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Tuesday 090922

Workout

Press - 1 reps
Push Press - 2 reps
Push Jerk - 3 reps

Yes, that's it...pick a weight, do 1 press, 3 push presses and then 5 push jerks, per round.

THEN
"Mini" MetCon


5x
250m Row
5 - Burpees

On Saturday September 26, 2009, Catalyst Athletics is holding the 1st Catalyst Games.
http://catalystfitness.typepad.com/catalyst_games/

To date, they have listed 3 events. They are:
1. 2k Trail run.
2. Lift a total of either 5000lbs (M) or 3000lbs (F) from the floor to an overhead position. Men's Rx Class will do 5000lbs at 75% of their bodyweight; Women's Rx Class will do 5000lbs at 50% of their body weight.
3. For time: 50 Wall Ball (Men's' Rx - 20lbs-10 feet; Women's' Rx - 20lbs-8 feet, 40 Push-ups, 30 Double-unders, 20 Knees to Elbows, 10 BCTs

Monday 090921

Workout
OHS - 7 sets of 2 reps@ 85% of 1RM

TFT / DUTY WOD
400M run
50-45 lbs Jumping Squats

500M row
50 Push-ups

400M run
50 sit-ups

500M row
50-16k Kettlebell swings

Compare to:
TITANFIT: 070822

Sunday 090920

Rest

Saturday 090919

Workout

Dr. Rick's Call!



RS box jumps during "Megan"


JD off and running


Becky hitting the row...

Friday 090918

Workout:
Pull-up ladder!
Do 1 pull-up the first minute, 2, the second, 3 the third. Continue until you can not complete the required number of pull-ups for the given minute.

Upon failure, rest 3 minutes.

Then Push-up ladder. Very same concept. Doesn't that sound fun?

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 090807


TFT / DUTY WOD
Nice easy 3 Mile run or 5K row

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 090728

Thursday 090917

Workout

Dead Lift

TitanFit Trainers / DUTY WOD
Daniel

For time:
50 - Pull-ups
400m Run
21 - 95 lbs Thruster

800m Run

21 - 95 lbs Thruster
400 meter run
50 - Pull-ups

Wednesday 090916

Workout

"Megan"

For time:
5 rounds of
400M run
20-18-inch box jumps
20-40 lbs Thrusters (with dumbbells...20 lbs per hand M/8 lbs F)

Megan calls for Thrusters to be done with DB, cause she's hard like that! Sub a barbell for the DB weight if necessary...

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 080924


TFT / DUTY WOD
Back Squat
5x5 @ 80% of 1RM

Compare to
TITANFIT: Tuesday 090901

Tuesday 090915


Workout
Push Press
2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2


TitanFit Trainers WOD
Team Workout

Monday 090914

Workout

Clean and Jerk
find new 1RM

"Mini" MetCon
3x
400m run
20 - Sit-ups
15 - Pull-ups
10 - Push-ups

Sunday 090913

Rest party people, rest!

Saturday 090912

Workout

4x (3:00 rest between each round)
10 - Back Squat @ 225 lbs or 50% of your 1RM
400m Run

Friday 090911

Happy Birthday Mr. Jerry Berg!

Thursday 090910

Workout
All but the Pull-ups and Wall Ball will be done outside. Dress accordingly!

400M run
25-65 lbs Thrusters
25-65 lbs SDHP

400M run
25-20 lbs Wall Ball Shots
25-Push-ups

400M run
25-35 lbs KB Swings
25-Ab Mat Sit-ups

400M run
25-65 lbs OHS
25-Pull-ups

Tomorrow, Jerry's Choice!


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 080416

Wednesday 090909

Workout
For time:
21 Box Jumps
21 KB Swings
3 Push ups

18 Box Jumps
18 KB Swings
6 Push-ups

15 Box Jumps
15 KB Swings
9 Push-ups

12 Box Jumps
12 KB Swings
12 Push-ups

9 Box Jumps
9 KB Swings
15 Push ups

6 Box Jumps
6 KB Swings
18 Push ups

3 Box Jumps
3 KB Swings
21 Push-ups

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 080604

Tuesday 090908

Workout

Thruster
Find a 1RM - 5, 3, 1, 1, 1

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Thursday 090528

Monday 090907

Rest!

Sunday 090609

Rest!

Saturday 090905

Workout with Dr. Rick!

Often, we give "chest up" as a cue while coaching the Back Squat. please note the picture below...put it in your memory for your next squatting session. Chest up and butt back!

Friday 090904

Workout
We are doing intervals today...

An interesting article from Time Magazine. While reading, it shows the author is still using traditional Globo Gym methods to get "thin" / lose pounds - vs. getting fit! Remember the goal at TitanFit is fitness. One can get "thin" / lose weight by not eating, but not eating will not help you carry your groceries or walk up that flight of stairs. Fitness is our goal.

As we have said many times, THROW AWAY YOUR SCALE. The health benefits of working out, especially with our methods, can not be overlooked. YES, you may gain a few pounds, but that extra muscle is necessary and an advantage as you age.

While a 120 lbs 30 year old and a 120 lbs 50 year old weigh the same, the older person has a lot less calorie burning, endeavor assisting muscle. Research shows that after age 30, we lose 5% of our muscle mass each decade. Do you want to be "skinny fat" or fit?

Sunday, Aug. 09, 2009
Why Exercise Won't Make You Thin
By John Cloud

As I write this, tomorrow is Tuesday, which is a cardio day. I'll spend five minutes warming up on the VersaClimber, a towering machine that requires you to move your arms and legs simultaneously. Then I'll do 30 minutes on a stair mill. On Wednesday a personal trainer will work me like a farm animal for an hour, sometimes to the point that I am dizzy — an abuse for which I pay as much as I spend on groceries in a week. Thursday is "body wedge" class, which involves another exercise contraption, this one a large foam wedge from which I will push myself up in various hateful ways for an hour. Friday will bring a 5.5-mile run, the extra half-mile my grueling expiation of any gastronomical indulgences during the week.

I have exercised like this — obsessively, a bit grimly — for years, but recently I began to wonder: Why am I doing this? Except for a two-year period at the end of an unhappy relationship — a period when I self-medicated with lots of Italian desserts — I have never been overweight. One of the most widely accepted, commonly repeated assumptions in our culture is that if you exercise, you will lose weight. But I exercise all the time, and since I ended that relationship and cut most of those desserts, my weight has returned to the same 163 lb. it has been most of my adult life. I still have gut fat that hangs over my belt when I sit. Why isn't all the exercise wiping it out? (Read "The Year in Medicine 2008: From A to Z.")

It's a question many of us could ask. More than 45 million Americans now belong to a health club, up from 23 million in 1993. We spend some $19 billion a year on gym memberships. Of course, some people join and never go. Still, as one major study — the Minnesota Heart Survey — found, more of us at least say we exercise regularly. The survey ran from 1980, when only 47% of respondents said they engaged in regular exercise, to 2000, when the figure had grown to 57%.

And yet obesity figures have risen dramatically in the same period: a third of Americans are obese, and another third count as overweight by the Federal Government's definition. Yes, it's entirely possible that those of us who regularly go to the gym would weigh even more if we exercised less. But like many other people, I get hungry after I exercise, so I often eat more on the days I work out than on the days I don't. Could exercise actually be keeping me from losing weight?

The conventional wisdom that exercise is essential for shedding pounds is actually fairly new. As recently as the 1960s, doctors routinely advised against rigorous exercise, particularly for older adults who could injure themselves. Today doctors encourage even their oldest patients to exercise, which is sound advice for many reasons: People who regularly exercise are at significantly lower risk for all manner of diseases — those of the heart in particular. They less often develop cancer, diabetes and many other illnesses. But the past few years of obesity research show that the role of exercise in weight loss has been wildly overstated.

"In general, for weight loss, exercise is pretty useless," says Eric Ravussin, chair in diabetes and metabolism at Louisiana State University and a prominent exercise researcher. Many recent studies have found that exercise isn't as important in helping people lose weight as you hear so regularly in gym advertisements or on shows like The Biggest Loser — or, for that matter, from magazines like this one.

The basic problem is that while it's true that exercise burns calories and that you must burn calories to lose weight, exercise has another effect: it can stimulate hunger. That causes us to eat more, which in turn can negate the weight-loss benefits we just accrued. Exercise, in other words, isn't necessarily helping us lose weight. It may even be making it harder.

The Compensation Problem
Earlier this year, the peer-reviewed journal PLoS ONE — PLoS is the nonprofit Public Library of Science — published a remarkable study supervised by a colleague of Ravussin's, Dr. Timothy Church, who holds the rather grand title of chair in health wisdom at LSU. Church's team randomly assigned into four groups 464 overweight women who didn't regularly exercise. Women in three of the groups were asked to work out with a personal trainer for 72 min., 136 min., and 194 min. per week, respectively, for six months. Women in the fourth cluster, the control group, were told to maintain their usual physical-activity routines. All the women were asked not to change their dietary habits and to fill out monthly medical-symptom questionnaires.

The findings were surprising. On average, the women in all the groups, even the control group, lost weight, but the women who exercised — sweating it out with a trainer several days a week for six months — did not lose significantly more weight than the control subjects did. (The control-group women may have lost weight because they were filling out those regular health forms, which may have prompted them to consume fewer doughnuts.) Some of the women in each of the four groups actually gained weight, some more than 10 lb. each.

What's going on here? Church calls it compensation, but you and I might know it as the lip-licking anticipation of perfectly salted, golden-brown French fries after a hard trip to the gym. Whether because exercise made them hungry or because they wanted to reward themselves (or both), most of the women who exercised ate more than they did before they started the experiment. Or they compensated in another way, by moving around a lot less than usual after they got home.

The findings are important because the government and various medical organizations routinely prescribe more and more exercise for those who want to lose weight. In 2007 the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association issued new guidelines stating that "to lose weight ... 60 to 90 minutes of physical activity may be necessary." That's 60 to 90 minutes on most days of the week, a level that not only is unrealistic for those of us trying to keep or find a job but also could easily produce, on the basis of Church's data, ravenous compensatory eating.

It's true that after six months of working out, most of the exercisers in Church's study were able to trim their waistlines slightly — by about an inch. Even so, they lost no more overall body fat than the control group did. Why not?

Church, who is 41 and has lived in Baton Rouge for nearly three years, has a theory. "I see this anecdotally amongst, like, my wife's friends," he says. "They're like, 'Ah, I'm running an hour a day, and I'm not losing any weight.'" He asks them, "What are you doing after you run?" It turns out one group of friends was stopping at Starbucks for muffins afterward. Says Church: "I don't think most people would appreciate that, wow, you only burned 200 or 300 calories, which you're going to neutralize with just half that muffin."

You might think half a muffin over an entire day wouldn't matter much, particularly if you exercise regularly. After all, doesn't exercise turn fat to muscle, and doesn't muscle process excess calories more efficiently than fat does?

Yes, although the muscle-fat relationship is often misunderstood. According to calculations published in the journal Obesity Research by a Columbia University team in 2001, a pound of muscle burns approximately six calories a day in a resting body, compared with the two calories that a pound of fat burns. Which means that after you work out hard enough to convert, say, 10 lb. of fat to muscle — a major achievement — you would be able to eat only an extra 40 calories per day, about the amount in a teaspoon of butter, before beginning to gain weight. Good luck with that.

Fundamentally, humans are not a species that evolved to dispose of many extra calories beyond what we need to live. Rats, among other species, have a far greater capacity to cope with excess calories than we do because they have more of a dark-colored tissue called brown fat. Brown fat helps produce a protein that switches off little cellular units called mitochondria, which are the cells' power plants: they help turn nutrients into energy. When they're switched off, animals don't get an energy boost. Instead, the animals literally get warmer. And as their temperature rises, calories burn effortlessly.

Because rodents have a lot of brown fat, it's very difficult to make them obese, even when you force-feed them in labs. But humans — we're pathetic. We have so little brown fat that researchers didn't even report its existence in adults until earlier this year. That's one reason humans can gain weight with just an extra half-muffin a day: we almost instantly store most of the calories we don't need in our regular ("white") fat cells.

All this helps explain why our herculean exercise over the past 30 years — all the personal trainers, StairMasters and VersaClimbers; all the Pilates classes and yoga retreats and fat camps — hasn't made us thinner. After we exercise, we often crave sugary calories like those in muffins or in "sports" drinks like Gatorade. A standard 20-oz. bottle of Gatorade contains 130 calories. If you're hot and thirsty after a 20-minute run in summer heat, it's easy to guzzle that bottle in 20 seconds, in which case the caloric expenditure and the caloric intake are probably a wash. From a weight-loss perspective, you would have been better off sitting on the sofa knitting.

Self-Control Is like a Muscle
Many people assume that weight is mostly a matter of willpower — that we can learn both to exercise and to avoid muffins and Gatorade. A few of us can, but evolution did not build us to do this for very long. In 2000 the journal Psychological Bulletin published a paper by psychologists Mark Muraven and Roy Baumeister in which they observed that self-control is like a muscle: it weakens each day after you use it. If you force yourself to jog for an hour, your self-regulatory capacity is proportionately enfeebled. Rather than lunching on a salad, you'll be more likely to opt for pizza.

Some of us can will ourselves to overcome our basic psychology, but most of us won't be very successful. "The most powerful determinant of your dietary intake is your energy expenditure," says Steven Gortmaker, who heads Harvard's Prevention Research Center on Nutrition and Physical Activity. "If you're more physically active, you're going to get hungry and eat more." Gortmaker, who has studied childhood obesity, is even suspicious of the playgrounds at fast-food restaurants. "Why would they build those?" he asks. "I know it sounds kind of like conspiracy theory, but you have to think, if a kid plays five minutes and burns 50 calories, he might then go inside and consume 500 calories or even 1,000."

Last year the International Journal of Obesity published a paper by Gortmaker and Kendrin Sonneville of Children's Hospital Boston noting that "there is a widespread assumption that increasing activity will result in a net reduction in any energy gap" — energy gap being the term scientists use for the difference between the number of calories you use and the number you consume. But Gortmaker and Sonneville found in their 18-month study of 538 students that when kids start to exercise, they end up eating more — not just a little more, but an average of 100 calories more than they had just burned.

If evolution didn't program us to lose weight through exercise, what did it program us to do? Doesn't exercise do anything?

Sure. It does plenty. In addition to enhancing heart health and helping prevent disease, exercise improves your mental health and cognitive ability. A study published in June in the journal Neurology found that older people who exercise at least once a week are 30% more likely to maintain cognitive function than those who exercise less. Another study, released by the University of Alberta a few weeks ago, found that people with chronic back pain who exercise four days a week have 36% less disability than those who exercise only two or three days a week.

But there's some confusion about whether it is exercise — sweaty, exhausting, hunger-producing bursts of activity done exclusively to benefit our health — that leads to all these benefits or something far simpler: regularly moving during our waking hours. We all need to move more — the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says our leisure-time physical activity (including things like golfing, gardening and walking) has decreased since the late 1980s, right around the time the gym boom really exploded. But do we need to stress our bodies at the gym?

Look at kids. In May a team of researchers at Peninsula Medical School in the U.K. traveled to Amsterdam to present some surprising findings to the European Congress on Obesity. The Peninsula scientists had studied 206 kids, ages 7 to 11, at three schools in and around Plymouth, a city of 250,000 on the southern coast of England. Kids at the first school, an expensive private academy, got an average of 9.2 hours per week of scheduled, usually rigorous physical education. Kids at the two other schools — one in a village near Plymouth and the other an urban school — got just 2.4 hours and 1.7 hours of PE per week, respectively.

To understand just how much physical activity the kids were getting, the Peninsula team had them wear ActiGraphs, light but sophisticated devices that measure not only the amount of physical movement the body engages in but also its intensity. During four one-week periods over consecutive school terms, the kids wore the ActiGraphs nearly every waking moment.

And no matter how much PE they got during school hours, when you look at the whole day, the kids from the three schools moved the same amount, at about the same intensity. The kids at the fancy private school underwent significantly more physical activity before 3 p.m., but overall they didn't move more. "Once they get home, if they are very active in school, they are probably staying still a bit more because they've already expended so much energy," says Alissa Frémeaux, a biostatistician who helped conduct the study. "The others are more likely to grab a bike and run around after school."

Another British study, this one from the University of Exeter, found that kids who regularly move in short bursts — running to catch a ball, racing up and down stairs to collect toys — are just as healthy as kids who participate in sports that require vigorous, sustained exercise.

Could pushing people to exercise more actually be contributing to our obesity problem? In some respects, yes. Because exercise depletes not just the body's muscles but the brain's self-control "muscle" as well, many of us will feel greater entitlement to eat a bag of chips during that lazy time after we get back from the gym. This explains why exercise could make you heavier — or at least why even my wretched four hours of exercise a week aren't eliminating all my fat. It's likely that I am more sedentary during my nonexercise hours than I would be if I didn't exercise with such Puritan fury. If I exercised less, I might feel like walking more instead of hopping into a cab; I might have enough energy to shop for food, cook and then clean instead of ordering a satisfyingly greasy burrito.

Closing the Energy Gap
The problem ultimately is about not exercise itself but the way we've come to define it. Many obesity researchers now believe that very frequent, low-level physical activity — the kind humans did for tens of thousands of years before the leaf blower was invented — may actually work better for us than the occasional bouts of exercise you get as a gym rat. "You cannot sit still all day long and then have 30 minutes of exercise without producing stress on the muscles," says Hans-Rudolf Berthoud, a neurobiologist at LSU's Pennington Biomedical Research Center who has studied nutrition for 20 years. "The muscles will ache, and you may not want to move after. But to burn calories, the muscle movements don't have to be extreme. It would be better to distribute the movements throughout the day."

For his part, Berthoud rises at 5 a.m. to walk around his neighborhood several times. He also takes the stairs when possible. "Even if people can get out of their offices, out from in front of their computers, they go someplace like the mall and then take the elevator," he says. "This is the real problem, not that we don't go to the gym enough."

I was skeptical when Berthoud said this. Don't you need to raise your heart rate and sweat in order to strengthen your cardiovascular system? Don't you need to push your muscles to the max in order to build them?

Actually, it's not clear that vigorous exercise like running carries more benefits than a moderately strenuous activity like walking while carrying groceries. You regularly hear about the benefits of exercise in news stories, but if you read the academic papers on which these stories are based, you frequently see that the research subjects who were studied didn't clobber themselves on the elliptical machine. A routine example: in June the Association for Psychological Science issued a news release saying that "physical exercise ... may indeed preserve or enhance various aspects of cognitive functioning." But in fact, those who had better cognitive function merely walked more and climbed more stairs. They didn't even walk faster; walking speed wasn't correlated with cognitive ability.

There's also growing evidence that when it comes to preventing certain diseases, losing weight may be more important than improving cardiovascular health. In June, Northwestern University researchers released the results of the longest observational study ever to investigate the relationship between aerobic fitness and the development of diabetes. The results? Being aerobically fit was far less important than having a normal body mass index in preventing the disease. And as we have seen, exercise often does little to help heavy people reach a normal weight.

So why does the belief persist that exercise leads to weight loss, given all the scientific evidence to the contrary? Interestingly, until the 1970s, few obesity researchers promoted exercise as critical for weight reduction. As recently as 1992, when a stout Bill Clinton became famous for his jogging and McDonald's habits, the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition published an article that began, "Recently, the interest in the potential of adding exercise to the treatment of obesity has increased." The article went on to note that incorporating exercise training into obesity treatment had led to "inconsistent" results. "The increased energy expenditure obtained by training may be compensated by a decrease in non-training physical activities," the authors wrote.

Then how did the exercise-to-lose-weight mantra become so ingrained? Public-health officials have been reluctant to downplay exercise because those who are more physically active are, overall, healthier. Plus, it's hard even for experts to renounce the notion that exercise is essential for weight loss. For years, psychologist Kelly Brownell ran a lab at Yale that treated obese patients with the standard, drilled-into-your-head combination of more exercise and less food. "What we found was that the treatment of obesity was very frustrating," he says. Only about 5% of participants could keep the weight off, and although those 5% were more likely to exercise than those who got fat again, Brownell says if he were running the program today, "I would probably reorient toward food and away from exercise." In 2005, Brownell co-founded Yale's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, which focuses on food marketing and public policy — not on encouraging more exercise.

Some research has found that the obese already "exercise" more than most of the rest of us. In May, Dr. Arn Eliasson of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center reported the results of a small study that found that overweight people actually expend significantly more calories every day than people of normal weight — 3,064 vs. 2,080. He isn't the first researcher to reach this conclusion. As science writer Gary Taubes noted in his 2007 book Good Calories, Bad Calories: Fats, Carbs, and the Controversial Science of Diet and Health, "The obese tend to expend more energy than lean people of comparable height, sex, and bone structure, which means their metabolism is typically burning off more calories rather than less."

In short, it's what you eat, not how hard you try to work it off, that matters more in losing weight. You should exercise to improve your health, but be warned: fiery spurts of vigorous exercise could lead to weight gain. I love how exercise makes me feel, but tomorrow I might skip the VersaClimber — and skip the blueberry bar that is my usual postexercise reward.

http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1914857,00.html

Thursday 090903


Will DL'ing...

Workout
For time:
3x
10 - Burpees (Yea Burpees!)
20 - Box Jumps
30 - Pull-ups
40 - Air Squats
100M run/125M row

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 090617

Wednesday 090902

Workout

400m run
20-KB Swings
20-Sit-ups

400m run
20-KB Swings
20-Push-ups

400m run
20-KB Swings
20-Your Choice

Tuesday 090901

Workout
Back Squats
85%-90% of your 1RM x1, x2, x3 - x3 sets or 85% of 1RM x5 x5
(Add 10 lbs to 090616's effort)

Weighted Pull-ups
Perform Pull-ups between each round of Squats. Find a max weight.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 090616

Monday 090831

Workout

Press
Find a NEW 1RM

Then
"Mini" MetCon
1 rounds of:
500m Row / 400m Run
20 - Box Jumps

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 090706

Tomorrow Back Squat!

Sunday 090830

REST!

Saturday 080929

Team WOD!

Friday 090828

Workout

Dead Lift!

Thursaday 090827

Workout

For time:
800m run
100 Pull-up

800m run
100 push-ups

Scared? Don't be. Partition as needed. The very strong might do a mile run then all of the push-ups and pull-ups. It might be best to break it into manageable sets (e.g.) a 400m run, 25 pull-ups, followed by a 400m run with 25 push-ups...or 200m runs and 12-13 of each.

Wednesday 090826

Workout

For time:
Row 500M/Run 400M
15 - 95 lbs SDHP

Row 500M/Run 400M
15 - 95 lbs Thrusters

Row 500M/Run 400M
15- 95 lbs SDHP

Row 500M/Run 400M
15 - 95 lbs Thrusters

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Thursday 080424


Heart group: Cut back — way back — on extra sugar

AP Tue Aug 25th, 2009 7:28 AM EDT

DALLAS - A spoonful of sugar ? Americans are swallowing 22 teaspoons of sugar each day, and it's time to cut way back, the American Heart Association says.

Most of that added sugar comes from soft drinks and candy — a whopping 355 calories and the equivalent of guzzling two cans of soda and eating a chocolate bar .

By comparison, most women should be getting no more than 6 teaspoons a day, or 100 calories, of added sugar — the sweeteners and syrups that are added to foods during processing, preparation or at the table. For most men, the recommended limit is 9 teaspoons, or 150 calories, the heart group says.

The guidelines do not apply to naturally occurring sugars like those found in fruit, vegetables or dairy products .

Rachel K. Johnson, lead author of the statement published online Monday in the American Heart Association journal Circulation, said it was time to give specific advice on how much added sugar Americans should be getting, not just advising moderation.

"Take a good hard look at your diet," said Johnson, professor of nutrition at the University of Vermont in Burlington. "Figure out where the sources of added sugars are and think about how to cut back on that."

She said about 8 ounces of fruit-flavored yogurt has about 6 teaspoons of added sugar; 8 ounces of low-fat chocolate milk has about 4 teaspoons; a cup of frosted whole grain cereal has about 3 teaspoons.

The biggest culprits for the glut of sugar? Soft drinks by far, followed by candy, cakes, cookies and pies.

With about 8 teaspoons of added sugar, a regular 12-ounce soft drink will put most women over the recommended daily limit.

Cutting back on sugar likely won't be easy for many people, said Lona Sandon, a dietitian at Dallas' University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center .

"I think it's probably going to be a struggle for quite a few people," Sandon said.

Calculating one's sugar intake can be tricky as the government doesn't require labels to differentiate added sugars from naturally occurring sugars, said Johnson. But she points out that the biggest sources, like regular soft drinks and sweets, are pretty obvious. And the U.S. Department of Agriculture has a database for the added sugar in some foods.

To check for added sugar, look for a variety of ingredients including sugar, corn syrup, fructose, dextrose, molasses or evaporated cane juice on the label.

The heart group didn't recommend general limits for added sugar for children; a national health survey has shown that boys ages 14 to 18 consume an eye-popping 34 teaspoons of added sugar a day.

Sandon said that parents can help lower that sugar intake by getting soda out of the house, looking at how much sugar is in their kids' cereal and substituting snacks like cookies with popcorn.

Johnson concedes that sugar does play an important role in enhancing the taste of food, adding: "If you feel like, 'I just can't live with this low amount of sugar in my diet,' then what you need to do is up your energy needs."

In other words, she said, get moving. A man in his early 20s who walks more than three miles a day could consume about 288 calories, or about 18 teaspoons, of added sugar.

The statement says data indicates added sugar is contributing to Americans consuming too many discretionary calories — the number of calories remaining after a person eats the foods needed to meet nutrient requirements.

"We know for sure that if you are consuming excessive amounts of added sugar, you will add calories, which leads to weight gain , or you will displace other essential nutrients ," she said.

On average, most women need about 1,800 calories a day and most men need about 2,200, Johnson said.

If someone drinks their daily calorie needs in soft drinks , they will be maintaining their weight, but won't be getting any nutrients, she said.

Wahida Karmally, nutrition director at Columbia University's Irving Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, said that with these guidelines, it's important to remember overall moderation. Some people, for instance, might be doing fine in their sugar consumption but are overdoing it on fat.

"I don't want people to go back thinking if I just cut back on teaspoons of sugar I'm going to be very healthy," she said.
__
On the Net:
American Heart Association: www.americanheart.org/nutrition/sugar

U.S. Department of Agriculture's database listing added sugars in certain foods: http://tinyurl.com/nacqhr

Tuesday 090825

Workout

Hang Power Snatch
80% of 1RM x2 x5

Then "Mini" MetCon

3x
10-KB Swings
10-Ring Push-up
10-Box Jumps
10-Sit-ups

Here's last year's TitanFit FGB (Fight Gone Bad)...

Monday 090824

Workout

90% of Friday 090731's effort
x2 x6

"Mini MetCon"
10 rounds of "Cindy"

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 090731

Sunday 090823

Rest!

Saturday 090822

Work on Weakness!

If you don't like it, do it today! For me that means a long run...

Friday 090821

Workout

For time:
800M Run/1000M row then...
5 Rounds:
10 - SDHP (Guys use 95# and Ladies use 65#)
10 - Ring Dips
10 - Ab Mat Sit-ups

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Saturday 071117

Thursday 090820

Workout

As we had no takers on 090810, I have reposted "Karen"!
150 - Wall Ball Shots

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 090810

Wednesday 090819

What your favorite 4-letter word that starts with "F"? If you are a CrossFit'er it is undoubtedly "FRAN"!

Workout

(Rain WOD)
5 rounds of:
9 - 95 lbs Thrusters
9 - Pull-ups

(No Rain WOD)
7 rounds of:
5 - 95 lbs Power Snatches
200m Run

Hey TitanFit'ers...are you interested in improving your rowing abilities? Caitlin, of the IRC (http://www.indyrowing.org) and a recent visitor to TitanFit, is teaching a "learn to erg class" at IRC.

The class runs October 19 - November 11, Mondays and Wednesdays 6:30-8 p.m. There is a discount for TitanFit members. If you are interested and need more information, we will provide her contact information.

Tuesday 090818

OK gang....

My bad as I have not yet posted info on this year's Fight Gone Bad Fund Raiser...Fight Gone Bad IV takes place on Saturday, September 26, 2009.

The event can take place at Affiliate facilities between 6am and 4pm. The event format is the Fight Gone Bad CrossFit format. 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 event is in the 3 round format.

The stations are:
Wall-ball: 20 pound ball, 10 ft target. (Reps)
Sumo dead lift high-pull: 75 pounds (Reps)
Box Jump: 20″ box (Reps)
Push-press: 75 pounds (Reps)
Row: calories (Calories)

NOW YOU KNOW! More info on TitanFit's entry soon to come!

Workout
Dead Lift
80% of 1RM x5, x4, x3, x2, x1 (add 5 lbs to 090707's effort)

AFTER
"Mini MetCon"

Tabata Row!

Monday 090817

Warm-up
Over Head Lunges

Workout
Power/Strength

Rack Jerk:

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 090714


"Linda" for those that are ADVENTURES!

Sunday 090816

REST!

Well not really. We are doing a 20 - 30 mile bike ride in the morning. If you are interested, we are meeting in Avon. Give a call to join in!

Saturday 090815

Team WOD!

Friday 090814

Workout

Work up to:
Clean & Jerk - 80% (of 1RM) x1 x6

THEN

"Mini" MetCon

15-10-5 reps for time:
Pull-ups
Box jump (Tall)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_med_breast_cancer_weightlifting/print

Study: Weightlifting helps breast cancer survivors
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE, AP Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione, Ap Medical Writer
Thu Aug 13, 2:08 am ET

Breast cancer survivors have been getting bum advice. For decades, many doctors warned that lifting weights or even heavy groceries could cause painful arm swelling. New research shows that weight training actually helps prevent this problem.

"How many generations of women have been told to avoid lifting heavy objects?" Dr. Eric Winer, breast cancer chief at the Dana-Farber Cancer Center in Boston, lamented after seeing the surprising results of the new study. "Women who were doing the lifting actually had fewer arm problems because they had better muscle tone."

The study was led by Kathryn Schmitz, an exercise scientist at the University of Pennsylvania, and funded by the federal government. Results are in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

More than 2.4 million Americans are breast cancer survivors, and the study could mean a big difference in their quality of life. Cancer treatment-related arm swelling now appears to be one of many ailments made better by exercise — not worse, Schmitz said.

"Fifty years ago we told people who had a heart attack not to exercise anymore," and people with sore backs to heal with bed rest, Schmitz said. "It was well-meaning advice but it was polar opposite of the truth."

Women who have had radiation to the armpit, or lymph nodes removed to check for cancer, can suffer lymphedema — a buildup of fluids that causes painful and unsightly swelling of the arms or hands.

To avoid it, doctors have advised women to avoid using the affected arm to lift toddlers, carry a heavy purse or scrub floors. Even activities like golf and tennis raised concern.

Women think, "Oh, my God, I need to baby the arm," Schmitz said.

Lifting weights — which boosts mood, muscle mass, bone strength and weight control — was thought to be a bad idea for women prone to lymphedema.

Schmitz challenged that notion with a small study several years ago, finding that weight training did not make lymphedema worse. Her new study is the first one large and long enough to give clear proof that this is so, and even suggests that weightlifting can help.

It involved 141 breast cancer survivors who had suffered lymphedema. Half were told not to change their exercise habits. The rest were given 90-minute weightlifting classes twice a week for 13 weeks at community gyms, mostly YMCAs.

They wore a custom-fitted compression garment on the affected arm and gradually worked up to more challenging weights and repetitions. For the next 39 weeks, they continued these exercises on their own.

The women's arms were measured monthly. After one year, fewer weightlifters had suffered lymphedema flare-ups — 14 percent versus 29 percent of the others. Weightlifters reported fewer symptoms and greater strength. Rates of change in arm size due to swelling were similar in both groups.

"I found it was really very effective. It not only gave me strength and mobility but it improved my balance and coordination," said one participant, Clare Faber, 66, of suburban Philadelphia. "It really does offer women hope."

Another participant, Gay McArthur, 56, of Smithfield, N.J., has continued weightlifting on her own since the study ended.

"When I first got diagnosed with lymphedema, they said I couldn't lift more than five pounds," she said. But weight training caused no problems and has made her feel better, she said.

It also should save money, though the study did not measure this, Wendy Demark-Wahnefried, of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, wrote in an editorial in the medical journal. In the study, the group of weightlifters made only 77 visits to doctors or physical therapists for lymphedema flare-ups versus 195 visits for the others, she noted.

Another part of the study is evaluating whether weight training can prevent a first case of lymphedema in breast cancer survivors; results are expected soon, Schmitz said.

Breast cancer survivors should not rush into weight training — that could trigger problems. Schmitz suggests:

_Have a certified fitness professional teach you how to do the exercises properly.

_Start slow, with a program that gradually progresses.

_Wear a well-fitting compression garment during workouts.

On the Net:

New England Journal: http://www.nejm.org

Lymphedema advice: http://tinyurl.com/l9lgga

Thursday 090813

Workout:
For time:

Body Weight* Back Squat x30
800M run

Body Weight Back Squat x10
400M run

*Or 70% of your 1Rm if you are unable to achieve BWT for 40 reps...the bar plus necessary plates that equal your body weight. Error on the high side.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: 071015

Wednesday 090812

Workout

Snatch Grip Dead Lift + Snatch Shrug
Work up to 120% of your Snatch 1RM x2, 2, 2, 2, 2

Tuesday 090811

Workout
TABATA!

Perform the following exercises for 8 rounds of 20 seconds work (in any order), 10 seconds rest:
Rowing*
Air squat
Push-ups
Pull-ups
Sit-ups

After the 8th round of each exercise, rest 1 minute before proceeding to the next. The lowest number of reps achieved in any of the 8 rounds is the score for that particular exercise (calories burned in place of reps are used for rowing). The sum of the scores for all of the exercises gives the score for the entire workout.

*Those without access to a rower, do SDHP with a 45 lbs barbell for each 20 second segment.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Saturday 090502

Monday 090810

Warm-up!

Skills
Tuttle recommends Handstands and Double Unders...

Workout
(No Rain)

3x
200M Farmers Walk
10 - Burpees

50M Lunges
10 - Burpees

10 - Box Jumps
10 - Burpees

(Rain)
"Karen"
150 - Wall Ball Shots

Sunday 090809

REST!

Saturday 090808

Don't forget today's WOD is at Dr. Rick's house.



Are Low Carb Diets Over-rated for Health and Longevity? The Kitavan and Okinawa Diets.

Posted By Mike OD On August 3, 2009 @ 6:00 am In Food & Cooking, Prevention & Wellness


In a previous article “Are Very Low Carb Diets Over-rated for Weight Loss [1]“, we looked at comparing very popular diet approaches such as Atkins vs South Beach/Zone diets for the benefits of losing weight. What was the verdict? Well, we saw that with a same protein and calorie load, there was no advantages in weight loss for any…as they all worked. We also saw that having some days of higher carbohydrate intakes allowed for the hormone leptin to increase (which also ties in with metabolic rate). So now we are going to look at another aspect, health and longevity, when it comes to carbohydrate intake.

The Kitavan Diet
In a series of papers on the study of the native people from Kitava (island in Papua New Guinea), we come across a very healthy….and high carb eating society (Gasp! I’ll let the shock set in as many may have thought carbs are evil…but we’ll talk more about that later). Here’s an abstract from the study [2] that sums up the results.

This study examined cross-sectional age relations of blood pressure, anthropometric indexes, serum lipids, and hemostatic variables in 203 subsistence horticulturists aged 20-86 y in Kitava, Trobriand Islands, Papua New Guinea. The population is characterized by extreme leanness (despite food abundance), low blood pressure, low plasma plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 activity, and rarity of cardiovascular disease. Tubers, fruit, fish, and coconut are dietary staples whereas dairy products, refined fat and sugar, cereals, and alcohol are absent and salt intake is low.

also Stephen @ Whole Health Source [3] expanded a bit more on these numbers for the Kitavans, and makes an interesting relation…

Kitavans eat a diet of root vegetables, coconut, fruit, vegetables and fish and have undetectable levels of cardiovascular disease (CVD), stroke and overweight. Despite smoking like chimneys. 69% of their calories come from carbohydrate, 21% from fat and 10% from protein. This is essentially a carbohydrate-heavy version of what our paleolithic ancestors ate.

The first thing we can say is that a high intake of carbohydrate is not enough, by itself, to cause overweight or the diseases of civilization. It’s also not enough to cause insulin resistance.

Essentially you have a natural group of people who are as a whole very lean (although they are not starving, and eat plenty of calories), healthy, have good skin, strong teeth and suffer from virtually none of all the “diseases of civilization” (obesity, heart diseases, cancers) that are increasing at an alarming rate…oh yeah, did we mention they also eat a high intake of carbs and saturated fat (mostly from coconuts) in the process?

The Okinawa Diet
Next up we have the Okinawans, living off the coast of Japan and most studied for their history of health and longevity. They too are a group of people with excellent health, virtually no “diseases of civilization,” live long and functional (no “aging diseases” like loss of memory or movement)…all while having higher intake of calories from carbohydrates (upwards of 50-60%).
The Okinawa way isn’t a magic diet or exercise plan – it’s a lifestyle. There’s nothing complicated about it. Okinawa’s enjoy simple lives and they eat from the earth. That’s it. No plan, no time limit, no weighing, no beginning and no end. Okinawa’s have remarkably clean arteries and low cholesterol. Heart disease, breast cancer and prostate cancer are rare. This can be attributed to the Okinawans mostly plant based diet that includes fish and soy foods with a variety of vegetables and a moderate amounts of good fats. They consume locally grown vegetables and large quantities of tofu (high protein, low-fat, calcium, vitiman E) and seaweed (higher in vitamin and minerals than land vegetables).

from Associated Content story - The Okinawa Diet: The Key to Longevity?

What you do find in common with the Kitavans is the source of those carbs comes mainly all from vegetables (notably sweet potato). While there are also numbers for fat/protein that seem to change depending on who you ask….cutting through the %s, the sources are still whole and natural such as seafood or pork and cooking with lard (not vegetable oils).

Not All Carbs are Created Equal
Ok, we have seen just 2 examples of high carb eating societies of people that can live long and prosper (yes I know what I just said, must have been from seeing the new Star Trek movie). But the real debate should not be about exact %s of carbs in a diet, but WHAT are the sources of those carbs. If we take a graph from a previous article Obesity, Diabetes, and Other Diseases vs Food Trends in Pictures [4], we will “see” where the major changes have occured.



More calories and more carbs over time.



Carb sources increasing in cereal grains and sugar.

The pictures speak for themselves……calories have increased…..even though carbs have increased (while protein and fat has not)….the biggest increases of carbs now comes from cereal grains and sugar. Can we see a trend with increased obesity/disease and what is going on above?

Going into this a bit more, here is a good excerpt from Ryan @ Matters to Me [5] who explains the difference in carbs:

T.L. Cleave, who wrote an important book called The Saccharine Disease. In this book, Cleave notes that the rural Zulu of Africa (in the 1950s) were in good health on a diet comprised of 90% carbohydrate calories. In contrast, the urban Zulu ate less carbohydrates (81%), yet had more diseases than the rural Zulu. Cleave concluded that the amount of carbs being eaten by the two groups didn’t matter so much as the types of carbs. This seemed to make all the difference: the rural population ate maize and root vegetables while the city-dwellers consumed refined, industrialized carbs, such as sugar and white flour.

..it’s not as simple as whole foods vs. refined foods — it’s also a matter of the qualities of the foods. To illustrate this, let’s evaluate two of the evils that Cleave proclaims to be the cause of modern man’s health demise. On one hand we have white flour: a starch — also known chemically as a polysaccharide — which is broken down to glucose in the body. Sugar, on the other hand, is a disaccharide with a significant difference: it’s composed of glucose and fructose, which the body handles quite differently than it does starch.

A high flux of fructose to the liver, the main organ capable of metabolizing this simple carbohydrate, disturbs normal hepatic carbohydrate metabolism leading to two major consequences… perturbations in glucose metabolism and glucose uptake pathways, and a significantly enhanced rate of de novo lipogenesis and TG [triglyceride] synthesis, driven by the high flux of glycerol and acyl portions of TG molecules coming from fructose catabolism. These metabolic disturbances appear to underlie the induction of insulin resistance commonly observed with high fructose feeding in both humans and animal models.

As well, this is also a great observation made by Matt at 180 Degree Health [6]:

So carbohydrates raise insulin levels temporarily to store away glucose into cells. Is that a bad thing? Of course it’s not. The rise and fall of insulin is no different than the rise and fall of your chest as your breathe.

The biggest flaw; however, is the idea that repeatedly raising insulin levels will somehow trigger insulin resistance over time. This is nonsense. The rural Zulu’s and modern day Kitavans, who both eat insulin-raising carbohydrates at every meal never went on to show signs of insulin resistance. They didn’t show signs of it because THEY WEREN’T INSULIN RESISTANT! Insulin resistance is something that appears to be triggered only in a reduced metabolic state – something I’ve reasonably concluded by following the work of Broda Barnes and Mark Starr – two men who reported never seeing a case of type II diabetes (severe insulin resistance) occur in someone with a closely monitored metabolism.

Since the only known substance that can reliably trigger insulin resistance in humans and animal subjects – something that was also introduced at the onset of modern disease – and something that has been associated with insulin resistance syndromes such as hypoglycemia, poor glucose tolerance testing, cavities and so on for going on a century is sugar. Not just any sugar, as straight glucose from starchy foods absolutely cannot induce insulin resistance – but fructose. Not surprisingly, the consumption of fructose is one of the two largest dietary changes to take place during mankind’s “ascent” to modernism.

So What’s the Real Answer?

When it comes to carbs, it is the source that seems to be of vital importance for health and longevity (which includes obesity that can come from a malfunctioning glucose metabolism). We have seen healthy societies with various %s (high and low) of carb intake but they all have one big thing in common…..they all eat natural “real foods”. They also have another thing in common, once people from their culture move into a more “modernized” food environment, then the health benefits seen previously decrease dramatically.

There doesn’t have to be just one way for health (and there usually never is). So don’t spend most of your time worrying about some magic macronutrient % and focus instead on getting your glucose metabolism fixed in the first place (especially your liver). Whether you choose to eat very low carb, moderate carb or higher carb… just keep these simple basic rules below in mind:

Have a Active Lifestyle Mindset (make it part of your lifestyle, something you enjoy, an active hobby whether alone or with friends/family)
Stop Stressing Out, Relax and Enjoy Each Day (including just being present and relaxing when you eat, and not stuffing your face mindlessly)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Article printed from Fitness Spotlight: http://www.fitnessspotlight.com

URL to article: http://www.fitnessspotlight.com/2009/08/03/carb-diets-overrated-part-ii-kitavan-okinawa-diets/

URLs in this post:

[1] Are Very Low Carb Diets Over-rated for Weight Loss: http://www.fitnessspotlight.com/2009/06/04/carb-diets-overrated-weight-loss/
[2] abstract from the study: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9322559
[3] Stephen @ Whole Health Source: http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2008/08/kitava-wrapping-it-up.html
[4] Obesity, Diabetes, and Other Diseases vs Food Trends in Pictures: http://www.fitnessspotlight.com/2009/04/20/obesity-diabetes-food-trends-pictures/
[5] Ryan @ Matters to Me: http://ryan-koch.blogspot.com/2009/03/can-high-carb-low-fat-be-healthy.html
[6] Matt at 180 Degree Health: http://180degreehealth.blogspot.com/2009/07/low-carb-oops.html
[7] FREE shopping list here: http://www.fitnessspotlight.com/university/nutrition/ShoppingList.pdf

Friday 090807

Workout:
Pull-up ladder!
Do 1 pull-up the first minute, 2, the second, 3 the third. Continue until you can not complete the required number of pull-ups for the given minute.

Upon failure, rest 3 minutes.


Then Push-up ladder. Very same concept. Doesn't that sound fun?

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 090626

Kelly Clarkson Does CrossFit!
http://www.etonline.com/news/2009/08/77270/


Kelly Clarkson looks fresh and radiant on the cover of the new SELF magazine, but has the singer -- who admits to ups and downs with her weight -- been Photoshopped?

"Yes, of course we do post-production corrections on our images," Editor-in-Chief Lucy Danziger tells ET. Airbrushing images is an industry standard, and the mag stands behind its decision.

"SELF magazine inspires and informs our 6 million readers each month to reach their all around best," Lucy adds. "Kelly Clarkson exudes confidence, and is a great role model for women of all sizes and stages of their life. She works out and is strong and healthy, and our picture shows her confidence and beauty. She literally glows from within. That is the feeling we'd all want to have. We love this cover and we love Kelly Clarkson."

For her part, Kelly has been constant in saying she is happy with who she is, Photoshop or not. She even joked about seeing the album cover for All I Ever Wanted, saying on her blog: "It's very colorful, and they have definitely Photoshopped the crap out of me, but I don't care! Whoever she is, she looks great."

"My happy weight changes," she tells SELF. "Sometimes I eat more; sometimes I play more. I'll be different sizes all the time. When people talk about my weight, I'm like, 'You seem to have a problem with it; I don't. I'm fine!' I've never felt uncomfortable on the red carpet or anything."

Recently, the "American Idol" winner has gotten into a workout program called Crossfit, which she says has given her more energy on stage.

Posted August 06, 2009 10:20:00 AM

Thursday 090806

Happy Birthday Mr. Moninger!

Workout
Snatch Balance + OHS (complete one of each before re-racking the bar)
Work to 110% of your SN 1RM

REST Then

"Mini MetCon"
5x 250M row 5 Burpees

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 090506:


Let's hope my Mini MetCon will be better than the following!

Wednesday 090805

Happy Birthday John (AKA FOOS)

Warm-up
using 45 lbs bar
Clean Drops x3 x3
Over Head Lunges x3 x3

Workout
Workout:
Hang Power Clean (HPCL)
1-1-1-1-1-1-1

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Sunday 081012

Tuesday 090804

Workout

AMRAP in 30:00 of:

400M Run or 500M Row
10 - Ring Dips or 3/1 Bench Dips
10 - KTE or 2/1 Knee Raises

Monday 090803

Workout

CrossFit Total (CFT)
1RM for:
Squat
Press
Dead Lift

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 090501

JLR: Health benefits of physical activity more pronounced in women
July 30, 2009--

Many experimental studies have found that physical exercise can improve cholesterol levels and subsequently decrease the risks of cardiovascular disease; however, few of these studies have included enough participant diversity to provide ethnic breakdowns. Now, a long-term study of over 8,700 middle-aged men and women provides race- and gender- specific data on the cholesterol effects of physical activity, with the interesting result that women, particularly African-American women, experience greater benefits as a result of exercise than men.

The analysis of this large Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study, which appears in the August issue of Journal of Lipid Research, was carried out by Keri Monda and colleagues at North Carolina and Baylor. They found that over a 12 year period, all individuals who increased their exercise by about 180 metabolic units per week (equivalent to an additional hour of mild or 30 minutes of moderate activity per week) displayed decreased levels of triglycerides and increased levels of the "good" HDL cholesterol. However, statistically significant decreases in the "bad" LDL cholesterol were only observed in women, with particularly strong effects in menopausal women and African-American women. And total cholesterol levels were only significantly decreased in African-American women.

The authors speculate that these novel differences may arise from hormonal differences between the sexes, especially considering the extra effects seen post-menopause. The racial differences observed may stem from genetic variations that require further exploration.

The authors do also note that their exercise data was assessed by questionnaire and this was non-scientific, though the particular methodology used has been extremely reliable in other studies. They also note that all evaluated participants were healthy, so these results cannot be generalized to individuals with diabetes or those on cholesterol-lowering medications.

Citation:

Monda KL, Ballantyne CM, North KE. "Longitudinal impact of physical activity on lipid profiles in middle-aged adults: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study." Journal of Lipid Research, Vol. 50, 1685-1691, August 2009.

Sunday 090802

Happy BDay Megan!

Saturday 090801

Team WOD!

Did you hear, we had 3 ladies get 100+ lbs on FS yesterday! Better step your game up.

Don't forget, next Saturday (09.08.08's) WOD will be at Dr. Rick's house. Bring your swimsuit!

Friday 090731

Have I ever mentioned hating Front Squats...

Workout
Front Squats
85% of your 1RM x1, x2, x3, x3 sets
OR
80% of your 1RM x5 x5

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 090610

Thursday 090730

Time to run!

Workout
3x
400M Run
2:00 Rest

200M Run
2:00 Rest

100m Run
2:00 Rest

Intense Daily Workout May Keep Cancer at Bay
WEDNESDAY, July 29

http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20090729/hl_hsn/intensedailyworkoutmaykeepcanceratbay

(HealthDay News) -- Increased oxygen consumption associated with moderate- to high-intensity exercise appears to reduce the risk of cancer, a new study has found.

The Finnish study included 2,560 men, aged 42 to 61, whose leisure-time physical activity was assessed over one year. None of the men had a history of cancer, according to the report published online July 28 in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

During an average follow-up of 16 years, 181 of the men died from cancer. Those who engaged in moderate- to high-intensity exercise for at least 30 minutes a day were 50 percent less likely to develop cancer compared with the other men.

The researchers found that an increase of 1.2 metabolic units (oxygen consumption) was related to a decreased risk of cancer death, especially in lung and gastrointestinal cancers, after they took into account factors such as age, smoking, alcohol consumption, body mass index, and fiber/fat intake.

"The intensity of leisure-time physical activity should be at least moderate so that beneficial effect of physical activity for reducing overall cancer mortality can be achieved," the study authors wrote in a news release.

Wednesday 090729

Workout

Snatch balance - 75% (of snatch 1RM) x 3 x 4
Power snatch + snatch - 70% (of snatch 1RM) x 5 sets

REST, THEN

3 rounds for time:
250 m row
10 - pull-ups
10 - KB Swings (2 pood)

Tuesday 090728

Workout
Nice easy 3 Mile run or 5K row

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Sunday 090426

Monday 090727

Workout
For time:
50 Box jump, 24 inch box
50 Jumping pull-ups
50 Kettlebell swings, 1 pood
Walking Lunge, 50 steps
50 Knees to elbows
50 Push press, 45 pounds
50 Back extensions
50 Wall ball shots, 20 pound ball
50 Burpees
50 Double unders


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 080115

Sunday 090726

Happy Birthday Ralph!

Rest!

Saturday 090725

Team WOD today!

Friday 090724

Happy Birthday Sherry

Workout
For time:
30, 20, 10 reps of
95 lbs - OHS*
Ring Push-ups
Pull-ups

The workout looks like 30 OHS, 30 Ring Push-ups, and 30 Pull-ups. Then 20 of each followed by 10 of each.*For OHS, depending on current strength level, use 45, 65 or 95 lbs.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 071226


Thursday 090723

Workout
For Time:
1000M row
50 - Wallball*

750M row
35 - Wallball

500M row
20 - Wallball

* The strongest of us should use the 20 lbs ball. Most should use the 12 lbs ball. Me, I'm using the 8 lbs ball.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 090218

Wednesday 090722



Workout

On the minute:
Perform 2 Power Cleans on the minute for 15 minutes.

*Start the clock. At the top of every minute perform 2 Power Cleans.
*Use a maximal weight. 80% - 85% of 1 RM
*For every rep not completed, perform 5 Burpees during rest time.


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 090601

Tuesday 090721

Workout

5 rounds of:
60% of 1RM Press - Max reps
Pull-ups - Max Reps

This is to be done "Lynne" style (e.g. 5:00 per round)

Monday 090720

"Warm-up"
20 - BWT Back Squats

REST...then get

Workout
Deadlift
85% of 1RM x2 x5

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 090624

Sunday 090719

Rest!

Saturday 090718

Today's WOD at the Fire Department

Great time today. Maybe I should join the WOD before I call it a "great time"

Post WOD

Wondering if Atlas will join the pic

WOD Pic without Dr. Rick...sorry it was hard enough to get them to sit still!

Friday 090717




Workout
For time:

"Fran"
21, 15 and 9 of
Thruster - 95 lbs
Pull-ups

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 090414

Thursday 090716

Workout

3 Rounds for time of:
10 - Ring Dips
10 - Deadlift (M 225lb/W 135lb)
1000m Row

Tomorrow "FRAN"

http://www.acsm.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Home&TEMPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&CONTENTID=12890
May 27, 2009

BOOST YOUR MOOD AT LEAST HALF THE DAY WITH PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
Exercise can improve mood for up to 12 hours

SEATTLE – The mood-enhancing effects of exercise are well documented, but a study presented at the American College of Sports Medicine’s 56th Annual Meeting in Seattle suggests the benefits may last much longer than previously thought.

The study enrolled healthy men and women to complete a survey about their mood states at one-, two-, four-, eight-, 12- and 24-hour intervals following either exercise or rest. Although previous studies have found enhanced mood for up to an hour after exercise, this study found benefits for up to 12 hours following activity, compared to the resting group.

“These positive effects on mood occurred in all types of participants, regardless of age, gender, or fitness level,” said Jeremy Sibold, Ed.D., ATC, lead author. “In some cases, exercise may be able to complement other standard therapies as a cost-effective alternative in the treatment of mental health issues.”

Test subjects performed exercise at 60 percent of aerobic capacity, indicating that moderate-intensity exercise – like walking or light cycling – is enough to boost mood.

Because the mood-enhancing effects of exercise fade after more than 12 hours post-exercise, Sibold says it’s important to make physical activity a daily habit. ACSM guidelines support the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, which recommend that adults participate in at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity, which can be achieved in 30-minute segments five days a week.

The American College of Sports Medicine is the largest sports medicine and exercise science organization in the world. More than 35,000 international, national and regional members and certified professionals are dedicated to advancing and integrating scientific research to provide educational and practical applications of exercise science and sports medicine.

Wednesday 090715

Happy Birthday Jessica!

Tuesday 090714

Happy Birthday DJ!

Happy Bastille Day!

Warm-up
Over Head Lunges

Workout
Power/Strength

Jerk:
Your choice, BTN, Rack, Push, Split

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Thursday 090618

Monday 090713

WOW we completely forgot about Christmas in July. Luckily L. H, called, emailed, texted, tweeted, facebook noted, IM'd and sent us a homing pigeon to remind us...

So..
Workout
For time:
1 – Burpees
2 - 95 lbs PP
3 - 95 lbs FS
4 - 95 lbs PCLS
5 - 95 lbs DL
6 - Box Jumps
7 - Pull-ups
8 - Push-ups
9 - Ab Mat sit-ups
10 - Air Squats
11 - 53 lbs KB Swings
12 - A 500M Row

So the workout is:
1 Burpee
then 2 Push Press and 1 Burpee
then 3 Front Squats, 2 Push Press and 1 Burpee etc...

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 081217

Sunday 090712

Rest!
http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/07/10/attitudes.overweight/index.html


As nation gains, 'overweight' is relative
By Elizabeth Landau
CNN

(CNN) -- The little number on the tag on a pair of pants that indicates size can mean a lot to a person, and retailers know it.

That's why, in recent years, as the American population has become generally more overweight, brands from the luxury names to the mass retail chains have scaled down the size labels on their clothing.

"You may actually be a size 14 and, according to whatever particular store you're in, you come out a size 10," said Natalie Nixon, associate professor of fashion industry management at Philadelphia University. "It's definitely to make the consumer feel good."

Research shows that, when it comes to self-perception, the concept of "overweight" may be relative.

A working paper from a group led by Mary Burke, senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Massachusetts, suggested that people's perceptions of overweight have shifted, and "normal" is now heavier than it used to be.

Researchers used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, nationally representative surveys run by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The first group was surveyed in 1988-1994, and the second was surveyed in 1999-2004. Because there were different people in each survey, it is not possible to tell if the perceptions of individuals shifted over time, the authors said. Watch CNN's Elizabeth Landau talk more about the study »

Participants were asked whether they consider themselves "underweight," "about right," or "overweight," and reported their body mass index, a measure of the health risks associated with weight. Calculate your BMI »

Are people more complacent, or better educated?

Although the BMI of the general population increased from the earlier survey period to the later one, the probability of people describing themselves as overweight decreased in the later survey, researchers found.

They found that weight misperception tended to decrease among women -- meaning women with normal BMI who were surveyed in 1999-2004 were less likely to say that they're "overweight" than women with normal BMI in 1988-1994, especially among 17 to 19-year-olds. For men, it was about the same.

"For women, this was good news," Burke said. "Women seem to get a more realistic perception of themselves."

Although the study authors said this trend may reflect healthy body image campaigns, physician nutrition specialist Dr. Melina Jampolis, who was not involved in this research, said she doubts that positive messages had this much influence.

Rather, it is the relative increase in weight of the general population that makes people with normal BMI feel more normal, she said.

On the flip side, feeling normal but being overweight may decrease a person's motivation to lose weight, Burke said.

Still, while the BMI scale reflects disease risks associated with being overweight, it does not reflect the whole story of a person's health, experts said.

There have been reports that being somewhat overweight, but not obese, is associated with decreased mortality, such as a 2005 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association that looked at deaths from a variety of causes.

Innovations such as treatments for high cholesterol have lowered the death risks for overweight people, Burke said. Especially for older adults, being slightly overweight may increase bone density, cushioning bones against falls, she said.

But the JAMA paper shows associations, not causes. People should not take this information as an excuse to gain weight, Jampolis said.

There are, however, other reasons that BMI isn't the whole story -- for instance, it does not reflect the distribution of a person's weight, Jampolis said.

"You could have really skinny arms and legs and just carry your weight in the middle, and it could be only 10 pounds, but belly fat, the visceral adiposity, it could very significantly increase your risk of disease," she said.

A brief history of body size perceptions

Experts noted that plumpness has been in style during some historical periods, especially as an indicator of prosperity when food was scarce. But the ideal of controlling one's food isn't new either. The book "Fat History: Bodies and Beauty in the Modern West" by historian Peter Stearns points out that fasting was a religious virtue seen throughout the Middle Ages, and continuing into the Puritan version of Protestantism. Christianity also espoused the idea of restricting food to fight sin.

The artistic and literary movement known as Romanticism, beginning in the late 18th century, stressed "slender, ethereal" ideals, Stearns wrote. The 1830s brought a prominent New York fashion style of a "willowy" look for young women, and there were many reports of anorexia nervosa during this time, the book said. But for older women, plumpness remained fashionable, and women on stage were expected to be voluptuous.

The meaning of the word "diet" came to include the goal of weight loss as early as 1910, Stearns wrote. "Middle-class America began its ongoing battle against body fat" between 1890 and 1910, Stearns wrote. The main factors that contributed to this shift were the advent of fat-control devices, the rise of public conversation about fat, and changes in fashion for both men and women, he wrote.

The culture of beauty that shaped up around the turn of the last century, promoting slimness as beautiful and fatness as ugly, has intensified since then, Stearns wrote.

Despite the widespread notion of dieting, obesity has risen dramatically over the last 20 years in America, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A recent survey by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Trust for America's Health found that the percentage of adults classified as obese went up in 23 states in the last year. View a map of obesity in America »

As clothing size numbers scale down in an era when bodies are getting more overweight, portion sizes have been increasing, Jampolis said. Photographs of fast food hamburgers from 50 years ago reveal that the serving size back then would seem like a "joke portion," now, she said.

"The same thing has happened with our body sizes. We're perceiving them as totally normal," she said.

As far as vanity sizing, Nixon called it a "temporary fix" that reflects a larger problem of people looking for quick solutions for losing weight, she said.

"It doesn't really deal with the root of the problem," she said. "It's really a lifestyle issue. It's not about a temporary diet, it's not about being pleasantly surprised because you're a size 12 instead of a size 16," she said.

Saturday 090711

Congrats to Kelin's 1021 CFT! Breaking the old record by 194 lbs!

Workout
Team (come in it is a secret!)

Friday 090710

From the good folks of Catalyst Athletics...http://www.performancemenu.com/index.php

Workout
Front squat - 65% x5; 70% x4; 75% x3; 80% x2; 85% x2 (4 box jumps immediately after each set)

Snatch - 65% x2 x6

Push Press - 70% of Clean and Jerk x5 x5

Thursday 090709




Let's hope it does not rain!

Workout (if no rain)
AMRAP in 20:00 of:
400M Run
Max Reps of Pull-ups
400M Run
Max Reps of Push-ups

Workout (if rain)
AMRAP in 20:00 of:
7 - Burpees
7 - WallBall Shots

Wednesday 070809

Workout
OHS - find your 1RM

THEN

"Mini" MetCon
3x
15 Ring Dips
25 - Double Unders*

Can't do Double Unders? Sub Tuck Jumps of Lateral Hops

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 081028

From "The Mighty Mix"...one of my favorite reads.

http://mightymix.blogspot.com/2009/06/six-tips-for-overhead-squat.html

Six tips for the overhead squat

The Overhead Squat (OHS) sits at the royal round table of the most efficient and rewarding weightlifting exercises. It works the entire body, increases strength, power, flexibility, coordination, and develops postural lean mass, which should be a priority for any intelligent bipedal.

The OHS appears deceptively simple; yet learning it can be very challenging. Even though it is designed, as all the Olympic-style weightlifting exercises are, to put the entire body through its most ergonomically engineered paces, it is nevertheless an unnatural movement. This article is both for the novice and the lifter already performing the lift who seeks some nitty-gritty details on form and technique, to give the thinking lifter some explanation and keys to executing this successfully.

1. Stick your butt out. It goes against everything you've striven for in general decency, but it's going to go out - way out. Focus on moving your backside backwards, away from your mid-line, and then focus on curling your lumbar up into extension, like a scorpion raising its tail. What this does is set your center of gravity, so you don't end up tipping forward or backward. Do it sideways in a mirror and try to keep your knees in line with/in the same plane with your toes; don't allow them to move in front of them.

2. Press into the bar. This is one of the biggest things that can improve your performance. One reason the OHS can be so counter intuitive is that the body wants to move as a unit through the dynamics of physics - in this case gravity - which means that as you descend, the muscle groups involved in keeping the bar raised tend to relax, hold, and depress. So the scapular group try to switch from elevation to depression. The upper traps try to switch from concentric contraction to bigger balance with eccentric, to brace the body to catch the overhead falling weight. Use the cue to be constantly lifting/pushing the weight, never just holding it.

Furthermore, there are far greater instances in work history that a person, if descending with an overhead object, needs to buffet it away in order to keep it from crashing onto oneself, than to catch it and return with it overhead with arms extended. So there is a certain amount of instinctive response and primal muscle memory that must be overcome.

To learn to press into the bar continually, focus on it through auxiliary overhead work - overhead presses, the Jerk Support and Recovery, etc. - whatever exercises you're doing to assist in developing overhead strength. This means focusing on fully contracting every muscle involved in keeping a load overhead, at every moment. Thought cue: be constantly lifting/pushing the weight, never just holding it. This allows more muscles to support the overhead position. It won't look like a shrug, but it will feel like you're trying to perform one.

3. Keep your chest, neck and head up, while bending over. Building on the reasoning above, it's easy to let the chest and head fall slightly forward on the way up. Actively focus on keeping these up throughout the movement, especially when hitting bottom and beginning ascent. Fix your eyes on something straight ahead or slightly higher. Be aware of what your neck is doing. In order to keep everything tight, retract and elevate the scapula.

Now, don't confuse this with trying to maintain a vertical posture. It's not like a ball squat, where you try to keep your spine ramrod straight, like a chair back. If you do that, you'll fall down. You will fold a bit on the descent, basically bending over, but at the hip joint. So allow the angle of your torso to change, just don't round your back, droop your neck, unlock your shoulders, or look down.

4. Bounce out of the hole. "When you master that bounce, you'll really take off in gains," Olympic silver medalist and coach Tom Hirtz told me. This applies in varying degrees to all squats and the snatch. It means learning where to stop on the descent and begin the ascent. Stop too soon, and you will perform only a partial squat, emphasizing upper glutes and hamstrings, and a legitimate OHS will be impossible. Stop too far down, and the squatting mechanism is completed, so major muscles will lose tension, and it's much more difficult to initiate the ascent. The goal is to stop descending when tension is still tight.

Focus on feeling it in your thighs, especially quadriceps, and think of your hip flexors as spring loaded. By shifting your focus from taking your cue from the glutes to the hip flexors, you'll get a faster cue from your nervous system and be better able to detect the "bounce" point. You'll also consciously engage your anterior muscles. This is important because most people are trained to focus on engaging their posterior muscles in learning the basic (back) squat, but the OHS is more of a front squat exercise than back, so by focusing on the glutes instead of the hip flexors, your body is more likely to follow the neuromuscular pathways you've set up for the back squat than to engage the bio mechanics necessary to maintain an overhead press while executing a squat. This means that you're likely to naturally fall into the pattern of leaning forward, which is what you do with a bar lying across your shoulders, and flex your elbows, which will lead to you tipping forward and possibly dumping the bar.

5. Use your wrists and hands. It takes every muscle involved in the OHS to maintain the proper trajectory of the bar for balance. The bar should be situated in line with a point just behind the ears. As the body moves through the vertical plane, each joint must make slight adjustments to maintain this fixed point. Be actively aware of what your wrists and hands are doing, for they are primarily responsible for holding and positioning the bar, so hold onto it! The fine-tuning points on this grip may mean adjusting throughout the movement, so that the fingers extend slightly and the bar rolls out toward the fingertips as the body becomes closer to the ground. This is the opposite of what would happen if you were buffeting or catching an object overhead when you hit the bottom.

6. Push with your feet. Your feet are your foundation. Assume your starting position by positioning your feet first. Your stance should be slightly wider than your shoulders, toes angled out. Note that if you're tall, and your stance is too narrow, you're going to have balance problems, so experiment until you find a secure width that you don't struggle in. Be sure your shoes have firm soles and allow the foot bed to fully extend. Throughout the movement, be actively aware of the load on your feet, and when you transfer into the bounce, push your feet "into the floor."

Tuesday 090707

Many have started LOCKDOWN Part Deux and we have a few that have never tried the "Baseline" WOD. So let's give it a shot.

Workout
Baseline

For time:
500m Row
40 Squats
30 Sit-Ups
20 Push-Ups
10 Pull-Ups

THEN

Dead Lift
80% of 1RM x5, x4, x3, x2, x1

Monday 090706

Workout

Press
Find a NEW 1RM

Then
"Mini" MetCon

3 rounds of:
500M Row
20 - Box Jumps


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 090403

Sunday 090705

Rest

Saturday 090704

Happy Birthday Sharon! Sorry we missed your actual 0702 date!

Happy and SAFE 4th of July to the TitanFit Family...

For those that are interested, we can try:
"Sharon"
Workout


For time:
5 rounds of
500M row
20 - Thrusters (M45/F33)
20 - AB Mat Sit-ups

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 090106


Want to skip Sharon, ask Dr. Rick to prescribe some pain!

Friday 090703

Workout

Fun with Dr. Rick

Today's workout is at TitanFit

So What's It Gonna Be

Holiday Weekend Hours

Hey TitanFit. As we plan for this coming holiday weekend, we need your input for Friday. The options are:
11:00 WOD and cookout at Dr. Rick's
11:00 AM - 2:00 PM Open Gym at TitanFit.

Post your preference to comments. We will post the "winner" Friday morning.

Thursday 090702

We will save Christmas in July until next week. We want to give everyone an opportunity to enjoy the fun....

Workout
"Dave"


For time
21, 18, 15, 12, 9, 6, and 3 reps of:
Kettlebell Swing (M-53 lbs/F-35 lbs)
Ab-Mat Sit-ups
Box Jumps (20 inches)
Push-ups (want to make it a little harder?...make those Ring Push-ups!)

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 090324

Wednesday 090701

Workout

Back Squat
find a new 1RM

THEN

"Mini" MetCon
50 - WallBall Shots

Post Squat weights and WallBall times to comments...