Archive for the Crossfit Philosophy Category

Make CrossFit apart of your life…Don’t let your life get in the way

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy, Lifestyle, Members on November 19, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc

A little dirt never hurt nobody!

How do you make CrossFit apart of your life?

What are some tips you would give that works for you?

Life can get crazy at times…work, family, friends, bills, kids activities, homework, holidays, no time….etc.

Bottom line is you get it done or you don’t.

So how do you do it? The great thing about our community is we support each other, learn from each other, and get better together.

We are moving into one of the busiest times of the year. It’s time to stick together now more than ever!

Let’s hear it!

Modern Fitness Standards…How Do You Measure Up?

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy, In the News on November 13, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc

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Interesting blog found about the different standards of physical fitness testing for Utah Peace Officers, Marine Corps Physical Fitness Test, The Seals, Firefighters and pro Basketball and Football Combines.

Read HERE

How do you stack up against them?

Standards too low? Too High?

What are your thoughts?

-Good Luck tomorrow to the Fran challengers…I heard she is in a very very bad mood this week:-0

Nov 13

10 Things To Believe In

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy on November 11, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc

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Happy Veterans Day! Casey found this cool blog…check it out.

I believe CrossFit is about people and relationships. Fitness comes as a result of having great people and solid relationships in a place where the right tools are available. A gym without great people is simply a room full of weights.

I believe CrossFit selects for great people. A co-worker once wondered how a guy he knew got a ride to a distant city overnight. He said he didn’t think any of his friends would do that for him. Our response: we have a gym full of friends who wouldn’t hesitate AND they’d even buy coffee for the trip

I believe you can tell a lot about a person by how they approach the bar. Confident. Questioning. Unsure. Determined. Reckless. Cautious.

I believe you can tell even more about that person when they leave the bar. Exuberant. Angry. Self depreciating. Impressed. Proud. Contemplative.

I believe burpees were designed by the same guy who invented pantyhose.

I believe getting your diet nailed down is the hardest thing you’ll ever do. And you’ll have to do it everyday. Somedays it will be easy to make good food choices, other days it will seem impossible. It comes down to how important it is to you. If its important enough, you’ll do it and the benefits will pay in spades.

I believe we have a duty to our kids. I have a responsibility to raise them in an environment where food is fuel and not celebration, a cure for the pity pool, or something to turn to in boredom. In other words, I have to know that my view of food is all screwed up and I have to instill in my kids something different.

On the topic of kids, I believe they need to grow up knowing exercise if fun, rewarding, and its an enjoyable pursuit for life. Luckily, they get to grow up in a CrossFit gym where they are surrounded by great people, heavy weights, PR’s and all of the makings of a positive, welcoming, healthy environment.

The best gift we’ve ever received was a card that simply said “Thank You for saving my life”

Lastly, I believe in family. My family is just a little bigger these days.

Taken from CrossFit Rainer (http://www.rainiercrossfit.com/rainier_crossfit/2009/10/index.html)

Nov 11

Scalability = Anyone can do it!

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy on November 10, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc
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To the general public who hasn’t had the opportunity to plug into the CrossFit training program, CrossFit can appear to be very intimating (I mean 50 pullups in a row, hundreds of pushups, handstand pushups…are you kidding me!?…etc). When they step up to the plate and attend a class they will come to understand that anyone can do it because every workout and exercise is scalable. Scalable meaning you can modify the particular exercise to your adjust to your current fitness level. The intention is to become proficient at the scaled version as quickly as possible.

How do you become proficient the fastest way possible…work in a functional, varied and INTENSE platform (as fast and hard as you possibly can) and you will improve faster than you can imagine.

Describe what exercises you had to scale in the beginning and how you noticed your improvement soar.

Nov 10

You Know You’re a CrossFitter When…..

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy on November 6, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc

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Funny post from CrossFit Verve

(my good friend Meat Chan!)

■Your shins have more scrapes than a twelve year old boy.
■You know better than to say, “That looks easy”.
■You’ve spent HOURS watching videos of other people working out (who does that?).
■CrossFit t-shirts dominate your wardrobe.
■When you travel, your first concern is if there is a local affiliate close by.
■Refresh is your favorite button after 9pm.
■3 on 1 off takes priority in your schedule.
■The words Snatch and Jerk have lost there comedic value, but farting while deadlifting has not.
■There are days you have to talk yourself OUT of going to the gym because it’s a rest day and that means you are suppose to rest, right? You are confused at this and ask your coach if you can still go for a run. When they tell you rest means rest, still confused, you ask if that means you should do nothing or could you do…?
■You can relate to this sentence “I feel like a GD Navy Seal and an Olympic Gold Medalist wrapped in a F-ing suit of body armor”.
■You shave your hands.
■Pain is a relative term.
■You know what this stands for IWCABTAMD.
■You know the ten general skills by heart and can recite them at social gatherings.
■You have posted pictures of yourself working out on facebook.
■You believe in sweat angels.
■You’ve looked up the criteria for the Nobel peace prize to see if you can nominate Coach Glassman.
■Tape and chalk are at a premium.
■You used to bit your nails and now you pick at your calluses.
■Almond butter is the nectar of the Gods.
■You know that the benchmark WOD’s are named after real people and you would find it interesting to talk with some of them and find out WHY?
■You think in blocks not calories.
■Fat is delicious, you laugh at fat free.
■You don’t remember what it is like to have mirrors in your gym.
■You know that a 70%+ dark chocolate bar can sub as 3 blocks carbs.
■You must workout with loud obnoxious music, but never hear a word of it.
■You consider other CrossFitters family.
■You believe the world would be a better place if everyone was a CrossFitter.

Those are some we came up with, now lets hear yours.

Nov 5

What makes a Great CrossFit Athlete?

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy, Members on November 5, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc
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Becoming a great CrossFit athlete, is much more than the shoes you wear:-)

Tuesday we talked about the characteristics of “What makes a Great CrossFit Coach?”.

Today’s we want to know from you. “What makes a Great CrossFit Athlete?”

Lets get some discussion going…

Nov 5

The New Month is Upon Us…Let’s get a Jump Start. Time to Recap and Reset

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy, CrossFit Workouts, Members on October 30, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc
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Flexibility is always great to improve on...check out Doc Rob and Chris P working on the shoulders

So how did you do in October? (https://cfsiouxfalls.com/2009/10/01/)

This is YOUR OPPORTUNITY to put YOURSELF out there and let the CrossFit Sioux Falls community hold YOU accountable to push YOU to a new and higher level. Prove to YOURSELF that you can do it. It is amazing the improvements you can have in a One Month Period when you focus and push hard.

We are all here to support your progress.

So let’s here it! What are you going to improve on and how are you going to do it? Pick 3 things…

Today’s WOD:

Oct 30

Want Optimal Performance……Work on your Weakness!

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy on October 29, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc
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Here's Rob Killing it at the CrossFit Total Saturday!

In order to be the best “all around” Athlete we need to work on being great at a lot and not phenominal in just one area. This usually entails working on the exercises we dislike or are not the best at the most often.

When I first started CrossFit, I did not have the luxury of working out at a box, so off to the globo gym I went. Everyday, I would go to several CrossFit websites and go through all the WOD’s till I found the one that I liked best; i.e the exercises that I really excelled in. I was getting a great workout, but I wasn’t working to my full potential.

Although I hate to admit this, even when we opened CrossFit in Sioux Falls I would skip the WOD’s that had weightlifting or any exercises that I felt I wasn’t good at or didn’t like. I was so focused on my times on the board and “getting bigger” that I stuck to what I was good at, and was not excelling. I was watching members all around me improving leaps and bounds, while I just sat back and stayed the same!

The moment that really opened my eyes was when I did my first pullup without a band! I was shocked and not only could I do it, but I did ten in a row! I didn’t want to sit back any longer so I started to lift more weight and I would come to every single WOD, whether I liked it or not! To my amazement, not only was I stronger, faster, and improving all around I even dropped weight ( so much for the myth that women who lift get bigger)! I have changed my focus and by doing this my times are better, I feel better about my workouts, and I am able to do things I never thought were possible for me to do!

The greatest accomplishment is to do a WOD with recommended weight, no bands, off your knees etc… and kill it!!! It is something that no one can take away from you!

So I challenge you CrossFitters to focus on improving in all areas, working on your weakness, and not picking and choosing. You will see tremendous results!!!

What weakness do you want to work on?

Written by:
Annie Mello

Today’s WOD:

Oct 29

The Mental Transition of CrossFit and the power it has to change your life

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy, Members on October 23, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc
The AMAZING 530a crew in the ZONE!

The AMAZING 530a crew in the ZONE!

We often talk about the mental aspect of CrossFit is much more important than the physical aspect.

Earlier this week we discussed Training Your Brain. The mental toughness that CrossFit can provide “fits like a glove” to compliment training your brain.

This is a MUST read story from a CrossFit Sioux Falls “stud” member, Matt Byers. Matt describes his mental transition into CrossFit and it is an awesome story.

“Six Weeks and Counting.

While shooting the breeze the other day with Chris we briefly talked about my progression thus far. Upon responding I had nothing but positive thoughts and was ready to fire off several different areas of improvement. But after a brief hesitation, I passed on the more obvious areas and mentioned my mental transition. I don’t want to discount the gains made in strength, overall fitness, and the physical changes I am noticing, but in my opinion I have made the biggest gains in the mental aspect of being a CrossFit’er.

Starting back in my high school years, “fitness” was always just a byproduct of playing sports. Between playing football, soccer, and wrestling there was plenty of running, lifting, and going to practice to keep me in pretty good shape. Narrowing things down to just soccer, it was more of the same in college. With the season in the fall, and practicing all winter and spring, I always had a solid cardio base. We did some lifting as a team, but nothing of real substance. Not being the tallest lad on the team I always had to keep my upper body fairly strong in order to prevent being firmly placed on the ground by opponents. While spending time in the weight room I became a touch of a gym rat. This is where working out was first embedded in my lifestyle. Post college I was fortunate enough to be able to play for a couple more years in a developmental league. Although it was only over the summer months it kept me fit and motivated to continue to work out.

Enter the real world… I joined the realm of cube dwellers and lost that “reason” I had always had to keep fit. For a few years it was a roller coaster of commitment. Six weeks on, a month off, two weeks on, three weeks off…very little structure or commitment to something that came so easy in the past. Same for my diet, I was hot and cold. Thankfully the gym rat in me never fully left. Over the past few years I have managed to keep working out as part of my lifestyle. It was a lot of stealing routines from muscle magazines, going to spinning class, pretending I was going to do a triathlon. All of these things kept me interested, but they also kept me on a plateau of results. I never really felt it was my lack of dedication that held me back, it was my lack of mental progression. I wasn’t accountable, things were “good enough”, and my desire to compete was left in my gym bag. It just became enough to go to the gym.

It was the last week of August this year when I was hanging out with some friends having some cocktails. I don’t know exactly what sparked it, but a couple of them mentioned CrossFit. I had no clue really, they both had great things to say and said I should give it a try. That next week I was also able to hit up a buddy I work with (Shout out “BIG Mike” 5:30am). He gave me a quick overview and finally said, “You just need to try it for yourself.” Being a previous work out partner of his I knew if he was into it, it was worth a shot. I mean it’s only going to take me like 15 minutes…can’t be that hard. J

In I went, found Chris, got the housekeeping out of the way and waited as the rest of the class walked in. Stood around like a kid at a new school, wondering what the marker board was for. Ten minutes later I was hunched over wondering if my heart was going to explode. I finished up the workout not caring about my time, I just wanted my water bottle and a place to sit down. I told Chris thanks, and walked out. Don’t get me wrong, I had a great first experience, I just didn’t realize what I had just started, I merely thought I got in a good workout. I woke up the next day, and even though it was a bit more difficult to get a shirt on due to soreness, I figured “What the heck, these workouts will probably be harder than if I just go to the gym on my own.”

I decide the next day I will give it a couple weeks to give it a fair look and figure out if CrossFit was worth it. Plus I needed to figure out who Fran is. Over the course of the next couple weeks I drag myself to class each time half asleep. I’m zoned out and all I want is a good workout, I just space out until I hear the squeak of the marker board. While warming up I just think to myself that I am about to be really tired. I read the board, the names and numbers don’t mean anything to me and I just dig in. Even early in the workout as soon as discomfort sets in I’m mentally mush. I break early and often and just want to pace myself so I can finish. I quickly write my time down because everyone else did and bail. On my drive home I feel accomplished because I’m tired. As if that alone means anything.

During weeks three and four I start to notice a difference. I’m waking up a little earlier to get some food in me and actually “wake up” before I leave. When I get to the gym small talk with the other members has started, I stretch a bit more, and start thinking about what we might be doing. During the workout my thoughts are turning positive, I’m telling others “good job”. I’m noticing the people that are always beating me and start wondering if I could do better. I start caring about my time on the board, asking myself if I really gave it my all.

Now after finishing my sixth week I get excited when I even mention CrossFit. I’m getting to bed earlier on nights I don’t have anything going on. I get up even earlier now to get some food in me, even trying ideas from a book I am reading about the Paleo Diet. I’m now listening to music on the way to the gym to get me ready mentally. During the workouts my internal voice is tell me “TWO MORE REPS!!” versus “man…you are tired.” I want to beat the clock, I want to be happy with my performance, want to catch the people ahead of me, distance myself from the people behind me. I enjoy sticking around and talking about the workout, failing miserably at muscle ups, knowing I will get them soon. I want to get home and take in some post workout nutrition. I pay attention to how my body feels, get ready for the next workout, check the CrossFit Journals.

Bottom line, after six weeks the fire is back. It’s no longer just “good enough” to go to the gym. I can’t wait for the day I compare my currents times with the new times I’m going to achieve. I can’t wait for the day I have it in me to push until I puke. I can’t wait to see how many pull-ups I can do. I can’t wait for someone to look at my future Fran time and say, “Holy sh*t!” Monday morning is no longer the start of the work week, it’s my first WOD of the week.

To Chris, Annie, Cody, Casey, and the crew at 5:30 am, thanks for a great start and here’s to becoming a CrossFit’er.

Later Gator,

Matt B.”

So what benefits have you noticed since doing CrossFit?…..Tell us your story.

Today’s WOD:

Oct 23

Top 10 Reasons Heavy Weights Don’t Bulk Up the Female Athlete

Posted in Crossfit Philosophy, In the News, Lifestyle on October 16, 2009 by Fit 605 Inc

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Having been in fitness training for over 8 years now. I can’t tell you how many times a woman has came to me and said, “I’m not interested in lifting a lot of weights, I will bulk up”. This is a subject I deal with every year regardless of how much training information is available to the public. I recently came across an interesting article that has a lot of valid points to it.

1. Women do not have nearly as much testosterone as men. In fact, according to Bill Kreamer in Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning, women have about 15 to 20 times less testosterone than men. Testosterone is the reason men are men and women are women. After men hit puberty, they grow facial hair, their voice deepens, and they develop muscle mass. Because men have more testosterone, they are much more equipped to gain muscle. Because women do not have very much testosterone in their bodies, they will never be able to get as big as men.
2. The perception that women will bulk up when they begin a strength training program comes from the chemically-altered women on the covers of bodybuilding magazines. These “grocery stand models” are most likely pumped full of some extra juice. This is why they look like men. If you take the missing link that separates men from women and add it back in, what do you have? A man!
3. For women, toning is what happens when the muscle is developed through training. This is essentially bodybuilding without testosterone. Since the testosterone is not present in sufficient amounts, the muscle will develop, but it won’t gain a large amount of mass. The “toned” appearance comes from removing the fat that is covering a well-developed muscle.
4. Heavy weights will promote strength not size. This has been proven time and time again. When lifting weights over 85 percent, the primary stress imposed upon the body is placed on the nervous system, not on the muscles. Therefore, strength will improve by a neurological effect while not increasing the size of the muscles.

Information was taken and the rest of the article can be viewed HERE

Thoughts anyone?

Today’s WOD:

Oct 16