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CrossFit Wods 2.15.16 – 2.21.16 **Week 2 of 9**

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[vc_row padding_top="0px" padding_bottom="0px"][vc_column fade_animation_offset="45px" width="1/1"][accordion][accordion_item title="Things coming soon at CrossFit South Bend" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]CFSB NEWS – EVENTS – UPDATES THE CROSSFIT OPEN- Announcing the 2016 CrossFit Intramural Open CROSSFIT OPEN UPDATE: Want to do the CrossFit Open Wods? Read here BLOG POST - Being late to class BLOG POST - Seven things to know/do before this years open IMPORTANT: The Future of CrossFit South Bend NUTRITION: Amy's Treat Corner - Gluten free chocolate chip bacon cookies MOBILITY SERIES – 4 WEEKS TO LESS LOWER BODY PAIN SCHEDULE NEW CLASS TIME THURSDAY – Click here to read about it – LOOK FOR POSSIBLE NEW CLASSES OPENING UP OVER THE NEXT FEW MONTHS! NEW CLASS TIME(S) TUE/THU Another Set of New Classes Added![/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Monday 2.15.16" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]Monday 2.15.16 A. Snatch Skill Work B. 7 Rounds 2 minutes to perform 5 Snatches 135/95 10 Lateral Burpees Over Bar Max Chest to Bar Pull Ups Rest 2 minutes Score is total reps performed. Each round is 5 + 10 + However many pull ups you performed.
Notes: Snatch Skill Work: Coaches choice, but this should have some concepts of barbell cycling involved in it. Wod: If we have a huge class you will be sharing a bar with someone else, so you'll be paired up with someone who has a similar strength, and if not, look alive and when they get off the lateral burpees over bar, get your plates changed out. Scale so that you have enough time to get to the bar and bang out a few reps (perhaps with around 20-30 seconds left) Scaling for pull ups can be anything again, regular pull ups, banded, ring rows. Whatever you feel most technically proficient at. You don't have to open your hips all the way on the burpees over bar [/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Tuesday 2.16.17" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]Tuesday 2.16.17 A. 15-20 minutes to work to a heavy set of the complex Pause Squat + Back Squat  (4+1) ***3 second pause at the bottom for the first 4 squats, the last squat is normal, work speed out of the bottom on that last one. B. Teams of 3 100 Floor Press 165/105 200 Kettlebell Swings 55/35 American 300 Double Unders Score is time
Notes: Squats: Just like the description says, the first 4 are a tempo, the last squat is working speed out of the bottom normal tempo down and up. Wod: Again, paired with people of your similar strength if possible, if not, separate bars. The work can be broken up however you'd like Only one person works a time Scaling for doubles is coaches choice. [/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Wednesday 2.17.16" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]Wednesday 2.17.16 A. 3 Rounds 30 yard plate push rest :30 seconds 30 yard plate push rest :30 seconds 30 yard plate push rest :30 seconds 30 yard plate push rest :30 seconds 10 strict toes to bar 20 cal row :45 second goblet squat 55/35 rest 3:00 between rounds
  Notes: Plate push is at 45# The distance will be broken up to two separate 10 yard segments on the turf, of which, we will be running 3 people on a line at the time (6 total per heat) You are responsible for tracking your own time, so pay attention Coaches choice for scaling on strict toes to bar, try to keep it to a strict variation though. 20 Cal row is all out! Goblet squat is 55/35, don't touch your elbows to your knees.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Thursday 2.18.16" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]Thursday 2.18.16 A. 7 Rounds 3 minutes to perform 3 position Power Clean mid thigh, below knee, floor max unbroken set of strict chin ups B. 7 minute amrap Teams of two Max Ball Slams 40/30 **These ball slams must be done in sets of 10 at a time
  Notes: 3 position power clean: must be performed without disconnecting from the bar This means there is a clean at each position Chin Ups: Unbroken set, and strict - meaning when you come off the bar, you are done. Amrap: Simple, fast, these have to be done in sets of 10, no more, no less. So... Joe hits 10 ball slams Jeff hits 10 ball slams Joe hits 10 ball slams Jeff hits 10 ball slams Joe hits 10 ball slams Jeff hits 10 ball slams Joe hits 10 ball slams Jeff hits 6 ball slams BEEP, time is up Score is 76 ball slams Catching on the bounce is mandatory for Rx'd, even on the last rep.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Friday 2.19.16" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]Friday 2.19.16 A. 20 minutes to establish Push Press + Push Jerk + Split Jerk B. Front Squat Religion Max at bodyweight (thats the amount you weight, on the bar) 5 burpee box jumps 24/20 not for time, for reps
  Notes: Complex: If you are new and not technically savvy at these movements, you will perform a push press 3rm unless the coach feels as though your technical ability allows for a push jerk. In which case the coach can customize your complex. example: Push Press, Push Press, Push Jerk. Front Squat Religion: Not for time, for reps. Rx'd is your bodyweight, on the bar, I weight 220, so I would put 220lbs on the bar, and that is Rx'd. If "Yennifer" weighs 160, 160 on the bar is Rx'd for her. We have two scales, so this shouldn't be an issue. If you are extremely sensitive to your weight, make something up. I don't want any emotional breakdowns today. You weigh what you weigh and we love you guys all the same. Just say Rx'd or Scaled.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Saturday 2.20.16" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]Saturday 2.20.16 Teams of 2 For time: 2k Row 50 Power Cleans 155/105 75 Toes to Bar 100 Burpees over Bar
  Notes: This must be performed in the order written however the work can be broken up back and forth however you see fit. Burpees can be lateral or facing Don't tear your hands on the TTB! Goal time is 22 minutes.[/accordion_item][accordion_item title="Sunday 2.21.16" parent_id="" id="" class="" style=""]Sunday 2.21.16 A. Every 30 seconds for 15 minutes Thruster x 1 B. 10 Rounds 20 seconds max muscle ups 40 seconds rest 20 seconds max handstand push ups 40 seconds rest
  Notes: Start with a weight that you think you can keep technically sound throughout the 15 minutes. Start at whatever weight you’d like You can take weight off during the 15 minutes, but you can’t add it back on. If it looks sloppy, strip the weight back If you no rep more than twice, strip that weight down Yes, it's pulled from the floor.[/accordion_item][/accordion][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Seven Things to Know/Do Before the Open

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[vc_row padding_top="0px" padding_bottom="0px"][vc_column fade_animation_offset="45px" width="1/1"][text_output]Seven Things to Know/Do Before the Open Written by Brandon, Fixed by Jess (And every day, really.) The open is right around the corner, and it’s time to start becoming more aware. Aware of your goals, your body, the clock, the reps you have left, the plan you are sticking to, what your are telling yourself in your head. It’s normal to not be terribly aware of your surroundings in a workout when you’ve been training less than a year and it takes a while, so don’t worry - it comes with practice. Even with practice, it’s important to be aware of negative habits that can slip into your training sessions and your mind.   7. The coaches see it all, the shaved reps intentional and unintentional Keeping count of your reps when extremely fatigued is hard. You may not notice missing a rep or two (and let’s be honest, there are times when you do) but the Open is when you’ll regret getting into the bad habit of bad reps. So start paying attention and start now. Count out loud if you have to, if you have a hard time keeping count - use a marker board to track them. Grab your phone, and record yourself so you can see if you’re hitting the standards. Judges won’t turn a blind eye to bad reps. Bad reps don’t count in the Open and one rep can make a big difference.   6. Know the difference between Scaled, Modified, and RX The difference is not that Carl is better than Brandon in all of life because Carl just did that workout RX and Brandon did not. The difference is in the form, the mechanics and consistency. Our goal first and foremost (and what yours should be too) is to avoid recipes for injuries. The RX score is something to be earned. It means you did every rep to the RX standard of that movement, and the full amount of repetitions in that workout. It’s okay to scale a workout to preserve the stimulus we are trying to accomplish with that workout - even in the Open. If you can’t get a muscle up, those chest-to-bar pull ups are going to feel just as nasty. Don’t leave anything to chance. We will (in any workout - not just the Open) tell you if you weren’t touching your toes to the bar or hitting the wall ball targets and your workout is, therefore, scaled.   5. Know your goal, know your goal, know your goal We aren’t talking life goals, or full on yearly athletic goals, that’s a talk for another time. Let’s talk smaller. Goals for the WOD at hand. Be Specific: Give yourself a range of what success would look like to you in each WOD. Adjust them for each workout. Bad Goal: I want to win the open / crush everyone in this workout Good Goal: I want to try to perform a 1 round per every 2 minutes during this workout. Be Realistic: Base this goal off of prior data and knowledge. Know your  numbers, what you can squat, how many pull ups you can do unbroken. You will often shoot too low with your goal, but more often you’ll shoot far too high. This is why numbers are important, know how your rep schemes and how to thingk them up. Pay attention to that stuff and write it down.   4. Get Some … Motivation Set your goals too far out of reach and your plan will go to shit, making it hard to stay motivated through the WOD, and the rest of the Open. The words you are speaking to yourself should be positive, affirming, and instructive. Research has found certain forms of self-talk is most useful for movements that require fine motor skills such as Olympic weightlifting or Challenging Gymnastics movements. What you say to yourself can improve focus, mental readiness, self confidence, and help you cope with difficult circumstances. Psych yourself up and find what helps you maintain your drive to succeed. Motivational self talk can also reduce the rate of perceived exertion in athletes, for improved performance during strength and endurance events. Get a mantra, sing a song, whatever. Need some suggestions? Here: Focused self talk: “Chest Up,” “Knees out,” “Extend” Motivational self talk: “Light weight!” “All day!” “Just one more rep...”   3. Lose the Attitude It’s not just about the words you say, it’s the attitude you have. Understand where it’s coming from. There is no time for negativity when the clock is running. Identify what is going on in your head so that when you hear it, you can overcome it. If this negativity is happening while you are not in the middle of a workout, take some time to meditate. Imagine that you sitting down, and your mind is a television. Now imagine you can see the negativity drift in front of you. Be aware of it, but allow it to pass in front of you and continue on its way, separating yourself from it. Quiet Down: Imagine you are turning the volume down on your t.v. so all that shit is silenced. Replace it with the positive self talk above, repeat.  2.5  Control Yo’ Self: Ever see someone who trains great but chokes in competition? It’s about controlling your anxiety. Side Note: Learn how to control your breathing (click here and follow this gif to control your breathing rate). The app “Headspace” is a fantastic app for that. Avoid postures of defeat: Pick your chest up and fuckin’ smile! Fake it until you make it. Slumped shoulders, frowning, hands on knees, will start to play into your psyche and in turn bleed into your performance. Click here to check out a really good TED talk on your body language. Don’t focus on how much it hurts, focus on small chunks of the workout, and how you can overcome each as its own individual obstacle.   2. Be Confident Don’t make excuses for yourself: I’m too short, too old, too weak, I’m not good enough. These are all a means to justify you to not take action. They become ingrained in your mind as self limiting beliefs. Don’t show off, don’t whine, don’t complain just to seek external validation. Confidence comes when you stop seeking approval of others and learn to validate yourself. Face your fears. Fear is part of the human conditioning, allowing it to control you is not. Challenges and setbacks are inevitable. You have the choice to view them as positive or negative. As obstacles to success or opportunities to learn and grow. Visualize your success and make that a part of your daily routine.   1. Develop a growth mindset, not a fixed one In a fixed mindset intelligence is static, this leads to a desire to look smart and therefore a tendency to… Avoid challenges / Gives up easily / See efforts as fruitless or worse / Ignore useful negative feedback / Feel threatened by the success of others / Lie about results With a fixed mindset you’ll plateau early and achieve less than your full potential. In a growth mindset, intelligence can be developed, fueling a desire to learn and therefore a tendency to... Embrace and seek out new challenges / Persist in the face of setbacks / See effort as a path to mastery / Learn from constructive criticism / Find lessons and inspiration in the success of others As a result, you will reach higher levels of achievement giving you a greater sense of free will and a will to give your all in every WOD and everything you do.[/text_output][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Friday, 2.12.16

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Amateur

Power Clean 5×3 (add 2.5 lbs to last workout) Pull Ups 3 x Max Reps

Collegiate

Hang Power Clean 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 Pull Ups 3 Max Reps

Conditioning

Complete as many rounds as possible in 12 minutes:

Ground to Overhead – 3 Reps Step Ups – 6 Reps (6 RT, 6 LT) Double Unders – 12 Reps

The Free Overhead Squat Clinic Is On!

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Hey all! it looks like we had enough interest for it the OHS clinic I posted here. Sunday 2.14.16 (yes, thats valentines day) I will be running a Free Overhead Squat Clinic at 11:00am, and it will last around 60-90 minutes We will be covering quickly, a few concepts, then into some mobility: How injuries occur Posture, Bracing Joint Mechanics, sliding surface disfunction Performing the movement itself, the Tunnel Concept Torque Tests 7 rules of mobility Overhead Squat faults Pain in the overhead squat and how to scale up or down Mobility for the Overhead Squat and programming for mobility  

Thursday, 2.11.16

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Amateur

Bench Press 3×5 (add 2.5 lbs to last workout)

Collegiate

Bench Press 1, 1, 1, 1, 1

Conditioning Part 1

Death by Back Squat Complete: 1 Back Squat the first minute, 2 Back Squats the second minute, 3 Back Squats the third minute and so on… *This workout is performed at body weight or 225 lbs, whichever is more.

Conditioning Part 2

Complete for time:

10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 Reps of:

2 pood KB Swings Seated Dumbbell Press

Being Late

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Hey all, Listen. I get it. The weather sucked, you are coming from work/class and had to work late, stopped by a train, spilled coffee on your brand new shorts and had to change them driving 60mph on the bypass. But there are people that are occasionally late, and there are people who are perpetually late. We aren't talking Noah Calhoun late. He should have just been more proactive with Allie in the first place. Maybe do something more than send her letters Noah, now Fin is dead because he was hanging out with you in World War 2...You know what, whatever. It's the difference between a reason, and an excuse. A Reason is a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event. An Excuse is intended to lessen or eliminate liability, accountability, or responsibility. I'll take both of them, but I don't like bullshit excuses that happen perpetually. For those of you who are perpetually late, try as much as you can, set your clocks forward, make a reminder, put it on your calendar. Do what you have to do to change the habit. It's you that is not getting to your full potential of what you could possibly be getting done. But for those of you who are showing up late, with or without a reason or excuse. The ship sails without you. If you come in late, you may be missing the warm up, or the strength, and we may send  you off to just row, or do a simple dynamic warm up. Don't get your feelings hurt. We set our warm up to be custom at the start of class with the amount of people that are in the class at that time. It wouldn't be a good idea for you to jump in cold to a strength portion of a workout - something simple is what we will prescribe for you when you get in. Also, check the blog the night before you intend on coming into the workout, there is nothing worse than coming in 15 minutes late AND having no idea what the workout is. We aren't implementing a penalty, we aren't going to tell you that you can't do class. Just a direction to something simple and eliminating some elements of the workout to keep you safe. We are also adding more classes periodically as we get the coaches around to do so, consider whether its better to shortchange your workout, or pop in for the next class instead. You can drive slower, and safer, allow time for changing, idle chit chat. I know thats not always a possibility, but we are working on it!    

Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Bacon Cookies

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Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Bacon Cookies-Amy's Treat Corner
 
In this month's edition of Amy's Treat Corner, Amy shows you how to make Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Bacon Cookies.
 
But you might be asking yourself:
"Wait, does that mean chocolate chip cookies are healthy as long as they're gluten-free?"
Definitely not. They're less unhealthy, but don't kid yourself into thinking that any chocolate chip cookie, even this one, is positively contributing to your health with nutrients. 
 
That being said, there is more to health than food and there's more to life than health, like sharing special occasions with your family and friends. Having a special occasion with your family and friends once or twice a month won't derail your progress if you're eating a nutrient dense real whole food diet the rest of the time. But that might lead to another question.
"Why make the cookies gluten-free if you're going to just be having a special occasion?"
You're welcome to make your cookies however you'd like. But there are a lot people who feel like crap after eating gluten who still want to enjoy themselves. In that case a gluten-free chocolate chip cookie is a way to celebrate a special occasion without feeling like crap for the next couple of days.
 
Enjoy this delicious recipe with someone special this Valentine's Day, and then get back on track with healthy eating the next day.
Running short on time? Check out the 90-second preview here:
Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Bacon Cookies-Recipe STEP 1: Heat oven to 375 1/4 C. Maple syrup 5-7 pieces of bacon *Put bacon in a bowl and pour syrup over to coat it well *Place bacon on parchment lined cookie sheet *Bake bacon for 20-25 mins and let cool STEP 2: 3 C Almond Flour 1 Tsp baking soda 1 Tsp salt *mix dry ingredients STEP 3: 2 Eggs 1 Tsp vanilla 1/2 C maple syrup *mix into dry ingredients ** add 1/2 C Coconut oil (melted) to the dry/wet ingredients STEP 4: 1 1/2 C choc chips - your choice 5-7 Pieces of bacon crumbled *stir into cookie dough STEP 5: Bake 350 12-15 mins Drop cookies by spoonful onto parchment lined paper