Mid-Week Partner Party

Now that we’ve broken the “Saturday Seal” of sorts with lighter reps the loading builds a little through the middle of the week, and you’ll see an even heavier day on Thursday.

But first some mid-week partner fun with a medium-longish piece to follow Tuesday’s sprint-like intervals. Enjoy!

WOD For 05-22-19:

With a Partner, 4 Rounds For Time:

30 Walking Lunges EACH (done simultaneously for 60 total reps)

30 Hang Power Cleans @ 165/115 lbs SHARED

20 Push Jerks SHARED

1 MINUTE FORCED REST

*Walking Lunges are performed SIMULTANEOUSLY (i.e. partners move together, but synchronized is not required) and Hang Power Cleans cannot start until both parters are done with 30 lunges each.

*Hang Power Cleans & Push Jerks are shared with only one partner working at a time (reps do NOT have to be split exactly even).

Jenny Morgan
It Had To Be Done

3 days out from our Saturday leg assault and we’re going back below parallel with some lighter loading. And believe it or not the overhead squats will also help with that pec tightness/soreness from Monday’s push-up volume.

Plus it’s a helluva workout so just get in here and get after it… we are a frequently snatching gym after all!

WOD For 05-21-19:

Every 90 Seconds For 8 Rounds (12 Minutes):

2 Power Snatches + 1 Overhead Squat + 1 Squat Snatch

-then-

4 Cycles of 2:00 Work / 2:00 Rest:

25 AbMat Sit-ups

50 Double Unders

MAX REPS Overhead Squats @ 95/65 lbs

*Score = total number of overhead squat reps OR stop when you reach 75 reps (and note the cycle and time remaining)

Jenny Morgan
Welp, There You Have It

Welp, if you felt like you were being rushed on Sunday evening to get all the storylines neatly wrapped-up then here’s a Monday WOD that should feel a little less rushed.

Who signs these petitions anyhow? LOL…

WOD For 05-20-19:

“The Petition: A Season 8 Remake”

4 Rounds For Time:

20 Pull-ups

30 KB Swings @ 53/35 lbs

40 Push-ups

50m Row or Ski

Jenny Morgan
AR Community Day: Sunday, June 23

Come and join us for our Arena Ready Community Day on Sunday, June 23rd from 9:00am to 1:00pm. We’ll have several cool things going on at the gym so make sure to stop by and hang out!

BodySpec DXA Scans

BodySpec will be on site and available for DXA scans — you can schedule your appointment here (book early since this is open to everyone, not just AR members!).

From BodySpec…

A BodySpec DXA scan (also known as a DEXA scan) is a simple, 10-minute body fat test that takes a comprehensive snapshot of your exact breakdown of bone, fat tissue, and muscle mass. The DXA scan is the most accurate and precise body fat test available.

DXA stands for dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry. Our DXA scans are performed using the same medical-grade machine used by hospitals, universities, and professional athletic facilities. The DXA uses very weak x-ray beams to detect the composition of each square inch of your body. These results are interpreted and aggregated to give you not only a total body fat percentage, but also complete visualization and analysis of your lean tissue and bone density.

Why get a DXA scan?

A DXA scan answers the question, What are you made of? Knowing your body composition gives you the information you need to:

  • Understand your body's individual needs, strengths and weaknesses with respect to training, diet, and overall health

  • Visualize and pinpoint the exact impact of a new training or diet plan down to exact muscle gains and fat loss in specific areas of the body

  • Make decisions about adjusting and optimizing your program to suit your body's specific responses

  • Compare your bone health to others of your age, gender and ethnicity

  • Identify personal long-term health risks

Vuori Clothing Trunk Show

You may have seen some of Vuori’s cool fits on a few of our athletes and coaches, and we really dig this California-based brand. The good folks at Vuori will be at Arena Ready with a bunch of great pieces for our community to check out, try on, and (if the mood strikes you) buy so you look fly.

Vuori_Store.jpg

(Image courtesy of Vuori)

Snacks, Drinks + More

We’ll have some noms on hand and tasty beverages for our people so that you can much, hang out, and enjoy the start of your weekend among friends old and new. More info to come on other things planned for the day… stay tuned!

WOD For 05-18-19:

With a Partner For Time:

1000m Med Ball Run @ 20/14 lbs (TOGETHER)

… THEN, SPLIT THE FOLLOWING…

200 Wall Balls @ 20/14 lbs to 10/9 ft

50 Single Dumbbell Snatches @ 50/35 lbs (alternate sides)

50 Toes-to-Bar

50 Single Dumbbell Forward Lungesters @ 50/35 lbs (alternate sides)

50 Lateral Burpees Over the Dumbbell

*Partners run together and can switch who holds the med ball at anytime (yes, there is a contingency for rain)

*Wall balls can start once the fastest partner is in the gym, assuming the ball has also traveled 1000m

*After the run only one partner working at a time, switch whenever you like 

*ONE rep of "Single DB Forward Lungester" is:

-Hang Power Clean

-Lunge RIGHT then LEFT (stepping forward)

-Thruster

Jenny Morgan
Friday "Practice"

If this WOD looks familiar it’s because we did the same format last month but with power snatches — so you’re memory serves you correctly. And since (thanks to an awesome friend and his thoughtful wife) I got to watch the Warriors playoff game live on Thursday evening, I’m re-posting the somewhat-basketball-themed post we published last month when this WOD format last appeared on the docket…

Friday's "for completion & quality" WOD reminds me of an old post post…  

As we (the coaches) watch most athletes actually do the two exercises for quality and with position, technique, and balance in mind we think to ourselves "yup, that's gonna transfer over eventually to bigger numbers or bigger sets if they just keep on doing that."  By contrast, the few who load up, go through the motions without much intent or mindfulness, and struggle-bus through the exercises will likely spend time re-enforcing existing bad habits (sadly).  

Of course there's a time and place to go fast & hard and to push the limits.  But when we're tying to develop movement patterns and fix or improve technique, that has to be done at sub-maximal loads… and with un-timed sets or progressions.  Through practice.

Number of times AI says the word "practice" in this video... twenty-five.

John Welbourn once told me, "when the bullets start flying EVERYONE drops to their level of training."  

Another way of saying this is "when the clock starts running or the weights get heavy, the body gets tired, and the fight or flight response kicks in, every athlete starts moving the way they always move... in training... in warm-ups... in PRACTICE... in everyday life."  No one ever starts "rising to the occasion" and miraculously looking perfect, as if all they ever needed to move well was simply the pressure of intensity and/or heavier loads.

In tens of thousands of hours of coaching I can tell you that this is one of the truest concepts of training.  We see it all the time, day after day.  The athlete who moves well in warm-ups, and has put the work in on doing just that, generally moves well in workouts, in strength sessions, and in competition (even if that "competition" is simply life).  The lifter who looks sharp and precise with the empty bar usually looks pretty damn good with heavy loads.  Alternatively, the guy or gal who consistently goes through the motions and lazily moves their body until things get heavy or hard usually has a tough time holding position when things become just that... heavy or hard.  Sometimes said athlete thinks, "well the people who look good in warm-ups and with low weights are just lucky... they're born that way and they're just really flexible/mobile/short/tall/etc."  In some cases there can be truth in that statement, but in most I would argue that those people have worked really damn hard to be able to put their bodies in the right positions.  But since fixing movement with little or no load isn't glamorous, and can be crushing to the athlete's ego and patience, most who aren't good at it chalk it up to "I'm just not built that way, and I need some more weight to make it look and feel better."  Not true.  You "need some more weight" to make it look passable... until of course the weight is heavy enough, or the workout hard enough, that passable can no longer complete the task.  Then he/she usually enters one of two territories - Miss-ville (the land of a thousand misses) OR Snap City (sometimes referred to as Sketch City or "holy crap I hope no one was watching that").  Very strong athletes who are also very limited in their mobility can likely identify with that situation (although they're not the only ones in this boat) - it feels hard with little to no weight, then it feels fine with moderate loading, then it just gets frustratingly impossible at heavier loads which are still well under his/her perceived maximum potential. 

If any of your goals includes cleaning better/heavier, getting muscle-ups, developing athleticism, increasing balance/strength/coordination/agility/speed/flexibility/power, or just generally heightening your awareness of how your body moves though space and how it can also move external objects… then I would recommend using Thursday’s WOD as a tool for mindful practice. The practice of all of those things.

Because, yeah, we talkin’ ‘bout practice.

WOD For 05-17-19:

For Completion and Quality (NOT For Time):

10-8-6-4-2

Hang Power Cleans

5-4-3-2-1

Ring Muscle-ups


*Alternate between movements (10/5-8/4-6/3-etc...) but rest as needed between movements and sets

*Climb in load as your technique allows on the barbell

*Scale mindfully & intelligently for the MU as needed to work on progressing skill level and/or positional strength required for the next step (don't just "go through the motions") -- if MU are "your jam" then do them unbroken and with perfect technique

Jenny Morgan
What's Like Nails on a Chalkboard To Coach Hillary?

Dropping an empty barbell.

Don’t do it. I don’t care if you did it at another gym and that’s how they treated their bars, so what’s the big deal… you look like noob (or an idiot, or both) and you make Coach Hillary want to tackle you.

If you want the full scoop on barbell etiquette click here to read that full post. But here’s the CliffsNotes version: you’re not a world champion weightlifter so set the bar down carefully like you want it to not be broken the next time you use it.

How, you ask? Here’s a helpful video from the very person who out-lifts just about everyone in the gym:

WOD For 05-16-19:

7 Rounds For Time:

7 Deadlifts @ 245/165 lbs

7 Hand-Release Push-ups

14 AbMat Sit-ups

28 Unbroken Double Unders

Jenny Morgan
Wednesday: Sans Barbell

Not a barbell in sight (well not in the workout at least) but a whole lot of fitness…

Definition-SHE.jpeg

WOD For 05-15-19:

For Time:

27-21-15-9

Calorie* Row, Ski, or Assault Bike

Pistols (alternate)

Chest-to-Bar Pull-ups

Burpee Box Jumps @ 24/20 in (facing the box is NOT required)


*Calorie adjustment for female athletes is 21-16-11-6 reps.

Jenny Morgan
Final Reminder: Yoga Series Starts Tuesday Evening, May 14th

A last reminder about our Yoga Series with Brooke which starts on Tuesday evening at 6:15pm. Click here for all the details — we hope to see some of your smiling faces at our first session!

WOD For 05-14-19:

On a Running Clock…

A) From 0:00 - 12:00

3 Rounds For Time:

30 Wall Balls @ 20/14 lbs to 10/9 ft

15 Power Cleans @ 135/95 lbs

B) From 15:00 - 30:00

Front Squat:

5-5-3-3-1-1-1

*Climbing to a heavy single as your technique allows. Use a rack.

Jenny Morgan
Monday: 3-Course Menu

Hope you all had a great Mother’s Day weekend.

WOD For 05-13-19:

On a Running Clock…

A) At 0:00

800m Run

*You pick the pace

B) From 5:00 - 20:00

Power Snatch:

5-5-3-3-1-1-1

*Climbing to a heavy single as your technique allows

C) From 25:00 - 31:00

“2019 AGOQ Qualifier Workout # 5”

For Time (6 Minute Cap):

30 (Power) Snatches @ 135/95 lbs

30 Strict Handstand Push-ups

Jenny Morgan
Reminder: Yoga Series Starts May 14th!

A REMINDER below from Brooke about her upcoming 6-Week (12-Class) Yoga Series at Arena Ready. Non AR members can purchase the full 12-class series for $279 and AR members receive a discounted price of $179 (click here to be directed to our Mindbody store). Dropping-in to a single class is $30.

Word on the street is you have to be flexible to practice yoga; but that’s akin to saying you have to be strong before you can do CrossFit, which is of course untrue. I remember my first CrossFit class at Arena Ready. The coach at one point referred to everyone in class as an “athlete,” and it blew my mind a bit: I come from a very active but a very unathletic background—or so I thought. What I’ve realized in my short time at AR is that athletes and yogis actually have way more in common than I knew; both work extremely hard to attain skill in action, to expand the limits of what they thought they were capable of, and often to accomplish what they initially assumed was impossible. Many of you may already know this from having practiced yoga at AR with Dani or elsewhere.

Beginning May 14, I’ll be teaching a series of twelve classes over the course of six weeks, Tuesdays and Thursdays 6:15-7:30pm. It’s hard to put into words how stoked I am for this opportunity, as I’ve mostly been nerding out to myself (and to Sal) over the past couple of years about just how much yoga and CrossFit need one another! 

While dropping into a class here and there would be perfectly acceptable, I’d like to invite you to commit to attending the entire six-week series if you can. In this way, it’s my hope that you’ll gain insight into what a regular consistent yoga practice can truly offer you—not just physically, but also mentally, emotionally, and energetically. We’ll also build on the classes that came before, which will make learning and practicing more fun! So, come! 

Questions you may have:

What is yoga… no, really?

It took me a long time to understand that yoga isn’t actually about perfecting postures; rather, it's about the use of yoga postures as a tool to approach and develop a relationship with the Self. 

Yoga has a unique way of inviting us to our edge, to where we're getting stuck, and to our own resistance to letting go. If we’re open to it, it can reveal to us our strengths and our weaknesses, our places of openness and the areas where we’re closed off. It can show us when we’re actually getting in our own way (and why). The practice slowly teaches us how to be with things just as they are, even if how they are is uncomfortable, even as we work toward making things more awesome. It’s a high aim, really. As we work on the postures, the postures work on us—in layers, beginning with our physical body, and from there the breath, and then the mind, and so on. And as a result we begin to feel not only more connected but also more engaged—with ourselves, in our relationships, and in our lives. Rad, huh?!

What style of yoga will it be? 

I teach alignment-focused yoga. Sometimes we’ll move by linking one pose to another (as in a flow-based yoga class), and other times we won’t link postures one after another. This is more akin to the Iyengar yoga style of practice, but I am not a traditional Iyengar Yoga teacher. Though I love a good flow practice, in general as a teacher, I prioritize optimal form over moving at a faster pace. What’s optimal for one person may be different than what’s optimal for someone else.

What do I wear to practice? 

You can wear whatever you would typically wear to a CrossFit class. If you’re wearing athletic shorts that are loose, you may feel more comfortable throughout practice if you also have on some form-fitting shorts underneath. Practice is done barefoot.

Do I need a yoga mat? 

Yes, you do. There will be mats available for purchase at the gym. You can also find yoga mats at any sporting goods store or even grocery stores like Rainbow Grocery and Whole Foods. I recommend the Hugger Mugger Tapas yoga mat, as it’s relatively inexpensive, sticky (less slipping), and not too thick. A thick fitness mat is not conducive to yoga.

Where will practice be? 

Upstairs on the top level. You can bring your shoes and belongings upstairs with you to store in the space. Please arrive a minimum of five minutes early so you have time to set up and get whatever props will be needed without feeling rushed. If you’re running late, no worries, it happens! In that case, please wait until the centering is done at the beginning of class before entering the room. 

Can I eat before practicing? 

It’s recommended that you practice on an empty stomach. When your body is working on digesting food, there is less energy available for your breath and your body during practice. That being said, if you need to eat something, do; just try to make it something really light and easily digestible, like a piece of fruit for example.

What will we be doing in class? 

Each class will include postures from a variety of different categories, but there will be a distinct focus each week. The syllabus for the six weeks is as follows:

Week 1: Breathwork (learning how to breathe for postural practice) / Standing Postures / Introduction to Inversions

Week 2: Breathwork / Standing Balancing Postures / Inversions

Week 3: Breathwork (additional breathing practices) / Hip-opening postures / Forward Folds / Inversions

Week 4: Breathwork / Hip-opening Postures / Twists / Arm-balancings

Week 5: Breathwork / Front-body Opening (quadriceps, psoas, chest) / Backbends / Inversions

Week 6: Breathwork / Sun Salutations / Linking Postures with Vinyasa / Review from Previous Weeks / Meditation

-Brooke

WOD For 05-11-19:

In Teams of THREE Athletes…

For Time:

100 Calorie Row

100 Deadlifts @ 155/105 lbs

80 Calorie Row

80 Hang Power Cleans

60 Calorie Row

60 Front Squats

40 Calorie Row

40 Push Jerks

20 Calorie Row

20 Squat Clean Thrusters

*One athlete working at a time, switch whenever you like — reps do NOT have to be split evenly.

(Compare to 12-19-15)

Jenny Morgan
Everything You Got!

How NOT to spot the bench press.

Happy Friday, fitness friends!

WOD For 05-10-19:

Every 2 Minutes For 7 Rounds (14 Minutes):

3 Bench Presses


*Start at a light weight and climb every round OR stay at a challenging weight for multiple rounds.



-then-


AMRAP 9 Minutes:

60 Double Unders

30 ABMat Sit-ups

30 Walking Lunges

Jenny Morgan
Thursday: Squats and a Couplet

If you EMOM this couplet of C2Bs and wall balls could you hold on and go sub-7 minutes? Maybe start a little faster than that, hold unbroken, and we see a sub-5?

Is either (or both) of the movements in the couplet a weakness for you? Then plan ahead for intentional breaks at specific points in your rep scheme, and see if you can hold that game plan through 5 rounds and step on the gas for rounds 6 and 7.

Either way have a plan and fight to execute it. If your movement is great and your technique is clean then lean in to the mental discomfort. See what happens when you push the pace as you near the end — you might surprise yourself, and you’ll definitely learn something… other than, “yep, confirmed, I hate wall balls.”

Ha!

WOD For 05-09-19:

Every 2 Minutes For 7 Rounds (14 Minutes):

3 Back Squats

*Start at a light weight and climb every round OR stay at a challenging weight for multiple rounds.

-then-

7 Rounds For Time:

7 Chest-to-Bar Pull-ups

14 Wall Balls @ 20/14 lbs to 10/9 ft

*Ninja at C2Bs? Then aim do every round unbroken (the wall balls too).

Jenny Morgan