31 October 2009

NYT: Death of Marathon Runner

I'm not a supporter of LSD on concrete because I feel the body isn't designed to do it. Evolution and shoe design have yet to catch up with our paved world, which has blossomed very recently in the history of our organism.

There are anomalies in our species who seem better adapted to running long distances, but if you think the loss of mobility and joint integrity NFL vets face at a young age is bad, let's wait and see how today's crop of ultra runners fair two decades from now. My guess: they will have serious problems with their feet, ankles, knees, hips, and backs.

When you have your toe nails surgically removed to deal with the exegencies of ultra running, it may be time to rethink your athletic passion.

I digress. This is a bummer for this guy and his family.

Drill it.
Http://mobile.nytimes.com/article?a=480963&single=1&f=19

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29 October 2009

LA road-rage defendent says he stopped to try to take a picture - VeloNews

Boo hoo for the poor doctor. Given that once he passed the cyclists he claims he stopped to take a photo, why didn't he drive farther down the canyon to one of the 4-way stops, turn off and wait where he could have a safe, clear line of sight?

God willing, the fact that he's rich and was able to hire some expensive fuckhead criminal defense attorney won't let him skate away from this. Hopefully he'll lose his medical license and spend the next 5 years facedown in a pillow crying while his cellmate does work.

Thank you, VeloNews, this is the most important thing you've covered in years.

http://mobile.velonews.com/article/99655

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27 October 2009

WOD 10-26-09: Hang In There

Overdid it on the bike this weekend. Oh well, it was sunny and it was well worth it. Today, then, is a day of rest.

Even god took one once a week while creating the world, so don't feel ashamed when you have to. Rest, eat right, stretch, and hang in there. Fitness is training dose + recovery. Don't neglect the second part of the equation. And get to know your body well enough and you too can have the joy of overindulging when the sun shines in late October and you know you can recover on a less tempting day.

Drill it.
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The west coast is the best coast

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26 October 2009

WOD 10-26-09: ESCHATON

3 hours(2.5 hour mtb ride w/intervals and BW fun, .5 hrs urban hiking in the hood) 

RIDE BETA
If you don't get out and take advantage of the days like we had in the Bay Area on Sunday. 75, sunny, legwarmers required for the Golden Gate Bridge crossing, as usual, but otherwise spectacular and nothing wrong with riding through a Princess Mononoke mist over one of the coolest visual landmarks in America. Just another day in the saddle. I hit it hard, hard, hard all week and on Saturday as well leaving me a bit shattered on Sunday.

The legs said no and rest was probably in order, but there's no way I was passing up riding on a day like this. That's the beauty of knowing your body inside out—I knew pushing it today would be pushing myself to the brink of overtraining, but I also knew just how hard I could go, what I could and couldn't do if I didn't want to spend the next three days being incapable of doing any physical activity except napping and shoveling food in my face. 

Got out and spent the first 40 minutes of the ride spinning at a high cadence very easy with my bro and L. MIN 40: stopped at pull-up bar/rings at Crissy field and knocked out 35 pull-ups, 35 push-ups in two sets. 

From there, back on bike, headed towards Golden Gate bridge. Quick 2-minute power climb up to the Bridge, then headed over to Marin and the climb up into Golden Gate Park. 

Got passed by one of the innumerable Cat. IV going pro roadies on the bridge, let him get a 20 meter gap, then spent the rest of the trip over the bridge attacking towards him, drifting back, repeating, to turn the 10 min. ride into a nice, hard interval session with steady LT and brief high cadence bursts to VO2 max for attacks, half dozen in total. 

THEN: 8 min.standing high rpm LT climb up GGNP climb towards ridge where I access dirt. The highlight of this climb was starting just in front of a pair of dead serious cyclocross riders on $5,000 bikes who charged past me shortly after I took off.

I was pretty gassed from yesterday and did I mention I was carrying a 20-pound load in my backpack? I'm pretty serious about being prepared for anything on a ride these days following a near death experience in Colorado a few weeks back when I got caught out on a ride without the proper kit (not my fault, I swear). Now I make sure that whatever happens, including totally unexpected weather or getting hurt and having to take care of myself while immobile, I have what I need in the magic bag. The prostate probably doesn't love it—weak stream y'all—but it does make every inch of a ride that much harder. 

Suzie Creamcheese and Lance Romance roll past on their badass cx rigs with road wheels/tires and start hauling ass up the climb. Rather than doing structured intervals today, I was up for a more stochastic, uncontrolled experience (in that I selected other riders to chase and use as interval markers rather than saying 'ok I'm going to ride up and down this hill for x number of minutes x number of times—as we all know, it takes a huge mental adjustment to get used to the discomfort of someone else taking a switch to your ass and lighting it up in front of you on the road versus dictating your own pace. It's always harder when someone else is calling the shots, and that's how it goes in every competitive scenario whether it's on a group ride, in a race, on a century, whatever. You don't decide when things get hard. Your environment, the riders around you, tactical considerations, etc. dictate when you have to dig deep—you yourself rarely do. It's one thing to develop an engine that can go full blast for long periods of time whether in 1st gear or 5th, but it's another thing entirely to put that engine into action in a dynamic scenario and to have the fortitude to erase the suffering-induced mental block you will definitely encounter when you're not at the controls of the Stanley Milgram pain dial and it's the guy in the next room/up the road giving you the electro shock, you know). 

I was having difficulty generating much power and was pretty much at my limit as far as a sustainable pace for this particular climb, but I said, ah, fuck it, it'll make me tougher and I'll get a more effective ride in if I suck it up and try to stick it to these skinny-tired mofos. So that's what I did.

I slowly cranked up to my maximum sustainable LT seated pace, then when I got within five feet of them soft pedaled a few strokes before blasting past them in a burst that didn't take me to my limit but allowed me to put some distance into them.

Once I came around them, I kept my pace as high as I could and stuck there until I was about 300 meters from the top of the climb when I got out of the saddle and started hauling ass, finishing at the top in a complete VO2 max-level effort, just the icing that really will make your fitness cake taste that much better when it's time to really use it. 

Over the top, I caught my breath then bombed (well, slowly picked) my way down a dirt trail into the valley on the other side with views that never disappoint. So nice to get off road, but it's taking a minute to get the dirt skills dialed back in. Also, I like to pump up to about 50 psi for the ride through the city, over the bridge and into Marin, and I don't necessarily want to have to reinflate using a frickin' mini pump later in the ride, so I try to just make due with 50 psi and the minimal tread on my MTB tires once I hit dirt. Sketchy, but it will make it that much easier when I'm in a real dirt scenario, can deflate down to 35 or so psi, what I'd normally ride off road. 

Lance Romance stuck with me on the descent for a while, impressive on a cx bike, then I hit the turbo boost and he disappeared. 

At the bottom, immediately looped around then grabbed a nice, very hard 15 minute climb back up the dirt and over the spur.

Did another interval over the bridge then stopped again at Crissy Field pull-up bar for more BW work.

Did:
15 pull-ups
15 push-ups
10 pull-ups10 push-ups
Then 50 hanging leg raises w/alternating sets of 10 normal hanging leg raises, 5 rolling inverted leg raises (ouch). 
After that, soft pedaled it back to HQ, then did some urban hiking and ran errands for 30. 

Training is where you find it.

Drill it.
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24 October 2009

WOD 10 24 09: SKYWALKER

3 hrs total

2 hour mtb/fst and intrvls as follows'ish:

10 min warmup
55 pushups/55 pullups
(In sets of 15/10)

THEN the following fun mixed into remainder of ride:
1 min vo2 max standing climbing high cadence intrvl
1 min rec
3 min stand LT intrvl, seated high cadence
2 min rcvry
8 min seated LT high cadence intrvl
3 min rec
9 min standing climb LT high cadence intrvl w/100 meter VO2 max sprint at top of climb
5 min dirt descent
10 min seated high cadence LT climb dirt intrvl
5 min rec spin downhill
8 min LT seated high cadence intrvl
8 min tempo rcvry spin
45 pushups, 45 pullups (sets of 15)
5 min ez spin
10 pushups, 10 pullups
Back to hq w:
3 x 15 second vo2 max high cadence climb bursts

Then: 1 hour ez riding for work transport.

Drill it.

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Berkeley WOD- 9-23-09 THE NEW HOUSE OF PAIN

9 am-Run/Ride 

3.5 miles (mostly flat)

hop on bike 

30+ miles (mostly hills)

 2hours 17min


8pm-fst

max reps bench at 135# 
+
max reps pull ups

3 rounds @ 2 min recovery (no recovery between bench and pull)

then 

10 x box hop cherpees at 1' box (do a burpee-jump on the box-jump to the pullup bar-do a pull up)
+
TABATA sit ups for 2 min

4 rounds 

then 

10 leg raises 
+
TABATA pushups for 1 min 
+
1min of plank 

4 rounds 

 



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23 October 2009

Berkeley WOD 10-22-09: GOT HOPS?

Ride-130 pm 1hour
 8 min warm up (riding to base of climb in traffic)
then 
3 x 2.5min intervals at LT with 1.5min active recovery (continuous climbing) 
1 x 3.5min interval at LT with 1.5min active recovery 
repeat sequence twice before descending 

FST-8:30 pm 45min

10xDL @ 160+
25x box jump @ 2'
3 rounds for time
(3min 19sec)

then 
12x burpee (with a 1' jump at the top)
12x pullup
10 rounds for time 
(17min 48sec, PR)

then
10-1
Knee to Elbow +
GHD sit up 

then 
5 min of planks 


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22 October 2009

'I want to teach them a lesson." — Road rage trial resumes. - VeloNews

I used to climb this road all the time, this asshole belongs in jail:

http://mobile.velonews.com/article/99513

Thank you VeloNews for providing coverage. Just wish you'd do your writers right and byline online content. They do great work and deserve the credit.
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20 October 2009

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WOD 10-19-09: HARDEN THE FUCK UP

2 hrs. total (WOD: 1 hr 25 min. + 35 min. urban hiking)

 

It rained a bit in SF yesterday. Since I’m a candy ass and made of sugar, I briefly feared I would melt in the rain. It can be de-motivating to deal with weather when you train outside. Or an opportunity to harden the fuck up and get shit done anyway. My polysaccharide corpus notwithstanding, I opted for the latter, hitting this WOD circa 7 p.m. after dark while the ground was still wet.

 

Eased into it with slow tempo on the first 6 exercises in the circuit to see if my body would give a harder workout the thumbs up. Things seemed to coalesce appropriately, so after those first six, I started hammering through the rest of the WOD. It was a good one. Give it a shot. Really. And write it you try it, I’d like to hear how it went for you.

 

WU: 5 min. walk to park w/45 lb. pack

 

Circuit the following, 20 reps per exercise (per side if single sided)

 

-TRX postural squat

-TRX low back

-TRX power pull (L and R)

-TRX SA row/rotation (L and R)

-Lateral sumo squat (L and R)

-High kicks over rope (L and R)

-TRX pike

-TRX piked pendulum (40 reps total)

-TRX reaching V-sit

-TRX suspended oblique crunch (L and R)

-TRX alternating hamstring bicycle (40 reps total)

-TRX hip press

-TRX windshield wiper (L and R)

-TRX leg raise

-TRX sit-up

-TRX kneeling roll out

-TRX postural squat

-TRX low back

-TRX alternating hamstring bicycle (40 reps total)

-TRX hip press

 

THEN:

-55 pull-ups, 55-push-ups

-TRX shoulder complex/5 reps/ex (T, I, Y, A)

-TRX SA curls 5 reps/side

-TRX high curl 10 reps

-TRX reverse high curl 10 reps

-TRX tri extension 10 reps

-TRX shoulder complex/5 reps/ex (T, I, Y, A)

-TRX SA curls 5 reps/side

-TRX high curl 10 reps

-TRX reverse high curl 10 reps

-TRX tri extension 10 reps

 

Cooldown: 5 min. walk home w/45 lb. pack

 

Drill it.

 

 

 

WOD 10-18-09: BLOWOUT

2 hrs total (1 hr. 20 min. walking 2 x 20 min. traffic riding aka intervals)

 

“You’ve gotta know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em,” know when to do kipping pull-ups, know when to run.

 

And know when to lay off and dial the intensity and duration of your workouts, too.

 

When your body says, hey, stop, it’s time to recover, listen, or I guaran-fuckin-tee you’ll end up sick, injured, overtrained, demotivated, depressed, or all of the above at once.

 

Then you’ll have to take more time off to get well again and let your body heal before you can get back at it.

 

I’ve been slowly ramping up the intensity of my workouts the past month, post move. It’s demotivating to step into a WOD or interval session and think about how much ‘better’ you used to be at whatever modality you happen to be trying to execute that day.

 

But if you try to push past that, you’re on a road to nowhere.

 

This Sunday was one of those days for me where I had the mental willingness to get out there and go on a long-ass mountain bike ride and enjoy the clean air and views up here in the Bay Area.

 

But after spending 5 hours training Saturday and half a dozen more on my feet for work, much of it ambulating nonstop, I was totally blown. Ten hours of sleep later (an absolute rarity for me), I woke up on Sunday in the mindset to get out and enjoy the day, but the body Just Said No.

 

Hard as it was, I limited myself to about 1 hr. 20 min. of walking for errands and 2 x 20 min. of riding in traffic for transport. Due to my route choice—it sucked, I don’t know what roads are ‘safe’ to ride on up here in the city yet—I ended up doing about 30 intervals restarting from stoplights, dodging cars trying to merge onto the freeway on ramp (in my path) and other fun stuff. Keeps the heart rate up, riding in the city.

 

Was I stoked to pass up a day of riding? No. It sucked. But I also know that if I’d pushed it, I would’ve gone beyond what I feasibly should have been doing and put myself in a state that would’ve taken three to four days of rest to recover from.

 

Know thyself, know thy body, know thy mind and thou shalt be free.

 

Drill it.

 

 

 

19 October 2009

WOD 10-17-09: DIRTY AT LAST

5 hrs. total (2.5 hrs mtb, 2.5 hrs urban hiking)

 

MTB:

Met the immortal Eric Doyne at Golden Gate bridge, rode over into GG National Park and was introduced to the local dirt. Will be perfect training ground when I find time to squeeze this one in, opps for road and off road climbing intervals and skills work galore.


Bagged 2400’ vert, drilled it back home.


Then opted to walk to afternoon gig, 3 miles there, 3 miles back, aggressively, to get in some extra aerobic base work. About 300’ vert on way back after being on feet all night for work. Good challenge, particularly after the MTB ride in the am.

 

Training is where you find it.


Drill it.

 

 

WOD 10-16-09: AV/TV pt. 3

WU: 5 min. Farmer’s carried 25 lbs. on one side, 15 lbs. on other side + pack w/kit

 

med ball circuit

(chest pass, lat pass on each side; 3 ex. Total, 5 reps per ex/side)

2 circuits of the following, 10 reps per ex/side:

PU BAR:
-pull up
-bodyweight rows

BW:
-mt climber (20 total, 10 per leg)
-burpees
-push-up (plyo)

PU BAR:
-hanging leg raise
-knee to elbow
-windshield wiper

BW:
-mt climber
-burpees
-T push-up

 

med ball circuit

med ball circuit

(chest pass, lat pass on each side; 3 ex. Total, 5 reps per ex/side)

 

+ xtra pull-ups for a total of 110 pull-ups, 110 push-ups.

 

Farmer’s carried 25 lbs. on one side, 15 lbs. on other side + pack home.

 

Walked an extra hour doing errands, etc.

 

Drill it. Even while walking ;)

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WOD 10-15-09: GOING UP, PAINFULLY

2 hours (1 hr 10 min. bike, 50 min. walking)

 

Second day of on-bike intervals in two weeks (not counting cruising around the city, which requires high intensity intervals every time you have to take off from a stoplight, which inevitably turns out to be a dozen or more times per ride.)

 

Felt better than last week today and took the single speed road bike out to the Presidio for another fun session.

 

I targeted the same intensities on my on-bike intervals this week—roughly LT with VO2 max intensity at end of each interval—but mixed up the combination of standing/seated, flat/climbing, and the duration of the intervals.

 

If I were a professional cyclist, I’d spend a few weeks building from 6 minute to 12 minute LT intervals x 5 sets, but I’m not and I don’t have time to do that. Instead I’m focusing on building my anerobic energy system with these in order to boost both my anerobic and aerobic capacity as well as focusing on form and joint integrity—all important things for the circumstances I sometimes find myself in through my professional career (not being a pro bike racer).

 

Today’s protocol:

 

5 x 2 min standing climbing LT (strength, power emphasis) w/recovery lasting just the duration of the descent. Ideally, I would’ve kept these as 2:1 work/rest intervals but traffic and road surface issues/construction plates meant that the recovery intervals ended up being about 1.5 minutes. Every one of these hurt, bad and the steepest pitch of the climb was at the top of the stretch of road I’d selected. That meant they hurt the worst at the very end of each interval. My legs and lungs felt like they were going to explode, and being on a single speed meant I had no option but to pull on the bars until I thought I might tear them off the bike and sheer the head tube off. Just as I advised last week, I made a conscious effort to remind myself I was experiencing discomfort, not pain, and tried to relax my breathing and not add any discomfort than my body was generating on its own. Not an easy trick, but one that DOES get easier every time you practice it. So do.

 

5 x 3 min seated high cadence LT on flats (musc endur, pedaling technique, aero position emphasis): These felt good, much better than the climbing intervals, probably because while they required an intense LT level effort from heart/lungs, the legs weren’t as overly taxed by the low cadence pedaling required to muscle up the hill on the single speed. I was surprised by how well I was able to pace these and maintain intensity given that I’ve done zero flat ground LT intervals in about two months. So there’s some fitness there, good to know.

 

Rode home, then walked another 50 minutes on the hills around where I live in order to run errands, get food, etc.

 

 

 

WOD 10-14-09: AV/TV pt. 2

TOTAL: 1 hr, 30 minutes.

 

Circuit training: 50 minutes:

 

WU:

5 min. walk w/40 lbs in pack, farmer’s carry 25 lbs + on way to WOD :30 burpees, :30 mt climbers

 

THEN:

20-1 PU/PU (110 push-ups, 110 pull-ups total)

 

THEN, 2 continuous circuits of following, 10 reps per exercise/side:

SL DL
Tuck jumps

Loaded SA row (w/40 lb pack)
TRX Ham
TRX Hip
Frt squat (w/25 lb med ball held overhead)

Loaded sa chest press (w/40 lb pack)

Loaded lat lunge (w/25 lb med ball held in zircher position)

Loaded xover lunge (w/25 lb med ball press at bottom of each lunge)

 

Farmer’s carried 25 lbs home, 5 min.

 

Later, 30 min. walk w/300 feet vert.

 

Don’t underestimate the power of walking. Safer than running, easy to do anywhere, great way to build your aerobic base with minimal tissue damage. The more you do it, the higher you’ll be able to take the intenisty in your HIIT.

 

Wherever you are, whatever your circumstances, get out there and Drill It.

 

WOD 10-13-09: GETTING FRANKELED

50 minutes. Ouch.

 

Took class at TRX Training Center helmed by the mighty Chris Frankel. Ouch. Hell of a class. If you’re in the SF Bay Area, drop into the TRX Training Center, check schedule here: http://www.trxtrainingcenter.com/. Well worth a visit, picked up five pieces of information in a single class that I’m already using in programming my own training.

 

Drill it!

 

WOD 10-12-09: MIGHT AS WELL JUMP

10-12-09 WOD

80 push-ups, 80 pull-ups in sets of 15/5 (do one set to start, then do another set after every 3 TRX exercises in the circuit below)

 

THEN: the following as continuous circuit 1 x, 20

TRX Core A and B

+

TRX Post squat

TRX SA Row

TRX SA Chest Press

 

 

17 October 2009

WOD 10-17-09: arise

3.5 hrs total
-2.5 hour mtb ride
-1 hour urban hike

Doyne, shepherd of the Marin headlands, we sing your praise.

Drill it.
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This is What You Train For

Thanks Doyne!
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12 October 2009

09 October 2009

IMG00079-20091007-1254.jpg

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Zero Process Loss

What are you doing on the way to your workout?

If. You're driving your wasting time. In fact if you're doing anything other than physical activity that gets you to your wod spot or is part of your warmup or wod you're wasting time.

Walk. Ride a bike. If you have to go to a gym to access olympic lifting platforms or barbells use human power to get yourself there.

We walk or ride to our wod's and recently we've started doing farmer's walks the entire way there. We toss a med ball, kb, and whatever else is handy in old, sturdy canvas bags we got for free and simply switch the weighted bag from hand to hand every half block or so.

If the whole point of doing this stuff is to more fully actualize your potential as a human machine and to expand your mind, then get off your ass and move when it's go time.

On another note big ups to TV for increasing his single set pull-up max reps by 100% in two days and for destroying today's wod, leaving me gasping for air and dragging ass 4 full minutes behind his wod time. Well done.
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10-9-09 WOD: TURN AND BURN

42 min. total
5 min. w/u, then:

CIRCUIT THE FOLLOWING, IN ORDER, 2 sets x 10 reps per ex/side:
-2 x 10
-Pull ups
-Push ups
-box jumps
-Trx pike
-Sa push press
-Med ball slam
-Trx chst press
-Frnt squt
-Jump squat
-Burpee
-Trx row
-Mt climber
-Kb ovrhd swing
-Lat bounding

07 October 2009

WOD 10 5 09: BALLBREAKER

1 hr. 10 min. total

Warmup:
-20 min. spin, not as easy as I would have liked because I rode across San Francisco in rush hour traffic to get to the target  training spot for the day.

30 min.:
3 x 5 min. LT hill climb intervals (hardest pace you can sustain for 20 minutes without stopping or varying your effort) w/5 min. recovery after each interval.
protocol:
INTERVAL 1: seated, high cadence, LT
INTERVAL 2: standing, high cadence, LT
INTERVAL 3: seated, biggest gear on bike, LT

20 min.: ride home, tempo pace, in traffic with many dead stop/starts at stoplights (these count as micro intervals, very similar to what you would do if doing all-out sprint intervals from a dead stop except you only ramp up your speed to the maximum speed you can sustain in traffic rather than an all-out, tossing the bike from side to side sprint. That just wouldn't be a great idea with cars inches from your shoulder whizzing past in an iPhone/Blackberry/what's for dinner haze. . .).

NOTES:
Every workout you do should have a purpose. Every interval should have a purpose. You should think through what you're going to do and why you're going to do it ahead of time. Otherwise you're just wasting your time and putting yourself through a lot of pain--and getting 'more fit' in the process, but 'more fit' for what?

To give you a glimpse into how I figure out what I might be doing on any given training day, here's how I decided to do today's workout, why I did it, and the specific objectives I hoped to achieve. I share this information because 'training' should not be a passive, robotic activity where you simply follow a workout protocol someone else writes down for you and tells you will work.

If you want to get the most from the time you spend tuning your body and mind, you must have a purpose. That purpose could be something as simple as 'I want to have more energy so I can more fully enjoy the time I get to spend doing my sport on the weekend.' Or, 'I no longer want to be out of breath when I play with my kids after work and I'm just not ready to fork over $50,000 for the gastric bypass just yet.' Or, 'My job puts me in situations where I better be incredibly fit or I'm going to embarrass myself, get my ass handed to me, and fail to achieve the objectives I was given by my employers.' Or, 'I'm tired of feeling like a fatass.' Or, 'I don't want my knees to hurt anymore and I know these exercises will help me to strengthen my ligature and the muscles that support my knee, hips, and lower back and will thereby help me to holistically correct the problem without surgery or amputation.' Or, well you get the point.

Sometimes you don't know what you're training for--i.e., you don't have a super specific event, race, date that you're targeting, but you know that you are building the physical and mental capacity to perform in a situation you may find yourself in in the future, perhaps a survival situation. That's a great reason to train, too.

The word 'train' implies rehearsal and preparation. If you're just going out there and destroying yourself every day with no objective in mind, no matter how small, you're wasting your time, guaranteeing you won't be engaged and mindful when you're performing the intervals or exercises you have chosen or had prescribed for you, and you'll more likely than not end up getting hurt. Even if you work with a personal trainer or take classes, the onus of responsibility for training safely and mindfully is still on your shoulders. When you hand over a check to Lance Romance at the gym to yell at you while you're sweating on a swiss ball, that doesn't mean you abdicate responsibility for your body and mind.

Lance might help direct your thoughts and motion, but make sure you're on board, engaged, mindful, aware, and tuned in to what you're experiencing. For example, what most people perceive as 'pain' while exercising or training is actually just mental and physical discomfort that is occurring within a totally safe range of mental/physical motion. It might not feel good, but that doesn't mean you're in pain. Pain is what you experience when you have physically injured your body, i.e. a sprain, tear, etc. Most of what you experience while exercising/training is simply discomfort. It feels different than your normal state at rest, your lungs burn, your muscles hurt, you may not even be able to listen to music or have anything touching your face because your discomfort is so great.

 But that doesn't mean you're in pain. Pain is a torn meniscus. Pain is smacking your head into pavement at 30 miles-per-hour. Pain is a gash in your arm that requires stitches. Pain is getting suckerpunched in the face. Breathing hard while exercising and experiencing soreness? That's just discomfort. The sooner you accept that discomfort, the more comfortable you become in that uncomfortable space, the stronger, fitter, and faster you will become.

To loop back to the impetus for my workout today: II haven't gotten out to do climbing intervals in quite some time, been busy moving to a new city, getting oriented, lifting and moving heavy, awkward objects, working. All the usual 'training' disruptions we all have to deal with.

I've spent a great deal of time walking here in San Francisco, usually about an hour a day just to get around, go to the grocery store, etc., often up and down mongo hills that encompass several hundred vertical feet of ascent and descent. So my aerobic base has probably increased through sheer utilitarian movement.

As you've seen in recent WOD's, I've also found a number of places to do functional strength training for endurance sports near the new HQ. As usual, playground equipment at a nearby park, in my case two blocks away, has served as the perfect training environment. With the addition of a few basic training implements like a TRX, a length of rope and sometimes a med ball, all of which I stuff in an Osprey backpacking pack and carry with me to the playground, I have everything I need to workout anywhere, any time. I guarantee you could drop me into the middle of any podunk town in the middle of Nebraska or into the heart of any major metro area in the US or around the world and I could find somewhere to train within ten minutes. So don't think you need to find a real pull-up bar, gym, Olympic lifting platorm or whatever in order to train. You can train anywhere.

In the middle of all of the life/location changes I've experienced recently, I've made a point of hitting FST sessions at least three times per week + all of the utilitarian walking and cycling for transport that I've been doing. Why? I know my body and I know that getting in three FST sessions per week plus the aerobic base building the other activities I've done just to get around ensure that I have a pretty solid base after 20 years straight of training every day.

But as I planned for this workout, I knew that I needed to start tuning the top end of my fitness again lest I lose it for the time being which would mean I would have to spend even more time down the road trying to regain my anerobic capacity if I continued to not make time to train it.

I had planned to take an easy spin over to the climb I had in mind for my intervals today, but San Francisco traffic meant that wasn't an option. I had to cut and scratch like a DJ to weave my way around cars, make it through lights, start from red's, and stay alive. So I'd gotten in a bit more intensity than I would have preferred prior to the intervals and a little less time warming up my joints and getting them lubricated with very easy spinning than I would have liked. Such are the vicissitudes of life. Plan for perfection but adapt and learn to run and gun or the paradox of choice will paralyze you and you'll end up watching Teletubby reruns and sucking your thumb whining about how conditions weren't right for the super duper workout you had the best intentions of completing but never got off the couch to do.

Once I got to my location, I surveyed several probable hills before settling on my climb/route. I took into account auto and pedestrian traffic, road surface, construction, etc. before settling on my specific route.

Sometimes I'll do repeats of the same interval at the same intensity over and over to target a specific energy system. But that's not where my body or training are at at the moment. Instead I elected to do three discrete intervals, all of the same length, but each with a specific purpose. I performed all in my LT heart rate/power zone because that's the energy system I intended to target today, but I did each using a different cadence and style of motion for the following reasons:

INTERVAL ONE:
-seated, high cadence
WHY? To prime the seated, high cadence motor pattern that I typically use for most of my high intensity climbing, a motor pattern I haven't had the opportunity to rehearse since my 9 hour death ride in a snowstorm a few weeks back.

INTERVAL TWO:
-standing, high cadence
WHY? To rehease/prime body for more high cadence, out of the saddle LT climbing in the future. A necessary skill for ascending super steep gradients, for keeping up on group rides, and for racing.

INTERVAL THREE
-seated, low cadence
WHY? This is similar to weight lifting on a bike. Every pull of the bars felt like rowing my entire body weight, and that's the level of force it required to turn my biggest gear while going up this hill, which featured a number of very, very severe gradients. I find that this style of climbing helps me avoid injury and prepares my ligature for higher intensity, all-out sprints and other intervals I'll be doing as part of my workouts in the coming weeks. But as I started this interval, and throughout, I was acutely attuned to my knees, my other joints and the manner in which I applied force to the pedals and bars. Do this type of interval wrong, and you can blow your knee out. Do it at the wrong point in your training cycle when your body isn't ready for it and you can blow your knee out. Or you can find yourself tweaking out your movement to generate more force and end up injuring your hips, shoulders, elbows, or ankles. By the end of this interval I felt like I'd just done 100 chirpees and nearly loaded my pants at the top of the climb it was so difficult. But I didn't injure myself and I did it safely. I was just experiencing discomfort, not pain.

That's a bit of a glimpse into what goes through my head when I plan and execute the pithy lists of exercises you see posted here daily. When you see those lists, feel free to give the workouts a shot, but I encourage you to start thinking more about what you're doing and why your'e doing it. When you're training, don't let your focus deviate from monitoring your movement for a moment. Over time you will learn how something is supposed to feel when you perform it properly. It's the difference between striking a golf ball improperly and feeling a stinger run up your forearm versus striking it perfectly, hearing a thunk ans watching your motion converted into an epic drive that lands on the green.

Whatever you do, do it mindfully, become comfortable with discomfort and know that by doing so you're making your body and mind stronger for whatever endeavor it is that floats your boat.

Drill it.


www.andrewvontz.com
www.drillit.tv
@vontz

05 October 2009

WOD 10-6-09: AV/TV

43 minutes total:
w/u: 5 minute walk

30 min. total for following:
circuit:
10 pull-ups
5/side (both sides) SA/SL deadlift/side w/25 lb med ball
15 x TRX pike
5/side (both sides) high hurdler lateral kicks

10 pull-ups
5/side (both sides) SA/SL deadlift/side w/25 lb med ball
15/side x TRX oblique crunch
5/side (both sides) high hurdler lateral kicks

5/side (both sides) SA/SL deadlift/side w/25 lb med ball
15/side x TRX rotating side plank
5/side (both sides) high hurdler lateral kicks/lateral sumo squat under

20 pull-ups
20 push-ups
15 x TRX leg raise
5/side (both sides) SA/SL deadlift/side w/25 lb med ball
20 pull-ups
20 push-ups

walk back to HQ.

Drill it.

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@vontz

WOD 10 2 09: Friday Night Light Brights

2 hrs ttl
Executed clandestinely under the cover of darkness.

W/u: 30 min.: nordic walk w 35 lbs in pack, many hills

(45 min for following):
Then circuit following in order:
20 pull-ups
20 push-ups
Trx core A

20 pull-ups
20 push-ups
Trx core B

20 pull-ups
20 push-ups
Trx deep row w pack
Trx deep chest press w pack
Trx curl
Trx post squat

10 pull-ups
10 push-ups

Walk 1 hr on steep hills (unloaded)

Total: 2 hrs 15 min
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01 October 2009

WOD 9-30-09: Wilma's Rainbow

-15 min w/u on bike
-10-1 push-up/pull-up

Then circuit the following:
-30 reps SL deadlift w/12 lb med ball per side in alternating sets x 5 per side
-30 reps 12 lb med ball overhead slams in sets of 10
-30 reps hanging windshield wiper/side in sets of 20 (3 sets total, 30 reps per side/60 reps total

Drill it.
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