Saturday, October 16, 2010

Friday WOD

Workout of the Day

WOD 1 – In the morning

Back Squat 20, 20, 20

Floor Press 8, 8, 8

Med Ball Chest throw & OH throw 3 x 10 each

WOD 2 – In the afternoon

20 minutes urban climbing

As I warmed up for my 5/3/1 squat session I could feel my low back getting tight—residual effects from the deadlifts and good mornings earlier in the week. So instead of hammering through 5, 5, 5+ and risking something I decided to keep the load at bodyweight and do a volume day. 3 sets of 20 at 85 kg (187 lb) wasn’t difficult for me, but I definitely got something out of it. The floor presses went great as well, finishing with 245 for 7. Bodie was with me again so for our assistance exercises we went out on the driveway and did a 3 set, non-stop medball sequence of 10 chest passes and 10 overhead throws to each other. This actually got pretty tough midway through and proved to be a nice finisher before heading off to work.

In the afternoon I got myself over to a parking structure in Old Folsom that I’ve been dying to explore. It features one of the best hanging ledges I’ve ever come across—20 meters of mortared brick at about a 3 meter vertical height. Sooooo, I went over and did some scaling, a few pullups, and whatever else my imagination could muster. All in all I spent about 20 minutes playing around on the thing and was legitimately pumped up afterwards. My grip, arms, and back felt swollen and all I had been doing was messing around. This was a nice reminder of how not every workout has to be organized to be effective. Sometimes just going somewhere and allowing yourself to be inspired and loose is the best approach.

Below is a brief clip of the ledge in question. Next time I’m going to duck tape my gloves to my wrists to keep them from sliding off!!

video

Friday, October 15, 2010

Rest Day

The soreness has only gotten worse today. I'm hoping that a long night's rest will have me ready to go in the morning but I'm skeptical.
Below is the first video submitted for the October Reader Challenge, from Aaron in Australia. See his blog here. Love the site and the workout, hope everyone enjoys it and gets inspired to get out and train someplace beautiful.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Massage Therapy

Workout of the Day

Deadlift 5, 5, 5+

DB Shoulder Press 5, 5, 5+

Good Mornings 10, 10, 10

Well, the lunges didn’t disappoint. VERY sore this morning and it’s only seeming to get worse. Not getting out of bed this morning definitely crossed my mind, but I made it to the garage somehow. I spent a little extra time getting loose just to be sure.

The deadlifts went well and I finished at 375 for 8 on my last set. The presses I decided to shake up this week, going with DBs instead of barbell. I did them from my knees instead of standing—big difference. If you haven’t tried this before, give it a shot. Way harder on the core stabilizers for some reason. I got 30 kg for 5 the last set.

This afternoon I took advantage of Bryan College’s massage therapy program and got myself an hour of deep tissue. Talk about perfect timing for this baby. I’m going to get one every week as long as they let me.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Monument WOD

Workout of the Day

WOD 1 – In the morning

Squat Clean 3, 3, 3, 3, 3

Front Squat 5, 5, 5, 5

WOD 2 – In the afternoon

3 rounds for time with 100 lb sandbag

80 meter run

40 meter lunge

10 shoulder to overhead

Today was the first morning of my admittedly ambitious 4 day x 6am strength sessions. Day 1 is for Clean & Jerk practice and Front Squatting. Day 2 is for deadlift and overhead press 5/3/1 protocol. Day 3 is rest. Day 4 is Snatch practice and snatch balance. Day 5 is back squat and bench press 5/3/1 protocol. Going to run with this for a few weeks and see how everything holds up. I’m hoping that by limiting the volume on the Olympic days my legs will get enough rest.

For metabolic conditioning and mono structural efforts I’ll float WODs in the afternoons doing them on days when I feel fresher than others. The weekend will almost inevitably include a trail run of some kind until the weather prevents it.

Okay, now that that’s off my chest… on to today’s workload.

I got 245 lb for the last set of squat cleans and it wasn’t hard. Technique felt solid and my pulls were fast. The front squats I finished at 275 lb for the last set of 5. Also not terribly difficult. Really happy about this number feeling good and looking forward to getting more practice in on a movement where I am admittedly weak.

The monument WOD this afternoon was AWESOME. I chose the Historic Folsom Turnabout because it’s the only one of its kind that I’ve ever seen and offered a pretty cool backdrop. I used only a sandbag (100 lb) and used the circular shape of the turnabout to construct the above written workout. It took me just 6:21 to complete but I was quivering afterwards. My ass and hamstrings were completely toasted and my core worked through. Usually I’m great with the overheads, even with shifting sand, but today I felt the bag pulling me all over the place. Great combination of exercises here.

This is just an example and I know there are many of you around the world that will come up with things far cooler and far more exciting. I can’t wait to see them--send em to me at morrison.blair@gmail.com. My link is below.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Rope Climbs Forever

Workout of the Day

Legless Rope Climbs, rest as needed

John and I took his rope up to the top of the Fair Oaks bluffs and tied it to a tree branch 15 feet high then took turns climbing it without our feet. We each did 20+ climbs before all was said and done, leaving our hands pretty callased and blistered from the effort. This is the first time I’d done legless rope climbs since last February I think, so it was a long time coming.

More than anything I enjoyed being outside on a nice night—the weather in Sacramento was mid 70’s with a warm breeze as the sun went down. Tomorrow will see a return to some heavy strength training, hopefully building on the gains I’ve made following 5/3/1 the past few months. I’m also hoping to get back up to Hope Valley for a mountain run later in the week. My grandparents and I did a hike this past Saturday and it was something to behold (pictured above). Hoping to convince a few of my friends around here to jump on the wagon.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Nimbus Dam to Negro Bar

Workout of the Day

WOD 1 – AM

Weighted Chin up 5, 5, 3, 3, 1, 1, 1

DB Hammer Curl 10, 10, 10, 10

L sit on DBs 4 x max

WOD 2 – PM

5 mile trail run

The morning session was designed to improve pulling strength that for me rarely gets trained. More often are the high volume pullup days where I’m testing my muscles’ stamina and recovery instead of their overall strength. Particularly weak in this chain are my arms, an area that whether you’d like to admit it or not factors in pretty heavily when it comes to doing a lot of upper body strength moves. So forgive me the inclusion of biceps curls.

I don’t have a belt to hang weight beneath me, so I used a combination of weight vests and DBs to accumulate enough resistance. My top set was with 15 kg of vests and 30 kg of DB. I found this to be as hard as doing 60 kg of hanging weight (from my memory), so I’m hoping the distribution had something to do with it and not all is my body having grown that much weaker. Considering that I’ve actually PR’d both my Deadlift and Back Squat in the last week, I think this is likely.

In the afternoon I left my car up near Rainbow bridge in Folsom and had a friend of mine drop me off down near Nimbus Dam, about 5 miles or so down the edge of Lake Natoma (Above picture is from early this summer on the same lake). From there I proceeded to explore a series of trails, hills, and parkland that I hadn’t known was there. Apart from the very popular bike trail that runs along the water there is a serious network of offroad paths to be taken advantage of here. And there are some MAJOR climbs within. I got real caveman and decided to wear my Vibrams—maybe a bit ambitious since the terrain turned out to be pretty rocky in parts. But overall I loved the run. I’m considering going back and marking off the best combination of trails and running it for time, with a possible eye towards hosting a race that would run from Nimbus Dam to Negro Bar. The elevation changes are pretty extreme in spots (150-200 foot climbs) and the views are spectacular. My feet are going to take a few days to recover I’m sure, but I’ll be back out there again soon to snag some pictures.

Heading on a hike with the family tomorrow to see the Aspen trees in fall form, should be a wonderful weekend.

Grokfeast 2010

If you aren't familiar with Mark Sisson's blog, check out this link to it and vote for the boys from Shenandoah River. Awesome caveman stunts. Way to go Quint and co. VOTE HERE

Friday, October 8, 2010

And the Winner is...

Congratulations to Yasir in Copenhagen!!! His video took home the most votes for September's challenge, narrowly edging Miles in Beijing. I will be sending Yasir a new Anywherefit T-shirt with his country's flag painted inside the logo, the first of this style to be made. Thanks again to everyone for participating and for voting, it was really a great turnout that I hope will continue. To see all the videos that were submitted click on the video heading at the top of this page and scroll down. And, as Yasir would advise, stay stylish...

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Tire Training

Workout of the Day

Flip a 300 lb tire up a 200 m hill

Took the party to the streets this evening with the help of my sister, mother, and friend Jessey. Utilizing the best of mother nature’s natural features and her relentless gravitational pull, I headed to the bottom of the biggest hill in my neighborhood and endeavored to climb it yet again. This time, however, I brought the tire with me. Flips are one of the most complete exercises in my opinion, especially if you can find tire that are tall, and are only more effective when done on an incline. I knew this would be a bear but still couldn’t wait to give it a shot.

In all the hill took me 18:57 to complete. Biggest limitations were the lateral slope (keeping me on a left to right tilt most of the way), and lower back fatigue. Afterwards I could really feel my forearms from gripping and pulling so many times on the tread, but they weren’t a huge factor during the workout. This was a great, really raw session that I think will pay huge benefits. I’d put it in the same category as the distance sandbag carry, trail runs, and even 5 k rows. With these types of challenges you never reach a point where you literally cannot take another step or do another rep, but you are forced to deal with a different type of failure. It’s a matter of will whether you will keep going and complete the task.

One more day to vote for the Public Transportation WOD so take a moment and show the finalists you appreciate their effort. 23 days to get your ideas for the monument WOD on video and uploaded so get out and train people.

Enjoy tonight’s video.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

October Reader Challenge

Voting is still open for the September finalists and it's close. I've gotten quite a few emails in addition to the comments so if you haven't yet voted get it in soon. I will announce the winner on October 8th. Vote here.
The challenge for this month is to come up with the best Monument WOD. A monument is defined as anything constructed in memory of some person, group, or event. Creativity is key here. Think outside the box and send the video link to me at morrison.blair@gmail.com

Monday, October 4, 2010

Public Transportation Finalists

Please vote on the following 3 finalists either in the comments or via email at morrison.blair@gmail.com
Miles In China
Zvi in Israel
Yasir in Copenhagen

Thursday, September 30, 2010

CrossFit Southshore

Tuesday WOD

10 minutes to establish 1 RM Snatch

Rest 5 minutes

10 minutes to establish 1 RM Clean and Jerk

Rest 5 minutes

10 minute AMRAP

6 squat clean (125 lb)

12 pullups

24 double unders

Wednesday WOD

Deadlift 3, 3, 3, 1, 1, 1

Strict Press 3, 3, 1, 1, 1

I rolled off the Bolt Bus right around 1 oclock in New York and was greeted by my boy Jason Mulligan just after. Great to see his mug again. We hopped on the Long Island Railroad out to his folks place, dropped our gear and headed over to CrossFit Southshore to connect with owners Doug and Tara for a workout. In honor of the upcoming USAW/CrossFit challenge in Colorado, they had prepared the above for the class. Because this is all crammed into one session the marks probably aren’t the best for comparison to what will happen this weekend, but it was pretty cool to be able to give it a shot.

Travelling light as I was I didn’t have the most appropriate footwear—ended up doing the night’s work in just my Van’s slip-ons. No big but the snatches were pretty rusty. I got 185 easy, then missed 205 twice before hitting it. That only left me a minute to try 225, my previous PR, and I didn’t hit it. Bummer.

5 minutes later I was going after the clean and jerks. 225 for the first, 245 for the second, both felt light. My third I got 275 with a great pull and a tight jerk, definitely the best lift of my day and matched my previous best. I had enough time to try but it wasn’t even close.

The cleans got me feeling better about things overall so I ran headlong into the metcon with no hesitation. Knocked out the first 2 rounds without breaking anything and a time of around 1:40. 3rd set slowed me down a bit but I was still moving pretty quick. The pullups started to wear on my arms a bit and I started to feel the heartrate jumping during the squat cleans. I finished round 4 with exactly 5 minutes gone and I knew I wouldn’t be able to match the pace to the end because of my fast start. In my head the goal was set at 7 and I nearly made it. 6 rounds plus the cleans, pullups and 20 double unders, just 4 shy of the full shebang. All in all a great series of tests that left me feeling pretty whipped. Looking forward to seeing what the guys can do this weekend—I expect a few to be up around 8 rounds.

After a hell of an evening with Jay’s family and a few from the CFSS crew out to dinner, we made it back in today before I had to catch my bus back to DC. Due to an injury, Jason’s been off heavy lifting for the past 4 months or so, leaving him itching to get back in the game. Last night was a huge bang for him, getting good numbers on snatch and clean without any pain. Today we went for it even more. Deadlifts to 455 for each of us (PR for me), and strict presses to 185. Came away feeling really positive about the gains I’ve made the past 6 months and the process of his recovery. Hell of a morning.

I want to issue a couple of huge thank you’s, first to Doug and Tara for being so welcoming and for running such a badass gym. Great atmosphere, great community, and very motivational. Congratulations on the new spot as well, can’t wait to check it out next time I’m in town. Second, to the Mulligan family/army. Top notch hospitality and so much fun to be around. I hope they will take the show on a west coast tour and let me return their generosity in kind.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Garage Gyms

As some of my recent workouts have shown, my garage has been transformed into a gym of sorts. This is by no means novel, but I’ve received enough feedback regarding the pluses and minuses of such an endeavor that I thought it worth going into. I’ve compiled a series of top 5 lists that, in my opinion, should guide anyone’s pursuit of a garage gym. They are in order of importance. Please feel free to raise points I may have missed or question what I’ve written. This is an open forum and I’m all about learning.

5 things you need:

1. Space

Without a doubt the biggest problem with most garage gyms is that people over do it. The most vital component to your home gym is that it allows you space to move. That means height, area, and lack of clutter. A clean, simple, efficient box is what you’re looking for, not a room filled with equipment that you imagine you might one day use. Guard free space with your life.

2. Pullup Bar

Can’t get around this one… you need it. Aside from the fact that pullups themselves are the quintessential upper body strength builder, the bar offers so many more uses that it cannot be omitted. From hanging rings to doing toes to bar, this is a staple. Because it is so important, you can’t just throw up some piece of crap and expect it to do what you want it to do. You need a bar that is secure, mounted far enough from the wall that you can kip, and ideally will allow you not to waste the valuable commodity that is #1. For affordable high quality ideas on this, look here.

3. Sandbag

You’re probably wondering why I didn’t write “barbell” here. That’s because I think sandbags are better, more versatile, and cost less—therefore, they’re higher on my list. This is something that you make out of an old army sack and some double thick plastic trash bags. You can use an old couch cushion. You can use an old punching bag you find at a flea market. These are all things I have actually done in the past. Once made, this tool can be lifted, carried, thrown, swung, and slammed. Then it can be emptied. It’s adjustable in size, weight, and thickness. Don’t argue, just get one.

4. Barbell and Bumpers

Notice these go together, because a bar without bumpers is useless and vice versa. Don’t waste money on metal weights because you can’t drop them. If you go on craigslist and find a great deal on Gold’s Gym hex plates, do yourself a favor and skip it. Look for used weights at competitive events or when places go out of business, but if that doesn’t work start scouring CrossFit outfitters like this. It’s not too difficult to find affordable deals and get what you need. Barbells are necessary if you intend to build real strength. You can only get so far before you have to deadlift and squat to improve.

5. Rubber flooring

You need this stuff to protect your floor while dropping all those newly bought bumper plates mentioned above. You don’t need it wall to wall, just enough for the width of the bar and a few feet to the front and back. A 3x5 stretch of ¾ inch thickness will do the trick. That will allow you to deadlift, clean and jerk, snatch, whatever. When you’re done you can slide it into the corner. Best place to find this stuff is either at pet supply stores or trucker supply stores. It can get pricey, but it will last forever.

5a) A rack

Without someplace to rack your bar you can’t do heavy squats. If you can’t do heavy squats you can’t get strong. This will also help when training jerks, thrusters, and overhead presses. You don’t need a cage, that just gets in the way. I’m simply referring to some way to load a secure bar at shoulder height. Portable metal racks, cinder blocks, whatever. I put this as 5a) because it isn’t as important as the flooring, but it still belongs on this list.

5 things you don’t need:

1. A treadmill

If I have to explain this one I’ve failed in everything I've written to this point. It’s huge, it takes up space, and it’s not real running. GO OUTSIDE!!!

2. A bench

It’s good for one exercise and otherwise it is always in the way. Hopefully if you’re reading this blog you won’t be looking for ways to do seated exercises, so one of those multiple angle bench seats, while more versatile, is completely useless. If you need to bench press, do it from the floor. Or find a couple 2x6’s and lie on them if you really want to retract your shoulders. It’s not an important enough movement to sacrifice the space or the money for a proper bench.

3. Plyo Boxes

Just the other day I was in a pitched battle with a set of 5 plyo boxes that I acquired from a friend. I was trying to find a smart way to stack them so that I could get to the smaller, more frequently used boxes without going through the huge awkward ones one top. I ended up inverting the whole pyramid, but still remain unsatisfied. These things just don’t get used enough to justify the inevitable headache they create. They are space vacuums and shin destroyers. Not to mention that a couple cinder blocks from your backyard or a small ledge will work just as well.

4. A platform

I write this even though I just finished building one, so disqualify what I say if you like. Bottom line, it’s a luxury not a necessity. I decided to build one to see if I could, how much it would cost, and to personalize my gym. It worked great and I love the thing, but if I hadn’t done it the gym would still function just as well. The rubber flooring will serve as your platform if you don’t have the time or space to build a proper wooden one. If you do it will require 5 sheets of plywood, 2 2x8 sheets of ¾ inch rubber, a screw gun and screws, a shit ton of gorilla glue, and at least 3 cans of verathane. That’s if you do it without any stencil or paint on the face. All in all, I made mine for about 300 bucks and I enjoyed the process immensely. But I also had the time to do it and the space to put it. Not everyone has those luxuries.

5. Medicine Balls

Now, I really have nothing against medicine balls. They can be incredibly useful tools and I like the potential they offer for creativity. The problem is twofold. First, they wind up all over the place—stacked on weights, in corners, or right out in the open—and second, the vast majority of Crossfitters only use them for one exercise—wallball. If a piece of equipment is only going to be used for one movement out of a hundred and it has a tendency to encroach upon my most valued commodity, it’s not going to be on my “must have” list. That being said, they are reasonably easy to come by and if used correctly can be quite valuable.

5 things to keep in your gym:

1. A clock

It can be a digital competition clock or one of those paper-faced ones off the classroom wall. It can be a stopwatch, a wristwatch, or a pocket watch. It can be an iphone. So long as it measures minutes and seconds it will work. Just make sure it’s in your gym. If you can’t measure time, you can’t measure progress; and if you’re not interested in progress, check yourself.

2. Tape

If I had a nickel for every time I needed athletic tape and didn’t have it I would not be writing this blog. Well, maybe I still would, but I’d be doing it on top of a huge pile of nickels. Everyone needs this stuff and it’s really cheap to buy in bulk. I’d be willing to bet I could go on ebay right now and find a case of 32 rolls for 45 dollars. I may or may not have just checked that out, so you might want to take my word for it. Certainly worth that price for all the sprained fingers, ripped callases, and tweaked wrists that seem to follow us around.

3. Chalk

Granted, people tend to overuse chalk. But that doesn’t mean it’s not still a valuable resource. Any sort of Olympic lifting demands it and when you really need that extra stick towards the end of a pullup routine, there’s no better friend. The only time chalk becomes an issue is when it makes its way out of the bucket. Then it is invariably crushed into a fine powder that is both un-useable and un-cleanable for many months. But keep it in a bucket and you’re good as gold.

4. A fan

This doesn’t have to be a huge industrial vortex contraption, in fact those might be too big and too cumbersome for the job at hand. All you need is a medium sized rotating fan to circulate air. Just the faintest breeze makes a huge difference in an otherwise stagnant space, especially when that space is saturated with sweat and exhalation. Chances are your mother has one in her attic collecting dust anyways, so go exhume it, knock off the rust, and stick it in the corner of the gym to keep things breathable.

5. A foam roll

This one is a little fluffy, I admit, but these things are usually worth the raised eyebrow. You really only need one and it stores itself in a corner very easily. It is incredibly useful before and after training to rehabilitate affected areas and to prevent excessive soreness. It is also a constant reminder of the importance of recovery to fitness. All work and no rest means vulnerable tissue and injury. These are also easily found on ebay or other discount websites.

5 things to keep out of your gym:

1. Liquid

Water, Gatorade, coffee, whatever. Don’t drink it in there. Garage gyms typically don’t come with cupholders or countertops and the inevitable end result of your morning cup of Jo is going to be a sticky mess. Clean up is something a garage is supposed to inherently avoid. It’s okay to have chalk and bumper grease all over the place down there because that’s what the space is for. Introduce other substances and you have a recipe for hybridized stains and ants. And you DON’T want ants.

2. Pets

Notwithstanding the off chance they may decide to mark their territory on your sandbag, the real issue here is hair. Dogs that shed tend to lay down more of it than you realize and before long there’s a few inches collecting in the drainage grooves of your cement floor. Nothing worse than sucking wind during a workout and having a few stray fur feathers waft into your mouth. Cats aren’t much better. Who wants to be concerned with sweeping the place out every single day to avoid this problem?

3. Spectators

Maybe they don’t stain or leave follicle traces of themselves (maybe they do), but these characters can still ruin a perfectly good garage gym. Outside its walls they may be your friends, neighbors, or even your family, but inside they are efficiency sinkholes. Whether it’s asking questions at inopportune times, unconsciously obstructing sightlines, or simply absorbing some minute bit of focus from the task at hand, they are distractions that you don’t need. Make your gym a refuge for those who want to train and coach, period. No innocent bystanders drinking Kool-Aid, no cute little babies in diapers, no armchair quarterbacks.

4. Television

Enough said.

5. Laundry

Clothing is not part of the gym. It’s something you wear in, occasionally discard, but should always take out. I’ve seen a lot of garages littered with stray t-shirts, shoes, even socks, and it’s disgusting. It makes the place smell, attracts flies, and encroaches on priority #1. My protocol is that if it’s left behind, it must be trash. So I put it where it belongs.

To review: Space is king. Stock your garage gym with things that are used frequently and effectively while taking up as little room as possible. Avoid things that tend to clutter or collect dust from infrequent usage. Do not be duped into thinking you will need a bosu ball. You won’t.

Keep your gym free of messy and distracting things, including pets and uninvolved people. They offer nothing and detract much. Keep it stocked with tools intended to measure, increase, and enhance your performance and you will more than likely do all three.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Public Transportation Submissions

Workout of the Day

Back Squat 3, 3, 3, 3

Floor Press 3, 3, 3, 3

Bent Row 10, 10, 10

Very happy to share another Public Transportation WOD with everyone, this one coming from Miles in Beijing. Watch it HERE. From the looks of things the subway cars in China aren’t as tall as they are here. Still a handful of days left until the deadline so get them to me at morrison.blair@gmail.com

Monday, September 27, 2010

Blair vs Sven 5

I did this Saturday morning when I should've been doing fight gone bad with the rest of the CrossFit world. I underperformed a bit, missing 3 reps during the 4th round. My final time was 13:00 but I think it can be done closer to 8 or 9. The video link is below.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Anywherefit Iceland

Workout of the Day

Hand balancing practice

Today’s workout was strictly a skill session. I did handstands with and without the wall, alternating shoulder touches, headstands with hand support, and many other drills. In all I spent about 45 minutes at the gym doing this in an effort to offer my body a low impact day of fun and technique. It worked, I had a lot of fun and walked out feeling fresh. Tomorrow I’m going to tackle the 5th faceoff workout with Sven and I know it will sap my strength. Can’t wait.

Now, on to bigger and better things… like the trip to Iceland next August. We have finalized dates—the trip will run from Friday August 12th until Sunday August 21st. Details about what those 10 days will include are coming soon, so stay tuned. I will say right now that it looks UNREAL. Start getting your sick days lined up now, it will be worth it.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Short and Sharp

Workout of the Day

WOD 1 – AM:

Deadlift and Strict Press 3, 3, 3+

Good Morning 10, 10, 10

Chin ups 10, 10, 10

Abmat situps (10 kg) 10, 10, 10, 10

Ring dips 10, 10, 10, 10

WOD 2 – PM:

3 rounds for time

5 muscle ups

10 kb swings (32 kg)

20 rope slams

Big day that started early. 6am start to get the heavy lifting in before things got rolling and then a late afternoon link up with John and Jake in the park to cap it off. Hell of a training day.

The deadlifts and presses went well, nothing spectacular. I got a tough 5 reps at 405 lbs and then did a single press at 185 lb before getting pinned. A little ambitious on that set. The afternoon WOD was great though. Minus the fact that we got kicked out of the first park we were at, things went off without a hitch. It was a sprint of a workout that really tested our ability to stay coordinated at maximal heartrate. The rope slams are no joke. By the last set I felt like I needed to jump to lift my arms. I finished in 4:12, John at 5:00, and Jake at 5:30. The video link is below.

For those of you out there still holding onto Public Transportation videos, get them to me (Morrison.blair@gmail.com) so I can get them up on the site for others to see.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Fitness Is...

Potential.

Everybody has it. Few reach it.

It’s easy to assume that people despise mediocrity because the world is littered with evidence of humanity’s desire to excel—our obsession with talent, our reverence for heroes, even our love of money. It’s easy to assume that everyone wants to be his or her physical best because everywhere there are those wishing for a better body type or a better lifestyle. They fill our virgin ears with a symphony of sincerity and aspiration, but listen closer. They clamor with empty voices.

The truth is that 90% of people just want to get by. We pretend our ultimate goal is to be the best version of ourselves, reading the right literature, quoting the right sources, joining the right gyms; but the reality is far less compelling. If we are truly honest we will admit that the level to which we might possibly rise is rarely our chief concern. More important is reaching the level where we can merely survive or, at the very least, mock survival. Getting there is much easier. Getting there requires less time, less pain, and less effort. Getting there is too often there enough.

I was speaking with my father the other day about a friend of ours whose son wanted to be a college football player. He had good size and natural talent, but he was a little slow and lacked the explosive quality most big programs look for in an athlete. One evening while having dinner with this family my dad suggested that the kid hang a bell at the top of the hill abutting their property and ring it every morning before going to school. Not only would sprinting up the hill begin to build the explosive power needed for speed and acceleration but the sound of the bell would become a symbol of his dedication to the goal. I wish I could say the kid went out and rang that bell every day, or committed himself to some other program in its place, but this isn’t that kind of story. He, like many others like him, chose instead to remain a card-carrying member of that mediocre 90%.

Why? Because greatness is HARD. Our bodies don’t care about potential. They were built to survive, not to excel, and survival has gotten pretty easy as of late. Our bodies don’t know that by being stronger and faster and leaner the likelihood of illness, disease, and injury drop dramatically. Our bodies only know that it hurts like hell getting there. It takes supreme physical and mental fortitude and an unflinching, genuine ambition to overcome these hurdles. Most of us lack this and it shows.

Now, maybe this kid would never have been great like Peyton Manning or Jerry Rice or Ray Lewis, just like some of us will always be at a higher risk for diabetes or arthritis than others, but that really isn’t the point. In this story his ability wasn’t being measured against theirs or any others, only against his own potential as an individual. He claimed that he wanted to be the best that he could be, to give himself the best chance to be a college football player. But when faced with the reality of what it would take to reach that goal he balked, exposing his ambitions as half-hearted and insincere, and his athletic future to be one ridden along the tired road to the middle. This is an all too common tragedy.

After hearing this story, I sat for a minute and observed my father. He was visibly disappointed by the kid’s inability to commit himself to his goal. Yet I knew for a fact that my dad had wanted to lose weight for years and failed to commit himself to doing so in much the same way. This struck me as a prevailing irony, not just in this conversation but in our culture in general, so I decided to ask him when was the last time he “rang the bell.” He was lost for a second, then smiled wryly as he got my meaning. “Too long,” he replied.

Sadly, it seems that our praise of greatness and our distaste for mediocrity is an appreciation and expectation reserved for others. We expect Jordan or Tiger or Ronaldo to reach their potential every time they compete and we shake our heads when they fall short. But we shrug off our love handles and that occasional chocolate cake as acceptable losses. We cry for the children growing up without physical opportunities, yet lie on the couch and amicably waste ours away. We claim we’re too old, too fat, too injured, or too tired. The truth is we’re too obsessed with getting by.

The good news is that physical potential does not expire. It has no shelf life. Whatever state you’re in at whatever moment, you can always be better. SO BE BETTER. Too often people try to do this by setting a number to hit, a person to beat, or a mirror to impress, implicitly attaching a finite quality to the process. This focus is flawed. As you change and improve, so too should your potential grow and your ambition swell. Remember that fitness is a goal inadvertently attained through the systematic overestimation of yourself in all fields. It’s a byproduct of setting the bar too high, of striving for perfection and falling just short. It’s knowing that you’ll never get there but trying your damndest nonetheless. It’s constantly pushing your limits in every direction regardless of your skill. It’s finding a way to keep ringing the bell.

Do this and we inevitably yield the best version of ourselves.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

New Company

Workout of the Day

5 rounds of:

3 minutes work/1 minute rest

4 toes to bar

8 hands up pushups

12 box jumps

70 meter run

My friend Bodie came over early this morning to train, first time we’ve worked out together since high school I think. It was a fun bit of nostalgia and the workout turned out to be great. Not nearly as intense as the faceoff WOD from last night, but still challenging. I completed 14 rounds + 4 toes to bar. Bodie did 9 rounds plus 4 toes to bar and 4 pushups. I had planned to try and deadlift tonight, but I think a battlefield adjustment is in order to cope with the growing fatigue I’m feeling. Wednesday is a rest day, so I’ll pick up the 5/3/1 deadlift and pressing Thursday morning.

On another note, some videos have started trickling in and I’m happy to share them with everyone. First is one from Brandon, a compilation of his family vacation around Europe and the workouts he and his brother did. Some great ideas and fun times on there.

Also, Marco submitted a video for the Public Transportation WOD from a subway underpass in Munich. See both under the Reader Videos page here

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Blair vs Sven 4

Workout of the Day

Blair vs Sven Faceoff #4:

10 deadlifts (140 kg)

20 burpees w/10 kg vest

30 pullups w/vest

40 wallballs w/vest

Remove vest

50 double unders

40 wallballs

30 pullups

20 burpees

10 deadlifts (140 kg)

I’m waaay overdue on this workout, so my apologies to Sven in advance. But I finally got this done and it was pretty rough. No problems with the deadlifts off the bat, but the burpees with the vest on were hard. I actually found it hard to balance with the extra weight swinging around and was way out of breath by the end. The pullups were easier than I thought—did them in sets of 10, 10, 6, and 4—but my heartrate was pounding away through the wallballs. Couldn’t wait to get the vest off. Double unders were quick but then going right back into wallballs wasn’t fun. At this point I entered the hazy zone where everything hurts but you’re only halfway conscious of what is happening. Before I knew it I was finished with the wallballs and pullups and struggling through the burpees. I broke the finishing set of deadlifts into 6 and 4 and stopped the clock at 11:31. Faster than I expected, but I was knocked out for 40 minutes or so afterwards. Light headed, a little dizzy, and seriously uncoordinated. That is until I heard Jukebox Hero coming through the stereo on my way to Monday Night Football and got a rush of fresh energy. Which was then flattened when the 49ers gave the ball away 4 times on their way to a 25-22 defeat. Brutal game.

The link to the video is below. Do this WOD if you’re looking for a challenge and let us know how it goes. Good luck.

BlairvsSven