Team 10k Row
In teams of three, with one partner working at a time, complete a 10k row for time. Trade off every 200-500 meters—your choice. This isn’t meant to be sprints, so aim to keep the pace aerobic throughout.
Post time and partners to comments.
Coach Frank of our Next Level Weightlifting Club just casually Front Squatting 407 lb to the sweet sounds of Whitney Houston | Video by Coach Nick
Good, Better, Best: Making Healthier Choices
By Chris Fox
Editor’s Note: The following are Coach Fox’s notes from a recent LFPB Info Session. We think they’re of interest to everyone, so we’re reposting them here. Enjoy!
“I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.”—Thomas Edison
Some of you might feel like you’re failing with this Look, Feel, Perform Better Challenge. You’re not!
When you mess up on a movement in the gym, you don’t decide that you failed at exercise. You simply use the information as feedback and adjust in the future. Keep trying until you find the habits that work for you. Remember that developing healthy habits takes practice.
There are no “good” or “bad” foods, simply those that are better or worse choices for us depending on our goals.
Better Choices share a few qualities like: being natural and unprocessed (or less processed), nutrient dense (provide a large amount of vitamins, minerals, and micro nutrients for their caloric load), high in fiber, generally thought of as healthy, and hard to overeat
Worse choices also share a few qualities like: being highly processed, low in nutrients, low in fiber, generally thought of as unhealthy or indulgences, easier to overeat.
Using the above guidelines, you can assess where any food is on the spectrum from better to worse. For example:
Corn > whole grain corn tortillas > homemade tortilla chips > store bought tortilla chips > Doritos
Steel cut oats > old fashioned oats > quick oats > homemade oat pancakes > Cheerios > Fruit Loops
Soft boiled eggs over beans and spinach > fried egg sammy with lettuce and tomato on sprouted grain bread > ham, egg, and cheese on whole wheat > bacon, egg, and cheese on plain bagel
Using that method, you can take just about any meal or food item and move it just a little bit along the spectrum from worse to better! For example:
Loaded nachos from a restaurant (deep fried corn chips, re-fried beans, ground chuck, pico, iceberg lettuce, loads of cheese and Sour Cream)
Can move towards:
Homemade nachos (baked tortilla chips, black beans, diced chicken breast, homemade pico, shredded cabbage, pickled jalapeños, low-fat pepper jack and guacamole)
Play around with this and see how you can make some of your favorite “unhealthy” meals just a little bit better!
The next Look, Feel, Perform Better Challenge Meeting/Q&A has been moved to SATURDAY 3/17 at noon in the Annex. This is the final meeting of the Challenge, and we’ll cover: taking a break from “dieting,” adjusting habits to meet goals, end of Challenge submissions, and moving on.
_____________________
Reverse Hyperextension BarBend
To Boost Sports Performance (and Annoy Your Opponents), Grunt NY Times
Open Workouts 18.2 and 18.2a
In 12 Minutes:
1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 reps for time of…
Dumbbell Squats
Bar-Facing Burpees
If you complete all the Dumbbell Squats and Bar-Facing Burpees in 18.2, you will use the remaining time to complete a 1-rep max Clean. If you do not complete all 110 reps of Squats and Burpees, your score will be the number of reps completed in 12 minutes.
Post time, Rx, and load to comments.
Thanks to everyone who came out for Friday Night Lights last night! See you next week for 18.3!
Tomorrow: Look, Feel, Perform Better Challenge Info Session: “What Even Is a Carb?”
The 5th Look, Feel, Perform Better Challenge Lecture and Q&A is tomorrow 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.
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:
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!
_____________________
18.1 Workout Analysis Beyond the Whiteboard
Nicole Carroll’s Tips for 18.2 CrossFit