM. Felt incredible. That was just a recent 2 RM personal best, so this was pretty unexpected. Then for the singles I missed 100 kg the first rep, but then got it the next two attempts. This has me so confident going into a heavier load. We didn't have smaller increment weights today so I couldn't try anything below 110 kg and I thought that would be too big a jump. Afterwards we took his old '70s blazer out in to the street and rigged the ropes to the front tow hitch. We found a decent stretch of flat ground that built into an incline and got after it. BLEW UP my calves and quads. Getting to the top of the hill wasn't happening but we made it 75 meters alright. Then we turned around and started doing deadlift rows alternating every 10 pulls to keep the truck moving. Finally, we finished up with a tandem prowler push using the truck as weight. Top notch session all in all. This evening I went to the park with another friend and tied the rings up to a swing set. This went pretty quick and I think could have had a little better intensity. Tomorrow is the wedding and Sunday is Fathers Day. Planning on getting back to a more regular schedule Monday. I have pictures to come of the last few days so stay tuned for those.

Thursday WOD

Workoout of the Day: 5K row for time. I've been a little backed up these first few days in California with my buddy's wedding, but I managed to test my 5K time yesterday morning. Previous best was 18:47--managed 18:21 this time around. The challenge is always to stay with it menatlly for that long a span, and every time I go for it I have to find new ways to manage. Overall I was very excited with the time though. Would love to get it under 18 minutes.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Farewell Europe

On a plane today back to California and thought it a fitting time to announce the first Anywherefit group trip.
Imagine taking 10 days to see natural beauty, history, and museums, to enjoy and experience local culture with people who actually live there, and to train your ass off all along the way. This is the idea behind this project. It will organize diverse trips that explore the world while training in creative and interactive ways and forging a personal connection with like minds around the globe.
Mark the calendars for August 2011. Anywherefit Iceland happens then.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Rest Week

Been 4 days since I last trained and I am itching to get active again. Thesis gets turned in tomorrow, then I'm back in the California saddle on Wednesday for whole new set of adventures. 5 weeks and counting...

Monday, June 14, 2010

Fitness is...

Character.

I am overwhelmed by the indiscernability of this idea. It’s something that I universally respect when I encounter it in a training partner, but that I can never quite determine the content of. It seems to exist independent of personality, status, or origin—the people I’ve met and been impressed by in the last year alone cover so broad a spectrum of personality types and nationalities I can’t even begin to categorize them. It seems independent of the task at hand—I’ve walked away from a low intensity stretch session with more respect for the guy next to me than after workouts that put us on the floor in total pain.

I may not be able to get my head all the way round it, but there’s three things I know about character for certain:

I know it when I see it.

I’m motivated by the individuals who have it.

CrossFit builds it.

I sat down the other day and tried to make a list of traits (as they pertain to fitness) that might be the basis of character and I swear I couldn’t find one that stood alone. It’s not effort… That manifests itself in all kinds of spastic, ill-conceived ways that I 100% do not respect. It’s not results… There are plenty of “goal getters” out there who are relatively low quality individuals. Sure, I may have been able to narrow down a couple qualities that were more essential than others (confidence, toughness, honesty, humility, purpose, etc) but the relevant fact remained that none could explain it alone. It’s truly a trait nearly impossible to pin down.

Perhaps this is because it’s a non-static value. Think of character like a multi-trait fluid that, like blood in the body, goes where it’s needed and adjusts its shape accordingly. For example, whether a guy talks a lot during a training session says very little about his character—maybe he’s good enough to date my sister or maybe he’s ready to steal my wallet. But choosing to speak at the right time--when it serves to motivate someone else or to deflect attention away from himself--this quality speaks volumes.

The same can be said for toughness. Most times it means gritting your teeth and training through pain. But others it means swallowing your pride and taking time off to lick your wounds. Mastering this flexibility takes a lot more than a single trait.

Having character is the ability to get this fluid equation right in every situation, even when it’s not necessarily personally advantageous. At the European Regional I watched Annie Thorisdottir absolutely embarrass the pullup bar during the third WOD, butterflying chest to bars like they were nothing. At one point she missed a rep and the judge didn’t see it, giving her credit for a repetition she did not complete. Now, only a few points separated the first 4 positions in a 3 person qualifying event. If there was ever a moment when getting through a workout fast meant everything this was it. Further, it was obvious that she was capable of doing the work, she just came up half a centimeter short one time. Annie told the judge that she missed, got back on the bar and did another one anyways. Obviously.

Seeing this type of thing in an event of this magnitude had an interesting effect. First, it made me respect her tremendously. It wasn’t even that she did the extra rep that impressed me; it was the fact that not re-doing it literally never crossed her mind. That she didn’t hesitate says a lot about what Annie’s made of.

Second, it motivated me to perform on a level worthy of the standard she had set. This is the more important point. The presence of one person in the room who never misses a repetition imposes an implicit expectation on everyone else to do the same. If an athlete finishes first and stays to support those finishing last, everyone in between will also feel responsible to do so. In this sense, character has gravity. It becomes much more than a quality subsumed in a single individual and begins to snowball into something far more impactful.

CrossFit creates many situations that benefit from such a quality simply due to its competitive foundation. It takes a lot of mettle to throw your hat in the ring and risk failure in front of your peers, but the example of one or two willing to lay it on the line eases that burden considerably. Those are the people I respect most. They don’t apologize for wanting to be the best, but they expect the same from everyone else. No shame. No excuses. In competition, they’re grounded enough to take credit when they win and honest enough to give it when they get beat. This kind of perspective in the fitness community inspires people to be better than they otherwise would be. They begin to expect the same level of confidence, toughness, honesty, humility, and purpose from themselves that they see in the leaders around them.

If there’s one reason I’m excited about going back to the CrossFit Games this July it’s not because I want to win $25,000, although that would be nice too. The bigger draw is to be surrounded and inspired by a stadium full of these types of people.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Cross Gym

Workout of the Day

Barbell Complex (60 kg)

10 rounds for time of:

1 Power Snatch

2 OH Squat

3 Power Clean

4 Thruster

5 Back Squat

6 Burpee with lateral jump

One day in Milan and I’m physically destroyed. I got off the plane and met up with Maurizio, Umberto, and Alex around 1:00 this afternoon, heading to their home gym soon after. Talk about a beautiful place. Maurizio has effectively converted what once was a 2 story lofted flat into a CrossFit palace. The entire ceiling is vaulted glass, showering the place with natural light at all hours of the day. The exposed steel infrastructure rises 10+ meters above the floor, giving the place a sense of endless space. The floor is wide open and covered by clean composite rubber. The place is loaded with toys, including 5 different types of ropes for climbing, dragging, grappling, and tugging. I seriously cannot wait to see what we get into tomorrow.

The idea today was to get some pictures of me training with the equipment in the fashion I typically would. Not surprisingly, this took us outside on a field trip. With us we brought a weight vest (utilizing sand weight rather than metal—amazing), some medicine balls, a barbell and bumpers, a couple kettlebells, and a sandbag. I did some wall climbs, some weight vest sprints, and a few kettlebell snatches.

After this we drove over to an abandoned property that used to belong to an important citizen of Milan a number of years ago. It’s completely crumbling now, but remains beautiful because of the exposed stone, large courtyards, and natural overgrowth. This was the setting in which I did the above mentioned barbell complex. With the temperature just over 30 degrees Celsius (85 ish?) and the dust kicking up all around me, this was not easy. To be fair, I don’t think it would have been easy in a vacuum-sealed, air-conditioned chamber either. The first 2 sets I only dropped the bar after the OH squats, but from then on I dropped it in between the 2nd and 3rd power clean as well. The idea here was to get my shit together before going into the thrusters. They were by far the worst. The overall impact during the WOD was most strenuous on the lower back, but now that I’m done I can really feel it in my legs. 10 snatches, 20 OH squats, 30 cleans, 40 thrusters, 50 back squats, and 60 burpees will do that to you I guess.

My final time was 19:21. Pretty stoked I managed to keep it under 20, but I gotta think it could’ve been done faster if the lower back doesn’t get smoked so early. Barbell complexes have a unique ability to do that to you though, so who knows. Really glad the guys were there to keep me moving, and get some great pictures along the way. All in all an incredible day capped by an incredible workout surrounded by great people. Looking forward to tomorrow.

Pictures to come...