ROD 062811

ROD

Tuesday, 28Jun11

 

Tabata Tuesday Couplet

8 rounds of 20 seconds work /10 seconds rest at each couplet

One minute rest between rounds.

  • Kettlebell high pulls
  • Battling ropes

 

  • Box jumps
  • Dumbell push press

 

  • Shuttle run 
  • KB Rows (l/r switch at rounds)

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What Food Cravings Mean and How To Control Them

We’ve all been there. You have a sudden, intense urge to eat something sweet or salty. It’s never broccoli. It’s probably not a salad. It’s nearly always chocolate. Or ice cream. Or pretzels. Potato chips. You name it…if it’s unhealthy, there’s probably been a time when you just had to have it. Where do these cravings come from and how can you keep them at bay without devouring the entire pumpkin pie?

It’s What You Crave

The big thing to note about a craving is that it’s not just a desire to eat. It’s not mere hunger. A craving is for a very specific food and nothing else will satisfy your need. When your stomach is growling and you’re famished, any food will do. When your brain is saying “I NEED THIS!,” only that particular food will work. Or will it?

A sharp, intense craving typically means that your body is lacking in some essential nutrient. It may be a particular vitamin or mineral or if you’re having a hypoglycemic response to a high-sugar meal, it may be glucose that your body demands. Here’s a list of commonly craved foods, many you may crave at some point in time, and what they may be saying about your nutritional status. Even better, here are much more healthful foods that will shore up those nutritional deficiencies.
[TABLE=6]
The complete list is here at 2nd Wind Body Science. What you’ll notice by looking over the list is that the very foods that serve as healthful stand-ins for the craved foods are invariably Real Foods. Organ meats, fruits, vegetables, nuts, seafood, red meat, legumes, and a couple mentions of grain (which I’ll let slide). Nearly everything on the list that you should be eating is unprocessed.

Controlling Your Cravings

It’s funny, I no longer find myself having cravings for sweet and salty snacks for the most part (unless I have a couple drinks too many, then it’s anybody’s game). In fact, if I eat too much junk, I find myself going “I just want a big ol’ salad to get back on track.” As evidenced by the list above, a big part of controlling food cravings is eating a nutrient-rich, Real Foods diet. As we’ve seen, cravings are often the result of the body’s desire for specific vitamins and minerals. So it follows logically that a diet full of the necessary vitamins and minerals is going to knock down most cravings.

Here’s a trick that has been proven in a study to improve willpower: take a picture. This article by Douglas Robb of Health Habits shows that dieters taking pictures are less likely to overeat.

One volunteer told the researchers: ‘I had to think more carefully about what I was going to eat because I had to take a picture of it. ‘I was less likely to have a jumbo bag of M&Ms. It curbed my choices. It didn’t alter them completely but who wants to take a photo of a jumbo bag of M&Ms?’ Another volunteer said the photo diaries actually improved the quality of his diet.

Personally, I’ll stick with just eating a high-quality diet that keeps me from needing to worry much about willpower. But the photo trick is interesting nonetheless.

Do you have specific foods that you crave? How do you deal with your cravings?

ROD 052311

ROD

Monday, 23May11

 

Monday Mayhem

15 seconds work/15 seconds rest for 8 minutes at each couplet. Alternate between each exercise of each couplet.

Lower body work

  • Kettlebell swings
  • Goblet squats

Upper body work

  • Kettlebell rows (alternating sides between sets)
  • Push ups 

Core work

  • Med ball shin taps
  • Med ball russian twists

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Sitting All Day: Worse For You Than You Might Think

Posted By Dr Mercola
Even if you exercise regularly, it might not be enough to counteract the effects of too much sitting.

Many people have sedentary jobs and also engage in sedentary leisure activities after work, with the result that a lot more time is spent sitting than moving. A study calculated how much time a group of men spent sitting during an average day, and found that those who sat during the day were substantially more likely to die of heart disease.

According to NPR:

Specifically … men who reported more than 23 hours a week of sedentary activity had a 64 percent greater risk of dying from heart disease than those who reported less than 11 hours a week of sedentary activity. And many of these men routinely exercised … [S]cientists are just beginning to learn about the risks of a mostly sedentary day.”

Sources:

 

As you likely know and understand I am a major proponent of exercise and believe it is absolutely essential if you are going to achieve any level of high-level health and wellness.

Exercise has been a lifelong passion of mine and I have been regularly exercising since 1968, over 43 years and counting now and I don’t ever plan on stopping till I exit this world.

It has been a journey as the first 25 years of my journey I am certain I caused some harm by overly focusing on aerobics and not understanding high-quality nutrition integration with exercise. Fortunately, I have learned much in the last ten years from some really amazing pioneers that has radically improved my health and hopefully many will seek to apply it to their own fitness programs.

What Did the Researchers Find?

The research linking too much sitting with increased risks of disease and premature death is quite eye-opening:

  • Men who were sedentary for more than 23 hours a week had a 64 percent greater risk of dying from heart disease than those who were sedentary less than 11 hours a week, according to a 2010 study in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise.
  • A study of more than 17,000 Canadians found that the mortality risk from all causes was 1.54 times higher among people who spent most of their day sitting compared to those who sat infrequently.
  • Sitting time is a predictor of weight gain, according to a study of Australian women, even after accounting for calories consumed and leisure time physical activity, such as exercise time.
  • The risk of metabolic syndrome rises in a dose-dependent manner depending on your “screen time” (the amount of time you spend watching TV or using a computer). Physical activity had only a minimal impact on the relationship between screen time and metabolic syndrome.
  • People who use a computer for 11 hours or more a week, or watch TV for 21 hours or more a week, are more likely to be obese than those who use a computer or watch TV for 5 hours a week or less.

An editorial in the British Journal of Sports Medicine also highlighted much of the recent evidence linking too much sitting with biomarkers of metabolic health. They reported research showing sitting time correlates with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease and other prevalent chronic health problems.

The “Active Couch Potato” Effect

Perhaps most potentially disconcerting about the health risks of sitting is that exercise does not appear to be enough to counteract its negative effects. This makes sense, really, as how could one hour of activity make up for 15 hours of sedentary ones (plus eight hours of sleep)?

Writing in a British Journal of Sports Medicine editorial, researchers state:

Even if people meet the current recommendation of 30 minutes of physical activity on most days each week, there may be significant adverse metabolic and health effects from prolonged sitting — the activity that dominates most people’s remaining “non-exercise” waking hours.”

In other words, even if you’re fairly physically active, riding your bike to work or hitting the gym four or five days a week — you may still succumb to the effects of too much sitting if the majority of your day is spent behind a desk or on the couch.

Researchers have dubbed this phenomenon the “active couch potato effect.”

As written in the journal Exercise and Sports Science Reviews:

We further examined relationships of TV time with continuous metabolic risk in men and women who reported at least 150 [minutes per week] of moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity — the generally accepted public health guidelines for health-enhancing physical activity.

Among these healthy physically active adults, significant detrimental dose-response associations of TV time were observed with waist circumference, systolic blood pressure, and 2-h plasma glucose in both men and women, as well as fasting plasma glucose, triglycerides, and HDL cholesterol in women only.

This observation — the Active Couch Potato phenomenon — is important.

The particular metabolic consequences of time spent watching TV are adverse, even among those considered to be sufficiently physically active to reduce their chronic disease risk. This finding reinforces the potential importance of the deleterious health consequences of prolonged sitting time, which may be independent of the protective effect of regular moderate-intensity physical activity.”

Can Too Much Sitting Drastically Increase Your Risk of Disease?

That is one of the reasons why I was intrigued with this study, but I am not convinced in the conclusion they reach and suspect more of it is related to the lack of optimal exercise than the actual act of sitting.

It is my belief that we all require some level of high-intensity exercise training, like the High Intensity Interval Training about twice a week or so and if we fail to incorporate this into our exercise program there will be negative health consequences. Since it is likely that far less than 5% of the population engages in this activity it is no surprise that this association was found.

Obviously there was not a group in this study that was compared using this form of exercise as it is not widely practiced or even appreciated among most researchers as different from traditional cardio type exercises.

Sitting is not intrinsically harmful — except when done incorrectly for long periods on a consistent basis. Your body simply wasn’t meant to be sedentary and numerous metabolic and other body processes are negatively impacted by long periods of inactivity.

So I simply do not accept the conclusions of these researchers, as everything I know and understand about exercise and health does not align with their controversial findings.

What Can You do to Reduce Your Sitting Time?

Having expressed my disagreement with this study there are still many changes you can make to minimize the impact of too much sitting. Clearly sitting is not something most of our ancient ancestors did so doing too much of it is likely to lead to problems. Unfortunately, most of us, including me, spend the majority of our day sitting.

One of the things I do to compensate for this is to spend about one hour or more every night lying on the floor doing an Egoscue exercise called the tower, which I reviewed in a recent article. It is a powerful simple structural movement that helps to realign my body posture and helps to radically compensate for the structural DE compensation that occurs as a result of sitting too much.

Simple Egoscue Exercises to Try Out

Following are four examples of Egoscue exercises that you can also use to help compensate for some of the damage caused by excess sitting. For more information about Egoscue, visit Egoscue.com or PatchFitness.com. You can also email painfree@egoscue.com with questions.

Foot Circles & Point Flexes

Foot Circles and Joint Flexes
  1. Lie on your back with one leg extended and the other leg bent and pulled up toward your chest
  2. Clasp your hands behind the bent knee
  3. Keep the foot on the floor pointed straight up toward the ceiling
  4. Circle the lifted foot outward for the indicated number or repetitions, then reverse direction for the same number of reps
  5. For the point/flexes, bring the toes back toward the shin to flex, then reverse the direction to point the foot forward for the indicated number of reps
  6. Switch legs and repeat
  7. Repeat 40 times in each direction

Frog (2 minutes)

Frog
  1. Lie on your back with your arms at your side, palms up, and hands relaxed
  2. Place the soles of your feet together
  3. Relax your upper back and hips

Static Extension Position (2 Minutes)

    Static Extension Position (2 Minutes)
  1. Start down on the floor on your hands and knees with your major joints aligned (i.e. shoulders directly above elbows and wrists, hips directly above knees)
    • Hands should be placed shoulder width apart, palms flat with fingers pointed straight ahead
    • Arms must remain straight, elbows locked
  2. Walk your hands about 6 inches forward and then move your upper body forward so that your shoulders are again above your hands but now your hips are forward of your knees about 6 inches
  3. Relax your low back allowing it to arch with the movement coming from the tilt of your pelvis
  4. Collapse your shoulder blades together and drop your head down
    • Your shoulders should be directly above your hands
    • If your low back begins to hurt, back your hips up toward your knees; this will make the exercise a bit easier
  5. Hold as directed on your menu

Standing Forward Bend (2 minutes)

Standing Forward Bend (2 minutes)
  1. Stand with your feet pointing straight and hip width apart
  2. Place your palms on your low back/upper buttocks area
  3. Tilt your hips forward to place an exaggerated arch in your low back
  4. Pull your elbows and shoulder blades together and hold
  5. Now bend forward from the hips (NOT from your low back)
    • Keep the low back arched as you bend over
  6. Tighten your thighs and shift the weight into the balls of your feet
  7. Hold as directed on your menu

5 More Tips to Try …

  • Make sure you get up frequently. At least once every hour make sure you get up from your chair to stretch, march in place or take a quick stroll outside. Research shows that a larger number of breaks in sedentary time are associated with better metabolic profiles, including waist circumference and glucose metabolism. So anytime you are sitting, be sure you are breaking up the sitting time with frequent breaks.
  • Use an exercise ball for a chair or a standing workstation. Unlike sitting in a chair, sitting on an stability ball engages your core muscles and helps improve balance and flexibility. You’ll also burn a few more calories as you keep the ball level than you would otherwise. Standing rather than sitting can also be a helpful option.
  • Stay active throughout the work day. Walk around, pump out a couple minutes of squatting, do some stretching. Break up your sitting and avoid long stretches of unmitigated motionlessness.
  • Stand when you can. Whenever possible, do your work standing instead of sitting. For instance, try putting your laptop on a high counter that you can access while standing, walk around your office while you’re on the phone, and communicate with your coworkers in person instead of sending an email.
  • Cut back on your TV, video game and computer time at home. Make your leisure time as active as possible, as much as possible. Instead of lounging on the couch in the evening, play a game of hide-and-go-seek with your kids, take a yoga class, spend time cooking in the kitchen, or go for a walk around your neighborhood.

Remember, Exercise is Important

Remember to make your exercise time count by including very high-intensity sessions such as you get at NLP. You probably do this at least twice to three times a week at the least. You’ll also want to include exercises that really challenge your body intensely along with those that promote muscle strength, balance and flexibility.

Then, don’t just collapse on the couch after your workout. Challenge yourself to stay as active as possible even during your non-exercise hours to reach your highest level of health.

 

ROD 051311

ROD

Friday, 13May11

   Good Luck everyone!!!

Couplet Friday

20 seconds work/20 seconds work/20 seconds rest x 8 rounds

  • Jumping pullups/Push-ups
  • Ball slams/Sit outs 
  • Dumbbell thrusters/ Tactical lunges

Do 20 seconds of work at each movement in each couplet, take 20 seconds rest then continue.

Complete 8 rounds of each couplet rest 1 minute and move on … until you are fork tender.

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10 Reasons Not to Skimp on Sleep

Too busy to go to bed? Having trouble getting quality sleep once you do? Your health may be at risk

You may literally have to add it to your to-do list, but scheduling a good night’s sleep could be one of the smartest health priorities you set. It’s not just daytime drowsiness you risk when shortchanging yourself on your seven to eight hours. Possible health consequences of getting too little or poor sleep can involve the cardiovascular, endocrine, immune, and nervous systems. In addition to letting life get in the way of good sleep, between 50 and 70 million Americans suffer from a chronic sleep disorder—insomnia or sleep apnea, say—that affects daily functioning and impinges on health. Consider the research:

Click here to find out more!

1) Less may mean more. For people who sleep under seven hours a night, the fewer zzzz’s they get, the more obese they tend to be, according to a 2006 Institute of Medicine report. This may relate to the discovery that insufficient sleep appears to tip hunger hormones out of whack. Leptin, which suppresses appetite, is lowered; ghrelin, which stimulates appetite, gets a boost.

2) You’re more apt to make bad food choices. A study published this week in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine found that people with obstructive sleep apnea or other severely disordered breathing while asleep ate a diet higher in cholesterol, protein, total fat, and total saturated fat. Women were especially affected.

3) Diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance, its precursor, may become more likely. A 2005 study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that people getting five or fewer hours of sleep each night were 2.5 times more likely to be diabetic, while those with six hours or fewer were 1.7 times more likely.

4) The ticker is put at risk. A 2003 study found that heart attacks were 45 percent more likely in women who slept for five or fewer hours per night than in those who got more.

5) Blood pressure may increase. Obstructive sleep apnea, for example, has been associated with chronically elevated daytime blood pressure, and the more severe the disorder, the more significant the hypertension, suggests the 2006 IOM report. Obesity plays a role in both disorders, so losing weight can ease associated health risks.

6) Auto accidents rise. As stated in a 2007 report in the New England Journal of Medicine, nearly 20 percent of serious car crash injuries involve a sleepy driver—and that’s independent of alcohol use.

7) Balance is off. Older folks who have trouble getting to sleep, who wake up at night, or are drowsy during the day could be 2 to 4.5 times more likely to sustain a fall, found a 2007 study in the Journal of Gerontology.

8) You may be more prone to depression. Adults who chronically operate on fumes report more mental distress, depression, and alcohol use. Adolescents suffer, too: One survey of high school students found similarly high rates of these issues. Middle schoolers, too, report more symptoms of depression and lower self-esteem.

9) Kids may suffer more behavior problems. Research from an April issue of the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine found that children who are plagued by insomnia, short duration of sleeping, or disordered breathing with obesity, for example, are more likely to have behavioral issues like attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

10) Death’s doorstep may be nearer. Those who get five hours or less per night have approximately 15 percent greater risk of dying—regardless of the cause—according to three large population-based studies published in the journals Sleep and the Archives of General Psychiatry.

ROD 050211

ROD

Monday, 02May11

 

Concord Couplets

30 seconds on/30 seconds of rest of the 1st exercise, followed by the 2nd exercise in the section. Continue for 4 sets then move to the next couplet until you are done! Enjoy!

Couplet 1

  • KB Swings
  • Mt Climbers  

Couplet 2 

  • Dbl KB Cleans
  • Dbl KB Push Press

Couplet 3 

  • Jumping Pullups 
  • Slam Ball

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The Truth About Gluten

 by Mike Roussell, PhD – 4/29/2011 The Truth About Gluten

Is gluten the devil incarnate as some “Paleo” types say? Or is it nothing to worry about unless you have celiac disease? We asked Dr. Roussell to cut through the crap and tell us the real story.

Muscle vs. Bloat

Your goal is solid, serious size. You want to look like a beast, so you train accordingly and eat everything in sight.

But you’re not really getting bigger, you’re just getting bloated. And when you leave the bathroom at the gym, the janitor has to call in a HAZMAT team.

What’s going on here?

Chances are, your GI tract is screwed up, and you need to get it fixed. What’s the point of chowing down on the foods you need if you aren’t absorbing the calories? There isn’t one. But there is something you can do about it.

When a client comes to me with GI issues, the first thing I look for is a gluten intolerance. An estimated 3 million Americans have celiac disease – an allergy to the protein gluten – and up to 97% of those people are undiagnosed.

But that’s just celiac disease. These stats don’t include those with wheat allergies or gluten intolerance.

Could that be you? Let’s find out.


Gluten 101

Gluten is a protein found in wheat. It’s a binding agent, which means it makes ingredients stick together. If flour didn’t contain gluten, breads would turn out like pancakes.

Here are all the usual flour and grain-based foods where you’ll find gluten:

Barley Rye
Barley malt/extract Seitan
Bran Semolina
Bulgur Spelt
Couscous Udon
Graham flour Wheat
Matzo flour/meal Wheat bran
Orzo Wheat germ
Panko Wheat starch

Gluten also sneaks its way into other foods that you wouldn’t expect:

Ale, beer, and lager Pasta
Breading Roux
Brown rice syrup Sauces
Coating mix Soup base
Croutons Stuffing
Candy Imitation seafood like crab
Luncheon meats Soy sauce
Broth Marinades


What About Oatmeal?

The Truth About Gluten

Oats don’t contain gluten, but they do contain avenin, which is similar.

Some studies show that people with celiac disease can eat oats without problems, but I know some who have an even lower tolerance for avenin than gluten.

The impact of oats varies dramatically between individuals. Try a bowl of oatmeal tomorrow morning to see if you remain free of gastrointestinal consequences. If you notice the bloat, it could be the avenin.


When Your Body Hates Gluten

According to the University of Chicago Celiac Disease Center, there are 300 different symptoms of celiac disease. Here’s a list of the most common symptoms:

Recurring abdominal bloating and pain
Chronic diarrhea or constipation
Liver disorders
Pale, foul-smelling stool
Iron-deficiency anemia that doesn’t respond to iron therapy
Fatigue
Pain in the joints
Tingling numbness in the legs
Pale sores inside the mouth
A skin rash called dermatitis herpetiformis (DH)
Osteopenia (mild) or osteoporosis (more serious bone density problem)
Peripheral neuropathy
Psychiatric disorders such as anxiety, depression

Abdominal discomfort and foul-smelling stool are the most obvious symptoms. Keep in mind, 65% of people with celiac disease don’t have chronic diarrhea.


Disease vs. Intolerance

For decades, scientists thought you were either allergic to gluten or you weren’t. If you were allergic to gluten, you were given the diagnosis of celiac disease. But now we know that celiac disease isn’t the only issue. You could be gluten intolerant.

The main difference between gluten intolerance and celiac disease is that with gluten intolerance your body’s immune system doesn’t nuke your intestines. Instead, your body just can’t digest gluten (so you still end up with bloating and other issues). Either way, you should be opting for a gluten-free diet.

The gold standard diagnosis for celiac disease requires a biopsy. Antibody and genetic testing are the first step. For many, a positive antibody test is enough confirmation to cut the gluten.

In the past I’ve had clients use a lab in Texas called EnteroLab, which examines your DNA to see if you carry celiac disease or gluten-sensitivity genes. Prometheus Labs also offers a battery of gluten/celiac disease tests. Just because you have the genes, it doesn’t mean that they’re active; it does mean that you should consider yourself warned.

Lab tests will cast a broader diagnostic net so you’ll be less likely to hear you don’t have an issue with gluten when you actually do. Aside from just feeling better, proper identification of a gluten issue is important.


Why You Should Care

Aside from digestive discomfort, having an immune system that constantly attacks your intestines has serious repercussions. Those with celiac disease are at increased risk of arthritis and potentially colon cancer.

It can also put the brakes on muscle building.

Let’s take a quick look at GI physiology. Your GI tract is designed to absorb every vitamin, mineral, and nutrient you eat. Humans haven’t always had the luxury of eating every two to three hours, so this was an important anatomical feature.

Here’s what your GI track should look like:

The Truth About Gluten

As you can see, there are folds upon folds containing cells that can absorb what you eat. Now here’s what the GI tract of someone who has celiac disease looks like:

The Truth About Gluten

Notice that the villi have flattened. If this is what your intestines look like, your immune system has carpet-bombed your GI tract: no folds, no more cells upon cells waiting to suck up every nutrient you eat. It’s a wreck.

Now, how much more food would you need to eat if you were absorbing less than 80% of the nutrients in your diet? And that’s just the complications you’ll find in the GI tract.

As a T NATION reader, you can appreciate the interdependent systems in the human body. And you probably already know that in order to maximize hypertrophy, you need to optimize other areas of your body through diet, rest, stress management, and other regeneration practices.

So imagine how the rest of your body will respond to the inflammatory and oxidative balance of your screwed up GI system.

In addition to the unrest in your GI tract, scientists say gluten allergies also impact your heart, skin, central nervous system, reproductive system, and bones. This is why people with celiac disease commonly suffer from other inflammatory diseases (i.e. arthritis). Your body’s revolt against gluten has serious oxidative and inflammatory consequences that extend far beyond digestion.


What You Can Do

Get tested to see if you have an issue with gluten via antibody or genetic testing. You might not have celiac disease since only 1 in 133 people in America have it, but you could easily be gluten intolerant.

Some of us can eat gluten with no problem, but if you’re battling the bloat, I don’t recommend taking it on faith that you’re one of those people.

At the very least, test how you feel with and without gluten. If you’re completely symptom-free with it in your diet, then getting biopsied is a waste of time (and you’d never be able to convince your doc to do it). But if you’re noticing mysterious stomach issues, test a gluten-free diet.

First, cut out gluten-containing foods for one or two weeks and see how you feel. Keep a written log each day. After two weeks, add gluten back to your diet for another one or two weeks, again keeping a written log each day of how you feel.

This second two-week log is probably the most important. I’ve found that when people restrict gluten and then add it back, the rebound effect of gluten can be worse. So when you add gluten back to your diet you might get an exaggerated response, which would tip you off that you have an issue with gluten.

If you do feel better cutting out gluten and then feel worse when you add it back, you’ve got a couple choices.

Option 1: Limit the amount of gluten you eat. Aside from just feeling better, when people cut out gluten from their diets, their health gets better overnight. Coincidentally, most of the garbage (pizza, cookies, etc.) and processed carbohydrates people eat contain gluten.

Option 2: Get the testing that I described earlier. Prove to yourself (or your family) that you have a gluten issue.


Time to Go Gluten-Free?

The Truth About Gluten

Play around with a gluten-free diet. When you cut down on the gluten you’ll have no other choice but to fill up on more fruits, vegetables, and proteins, since those are all gluten-free foods! Or bite the bullet, get tested, and invest a little money in your wellbeing.

Do something. You’ll be healthier, bigger, and stronger for it.

ROD 033011

ROD

Wednesday, 30Mar11

 

Clay Pit to Stay Fit

15 seconds work/15 seconds rest for 8 rounds at each couplet: 30 sec rest between rounds

Couplet 1:
  • Reclines
  • Ball Slams

Couplet 2:

  • Kettlebell H2H swings (heavy)
  • Hindu Push ups

Couplet 3:

  • DB Unilateral Thrusters
  • Mtn. Climbers

_____________________________________________________________________________

For anything worth having one must pay the price; and the price is always work, patience, love, self-sacrifice — no paper currency, no promises to pay, but the gold of real service.

____________________________________________________________________

         Demetria is a 12 year old athlete that has been in our program since October of  2010. Before she entered the program she always wanted to climb the rope. Well now that the program is over and we are confident that she has the upper body strength, we allowed her to climb. Look at her now, capable of maintaining enough back strength to perform this climb…. you go girl!!! We are so proud of your hard work and dedication.

ROD 032911

ROD

Tuesday, 29Mar11

 

Kettlebell Two Minute Torture
 
On the 2 minute mark for 20 minutes, do…
  •    5 Burpees
  • 10 Kettlebell High snatches 
  • 15 Mountain climbers
  • 20 Kettlebell swings

__________________________________________________________________

    Jaime is an eleven year old softball athlete that has been training with us since the latter part of October. Yesterday, we recieved 2 sets of lifting chains. As I was putting them away Jaime asked if she could try lifting these chains. I was reluctant to let her try, but she finally convinced me. Here she is performing 1 of 4 Thrusters, with 3/4 inch, 5 foot long chains that weigh 30lbs apiece and one of them hanging on her neck, thats 90 lbs. of chain. I was amazed at how strong Jaime got, training with us. Go Jaime, you are the best.

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Moore junior Maxine Jasko leaves a lasting impression

Charlie De Biase Jr., March 28, 2011 12:36 p.m.

These young athletes that the Advance are referring to were trained at Nxt Level Performance. We are proud to say that these girls have noticed quite a difference in their performance on the field. It goes to show that strength & conditioning goes a long way. We are very proud of their athletic achievements. Read on…

St. Joseph Hill’s Amanda DiPaolo collides with Moore shortstop Taylor Baggs on a stolen base attempt during the third inning. – (Staten Island Advance/Hilton Flores)

Maxine Jasko couldn’t have left a better first impression if she scripted it herself.

The Moore Catholic junior made a memorable varsity debut, finishing 3 for 3 with two homers and six RBI to lead the Mavericks to an 8-7 CHSAA victory over visiting St. Joseph Hill yesterday.

“Maxine did a great job,” said Moore coach Kristine Knuth, who batted Jasko third. “She’s an impact player that makes things happen.

“Along with (clean-up hitter) Taylor Baggs, I think we’ve got a pretty good 3-4 combo.”

The upstart Hilltoppers, who finished with 10 hits, grabbed a 4-1 lead after 2½ innings thanks in part to RBI hits by Victoria Procopio, Nicole Gundacker and Briana Stapleton, who had two hits apiece.

“I was impressed with our hitting today,” said Hill coach Joe Wuensch. “If we had made a couple of more plays defensively (the rest of the way), things could have been interesting.”

But after the Mavs cut their deficit in half via Baggs’ third-inning RBI single, Krissa Sagona (second of two doubles) and Alexa Aliberti (single) opened the fifth by putting runners on second and third.

That brought up Jasko, who gave the Mavs the lead for good by depositing a Procopio pitch over the left-field fence to make it 5-4.

“I was just trying to put the ball in play,” said Jasko, who also had a first-inning sacrifice fly and a third-inning double. “I worked hard all winter to get ready for the season.

“The pitch was right down the middle and to come through like that is a great feeling. It couldn’t have been any better.”

Not to an inning later anyway.

After Nicole DeMartino added insurance with a run-scoring double in the fifth, Jasko made it 8-4 an inning later when she belted a two-out, two-run homer to center.

“It’s not suprising she’s hitting the ball that hard or that she homered,” said Knuth. “What does shock me is she homered twice in one game.

“She made great contact today.”

Gianna DeCeasar allowed just one run on four hits in four innings of relief to notch the victory. She allowed just one walk with four strikeouts.

An error paved the way to a Hilltopper rally in the seventh, but DeCeasar limited the damage to help preserve the victory.

ROD 010811

ROD

Saturday,08Jan11

                                                       NLP 30 Day Challenge

We dare you to try our 30 day Challenge. One of the biggest things that we stress here at Nxt level  is for our clients to be consistant. Doing the little things right on a consistant basis will help you get your goals that much faster. Now, for the next 30 days, Nxt Level wants to challenge it’s members to a Challenge to perform 10 exercises at 50 reps each. Now in the big picture thats 15,00 extra reps for those 30 days, That’s right 15,000. Wuuu man what a challenge. 15,000 extra reps on top of your workouts. But it’s these small changes on a daily basis, that’ll help you reach your goals that much faster. From pushups, squats, squat jumps, russian twists, hip extensions, v-ups, mtn climbers, alternating lunge jumps, plank twists and chair dips. So mark your calendar for the next 30 days, check off each day and feel free to mix up the order of the exercises. Feel it, do it, be it,  challenge yourself… Consistancy Leads to Success.

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Killer Kettlebell Workout  -  Morning class

30 seconds work/30 seconds rest for 5 rounds non-stop

  • Kettlebell snatches (switch sides half way, 7 reps on each side)
  • Kettlebell alt swings
  • Battling Rope 
  • Box Jumps  
  • Prowler push 

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Athletes ROD - Power Circuit

3 rounds non-stop: 30 work/30 rest:

  • Short but quick box jumps
  • Jumping 180′s w/ 1 foot on short box
  • Suicides w/5lb DB
  • Floor to overhead DB lifts
  • 3 point hip extensions 7 r/l
  • Single leg burpees 360′
  • Leg overs
  • Prowler push
  • Speed rows

ROD 121810

ROD

Saturday, 18Dec10

 

Roped-Up Tabata

20 seconds work/10 seconds rest for 6 rounds at each couplet! Take one minute rest between couplets.

  1. Kettlebell swings/Power Rope 
  2. Kettlebell thrusters/Jumping pull ups
  3. Burpees/Slam Ball
  4. Mountain climbers/Kettlebell high pulls

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Each person is born with a calling. It is your task to discover what that calling is and find a way to make that calling a reality ~ Lucy MacDonald

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ROD 111310

ROD

Saturday, 13Nov10

 

Round and Round

10 Rounds for Time:  
15 Dead Lifts 135#/95#  
15 Pushups

 Let’s go over the deadlift

tn_101_1830     The Set-up…

  • Feet are hip width apart,
  • arms are thumb distatnce apart from legs
  • shoulders are over the bar
  • back angle approximately 45 degrees and slightly extended 
  • eyes looking straight into horizon

 tn_101_1834  

  • Push off with heels
  • drag bar against legs
  • straighten knees while maintaining shoulders over bar
  • and extend the hips at the top

tn_101_1836tn_101_1832      

Reverse movement to descend the weight.

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Obstacles don’t have to stop you. If you run into a wall, don’t turn around and give up. Figure out how to climb it, go through it, or work around it.” – Michael Jordan

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ROD 101410

ROD

Thursday, 14Oct10

 

Tabata Boxing

A timed 2 minutes at each station with NO REST between stations…. the last 30 seconds “I Say You Do”.

Kick, Punch and Jump … a full-body experience that will leave you breathless.

  • M-I-T-T-S
  • Zig Zag Farmer Walks ( Human timer)
  • B-A-G
  • KB Swings
  • B-A-G 
  •  Knees lifts (5/r 5/l on the rope)
  • B-A-G
  • Bosu Burpees 
  • B-A-G
  • Abs  (10 MB Russian Twists &  V’s )
  • M-I-T-T-S

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“One of the rules of caution is not to be too cautious.” – Bahya ibn Paquda

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Here are some videos you might enjoy:

“Squatting To Restore Spinal Motion and To Poop” with Kelly Starrett – video [wmv] [mov]

WOD Demo with Miranda Oldroyd – video [wmv] [mov]

Steve Cotter and Ken Blackburn – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_QfWFGjewE

Ross Enemait shows what he can do – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdthWDUEKtY

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Last night’s ROD was performed as a team, meaning each team member must complete reps together as team before advancing to the next exercise…. why ?

1. Creativity

2.Variety

2. Motivation

3. Synergy

4. Accountability

101310 ROD Results

Chris completed the ROD on his own while he waited for the Panthers to finish there hitting session in the cages and posted a time of 18:29