eatsleepcrossfit:

2fit-2quit:

By: Anthony Lee
Want greater fitness success? Stop making these 10 mistakes - these misconceptions seem more common among women and are perpetuated by media, fads, etc. These mistakes are hard to shake.
10 Fitness & Nutrition Mistakes Made By Women
———-
1. I Need To Lose Weight.
When speaking about fitness and nutrition, this is the most common phrase uttered by women. While it is true that many overweight individuals (both men and women alike) need to lose drastic amounts of weight for health reasons, many who utter this phrase want to lose body fat, not weight. What’s the difference? If weight goes down, doesn’t body fat follow? Not necessarily. For many, an exercise regimen that includes cardiovascular and resistance training increases muscle while eliminating body fat. The overall effect is a tighter, more toned physique, but body weight could stay the same or even increase. Therefore, the obsession with numbers on a scale is unfounded; one can greatly improve appearance, enhance fitness levels, and eliminate unwanted fat all while maintaining a constant weight. Focus instead on a combination of body fat measurements in trouble spots and the image in the mirror.
2. I Just Gained Two Pounds!
Again, the numbers on the scale are of little importance in the short run. I hear too many women expressing genuine concern over a fluctuation of two or three pounds in bodyweight. There are so many factors, none of which have to do with “getting fatter,” that could have caused such a minor gain, so there is no need for panic.  For example, an individual should weigh him/herself at the same time every day because the difference in weight between stepping on the scale first thing in the morning on an empty stomach and stepping on the scale after dinner can be quite noticeable. This difference, however, is normal and cyclical.
3. I’m Going On The ____ Diet.
To many women, the word diet implies two things that are notorious saboteurs: deprivation and an end-date. Whether it’s the grapefruit diet,Atkins, or some other fad diet in the latest fashion magazine (that’s why they’re fashion magazines, not health magazines), diets require deprivation. They force the follower to give up enjoyable foods, endure intense hunger or some combination of the two, which usually leads to intense cravings and even more intense binges.   A second thing that diets imply is an end date, a day when the h#llish deprivation comes to an abrupt end. So after that spring break trip, high school reunion, or wedding day, many women gain back even more weight/fat than they originally carried. This is because they feel entitled to finally eat the foods they love after a prolonged diet, and a week of carefree eating somehow turns into a month, then a year. The way to avoid these pitfalls is to develop healthy eating habits instead of relying on crash diets. Eat nutrient-dense foods in small, frequent meals to stay satisfied and embrace portion control so that you can enjoy the foods that you love.   Exercise moderately, incorporating fun and variety to workouts to avoid burnout and boredom. Health and fitness should be lifelong goals, not 4-week tours de force
4. I’ll Be On The Elliptical If You Need Me.
The idea behind some people’s religious devotion to the elliptical machine lies in the belief that since cardiovascular exercise effectively burns body fat, any form of cardio will suffice. First of all, a nutrient-dense diet combined with both cardiovascular and resistance training is shown to trump diet and cardio alone, but that is not even my main gripe.   Research has consistently shown that the elliptical, although easiest on joints, is worse than the treadmill, stationary bicycle, and rowing machine (not to mention activities such as swimming and intense hiking) when it comes to elevating heart rate and burning body fat. This is due to the fact that movement on these machines relies heavily on momentum and not resistance or the propelling of one’s bodyweight. All these months of elliptical training has yielded mediocre results, and now you know why.
5. I’m Going To Give Diet Pills A Try.
Do you know what Yohimbe is and how its affects the body? Do you know why there was so much concern around Ephedra? Do you consume too much caffeine? If you are not intimately familiar with these substances, why would you put them in your body day after day? Before taking these pills, an individual should consult a physician to assure that he/she is in good health. Diet pills achieve fat reduction and weight loss by stimulating the body’s systems (thereby increasing metabolism), which can put extra strain on vital functions and organs such as the heart.   Also, diet pills are just a tool; effort is still required to make every tool perform. Just because you pop a capsule a few times a day doesn’t mean that you can eat junk, skip workouts, and achieve that ideal physique. In short, diet pills should be employed after starting and maintaining a regimen as that last resort to break through a plateau. They can be very dangerous if used improperly or abused or use caution.
6. I’ll Have The Salad, Please.
Salads can be a great source of nutrients while being low in saturated fat and simple carbohydrates. The key word is “can.” Too many times I see individuals pass up perfectly healthy sandwiches and entrees, opting instead for a salad drenched in dressing, bacon bits, and croutons. These items, loaded with fat and calories while scant on nutrients, will not only sabotage a diet but will often fail to make you full. In order to construct a truly healthy salad, focus on nutrient-dense, low-calorie items such as spinach, broccoli, tomatoes, etc and mix in some lean proteins, beans, nuts, and low fat cheeses for flavor and texture. The best feature of salads is the variety that can be created, so keep things interesting and flavorful. If you prefer the mixture of dressing, bacon bits, and croutons with some greens mixed in, you might as well have some pizza or burgers to at least fill you up. As you can see, not all salads are created equal.
7. I Try To Skip Breakfast.
Study after study confirms that individuals who eat a balanced breakfast complete with carbohydrates, protein, and healthy fats lose more weight than those who skip this meal. Why? After a night of fasting and inactivity (aka sleep), an individual’s metabolism is slowed to a crawl. Think of breakfast as the spark that ignites up your body’s metabolic fire, setting you up to burn calories for the entire day. More importantly, though, a nutrient-dense, satisfying breakfast prevents overeating later in the day. While it is true that skipping breakfast equates to zero calories for that meal, it sets you up to consume many more calories throughout the day, when food choices probably aren’t the healthiest. So if your goal is to shed body fat or lose unwanted weight, eat within 45 minutes of waking up. Breakfast can be as simple as a low-fat yogurt with a piece of fruit, so the “I don’t have time for breakfast” excuse won’t work.
8. I Do Pushups To Get Rid Of My “Batwings.”
Some swear by pushups to rid themselves of that unwanted flab around the triceps, others are devotees of crunches to expunge belly fat, while still others try lunging their way to less cellulite on the backside. Whatever the exercise and whatever the body part, this approach is called “spot reduction,” whereby an isolation exercise is performed to tone a specific area. It simply doesn’t exist.  You cannot reduce body fat in one spot. While isolation exercises will undoubtedly strengthen the target muscles, the fat surrounding these muscles (and the fat everywhere else on the body) can only be reduced by consistently being in a hypocaloric state (burning more calories than consumed).  This is why anyone with a six pack will tell you that crunches are not the key. So it does not matter if the goal is tighter arms, a small waistline, or a toned backside; decreasing consumption and increasing cardiovascular activity are the paths to success.
9. I Don’t Lift Weights. Lifting Will Make Me Bulky.
An overwhelming number of women avoid the weight rooms of local gyms and health clubs because they firmly believe that resistance training, whether it is free weights or machine-assisted weights, will result in an undesirably bulky physique. This misconception stems from the fact that nearly all men achieve noticeable gains in muscle mass after beginning a weight training regimen. Because it stems from personal observation and is partially true, it is quite difficult to combat.  Yes, regular weight training will result in increased muscle mass. However, there is a certain type of training necessary to achieve these gains in size, training that involves heavy resistance and volume. By keeping the weight at about 40 to 50% of maximum effort and increasing repetitions for a cardiovascular effect, you will notice tone, not bulk.
10. It’s Reduced-Fat. I Can Eat As Much As I Want.
There are two pieces of information I would like to convey here. “Reduced fat” is a relative term and just because an item is labeled such does not mean that it is low in calories. For example, if one serving of a certain food contains 60% of the daily recommended fat intake, reducing that amount to 30% is considered “reduced fat,” and will probably even be marketed as “half the fat of the original!”  However, 30% is still a lot of fat for one serving, so considered absolute values like how many grams of fat, carbohydrates, protein, etc. are consumed instead of relative values like “50% less fat.” Additionally, reaching fitness goals is largely about calorie intake. More body fat and unwanted weight will be gained by eating 500 calories of a low-fat item than by eating 100 calories of a high-fat item, so keep this in mind. If there is a loss of control or guilt when eating diet or low-fat items, it is probably better in the long-run to consume the higher-fat, higher-calorie counterparts in moderation.

I hear these from my clients EVERYDAY.

eatsleepcrossfit:

2fit-2quit:

By: Anthony Lee

Want greater fitness success? Stop making these 10 mistakes - these misconceptions seem more common among women and are perpetuated by media, fads, etc. These mistakes are hard to shake.

10 Fitness & Nutrition Mistakes Made By Women

———-

1. I Need To Lose Weight.

When speaking about fitness and nutrition, this is the most common phrase uttered by women. While it is true that many overweight individuals (both men and women alike) need to lose drastic amounts of weight for health reasons, many who utter this phrase want to lose body fat, not weight. What’s the difference? If weight goes down, doesn’t body fat follow? Not necessarily. For many, an exercise regimen that includes cardiovascular and resistance training increases muscle while eliminating body fat. The overall effect is a tighter, more toned physique, but body weight could stay the same or even increase. Therefore, the obsession with numbers on a scale is unfounded; one can greatly improve appearance, enhance fitness levels, and eliminate unwanted fat all while maintaining a constant weight. Focus instead on a combination of body fat measurements in trouble spots and the image in the mirror.

2. I Just Gained Two Pounds!

Again, the numbers on the scale are of little importance in the short run. I hear too many women expressing genuine concern over a fluctuation of two or three pounds in bodyweight. There are so many factors, none of which have to do with “getting fatter,” that could have caused such a minor gain, so there is no need for panic. For example, an individual should weigh him/herself at the same time every day because the difference in weight between stepping on the scale first thing in the morning on an empty stomach and stepping on the scale after dinner can be quite noticeable. This difference, however, is normal and cyclical.

3. I’m Going On The ____ Diet.

To many women, the word diet implies two things that are notorious saboteurs: deprivation and an end-date. Whether it’s the grapefruit diet,Atkins, or some other fad diet in the latest fashion magazine (that’s why they’re fashion magazines, not health magazines), diets require deprivation. They force the follower to give up enjoyable foods, endure intense hunger or some combination of the two, which usually leads to intense cravings and even more intense binges. A second thing that diets imply is an end date, a day when the h#llish deprivation comes to an abrupt end. So after that spring break trip, high school reunion, or wedding day, many women gain back even more weight/fat than they originally carried. This is because they feel entitled to finally eat the foods they love after a prolonged diet, and a week of carefree eating somehow turns into a month, then a year. The way to avoid these pitfalls is to develop healthy eating habits instead of relying on crash diets. Eat nutrient-dense foods in small, frequent meals to stay satisfied and embrace portion control so that you can enjoy the foods that you love. Exercise moderately, incorporating fun and variety to workouts to avoid burnout and boredom. Health and fitness should be lifelong goals, not 4-week tours de force

4. I’ll Be On The Elliptical If You Need Me.

The idea behind some people’s religious devotion to the elliptical machine lies in the belief that since cardiovascular exercise effectively burns body fat, any form of cardio will suffice. First of all, a nutrient-dense diet combined with both cardiovascular and resistance training is shown to trump diet and cardio alone, but that is not even my main gripe. Research has consistently shown that the elliptical, although easiest on joints, is worse than the treadmill, stationary bicycle, and rowing machine (not to mention activities such as swimming and intense hiking) when it comes to elevating heart rate and burning body fat. This is due to the fact that movement on these machines relies heavily on momentum and not resistance or the propelling of one’s bodyweight. All these months of elliptical training has yielded mediocre results, and now you know why.

5. I’m Going To Give Diet Pills A Try.

Do you know what Yohimbe is and how its affects the body? Do you know why there was so much concern around Ephedra? Do you consume too much caffeine? If you are not intimately familiar with these substances, why would you put them in your body day after day? Before taking these pills, an individual should consult a physician to assure that he/she is in good health. Diet pills achieve fat reduction and weight loss by stimulating the body’s systems (thereby increasing metabolism), which can put extra strain on vital functions and organs such as the heart. Also, diet pills are just a tool; effort is still required to make every tool perform. Just because you pop a capsule a few times a day doesn’t mean that you can eat junk, skip workouts, and achieve that ideal physique. In short, diet pills should be employed after starting and maintaining a regimen as that last resort to break through a plateau. They can be very dangerous if used improperly or abused or use caution.

6. I’ll Have The Salad, Please.

Salads can be a great source of nutrients while being low in saturated fat and simple carbohydrates. The key word is “can.” Too many times I see individuals pass up perfectly healthy sandwiches and entrees, opting instead for a salad drenched in dressing, bacon bits, and croutons. These items, loaded with fat and calories while scant on nutrients, will not only sabotage a diet but will often fail to make you full. In order to construct a truly healthy salad, focus on nutrient-dense, low-calorie items such as spinach, broccoli, tomatoes, etc and mix in some lean proteins, beans, nuts, and low fat cheeses for flavor and texture. The best feature of salads is the variety that can be created, so keep things interesting and flavorful. If you prefer the mixture of dressing, bacon bits, and croutons with some greens mixed in, you might as well have some pizza or burgers to at least fill you up. As you can see, not all salads are created equal.

7. I Try To Skip Breakfast.

Study after study confirms that individuals who eat a balanced breakfast complete with carbohydrates, protein, and healthy fats lose more weight than those who skip this meal. Why? After a night of fasting and inactivity (aka sleep), an individual’s metabolism is slowed to a crawl. Think of breakfast as the spark that ignites up your body’s metabolic fire, setting you up to burn calories for the entire day. More importantly, though, a nutrient-dense, satisfying breakfast prevents overeating later in the day. While it is true that skipping breakfast equates to zero calories for that meal, it sets you up to consume many more calories throughout the day, when food choices probably aren’t the healthiest. So if your goal is to shed body fat or lose unwanted weight, eat within 45 minutes of waking up. Breakfast can be as simple as a low-fat yogurt with a piece of fruit, so the “I don’t have time for breakfast” excuse won’t work.

8. I Do Pushups To Get Rid Of My “Batwings.”

Some swear by pushups to rid themselves of that unwanted flab around the triceps, others are devotees of crunches to expunge belly fat, while still others try lunging their way to less cellulite on the backside. Whatever the exercise and whatever the body part, this approach is called “spot reduction,” whereby an isolation exercise is performed to tone a specific area. It simply doesn’t exist. You cannot reduce body fat in one spot. While isolation exercises will undoubtedly strengthen the target muscles, the fat surrounding these muscles (and the fat everywhere else on the body) can only be reduced by consistently being in a hypocaloric state (burning more calories than consumed). This is why anyone with a six pack will tell you that crunches are not the key. So it does not matter if the goal is tighter arms, a small waistline, or a toned backside; decreasing consumption and increasing cardiovascular activity are the paths to success.

9. I Don’t Lift Weights. Lifting Will Make Me Bulky.

An overwhelming number of women avoid the weight rooms of local gyms and health clubs because they firmly believe that resistance training, whether it is free weights or machine-assisted weights, will result in an undesirably bulky physique. This misconception stems from the fact that nearly all men achieve noticeable gains in muscle mass after beginning a weight training regimen. Because it stems from personal observation and is partially true, it is quite difficult to combat. Yes, regular weight training will result in increased muscle mass. However, there is a certain type of training necessary to achieve these gains in size, training that involves heavy resistance and volume. By keeping the weight at about 40 to 50% of maximum effort and increasing repetitions for a cardiovascular effect, you will notice tone, not bulk.

10. It’s Reduced-Fat. I Can Eat As Much As I Want.

There are two pieces of information I would like to convey here. “Reduced fat” is a relative term and just because an item is labeled such does not mean that it is low in calories. For example, if one serving of a certain food contains 60% of the daily recommended fat intake, reducing that amount to 30% is considered “reduced fat,” and will probably even be marketed as “half the fat of the original!” However, 30% is still a lot of fat for one serving, so considered absolute values like how many grams of fat, carbohydrates, protein, etc. are consumed instead of relative values like “50% less fat.” Additionally, reaching fitness goals is largely about calorie intake. More body fat and unwanted weight will be gained by eating 500 calories of a low-fat item than by eating 100 calories of a high-fat item, so keep this in mind. If there is a loss of control or guilt when eating diet or low-fat items, it is probably better in the long-run to consume the higher-fat, higher-calorie counterparts in moderation.

I hear these from my clients EVERYDAY.

Reblogged from Fran-Cindy-Murph

Overtraining: It exists.

Let me tell you about the first time I overtrained. (Yes, first does imply that it’s happened more than once)

In High School I ran Cross Country as well as Indoor and Outdoor Track. I had some fairly respectable times for my area. 4:30 1600, 9:52 3200, 16:30 5k - just for a reference point. It was the summer between my 11th and 12th grade and I was thinking about some summer training. I had been running competitively since the 8th grade so I figured it was time to bump it up a notch. I mean, more is better right?

I was spending the summer at a nearby college participating in a summer enrichment program (something on genetics and ethics…fun) when I happened to meet the captain of their Cross Country team. I figured that he was fast and I was aspiring to be fast so I fell into training with him. His weekly mileage was way over mine but I figured if I bumped mine up a little there would be no problem catching up. I was young and so thought I was resilient enough. I mean, more is better right?

I trained with him for 2 months. I started noticing that my legs were pretty sore and sometimes it wouldn’t go away for days. I thought it was from the increased mileage and that it would go away. Well, it WAS from the increased mileage, but it DIDN’T go away - I just got used to it. I hit up a few running camps and due to my enhanced training I caught the attention of a few college coaches. I figured it was going to be a great Cross Country season.

Then I started limping. I didn’t notice it, bu

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One more for the road. Please watch if you are prone to whining.

This is my student, Matt Hall, practicing hang squat cleans. Notice he doesn’t have any legs from the knee down. He never lets that keep him out of CrossFit. What’s your excuse?

Failure happens.

I haven’t posted in a while. Fail. I was on vacation for a few days - eating poorly, not working out. When I got back and started into my daily routine I felt like I had been away for months. Needless to say, my first couple of workouts back from vacation were more than painful physically - I felt like I had lost something just by taking a few days off.

I got my diet back on track and stuck through my workouts and now I feel much better. Those first couple of days were terrible for my psyche. I was second guessing a lot because I wasn’t posting the times or the weights as before I left.

I see this happen often at our box. Many students get discouraged when they can’t do a movement correctly the first day, or if they aren’t able to do the Rx’d weight, or if they can’t match their times or weights from a previous workout.

Failure happens. It really does.

Many people can’t accept that - I know that I have a hard time with it. It is especially being in the CrossFit community. Everyone is always pushing to be bigger, faster, stronger. I’ve seen a shirt out there that says “Death before DNF” - meaning Death before Did Not Finish.

It’s really not all that serious. Easy to say, I know, not so easy to remember.

Everyone has their days - good ones, bad ones, really great ones, exceptionally horrible ones.

You can’t be 100% everyday. It’s pretty much impossible. Just about every week you will have one workout that you will remember for a while because of how amazingly you performed. You will have one workout that you remember because of how much it sucked. Every other workout that you do during the week will pretty much be filler - going through the motions and putting in the work.

Now of course this is just a theory - you may have entire weeks where you just feel absolutely dreadful. However, if you believe this theory to be true and expand on it a little bit you can see that everyone will have bad days, weeks, months, or maybe even a bad year or two.

Lifts will be failed. Times will be slow. Performances will be mediocre…at best.

It’s natural.

What is important to remember is that you have to keep working. I think Winston Churchill said it best with:

“If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

And I think every cowboy ever had it right with saying you need to just get back on the horse. Setbacks are only detrimental if you let them keep you down and don’t learn from them.

Parting shot: Everyone else posts this video, I figure it’s my turn. Good motivation for those of you that are feeling defeated.

The Best Motivation Video

Be Aggressive. B-E- Aggressive.

Yeah I said it. That same age old cheer that you heard at every elementary/middle/high school event/match/game where the cheerleaders were yelling at a team because they weren’t doing something right, presumably not being aggressive.

Well it just so happens that I was teaching the Snatch to a class this week and this cheer came to mind. Stalking around the circle of students, I asked what, behind form/technique, was the most important thing to remember about Olympic lifts.

My answer was a lot of shuffling and some wide eyed “don’t call on me” stares.

So I told them:

Aggressive Hip Extension

Dun, dun, dun…

But what does the even mean?

It means

Read More

Form Before Weight. Weight Before Time.

Every coach or trainer has a way of saying it. This is mine.

Form before weight. Weight before time.

What the heck does that mean? Well let me tell you.

Form before weight. Pretty simple concept for weightlifting or even exercise in general. Before you can learn to walk you must learn how to crawl. Before you can do a power clean at 135# you must first learn what a power clean is and do drills to get proper form. Of course this goes for any weightlifting/gymnastics/metabolic conditioning movement. I wouldn’t throw you a 55# kettlebell (yes, kettlebell, not cattlebell or kettleball…or even cattleball) and expect you to do kettlebell swings with any semblance of good form. If you don’t have the form down you aren’t going to get the benefit of the exercise. Doctors that say squats are bad for your knees are talking about the quarter squats done with exorbitant amounts of weight that you see being done at your local globo gym. Get that form down and squat below parallel and it actually

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You Want Us To Do WHAT?!

I had a student come up to me at the end of our CrossFit WOD the other day to tell me that he had a story for me.

Whenever I explain what we are doing in class for the day I tend to get a few deer-in-the-headlights looks from a few people. So, I usually ask “Do you have any questions?” At which point most people don’t, they just snap out of the shock from realizing what they are about to do. So then I start the clock.

Well, this student told me that it reminded him of a story from World War II:

On a Japanese battleship preparing to attack, an officer was briefing a newly formed Kamikaze squad on the mission they were about to execute. He explained how each of the pilots was to take off and fly to their intended target. Then they were to ascend to the appropriate altitude and drop like a stone to explode in a enormous fireball. At the end of the brief he turned to the pilots and asked, “Do you have any questions?”

One pilot raised his hand and the officer called on him.

“Yes, one question…are you f**king crazy?!”

So every time I turn from the board after explaining the WOD and ask for questions he thinks of that story and it makes him laugh.

Which makes me laugh, so now I ask it as much as possible.

Happy Friday

How To Get Better At Push-ups, a.k.a. Do More Push-ups

So I just finished a WOD with a lot of handstand holds - not only are my wrists killing me, I am also having a hard time lifting my arms. With that in mind for my post today I am going to pull from an email I received a few months ago (to save my exhausted shoulders). We had just done Cindy and one of my students wanted to know how to get better at push-ups. He really just wanted to know how to increased the amount that he could do before muscle failure.

Before we get to how to increase the number of push ups you can do at one time let’s talk about how to make your push-up better in general. First,

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