Archive for December, 2011

Me doing the NP Crippler at body weight of 185.

30 Back squats @ 185lbs
1mile run

Overall time is 7:09. 1 mile split is 5:34.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T66_lqtHgtI

Mind you this is all off of CrossFit training and swimming 2x/week for the past 6 months. I haven’t been able to run at all due to injury. I’ve had two formal running workouts in the last 2 weeks leading up to this workout. Not too shabby!

You may remember the titled song, “Win in the End”, featured at the end of one of the greatest 80′s movie’s of all time: Teen Wolf. More than just awesome childhood memories, going Beast Mode AND actually turning into a beast when you get angry has always greatly appealed to me. I could go on and on about the quotes, but this post isn’t a review on Teen Wolf.

With the new year approaching and the old one winding down, I thought it would be fitting to discuss goal accomplishment. What are you goals for 2012? Nearly all of us, myself included, right down short and long-term goals only to throw in a notebook and never think about again. It’s fun to think about them, jot them down, all that stuff. In the busyness of day-to-day life however, it is way to easy to lose sight of where we want to go. Here’s some insight in this post on what it takes to start your goals and powerful measures to keep them in your cross-hairs, making you a goal grinding machine!

First off, every great accomplishment begins with a thought. Begin by visualizing the WIN in the end or the ending outcome you would like to receive. Start with the end goal in mind and then execute violently. Every great accomplishment is begun this way. Every small accomplishment is as well (grocery lists), whether you realize it or not. When we begin with the end, we subconsciously give our minds the GPS coordinates to find. Because our brains are all wired for success, it’s the most natural way for goal accomplishment.

Second, write it down with some emotion! Most people when they write goals put the ending outcome and that’s it. ie Win National Volleyball title. To be thoroughly effective, when you write it, make it as descriptive as possible. Write your emotions on the page. How you feel while you’re performing the task (race, game, match, etc). Remember, your emotions are the fuel that drive the goal. Without emotion, all you have is an empty race car with no motor. Depending on how you leverage them, they determine how quickly (or not) you’ll actually achieve your goal. The more emotion, the better. Pour it on.

Third, protect your thoughts! Abraham Lincoln said something like, “If you think you can’t, then you won’t.” Remember how our minds are wired for success?? If you approach a task, a business meeting or whatever with the thought of “This is going to suck” or “No f’ing way” then guess what, your body will deliver. No matter how hard you try, you subconscious mind will find every way to sabotage you…all b/c it wants to succeed! Get it? It’s all a part of how we’re wired. In our mind, success is what you tell it. If you say, “I’m going to crush the MCAT!” then by god your whole being will do everything it can to succeed. If you were to say, “I don’t know, the MCAT’s are going to be really hard.” Poof, guess what, the MCAT’s are going to be hard and you’ll get the score you “knew” you would get; a mediocre performance at best.

Fourth, wash, rinse and repeat. One of the best tools I learned from Coach Todd Herman was to continue my writings on a daily basis, preferably before I went to bed so I could soak up all the goodness. This step is the glue or the magnifier of all the other steps. Writing your goals down everyday with emotion has an amazing effect of bringing them to the forefront of your mind. This practice is so huge and its importance is something I can’t stress enough. Even just a quick five sentence goal achieving outline with a little emotion seeps it deep into your bones. Before long, you’re a goal grinding machine. On to the next!

Lastly, I highly recommend hiring a coach, one who can help with goal setting, achievement, mental toughness, etc. It’s a must for any high performer on the field or in the office. Over the years, I have received and continue to receive excellent coaching in the realm of sports performance and mental training. These coaches have made a huge impact on my life.

One last tid bit of information. Tonight is December 25th and the 235th anniversary of George Washington’s crossing of the Delaware to attack a sleeping Hessian Army. This victory turned out to be a watershed moment of the Revolutionary War, effectively rallying other rebel fighters to join the Continental Army to fight the British. Remember, the British Empire was a seemingly insurmountable foe, had the world’s greatest army, largest navy and a winning record. No one every thought it possible that a bunch of “rabble rousers” could oust the greatest Empire in the world at the time. How do you think our Founding Fathers approached their mental game? Did they give their minds an “out” clause if things didn’t work? Thoughts of freedom and living a life free of oppression filled their minds, thoughts, writings, words day in and day out. By any means necessary would they forge their own country, founded upon ideals that had never been done before.

I hope this post finds you warm and cozy yet pondering the greatness of your mind and the possibilities that await in your future.

Never Let It Rest,
Brendon

In the end, if you don’t have belief, you don’t have anything. Believe in yourself first. Train your brain, then your body.

“The power of one is above all things the power to believe in yourself, often well beyond any latent ability you may have previously demonstrated. The mind is the athlete, the body is simply the means it uses to run faster or longer, jump higher, shoot straighter, kick better, swim harder, hit further, or box better.”
Bryce Courtenay, The Power of One

2012 is going to be a good year ;)

Never Let It Rest,
Brendon

 

Paleo – It works.

Recovery – Is the reason you get better (faster, stronger, etc).

The Sweet Potato – In your diet

My neck – Was what I was up to in mud…while attempting to train.

My relationship with the paleo diet has been tumultuous and considerably trial and error. Check out my post Paleo is Dead from last year. Didn’t sit well with many peeps in the CF community, rightfully so.

In the beginning, I saw immediate physical results. Not in body composition but in systemic inflammation. Tendonitis in my knee was something that had bothered me for so long that limping down the stairs in the morning was normal. Walking crooked up steps on the way to work was just how I walked. Doing a 15min knee prep warmup before any track work was par for the course. After being introduced to paleo by Brent Wenson, a good friend and fellow trainer at CF Atlanta, and implementing it for a solid 3 weeks with the addition of a good fish oil, tendonitis in my knee had disappeared. That was huge.

Fast forward a couple of years. I’m back competing on the track. In addition to training at a very high level, I’m coaching 4-6 classes a day, watching my daughter full time and trying to run a business at CrossFit San Mateo. Free time is a foreign phrase to me. The overall picture is that I’m not consuming enough calories and sleep is terrible. Thus, I’m not recovering properly, I have no energy and I’m getting injured. Big surprise.

I was eating a strict high fat/protein paleo diet. No post WOD supplements, lots of fat, lots of protein, only about 20% carbs. I was hitting the wall big time. Muscle glycogen stores were on a constant E. I would have a week of awesome workouts and 2 weeks of feeling like I was running in mud…up to my neck.

So, stupidly and in my fog induced glycogen depleted brain, I swore off paleo eating. In the month or two that I was “off” paleo, I noticed my aches and pains in my joints came back. My face broke out. My stomach hurt, all the damn time. Irritabal Bowel Syndrome?? I thought taking a deuce 3x-5x a day was normal…no?! Damn it! All of this and my energy still sucked.  The answer was two-fold. Day to-day nutrition and post WOD recovery.

Overall Nutrition

Let’s start first with overall nutrition. Enter my buddy Badier of The Lazy Caveman. His first response to all of this was, “Dude, everyone thinks paleo is a low carb diet. It doesn’t have to be. We just have to get your carbs from better sources.”

Because my training is so anaerobic (2-3x track wods, 3-4 CF WODs + strength) Badier put me on a 60-70% carb diet. 70% carbs, 15% fat 15% protein. I started eating banana’s paired with protein and fat. Rice has snuck in there from time to time to vary things up. In the end, sweet potatoes have become my Holy Grail. Since consuming at least 1 sweet potato nearly everyday, recovery, energy and overall mood (note: mood has nothing to do with being an asshole) is at an all time high. Most importantly, I can maintain a high level of performance throughout my program w/o any breakdown.

I could devote a whole post to sweet potatoes. My good friend is actually coming out with a book on its benefits. Real quick it:

  • Is a ”slow” carb
  • Is packed full of vitamins
  • Helps stabilize insulin levels
  • Has natural anti-inflammatory properties
  • Tastes great
  • Is easily transportable, stays well in storage
  • Is a must for endurance athletes

Missing an extra gear in your workouts? A liberal peppering of sweet potatoes in your diet may be your answer.

Post WOD Recovery

Nothing comes close to Vitargo Genr8. I’ve blogged about it in previous posts and over 7 months of taking it as a supplement can attest that it works better than any other product I’ve tried or try (Hammer, Endurox, etc). All of them are usually made with crap maltodextrin or dextrose (corn) which has shown to reach muscle stores slower than eating a piece of white bread. After a hard track session, swim or WOD, in the past I would have NO ENERGY. Usually I’d be very tired. With Genr8, my energy levels stay up as does my insulin levels (no crash). You know what this means??? It means no muscle catabolism. It means my body absorbs more work. I’ve noticed I need less sleep while taking this as well, another sign of superior recovery. The icing on the cake? I’ve put on 12 lbs of lean muscle mass in 12 months. That’s huge! That is with everything else remaining the same ie. diet, protein intake, caloric consumption.

In the end, nutrition is the athlete. If what you’re doing isn’t working for you, keep plugging away. The combination of an overall proper diet AND post workout recovery is what makes the athlete a high performer. If you’re bonking before/after/during your workout, you need to fix your nutrition!!

Hope the above shed some light on your nutrition plan and what works or what doesn’t work for you.

Never Let It Rest,
Brendon

We have a saying in CrossFit, “Get comfortable being uncomfortable.” It’s easy to do with CrossFit b/c nearly every workout is going to challenge you. Take this idea further and challenge yourself in a new sport. Most of the time, you’ll get that old feeling again of walking out on the baseball field as a kid for the first time. A little unsure, somewhat scared but excited nonetheless. CrossFit helps build this internal “muscle” of being prepared for the unknowable or at least accepting it, whatever it may be.

With all this considered, I’ve always wanted to box or learn how to box. The idea of getting hit in the face doesn’t appeal to many people, so picking it up at 31 years of age is not something most people do. Maybe it has to do with my Irish background. Maybe it has something to do with the fact that when I was born, my parents friends would tell them I should be a boxer b/c I had big hands. That was 1980. I was probably one of the last white kids anyone ever said that to.

As a kid though, I grew up taking Taekwondo until the age of 16. I learned how to throw a punch, kick and defend myself. I valued the discipline that it brought and the “outlet” that it allowed. Sports is one thing. Taking out one’s aggression on a heavy bag or punching mitt is a totally different experience and response. Some parents may frown on the idea as violent or think of such actions as promoting violence. Actually, that line of thought couldn’t be further from the truth. The discipline instilled from martial arts was a tremendous value that taught me proper use of force was only to be used as a last resort. Because I now had the experience of hitting and being hit, I understood the ramifications. I learned never to hit anyone out of anger. I learned to protect those weaker than me. I learned my own true power as an individual and my capabilities. In the end, it instilled confidence, humility and graciousness.

In addition to my martial arts background, my father, the quintessential competitor who took Taekwondo classes right alongside us, also loved to spar and box. In the Irish tradition (it’s a tradition right?), boxing against your dad is a hallowed act and a coming of age rite, so to speak. Now, my father has always claimed to be a Golden Gloves boxer which I have never been able to verify. He has multiple trophy’s from his collegiate championship wrestling days but nothing for boxing which makes me a little suspect. My dad loves trophies, where the hell are they?! If he’s reading this, Dad, I believe you, whether I ever see those trophies or not.

Back to the sacred rite of “Father vs. Son” backyard brawls, my dad made sure as we grew up that we’d always be able to handle ourselves in a fight…which also includes handling him in a fight. For the record, my mum was VERY much against this. However, that didn’t have any sway in the matter whatsoever. For the untrained, when the gloves go on a rush of adrenaline will overtake the individual. When the “bell” rings, the first 30 seconds are usually a blur. It’s only when your arms are so tired from swinging (improperly) are when things start to slow down.

My first experience sparring with my dad was something that was very memorable. Actually, the most memorable part was the feeling of getting hit and looking up at the stars. It happened quickly too. Those are stars, right?? In the end, he knocked me down once (my father will say twice but I firmly attest I slipped) and I knocked him down three times. At the time, it was a feeling of mixed emotions. I just knocked my dad out! Shit! I apologized of course and felt bad while at the same time feeling very proud. I was a senior in high school and it was a coming of age moment for me. A moment that has always stayed with me.

Back to the present, I’m currently training under Tim Lajcik, a former MMA Champ, skull crusher who happens also to be the nicest guy in the world. Maybe it’s his strict diet of sweet potatoes and fish, but Tim “The Bear” Lajcik is as real it gets. What are my intentions with this training? Naturally, I’m inclined to take it as far as possible. With my background, what’s stopping from me from exploring an amateur boxing/kick boxing career? I have a long way to go but right now I’m having a lot of fun pushing myself in new and different ways, physically and mentally.

Learning how to throw a proper punch is no different from learning how to clean, run, jump, snatch, swim or do a kipping pull-up; it’s all in the hips. In all regards, CrossFit has prepared me to be a superior athlete, no matter what the sport. Couple this with the mental fortitude to take on a WOD and CrossFit is the all around best method of preparing any athlete, mentally or physically for the seen and unseen.

How are you challenging yourself?

Never Let It Rest,
Brendon Mahoney