O- My My

IMG_5496 Olivia strong and beautiful

World Class Fitness in 100 words:
Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise, but not body fat. Practice and train major lifts: Deadlift, clean, squat, presses, C&J, and snatch. Similarly, master the basics of gymnastics:  Pull-ups, dips, rope climb, push-ups, sit-ups, presses to handstand, pirouettes, flips, splits, and holds. Bike, run, swim, row, etc., hard and fast. Five or six days per week mix these elements in as many combinations and patterns as creativity will allow. Routine is the enemy. Keep workouts short and intense. Regularly learn and play new sports. 
~Greg Glassman

Based on the above 100 words what would you, add, change and or work on to closer match this outline?

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Workout:

Four 400m sprints, rest as needed between efforts

Z's

IMG_5322Warming up for Hope

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It can never be stressed enough just how important sleep is. I’ll be the first to admit that I’m an old lady trapped in a 21-year-old’s body and thoroughly enjoy going to bed at 9:30. But even I sometimes get caught up in life and responsibilities and forget to look out for my best interests and well being. 

Sleep is often underestimated, especially when you’re in college where finishing something on time means finishing it 3 hours before it’s due (procrastination? It’s a lifestyle). For me personally, without at least 8 hours of sleep I become a zombie-like creature whose sasstitude increases exponentially. 

Without sleep, your hormones are confused, your stress levels raise, your brain slows down, and if you’re anything like me, you begin to consume everything in sight and feel like Ms. Pacman. And as much as I would like to think my workouts are still great when I’m tired, they aren’t. Those are the days when my push-up looks even more like a strugglefest than usual and even my lucky bacon shirt can’t help a sistah out.

Regardless of what your schedule looks like, it is incredibly important to take care of yourself in all aspects of life (hydration, nutrition, etc.), but especially in making sure you are getting enough sleep.

So try to make a conscious effort tonight, turn off your electronics and go to bed early. Or even nap! Cat naps are where it’s at (have I convinced you yet that my real age is 88?) Try getting 8 hours of sleep and see how you feel the next day. See if you don’t feel more energized and ready to PR your snatch by 10 pounds (Spealler obviously got a full night’s sleep the night before his PR at the South West Regional ... ergo, get 8 hours of sleep and you can compete at the CrossFit Games too!)

- Kelsey K.

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Workout:

Rest day

Wise up

IMG_5062

Before I started CrossFit, I thought skinny was fit. I thought six packs were the be all end all of fitness. I know now it is much wiser to see my fitness in terms of what I am able to do, not what I look like. I see my nutrition as fuel for my performance and not a diet for my waistline. I want to deadlift and clean and jerk. I want to santch and run. Those things make me better at moving furniture, riding bikes, surfing and climbing trees. This is an easy idea to forget, but a great one to remember.

-Coach D

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Workout:

With a continuously running clock, do one 135-pound overhead squat the first minute, two overhead squats the second minute, three overhead squats the third minute ... continue as long as you are able. Do not use a rack.

After A Lot Of Reps

IMG_5488After  "Hope"

In case you haven't noticed, my posts have been few and far between. Yet others have certainly picked up where I left off -- which speaks volumes about the type of community we foster here at CFSC. The post I'm sharing with you today comes courtesy of author Bill Hayes, who is currently writing a book on the history of exercise. The following is something I think most of us athletes can relate to -- especially those who have been at it for years.
- Dahlberg
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If only I had read Plato. That's what I thought when I saw my MRI: 28 images, impossible to deny, of a torn rotator cuff muscle -- a consequence of years of weightlifting... Plato could have warned me. In "The Republic," he advises "temperance" in physical training, likening it to learning music and poetry. Keep it "simple and flexible," as in all things, don't overdo. Follow this course, and you will remain "independent of medicine in all but extreme cases."
 
Plato was an athlete, particularly skilled as a wrestler... So good a wrestler was Plato that he reportedly competed at the Isthmian Games (comparable to the Olympics), and continued wrestling into adulthood. Ensconced at the academy, he spoke strongly on behalf of the virtues of physical education. He felt that one could balance physical training with "cultivating the mind," exercising "the intellect in study." The goal "is to bring the two elements into tune with one another by adjusting the tension of each to the right pitch." Equal parts thought and sweat...
 
As one can see most obviously in gifted athletes and performers, the body itself can be a source of knowledge -- coordination, grace, agility, stamina, skill -- both intuitive and learned... Of course there is the risk of taking things too far. Again, from "The Republic": "Excessive emphasis on athletics produces an excessively uncivilized type, while a purely literary training leaves a man indecently soft."
 
Even if I'd been sitting at Plato's feet as a young man, I would not have listened. Back then, looking good and getting bigger mattered most... Alas, today I'm paying a price in frayed muscle tendons. But in my aches and pains I am choosing to see wisdom gained... I have pressed pause... and stepped away from the heavy weights for a time. Now it is Plato's body to which I aspire.
 
* Something tells me Mr. Hayes should have done more mobility work.
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For time:
100 Ball slams, 30lb ball
Run 400 meters
100 Wall ball shots, 20lb ball
Run 400 meters
100  Pull-ups
Run 400 meters

 

Amazed

IMG_5449Kelsey working the pull-up

Thank you to everyone who came out yesterday to support CrossFit for Hope. We raised more than $4,000 for St. Jude Children's Hospital. We aimed to raise $2,000, but with the support of everyone, we doubled our goal. We are simple amazed at the turn out. THANK YOU ALL!

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Workout:

Deadlift 1RM

Then, deadlift 3-3-3 at 85%

Then, deadlift a max set at 75%

 

St Jude Children's Research Hospital

IMG_5261Madeline holding strong.

Today we are coming together as a community to raise money for the treatment and cure for children with cancer and other serious illnesses.  This year the fundraing effort goes to St Jude Children's Research Hospital. The CrossFit community at large is trying to raise enough money to runthe facility for a day, close to 1.5 million dollars. Go CrossFit!

Come on in at 8am or 10am for your chance to workout for a great cause.

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Workout: 

"Hope"

Three rounds of:
Burpees
75 pound Power snatch
Box jump, 24" box
75 pound Thruster
Chest to bar Pull-ups

In this workout you move from each of five stations after a minute. This is a five-minute round from which a one-minute break is allowed before repeating. The clock does not reset or stop between exercises. On call of "rotate," the athlete/s must move to next station immediately. One point is given for each rep.

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After we are done working out today we are heading down to Natural Bridges beach for some relaxing and socializing. It is an informal gathering, look for the blue easy ups and come join us.

 

Climb It

IMG_5235Coach D and Sonny

Saturday is fast approaching. Have you signed up for Hope? Come in tomorrow and join the fun. We will be running the workout at 8:00 and 10:00

Afterward, we're headed to Natural Bridges beach for social time and relaxation. Bring friends and family and whatever else you feel like, very casual.

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Workout:

Shoulder Press 1RM

Redliner

IMG_5216 Fender

Functional movements done at high intensity with variance. We always talk about mechanics and we teach you proper technique. We write workouts that cover broad time and modal domains and we teach about fitness. How hard you go is up to you. Your physical and psychological tolerances on any given day have a lot to do with your effort. But everyday you come into the gym, you've got to go hard ... as hard as you can. Push yourself to the limit and see what you are capable of. Fender does. So should you.

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Workout:

Five rounds of:
25 box jumps
155 pound thruster, 5 reps
2 rope climbs

We Hope

IMG_5188Dave having fun.

This Saturday we would like to invite everyone to participate in another worldwide CrossFit event: CrossFit for Hope.

When we hosted the CrossFit Open, more than 70 athletes from the gym signed up, paid $20 and showed up for five weeks to see what they could do. This time, the cause is much greater and the possible outcome potentially more life changing. This time we are competitng in a workout to help raise money for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. St Jude's mission is to find cures for children with cancer and other deadly diseases through research and treatment. If you would like to join us signing up is easy. The registration process is identical to that of the Open. In fact, if you competed in the Open, you already have a profile.

1. Go to the CrossFit for Hope website and login or create a profile

2. Join the CrossFit Santa Cruz roster

3. Donate $20 to yourself (or another athlete who has signed up)

4. Come in on Saturday and go hard.

5. Sign up before Friday, June 8th at 5 p.m. We are asigning heats and need to know who is coming. 

Hope to see everyone on Saturday!

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Workout:

Rest Day