ROD 041712

Tuesday, 17Apr12

 

 

 

 

 

NEXT LEVEL BOXING

Are You Ready for Anything ?

This Super High Intensity Boxing Circuit is a 1 hour ass kicking class that will leave you in a puddle of sweat.

Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

_______________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

 

This is a 30 second work / 10 second rest for 4 rounds.

Rest 1 minute between rounds.

  • Extreme Reclines
  • Pull-ups
  • KB Dead dip and switch
  • Dbl KB swing outside of legs
  • Box jump w/ hurdle jump combo
  • Windmill (L)
  • Windmill (R)
  • Alternating Lateral lunge with DB lateral raises
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This is a must read…

www.charlespoliquin.com

Follow the Poliquin Blog for strength training, fitness, supplement, tips, and recommendations from Charles Poliquin and other well-known coaches.

 

ROD 041412

Saturday 14Apr12

Over a bottle of wine… or two… or whatever. This is tomorrows NLP & High Rocks Training ROD
 
Tabata your Meta Ass off

All teams will be chosen. There will be 4 staging areas which will be refered to as the “pit”. There will be 4 teams chos…en for each pit. On the onset of the ROD the timed sets will be set-up as 30 seconds work/ 30 seconds rest for 3 rounds. Each team will perform the exercises orchestrated at each PIT. After 3 rounds each team will run a designated distance. Then move on to the next staging area and so on till every team has performed all of the assigned “Weird Object” exercises.

The Pit

Staging Area I ” The Cobblestone”

* Cobblestone Thrusters
* Cobblestone Swings
* Cobblestone High-Pulls

Run…

Staging Area II ” The Log”

*Log Shoulder Passes
*Log Sit-ups
*Log Squats

Run…

Staging Area III “The Tire”

*Tire Jacks
*Tire Slams
*Tire Crunch

Run…

Staging Area IV “The Sandbag”

*Sandbag Reverse Lunge
*Sandbag Snatchpulls with release
*Sandbag Figure Eights

Good Fuckin’ Luck This is who we are and what we do best. Done…

ROD 041212

Thursday, 12Apr12

 

 

 

 

Mental Toughness

Here is your partner workout for today: 

Pick a partner, workout together, motivate each other, spot each other & Go Heavy!!!!

 DB or KB snatches from the floor

  • 3×6 reps lights weight (alt l/r)
  • 2×4 reps medium weight (alt l/r)
  • 3×2 reps heavy weight (alt l/r)

 Then perform the following movements:

10, 8,6,4,2 reps  

  • Deadlifts (bodyweight)
  • Mixed push-ups (w+25 lbs / m + 45lbs)
  • Mixed grip pull-ups

_____________________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Are You Ready for Anything ?

 This Super High Intensity Boxing Circuit class is a 1 hour ass kicking class that will leave you in a puddle of sweat.

 Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

 Push your self & let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

ROD 041012

Tuesday, 10Apr12

 

 

 

 

 

Are You  Ready for Anything  ?

This High Intensity Super Boxing Circuit class is a 1 hour ass kicking class that will leave you in a puddle of sweat.

Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

 

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Strength & Power

10 rounds for time of:

  • 5 Double jumps (over hurdles, boxes, steppers etc)
  • 5 BB or Dbl DB Snatch from floor ( w 65lbs / m 95lbs)
  • 5 Front Squat (use any variation KB, Sandbag, BB etc)

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NLP T-Shirts are finally coming. Here is what they will look like.

Guys t-shirt will come in red and grey & the ladies tank top will come in black and pink.

 Let’s us know what you think?

 

 

 

 

 

ROD 040512

Thursday, 05Apr12

 

Pre-workout:  Everyone will take a turn at performing 7 half burpees while the rest of the group performs DB thrusters.

15 Minute AMRAP

  • 7 Burpees
  • 7 Box jumps
  • 7 Box handstand pushups (feet on box and hands on floor with bicep by ears) inverted overhead press.
  • 7 Plank jacks
  • 100m Sprint

Post times to comments !

______________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Are You  Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This High Intensity Super Boxing Circuit class is a 1 hour ass kicking class that will leave you in a puddle of sweat.

Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

________________________________________________________________________

Running 101: How Often Should You Run?

Here’s how to choose the right number for you.

Frequency—or how often you run—is one of three fundamental variables of training. The other two are duration (how far you run) and  intensity (how fast you run). Research shows a person needs to run at least a couple of times a week to get any progressive benefit from it. Many elite runners run as often as 14 times per week. How often should you run?

There is no single right answer to this question. While considerations such as your goals, life schedule, and running experience can and should be used to establish boundaries of too much and too little running frequency for you, within these boundaries you can choose any of a number of different running frequencies based on personal preferences and needs and get the results you seek.

The Minimum

Let’s first consider the boundary on the bottom end. The most important piece of advice I can give you in this regard is that it is necessary to do some form of exercise almost every day to optimize your general health. Every man, woman, and child on earth, whether a competitive or recreational runner, whether a runner at all or a non-runner, should aim to exercise every day. The research is very clear on this score. If you exercise daily you will have lower risk of chronic disease, be leaner, and live longer than if you exercise just a few times a week.

This doesn’t mean you have to run every day, however. If you care about running enough to seek some form of progress, you need to run at least three times per week. On the other days you can swim, do yoga, lift weights, whatever. However, if you choose to run only three times per week—and if, again, you care enough about your running to want to improve—you need to make those runs really count. Most weeks those runs should be a tempo run to develop intensive endurance, a speed workout to build speed, and a long run to increase raw endurance. The popular FIRST marathon training program developed at Furman University prescribes a weekly training schedule comprising the three types of runs just mentioned plus two cross-training workouts. In my opinion this system defines the minimum effective training protocol for runners.

The primary reason to run only three times per week is to minimize injury risk. As we all know, running has a high injury rate, and the rate of injury increases with running volume. Many runners cannot run every day without getting injured. If you are such a runner, or if you simply fear getting injured if you run daily, then stick to a schedule of three to four purposeful runs plus a few cross-training workouts per week and feel confident that you are not sacrificing any of the performance you would get from running daily (presuming you actually could run daily without injury).

The most common running frequency for non-elite competitive runners is six to seven times per week (that is, daily with one scheduled day off or daily with rest days taken only as needed). I don’t know of any research addressing the matter, but my experience-based belief is that some runners are better off running daily and not cross-training, others are better off running three or four times a week and cross-training on non-running days, and many runners are able to fare equally well on either schedule. Use factors such as your durability (can you handle daily running?) and your personal preferences (would you rather chew glass than do any form of exercise besides running?) to set your personal routine.

Running Twice Per Day

Only the most serious runners habitually run more than seven times per week, which necessarily entails a certain amount of doubling, or running twice a day. Personally, I think more runners should consider it, as some magical things can happen when you push your running volume beyond the amount you can practically squeeze into one run a day.

There’s a simple rule that runners can use to decide whether or not they should double: If you plan to consistently run more than 70 miles per week, double at least once or twice a week. The rationale behind this rule is that every runner’s training schedule must include some easy runs, and if you try to pack more than 70 miles into just six or seven runs each week, none of those runs can be very easy. You can double if you want to on a schedule of fewer than 70 miles per week, but it only really becomes necessary when you run more.

As you continue to add mileage to your weekly schedule, continue to add doubles as necessary to keep your average run distance from creeping above 10 miles. So, for example, if you run 100 miles a week you should run at least 10 times.

Ease into doubling by inserting one or two very short, easy runs into your schedule. Gradually increase the distance of these runs and add more doubles until you reach your weekly mileage target, but keep the pace easy in all of these extra runs. Never try to perform two hard runs in a single day.

Some runners do an easy run in the morning and a longer and/or faster run in the evening. Others do the opposite. It’s a matter of personal preference.

Cross-Training

Just as a casually competitive runner can exercise more than three or four times a week without running more than three or four times a week, a serious competitive runner can exercise twice a day without always running twice a day. The question is, should he or she? While there are many examples of very successful runners who run 14 times a week and never cross-train, I believe that in most cases, runners who train nine or more times a week are better off running seven times and lifting weights and doing plyometrics two or three times than they are making every workout a run.

In fact, there’s research proving this. In a famous Norwegian study, elite runners improved their 3K race times by replacing 30 percent of their running with plyometrics—not adding plyometrics to the running they were already doing, but replacing a chunk of their running with plyos. Based on such evidence, I advise runners who train nine to 10 times per week to perform two or three strength/plyo workouts and run the rest of the time. There’s no need to do strength and plyometrics training more than two or three times per week, so if you add any workouts beyond 10 per week, the rest can and should be runs or non-impact cardio alternatives to running such as cycling.

What’s the absolute maximum amount of training any runner should consider doing? Many elite runners thrive on a schedule of two runs per day every day plus three strength/plyo workouts per week. If you can handle all that, more power to you!

 

ROD 040312

Tuesday, 02Apr12

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

____________________________________________________________

7pm

 

 

 

 

Are You  Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This High Intensity Super Boxing Circuit class is a 1 hour ass kicking class that will leave you in a puddle of sweat.

Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

_________________________________________________________

8pm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*400m Run  (202 Industrial Loop and back)

30 seconds of work 30 seconds of rest non-stop for 4 rounds

  • Atlas Stone lifts
  • KB Row
  • KB Swings with release
  • Pull Ups
  • BB Front Squats

Then Run 400m (202 Industrial Loop and back) for time

 

ROD 032912

Thursday, 29March12

 

 

 

 

 

 Pre-workout - perform 20 Alt DB Ground to Overhead Snatch (10l/10r) then:

7 rounds for time of:

  • 10 Deadlifts (75%bodyweight)
  • 10 Lateral jumps over bar w/ burpee

Post-workout – perform 20 Alt DB Ground to Overhead  Snatch (10l/10r)

Post workout counts toward your time ! 

_______________________________________________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This High Intensity Super Boxing Circuit class is a 1 hour ass kicking class that will leave you in a puddle of sweat.

Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

ROD 032712

Tuesday, 27March12

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This High Intensity Super Boxing class is a 1 hour ass kicking circuit that will leave you in a puddle of sweat.

Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

____________________________________________________

Ladder Climb

Before you climb the ladder we need to get the fat burning in our furnace. So, for that we will perform 2 rounds at 15/15 work/rest timed set of:

  • Plyo Push-ups
  • Squat Jumps
  • Mtn Climbers
  • Split Jumps
  • Sit-outs

Rest for 2 minutes, then…

How far up the ladder can you climb? 

For 12 minutes perform each movement 1x, 2x, 3x…..

  • KB Swings (w-16k>/m-20k>)
  • Burpees
  • Wallball Shots (w-8lbs/ m-10lbs)
  • Knees-to-Elbow

Post completed rounds to comments.

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33 Ways To Get And Maintain Motivation

Being motivated is a wonderful state of your being. In that state your body leverages huge amounts of energy. Your emotional field is totally balanced, physically you’re able to climb the Everest and mentally you understand the whole Universe in a split of a second. I know you know the feeling. The good news is that you can re-create this state pretty much whenever you want. Here are 33 tips to help you get and stay motivated. By the way, if you’re into long lists, you may also check this one: 100 Ways To Live A Better Life.

1. Ignore The Unimportant

Learning to ignore is a fantastic lesson. Much more rewarding than you think. There must be an art of ignoring and they should teach it in universities. Spanning your focus in so many areas will only weaken you. Ignoring what’s unimportant will free up energy, foster motivation and help you stay focused and productive.

2. Understand What Makes You Bored

And avoid it. Boredom is a nasty place to be. But as any other state of your being can be understood and you can identify the triggers. Once you understand that, you can safely go away from the gray zone. Takes some time but it really worth the effort.

3. Laugh More Often

Watch comedies, read comics. Throw away that ugly seriousness form your face. Laughing is a safety valve for your stress relief mechanism. It actually let it out from your body in bursts. And while you’re laughing you can still learn new stuff, like personal development lessons from Dumbo.

4. Keep A Log Of Your Breakthroughs

Do you remember when you had the first major success of your life? No? I thought so. We tend to overlook this simple habit of writing down our feelings every time we have a major breakthrough in our lives. If you want the shortest path to motivation, just keep a log of your successes. And get inspired by it.

5. Exercise

This is one the easiest and simplest way to summon motivation. Just walk out from the office, start doing some pushups or just go for a short run around the house. It will instantly declutter your physical body. Every time you exercise, you produce endorphins. Endorphins are good.

6. Create A Custom Environment

You can’t be motivated if you work in an environment which does not represent you. Make changes, adjust, improve. Doesn’t matter if it’s about your job office or your home. Whatever the space you work in, make it yours somehow, that will lower your unconscious adaptation efforts and you’ll have more time dedicated to the actual tasks.

7. Read Success Stories

Like in other people success stories. Get inspired. Admire them (with caution, but do admire them). Reading about success will make it more available to you and will fuel your efforts towards its achievement. And of course, you can learn how to be successful too.

8. Switch Tasks

You will get bored if you work on the same projects for too long. Boredom kills motivation. Try having several small projects that you can land on whenever you feel you’re on the verge of a burn out. Not to mention that switching tasks will instantly create fresh perspectives, helping you solve problems faster.

9. Assess Your Progress

If you work constantly you will make some progress, that’s a rule. You may have the impression that you’re not going anywhere but that’s because you’re skipping all those little milestones you go through every day. Watching back with satisfaction at what you created will surely boost your energy.

10. Talk About Your Projects

With your friends or family. Let the people know you’re doing stuff. That will often make yourself aware of the fact that you’re actually doing stuff and enjoy doing it. It will also create a certain level of accountability that will most likely push you forward.

11. Avoid Energy Vampires

Naysayers, pessimists, braggers they all are sucking up your energy. Don’t get caught in such power games, avoid at all costs those energy leaks. Even if that means you’ll isolate more often. It’s better to do work in your own secluded realm than to try to resist to a diminisihing environment.

12. Write Clear Goals

Most of the time that translates to actually write down your goals, you already have them clear in your mind. But take them out of your mind, put them in a trusted system and move on. Your mind works better when it knows what it has to do not when it spends time figuring what it has to do.

13. Exercise Satisfaction

Once you finished some task, reward yourself. Give yourself a prize. No need to be a huge one, but just enough to create the habit. Look forward to it while you’re working, wait for it, praise for it. In time you’ll become addicted to this fulfillment satisfaction and you won’t stop until you reach it.

14. Accept Failure

As part of the game. Failure, like success, is just a result of your actions, nothing more. One of the biggest motivation enemies is fear of failure. Fear that your outcome will turn bad. Accept it. It may turn bad, but that doesn’t mean you have to stop doing what you’re doing. Give your best and hope for the best.

15. Use Affirmations

Like writing down your intentions, your goals, your current status. Affirmations are a very powerful tool, hugely underrated. People find it awkward to write self-directed messages and read them out loud. News flash: you’re doing this all the time, unconsciously. So why not doing it consciously? Start with a morning phrase.

16. Play Games

Impersonate people. Imitate animals. Pretend you’re Sindbad the Sailor. Playing challenging games will relax your mind and at the same time will gather more resources from secret sources. A good motivation is always blended with joy. You can start with a simple game like how to get from a to b in 5 random steps.

17. Say “No”

Say “no” to distractions, to trolls, to depression. Exercising “no”‘s is liberating. Too often too many commitments are making your life a continuous chore. Limit your promises and only get into things you really want to finish. Once you do that, go to a mirror, smile and start to politely exercise your “no”‘s.

18. Look For Positive People

Sadness, whining and complaining doesn’t play well with motivation. On the contrary. But positive, optimistic, energetic people will always shift your vibration in the right direction. Search them, find them and become their friend. Sometimes all you need to get motivated is to be surrounded by shiny happy people.

19. Difficulty Is Part Of The Game

Learn to work under pressure. Some things are more difficult than other. Accept that fact and focus on doing what you have to do not on your feelings of dissatisfaction. Difficulty is often what makes things worth  doing. No sweat, no glory. Whenever I feel something is going to be tough, I’m usually more motivated to do it. The reward will be higher.

20. Create Personal Challenges

Personal challenges are short term goals, usually from 15 to 90 days. Like starting to exercise, or creating a habit from scratch in 15 days. Using personal challenges strengthen your inner power the same way exercising is strengthening your muscles. The more you do, the more motivated you feel to do even more.

21. Choose Positive Motivation

Whenever you lock in your motivation, do your best to keep it on the positive side, which is rooted in service. As opposed to the negative motivation, which is basically rooted in fear. Negative motivation works just the same, only it lasts significantly less than positive motivation.

22. Release Your Guardians

You do have guardians and some of them are pretty nasty. They won’t let you do your stuff. The bad thing about your guardians is that most of the time they’re working at the unconscious level, really difficult to interact with. Just accept, acknowledge and let them go. You will be much better off.

23. Enforce Your Personal Mission

You gotta have a personal mission. If you don’t, go find one fast. Reinforcing your personal mission at certain intervals is surely one of the greatest motivators of all. It’s like looking on a map and seeing at any moment where you are, how much do you have to go and which path you have to chose.

24. Spend Time Outside

If you can do something creative, like gardening or landscaping, even better. But it’s ok even if you don’t. Spending time outside of your box will clear the air inside. When you get back, everything will be fresher and shinier. And something fresher is always a nice motivator.

25. Keep A Clean Inbox

That’s one of the few GTD concepts I still use and it proves to be a great motivator. A clean inbox helps a smooth thoughts flow. A smooth thoughts flow let me be in the moment without any hidden burdens. Being in the moment is usually all I need to actually start doing things.

26. Don’t Aim For Perfection

It will soon drain you out. Aiming to be better is the real game. Perfection is a dead end, nothing really  happens after you reached to it. Accepting that you can be better instead of perfect leaves some room for growth. And that means you have a reason to do more. And that’s what we usually call motivation, right?

27. Do One Thing At A Time

Multitasking is a myth. Even computers processors aren’t really doing multi-tasking, that’s what we perceive. Instead they have a single frequency and several parallel buses managing information, faking a multi-tasking activity. Multitasking is creating internal conflicts, both in humans and in computers. You end up spending more time solving those conflicts than actually working.

28. Keep A Source Of Inspiring Readings

You’re not always completely down, most of the time you’re just averagish, just one sentence away from your best shape. Be sure to keep around a list of inspiring readings. Quotes, blog posts, ebooks, whatever works for you. You can start with 100 ways to live a better life, for instance.

29. Put On Some Good Music

Just let it there, floating around, don’t turn the volume knob. Just enough to recreate a pleasant atmosphere. Music speaks to areas you can’t control with logical tools, yet is so powerful that can completely shift your mood in a second. The only thing better than silence is good music.

30. Don’t Fall Into The Productivity Trap

It’s not how much you do, but how much of it really matters. Doing stuff just for filling up notebooks with tasks won’t make you feel motivated. On the other side, whenever you’re doing something that matters, your planing and organizing activities will just flow.

31. Keep Your Life Lenses Clean

Your camera objective may be blurred but you don’t know. This is why you get the same picture again and again, this is why feel stuck and can’t seem to see any progress. Sometimes all you have to do is to clean up your lenses. It takes a little bit of courage but it’s worth the trouble.

32. Clean Up Your House

I know you need motivation for that too, but believe me, it’s a fantastic way to clean up your internal garbage. Cleaning up your house is not a chore, it’s a necessity. Your action paths may be clogged the same way your floor is sticky. And most of the time unsticking the floor will open your mind again.

33. Stop Reading This And Get To Work

It was fun reading it, I’m sure. But it won’t get things done in your place. Inspiration is a good motivator, but don’t abuse it. Now, that you are all energized, it’s time for you to get back to work. Of course, you can bookmark this post for future motivation sessions, but for now, just go back to work.

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300+ NLP FACEBOOK friends and counting

Our little secret isn’t little anymore.

ROD 032512

Sunday, 25March2012

Rest Day 

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I want to thank everyone who came out to train with us at High Rock Park. You all did amazing!!!

If you came with someone who hasn’t LIKED us on Facebook please remind them to do so.

We are already thinking about this coming Saturdays ass kicking work and as promised it will get harder each week

Btw all pictures are taken by our beautiful paparazzi Maria who will post them shortly on FB and our website.

Www.nxtlevelnow.com

I also want to thank Darren Corona big time for all of his help and expertise.

Please take advantage of what we have to offer.

If your not a member and would like to become one NLP is now offering a 20% discount to all High Rock participants on our 3 month membership and a 10% discount on our Drop-In-Whenever program.

For details visit our website.

Thank you

 

 

ROD 032412

Saturday, 24March12

 Simplicity

 Everyone will do this ROD today!

As many rounds in 20 mins of…

  • 10 Reclines
  • 15 Pushups
  • 20 Air squats

Let’s do this fast and furious.

_________________________________________________

 

Saturday’s High Rock ROD

Get High Rock Challenged: Free Training Sessions at High Rock Park

Join us in High Rock Park for one of our classic workouts, but with a twist. Next Level Performance, an official sponsor of the High Rock Challenge Adventure Race, will be doing our cutting edge High Intensity Strength Training work-outs outdoors in the Park. The sessions are designed to increase the registrants stamina and endurance, which they will need for the race. Sessions are free and no registration is required but be prompt.

Meet up: High Rock parking lot, 200 Nevada Avenue, Staten Island, 10306.

Lets have some fun today…

4 rounds of 40 seconds work/ 20 seconds rest.

One minute rest between rounds.

  • Reclines
  • Kettlebell Slams
  • Power ropes
  • Lateral bench jumps
  • Bench crawl
  • Sandbag farmers walks