Thursday, January 13, 2011
Friday, November 28, 2008
Thursday, November 27, 2008
I'm Still Thankful...
To go get it, or wait for it to come back around, that is the question. Anybody have an answer?
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Be Thankful,
I am very thankful for the friends I've had over the years, and the close friends I still have today. I am also thankful for the support my family has given me throughout college.
I am thankful for the opportunities that I have been given, and the success that I've had. I am thankful for the words of wisdom I've been given, and the ability to accept the meanings to have a new outlook on life.
I am thankful for every experience which humbles the soul, reminding you that something greater is always in control. I am thankful to know the difference between situations I can control, and those I cannot.
And lastly, I am thankful for being reminded that I don't always have to stop and think before I speak, because when you speak from your heart those who need to hear the message will.
Happy Thanksgiving Everyone
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Think Your a Man?

Monday, November 24, 2008
Going Heavy..really heavy
Oh yeah, this guy is also the world record holder in the Clean & Jerk..no big deal. 580lbs!
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Tips on Dinning Out
RULES FOR EATING OUT
1. Never eat the rolls or bread brought to the table.
2. Choose a low fat protein off the menu and ask to replace starches with extra vegetables.
3. Drink a glass of water while waiting for you meal to arrive.
4. If the protein you ordered is significantly bigger than the size of your palm, take the extra home with you for another meal.
5. If you must have dessert when dining out, do not have any carbs with your dinner. Order any dessert you would like, and only eat half.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Tabata Turkeys Win!
Friday, November 21, 2008
D-Day Here
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Quote un-Quote
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Better Than You Were Yesterday
Here is another Jon Gilson article from Again Faster.
In October of 2006, Greg Glassman gave me the most important lesson of my life. It has nothing to do with barbells or pull-ups, sweat or pain. In fact, it has very little to do with exercise at all.His words, paraphrased and non-profound: The pursuit of excellence is rewarded. Simple and axiomatic, it would be easy to dismiss this lesson as self-help drivel. Yet put into action, it is the most powerful thing on the planet. It’s taken me two years to appreciate its potency, and ten short months to see its effects.I’ve pared it down for my own use, coining a three-word phrase that reminds me that today is not just another day: Better than yesterday.Today is an opportunity to run faster than ever before. To lift more weight. To make better videos and write better articles. To create better athletes. To make every client happy. To embrace the fact that yesterday’s efforts were nothing more than an unsatisfactory attempt at an uncompromising ideal.
You've got to reject where you are before you can get where you're going.
“Better than yesterday” is hard. It requires you to be your own worst critic, while maintaining the belief that you are fully capable of remedying your own faults. This juxtaposition can be hard to sustain. It is easy to find satisfaction in mere competency, to believe that the job you’re doing is the best you can do. The identification of fault is much harder on the ego, an unending assault on the bastion of identity. “Better than yesterday”, with its implicit focus on excellence and explicit criticism of self, is an uncomfortable place. I have a whiteboard in my office, bearing the unceremonious title “Things We Suck At”. This list is the CEO of Again Faster, and it says nasty things about me and my company. It keeps me honest and unsatisfied, and the second I become smug, it’s there to drive me into action, mocking me for my shortcomings. I don’t particularly like to look at that whiteboard, but it keeps us on a beeline toward excellence, and it’s done more for our company than any consultant ever could.When Greg drew a capital “E” on the whiteboard at CrossFit Boston and launched into the relationship between excellence and reward, I understood his point, but I didn’t really get it. The concept was too vague. Two years later, “better than yesterday” has given me a concrete way to act on his philosophy, and the results have been profound. We’re way better off than we were yesterday, and tomorrow will prove to be even brighter. Take this philosophy, and apply it to your pursuits, whether personal or professional. You’ll find, as I did, that excellence boils down to a simple truth: you’ve got to reject where you are before you can get where you’re going. You've got to be better than you were yesterday.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Power and Work: Crossfit
Ever wonder how much power or work you are producing during your Crossfit workouts?
Check out Work & Power Output Calculator, and plug in your movements and time.
Monday, November 17, 2008
You Need Me
You Need Me
-You are not wired for progress. You seek a state of sameness, one where mental and physical stressors are nonexistent, and every day is just like the one before. Routine is bliss for your underperforming ass.It’s not your fault. Evolution left you ready to do battle with nature, and civilization gave you a neutron bomb. You should be outside, spear in one hand and shield in the other, looking for something to kill. Instead, you’ve got forty-five aisles of floor-to-ceiling shrink-wrapped grub, obtainable with nothing more than a plastic card and a smile.
I’m a grizzly bear charging at twenty miles an hour, the uncertainty of your next meal, and the reason you sleep with one eye open.
You should be sprinting away from predators, seeking safety, but you’ve got fences, freeways, and a fifteen-digit algorithmically protected front door. You’ve got two guns, a can of mace, four layers of body armor, and nothing to worry about. Unfortunately, your DNA doesn’t know this. Your hindbrain is programmed to save your resources for another day, conserving energy for an apocalyptic event that will never come. “Eat more, move less,” it says, and you’re eager to comply. The result is a forty-five inch waist and a mean case of diabetes.You need a prod. A thousand volt, fifty-milliamp foot to the backside, designed to override your nonsensical attachments to comfort. You need me.I am the stress that humanity has removed from your existence. I’m a grizzly bear charging at twenty miles an hour, the uncertainty of your next meal, and the reason you sleep with one eye open. I’m your coach.I’m not yelling at you because I’m angry. I’m yelling because you need to be shoved away from calm and toward performance, brought to a place where death is imminent and action is the only option, and it’s my job to bring you there.When my volume goes up and my tone gets clipped, you move rapidly. You execute. You drive faster and further into physiological discomfort, and you stay there. You leave six-way adjustable leather seats and lumbar support for the weak, and transport yourself to a place where ease is a distant memory. Your hindbrain wakes up, and those resources, heretofore held for Armageddon, know that it’s go time. Fat melts, lungs sear, and muscles break down, all in service of getting away from me. Day after day, you undergo this process, overcoming unreasonable obstacles until your recalcitrant brain is born again hard. Embracing pain and shunning comfort, you’re ready to kill or be killed. You’re rewired, no longer subject to the temptations of easy living and all-you-can eat buffets. You’re an athlete.
The pull of a painless life is too great to get here alone. You need me, the harbinger of change, the bullwhip, the irresistible rush of progress. I am your ticket to growth, and I’m sending you to battle civilization’s paradox with nothing more than a pointy stick. Ironically, you’ll win, and if that apocalypse ever comes, you’ll be ready.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Why Water?
Weight loss. Water is one of the best tools for weight loss, first of all because it often replaces high-calorie drinks like soda and juice and alcohol with a drink that doesn't have any calories. But it's also a great appetite suppressant, and often when we think we're hungry, we're actually just thirsty. Water has no fat, no calories, no carbs, no sugar. Drink plenty to help your weight-loss regimen.
Heart healthy. Drinking a good amount of water could lower your risks of a heart attack. A six-year study published in the May 1, 2002 American Journal of Epidemiology found that those who drink more than 5 glasses of water a day were 41% less likely to die from a heart attack during the study period than those who drank less than two glasses.
Energy. Being dehydrated can sap your energy and make you feel tired -- even mild dehydration of as little as 1 or 2 percent of your body weight. If you're thirsty, you're already dehydrated -- and this can lead to fatigue, muscle weakness, dizziness and other symptoms.
Headache cure. Another symptom of dehydration is headaches. In fact, often when we have headaches it's simply a matter of not drinking enough water. There are lots of other causes of headaches of course, but dehydration is a common one.
Healthy skin. Drinking water can clear up your skin and people often report a healthy glow after drinking water. It won't happen overnight, of course, but just a week of drinking a healthy amount of water can have good effects on your skin.
Digestive problems. Our digestive systems need a good amount of water to digest food properly. Often water can help cure stomach acid problems, and water along with fiber can cure constipation (often a result of dehydration).
Cleansing. Water is used by the body to help flush out toxins and waste products from the body.
Cancer risk. Related to the digestive system item above, drinking a healthy amount of water has also been found to reduce the risk of colon cancer by 45%. Drinking lots of water can also reduce the risk of bladder cancer by 50% and potentially reduce the risk of breast cancer.
Better exercise. Being dehydrated can severely hamper your athletic activities, slowing you down and making it harder to lift weights. Exercise requires additional water, so be sure to hydrate before, during and after exercise.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Good ol' Food Pyramid

Not the newsest food pyramid, but the one we are most familiar with. Read the article (link at the bottom), and let me know what you think. At least they don't advocate high carb low fat diets. And actually, its not far from what we as Crossfitters do.
Solid Nutrition?
Critics of the USDA food pyramid identify several problems:
The pyramid groups all fats and oils together at the tip, without distinguishing between "good" fats (like olive oil and canola oil, which contain monounsaturated fats) and "bad" fats (saturated fats and trans fatty acids).
Starchy, carbohydrate-packed potatoes are lumped together with the low-calorie, nutrient-rich fleshy and leafy vegetables.
Protein gets only one category in the pyramid. Meat, poultry, fish, dry beans, eggs and nuts are together despite many nutrient differences.
There is no distinction between high-fat and low-fat dairy products.
Bread, cereal, rice and pasta are in a group at the base, despite the health differences between refined carbohydrates (think white rice) and unrefined ones (brown rice).
With obesity and diabetes at record highs, there is no guidance about the daily need for exercise or portion control.
Friday, November 14, 2008
Any Takers?
Thursday, November 13, 2008
And the pass is.....!!!
Score is 6-2, Titans are up. TKE's have the ball with 3 seconds left about 20 yards away from the end zone. The snap comes, with the TKE quarterback in deep shotgun he drops back even further with the Titans rushing 2. They are getting in quick with hands in the air. The QB, under heavy pressure, throws ups a hail mary. The Titans were already playing deep so getting burned didn't seem to be an issue. With the players waiting in the end zone like a bride was tossing her bouquet, they all jump, and to everybody's surprise the pass is caught. By a TKE. With no time left. The Titans were left walking around with puzzled faces while the TKE's stormed the field. Very dramatic...guess you just had to be there. In case you were wondering, it looked like this.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Ouch! Piriformis Syndrome

The symptoms of sciatica come from irritation of the sciatic nerve. Many doctors think that the condition begins when the piriformis muscle goes into spasm and tightens against the sciatic nerve, squeezing the nerve against the bone of the pelvis.
What does the condition feel like?
Piriformis syndrome commonly causes pain that radiates down the back of the leg. The pain may be felt only on one side, though it is sometimes felt on both sides. The pain can radiate down the leg all the way to the foot and may be confused for a herniated disc in the lumbar spine. Changes in sensation and weakness in the leg or foot are rare. Some people say they feel a sensation of vague tingling down the leg.
Know your body and know your limits. Unfortunately I'm going through this right now and it's not something people want to experience :(. Make sure you don't rush rest. You want to be 100% pain free/ recovered before resuming your usual exercise program. Wish me fast healing!
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Nervous? Part-1
So....
Train your weaknessess! Lift heavy and fast, speak in front of a large crowd, stand on top of a high building. Whatever makes you nervous, do that. Regularly challenge yourself to live your life the way you want to. There's nothing to it, but to do it...it's that simple. What do you have to lose? It's hard to lose something you don't have..so nothing! Having everything to gain makes "doing" well worth the discomfort experienced in the beginning.
Part-2 rant coming soon...
Friday, November 7, 2008
I Will Act Now!
-Og Mandino