Check out our new site. www.titanfit.com

Looking for TitanFit? Go to our new site. www.titanfit.com










Saturday 090131

REST!

Friday 090130

Workout

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


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 080806

So, kettlebells are catching on...Who Knew? That's right...YOU KNEW!

Bring something

We are looking to hang stuff on the walls of the new space. KTF and I are thinking of going with as orange and blue ILLINI theme. Do you have a IU , IUPUI, Indiana State, Purdue, etc... flag you would like to donate?

Thursday 090129

Yesterday Kelin noted CrossFit enabled him to shovel the snow. I too can attest to thanking CrossFit while moving snow yesterday. Anyone else have a tale to tell?

BTW, real shoveling is more fun that virtual.

Workout

2 position snatch:
work up to 75% x2 x6 (floor and high hang)

Snatch pulls:
95% x3, 100%x3, +5 10 more lbs x3

Snatch shrugs:
100% + 20 lbs x5, + 20 lbs x5, + 20 lbs x5

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 081118

Wednesday 090128

Don't you just feel the need to FS and Push Press

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

Weighted Pull-ups
Find a 1RM - 5, 3, 1, 1, 1


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 081006

Tuesday 090127

REST!

Missed a day, or just coming to see the new place? The address is:
7107 Girls School Avenue
Indianapolis, IN 46241

See you at 5:30 PM!

Monday 090126

HAPPY BIRTHDAY SETH!

Workout

"Barbara"
Five rounds, each for time of:
20 Pull-ups
30 Push-ups
40 Sit-ups
50 Squats

Rest three (3) minutes between each round. Post time for each round (not including the 3:00 rest)

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Sunday 081005

LOOKING GOOD!

Hey, we painted the new space. We want to continue to offer the very best CrossFit facility to our TitanFit family!

Thank you for helping us grow. The best is yet to come!


Let's just say...if you hear me wheezing during the next few days, you will know why!

Sunday 090125


MB hurtin' the new space with WallBall

Today's Workout January 25, 2009, And Tomorrow's Workout, January 26th, 2009 Is In The Garage At 1646 Walpole Way!...New Workouts at the new space will begin Tuesday January 27th at 5:00 PM.

Workout
Dead Lift - 90% of your 1 RM x2 x5

After

"Mini" MetCon
Tabata Push-ups

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Sunday 081123

Saturday 090124 - Directions to the new box

Workout

Team workout at the new box.

That's right, show up at the new box. Team workout starts at 10:00!

There's a map on the left hand column. The new address is:
7107 Girls School Ave
Indianapolis, Indiana 46241

Can't find us? give me a call - 312.543.4372

Directions from the garage...

  1. Head south on Walpole Way/Walpole Ln toward New Church Blvd - 312 ft
  2. Turn left at New Church Blvd - 0.1 mi
  3. Slight left to stay on New Church Blvd - 180 ft
  4. Turn left at Bridgeport Rd - 0.5 mi
  5. Turn right at W Morris St - 1.5 mi
  6. Turn right at S Girls School Rd - 0.2 mi
  7. Turn left at Girls School Ave - Destination will be on the right 0.2 mi
    7107 Girls School Ave
    Indianapolis, IN 46241

Friday 090123

Rest


With the Right Motivation, That Home Gym Makes Sense
By
TARA PARKER-POPE
Published: January 5, 2009


A year ago, I bought an elliptical trainer — a gym-quality machine that I felt certain would get a daily workout.

Do you have exercise equipment in your house that you don't use?

Today, my top-of-the-line exercise machine sits idle most of the time. But I’m not alone. Every year, consumers spend an estimated $4 billion on home treadmills, stationary bikes, Stairmasters and other equipment that ends up gathering dust. A Consumer Reports survey last year found that nearly 40 percent of those who buy home exercise machines say they use them less than they expected.

This may be discouraging to people like me, but it is a source of fascination for behavioral scientists. The hope is that by better understanding the behavior, they can help people make better buying decisions — and help them start exercising and stick with it.

Buying an exercise machine does seem to influence whether people start working out. But some research suggests that the same people are less likely to stick with exercise over time than people who don’t own home equipment.

In October, the journal Annals of Behavioral Medicine reported on a study of 205 sedentary adults who were encouraged to begin an exercise program. At 6 months, about half had done so, but by 12 months, about a third of those people had stopped.

People with a home exercise machine were 73 percent more likely to start exercising. But by the end of the year, they were also 12 percent more likely to have quit than people in the study who did not have home equipment.

This doesn’t mean a home exercise machine leads to less exercise. It just means that having home equipment is not the most important factor. What matters more is “self-efficacy” — a deep-seated belief that we really do have the power to achieve our goals. In the Annals study, those who scored high on psychological measures of self-efficacy were nearly three times as likely to be exercising after a year as those with lower self-efficacy scores, whether or not they owned an exercise machine.

Meeting your own expectations also influences whether you stick with exercise. Study participants who were satisfied with the results of their exercise plan were twice as likely to keep it up as those who were not.

While believing that you can do it and being happy with your results may seem to be obvious parts of success, researchers say that people often fail to take these psychological issues into account when they start an exercise plan.

“What is your confidence in your ability to stick to your exercise program when you’re on vacation, when you’re not feeling well, when you’re busy?” asked David M. Williams, assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior at the Alpert Medical School of Brown University, who led the exercise study. “The message isn’t that home exercise equipment doesn’t work. It’s just one very small piece of the puzzle, because it might make it easier to exercise, but they still have to motivate themselves to do it.”

Dr. Williams said there were simple ways to increase the likelihood that you will keep exercising. Working out with friends or family members, mastering an exercise (like the proper way to use gym equipment), and working with someone who motivates you, like a personal trainer, all build confidence and bolster the chances of sticking with it.

But consumers need to distinguish between real motivation to exercise and the unrealistic optimism that often takes over when they are shopping for a new exercise machine.

“Most goals we set for ourselves tend to be unrealistically high,” said Ravi Dhar, director of the Yale Center for Customer Insights and a professor of marketing and psychology. “When you buy these machines, you probably end up focusing on one or two attributes, like how easy it is to use or having it in your home. You’re not thinking about the barriers, what you’re giving up, like the time with friends or the Internet.”

In experiments to be published next month in The Journal of Consumer Research, scientists at Duke and the University of Wisconsin studied ways to help people make more realistic buying decisions.

In one group, undergraduate students were asked how often they would exercise in a two-week period. They estimated five times, and then indicated they would pay about $610 for a treadmill.
In a second group, students were asked how often they would exercise under ideal conditions, with no constraints on their time, motivation and physical ability. The answer: 10 times. Then they were asked how often they would really exercise. They scaled it back to fewer than four times. Rooted in reality, this group was willing to pay just $480 for a treadmill.

When the participants recorded their actual exercise over a two-week period, it totaled about three days. That shows that the simple act of distinguishing between an ideal setting and the real world helped those in the second group make more realistic exercise estimates.

“We’re not telling people to stop buying treadmills,” said Kurt A. Carlson, assistant professor at the Fuqua School of Business at Duke. “The question is how to get the right people to buy them. Everyone else should recognize they don’t have the motivation, and take the money and use it on a personal trainer or something else that’s going to get them motivated.”

Thursday 090122


Remember the "Anti-Herb" WOD? Man I missed named that one. Check this out

Workout
For time

20 - Burpees
10 - L Pull-ups

20 - Thrusters (95 for the strongest, 65 for most, 45 or 33 for some)
10 - L Pull-ups

15 - Burpees
10 - L Pull-ups

15 - Thrusters
10 - L Pull-ups

10 - Burpees
10 - L Pull-ups

10 - Thrusters
10 - L Pull-ups

Wednesday 090121


No, we are not asleep. Yesterday's workout was not kind to Kelin and me...
Workout
Strength

Front Squat or Back Squats
80% of 1RM - 5 sets 0f 5 reps

Press
80% of 1 RM - 5 sets of 5 reps

For your reading pleasure, we have pasted a recently penned article written by Delia Cabe, of Prevention Magazine. see below:

Sweat Yourself Smart
Exercise makes you sharper, happier, and healthier. Get ready to transform your life!
By Delia Cabe, Prevention

Have you ever vowed to ring in a new year by starting to exercise—only to end up too busy, tired, or achy? The right motivation can make you 70 percent more likely to keep it up for the long haul, reports the American College of Sports Medicine. But focusing only on weight loss can cut your odds of success by over half, say researchers. A better inspiration: the amazing health rewards you get by being active. A stronger heart and lower cancer risk are two well-known benefits. Here, more that are guaranteed to motivate.

1. Improve your language skills

A single treadmill session can make you brainier. Exercisers who ran just two three-minute sprints, with a two-minute break in between, learned new words 20 percent faster than those who rested, in study at the University of Muenster in Germany. Getting your heart pumping increases blood flow, delivering more oxygen to your noggin. It also spurs new growth in the areas of the brain that control multitasking, planning, and memory.

2. Get all-natural pain relief

It may seem counterintuitive, but rest isn't necessarily best for reducing pain and stiffness in the knees, shoulders, back, or neck. Healthy adults who did aerobic activity consistently had 25 percent less musculoskeletal pain than their couch-bound peers, says Stanford senior research scientist Bonnie Bruce, Dr.P.H., M.P.H., R.D. Exercise releases endorphins, the body's natural pain reliever, and may make you less vulnerable to tiny tears in muscles and tendons. Staying active can also provide relief for chronic conditions such as arthritis: In a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill study, arthritis sufferers experienced 25 percent less pain and 16 percent less stiffness after 6 months of low-impact exercise like balance and strengthening moves. Most people start to feel improvement within a few weeks, says study author Leigh Callahan, Ph.D., an associate professor of medicine at UNC.

3. Be happier at work

An active lifestyle may help you check off extra items on your to-do list, says a study from the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom. On days staffers participated in on-site fitness activities, they reported thinking more clearly, getting more done, and interacting more effectively with colleagues. You'll be less likely to miss work due to illness, too. Research shows that people who participate in vigorous leisure-time physical activity (such as jogging or bicycling) just once or twice a week take about half the sick time of those who are more sedentary.

4. Feel sexy at any size

A good workout practically ensures a better body image. A Pennsylvania State University study found that women ages 42 to 58 felt more attractive after four months of walking or yoga even if they didn't lose weight. Exercise can also put you in the mood for love by increasing blood flow to the genitals. University of Washington research found that just one 20-minute cycling workout enhanced sexual arousal up to 169 percent in women. And the benefits stand the test of time: A Harvard study of swimmers found that those over age 60 were as satisfied sexually as those decades younger.

5. Lower your dental bills

Flossing and brushing, it turns out, are not the only keys to a healthy smile, says Mohammad Al-Zahrani, D.D.S., Ph.D., a former associate professor at Case Western Reserve University. Exercise plays an important role, too. In his recent study, Al-Zahrani discovered that adults who did 30 minutes of moderate activity five or more times a week were 42 percent less likely to suffer from periodontitis, a gum disease that's more common as you get older. Working out may thwart periodontitis the same way it does heart disease—by lowering levels of inflammation-causing C-reactive protein in the blood.

6. Slash cold risk 33 percent

Moderate exercise doesn't just rev your metabolism—it boosts your immune system, too, helping your body fight off cold bugs and other germs. Women ages 50 to 75 who did 45 minutes of cardio, five days a week, had a third as many colds as those who did once-weekly stretching sessions, a University of Washington study found.

7. Reach the deep-sleep zone

Say good night to poor sleep. Women age 60 and older who walked or danced for at least an hour, four times a week, woke up half as often and slept an average 48 minutes more a night than sedentary women, according to a study in the journal Sleep Medicine. That is good news for the many women who toss and turn more as they get older. As you age, sleep patterns start shifting, so you spend more of the night in lighter sleep phases, says Shawn Youngstedt, Ph.D., an assistant professor of exercise science at the University of South Carolina.

8. Beat bloating

The next time you feel puffy around the middle, resist the urge to stay put. A study from Spain's Autonomous University of Barcelona suggests that mild physical activity clears gas and alleviates bloating. That's because increasing your heart rate and breathing stimulates the natural contractions of the intestinal muscles, helping to prevent constipation and gas buildup by expediting digestion.

9. See clearly

What's good for your heart is good for your eyes. An active lifestyle can cut your risk of age-related macular degeneration by up to 70 percent, according to a British Journal of Ophthalmology study of 4,000 adults. This incurable disease makes reading, driving, and seeing fine details difficult, and it's the most common cause of blindness after age 60.

10. Enjoy instant energy

If you're among the 50 percent of adults who report feeling tired at least one day a week, skip the java and go for a walk. University of Georgia researchers who analyzed 70 different studies concluded that moving your body increases energy and reduces fatigue. Regular exercise boosts certain fatigue-fighting brain chemicals such as norepinephrine and dopamine, which pep you up, and serotonin, a mood enhancer.

Tuesday 090120

Check out "The Silvers", from Freedom CrossFit - video [wmv]
One is never too old.

Workout
For time:

50 - Squats
40 - Sit-ups
30 - Pull-ups
20 - 95 lbs Thrusters
10 - KTE
20 - 53 lbs KB Swings
30 - Push-ups
40 - Sit-ups
50 - Squats

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 080305

Monday 090119


Candace Hamilton, CrossFit Oakland

REST!

JB writes, on the TitanFit Trainers Blog http://titanfittrainers.blogspot.com/ that we all should consider participating in a new sport/activity, to enhance, give reason for our CrossFit work outs.

The rest days are a great time to shoot baskets, work on your weaknesses, have fun. Just cause it is a rest day, don't sit on the couch eating. get up and do something you really enjoy (as long as your hobbies are not related to Budweiser).

What new thing will you try today?

Sunday 090118


TitanFit's new home starting to take shape...

Workout:
Hang Power Clean (HPCL) + 1 Front Squat
1-1-1-1-1-1-1

Work up to 90% of your Squat Clean 1RM

Saturday 090117

Workout

"Helen"
For time 3 rounds of:
Run 400 M/Row 500M
21 - 24k KB or 55 lbs dumbbell swings M/ 16k KB or 35 lbs dumbbells swings F
12 - Pull-ups

You know the drill...scale to your fitness level. Those that can not do 50 or 35 lbs+ lbs KB swings need to use less weight. If you are unable to complete an un-assisted pull-up, jumping pull-ups (at a 2 to 1 sub) are allowed.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 081021

Friday 090116

Workout

Power Snatch + 1-OHS
Work up to 90% of your 1RM.
Not sure of your 1RM? By the end of today, we will have a pretty good idea.

So you are thinking about, considering, pondering the Regional for the CrossFit Games. Based on last year's standings, those that are able to complete the prescribed Thruster/Pull up WOD, the Deadlift/Burpee WOD and the Clean and Jerk WOD from the 2008 CrossFit Games finishing with excellent form (e.g. chest touching bar for pull-ups, fully over head for thrusters and Burpees, full squat for cleans) around the following time slots should consider attending.

APPROXIMATE times to match for those events are:
Thruster/Pull Up WOD - Men 6:30 -Women 10:30
Deadlift/Burpee WOD -- Men 5:00 -Women 6:00
Clean and Jerk WOD - --Men 7:30 -Women 9:30

CrossFit Game Prep Classes

CrossFit Games Widget

Are you thinking about competing in the regional for the CrossFit Games? Need to step up the intensity of your workouts. Want to get together with other "Fire Breathers" to test your metal?

TitanFit is proud to announce the CF Games Class. Starting Saturday, January 31st., 2009, once a week, we will conduct a full out, no holds bared, CF Games Workout. The workouts are designed to get you ready for the intense competition. trust me, if you have not amp'ed up the intensity, competition will definitely do it for you.

Contact us for more information. GET READY FOR THE SWEAT ANGELS AND A POSSIBLE VISIT FROM PUKIE!

Thursday 090115

REST!

Yes, I know it is snowing and cold. I need you to come in on this rest day to learn some Olympic lifting. Today, we will teach the Snatch. We will also provide hot chocolate as an incentive to come and get better on your Olympic lifting.

No, we will not provide marshmallows!

NEWS
TiatnFit is growing. The growth is prompting us to move from the garage. Exciting? Yes! Change is always for the good! Stay tuned for additional updates!

MORE NEWS
DJ has entered the Indianapolis Indoor Rowing Championships. Check out the TitanFit Trainer's blog (link on the left) to get additional information on DJ and the other TitanFit trainers.

The Championship is:

Presented by FITNESS CONCEPTS
Hosted by the Indianapolis Rowing Center
January 24, 2009
International School of Indianapolis

WHAT : A 2000 meter race on indoor rowing machines. A race takes about 8 minutes and is a sprint. Competitors compete side-by-side in heats of 10 people. The machines are electronically linked. Their progress is depicted by video game boats racing down a course, so the spectators and competitors can watch the race on a big screen.

There are categories for all levels including age groups and skill levels. The oldest competitor is 90 and the youngest is 13. Most competitors are from Indianapolis, though teams also come from Bloomington, Lafayette, Elkhart, Fort Wayne, as well as Kentucky and Ohio.

WHO: Anyone can enter. No experience necessary, though if you’d like to train, we will help you!

WHAT CAN YOU WIN?? The winners of relay race* win their very own erg! Individuals who meet a time standard also win a free trip to Boston to compete at the International Indoor Rowing Championships. Last year, two competitors at this race won trips!

What does CRASH-B SATALITTE MEAN? It means if you meet the time standards for your age group — you can win a free trip to Boston to compete at the World Championships on Sunday, February 22, 2009. View the qualifying times on the concept 2 website http://www.concept2.com/us/racing/crashb/crashb_qual.asp

HOST: The Indianapolis Rowing Center (IRC). IRC has workouts posted on its website www.indyrowing.org and can help coach you through a training plan!

SIGN UP: Sign up online at www.regattacentral.com. Search “Regattas” for the Indianapolis Indoor Rowing Championships. Email Eric Stoll <estoll@sbcglobal.net> if you have any questions about registration.

COST: $25 per person. Enter as many categories as you like! Entry fee includes a T-shirt and helps to fund our outreach rowing program for urban teenage girls.

Wednesday 090114

Workout
Back Squats
85%-90% of your 1RM x1, x2, x3 - x3 sets

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

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 080204

Tuesday 090113


Look what I found while shearing the archives....the TitanFit trainers doing HSPU. Let's see how they do today!
WOW, it has been a year (almost) to the day!

Workout
"Diane"
For Time - 21, 15, 9 reps of:
225 lbs Deadlift
Handstand push-ups

Those that, like me, are unable to do handstand push-ups can sub strict shoulder press. For that sub, pick a weight that is about 50% of your BWT. As for the 225 lbs DL, ideally use a weight that is 25% greater than your BWT.

Compare to:

Monday 090112

Workout
"Elizabeth"
For time 21-15-9 reps of:
135 lbs Cleans
Ring dips

As always, SCALE if and when necessary. For some of us that are new to Olympic lifting, high pulls and FS will be good enough. The sub for ring dips is 4/1 bench dips, 3/1 bar dips or 2/1 jumping ring dips.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Saturday 080726

RANT!

RANT!

Ok, we are all at fault! I know I have "dumped" my fair share of Thrusters from over head.

With that said we MUST change our behavior. For member safety, your safety and so TitanFit is not buying new equipment daily, let’s take better care of the equipment we have.

As examples, no one needs to:
Drop a High Pull from chin high
Drop a Kettlebell from over head
Release the handle on the rowing machine versus placing it back in the cradle

YES, I understand there are times to dump the weights (e.g. failed personal record attempts). In fact I encourage you to do so, for your own safety, during Olympic lifting. It is not necessary, however, to dump a 45 lbs or 65 lbs Thruster from over head. When possible, which is most of the time by the way, lower the weight to hip level before you release. Doing so will prevent the loaded bar/Kettelbell/Dumbell from injuring you, the member working next to you and will allow us all to continue to utilize/enjoy the equipment we all use to get better.

We continually describe TitanFit and its members as family. As such treat the equipment as if it were your own. It is after all.

Sunday 090111

REST!

If you plan to visit TitanFit today, think TABATA!

Conquering Your Fear of the Box Jump

At 64" tall, with a 28" inseam, you might think that I would be scared of a 20" box jump: that's a big height for a small gal. But I'm not. I have no fear of the box jump. Never have. I don't know why. Maybe it was all those years of basketball practice and those jumping drills, when they tried desperately to improve my vertical leap but, it seemed at the time, to no avail. I remained a power forward's heart in a point guard's body: the story of my life. Still.

Anyway, I may not have a fear of the box jump but I know that most of my clients do. Usually, they tell me outright but, with a few, I can see it in their faces as they stand, hesitating, before the box, looking, edging forward, backing away a bit, seemingly waiting for courage to stand up and take their hands.

I can understand. Most of us don't jump as adults.

We did as kids, but somewhere we put jumping to the side. It wasn't very practical, I guess. Think about it. Outside of CrossFit, when was the last time you jumped as high as you could into the air? Maybe if you play basketball or you're in the military, but for everybody else (particularly for women) the need to jump just doesn't seem to come up that often. The last time you jumped as high as you could might have been at an age that ended in the word "teen" and so you might have some apprehension when the WOD calls for box jumps. So here are some tips for successful box jumping:

  1. Start small. It doesn't matter if the WOD is "Fight Gone Bad" and the standard is a 20" box jump. If you're not a comfortable, experienced jumper, then use the 12" box and nail it repeatedly. Then move to the 16", then the 20", and beyond. Progress slowly if you have to -- but continue to repeatedly challenge yourself and your limits.

  2. Focus on the top of the box at first. Stare at it and visualize your feet planted firmly in the middle of the top. Do this for every jump. As you progress, you can move your gaze forward until you're jumping with the box in your peripheral vision but don't worry about that at first. Just worry about planting your feet in the middle of the top.

  3. Get mad at the box. It's a stupid piece of lumber and, if you're scared to do it, that means the box is conquering you. It owns you. How pathetic is that? In my house, we have a saying: "Today, I will not be defeated by inanimate objects." It sounds really stupid but, the next time you're struggling with a stubborn jar lid, repeat this saying to yourself and you'll find yourself twisting off that lid like you're Superman.

  4. When you're really tired, deep in the WOD, and you still have to box jump, revert to #2, even if you think you've licked this box jump fear. Fatigue can do funny things to your mind, as we all know. Focus and refocus and you'll get through it.

  5. Add the box jump to your warm-up at least once a week, preferably twice. It doesn't have to be a lot of jumps: just 10 at a time. Repeated exposure at low levels will help.

  6. If you fall, do it again right away. Jump immediately. Really. The more you postpone the activity, or avoid it, the worse the fear will become. It doesn't matter if your shin has a bruise 3" wide and you've left skin on the floor, jump again right away. Don't wait.

Fear is a funny thing. Not "ha-ha" funny but you know what I mean. Last summer, I was speaking with Robyn, an old college chum (who now happens to be a psychologist) and I mentioned my anxiety over the swim portion of triathlons. "The more fear I have, the more compelled I am to do it," I told her, expecting a very concerned look and perhaps a step backward. (I was confessing to being a whack job, after all.) Instead, she reached out and touched my arm. "Oh, Lis, that's actually really healthy," she said, "Expose yourself to your fears at manageable levels and eventually you will take away the power of your fears and give that power to yourself." Okay, so maybe Robyn's nuts too. (Which is very possible, she did go to Vassar with me.) But her point was that when you fear something you should do it again and again in a controlled manner, instead of avoiding it. Then, it won't own you but you'll own it.

Once you've mastered your fear of the box jump, it becomes addictive. You'll want to jump more, and higher, and you'll find that you no longer want to limit your jumping to the inside of a CrossFit gym. That bench at the park? Jump it. That chair in your dining room? Nail it. Climbing into bed at night? So much more fun than sitting down and swinging those legs over.

This obsession can, however, put you in an odd predicament as a jumping grown-up among those who no longer jump. People will look at you oddly so resist the urge to jump in public places. Really. Don't be like me. Or else you'll find yourself in a school gymnasium, right under the backboard, waiting to pick up your 8-year-old son after school, in a sea of non-jumping grown-ups, none of whom seem to have the urge that you do -- that urge to jump up and touch the bottom of the net. The net is right over your head, after all, the threads hanging down so temptingly. But you are in a pair of dress pants and a shirt with French cuffs, looking to all the world like a serious English professor, and yet your internal dialogue goes something like this: Don't do it. Don't jump. Be normal. Nobody else is jumping in their business suit and their grown-up shoes. Really. Just blend in. Stop it. You're only 5'4" for God's sake, you can't reach the bottom of the net anyhow. Be normal. Be normal. BE NORMAL!

Oh, what the hell. Might as well jump!

(Text and photograph by Lisbeth Darsh/CrossFit Watertown in Connecticut.)

http://crossfitwatertown.typepad.com/index/2008/03/might-as-well-j.html

Saturday 090110

Workout

Work on your weakness!

For me, today is Cleans. My squatting, pressing and MetCons have improved. My Olympic lifting has not. As such they will become a focus over the next few weeks to months.

What is your weakness? Today's session will be tailored to help you improve. YES, you. We all know TitanFit's brand of CrossFit is small group personalized training. Today it IS personalized training.

The fine folks of NPR have published a podcast with Mark Rippetoe (URL below). He discusses New years resolution workouts and what he feels are the best ways to get fit. Give it a listen. it is good for all to hear especially those that a new to "real" fitness as he refutes some of the commonly-held fitness myths people hear and take as "gospel" [e.g. ellipticals and LSD (long slow distance) training are great ways to get fit].

Thanks JB for the link.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/wwrd/2009/01/what_would_rob_do_to_lose_10_p.html

Friday 090109


Mary pressing

Workout
5 sets of 8-10 reps of:
60% of BWT OHS or Front Squats (for those that did not FS last week)

After

"Mini" MetCon
7 rounds for time of :
7 Sumo Deadlift High Pulls - 95 lbs (M), 65 lbs (F)
7 Box Jumps - 24 inches (M), 18 inches (F)

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Saturday 081122

Thursday 090108

Workout
"Lynne"
5x max reps of:
Body weight bench press
Pull-ups

For Lynne as rx'd, each "round" is 5 minutes long.

Start your BP on the minute, complete as many as possible without racking the weight. Once you have completed the BP, start your Pull-ups. Complete as many Pull-ups as possible (your set is complete once you release the bar). Now rest for what remains of the original 5 minutes (e.g. if it takes you 2 minutes to BP and do the Pull-ups, rest 3 minutes). Repeat 4 more time. Got it? (As an aside...do the exercise that you are weakest in first. E.g. for me, that of course means I do pull-ups before bench pressing)

Post reps for both exercises in all rounds

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 081103

NEW YEAR Changes (for the better) are coming!

REST!

Man I need it, I bet you do too.

OK there are a few things that we need to cover.

  1. FULL RANGE OF MOTION - TitanFit will be a stickler for full range of motion as we start the new year. Let us be the Indiana example of how to do it right!
  2. Class schedule coming soon - Starting in February, we are instituting classes. Currently we are thinking of 5:30, 6:00, 7:00 and 8:00 for the times. We will continue to offer "open gym during our ope hours. The class times are to ensure we all get a proper warm-up before starting the WOD. Those time don't look good? Let us know what schedule might work better for you.
  3. Price increase - in an effort to ensure we continue to offer the best training experience, we are raising the non-contracted monthly rates starting the first week of February (current members are "grand-fathered" and will not experience an increase.) If you want to save a few bucks, now is the time to join or get your family/friends to do so.
  4. February will also start "The save dollars by losing weight/being consistent" program. More details are available so come in and ask...

Tuesday 090106

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

OK we have a few new folks. As such, we need to ensure reinforce proper form. It is a MUST that we get full range of motion during our exercises. For today, for example, during your Thrusters, bar fully overhead and arms locked out at the top of the exercise.

Monday 090105


Lance Armstrong during workout in his home gym as he prepares to resume career.



Fouts got new shoes and Berg says he wants to Oly lift today...so

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

Compare to:

Sunday 090104

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

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Saturday 081129

Saturday 090103

Rest!

Each do:
700M row
33 - Squats
20 - Ring Dips
33 - 53 lbs KB swings
20 - Body Rows

Friday 090102

Workout
Nice easy 3 Mile run/5 K row.

CFT set for Sunday January 4th! Get your mind right.

Thursday 090101

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

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 080421

It is official. Below please find the regional qualifier information for this year's CrossFit Games

May 16-17, 2009
Midwest
Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee

12 Spots:
6 men & 6 women
845 Claycraft Rd
Gahanna, OH 43230