"Conscious physical training is using the visible to mold the invisible."
-Dan Millman

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Large Loads, Long Distances...Quickly






In CrossFit we define fitness as the ability to move large loads, long distances, quickly.  Basically what this can mean is that a person develops the ability to move heavier and heavier weights, for longer times, and do it faster.  One of the unique aspects of CrossFit is taking this definition as a way to quantitatively measure the development of fitness.  Using this method a person can track their progress in a fitness program.  For example, if on January first I can do 15 kettlebell swings at 35 lbs. and I can do it in 10 minutes this is a measurable level of fitness.  Then on March 1, I repeat this workout and find that I can do 15 kettlebell swings at 53 lbs. and I do it in 7 minutes this is another measurable level.  According to our definition of fitness, I have become more fit.  Got it?  I have increased my ability to move large loads, long distances, quickly.

As a trainer it is always exciting to see clients succeed and reach, then surpass, fitness goals that they have set for themselves.  In this blog I would like to take the time to highlight one of my clients, Cristina Shaner.  Cristina is a perfect example of the practicality of the large loads, long distances, quickly definition of fitness.


Cristina started participating in Odyssey Outdoor Training in June.  When she first came to training she was already following the paleo diet and was healthy by most modern standards.  She was healthy, but had a low level of fitness according to the above definition.  She was able to swing a 15 lb. kettlebell but she could not do it very much, or very long.  Since that first day of training, Cristina has made great strides in skills and ability, and her level of fitness has increased tremendously.





Cristina has participated in consistent training, at least 2 times per week, for the last couple of months.  During that time I have watched with pride and happiness as Cristina ran up against her limitations and then broke those barriers down.  To mention just a few of her accomplishments, Cristina has increased the distances and speed of her running, and she has done it while at the same time learning how to run "barefoot style" in her Vibram KSO's.  She has greatly increased her skills on the kettlebells, becoming proficient with Russian and American swings, clean and press, clean and jerk, Turkish get ups and kettlebell snatches.  She has also graduated from her 15 lb. kettlebell and is now working with the 20 lb. kettlebell.  This increase in weight is accompanied by an increase in speed and duration.  In other words, we can actually measure Cristina's increased ability to move large loads, long distances, quickly.  Cristina has also moved from modified push ups to regulation style push ups.  This is a great accomplishment.



As a pioneer in the Odyssey Outdoor Training program Cristina has also broken out of the mold of what most people think of as fitness training.  Cristina has learned how to jump on and vault over picnic tables and parallel bars.  She has developed balance on objects of multiple heights and shapes.  She has learned how to do hill scrambles and descents.  She has climbed on trees, used logs for plyo jumps and developed Olympic style lifts with large rocks and other odd shaped objects.  Through this kind of training Cristina has had great fun in a constantly varied program while at the same time developing a broad based fitness level that prepares her to meet multiple, real life challenges.





So I send out a heartfelt congratulations to Cristina Shaner for the great accomplishments she has made in her training.  I look forward to continuing to work with her and watch her fitness levels and abilities grow.

If you are interested in taking your fitness to the next level while having fun in a challenging and constantly varied environment, Cristina and I invite you to come out and join us in our outdoor adventures!

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

My Capoeira Adventure




Anyone who knows me knows that I am always on the look out for something new and exciting.  Whether it is a new physical activity, a new idea, new people, or new situations, I am always trying to push the envelop on my life and experiences.  My root guru Robert Anton Wilson divided human kind into two broad, loose groups: homo neophilus and homo neophobus.  Homo neophilus seeks out new experiences and new ideas.  Homo neophobus likes to stick with the traditioanl, the "tried and true" and the safe.  I definitely hope to continue to push forward as a homo neophilus!

It is in the spirit of seeking out the new and exciting that my wife Samaria and I attended a capoeira demonstration and Brazilian dance party at the new studios of Capoeira Evolucao here in Austin Texas about 2 weeks ago.  I have practiced various martial arts in my life but I had never seen or experienced anything quite like capoeira.  I had watched a few youtube videos of capoeira but those videos did not give a bit of justice to watching capoeira in person.


Capoeira is an Afro-Brazilian martial art that was developed and used by African slaves in Brazil to fight and defend themselves.  Many runaway slaves established strong holds against slave owners and the state and were able to defend their hard won freedom, and liberate other slaves through the use of capoeira.  Because capoeira was developed by slaves, they had to hide what they were doing since a slave owner would obviously not want his slaves to be practicing martial arts!  To hide what they were doing, capoeiristas (a capoeira  practitioner) combined their martial art with dance and music.  The history of capoeira is rich with legends and origin stories and I have only provided a rough outline here.  The interested reader can discover more detailed history on-line or through books.

I was blown away during the capoeira demonstration I watched.  The capoeirista were incredibly agile and fluid.  There moves displayed an incredible amount of gymnastic skill and a masters level of body weight control.  They would begin slow and then accelerate kicks and legs sweeps so fast that the opponent would have to duck and dodge with lightening speed.  It was incredible.



My wife has practiced capoeira in the past and was eager to take the offer of a free week of training that Capoeira Evolucao provides to interested people.  She came home from her first class bursting with excitement and physical exhaustion.  She quickly convinced me to come try a class and I am so happy that I did.

My first capoeira class took me outside of my comfort zone in multiple ways.  To begin with, the "warm up" consisted of about 30 minutes of pretty tough calisthenics and heavy duty stretching.  The calisthenics had me standing in a puddle of my own sweat and the stretching would have been challenging for a yoga student.  The actual capoeira training was about 45 minutes.  The techniques are complicated and extremely technical but the instructors broke them down into somewhat more easily worked sections.  I thought I had balance, coordination, accuracy, and flexibility but I almost immediately found the end limit of all of those things when trying to perform the capoeira training.  Another aspect of the training is rhythm, and all of the moves are set to music.  Some of the music was recorded but there were also musicians playing traditional drum and a stringed instrument called a berimbau.  I was surprised to find that I liked this part of the training.  I am not the most confident of dancers but I was able to lose some of that inhibition while doing capoeira.



When capoeiristas practice capoeira or spar, they call it "playing" capoeira.  I enjoyed this very much.  We were doing something highly technical and martial but the spirit was of play, fun, community, and friendship.  This was a great environment to train in.

Half way through that first capoeira class I had decided that like my wife, I too wanted to sign up for regular classes.  I am going to my third class tonight.  My body is sore, my mind is swimming with all the new techniques, and I can't wait to go do it again!

If you are looking for a new way to have fun with that fit body that you are developing through work in the CrossFit gym or Odyssey Outdoor Training groups then I could not give a stronger recommendation for capoeira and the folks at Capoeira Evolucao.  Find new ways to challenge yourself.  Take your fitness and the adventure of life outside of your normal, comfortable, routine and try something new and daring.  Go out and explore the world...and have fun doing it!


                                           http://www.capoeiraevolucao.com/

Monday, August 8, 2011

Product Endorsement-Vibram KomodoSport







I have been wearing Vibram Five Fingers for about a year now.  I started with the simple KSO model and the original pair of KSO's that I bought are still holding up despite lots of CrossFit and MovNat inspired training along with trail running, swimming, and just fooling around town in them.

Recently a friend of mine bought a pair of the Vibram KomodoSports and brought them out for one of our training sessions on the steep, rocky trails of Bull Creek.  Like me, he has been wearing Vibram Five Fingers for awhile and doing various forms of training in them.  At the end of our training session he proclaimed the KomodoSport to be the best functioning Five Finger he had worn thus far.  This meant a lot coming from a guy who has numerous pairs of different Vibram Five Fingers.

I had some doubts about buying the KomodoSports.  One of the things I like the most about the Five Fingers is that they come very close to approximate the feeling of being barefoot.  As someone who is working toward developing a more primal lifestyle and evolutionary fitness I like to go barefoot as much as possible.  When it is not possible or practical to go completely barefoot I like to slip into my Five Fingers.  They basically serve as a protective covering for the soles of my feet. 

The KomodoSport Five Fingers have tread on the bottom and a little more cushion than the KSO.  I was concerned about this because padding and tread is not what I am necessarily looking for in a barefoot shoe.  In short, I did not want to move in the direction of a high tech primal shoe.  This seemed like a contradiction to me. 

At the same time, I have been doing a lot more trail running, tree climbing, and jumping lately and my feet have been getting pretty banged up.  After 30 plus years of wearing heavily padded shoes, the relatively short amount of time I have spent in my KSO Five Fingers has just not been enough to toughen up my feet and prepare them for the rigors of training on trails and rocks.  I had to be open to the possibility that I needed a little bit of padding and tread...just a little.

So, with all this in mind I went out and purchased a pair of the KomodoSport.  Here is my short review:



The KomodoSport have the same snug fit that I have come to enjoy in the KSO.  When fitted correctly the feeling is like having a well fitted glove on the foot.  All the toes can move, the foot can bend and flex in all the directions that nature has designed it for.  Walking or running I feel very close to being completely barefoot...and that is the main point.

Regarding the padding:  I have taken my new shoes out for two runs at this point and one CrossFit workout.  In all 3 situations I was pleased with their performance.  On the road and in the CrossFit workout I did not notice much difference between the KomodoSport and the KSO.  The rear strap in the KomodoSport actually provides for a better fit.  I experienced less sliding in my KomodoSports and could get a more customized fit with the added strap.  When I hit the trails with the new shoes I was glad to have the added tread and padding.  I did not lose any of the feeling of feet in contact with the ground despite the added padding.  However, the added padding gave me a slight but significant protection from pointy rocks.  To be frank, I was no longer constantly be jarred by the pain of my feet hitting rocks.  After the run my feet were not bruised and sore.  At the same time I could feel the rocks, I knew when I hit them and how I hit them and therefore how to adjust my running accordingly.  None of the feeling was lost but the intensity of the rocks was dialed down a bit.  This is important to me because it allows me to train near barefoot, develop the foot and leg strength, as well as the techniques, without banging up my feet too badly.

Regarding tread:  On the trails I found that the tread was a bit better than the comparably slick bottom surface of the KSO.  I found that I felt a bit more confident in climbs, jumps, and quick side to side shifts with that added little bit of tread.  Is this in violation of some barefoot purist approach?  Perhaps, but I imagine my naked foot would have a bit more grip than the sole of the KSO and a bit less than the KomodoSport.  From a training perspective I think the added tread is a helpful way to work the techniques of quick, lateral shifts, jumps and climbs.

                                 (my wife loves her new pair of KomodoSports!)   

Well, that was a lot of writing to get to the point that I highly recommend the Vibram KomodoSport.  I am very happy with my pair.  I think they would be a great shoe for either a beginning barefooter, or a more veteran primal mover.  They combine comfort, function, and the best of modern paleo fashion.  Do your feet a favor and check them out.
http://www.vibramfivefingers.com/products/Five-Fingers-Komodo-Sport-Mens.htm

Monday, August 1, 2011

Adventures in the wild

If you have never heard of MovNat then check this link out http://movnat.com/ watch some of the videos, read some of the articles, and then come back to this post.

For about a year now, I have been interested in MovNat style training and primal movement.  There is a whole new movement in the fitness world that some call Evolutionary Fitness which encompasses much of this.  Without going into a whole lot of detail some of the basic ideas are that human beings are "designed" to be proficient at running, jumping, climbing, lifting, throwing, swimming, balancing, carrying, defending, and quadrupedal movement.  One of the fundamentals is that these movements should be rooted in functionality.  I think of it like this: it is great to be able to do 20 pull ups, but what functional use are those pull ups if I can not use them to actually get on top of an obstacle?  If my life depended on me being able to climb up and on top of something it would be meaningless if all I could do was get my chin above the ledge.  Being able to run 5 miles around a track is a good achievement but can I run those 5 miles on uneven surfaces, maybe wet surfaces or rocky surfaces?  Can I do it in the dark?  Lifting weights in the comfort of a gym, with symmetrical objects will make me stronger but does it translate into being able to use that strength when it counts?  Can I lift an odd shaped object, like a human being, and carry them to safety?

A program designed around the principals of natural movement attempt to build a human being that is not only strong and healthy, but also able to deal with all challenges found in the real world.  To quote the founder of MovNat, Erwan LeCorre, "You are not beach ready because your body shape looks good, but when you can run, swim, and carry someone out of the water."

So I have been exploring my own fitness program and attempting to develop a program based around natural movement and the principals of functionality in real world scenarios.  I started by going out to some of the beautiful, local parks in Austin and the rocky trails of the Greenbelt.  The first thing I noticed was that barefoot running is a completely different animal when there are obstacles in your path like rocks, logs, loose dirt etc.  It is also a different kind of running when you have to traverse inclines and negotiate steep declines.  Running on a trail that requires you to duck under and jump over things is a completely different experience from putting in a couple of miles on the track or around the neighborhood.

Plyometric jumps, or box jumps are a staple of CrossFit workouts.  This is an exercise where you jump up and down from a box repeatedly for a set number of repetitions.  I have done this countless times in the gym, on boxes of 30 plus inches in height.  Translating this movement into nature requires a whole host of skills that the gym environment does not necessarily demand.  Nature requires balance and accuracy.  Imagine a large rock or a tree branch.  How do you jump and land on these objects?  They are not symmetrical.  They do not have flat surfaces.  Chances are when you jump on a rock you are landing on a surface that is extremely uneven.  Jumping on a tree branch and your landing surfaces is uneven, and moving!  This kind of jumping requires the ability to land accurately and with balance, to be able to "stick" the landing or be able to land and move immediately to the next object.

Natural movement applications of climbing were and are an humbling experience for me.  Erwan LeCorre explains that in MovNat training pull ups are really just the first part of a climbing application.  I am pretty good at pull ups, both kipping and strict.  I can even get a few weighted pull ups.  But I found myself struggling to get on top of a tree branch.  I could pull my chin up to the top of the branch, but that was about as far as it went.  It was at this exact point that I realized my gym training just was not enough.  Pull up bars are nice and smooth, perfectly round, and a comfortable width.  Tree branches and rock ledges are not.

Luckily I have found some good natural movement training partners through https://www.facebook.com/groups/austinnaturalmovement.  The group is headed up by a great guy who has experience training with the founder of the MovNat method.  We get together twice a week for training sessions with people of all skill and fitness levels.  Through these sessions I have begun to re-learn the functional movements of the human body.  I really recommend this group to you if you live in the Austin area and are interested in this kind of thing.  You can also find us on MeetUp at: http://www.meetup.com/austinnaturalmovement/

We are also lucky to have MovNat instructor Clifton Harski coming to the Austin area in late October for a 1 day MovNat seminar.  The seminar is limited to 14 people and will fill up fast so I suggest you register asap.  I am registered and can not wait for the experience.  You can find more information here: http://www.eventbee.com/v/movnat1dayaustinoct30

The last thing I want to add in this blog post is the natural movement is extremely fun.  We spend so much of our lives being serious adults who have serious adult responsibilities.  We very rarely do things simply because they feel great and are great fun.  Even with our workouts we have a serious mentality.  We go to the gym because we want to lose weight, or reduce our blood pressure, or get stronger, or look better naked.  All of these are great goals but we should also seek the experience of cutting loose and having fun.  Exploring natural movement makes you feel like a kid again.  Essentially it is the kind of exercise you got as a kid: running, jumping, shouting, throwing things, shadow boxing, and climbing trees.  I think of it as recess for adults.  Wouldn't you like to go back to recess?

Sunday, July 17, 2011

What are you looking for?

Let's face it, most people come to a fitness program for aesthetic reasons.  People want to shed a few pounds, they want to fit into that outfit from high school or college, they want to look good in a swim suit for the summer time...basically people want to look better naked.  That is the reason I began my fitness journey.  I was in my mid thirties and had the typical American male physique...I had the spare tire, the gut, and the man boobs.  When I first walked in to a CrossFit gym I told the head coach that I would do anything he told me to do if he could guarantee to get that fat off of me.  In about 60 days most of the fat was gone and my life had been completely transformed.


This picture is not a fake, these are the kinds of results a person can get with a clean diet (paleo/primal) and good physical training.  The methods work and it is actually quite easy.  But there is so much that is not shown in this picture.



Getting into a fitness program not only transformed my body it also transformed my spirit.  I began to rediscover what it really means to be a human being, to be alive.  When you let your health decline, when you follow the sick consensus reality of what passes for being alive in our modern western culture, you lose touch with the fundamental joy of being a human being.  There is joy in movement. There is joy in adventure.  There is joy in hard, physical activity and sweat.  There is joy in climbing, running, swimming, lifting, throwing and jumping.  There is joy in rolling in the grass.  We all knew this back when we were little children, when we were still wild, and undomesticated.  Erwan Le Corre http://movnat.com/ describes most modern people as "zoo humans".  I take this to mean that most of us are like wild animals who have been locked in cages.  We are no longer in touch with our natural instincts, desires, way of moving, or diet.  We are in the zoo of modern life and we are growing fat, lazy, sick and dull.

But hope is not lost, far from it.  Right outside of your front door is a whole world just waiting for you to explore and rediscover your true human nature.

My fitness adventure began as a way to lose weight, and look better naked.  My fitness adventure has transformed into a completely new way of looking at and living life.  I no longer think of a "beach ready" body in terms of how a person looks in a bathing suit.. Now I am interested in the ability to swim, to dive, to hold my breath, and the ability to help if someone gets in trouble in the water.  I no longer concern myself with the amount of weight I can squat or bench press.  Now I am interested in my ability to use that strength to seek out new adventures, have fun, and be helpful to friends, family, and strangers.  I no longer walk or run on tread mills, use weight machines or cardio theaters.  Now my training involves lifting actual objects, from dumbells, to kettlebells, to rocks.  I run on trails that have obstacles and beautiful scenery that requires awareness and engages my mind.  I climb trees, rocks, and ropes.  I seek adventure.



What are you looking for in your fitness training program?  It is a wonderful goal to lose weight and look good naked.  This is a goal that you can easily achieve through a paleo/primal diet and a constantly varied, high intensity training program.  But explore the possibilities beyond that initial goal.  What might your life be like if you could reawaken that beautifully wild, undomesticated being that is the original core of who and what you are?  What kind of life might there be outside of the confines of the zoo?

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Rituals of Strength



The rituals of strength, the smell of the dew on the grass before the sun has risen, the cool darkness of morning, it is worship.  The early morning alarm sound jolting fuzzy awareness from the warmth of sleep, the sound of water running in the sink, brushing teeth, making coffee, wanting to go back to bed, it is worship.  Moving the joints, stretching the limbs, increasing the flow of blood, the pumping of the heart, the sound of breath, it is worship.  First pull, first lift, first swing, first sprint, it is worship.  It is so early, so many people are still asleep, or dragging themselves into the shower, here on the field we sweat, we grunt, we doubt ourselves and our ability but we continue to move, to push, to pull, to lift, to throw...the sun begins to spray the first rays of light across the horizon, it is worship.  Covered in sweat, gasping for breath, body trembling, fully awake in ways beyond the boundaries of consensus reality, alive, really alive, really alive and breathing and human and aware and so fucking thankful to be awake, aware, alive...it is worship.  The rituals of strength.


Sunday, June 26, 2011

Back in the swing...sort of




Well folks, the kid had himself a vasectomy.  I know, I know, too much information right?  I felt that way in the beginning, like I really did not want to tell people about it, that it would be a hand better played close to the chest.  After all, we live in a culture where there is tremendous social pressure to grow up, get married, and then start having children and lots of debt.  I have done at least one of those things, I have married.  My wife and I decided that we enjoy our freedom, and struggle for more freedom, more than the biological and social imperative to reproduce.  We also decided that her continuing to take hormone filled birth control pills was not really in line with our goal of living a more healthy lifestyle.  So I sucked up my fear, went to the doctor and had a vasectomy.  And now I am telling you about it because...well I guess in a certain sense I am proud of it.

First off let me tell you that all the stuff you hear about a vasectomy not being that painful and having a quick recovery time...neither of those things was true in my case.  I am sure there are some lucky guys out there that did not experience much pain or discomfort but I am not one of them.  The procedure itself was not painful, but the two shots in the testicles before the procedure hurt like a son of a bitch!  And the recovery....well I am almost 3 weeks into the recovery and it hurt.  The past 2 1/2 weeks have felt like I was recovering from getting kicked in the balls by the Incredible Hulk.

I have not been able to really workout.  I have done a few workouts over the 3 weeks but after each one I was back on the sofa with ice packs between my legs.  This past Friday was the first time I have been able to participate in a typical CrossFit WOD without painful repercussions.  As someone who loves the physical arts, being sidelined for approximately 3 weeks has not been an easy thing.  Guys like us do not really enjoy sitting around too much.  I have been so eacger to get back into the swing of things and it felt GREAT to be able to enjoy a workout with relatively little pain.  I am not back 100% yet but I am feeling like I am getting close.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Goals and Community

Okay, I know that to a lot of people it is no big deal.  There are people in gyms all over the world who can do muscle ups, people can do 10 to 20 of them at a time.  Hell, a muscle up is just the way a gymnast gets up onto the rings to do all the interesting and amazing gymnastics.  Regardless of all of that, to me, a muscle up is a big deal.

I have been trying to get a muscle up for months.  I have had the strength.  I have understood how the movement works.  I have known for months that I "should" be able to do a muscle up, and yet I have not been able to get one.  I have no problem telling you the reason why....fear.  To put it simply, I was afraid to really try.  If I closed my eyes all I could see was myself dislocating a shoulder, falling, breaking an arm etc.  Despite this fear, each time I came into the gym I worked on some aspect of a muscle up.  I would do ring dips, I would work the transition, I would jump into a muscle up, I would use bands.  Over time I let my body get more comfortable with the various parts of the movement.  But I was still afraid to just go for it.  Then last Friday I did just that.

I spent some time that day jumping into the low position of the movement, and raising the rings higher and higher.  My friends Jesse and Jevon encouraged me to just go for it.  They assured me that I could do it.  I took a few deep breaths and then a big kip and before I knew it I was sitting in the low position of a full muscle up.  I was so shocked that I jumped down without finishing the move.  I just could not believe that I had done it without ripping my arm out of the socket!  Other friends from the noon class joined the chorus of encouragement and I jumped back up on the rings and did my first muscle up.  I finished the movement to cheers from my fellow athletes.  It felt great!

For months I had wanted to be able to do a muscle up but my fear was holding me back.  I shared my fear with my friends at the gym and received understanding, friendly joking and teasing, and most of all support.  My friends watched me try and try and fail and fail at the muscle up.  Throughout all of it they continued to encourage and coach me on.  My friends were there when I achieved my goal...I achieved it to the sounds of their cheers.  Most importantly I achieved it with them.  My community, my tribe was a key element to my success.

One of the open secrets of life deals with the types of people we surround ourselves with.  I am so greatful to be part of a tribe of supportive, strong, and fun friends.

Here is a side ways video of my muscle up:

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Exposed!





Yesterday my wife and I went to Austin Rock Gym http://www.austinrockgym.com/nargpics.htm to try our hand at indoor rock climbing.  We went to the North Austin location which has a huge indoor climbing area dedicated to "bouldering".  Below I quote from the wikipedia page for bouldering:

"Bouldering is a style of climbing emphasizing power, strength, and dynamics. Its focus is on individual moves or short sequences of moves, unlike traditional climbing or sport climbing, which generally demand more endurance over longer stretches of rock where the difficulty of individual moves is not as great. Boulder routes are commonly referred to as problems (a British appellation) because the nature of the climb is often short, curious, and much like problem solving. Sometimes these problems are eliminates, meaning certain artificial restrictions are imposed. Bouldering is more focused on the technique of climbing instead of undertaking a full bodied climb."



Austin Rock Gym's North Austin location has 30 ft. high climbing walls (and lower ones), simulated caves, and cliff overhangs.  There are crash pads all around the gym that you can position underneath yourself to ensure safety, though the pads do little to reduce the fear accompanied with being 15-20ft. in the air, with no rope, hanging on to a tiny hand hold.



Both my wife and I are avid CrossFitters and generally excel at physical activities, even when we have no previous experience with the activity.  CrossFit attempts to develop a broad and general fitness that will allow a person to successfully participate in just about any physical activity.  We like to think that we are training people to be able to go run a 10K, swim, row, play soccer, whatever the situation calls for, and to be able to do this at a competitive level.  We stepped into Austin Rock Gym with the confidence of CrossFitters, ready to conquer the walls...even though neither one of us had ever done it before.




To our credit, and the credit of the CrossFit training program we both completed some pretty awesome climbs for beginners.  In fact we completed a route that a novice climber in the gym that day, with previous climbing experience, was unable to complete.  I watched with pride as my wife Samaria would try a climb, fall, get back up with a laugh, and make it to the top on her second attempt.  We fulfilled the promise of CrossFit: we showed a broad based fitness, prepared for the unknown and unknowable.  However.......

Climbing exposed some major weaknesses in my fitness.  After a few climbs my forearms were exhausted.  My hands were beginning to cramp.  I watched in frustrated amazement as veteran climbers hung upside down, 20 feet off the ground with an ease and grace that was beautiful and astounding.  After an hour and a half of climbing we could simply do no more.  We had plenty of energy, and wanted to keep climbing, but our ability to grip or pull was just gone.  It was incredibly frustrating.

Climbing was one of the most fun activities I have participated in.  I loved it.  Samaria loved it.  We plan on making regular trip to the Rock Gym to develop our climbing strength and skills.  It was a great experience.  It also showed me a whole other aspect of fitness training, a whole side of physical and mental development that is missing from my training regiment.  It is a great thing to have these kinds of weaknesses exposed.  Now it is time to go back to the drawing board, and figure out a way to turn those weaknesses into strengths.  And once that is complete it will be time to search for more weaknesses.  These kinds of exposures are the engines of change and progress.



Thursday, May 19, 2011

Necessary or Comfortable?

 
(performing the last 3 of 30 Curtis P's at the prescribed weight of 95 lbs.)







Scaling because of necessity or comfort?  This is a question I started asking myself about 2 months ago.

Those of you who are CrossFitters know what I mean by scaling, for the rest of you I will offer a brief explanation.

In our workouts that involve weight we have a prescribed weight for men and women.  This prescription is based on what an elite athlete should be able to do the workout with.  As an example, our workout today involved completing 30 repetitions of a wonderful exercise known as a Curtis P (hang squat clean, right lunge, left lunge, push press and repeat).  The prescribed weight for men was 95 lbs. and for women it was 65 lbs.  Scaling involves taking this weight and lowering it if you are unable to do the workout with that weight.  So for example, a man might scale down to 75 lbs. if he knew he could not complete the given repetitions at the prescribed weight.  That can serve as a brief description of scaling.

Since I began CrossFit I scaled just about every weighted workout that I did.  I had a lot of confidence when it came to body weight workouts but heavier weight flat out intimidated me.  And thus, for the past year I would scale almost every weighted workout.  Typically when faced with a WOD (workout of the day for the non-initiated) like the one today I would have done it at about 75 lbs.  Approximately 2 months ago I began to question my reasoning for doing this.  I began to wonder if I was scaling because I really could not handle that weight, or was it more because I was intimidated by it.

I decided to begin an experiment.  I had witnessed another member of our gym increase their weight capacity by just going for the prescribed weight every time.  They no longer worried about their time or competition status in relation to anyone else, they just focused on doing the prescribed weight in every workout possible.  I watched this athlete become stronger over a period of a couple of months, and though their time decreased in the beginning, it rapidly caught up after a couple of months.  This athlete is now stronger and faster than when they began.  I decided to follow this same program.

When I get set up for the WOD I automatically load up the prescribed weight.  Most of the time I wonder whether or not I will be able to lift it, or if I will be able to complete the required number of repetitions.  I worry about being the slowest person in the room, or even busting my ass.  I take all that worry and doubt and shove it to the side and load the bar up.  I have been doing this for about a month now and I have done things weight wise that I really did not think I had the ability to do.  I have not failed to complete the number of reps required, I have been the slowest person in the room....but I have not busted my ass!

I think this has profound implications in my life inside and outside of the gym.  How many other things out there have I not tried because I thought I would not be able to?  How many other things do I do at a level that is comfortable as opposed to challenging?  Is that really how I want to live my life?  Do I want to stay comfortable or do I want to get out on the edge?  Undoubtedly many people strive for comfort, and that is all.  I can imagine that for many people this is a satisfactory way to live.  If you are reading this blog, I imagine that you are one of the people who want to get out on the edge.  So I ask you, do you scale your life out of necessity or comfort? 

Saturday, May 7, 2011

The "Is" of identity





This workout "is" hard!  It "is" hot outside.  That guy "is" pissing me off.  I "am" depressed.

The above statements are example of the use of the "is" of identity.  The "is" of identity involves the use of the "to be" verb and can contribute greatly to many of the misunderstandings we experience in our lives and many of the limitations and states of mind that we create for ourselves.

There are many great books that break this concept down in great detail.  I point people to the numerous works of my root guru Robert Anton Wilson and also to the excellent book, "Drive Yourself Sane: Using the Uncommon Sense of General Semantics" by Susan and Bruce Kodish.  In this short blog post I will attempt to give a quick breakdown on why one can benefit from working to limit the use of the "is" of identity and the "to be" verbs (is, am, are, were, will be,...) in thinking, writing and talking.

Look again at the first sentence that started this blog: This workout "is" hard!  I often find myself thinking like this in the middle of certain workouts or even before a workout begins, the minute I see it on the board!  When I think like this I seriously limit myself and my experience of the present.  Perhaps the workout is one that I have performed in the past, and in the past I found it difficult.  Why should I assume that my current experience will be identical to my past experience?  Why should I assume anything about the present experience?  When I use the word "is" I am cementing a value, an idea, a concept about the present experience.  I take an unknown and I label it, I put it in a cage from which it cannot escape.  If I tell myself or others that something "is" hard I am actively working to create a hard situation.

Now consider a re working of the sentence.  How different would it be if instead of telling myself, "this workout 'is' hard", I tell myself, "this workout looks like it 'might' be hard"?  This is a subtle change but has profound implications.  It might be hard, but it might not.  And what does 'hard' mean anyway?
 
We can see how this impacts on oour experience when we think of ideas like, "I 'am' depressed", or "I 'am' angry".  Are you depressed, or are you currently experiencing feelings of depression?  When a person says, "I 'am' depressed" do they really mean that they 'are' depressed....all the time, every day, every hour, forever?  How much more accurate is it to say, "I currently am experiencing the emotion of depression"?  This makes clear that we are not constantly depressed and will not constantly be depressed.  Talking, writing, and thinking in this was can open up many more doors of choice in life.
 
What does this have to do with CrossFit?  Everything.  The next time you walk in the gym and see a heavy workout on the board, or the next time you are in the midst of a challenging workout dont tell yourself and others how much the workout sucks or how hard it 'is'.  Instead try using language that leaves open the possibility for a completely different experience.  "This work out looks hard, but I bet we can kill it!"  Try that one on yourself and others and see what results you get.  Also try this in your life outside of the gym...open yourself up to surprise.  To quote my guru, "Universe contains a maybe".

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

 
 
"It's never to early to learn and practice what less pacified, less predictable times might require of us." -anon
The above quote does a beautiful job in summing up the idea behind a concept we hear about in the gym every now and then and that concept is know as GPP or General Physical Preparedness.
GPP is something that is at the heart of CrossFit training.  Here is a wonderful example of GPP:   folks came in to the gym last Friday expecting to see a typically difficult CrossFit WOD (work out of the day...every good cult has a specialized language!), something involving weights, and pull ups, and box jumps, and kettlebells, maybe some jump rope.  Instead, they entered the gym and with no warning were told that today they would be running a 5K...for time.  I have been at Westlake CrossFit for over half a year now and in that half a year we have not done any distance running.  We do not train for long distances.  Despite a few grumbles and complaints in the beginning, everyone ran the 5K.  Everyone who came into the gym that day displayed a decent level of GPP.  They showed up, were confronted with something they were not expecting, and met the challenge.
Life works that way as well.  Typically life gives me no advance warning when a rough task is coming our way.  I do not know when life may require that I lift something heavy, carry it a long distance, and do it quickly.  This could be something fun like having to paddle a paddle board against the wind at Town Lake, or it could be pulling someone out of a burning building in a survival situation.  Either way, if I do not train for it now I will not be able to perform when the time comes.
GPP extends way beyond the gym as well.  I keep a few gallons of water in my car, and some blankets, and materials to start a fire.  I may never need those things, but they are there if I do.  When I am walking through town, I practice projecting my awareness in all directions around me, watching out for anything that might come my way.  It could be an open man hole cover, it could be a mugger, it could be a friend I have not seen in a while.  Whatever the "it" might be, I want to be prepared.
GPP is a mind set as much as a process of physical development, the two go hand in hand.  Train now, for the unknown and the unknowable.  As the quote above points out, it is never too early....but it can be too late.
 

Sunday, April 24, 2011

How do you live your life?

I am 38 years old and I am trying to get out of the box.  I am trying to get out of the various mental and physical prisons that I have built for myself.  I am trying to look down at the barred door and recognize that I hold the key to all the locks that seem to hold me back.  I am free...if only I can constantly realize it.

What does this have to do with physical training, with exercise, with working out?  Everything.  So much of human life in the industrialized world has become like living in a zoo.  We have become zoo humans. Too many of us never step out of the safety of our cages, we never get too far from the food dish.  When is the last time that you stepped out of your comfort zone?

One of the greatest things about CrossFit is that it gives you a place and a chance to get outside of the zoo cage for at least one hour a day.  For that one hour you can push yourself to what you think your limits are...and then a little further.

The other day I cam into the gym and the workout of the day was truly intimidating.  I read the workout and thought that there was no way I would be able to handle the amount of work, the weight...the whole thing was intimidating.  Part of my training is to recognize this fear and intimidation and then to challenge it, to face it, and attempt to over come it.  With this in mind I decided to go for the workout.

20 minutes later the workout was over and I was sitting on the ground in a pool of my own sweat, exhausted but invigorated.  I was smiling from ear to ear.  I was working out with two other athletes and I came in last in terms of repetitions but as far as I am concerned I came in first place in that I completely broke through a barrier I thought existed.  The moment I engaged that workout I became a fitter and more free individual.  I spent time outside of the zoo and I loved it.

The  more time we spend outside of the box the less we enjoy living inside the various boxes in our lives.  The more time you spend challenging yourself and trying to break through the barriers that are holding you back the more powerful you become.  Stepping into a CrossFit gym is an extraordinary way to transform your life.  Take time to push yourself beyond the barriers you have created.  Get outside of the zoo.


                                                            GETTING FREE