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4th Of July Hours

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Hey everyone Here is our schedule for Tomorrow  Saturday July 4th 9:00am - Wod - I will be running a wod. Wear leggings, get ready to do some team workouts. I don't want to say its mandatory. But...you should do it. 9:00am Fundamentals - Our Fundamentals will be performing the 9:00am wod with the class 10:15am Mobility Class - Canceled (Saturday Mobility people, you can come into the Wednesday) 10:00am Olympic Weightlifting - Canceled 11:00am Wod Canceled

Training Season – by Jessica Sieff

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[vc_row][vc_column width="1/1"][text_output]Training Season – Jess S. Every year in March, around the time the CrossFit Open has ended, CrossFit athletes who aren’t going to regionals or to the Games hear the same declaration in gyms all around the world: The Open is over. Training season has begun. Those four little words, “training season has begun,” sends a shrill down the steely spines of athletes young and old, small and tall – the flexible and the otherwise awkwardly immobile… Training season has begun. We walk around super excited like kids comparing our wish lists for Christmas or Hanukkah (that’s right … represent). “What program are you doing this year?” “Are you getting ripped?” “Are you getting jacked?” “Are you gonna get shredded?” “Are you going to fold yourself into a pretzel and then do a muscle up – with one hand?” “Totally. Me too.” Hell yeah. Training season has begun. This morning I set myself up for a set of 10×3 backs squats at 70-75%. I warmed up. I felt good. Full disclosure my coach does NOT know I’m writing this right now. So I have no idea what she’s going to think when I say that as I got up to 70% something just started wavering a little in my brain. Maybe it’s that I’m coming back from having some hip issues and I haven’t squatted in a while but in all honesty, 70% is not that heavy for me yet I was instinctively afraid of it. “I’m not sure about this,” I thought to myself. “Hrm. Well. That’s heavy. I’ll try it. No, wait, I’m going to edge off the weight just a little bit. Okay. Set two.” I started taking more time between sets. It was taking me at least three minutes to build up the courage to do THREE squats. I knocked the weight down a little more. My monkey brain came alive. “Why is this freaking me out so much? It’s not heavy. Is it heavy? What did I eat last night? Is that it? Is it because I had dessert? No. I’ve had dessert before. Did I not sleep enough? I don’t get it. Let me just – no, still freaked out. Is someone going to get mad at me? Coach will totally be mad at me. There are only three other people in this gym right now. Are they all mad at me? This is ridiculous. Just squat it. There. Shit, I don’t know if I can do this for five more sets. Sure I can. It’s light. It doesn’t feel light. I’ll walk over here and then walk back and it will all be fine. Nope. Still not so sure about it …” And then I remembered something I’d read recently in a book, completely unrelated to CrossFit. In the book, the author mentioned this theory about seasons. He said we all experience seasons – seasons when we might be laser focused on certain objectives, or battling a particularly busy time in our studies or our work. Maybe you’re raising a tiny human and balancing that with managing those other little things, you know, like paying bills and keeping your house from falling down. Maybe you are chest deep in writing your dissertation or you’re defending it or something. I don’t really know what it means to defend something like that but if that’s you – I hope you have a sword because it seems to me that a sword would come in handy in the case of defending something like that. Plus it’s just really cool to have a sword.[/text_output][container][vc_row_inner padding_top="150px" padding_bottom="150px" border="none" bg_image="12417" parallax="true"][vc_column_inner width="1/1"][/vc_column_inner][/vc_row_inner][/container][text_output]Maybe you’re about to move your entire family into a new house. You’re starting a new job. You have new responsibilities at your current job. Any of those things qualify as a season. You have shit to deal with – and that might mean this is not training season for you. I’m a writer. You might not know that because I don’t write a lot for public consumption right now. I write talking points. And memos. And recommendations. And sometimes, sadly, I have to write people’s emails. Email is hard, guys. The struggle (for some) is real. This morning, while I was spending SO MUCH time considering a single set of squats I realized something. I’m not in training season. I’m in, ‘just trying to do the best I can at the workout’ season. I’m already dealing with new responsibilities at my job, I’ve made a commitment to study and write more every night so I don’t lose my passion for doing so. Between all of that – the writing, the work, the commute, getting groceries, paying bills and making sure my family still recognizes my face – I’m about as tapped out as I can possibly be. So what does that mean for my training season? That doesn’t mean I don’t try. That doesn’t mean I don’t push. It means I had to listen to my body today. And I’ve gotten better at that over time. Sometimes, I do have to knock down the weight. Some days, mentally, I just can’t handle mustering up what it takes to hit the numbers that I want to hit. And that’s okay. It doesn’t mean I won’t hit them. When I listened to myself this morning, I still felt challenged by the rest of the sets and I still felt worn out by the end of my workout. When you work to your capacity – that’s when you feel the challenge and the triumph. But you have to know that capacity is fluid because it’s not all centered on your strength. It’s also reliant on your emotional and mental wellbeing. We CrossFitters are bonded by more than just the surface goals of losing weight or getting healthy or building muscle or bending ourselves into a pretzel. We’re bonded by our hunger for reaching goals and setting new ones. We’re bonded by wanting more. That can make us feel, at times, that we have to run ourselves into the ground to hit the highest number on the whiteboard. We don’t. We’ll do better in the long run if we don’t. You’ve seen the memes that say, “What are you training for?” “Life, Mother F$%#er.” It’s true. That’s what we’re training for. That takes a lot. If you’re beating yourself up over your performance in the gym … if you’re hesitating at every work out and doing an incredibly good job of talking yourself out of even just coming in... Maybe you just need to recognize your season. Take some of that pressure off of yourself. Come in and just move for an hour. I guarantee your body will respond. It’ll guide you to how far you can go. And you’ll get stronger with every step.[/text_output][/vc_column][/vc_row]

July Fundamentals Begins Tomorrow!

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[vc_row][vc_column width="1/1"][text_output]Interested in our Fundamentals Course? Our  Fundamentals Course is always right around the corner! Interested in signing up for TWO FREE WEEKS! Click here to do it. Want some Details? Scroll down to check out the schedule or any other details you may want to know about. [/text_output][accordion][accordion_item title="What is the monthly Fundamentals schedule?"]2015 Fundamentals Start Dates:  Our Fundamentals program begins on a Tuesday each month, and runs 12 classes in succession. The start date for each month is listed below.
July Fundamentals: Tuesday, June 30th
August Fundamentals: Tuesday, August 4th
September Fundamentals: Tuesday, September 1st
October Fundamentals: Tuesday, September 29th
November Fundamentals: Tuesday, October 27th
December Fundamentals: Tuesday, December 1st (exception: 3 weeks long due to holidays)
Class Times:
Tuesday 8:30am OR 7:00pm Thursday 8:30am OR 7:00pm Saturday 9:00am THAT SCHEDULE DOESN'T WORK FOR ME! You may want to check out our Accelerated Fundamentals Course then!​ Which you can check out by clicking right here![/accordion_item][accordion_item title="I don't want to wait, I want to start tomorrow!"]If you don't want to wait to start until our next scheduled Fundamentals, and you'd like to start the Fundamentals RIGHT NOW! We also offer an Accelerated Fundamentals, which you can check out by clicking right here! With that you get 6 personal training session to get you ready for class, along with 3 free weeks of CrossFit afterwards! The sessions are scheduled at your convenience.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="But I'll be missing a few classes"]If you will be missing a Fundamentals class, no worries, we can do some make up work to catch you up. Try not to miss as many as you can though because each one builds on the prior class. But if you have to, just email Brandon@crossfitsouthbend.com and we will get it organized for a makeup during the Fundamentals. We usually allow up to 2 missed sessions, if you are going to be missing 3 or more, you may want to consider an Accelerated Fundamentals here.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Signing Up for a membership"]The first two weeks of each month are free! We want people to give CrossFit a good honest try before they decide whether or not it is for them. After that first two weeks if you decide CrossFit is for you, you can sign up and continue out the rest of the month. You can find out prices right here[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Want to sign up and already know how to perform CrossFit?"]
Already well versed in the Olympic lifts, power lifts, gymnastics, and CrossFit movements?
[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Questions about anything"]If you have questions, don't be afraid to ask any of us! Our office and inboxes are always open! You can also check out our website for more info about our programs, prices, programming, and schedule at www.crossfitsouthbend.com  Other than that, we will expect to see you in here on your start date! Click here to email us if you have any other questions. [/accordion_item][/accordion][/vc_column][/vc_row]

4th of July Hours – Leggings Wod!

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Hey everyone Here is our schedule for Saturday July 4th 9:00am - Wod - I will be running a wod. Wear leggings, get ready to do some team workouts. I don't want to say its mandatory. But...you should do it. 9:00am Fundamentals - Our Fundamentals will be performing the 9:00am wod with the class 10:15am Mobility Class - Canceled (Saturday Mobility people, you can come into the Wednesday) 10:00am Olympic Weightlifting - Canceled 11:00am Wod Canceled  

4th of July Hours – Leggings Wod

By: 0

Hey everyone Here is our schedule for Saturday July 4th 9:00am - Wod - I will be running a wod. Wear leggings, get ready to do some team workouts. I don't want to say its mandatory. But...you should do it. 9:00am Fundamentals - Our Fundamentals will be performing the 9:00am wod with the class 10:15am Mobility Class - Canceled (Saturday Mobility people, you can come into the Wednesday) 10:00am Olympic Weightlifting - Canceled 11:00am Wod Canceled

July Fundamentals Begins June 30th!

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[vc_row][vc_column width="1/1"][text_output]Interested in our Fundamentals Course? Our  Fundamentals Course is always right around the corner! Interested in signing up for TWO FREE WEEKS! Click here to do it. Want some Details? Scroll down to check out the schedule or any other details you may want to know about. [/text_output][accordion][accordion_item title="What is the monthly Fundamentals schedule?"]2015 Fundamentals Start Dates:  Our Fundamentals program begins on a Tuesday each month, and runs 12 classes in succession. The start date for each month is listed below.
July Fundamentals: Tuesday, June 30th
August Fundamentals: Tuesday, August 4th
September Fundamentals: Tuesday, September 1st
October Fundamentals: Tuesday, September 29th
November Fundamentals: Tuesday, October 27th
December Fundamentals: Tuesday, December 1st (exception: 3 weeks long due to holidays)
Class Times:
Tuesday 8:30am OR 7:00pm Thursday 8:30am OR 7:00pm Saturday 9:00am THAT SCHEDULE DOESN'T WORK FOR ME! You may want to check out our Accelerated Fundamentals Course then!​ Which you can check out by clicking right here![/accordion_item][accordion_item title="I don't want to wait, I want to start tomorrow!"]If you don't want to wait to start until our next scheduled Fundamentals, and you'd like to start the Fundamentals RIGHT NOW! We also offer an Accelerated Fundamentals, which you can check out by clicking right here! With that you get 6 personal training session to get you ready for class, along with 3 free weeks of CrossFit afterwards! The sessions are scheduled at your convenience.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="But I'll be missing a few classes"]If you will be missing a Fundamentals class, no worries, we can do some make up work to catch you up. Try not to miss as many as you can though because each one builds on the prior class. But if you have to, just email Brandon@crossfitsouthbend.com and we will get it organized for a makeup during the Fundamentals. We usually allow up to 2 missed sessions, if you are going to be missing 3 or more, you may want to consider an Accelerated Fundamentals here.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Signing Up for a membership"]The first two weeks of each month are free! We want people to give CrossFit a good honest try before they decide whether or not it is for them. After that first two weeks if you decide CrossFit is for you, you can sign up and continue out the rest of the month. You can find out prices right here[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Want to sign up and already know how to perform CrossFit?"]
Already well versed in the Olympic lifts, power lifts, gymnastics, and CrossFit movements?
[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Questions about anything"]If you have questions, don't be afraid to ask any of us! Our office and inboxes are always open! You can also check out our website for more info about our programs, prices, programming, and schedule at www.crossfitsouthbend.com  Other than that, we will expect to see you in here on your start date! Click here to email us if you have any other questions. [/accordion_item][/accordion][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Mobility Class June Itinerary and Details

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Hey there everyone, as our Mobility Class gets a bit closer. We have been getting a few more questions as to what we will be doing, and how the Mobility class will work. Our Mobility Class sign up sheet is on the whiteboard. After your first FREE session, you can decide during class whether or not you would like to sign up for a monthly membership. When you sign up for a membership, you will not be required to pre register for class.If you sign up for a membership on the day of your first free class, you get the first month 50% off! We are capping each class for our first time at 20 people, so this will be first come, first serve. Once this is filled, we will not accept any more entrees into the class for that day with the exception of drop ins and free first classes. If you are not a CrossFit South Bend member and would still like to attend this class click here to contact us Remember, spots are limited and your first time is free! June Itinerary (13 free spots left) Saturday 6.13.15 @ 10:00am: Squatting Voodoo Band Compression Series (11 free spots left) Wednesday 6.17.15 @ 6:45pm Squatting Voodoo Band Compression Series (Free Spot Registration not up yet) Saturday 6.20.15 Overhead Voodoo Band Compression and Prep Series (Free Spot Registration not up yet) Wednesday 6.24.15 Overhead Voodoo Band Compression and Prep Series      

Memorial Day Murph Today

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[vc_row][vc_column][text_output]We will be starting the warm up at 10:00am on Monday May 25th for Murph, and we will be having a cookout and potluck after. So Bring some snacks, wear some Red, White, and Blue. Come join us for Memorial Day for Murph as an individual, or bring a team to chip away at the workout. This is the only class we will be open for today. "Murph" For time: 1 mile Run 100 Pull-ups 200 Push-ups 300 Squats 1 mile Run In memory of Navy Lieutenant Michael Murphy, 29, of Patchogue, N.Y., who was killed in Afghanistan June 28th, 2005. This workout was one of Mike's favorites and he'd named it "Body Armor". From here on it will be referred to as "Murph" in honor of the focused warrior and great American who wanted nothing more in life than to serve this great country and the beautiful people who make it what it is. Partition the pull-ups, push-ups, and squats as needed. Start and finish with a mile run. If you've got a twenty pound vest or body armor, wear it. You may perform this one as an individual, or in a team.[/text_output][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column width="1/1"][accordion][accordion_item title="Date-Time-Schedule"]Workout: Warm up at 10:00am Wod starts at 10:30am Cookout/Potluck @ 12:00pm - 2:00pm[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Murphy's Story"]Murph Laden with weapons and gear, Petty Officer Marcus Luttrell grasped the rope dangling from the rear of the Chinook transport helicopter and descended into the moonless night. Twenty feet down, his boots touched ground in the remote mountains of northeastern Afghanistan near the Pakistani border. As the roar of the helicopter faded to silence, Luttrell and three other Navy SEALs—Lieutenant Michael Murphy and Petty Officers Danny Dietz and Matt Axelson—found themselves alone in the pitch darkness of a desolate warzone. The elite four-man team was searching for Ahmad Shah, a militia leader aligned with the Taliban, as part of a mission dubbed Operation Red Wings. Soaked by a cold rain, the quartet hiked for hours through the darkness as they struggled to keep their footings on the steep mountain ridges. After the sun dawned on June 28, 2005, nearly four years into the war in Afghanistan, the mud-caked SEALs burrowed themselves behind rocks, logs and tree stumps on an outcrop overlooking Shah’s suspected location. The 29-year-old Luttrell, a sniper and team medic, concealed himself under a felled tree when he suddenly heard soft footsteps. Looking up, he saw a turbaned man carrying an axe. The SEALs had been discovered. Not by enemy forces, however, but a local goat herder. Within moments, nearly 100 goats with bells around their necks came jingling over the mountainside with another herder and a teenage boy. The surprise presented the SEALs with several options—none of them good. Killing unarmed noncombatants would violate acceptable rules of engagement and also likely result in a court-martial. If the SEALs tied up the three and left them behind, they still faced the problem of what to do with the bleating herd without raising suspicions. Dietz, who was in charge of communications, tried to radio headquarters for instructions but could not connect. Left to make their own decision, the unit released the unarmed men, knowing it was very possible that the herders would inform the Taliban forces. It was a decision Luttrell “knew could sign our death warrant.” With their mission compromised, the SEALs tried to move to a defensive position, but barely an hour later, dozens of Shah’s forces emerged over a ridgeline. An avalanche of AK-47 fire, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars cascaded down the mountain. The terrain proved just as vicious as the enemy. As the Taliban fighters advanced, the SEALs scrambled, fell and jumped hundreds of feet down the mountain. One fall shattered three of Luttrell’s vertebrae. Dietz was shot multiple times during the firefight, and although his right thumb had been blown off in the battle, he continued to shoot at the enemy to protect his unit. As Luttrell hooked his arms underneath the shoulders of his badly wounded comrade to drag him down the slope, a bullet hit Dietz in the back of his head. He died in Luttrell’s arms. The badly wounded Murphy knew their best chance at survival was to call in reinforcements. Without a workable radio connection, the team leader cast his personal safety aside and moved to a completely exposed position, the only location where he could get a signal on his satellite phone. As Murphy phoned for backup, a bullet ripped through his back. The lieutenant managed to complete his call and even keep up the fight, but he could not survive. Luttrell holed up with Axelson, who had sustained a terrible head wound, when a rocket-propelled grenade blasted the two apart. Luttrell never saw Axelson again. Luttrell miraculously survived the blast and managed to elude capture by the time reinforcements arrived. Alerted by Murphy’s call, two Chinook helicopters carrying Special Operations Forces rushed to the area of the firefight, but as one of the aircraft hovered to discharge its troops, a rocket-propelled grenade shot it out of the sky. The eight SEALs and eight Army Night Stalkers aboard all died. By the time the sun set on the disastrous day, 19 Americans were dead. Luttrell was presumed to have been a 20th victim, but in spite of bullet wounds, a broken back and rocks and shrapnel protruding from his legs, the SEAL survived. Unaware of the tragedy that befell the rescue operation, Luttrell crawled seven miles through the mountains. In spite of his wounds, he killed chasing Taliban with his rifle and grenades as he continued to evade capture. As the sun blazed down, the thirsty Luttrell licked the sweat off his arms until he found a waterfall. As he sipped its cool waters, he suddenly found himself surrounded once again by a band of local men. These men, however, proved to be more friend than foe. One of the men, Mohammad Gulab, assured Luttrell they were not Taliban, and he and three others carried the wounded warrior back to their village of Sabray. Bound by a tribal code of honor known as Pashtunwali, Gulab gave Luttrell food, water and shelter. Although the Taliban encircled the village and threatened his family and neighbors if he didn’t turn over the American, Gulab refused. For four days, Luttrell was shuttled among houses and even into a cave to prevent his capture. Finally, Gulab’s father traveled to a Marine outpost with a note from Luttrell. The military launched a large combat search-and-rescue operation with warplanes and ground forces that attacked the Taliban fighters and brought home their missing man. As Gulab helped the limping SEAL to a waiting helicopter, an Air Force pararescueman held out his outstretched arm to Luttrell and said, “Welcome home, brother.” For his actions, Luttrell received the Navy Cross in a 2006 White House ceremony, and Axelson and Dietz received the same honor posthumously. Murphy posthumously received his country’s highest military honor, the Medal of Honor. Luttrell may have been the firefight’s lone survivor, but he hardly emerged unscathed. He struggled with survivor’s guilt, post-traumatic stress disorder and physical after-effects in the ensuing years. “I died on that mountain, too,” he said of his torment in a 2007 interview with NBC. “I left a part of myself up there.”[/accordion_item][/accordion][/vc_column][/vc_row]