For the month of August 2011 CrossFit Norwest will run a family and friends promotion. The members at CrossFit Norwest are all hard working, dedicated and enthusiastic. We would like more of the same type of people to join our ranks. During the month of August if you introduce a new member to CrossFit Norwest, be it family or friends you will receive a 25% discount from your current monthly dues for the entire time that member trains at Norwest. In turn your family and or friend can begin their CrossFit journey and be on the way to a healthier lifestyle.
 
General Physical Preparedness is overall physical preparation for the expected and the unexpected.. it is all round conditioning!!

Beginning this weekend, Crossfit Norwest will now be holding a General Physical Preparedness/Open Gym Session EVERY SATURDAY at 9:30am. This is NOT a class, it is an opportunity for those who are not afraid of some grunt fitness work to come and get their hands dirty, lift heavy shit, push their physical and mental limits and ruin themselves for the rest of the weekend.

The Saturday 8am will still remain for those looking for their long Metcon fix.
   
People often ask, "What makes a good diet?" or, "What diet will maximise my performance?" According to Glassman, founder of CrossFit, nutrition lays the molecular foundations for overall health and fitness. To build a solid foundation, CrossFit promotes the Paleo/Paleolithic diet. The Paleo diet is pretty simple, eat as our Paleolithic ancestors did, this means consuming plenty of lean meats, eggs, vegetables, fish, berries, and good fats, and avoiding grains, legumes, dairy and processed/artificial foods. The diet is based on the idea that our ancestors evolved for millions of years before reaching the Neolithic period, during which the agricultural revolution, i.e. farming and other advancements radically changed the human diet to the detriment of our health. Diabetes, cancer, heart disease, obesity and a number of other health issues have all been scientifically linked to a diet too high in refined or processed carbohydrate which is not suited to our genetic composition.

In terms of performance, the diet fullfills all the nutritional needs of an athlete to enhance output whilst maintaining a reduced caloric intake. By consuming the raw, natural foods of the diet, CrossFit athletes are eliminating processed and refined carbs that have been linked to lifestyle diseases, while also controling insulin and hormone levels to improve overall athletic performance.

If you wish to learn more, an abundance of information exists on the Paleo diet, however the most reader friendly look at this diet comes from Rob Wolf's, 'The Paleo Solution.' Why don't you try the Paleo diet for thirty days and see what happens...

   
Just a quick reminder that registration for CrossFit Never Quit Games Day (teams events only) closes this Thursday, the 21st July. Crossfit Norwest already has three teams competing, but would love to enter one more so we can dominate!! Details for the event are as follows: 8am 7th August at Unit 3, 7-9 Progress Circuit PRESTONS. If you're interested in competing, there are both advanced and intermediate divisions, please see Rob.

   

People often make misguided assumptions about CrossFit workouts based on what grabs their attention on paper. “Tough workouts”, “elite athletic training” and “high intensity” translates as high repetitions, endless rounds, a grab bag of exercises (often seemingly chosen at random), or some combination of the above. And there’s a trend, especially among those new to CrossFit and inexperienced with programming, to ride that met-con train all the way to Cortisol Crazytown.

I’m here to caution you… beware the lure of the Sexy Met-Con.

For some (especially those new to CrossFit), the lure of something like the Filthy Fifty or the “300” workout is undeniable. Hundreds of reps of various bad-ass exercises all in one workout? That MUST be good fitness. New trainees doing their own programming fall quickly into the Sexy Met-Con trap, piling on the reps, adding more and more exotic movements, needing an excessive amount of time to complete the workout. They get beyond creative, making up workouts so complicated that you need a map and a flashlight just to follow along.

Trainees aren’t the only victims of the Sexy Met-Con pull. New coaches and affiliate owners fall into this trap as well. What looks like you put more effort into your programming – seven rounds of five different exercises with a complicated rep scheme, or “Back Squat 5×5”? What’s an easier group class workout – a 20 minute light-weight met-con, or a structured PMenu-style Olympic lifting session? This isn’t a dig on those coaches or affiliate owners – I get it. The pressure to get creative and put out fresh “unknowable” workouts every day is enormous. There is also a need (real or perceived) to drastically distinguish themselves from their Globo-Gym competition. Add in the pressure from clients to make them SWEAT so they feel like they’re getting what they pay for and the Sexy Met-Con becomes an easy go-to on all counts.

But while it’s an easy trap to fall into – some affiliates never bear-crawl out. I follow several gyms’ custom programming, just to keep an eye on what everyone else is doing. With one, I counted back a few months and found 22 days of met-con out of a month’s worth of programming. Twenty. Two… not including rest days. Another programmed “find your deadlift one rep max” workouts two months apart – without a single day of strength-oriented deadlifting in between. Sure, they did some light deadlifts during met-cons… but how much does your 1RM go up without putting the work in on your 5x5s?

There are a few things wrong with this phenomenon. First, longer length met-cons (even those that go “heavy” for time) will not make you as strong as you could be. Sure, your cardio will improve, and you’ll most likely see some strength gains, but nowhere near the gains you’d see picking up heavy stuff with a tried-and-true 5×5, 3×5 and 3×3 protocol. (Of course, this point is only valid if you believe, as we do, that prioritizing strength is the most effective way to get better at everything.)

In addition, these types of workouts miss the bus by focusing on quantity at the expense of quality of movement. The never-ending pursuit of improved met-con “performance” overlooks the important component of quality-based training. You can learn your nine foundational movements in a group class and “practice” them in a chipper, but none of those movements (performed fast and loose, as these met-cons tend to inspire) prepare you for moving a real load. Sloppy air squats won’t translate to more weight on your back, and a hundred med ball cleans won’t prep you for a heavy clean and jerk. What you are doing, unfortunately, is reinforcing bad movement patterns for literally hundreds of repetitions. And that’s hard to recover from if and when you decide you want to start adding weight to the bar.

Want to be a better CrossFitter? Make sure your workouts are constantly varied, right? On first glance, these met-cons seem to fit the bill. The structure makes you THINK you’re working a good “constantly varied” program, with fresh-out-of-the-hopper movements and convoluted rep schemes. But “constantly varied” means more than just swapping out exercises in your 30 minute met-con. These Sexy Met-Cons work primarily one metabolic pathway, with a very limited range of strength and power. So all those randomized exercises and rep schemes, when contained within the same longer length, light-weight met-con, aren’t really variety at all.

But the biggest danger by far is this – these Sexy Met-Cons can quickly take a dive into “overkill” territory, where your training starts to hurt more than it helps. You can’t tell me that day after day of Filthy Fifties won’t produce a sharp decline in movement integrity, and the overuse of certain muscle groups, joints and tendons. (How many days of kipping, ring dips and push-ups can you do before your elbows starts to hurt?) In addition, the body goes into serious cortisol production around the half-hour mark, so these day in, day out, longer length workouts wreak all kinds of havoc on the body. These kind of met-cons (much like long distance “cardio”) are notorious for pushing people into over-trained territory, and where over-training lives, injury is soon to follow. (Not so awesome for you, but serious job security for Dallas.)

But who wants to work a boring 5×5 when there are plenty of sexier workouts to choose from? I’ll tell you who. People who want to be stronger. Nothing builds muscle and strength like the big lifts – squat, press and deadlift – supplemented with gymnastics skills for core strength and low repetition Olympic lifts to develop explosive power. And I’m not taking a bunch of one rep maxes, either! Sets of 3’s and 5’s are your money-makers – where you train the body and build the strength. Missing your met-con? Work them in, but hit them hard and keep them short. Piling 30 minutes of “cardio” after a serious strength workout is, in a word, counterproductive. And for the love of Pavel, keep them simple. Thrusters and burpees, broad jumps and overhead carries, sprints and swings – all simple, all brutally effective.

 

http://whole9life.com/

   

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