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Rest Day

Posted on Friday, March 2, 2018


Join us tonight from 5:30 to 8pm to take on Open Workout 18.2 at Friday Night Lights! You can sign up for a heat here, but even if you’re not competing, c’mon out to cheer and have some fun. BYOB!

Should I Redo an Open Workout?

By Chris Fox

Congrats! You completed 18.1, the first workout of the 2018 CrossFit Games season! Whether this is your very first Open or you’ve been in the game since 2011, you’re probably (over?) analyzing your performance and what you could have done differently to score higher. It’s natural, you’re human, and we’re all a little bit competitive in CrossFit LaLaLand. While the answer may very likely be yes, you could probably do a bit better your second time around, I’m going to recommend you not plan do just that for a few reasons.

  • The few extra reps you may (or may not) get don’t really mean anything in the grand scheme of things. Sure, you probably know you could have rowed harder now that there’s video evidence of you rowing your boat ever so gently down the stream (or, sleeping while rowing?). Compared to the larger picture however, the larger picture being your long term health and fitness, those few points mean nothing. Unlace your nanos and use the info for the next workout.
  • If you go in knowing that you might redo a workout, you will not give the first attempt your best effort. Of you’re treating the Open as the Sport of Fitness, then be true to that. Does Christiano Ronaldo get a practice shot on a breakaway? Does Aaron Judge get a 4th strike? (I wish, but he probably still would have struck out over 200 times.) The point is, treat the opportunity to do the workout like it matters the first time. You might be able to do it again, but that doesn’t mean you should.
  • You wouldn’t redo “The Chief” or 1RM squat session a day or two after later, right? Srsly, right? One of the original tenets of CrossFit, and one reasons it works so well, is it’s Constantly Varied. Give your body a break and move on to the next workout. Your body will take less of a beating, your hands will likely thank you, and you’ll have the opportunity to redo the workout at some point in the future anyway. Dave Castro likes to repeat Open workouts every year, and so does your head programmer at CrossFit South Brooklyn.
  • If your friends jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge, would you jump too? Maybe the bridge was a different one for you growing up, but I’m pretty sure everyone had a mother figure in their life ask them some iteration of this query. It was meant as a prompt for you to think for yourself a bit before you act. Sure, you’ll hear people at your gym brag about doing it again. They’ll even make it sound “hardcore” with their broken backs and tore up hands. Don’t be swayed, make your own choices. I know Games athletes all redo the Open Workouts…but you’re not as dumb as your friends and, you are not a Games athlete.

Wait, you are a Games or Regionals athlete? Even if not, there may be times when redoing the workout wouldn’t be too bad of an idea. Let’s say…

  • You had a outlying mishap. Your dumbbell fell apart, your rower collapsed, your pants fell off mid Double-Unders, whatever. If you truly had something prevent you from continuing for a significant amount of time then go for it, you have my blessing.
  • You’re on the “Next Level Bubble,” meaning you actually have a shot at going to Regionals. Or, you’re fit and committed enough that competing in CrossFit is a realistic goal and you have a long term plan that involves placing higher each year. If this is you, then you probably stopped reading a few paragraphs above anyway but you can and should do the Open workouts twice. The first time as a “test” and 2nd as the “event”. Depending on the workout and the damage/soreness it’s likely to cause, you might do a shorter version for your test, and you probably have a coach already telling you this so listen to her or him.
  • You have a compadre who’s going to redo it, and it would be a really good time do go again with her or him. You fell in love with CrossFit in the first place at least in part because it’s fun to workout with your friends. Don’t forget that.

Statement of Full Disclosure: Last year your author redid ALL of the 2017 Open workouts. Yep, all of ‘em. I did them with a great crew on Friday early afternoons and then again on Monday afternoons. So in my defense, I had pretty much as much time as possible in between workouts. It sort of snuck up on me, I didn’t plan it and it was the first time I’d ever redone an Open workout. But, a friend and colleague (McDowell) who was leaving Brooklyn later in the year was redoing them. I guess I wanted to squeeze in as much CrossFit fun as possible before he and the family hightailed it to Virginia, something we hadn’t really done much of recently since we were both pretty busy with work and life. Jess (the wifey aka Lady Fox) and some other gym friends/colleagues were in for it, and we all had a lot of fun. Funny thing is I thought Mcd was just doing them twice for kicks…I later learned that he had to redo them since that was what his coach programmed for him. He’s someone who is near that “bubble” mentioned above…I am not. Hence I am back to my old self in 2018, planning to give my best at FNL (which was OFF THE CHAIN) or Saturday with group classes and then be done with it.

News and Notes

  • Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Open Mat is cancelled this Tuesday, March 6th. 
  • Starting this week, Thursday night Next Level Weightlifting Club will move to Friday night from 6 to 8pm. NLWC will now meet Mondays from 7 to 9pm, Wednesdays from 7 to 9pm, and Fridays from 6 to 8pm.
  • The 5th Look, Feel, Perform Better Challenge Lecture and Q&A is this Sunday at 12pm in the Annex. In “What Even Is a Carb?” we’ll learn a bit more about what macronutrients are, which foods contain which, and some simple guidelines to help us choose foods that are better for us along a spectrum of Healthy to Less Healthy to Unhealthy. As always, there’s an open Q&A afterwards where you can air out whatever you like.

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Yesterday’s Results Board: Cluster | Handstand Walking
Who Should You Listen To? Catalyst Athletics
We Finally Know Who the Millennials Are The Outline

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

Cluster | Handstand Walking

Posted on Thursday, March 1, 2018

Cluster (aka Squat Clean Thruster)

1-1-1-1-1

Warm up and work up to a heavy single for the day. No Jerks.

Post loads to comments.

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HANDSTAND WALKING

Choose one of the following scaling options, and spend 15-20 minutes developing your hand balancing:

A) Hand Walking (free or 2′ from wall)
B) Wall Inverted Hip Shifts with Hand Release (from a Wall Walk or Kick Up)
C) Box Piked Hip Shifts with Hand Release
D) Floor Piked Hip Shifts with Hand Release

Rest after each set or attempt and don’t turn it into a 20-minute AMKAP (As Many Kick Ups as Possible). If you’re not spotting someone, you can use the rest periods to do some light stretching or light rowing, jogging, cycling, etc.

Post work to comments.

Open Diary 18.1

By Brett Ferguson

Editor’s Note: Throughout the Open, Coach Brett will be contributing these “Open Diary” entries in which he will continue to reflect on the head-game aspect of CrossFit and offer his thoughts on each workout. Enjoy this first installment!

Open Workout 18.1 is in the books. If you read my previous post about mindset, you know that it’s something that I struggle with. This struggle usually has to do with how I feel going into a workout or what happens to me mentally after a work out.

So how did 18.1 go? My mental approach before attempting it the first time was excellent! I knew that I was going to try to keep my own pace. I had a plan as to how I was going to do the Toes-to-Bars, how I was going to transition to the dumbbell, and the pace I was going to keep on the erg. Reality and my plan didn’t quite match up. The energy of Friday Nights Lights and some friendly competition got me a little excited, and I came out SUPER HOT. I looked at the clock after 3 rounds and knew I was in trouble. My Toes-to-Bar plan went well, but my transitions started to get longer because I came out to hard and needed to breathe a little. I knew I could pace better, but overall I was very happy with the workout. All good things right?

Second attempt at the workout: Because I had a previous score and thought I could do better, I picked a score that I thought was attainable for me to hit. I did the workout on my own this time (with a judge) and was able to stick with my pace right away (which felt SUPER slow). One thing that I did not anticipate, however, was the fatigue in my grip still being a factor after Friday’s workout. My Toes-to-Bar and grip on the dumbbell started falling apart way faster than I anticipated. I could see the goal I had set for myself starting to slip away.

I am proud to say that in this moment I stayed calm and didn’t give up. I pushed through steadily as my Toes-to-Bars went to singles and I dropped the DB because I couldn’t hold on. I kept a steady pace on the erg. I did what I could do in that moment. As a result, I ended up doing better in my second attempt but not as well as I wanted to do. This is where my mental game fell apart. I knew I did the best I could have on that day, but it wasn’t the best that I could do overall. Take the strength of my grip from Friday and my pacing from Monday and that would be my best effort. That’s what I focused on. I started beating myself up for coming out too hot on Friday, for warming up too many Toes-to-Bars on Monday or whatever, analyzing everything I did wrong instead of thinking about what I did well. To beat myself up even more, I found people that I am competitive with on the leaderboard and really started to tear into myself when I saw that people beat me by 1-3 reps! If only I did this or that I would’ve have climbed X amount of spots on the board!

I sat simmering in self-pity (and saying nasty things to myself) for the rest of the night. The next day I saw a post by James Fitzgerald, the founder of OPEX, on Instagram that simply said, “Measure yourself by how you deal with adversity when it comes to you, not by the scoreboard.” This shot of perspective was exactly what I needed. In the workout, I dealt with the adversity well (a reaction I can control), but I let my placement on the leaderboard (out of my control) and how other athletes performed (also out of my control) take me out mentally for a full day!

It’s too easy for me to let other things pull me away from these successes and turn my performance into a failure for no reason. It’s something for me to continue to recognize and work on as these next 4 weeks of the Open unfold. If it’s meant to be about improvement and learning, well, I’m hitting PRs every day.

Open Intramural Team Rankings: Week 1

For the 3rd year in a row, CFSBK is running the Open Intramural League throughout the CrossFit Open. It looks like this year has all the makings of another great competition. Awesome team names? Check. Evenly matched teams? Check. Friday Night Lights? Check. Jay-Star vehemently denying that he’s using massive amounts of performance enhancing drugs despite evidence to the contrary? Check.

Anchored by a bunch of top-15 performances, Amino Disrespect got off to a strong start, but Make America Blue Again (also powered by some top-15 performances and Toni’s ponytail) isn’t far behind. All 6 teams are separated by less than 4 points, so you know what that means. Everyone has to come out to Friday Night Lights this week to get in on the fun!

Go here to sign up for a FNL heat!

Current Ranking – Team – Overall Average 

1. Amino Disrespect: 38.6
2. Make America Blue Again: 39
3. Going Dark: 39.6
4. Kippin’ It Real: 39.7
5. 50 Shades of Gainz: 41.1
6. The Incredible Hulks: 42.3

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Yesterday’s Results Board: Wall Balls, Burpee Box Jump Overs | Back Squat
Do You Have What It Takes to Be an Olympian? NY Times
The Lost Art of Bending Over NPR

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

WOD 2.28.18 | Back Squat

Posted on Wednesday, February 28, 2018

WOD 2.28.18

Performance
Every 3 minutes x 18 (6 sets):

12 Wall Balls 20/10, 14/9
8 Burpee Box Jump Overs 24/20

The goal is fast and unbroken on each set. The Burpee Box Jump Overs are Rx’d as a jump-out/jump-in Burpee and must be a two-foot take off on the jump. Jump or step down as desired.

Fitness
Every 3 minutes x 18 (6 sets):

12 Wall Balls 14/10, 10/8
8 Burpee Box Jump Overs 20/16

The goal is fast and unbroken on each set. TheBurpee Box Jump Overs can be a step-out/step-in Burpee, and stepping over the box is allowed.

Post work to comments.

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Back Squat

Heavy Single
90% x 1 x 3

Warm up and make a heavy-single Back Squat followed by three more singles at 90% of that load. Goal is no misses and no bailing, but use spotters on all work sets.

Post loads to comments.


Photos from our first Friday Night Lights event of the season are now up on Flickr. Join us again this Friday night from 5:30 to 8pm as we take on 18.2. Heat sign up info will be on the blog tomorrow!

Critical Mass, Part II

Introduction by Erica Dohring

“You’re gaining weight on purpose?” Looking the inquirer in the eye with a strong “yes” has yielded an interesting array of responses: surprise, confusion, amusement, and, my personal favorite, “of course you would” (said lovingly). Deliberately trying to gain weight is an unusual pursuit in the US, even among active, athletic adults. In this 2-part miniseries—Part I went up last Tuesday—you’ll read the stories of 5 women who are going against the grain, even if they are probably snacking on it right now.

Last week we heard from Erica D., Lorena F., and Coach KHarpz, all of whom are currently at work on massing programs. This week we’ll hear from Francine D. and Coach Lauren “Snickers” Snisky , both of whom have completed massing programs. Let’s rock!

Can you start by telling us a bit about your massing programs? Did you follow a coach’s template or come up with or own (or something else)?

Francine: I first started with a Renaissance Periodization cut and lost 25 lb. Then after 16 weeks of maintenance, I did a reverse diet working my way back up the RP templates to gain weight.

Lauren: I have done the fairly simple, you-gotta-eat-MORE self-made program 2 or 3 times since I started CrossFit 4 years ago. I have some experience in playing with my nutrition and a solid whole-foods foundation, so I felt confident enough to experiment on my own for this purpose. My initial attempt focused on increasing my protein and my protein options. I expanded my diet to included fish and seafood and eventually poultry and meat after about 8 years of a vegetarian diet. I made adjustments along the way based on what felt right as far as my macro nutrient ratios were concerned, and tried I to avoid the absolute forced feed feeling.

Why did you decide to do a massing cycle?

Francine: After hitting and maintaining what my original goal weight, I soon realized that I didn’t feel good at that light weight and with very little body fat. And while I had accomplished the feat of losing a good amount of body fat, I realized I needed to gain more muscle mass—not to be thin and lean.

Lauren: I wanted to get stronger, but it was also for aesthetics. I wanted more visible muscle mass, and I see that as sort of an ongoing work in progress. I will occasionally whine that I “want to get jacked,” and someone will say something like “hey crazy, you are jacked.” I have definitely made some mass gains since starting CrossFit and realizing I needed to eat more overall. It’s all relative to you and your strength and body composition goals.

But initially, a few years ago, I would say I was a bit unaware of how little I was really eating compared to my goal of getting stronger. Coach McDowell asked me one day how many calories I was taking in per day. At the time is was about 1500. He responded with no hesitation that that needed to come up… immediately. And really any increase at that point would have been just to better support my performance and recovery while maintaining current weight. So that’s where I started: eat more and feel the benefits of that, then make another increase with the goal of putting on more muscle mass.

How did it work out? What changes did you notice?

Francine: I massed for 16 weeks and gained 9 lb. I immediately felt better, more vibrant. My programming changed around this time as well. I started working with Coach Ro right before “the massing” began, and the focus was to get stronger with a little bit of hypertrophy work. I felt great immediately.

Lauren: I have noticed changes in both muscle gain and performance. I did do a cutting (fat loss) diet in 2016 and am currently maintaining the weight I’ve put on since last year. When I began Crossfitting I was about 114 lb. I’m currently about 128. 14 pounds gained. Of course this wasn’t all at once. Like I said, I’ve made intentional increases in my diet a couple of times over the past 4 years. I would say my last increase was about 7-8 lb in 2017. Generally over this longer period of gaining weight, my strength has increased significantly. I believe it has helped me push through some strength plateaus. For example, once I was in the 120s, I felt better and saw increases with my Olympic lifts. And I was able to rep out at higher percentages on my Back and Front Squats.

What’s the biggest challenge you encountered?

Francine: I consciously allowed myself to gain weight and train with that goal of strength, but the whole time I kept worrying about getting fat and losing fitness. My mindset was not right. It’s impossible to gain weight without gaining body fat, but I was constantly worried about this aspect. It was also weird at first to watch the scale go up when all my life I’ve stepped on to either see my weight go down or remain the same.

Lauren: Sometimes eating enough is actually a really difficult thing to do. And this is twofold. The first part being, it can just feel like A LOT of food. I already ate 3 servings of protein today. I need more? Yes, yes you do. The second part is more psychological. It’s about keeping the long game in mind. Some body fat will come along with your muscle gains, and that’s been a challenge for me to accept. It still is. But when I think long term, taking on a small amount of body fat and managing that later is well worth the muscle and strength gains.

How did you transition out of massing and back into a maintenance diet/training program?

Francine: This was the hardest part for me. In October, I  started maintaining my weight gain, but I was definitely out of whack and not with my calorie counts. I was just finding it a bit difficult to be a regular person. I was food obsessed during the cut and mass. I just wanted to stop thinking about food. I gained another 4 lb through the holidays, struggling to find my “correct weight.”  I decided to just give my mind and body a break and focus on my performance as I gear up for Masters Nationals Weightlifting Meet in April and am focused on a “healthy eating” approach, looking to maintain scale weight but lose a bit of body fat with some higher volume training and conditioning. The whole program was designed by Coach Ro.

Lauren: I found what I would require calorie-wise to maintain my weight, and I figured out what macro nutrient ratio should make up those calories. Then for me, it was just a matter of finding the portions I needed per meal to meet that new macro requirement. It can take a few days maybe to figure out what works so you don’t continue to gain weight.

Any advice for a women who are considering doing a massing program?

Francine: Our bodies need love, care, and respect. Eat to love your body, first and foremost. Go ahead and gain some weight if your training/fitness goals would be better achieved by adding mass (or by cutting for that matter). Otherwise, just focus on the quality of the food you eat and maintaining a healthy relationship with food and your body.

Lauren: I do think for most, you’ll want to follow an actual program or guideline to be confident you are taking in a good macro-nutrient ratio vs. just eating all the food. There are some different approaches out there, so do what feels right for your goals and training. Ask around, do a little research. Remember these changes, if done well and to last, take time. tTis is why the RP program (that some others have done here) is about 3 months long for a massing phase.

Would you do it again?

Francine: Only if my performance goals required it.

Lauren: Yes, for sure. Maybe a structured program this time to see how that works for me. I get muscle envy. And putting on muscle feels great, plus I know I’ll be stronger for it. I received a couple of compliments not that long ago on how my quads looked larger, and that’s like Christmas to me. It reassured me that the little bit of body fat I’ve put on is worth it, because that body fat can be managed later, and I’ll still have these bigger, stronger quads to show for it.

News and Notes

  • There’s just one spot left in Coach Ro’s popular Anti-Gravity Strength class, which starts on March 6th. Who wants it? Go here to register!
  • Starting this week, Thursday night Next Level Weightlifting Club will move to Friday night from 6 to 8pm. NLWC will now meet Mondays from 7 to 9pm, Wednesdays from 7 to 9pm, and Fridays from 6 to 8pm.

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Yesterday’s Results Board: Rest Day
Inside Westside Barbell Club, Powerlifting’s Most Exclusive and Controversial Gym Vice Sports (video)
Returning to CrossFit After Pregnancy Girls Gone Strong

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

Rest Day

Posted on Tuesday, February 27, 2018

REGISTER NOW FOR STARTING STRENGTH PROGRAM

The Starting Strength program is an opportunity to spend 8 weeks with Coach Jeremy honing your technique and increasing your capacity at the most fundamental strength movements: Back Squat, Overhead Press, Bench Press and Deadlift. This small group format of 90 minute sessions offers one-on-one guidance, great camaraderie, and a simple roster of movements allowing you time to correct errors and challenge your limits.

Whether you are brand-new to lifting, someone with experience who has struggled to surpass a plateau, or just looking to try something different, by taking the time to focus exclusively on the lifts that support almost ever other activity you do inside (and outside) the gym, you will gain confidence and enhance your performance.

Upcoming Program Times and Dates

A cycle: Novice, 7pm Mon/Wed and 6pm Fri | Monday, March 5th – Friday, April 27th (4 slots)
B cycle: Intermediate, 7pm Tues/Thurs and 10am Sun |Tuesday, March 6th – Sunday, April 29th (full)
C cycle: Morning Novice, 6:30am Mon/Thurs |Monday, March 5th – Thursday, February 26th (3 slots)
D cycle: Continuing Education, 6pm Mon/Wed |Monday, March 5th – Wednesday February 25th (4 slots)
E cycle: Late morning, all levels, 10am Mon/Thurs |Monday, March 5th– Thursday, February 26th  (3 slots)

A CrossFit Total testing one-rep maxes in the Back Squat, Press, and Deadlift will take place on Sunday, April 29th at 2pm to cap off all cycles.

Class Sizes: Space is limited to 4-10 participants
Class Length: 90 minutes

Pricing

3x Per Week Cycles: $300 paid upon registration and then another $300 at the halfway point
2x Per Week Cycles: $200 paid upon registration and then another $200 at the halfway point

Group Class/Open Gym/Active Recovery/Yoga/Pilates Add-On Option!

This add-on membership allows our 2x/week Starting Strength Program to attend two additional classes per week, outside of the regularly scheduled strength cycle classes. This includes group classes, Open Gym, and Active Recovery/Yoga/Pilates/Short Circuit.

Price is $100 per four weeks, first bill due at sign-up and second bill ($100) charged automatically to the card on-file four weeks later. Register here!

If anyone is confused as to which cycle they belong in or has any questions, they can contact Jeremy directly at Jeremy [at] CrossFitSouthBrooklyn.com to discuss placement.

 Jeremy M. on Starting Strength

“One recent Monday morning, I stood on my bathroom’s scale and watched its pointer swivel, as it almost always does, slightly further than it ever has before. This time it landed on 180, a full 30 pounds gained since I began Starting Strength.” That’s CFSBK Starting Strengther Jeremy McKey reflecting on Starting Strength (the Rippetoe book) and his experience building strength in Coach Jeremy’s class. Give “The Man on the Blue Cover” a read!

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Yesterday’s Results Board: Push Press | Run, C2B Pull-Ups, Pistols
Found: A Pair of Boxing Gloves from 2,000 Years Ago Atlas Obscura
Using Archival Audio to Plug You Back into Nature The Outline

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

Push Press | WOD 2.26.18

Posted on Monday, February 26, 2018

Push Press

5-5-5

Warm up and work up to a heavy set of 5. The barbell comes off the floor.

Post loads to comments.

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Performance
5 Rounds for Time:
270m Run
7 Chest-to-Bar Pull-Ups
14 Alternating Pistols

Fitness
5 Rounds for Time:
270m Run
7 Jumping Chest-to-Bar Pull-Ups
14 Alternating Reverse Lunges

Post time and Rx to comments.

February Athlete of the Month: Allie Barsamian

By Chris Fox

We look for members who show a list of traits for Athlete of the Month honors, and this month we’ve got someone who hits on all of them. Consistent training? Yep. Engages in both fitness and social activities at CFSBK? Yep. Has made progress in a variety of ways and goes the extra mile not only for herself but also for fellow members? Yep and yep! Allie couldn’t be a better example of what we look for. Read on and learn more…

Fox: Congrats, Allie! Thanks for coming in to sit down with me. Starting at the beginning, when and why did you start CrossFit?

AB: Wow, thanks for the honor! This is very exciting. I started at CFSBK in May 2014. I’d recently broken up with my longtime boyfriend and was busy trying new things and getting fit. I had started running, and was pretty into another fitness cult, Soul Cycle, so I figured I’d give this one a try. Funny story, I actually thought I signed up for an intro class at CrossFit Prospect Heights, which is the gym I passed by on a run and wondered what what was going on in there. I show up for the class and the gym is closed. I searched my email and realized that I actually signed up for the Free Intro Class at CFSBK. Luckily I was planning to be early so I had enough time to get over here and that was that. I met David, and he made it very clear what made CrossFit different from other methods. I had to wait until summer break to do Foundations, but I’ve been coming ever since.

Fox: So from one fitness cult to another! Were you always a gym junkie?

AB: Not at all! I was never into fitness, had never been in a gym, and had no idea what weightlifting was. I was always an art and theater nerd whose main form of exercise was occasionally taking the stairs. I was never overweight as a kid, but I certainly wasn’t what you’d call fit. Then, in my senior year of high school I attended an arts camp and gained about 15 lbs that just sort of stuck around. I actually weigh the same now as then but at a pretty different body composition.

Fox: So we were your introduction to the gym. That’s pretty great! What were your first impressions?

AB: David was immediately welcoming, and made me feel comfortable even with no prior training experience. We learned how to Squat and he taught us why we should actually Squat below parallel, something that most everyone tells you not to do. Right away I felt like CrossFit was going to be for me. The coaching was attentive, the progress was quantifiable, the exercises were varied, and the coaches could explain why something was beneficial. The biggest thing that stuck out was the emphasis on health, not necessarily on vanity.

Fox: I know you like to drop in to gyms when you travel. Do you have a favorite?

AB: CrossFit Acadia in Bar Harbor, Maine. They’re so great and welcoming and the classes are well structured a la CFSBK. They even know DO and Inside The Affiliate.

Fox: What can you be found doing when you’re not at the gym?

AB: Man, exercise really is my main hobby now, so I’m here a lot. The gym has given me a social community and a place to have friends as well. Being fit even makes me relish mundane chores like carrying groceries or washing the dishes. I’m really appreciative of my ability to do simple stuff. I work as a music and drama teacher at Achievement First East New York Middle School, and I really love my job. I get to meet every student since they all have to take my class for a semester. In addition to my classes, I direct musicals and head up the technical theater team. It was my first job out of college, and I’ve been there since 2009. The school and the students are really special to me. Other than the gym and work, I like to go see live music and will often buy a ticket just for myself. Any and all types of music are great by me. I’ve even been to Saint Vitus! The last show I saw live was Espiranza Spalding over in Red Hook at Pioneer Works. She was amazing. My boyfriend Ben and I just celebrated our two year dating anniversary! He doesn’t do CrossFit but he does Squat and Deadlift. 🙂

Fox: I finally got to include a Saint Vitus mention in one of these articles! I hear you and Ben have a funny origin story. Care to tell it?

AB: Of course… it’s pretty funny now! We met online and set up a first date, and of course I was at the gym that day before the date. Long story short, I took the tail end of a rowing machine to the face and suffered a cut that required seven stitches. I felt awful and was worried it would seem like I was just trying to ditch him, so I texted him picture of my bloodied and bruised face. Can you believe, lol, this guy still came to meet me? We went to the bar that we had planned to meet at that night and had a few drinks, all the while I was still in my workout clothes, and have been dating ever since. I’m so happy to have met him.

Fox: That’s a great story. Ben sounds like a great guy. Where did you grow up?

AB: I grew up in Novi, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, where I danced competitively and did cheerleading from the time I was 3 years old through high school. My dad recently sold his private dentist practice, and my parents are building a home on the gulf coast of Florida. It will be nice to visit a warmer place, but it’s pretty weird to think that the house I grew up in won’t be ours anymore.

Fox: You’ve been pretty open and vocal about some food issues in the past but seem to be in a pretty good place nowadays. Care to talk a bit about that?

AB: Well, I was a longtime vegetarian, and as I mentioned, not overweight but not fit. When the previously mentioned boyfriend and I broke up I decided to have a steak as sort of an “eff you” to him since he was part of the reason I was vegetarian. Once I started eating meat, I noticed my body composition change pretty fast for the better, but then I went to the other extreme. That first year I was a member I did the LFPB Challenge and was strict Paleo, meaning I pretty much only ate protein. I lost a bunch of weight but was not at all healthy. The next year I did a bit better, and the year after I decided not to do the Challenge at all. I tried a macro-counting program later that year but wound up relying on a bunch of sugar-free crap and developed some bad habits on that diet also. Now I’m in a much better place and have built some healthy habits that I can maintain. I generally eat clean foods but am ok with indulging and not letting it get me down and just getting right back to my next choice. I’m still a work in progress for sure, dealing with food pressure from co-workers can be a bummer, but I’m learning. One funny thing is I eat so many more vegetables now that when I was a vegetarian!

Fox: That’s a familiar trajectory, and it’s great to hear you’re learning what works best for you. Nice work. What were some gym goats for you when you started, and what are you working on now?

AB: Man, I thought I would never get Double-Unders. The big “secret” for me on those was just to practice, consistently. As you (and anyone who reads the blog) may know, Muscle-Ups were a longtime goal of mine, and I put in so much work to get one. I don’t just “have” them now (I’ve done a total of 5), but it was pretty rewarding to finally unlock that achievement. Now I’d like to be able to do them with consistency and also to do Bar Muscle-Ups. AG Strength has built up my upper body strength pretty well, but my legs are lagging behind! I would like to Squat 185 this year. There, I said it.

Fox: Those muscle ups were a long time coming… congrats! Last question: What should we look for in a future AOM?

AB: I think it would be great to highlight someone from one of the specialty populations  like Kids, Teens, Fit 55+, or one of the Barbell Clubs (Starting Strength and Next Level Weightlifting). There are so many people who push hard and inspire there, too. Also moms and dads who are committed to work childcare in and around exercise, introverts who are quietly working hard, and anyone who cheers and supports others.

News and Notes

  • Take a look back through 7 years of Athletes of the Month over on our Articles & Media page.
  • Don’t forget to submit your 18.1 scores to the CrossFit Games site by 8pm tonight!
  • Intramural League captains: please submit your athletes’ scores to the spreadsheet by Tuesday at 8pm!

_____________________
Why Olympic Lifting Makes You Better at Practically Any Sport BarBend
The Most Metal Closing Ceremony of All Time Deadspin

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

WOD 2.25.18

Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2018

WOD 2.25.18

EMOM x 35 (7ea):
1) 2 Power Snatches
2) 30 Second Hollow Hold
3) 40 Double-Unders or 40 seconds of practice
4) 5 Strict Pull-Ups
5) Rest

The Power Snatches are not touch-and-go, and you can build to a heavy double or perform work sets across.

Post work to comments.


Coach Nick and his CRASH-Beasts are competing at the  CRASH-B World Indoor Rowing Championship in Boston today. Here they are doing their final practice last night at Harvard’s Newell boathouse. Let’s send them some good vibes in the comments!

TODAY: Starting Strength Program Total

Coach Jeremy’s Starting Strengthers will wrap up their eight-week cycle today starting at 2:00pm. Lifters will be testing their 1RMs in the Back Squat, Press, and Deadlift. All are welcome to come by, hang out, and do some cheering. Get ready for some massive PRs!

Register for Active Life Strength

Get out of pain, stay out of pain, strengthen your weaknesses, and improve mobility and movement patterns, all while getting stronger! This is a predominantly strength-based class very specifically programmed to strengthen movements and improve positions based on your individual needs.

The Active Life methods help athletes of all levels identify the root causes of their pain, injuries, and plateaus, and provide solutions for alleviating and eliminating those limitations through strength training, hands on treatment, corrective movements, and program modification. As the Head Coach at Active Life Athletics, Coach Keith worked closely with the Active Life doctors as they developed the system and led the charge to incorporate it into a gym model. Using those principles, this program will help you identify your individual weaknesses and limitations, guide you through the necessary strength and mobility exercises, and get you moving and lifting more efficiently, with less pain. A pain-free athlete is a confident athlete, and a confident athlete is a dangerous athlete. If your goal is to look better, feel better, and go hard into your 80s, this program will help you set and maintain the foundation.

For more information on The Active Life, check out:

  • @activeliferx on Instagram
  • www.performancecarerx.com
  • The Active Life on YouTube

Schedule

March 12th, 2018 – May 3rd, 2018
Monday and Thursdays from 6:30pm to 7:30pm
2x per week for 8 weeks
Cap: 12 athletes

Cost

The cost is $160 per month ($320 total plus NY state sales tax). The first charge will occur at the time of registration and the second payment of $160 will occur automatically 1 month later. This cycle is open to all CFSBK members as well as CrossFitters from other affiliates.

(Please note that you are committing to specific days and times and there be no refunds for any missed classes or late cancellations.)

What happens in class?

We will start with testing your single leg strength relative to your Back Squat, your Deadlift stamina relative to your absolute strength, your 1-arm carry ability, and your upper body pressing and pulling. You will then receive progressive strength work during each class to address your weaknesses based off of your test results.

In addition, we will identify your general movement limitations through mobility and flexibility assessments. Each athlete will receive an individualized “Not for Time” piece to complete as a warm up/cool down for CrossFit group class or during standardized warm-ups to address these limitations through corrective movements, stretches, and holds.

Register Here!

_____________________
Yesterday’s Results Board: Open Workout 18.1
How Exercise May Help the Memory Grow Stronger NY Times
Nicole Carroll’s Tips for 18.1 CrossFit Journal (video)

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

Open Workout 18.1

Posted on Saturday, February 24, 2018

Open Workout 18.1

Rx’d Division
AMRAP 20 Minutes:
8 Toes-to-Bars
10 Dumbbell Hang Clean and Jerks 50/35
14/12 Calorie Row

Scaled Division
AMRAP 20 Minutes:
8 Hanging Knee Raises
10 Dumbbell Hang Clean and Jerks 35/20
14/12 Calorie Row

Masters 55+
Rx=35/20
Scaled = 20/10 and Sit-Ups

The Dumbbell Hang Clean and Jerk is single-arm, and the 10 reps per round must be completed as 5 reps on one arm then 5 on the other. When the dumbbell is coming off the floor, as in the first rep of any set, the dumbbell must be Deadlifted to the hips before lowering to the hang for the rep to count (i.e., a Clean directly from the floor is a NO REP). The Hang Clean can be any style (Muscle, Power, Squat, Split) and the Jerk is from the shoulder to overhead anyhow (Press, Push Press, Push Jerk, Split Jerk). The Jerk is complete when the knees, hips, and arms are locked out with the dumbbell over the middle of the body.

The goal in this workout is to keep moving at a pace you can sustain and then maybe pick it up a bit in the last minutes. Don’t get caught a hunched over with your hands on your thighs. Thursday night’s winner, Sam Briggs, scored almost 15 rounds, with a difference of LESS THAN 10 SECONDS between her best and worst rounds! #holyshit2018opengoals. HAVE FUN!

Post rounds, reps, and Rx to comments.


Coach Brett goes Beast Mode in the final seconds of 18.1. Thanks to everyone who came out to compete, judge, and cheer at Friday Night Lights last night! See you next week…

TOMORROW: Starting Strength Program Total

Coach Jeremy’s Starting Strengthers will wrap up their eight-week cycle tomorrow starting at 2:00pm. Lifters will be testing their 1RMs in the Back Squat, Press, and Deadlift. All are welcome to come by, hang out, and do some cheering. Get ready for some massive PRs!

BJJ at CFSBK

The start of our next Level 1 Brazilian Jiu Jitsu class has been pushed back a week to March 4th, giving you more time to register! (Level 2 stays the same.) All aboard the jiu jitsu jet!

The Level 1 Cycle is your jiu jitsu starter pack. The course is geared towards anyone intrigued by BJJ but unsure where to begin, anyone who wants to become better acquainted with dynamic movement on the ground, and anyone who could use a review to jump back into it.

In Level 2, we will build on concepts and vocabulary of movement from the various positions with a larger portion of class-time dedicated to progressive resistance drilling, positional sparring, and straight sparring. If you have grappling experience from the past, you are welcome to jump into the Level 2 course!

Days & Times

Level 1 (March 4th – May 6th, no class on March 25th): Sundays, 1:30pm – 3pm
Level 2 (February 25th – March 18th): Sundays, 3:00pm – 4:30pm or 4:30 – 6:30pm
Open Mat (ongoing): Tuesdays, 4pm – 6pm

REGISTER HERE!

Pricing

Level 1 (8 weeks): $200 ($100 will be charged when you register and at the 4-week mark of the cycle)
Level 2 (4 weeks): $100
Open Mat add-on (for Level 2 members only): $40

About the Coach

Callie Brennan is a brown belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu under Team Fabio Clemente. Callie has been training and competing for the past 7 years. She began teaching beginner and intermediate students under the guidance of Pan American champion Babs Olusanmokun and multiple time World and Pan American champion Dominyka Obelenyte. Callie has competed locally and internationally winning gold at American Nationals as a white belt, the Montreal IBJJF Open at blue belt, and New York IBJJF Open at purple belt in her weight. She also medaled in the Abu Dhabi Pro Trials at blue belt.

Callie recently founded Rag Doll Camps with her training partner and coach, Dominyka Obelenyte, with a mission to close the gender gap in the sport. She also teaches privately. Callie initially began CrossFit to supplement her jiu-jitsu practice, and she is looking forward to sharing it with the CFSBK community!

Feel free to contact Callie directly with any questions!

_____________________
Yesterday’s Results Board: Rest Day
Is Philly’s Next Joe Frazier a 16-Year-Old Girl? Daily News
Why Is There So Much Hate for the Word “Moist” Nautilus

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

Rest Day

Posted on Friday, February 23, 2018

#Weekendvibez

Lots of opportunities for fun at the gym this weekend! Here’s what’s happening:

  • The first Friday Night Lights event of 2018 is TONIGHT from 5:30 to 8:00. Everyone is welcomed to take on 18.1 in a super-fun high-energy environment. Go to the FNL Sign Up Sheet to reserve a space in the heat of your choice. The high fives will be plentiful!
  • 18.1 is slated for Saturday’s programming, which means you can do it during any of our group classes today or tomorrow. See yesterday’s post for all the details.
  • A new round of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu cycles starts Sunday! See below to get involved with this awesome new class…
  • The Starting Strength Program Total goes down on Sunday starting at 2:15pm! Lifters will be testing their 1RMs in the Back Squat, Press, and Deadlift. All are welcome to come by, hang out, and do some cheering. Get ready for some massive PRs!

BJJ at CFSBK

Brazilian jiu-jitsu (BJJ) is a full-contact grappling style that prioritizes strategy over brute force. Literally translating to the “soft” or “pliable” (jiu) “style” (jitsu), it is often thought of as the chess of martial arts. BJJ is, at its core, a self-defense system that employs positional advantages, joint locks, and chokes to defend against an opponent or attacker in an assertive and elegant manner. You needn’t be stronger than your opponent to subdue them, which makes BJJ one of the most practical and effective martial arts for all ages and sizes. There is no striking in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. This is a submission grappling art based on efficiency of movement, leverage, and timing.

The Level 1 Cycle is your jiu-jitsu starter pack. The course is geared towards anyone intrigued by BJJ but unsure where to begin, anyone who wants to become better acquainted with dynamic movement on the ground, and anyone who could use a review to jump back into it.

In Level 2, we will build on concepts and vocabulary of movement from the various positions with a larger portion of class-time dedicated to progressive resistance drilling, positional sparring, and straight sparring. If you have grappling experience from the past, you are welcome to jump into the Level 2 course!

Days & Times

Level 1 (February 25th – April 22nd): Sundays, 1:30pm – 3pm
Level 2 (February 25th – March 18th): Sundays, 3:00pm – 4:30pm or 4:30 – 6:30pm
Open Mat (ongoing): Tuesdays, 4pm – 6pm

REGISTER HERE!

Pricing

Level 1 (8 weeks): $200 ($100 will be charged when you register and at the 4-week mark of the cycle)
Level 2 (4 weeks): $100
Open Mat add-on (for Level 2 members only): $40

About the Coach

Callie Brennan is a brown belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu under Team Fabio Clemente. Callie has been training and competing for the past 7 years. She began teaching beginner and intermediate students under the guidance of Pan American champion Babs Olusanmokun and multiple time World and Pan American champion Dominyka Obelenyte. Callie has competed locally and internationally winning gold at American Nationals as a white belt, the Montreal IBJJF Open at blue belt, and New York IBJJF Open at purple belt in her weight. She also medaled in the Abu Dhabi Pro Trials at blue belt.

Callie recently founded Rag Doll Camps with her training partner and coach, Dominyka Obelenyte, with a mission to close the gender gap in the sport. She also teaches privately. Callie initially began CrossFit to supplement her jiu-jitsu practice, and she is looking forward to sharing it with the CFSBK community!

Feel free to contact Callie directly with any questions!

_____________________
Yesterday’s Results Board: Clean | Handstand Walking
Cooking for Olympians Mic
New Research Shows That Neanderthals Were Artists Pacific Standard

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

Clean | Handstand Walking Skill Work

Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2018

Mid-Hang Clean

1-1-1-1-1

Warm up and work up to a heavy single for the day.

Post loads to comments.

_____________________

Handstand Walking

Choose one of the following scaling options, and spend 12 minutes developing your hand balancing:

A) Hand Walking (free or 2′ from wall)
B) Wall Inverted Hip Shifts with Hand Release (from a wall walk or kick up)
C) Box Piked Hip Shifts with Hand Release
D) Floor Piked Hip Shifts with Hand Release

Rest as needed between sets.

Post work to comments.


The Open is Here!

So far we have 165 (!!!) CFSBKers registered for the 2018 CrossFit Open. If you’ve registered, congrats on making this decision! It’s going to be an awesome five weeks in which you’ll get to benchmark your overall fitness and engage in some fun competition with yourself, the CFSBK community, and the rest of the world. Last year, about 330,000 people competed in the Open making it the world’s largest participatory sporting event.

Open Workout 18.1 will be announced tonight at 8pm New York time. See the CrossFit Games site for more info.

If you haven’t registered for the Open yet, there’s still time to get in on the fun! Go here to sign up.

Intramural Teams

As you may have read right here on the blog, we’re going to do in-house intramural teams again for the 3rd year in a row to make the Open even more exciting and inclusive. For more information on that, check out the event page. When you sign up for the league, you’ll be placed on a team in which your performance will contribute to your team’s overall score. Each team will be assigned a captain who will communicate with their team over the 5 weeks and submit their scores to management. This is a great way to meet some new people, have a bit more fun with the Open, and motivate yourself to work a little harder.  We encourage everyone to sign up and give it their all! Remember: your team won’t be penalized if you can’t do a workout for some reason.

If you’re on a team, you should have been contacted by your captain already. You can follow the Intramural Team Competition leaderboard here.

Friday Night Lights

We’ll also be doing a series of “Friday Night Lights” events again this year. Every Friday night from 5:30 to 8:00pm for the next 5 weeks, you’ll have a chance to take on that week’s Open Workout with your fellow CFSBKers in a high-energy environment. These are open to EVERYONE who’s doing the Open. Go to the FNL Sign Up Sheet to reserve a space in the heat of your choice!

Programming & Submissions

As usual, the Open workout will be programmed for Saturday’s group class, which means you’ll have the following opportunities to perform the workout:

  • Friday morning/afternoon group classes
  • Friday Night Lights, 5:30-8pm
  • Saturday Group Classes, 8-2pm
  • Saturday Open Gym, 2-4pm
  • Sunday Open Gym, 6-8pm

For extenuating circumstances, we can try to work with you if you CAN’T make any of those times. With the exception of the Frida and Saturday group classes and Friday Night Lights, you’ll have to find someone to judge you in order to post a valid score. There are often folks hanging around to do the workouts, so just ask the coach to assist you if you can’t find someone to help out yourself.

In order for your score to be counted, you must submit your score and judge’s name to the CrossFit Games site by 8pm on Monday night. If you don’t submit a score, you’ll get a zero for the workout, but you’ll still be allowed to participate in the subsequent workouts. There’s nothing worse than crushing a workout and then posting a zero for the year! You’ll have to submit your judge’s name when you submit so remember to cut off the bottom of your scorecard and take it home with you. In a worst-case scenario, you can submit “David Osorio” as your judge.

Judges Needed for Video Reviews

Since the inception of the CrossFit Games regional competitions, Coach David has worked as the Competion Director for the North East and Canada East regions. This means he leads a team that reviews Open Workout videos and works at the Regionals leading judging and scoring teams, as well as determining appeals and making sure the competition element runs smoothly.

Part of his task is to assemble a team of 9 people to help watch the top videos in his regions in order to ensure that movement standards have been met by all the athletes heading to Regionals. We’re looking for a few more people to help lead the charge on this! You would be responsible for watching 5-10 videos per week and giving them the thumbs up or down regarding performance standards. Coach David will assist you on any tough calls or questions you have a long the way.

The only requirement is that you pass the online judges course.

If you’re interested in helping out, please e-mail David [at] CrossFitSouthBrooklyn.com as soon as possible!

_____________________
Yesterday’s Results Board: Burpees, T2Bs, Row | Front Squat
4 Benefits of Butterfly Pull-Ups BarBend
CrossFit Open or Tropic Thunder? Morning Chalk-Up

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

WOD 2.21.18 | Front Squat

Posted on Wednesday, February 21, 2018

WOD 2.21.18

Every 3 minutes for 5 rounds:
8 Burpees
10 Toes-to-Bars
12 Calories Rowed

The goal is unbroken reps with consistent scores.

Post work to comments.

_____________________

Front Squat

10-10-10

Warm up and work up to a heavy set of 10.

Post loads to comments.


Congrats to Bethany E. and Amy M. on their huge success at the Murder of Crows Barbell Club Open this past weekend. Bethany squatted 110kg/242 lb for a 5 pound PR. She also PR’d her deadlift at 140kg/308 lb and PR’d her total at 297.5kg/655 lb. Amy squatted 112.5 kg/248 lb  (a 3 lb),  benched 55 kg/121 lb (a 1 lb PR), and PR’d her total at 295kg/650 lb. Let’s give them some love in the comments!

CFSBK & BTWB

CFSBK is excited to partner with our friends at beyond the whiteboard to provide digital workout tracking for our affiliate! Members are able to access each day’s workout on the app or desktop site, both of which provide tons of data, gym leaderboards, and a variety of other cool tracking parameters. BTWB is an official CrossFit® app, and it’s run by CFSBKers!

Complete the following steps to register and start tracking your workouts:

  1. Create a profile by registering at btwb.com.
  2. Use the gym code CFSBK101 to receive a free membership and link you into the CFSBK group class programming feed.
  3. Download the app for Apple or Android and sign in!

You read that right: this premium service is completely FREE for CFSBK members. OMG, that’s you! Get on there now and start tracking your workouts!

News and Notes

  • Open Workout 18.1 will be announced tomorrow night! There’s still time to sign up and have fun with 150 (!) other CFSBK members. Go here to do that!
  • Check out the latest installation in Coach Fox’s Older Fitter series for Beyond the Whiteboard. This one is called “What Does the Open Mean for Me Anyway?” and it’s about why everyone (yes you, too) should do the Open. Read it!
  • Holy water bottles! We have a lot of ’em. Check out the results of our latest lost and found dump on our Flickr account!

_____________________
Yesterday’s Results Board: Rest Day
How to Work Swimming Into a Strength Cycle BarBend
Why Dating Apps Are Full of Guys with Fish Photos NY Mag

| Filed Under: Workout of the Day

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