ROD 033012

ROD

Friday, 30Mar12

 

Fabulous Friday

Here’s an ass kicker

 

This is a 45 second work /20 second recovery timed sets for 3 rounds with 1 minute rest between

  • TRX Finishers
  • Slam Ball
  • DB Renegade Rows
  • Squat Thrusts
  • Mtn. Climbers
  • KB High Pulls

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Dietary fats: Know which types to choose

When choosing fats, pick unsaturated fat over saturated or trans fat. Here’s how to know the difference.

By Mayo Clinic

Most foods contain several different kinds of fat, and some are better for your health than others are. You don’t need to completely eliminate all fat from your diet. In fact, some fats actually help promote good health. But it’s wise to choose the healthier types of dietary fat, and then enjoy them — in moderation.

The facts about dietary fat

There are numerous types of fat. Your body makes its own fat from taking in excess calories. Some fats are found in foods from plants and animals and are known as dietary fat. Dietary fat is one of the three macronutrients, along with protein and carbohydrates, that provide energy for your body. Fat is essential to your health because it supports a number of your body’s functions. Some vitamins, for instance, must have fat to dissolve and nourish your body.

But there is a dark side to fat. The concern with some types of dietary fat (and their cousin cholesterol) is that they are thought to play a role in cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. Dietary fat also may have a role in other diseases, including obesity and cancer.

Research about the possible harms and benefits of dietary fats (sometimes called fatty acids) is always evolving. And a growing body of research suggests that when it comes to dietary fat, you should focus on eating healthy fats and avoiding unhealthy fats.

Harmful dietary fat

The two main types of potentially harmful dietary fat:

  • Saturated fat. This is a type of fat that comes mainly from animal sources of food. Saturated fat raises total blood cholesterol levels and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels, which can increase your risk of cardiovascular disease. Saturated fat may also increase your risk of type 2 diabetes.
  • Trans fat. This is a type of fat that occurs naturally in some foods, especially foods from animals. But most trans fats are made during food processing through partial hydrogenation of unsaturated fats. This process creates fats that are easier to cook with and less likely to spoil than are naturally occurring oils. These trans fats are called industrial or synthetic trans fats. Research studies show that synthetic trans fat can increase unhealthy LDL cholesterol and lower healthy high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. This can increase your risk of cardiovascular disease.

Most fats that have a high percentage of saturated fat or trans fat are solid at room temperature. Because of this, they’re typically referred to as solid fats. They include beef fat, pork fat, shortening, stick margarine and butter.

Healthier dietary fat

The two main types of potentially helpful dietary fat:

  • Monounsaturated fat. This is a type of fat found in a variety of foods and oils. Studies show that eating foods rich in monounsaturated fats (MUFAs) improves blood cholesterol levels, which can decrease your risk of heart disease. Research also shows that MUFAs may benefit insulin levels and blood sugar control, which can be especially helpful if you have type 2 diabetes.
  • Polyunsaturated fat. This is a type of fat found mostly in plant-based foods and oils. Evidence shows that eating foods rich in polyunsaturated fats (PUFAs) improves blood cholesterol levels, which can decrease your risk of heart disease. PUFAs may also help decrease the risk of type 2 diabetes. One type of polyunsaturated fat, omega-3 fatty acids, may be especially beneficial to your heart. Omega-3s, found in some types of fatty fish, appear to decrease the risk of coronary artery disease. They may also protect against irregular heartbeats and help lower blood pressure levels.

Foods made up mostly of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats are liquid at room temperature, such as olive oil, safflower oil, peanut oil and corn oil.

A word about cholesterol

Cholesterol isn’t a fat. Rather, it’s a waxy, fat-like substance. Your body manufactures some cholesterol. Your body also absorbs some dietary cholesterol — cholesterol that’s found in foods of animal origins, such as meat and eggs. Cholesterol is vital because, among other important functions, it helps build your body’s cells and produces certain hormones. But your body makes enough cholesterol to meet its needs — you don’t need any dietary cholesterol.

Excessive cholesterol in your diet can increase your unhealthy LDL cholesterol level, although not as much as saturated fat does. This can increase your risk of heart disease and stroke. Most foods that contain saturated fat also contain cholesterol. So cutting back on these foods will help decrease both saturated fat and cholesterol. The exception to this is tropical oils, which are high in saturated fat but contain no cholesterol.

Recommendations for fat intake

Because some dietary fats are potentially helpful and others potentially harmful to your health, it pays to know which ones you’re eating and whether you’re meeting national recommendations. The 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, issued by the Department of Agriculture, offer recommendations about dietary fat intake.

Here’s a look at the recommendations and common sources of each type of dietary fat. Be aware that many foods contain different kinds of fat and varying levels of each type. For example, butter contains unsaturated fats, but a large percentage of the total fat is saturated fat. And canola oil has a high percentage of monounsaturated fat but also contains smaller amounts of polyunsaturated and saturated fat.

Recommendations for dietary fat and cholesterol intake
Type of fat Recommendation Major food sources
Total fat This includes all types of dietary fat. Limit total fat intake to 20 to 35 percent of your daily calories. Based on a 2,000-calorie-a-day diet, this amounts to about 44 to 78 grams of total fat a day. Plant- and animal-based foods.
Monounsaturated fat While no specific amount is recommended, the guidelines recommend eating foods rich in this healthy fat while staying within your total fat allowance. Olive oil, peanut oil, canola oil, avocados, poultry, nuts and seeds.
Polyunsaturated fat While no specific amount is recommended, the guidelines recommend eating foods rich in this healthy fat while staying within your total fat allowance. Vegetable oils (such as safflower, corn, sunflower, soy and cottonseed oils), nut oils (such as peanut oil), poultry, nuts and seeds.
Omega-3 fatty acids While no specific amount is recommended, the guidelines recommend eating foods rich in this healthy fat while staying within your total fat allowance. Fatty, cold-water fish (such as salmon, mackerel and herring), ground flaxseed, flax oil and walnuts.
Saturated fat Limit saturated fat to no more than 10 percent of your total calories. Limit to 7 percent to further reduce your risk of heart disease. Based on a 2,000-calorie-a-day diet, a 10 percent limit amounts to about 22 grams of saturated fat a day, while 7 percent is about 15 grams. Saturated fat intake counts toward your total daily allowance of fat. Cheese, pizza, grain-based desserts, and animal products, such as chicken dishes, sausage, hot dogs, bacon and ribs. Other sources: lard, butter, and coconut, palm and other tropical oils.
Trans fat No specific amount is recommended, but the guidelines say the lower the better. Avoid trans fat from synthetic (processed) sources. It’s difficult to eliminate all trans fats because of their presence in meat and dairy foods. The American Heart Association recommends limiting trans fat to no more than 1 percent of your total daily calories. For most people, this is less than 2 grams a day. Margarines, snack foods and prepared desserts, such as cookies and cakes. Naturally occurring sources include meat and dairy products.
Cholesterol Less than 300 milligrams a day. Less than 200 milligrams a day if you’re at high risk of cardiovascular disease. Eggs and egg dishes, chicken dishes, beef dishes and hamburgers. Other sources: Seafood, dairy products, lard and butter.

Source: Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2010

Need help calculating what your daily fat intake should be in grams? Multiply your daily total calorie intake by the recommended percentage of fat intake. Divide that total by 9, which is the number of calories in a gram of fat. For example, here’s how a 7 percent saturated fat limit looks if you eat 2,000 calories a day. Multiply 2,000 by 0.07 to get 140 calories. Divide 140 by 9 to get about 15 grams of saturated fat.

What about very low-fat diets?

If watching fat content is a good strategy, is it even better to try to eliminate all fat from your diet? Not necessarily. First, your body needs some fat — the healthy fats — to function normally. If you try to avoid all fat, you risk getting insufficient amounts of fat-soluble vitamins and essential fatty acids. Also, in attempting to remove fat from your diet, you may wind up eating too many processed foods touted as low-fat or fat-free rather than healthier and naturally lower fat foods, such as fruits, vegetables, legumes and whole grains. Instead of doing away with fat in your diet, enjoy healthy fats in moderation.

Tips for choosing the best types of dietary fat

So now that you know which types of dietary fat are healthy or unhealthy, and how much to include, how do you adjust your diet to meet dietary guidelines?

First, focus on reducing foods high in saturated fat, trans fat and cholesterol. Then emphasize food choices that include plenty of monounsaturated fats (MUFAs) and polyunsaturated fats (PUFAs). But a word of caution — don’t go overboard even on healthy fats. All fats, including the healthy ones, are high in calories. So consume MUFA-rich and PUFA-rich foods instead of other fatty foods, not in addition to them.

Here are some tips to help you make over the fat in your diet:

  • Read food labels and ingredient lists and avoid products with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil listed among the first ingredients.
  • Saute with olive oil instead of butter.
  • Use olive oil in salad dressings and marinades. Use canola oil when baking.
  • Use egg substitutes instead of whole eggs when possible.
  • Sprinkle slivered nuts or sunflower seeds on salads instead of bacon bits.
  • Snack on a small handful of nuts rather than potato chips or processed crackers. Unsalted peanuts, walnuts, almonds and pistachios are good choices.
  • Try nonhydrogenated peanut butter or other nonhydrogenated nut-butter spreads. Spread them on celery, bananas or whole-grain toast.
  • Add slices of avocado, rather than cheese, to your sandwich.
  • Prepare fish such as salmon and mackerel instead of meat twice a week. Limit sizes to 4 ounces of cooked seafood per serving.

ROD 032812

ROD

Wednesday, 28Mar12

 

Wired-Up Wednesday

30 seconds of work 20 seconds of rest non-stop for 4 rounds

  • Pull-ups
  • Wall Ball
  • Ball Slams
  • DB Single leg alt step-up jumps

Then a 2 min rest…then the following for another non-stop 4 rounds

  • Squat Thrusts
  • KB Front squats
  • T-Stab push-ups
  • Push Press

______________________________________________________________________

American vs Russian Swings

Kelsey swings

Pavel on the American Swing vs. the Hardstyle RKC Swing- Courtesy of  the Russian Kettlebell Room.

“Comrades, overhead swings have been around and are occasionally done by weightlifters in Eastern Europe. I have mentioned this exercise in the Russian Kettlebell Challenge book. You may do them if:

1. You have mastered a lower swing.

2. You  have no thoracic and shoulder restrictions and you do not hyperextend  your back or jam your shoulders on the top.

3. Your body is skinny enough not to get in the way.

Com. Brett Jones has pointed that  “The snatch is an exercise in elevating the energy, the swing is an  exercise in projecting the energy forward. If we want to elevate—we will  snatch.”

Why would you want to project your force forward rather  than up?—Because, unlike weigthtlifting and some Highland throwing,  many sports (boxing, martial arts, football, shot put, etc.) demand it.  And when you project your force forward your abs and lats act as the  sights of a gun. The arms pointing forward and the abs being short bring  the “sights” in line. “Spreading the sights” weakens the punch. Try an  experiment: throw a few punches against a chest level target, then punch  a target overhead, and compare your power.

Why NLP uses the Russian Kettlebell Swing

Many gyms, especially those that practice CrossFit, perform kettlebell swings so that the swing ends with the arms completely overhead. We do not. We prefer to teach what is known as a Russian kettlebell swing. The high swing is characterized by an end point where the kettlebell is completely overhead at the top of the swing and the knee and hip opened completely. This is referred to as an American kettlebell swing within the fitness community. It’s motions is longer and smoother. In contrast, we teach what is known as a Russian kettlebell swing. This is characterized by a high point right with the kettlebell directly in front of the eyes. The movement is shorter, faster and more compact.We feel very strongly that this kettlebell swing variation is superior to its American counterpart. It’s not only the original and most widely practiced version of the swing around the world, it’s also safer and a better training method than the American version. While the American version of the kettlebell swing moves the kettlebell through a greater range of motion, it places the highly unstable shoulder joint in a compromised position at the top of the swing. The shoulder joint is the most unstable joint in the human body and bearing a load overhead in a close grip position is not orthopadeically sound. Furthermore, despite claims that the greater range of motion associated with an American swing increases work (Work = Force x Distance) and therefore power (Power = (Force x Distance) / Time)), we are certain this is simply not the case in actual application. Although the range of motion in an American swing is greater than its Russian counterpart, this also requires the athlete to make a compromise in either Force or Time that easily negates any increase in range of motion. If the swing is brought totally overhead, the athlete must use a lighter kettlebell (which will likely lead to decreased Force output) to ensure they can move the kettlebell all the way to the overhead position. This somewhat obvious point is actually even greater than one might think because once the arms and kettlebell are moved beyond parallel with the ground the athlete is at a distinct mechanical disadvantage (read up on lever systems for details if you’re not a biomechanist or engineer). In fact, the kettlebell slows substantially once it passes the chest on the upswing due to this mechanical disadvantage. Basically, if you have enough hip power to get the kettlebell all the way to the American standard position overhead then you should be using more weight (or actively forcing the kettlebell down to increase the effective load of the kettlebell). The other consequence is that the time to complete the swing is significantly longer which reduces the power output. So while the American swing is the de facto technique for CrossFit competitions, we do not feel it is the best variation to be used in training outside of training specifically for CrossFit competitions.

 

 

 

 

ROD 031712

Saturday, 17March2012

 

 

9am @ NLP

St. Paddy’s Day Gone Bad

 

 

 

 

 

Team ROD for time:

  • Row 300M
  • Wallball
  • Reclines
  • Box jumps
  • Highpulls
  • Burpees

6 person team – 1 person at each exercise.  One person starts on each exercise and performs that exercise until the rower reaches 300m, then everyone switches exercises until everyone has rowed 300M (example: after your first teamate rows 300m’s the teammate performing wallball moves to rower, reclines moves to wallball,  box jump moves to reclines, highpulls moves to box jump, burpees moves to highpulls and rower goes to burpees. Continue this until everyone has rowed for 300 meters).

______________________________________________

10:30am

High Rock Challenge Training – week#1

 Sand Bagged

Perform the following for time:

  • Run 200m w/ sandbag
  • 20 Step-ups w/sandbag
  • Run 200m w/sandbag
  • 20 dynamic squats w/sandbag
  • Run 200m w/ sandbag
  • 20 jumping jacks w/ sandbag
  • Run 200m w/ sandbag
  • 20 Thrusters w/ sandbag
  • Run 200m w/ sandbag
  • 20 High pulls/w sandbag

______________________________________________________________________________

 Athlete’s ROD

Couplets

30/30/30 work-work-rest in a circuit style for 4 rounds

  • Agility Ladder / Dynamic Squats / rest
  • Ball Slams / Box Jumps / rest
  • DB Snatch (l) / DB Snatch (r) / rest
  • Suicide Runs / Burpees / rest (Outside) set up 4 cones about 12 ft apart, touch and go.

ROD 031512

Thursday, 15March12

 

Ohhh Snap Gau!!

5 Rounds for time:

  • 10 Knees to Elbow
  • 15 Thrusters ( w 20lbs or >/ m 30lbs or >)
  • 200m run

______________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This Super Boxing X-Treme 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!!!!

 

ROD 031312

ROD

Tuesday, 13Mar12

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This Super Boxing X-Treme 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!!!!

___________________________________________________________________

Let’s do the opposing ladder routine with a 20 minute cap. In order for this ROD to be effective, it must be performed with heavier than normal weight.

  • 1 DB Hang Squat Cleans  / 5 Split Squat Jumps / 10 Burpees
  • 2 DB Hang Squat Cleans /  5 Split Squat Jumps /   9 Burpees
  • 3 DB Hang Squat Cleans /  5 Split Squat Jumps /   8 Burpees
  • 4 DB Hang Squat Cleans /  5 Split Squat Jumps /   7 Burpees
  • 5 DB Hang Squat Cleans /  5 Split Squat Jumps /   6 Burpees … the jumps will be counted as 1 rep for r&l. Do it fast and heavy til you reach the opposite finishing number of 10 to 1 ratio. i.e.  10 DB Hang Squat Clean / 5 Split Squat Jumps / 1 Burpee.

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 Why eat raw food?

For millions of years, humans had only our senses to rely on in selecting food. We were guided to eat fruit by our ability to see colors against a contrast of green, smell enticing fragrances and taste sweetness. During those millions of years, our bodies adapted to our environment and became entirely dependent on certain conditions for optimal health. The closer we can get to those ideals in our modern lives, the higher the level of health we will enjoy.

Humans have been cooking food for thousands of years. Nevertheless, our biological and physiological requirements were in place long before the practice of cooking food began. Evidence that we are flouting our biological heritage by cooking our food is plain to see. No other animal on Earth cooks its food, and no other animal besides humans (and the animals we feed) experiences disease on the scale that we do.

Heat changes the molecular structure of foods, rendering nutrients mostly unusable. Cooked and otherwise denatured or processed food is less digestible than raw food. Anything that is consumed that cannot be digested or stored must be eliminated as waste. Eating cooked food produces so much waste in the body that our eliminative organs cannot keep up, and waste accumulates. It is this accumulation that leads to an overall toxemic state in the body and results in disease. Biologically-appropriate, raw food is almost entirely usable by the body, and provides all the nutrients that the body requires, as it does for all the other species of animals on the planet.

What do raw foodists eat?

For our purposes here at RawSchool.com, the term “raw foodist” refers to someone who eats a diet primarily or exclusively comprised of biologically appropriate foods. (Please see the next question for a definition of “biologically appropriate”).

Raw foodists eat fruit, vegetables, nuts and seeds. The ideal percentages seem to be 75-85% fruit, 10-20% green leafy vegetables, and 5% nuts and seeds. Most people who change to a raw food diet initially go through a period of eating very complicated combinations of foods as a way of replicating their favorite cooked foods. This is a healthy, painless way to transition. There are lots of ‘uncook’ books on the market now, with recipes for everything from raw lasagna to cookies and pies. These kinds of dishes can be very helpful in the transition process. At first, it is common to eat large quantities of food and to eat more fatty and dense foods like nuts and dried fruit, as these give us the “full” and “satisfied” feeling that we’re used to getting from cooked food. This changes over time. Eating cooked food for an entire lifetime causes our digestive systems to build up protective barriers to prevent too much absorption of the harmful, denatured substances in cooked food. A diet of raw, biologically appropriate foods allows the body to slowly and naturally shed that protection, thereby increasing its ability to absorb and assimilate nutrients. When this happens, our bodies demand less.

Eventually, successful raw foodists invariably settle into a very simple way of eating. It is not hunger but our emotional addictions to food and our misplaced expectation that food should serve as entertainment or comfort which motivate us to combine foods in complex recipes. True hunger demands only nutrient-rich, uncooked, biologically-appropriate food, and preferably only one food at a time, since each food requires a different chemical environment for digestion.

Why don’t raw foodists eat grains, meat, and dairy foods?

“Biologically appropriate” foods are those for which we are physiologically adapted. Humans are a frugivorous or “fruit-eating” species. This is not a matter of speculation or belief. Belief is defined as the acceptance of ideas without regard to evidence for or against. We need not allow beliefs to guide us in matters of health. Rather, what should dictate our habits are the immutable laws of nature that are obvious and self-evident through simple observation.

Natural laws and principles of science are just as fixed and certain when they are applied to human health as they are when applied to any other subject, such as chemistry, mathematics or astronomy. For example, animals are scientifically classified according to their diets and their corresponding physiologies. Granivores eat primarily grains, insectivores eat mostly insects, and so on. When we compare human anatomy and physiology to those of other species, we find that we are distinctly different from granivores, carnivores, insectivores, herbivores and even omnivores (such as pigs and bears). We find, though, that we are remarkably similar, in fact identical in some important ways, to our primate cousins, who are all frugivores. Although mainstream nutrition “experts” commonly classify humans as omnivores, the stark differences between us and true omnivores and the preponderant similarities between us and frugivores leave absolutely no doubt that humans are, indeed, a frugivorous species. When the evidence is studied objectively, the facts are inescapable. It is these kinds of observations and logical conclusions which enable us to determine with 100% certainty what our natural foods are.

Where do raw fooders get their protein, calcium, etc.?

The story on protein has been so hopelessly and deliberately obfuscated by commercial propaganda that it’s always the first question that is asked about diets that include no animal products. It is surprising for most people to learn that human protein needs are actually very small. Overconsumption of protein presents a far greater threat to our health than not getting enough. The truth is, it’s practically impossible to not get enough, and actual cases of protein deficiency are almost nonexistent in our culture. Our true protein needs can be ascertained quite definitively by examining the relative protein content of human mother’s milk. When we are infants we grow faster than at any other time in our lives. Consequently our relative protein needs are the greatest at that time as well. Yet breast milk contains a very small amount of protein — 1-4%, depending on the age of the infant (percentages change at various stages of development). It is no coincidence that fruit contains roughly the same percentage of protein on average: 1-6%.

The reality about all the various nutrients in food, including protein, calcium, vitamin b12, EFAs and the others, is that we needn’t concern ourselves at all with getting enough of them. What we need to do is determine what our real, natural foods are and just eat them. None of the other animals on Earth fret about getting enough of each nutrient, they just eat the foods that naturally appeal to them. We can do the same. Nature has it all worked out for us. As previously mentioned, it is not a mystery or a matter of theory which foods we’re supposed to be eating. This has been determined with as much certainty as whether we should drink water instead of Kool-Aid or breathe oxygen instead of carbon monoxide.

Further, it has been estimated that only a small percentage of the nutrients in food have been isolated and identified. It may well be that the ones yet to be discovered are even more important than the ones we unnecessarily obsess about getting enough of. Like most other misconceptions about health, the fear of nutrient deficiency does not originate from true scientific evidence but from the advertising efforts of the industries which stand to gain from our confusion – the meat, dairy, egg, medical, pharmaceutical, herb and supplement industries, to name a few. These ideas and fears need to be discarded in favor of rational thinking and sensible, fact-based information.

How does eating cooked food contribute to disease?

Cooking radically alters the chemical structure of food. Proteins are denatured, fats are oxidized and potentially dangerous compounds are produced, such as trans-fatty acids, free radicals and other toxic hydrocarbons. Sugars and starches are progressively caramelized and complicated, giving rise to erratic and excessive body sugar metabolism reactions. Although it is often claimed that the destruction of enzymes in cooked food forces the body to use its own ‘enzyme bank’ to digest the food, this is not the case.  The enzymes in food perform other functions that have to do with the growth and development of the plant or the food itself.  However, enzymes are extremely heat-sensitive and can therefore be regarded as the canaries in the coal mine — their destruction means that vital nutrients have probably been damaged as well.  In addition, cooking causes minerals to return to their inorganic ash state, making them unuseable and toxic to the body. Vitamins are inactivated, turned into toxic or useless chemical structures, and no longer add to the capable function of the body. Poisonous, highly reactive free radicals are instead produced, adding to the body’s burden. These are only a few of the problems that are created by the cooking of food.

When we eat a meal of cooked food, the body’s white blood cell contingent must triple or quadruple in order to expel and counteract the offending substances. Any poison or drug taken into the body elicits the same defensive response. This does not occur when we eat a meal of raw, biolgically-appropriate food.

Cooked food is obviously not a poison that will immediately cause us to fall over dead. Rather what it does is gradually and cumulatively overtax the various organs and processes in our bodies with a backlog of waste. Eating cooked food is like piling so much trash in your driveway that the trash collectors can’t keep up. Eventually, the trash is going to overtake the entire driveway and you’re going to have a problem. A lifetime of eating cooked food causes the body to become saturated in its waste. Tissues that are in constant contact with toxins and other waste become irritated, inflamed, ulcerated and indurated (hardened). Cells die at an accelerated rate, tissues degenerate and organs lose functionability. This is why people in their 30s, 40s and 50s who eat a cooked food diet typically have one chronic illness or another. The fact that people manage to live for decades eating a diet of cooked food doesn’t mean that it isn’t harmful, but rather attests to the human body’s capacity for tolerating abuse and demonstrates that our lifespans would be a great deal longer if we lived in accordance with our biological mandates.

What are the other healthful habits one must practice to acquire and maintain perfect health?

Much attention is given to nutritional matters, because that is where people have gotten the farthest off track. But there are many other habits which bear significantly upon our level of health. Exercise, for example, assists and improves many vital bodily processes, including the movement of lymph, which carries waste out of the body. During sleep, the body regenerates nerve energy, restocks cells and organs with fuel, replaces old cells and rids itself of uneliminated toxins. Breathing clean air means our respiratory and circulatory systems don’t have to work so hard to remove impurities. Sunshine enhances bodily nutritive processes overall and facilitates nutrient absorption and assimilation. Engaging in work that is creative and productive gives us a sense of satisfaction and self-reliance, and is a healthy outlet for our energy. All of these factors, plus many more, are important in determining how healthy we will be.

In addition to eating cooked or processed food, smoking, drinking harmful beverages, sleeping too little and not exercising enough, there are other habits that are particularly destructive of health. One of those is the practice of suppressing symptoms with medications, remedies, herbs and supplements. A cold, for example, is the body’s relief valve for eliminating toxins that have accumulated to a level that jeopardizes health. Taking cold remedies of any kind, even so-called natural ones, causes the body to retain waste that it would otherwise discard. To suppress any of the body’s eliminative efforts is to subvert its ability to maintain balance and preserve life. The wisdom of our bodies far exceeds our capacity to fully comprehend it. The body never makes mistakes. Our health-building habits should therefore include fostering in ourselves an attitude of trust, respect, and cooperation with the innate intelligence of our bodies.

What typically motivates people to go raw?

The reasons are many, but all have to do with a desire to be healthy. It is common to meet raw fooders who changed their diets as a result of having been seriously ill. Typically, people seek relief through doctors, naturopaths, acupuncturists and the like, but when their illnesses “return” or when they finally realize that symptom suppression in any form is not “cure”, they sometimes become open to a truly natural approach. Fortunately, many people are coming to understand that the best way to deal with disease is to remove the cause rather than treat symptoms. Disease is not a predator that seeks out unfortunate victims, and its causes are not mysterious. Understanding what disease is and why it occurs not only liberates us from the burden of sickness, but from the fear of sickness as well.

The idea that we can have so much power over our own quality of life just by living according to our bodies’ true requirements is a profoundly motivating reason to go raw. We can take the responsibility for our health out of the hands of disinterested third parties, like doctors and nutritionists, and put it where it belongs, on US. Nobody can eat, sleep, or exercise for us, and it is these behaviors which determine whether or not we will become ill. By learning how to incorporate the simple, nature-based principles of good health into our everyday lifestyles, we can discover the inner joy and well-being that can only come from an internally clean, healthy body

What’s the hardest part about going raw?

Many times when people hear about the health transformations and see the astounding before and after pictures of people who have gone raw, they jump right into the lifestyle without fully realizing the mental, emotional and lifestyle changes that are required to succeed long-term on a 100% raw food diet. Old unhealthful habits have to be replaced by new healthful ones. This is a very slow and painstaking process that requires conscious effort. In addition, there is much to learn and UN-learn. You’ll have to be prepared to devote a good deal of time to seeking out and studying new information, and casting off old ideas and ways of thinking. You’ll have to have enough knowledge about and confidence in what you’re doing to deflect well-meaning criticism from friends, co-workers and family members whose mistaken ideas about health may cause them to question or even condemn your new lifestyle. If you live in a ‘cooked’ household it will take strength and conviction to stick to your healthy practices while everyone around you indulges in their favorite cooked foods. Even if everyone in your household is raw, you’ll still be living in a culture where destructive habits are encouraged and supported. It will seem sometimes like you’re the only one in the world who cares about living healthfully. This is just a partial list of the challenges. On top of all that, you’ll have to have enough resolve and commitment to get through stages of healing and bodily adjustment that may occasion feelings of weakness, anxiety, lack of energy, discouragement and even acute (flu-like) symptoms. The process of detoxification is not torturous, but it can be unpleasant at times. It is a necessary part of getting well. Nature demands due accounting when we abuse our bodies. Our choices are either to pay now with a little short-term discomfort, or later with degenerative disease and premature death.

You also have to be willing to change your life in ways that go beyond eating habits. Your exercise and sleep habits, personal hygiene, social outlets, forms of recreation and even possibly your profession, among many other facets of your life, may become subject to re-evaluation and change if optimal health is what you desire.

In addition, health improvements may not happen quickly. In the beginning they may not seem equal to the sacrifices and work that are required. Healing happens at different rates for everyone but it can sometimes be very slow. Patience and cooperation are the order of the day. Our bodies are under no obligation to reward our efforts with instant or quick healing.

HOWEVER, even the most difficult and demanding aspects of going raw are worth every bit of effort in the end if you see them through. Until you have experienced them, the potential benefits defy the imagination. No disease, no fear of disease, clear thinking, deep sleep, balanced emotions, rational judgement, almost limitless energy, a firm/youthful body, clear eyesight, increased self-confidence and self-awareness, heightened senses, smooth skin, healthy sexual function and the knowledge that you will be independent and active into your old age, plus many, many others. Ultimately, the benefits you reap WILL be commensurate with the effort you sow.

 

ROD 031212

ROD

Monday, 12Mar12

 

Here we go Again,

Kettlebell Torture
 
For 20 minutes peform as many rounds as possible of the following movements as quick as possible
  •    5 Burpees
  • 10 Kettlebell snatches or Snatch pulls
  • 15 Mountain climbers
  • 20 Kettlebell swings

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 Here are some Genious Ideas…

 

 

ROD 030512

ROD

Monday, 05Mar12

 

Monday Mash-up

 

6 Rounds: 1 minute rest between rounds

30 seconds work /10 second rest intervals moving non-stop from station to station:

  • Reclines
  • Burpees
  • Kettlebell swings
  • Mtn Climbers
  • Dumbbell snatches l/r at each round (snatches will start just below the knee, between the legs, in a bentover position)
  • DB Push Press

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Posting to comments

 

 

 

 

 

 

This is a quick step by step guideline to posting comments.

1. make sure your computer is on

2. go to www.nxtlevelnow.com .  Your already there, I told you this would be easy

3. On the Home page click on today’s ROD

4. Go to the bottom of the side tool bar and click on “Register” under login.

5. Enter username and email. (use a name, word or phrase you will remember)

6. Click on that days ROD (example: ROD 030512)

7. Click on comment

8. Post away

9. Repeat steps 1-8 whenever you want to repost to comments

Thank you

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ROD 030212

ROD

Friday, 02Mar12

 

Friday Melee

AMRAP for 10 minutes of:

  • 10 Push-ups
  • 15 Slam Ball
  • 20 Mtn Climbers

2 minute rest then… another 10 minutes of:

  • 10 Goblet Squats
  • 15 DB Push Press
  • 20 Swings

Post times for each AMRAP on white board and to comments….

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The TRUTH About Bacon

By Cassandra Forsythe-Pribanic, PhD, RD

When people today think of bacon, they think of clogged arteries, love handles, and sin. They also think of Homer Simpson.

That’s right: eating bacon means that you’re destined for heart disease, a fat belly, and a lifetime in Satan’s dungeon-Doh!

But, thinking this way is a terrible misconception. In truth, bacon is a very good addition to your diet, and should be something enjoyed more often than you endulge in pancakes and syrup or crepes with brown sugar.

Pancakes and syrup may look good to some people, but it is not good for you at all…

Bacon is not an unhealthy food when chosen correctly. By reading this article, you’re going to learn why and how to properly add bacon to your diet, and you’re going to start doing it now.

What Is Bacon?

Bacon is a cured meat (a natural way to prevent the meat from spoiling by way of salt, and often nitrites) that traditionally comes from a pig. It consists of both the meat of the pig, plus the fat (known as lard).

Bacon usually comes from either the belly of the pig, the back, or the sides. The amount of fat (lard) in bacon depends on how fat the pig is, with the belly usually being fattier than the back, especially in America.

Today, you can also find bacon made from turkey. But if you actually spent time reading the label of turkey bacon, you’d see it contains a laundry list of ingredients, many of which are not good for you such as hydrolyzed corn gluten, soy protein, wheat gluten, disodium inosinate, silicon dioxide and nitrites.

Europeans Have It Right

All over Germany, pork reigns supreme. From bacon to sausage to lard, no parts of the pig are left unused. And, if you take a good look at traditional Germans, you will notice that they are not as overweight as Americans, nor suffer the same incidences of chronic disease.

Unlike modern-day Americans, Europeans use lard for most of their baking and cooking. Previously in the US, we also used to incorporate a lot of lard into our daily diets, but with the notion (from our government) that pig fat is too “saturated” and unhealthy, we shifted to the use of hydrogenated plant oils (aka., vegetable shortening ) which actually made us sicker, fatter, and more diseased.

Why Bacon is Better

To understand why bacon, and the fat it’s rich in (lard), is a healthy choice for us to use in our diets along with other beneficial fats and proteins, let’s look at the nutritional science of this food.

If we take 1 tablespoon of pure lard, we see that is consists of an even balance of saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids, with some polyunsaturates and cholesterol (all animal fats contain cholesterol), but no trans fats. Specifically, it contains*:

• 5.9 grams of saturated fatty acids

• 6.4 grams monounsaturated fatty acids

• 2 grams polyunsaturated fatty acids (mostly omega-6)

• 14 mg cholesterol

*analysis from Mass Spectrometry at University of Alberta, 2003

If you compare lard to vegetable shortening, you get**:

• 3.8 grams saturated fatty acids

• 6.7 grams monounsaturated fatty acids

• 3.9 grams polyunsaturated fatty acids (mostly omega-6)

• 2 grams trans fatty acids (man-made)

• 0 mg cholesterol

**analysis from ESHA Food Processor

What’s most frightening is the trans fats found in this man-made, fake lard substitute – trans fats have now been linked directly to heart disease morbidity and mortality, and there is a strong move to rid our shelves of this dangerous fat as soon as possible.

Saturated Fat is Not Bad

Some people still think saturated fats are evil, and as a result have banned bacon from their homes. However, fatty acid experts today emphasize that saturated fat from natural sources like meats, dairy, and tropical oils (coconut, palm) are not detrimental for our health, but instead much better than the polyunsaturated and hydrogenated substitutes we’ve been recently using.

Sure, maybe it’s confusing to try and tell yourself that saturated fat isn’t bad like we once thought. However, it’s important that you realize that we were fed lies and deception that only made us fatter, sicker, and more unhealthy. We need to change this way of thinking.

The bottom line is that saturated fats, like that found in bacon, CAN and SHOULD fit into a healthy diet – a diet low in sugar, processed carbohydrates, and synthetic chemicals, but high in fresh low-pesticide vegetables, organic meats and fish, and nuts and seeds.

Essential Omega-6 and Omega-3 Balance

What about the omega-6 fats in bacon? Some people feel that bacon and other foods containing omega-6 polyunsaturated fats should be minimized, and a focus placed on omega-3 fats such as fish, flax, and certain nuts – which is both true and untrue.

It is correct that we should try to keep a fairly close balance between the omega-6 fats (found in most meats and some nuts and seeds) and the omega-3 fats, but we can’t completely eliminate omega-6s in favor of omega-3s.

Not only is it almost impossible, unless you eat completely fat-free meats and avoid all nuts and oils, but your body needs omega-6s because they are ESSENTIAL – meaning necessary for proper metabolic and physiologic function.

It’s more important to maintain a healthy ratio of omega-6 fats found in foods like bacon, with omega-3 fats found in DHA-enriched eggs and omega-3 rich fish.

For example, a great breakfast combination would be a few slices of bacon with omega-3 DHA eggs topped with organic salsa and avocado. Delicious and nutritious!

The Science of Bacon Fat

In 2003, I conducted a research study at the University of Alberta looking at the effects of a high bacon fat diet compared to a high palm oil diet on the cholesterol synthesis and inflammation profiles of ten healthy men.

I cooked all the food for these guys every day, so all they ate was what I gave them. They ate things like:

• (BLLTs) Bacon, Lettuce, Lard and Tomato sandwiches

• Hash Browns cooked in lard

• Bacon and Egg Omelets cooked in lard

(To say I smelled like bacon all the time was a compliment…)

After 6 weeks on each diet, their blood was analyzed for cholesterol synthesis rates, cholesterol, and triglyceride concentrations, and markers of inflammation.

What was found was that the high lard diet compared to the high palm oil diet produced significantly lower total cholesterol, and total-cholesterol/HDL cholesterol levels, with slightly lower LDL-cholesterol and inflammatory marker levels.

What this means is that fat from lard may be less cholesterolemic and inflammatory than fat from palm oil. This does not mean that palm oil is a bad fat, but instead suggests that lard may be better when consumed often.

Choosing Healthy Bacon

Now that you know that the fat in bacon is not bad for you, or harmful for your health, don’t immediately go out and purchase bacon and eat it everyday.

First, you need to look for bacon that is nitrite-free.

Nitrite (sodium nitrite) is a preservative used in bacon to not only prevent spoilage, but also keep bacon a nice red color.

However, nitrite is also a known carcinogen and is related to increased risk and incidences of cancer.

So, if you do decide to choose bacon to help you either stick to a lower carbohydrate diet, or just eat instead of toast and jam, make sure you choose wisely – natural nitrite free bacon is the best.

With bacon, you don’t have to worry about the pig being full of artifical or natural hormones, because these are not allowed to be used on pigs.

Eat a Better Breakfast

Now you know that bacon is a good breakfast food, but it can also be used to enhance the taste of your favorite salads for lunch, or as a side dish at dinner.

No matter what you choose to do with your diet, bacon or not, remember that bacon is not bad for you, and will not ruin your health. Also, when eaten in the context of a low-sugar, unprocessed diet, it will not make your belly look like a pig’s.

 

 

ROD 022812

ROD

Tuesday, 28Feb12

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This Super Boxing X-Treme 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!!!!

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This class is built for speed, agility and strength. This class is not for convenience, nor is it for those who want to use light weights. This class is for those who are looking to take their fitness  to the next level. The movements expected in this class are advanced.  Every participant will be expected to perform the suggested lb’s for each movement and post their time or rounds completed when applicable to comments. Those of you who do not want to meet these requirements are invited to the Boxing class. We have members who want to go outside their comfort zone and take their fitness to another level.

Ladder This For Time

10,9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1 reps on of these 4 movements for time:
  • DB Thrusters (w 20lb or > / m 30lb or >)
  • Clapping Push-ups
  • Box Jumps
  • Kettlebell swings (w 20kg or > / m 24kg or >)

Post times to comments…..

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How Should Children Exercise?

People often ask questions about children exercising. And you might find this surprising, but the plurality of kid-related questions I receive pertain to exercise. Not food  – So I’ll go through two of the most common queries, paraphrased, and answer them, then follow up with my recommendations for ideal – but totally achievable and realistic – kid fitness.

But first, let’s go over the dire situation we currently face. Kids are not very active. They are fatter, more sedentary, and more unhealthy than the previous generation of kids. Whereas in 1969 42% of American children walked or biked to school, just 16% did so in 2001 (and I imagine the number has decreased since then). This isn’t me crowing about the good old days of kids walking uphill backward and barefoot in freezing snow to school while the blazing hot sun paradoxically burns overhead and having to stop along the way to haul hay bales and fistfight bullies all while doing arithmetic without calculators and researching term papers without the Internet (although let’s face it – those were good times). These are incontrovertible facts, confirmed via empirical evidence and by counting the number of kids you see with noses buried in iPads. Preschoolers are sedentary (even during outdoor playtime), children from low socio-economic households are sedentary (PDF), teens are sedentary, and don’t get me started on those lazy infants.

And the evidence is pretty clear that active kids and teens become active adults, while sedentary kids and teens become sedentary adults. If that’s true, the next generation of adults is going to be more sedentary than the current group unless you guys – the parents – do something about it. Notice that I said nothing about the government stepping in. They can make recommendations (the same ones they’ve been making for decades to little effect), but it comes down to you. Are you going to start walking and exercising and playing so that your kid follows your example and maintains interest in movement from an early age? Because that’s what it’s going to come down to. It’s not even a big deal. Kids love to move. They are born with the desire and innate drive to move throughout the world, climbing and lifting and throwing things. We stifle that with our chairs and school schedules and passive modes of entertainment, but the drive to move is there. This isn’t an obese diabetic with bad knees you’re trying to motivate. This is a kid brimming with kinetic energy who will engage in intense activity, given the chance. Take advantage of that and give it!

Okay, now that the ugly stats are out of the way, let’s get to the meat.

Does lifting weights stunt growth?

Everyone’s heard that kids who lift weights will suffer stunted growth. When Carrie and I were having kids, it was even the official recommendation of the American Academy of Pediatrics that children not be allowed to strength train, with the justification being it would damage growth plates and retard bone growth (and thus height). Before we examine the evidence, let’s talk about growth plates. What are they, exactly?

At either end of “long bones” (bones that are longer than they are wide) are epiphyseal plates, also known as growth plates. A bone grows at the ends and as it does, the growth plates are constantly in flux. The chondrocytes are always dividing to produce more and newer bone, and this renders the “energy-absorbing capability” of the growth plate “lower than that of bone, ligament, or tendon.” In growing kids, the growth plates are more susceptible to injury than ankles or other common areas of injury because they will “fail first.” About 85% of people with growth plate injuries enjoy normal, uninterrupted growth, but the potential for interrupted growth nonetheless exists.

That being said, no research has ever shown that weight training actually stunts growth in youth. In fact, just like adults who lift, kids who lift enjoy stronger bones (which extends into adulthood), increased lean mass, improved insulin sensitivity, and overall better health. A recent review (PDF) of all the epiphyseal injury literature found that the bulk of epiphyseal injuries occur on the football field, and that of the injuries attributed to weight training, 7.4% were epiphyseal. Of “all sports,” 10% of injuries were epiphyseal. The takeaway from the review is that growth plate injuries can occur in any sport, not just weight training (and even there, it’s not as heavily represented).

So, you see, the answer isn’t as simple as “yes” or “no.” Weight training with excessive loads, improper technique, and/or poor programming can lead to epiphyseal growth plate injuries, just as they can and do lead to general injuries in weight lifting adults, but so can football hits, snowboarding accidents, and bike mishaps. Injury can happen anywhere and in any activity. I’d even argue that because strength training takes place in a controlled environment – no bodies flying at you from across a field, no split-second decisions, no quick movements in either direction, just you and the weight – it is safer than many other forms of childhood physical activity. The evidence (what little there is) seems to support this contention.

If your child is going to lift weights, get the kid’s form dialed in and checked by an expert. Have him or her lift for higher reps and lower weights; no heavy singles or five rep maxes until later adolescence, when the growth plates have closed. Lift with your child, and don’t let them lift alone. If enthusiasm gets the better of them and they try to go for a max and you’re not there to supervise, bad things could happen.

Can kids benefit from regimented programs like NLP?

Potentially. Fitness programs are only necessary because physical activity is no longer required for survival. I have to make the decision to go for a walk or a hike because I no longer have to walk to get food or water. I lift heavy things in the gym because I no longer have to do manual labor or hunt animals to live. All exercise programs are replacements for once-compulsory activity that’s no longer compulsory. Of course, I’d argue that activity is compulsory, but not in the sense that most people mean it. Being a couch potato won’t kill you today. It’ll kill you down the line.

However, if your kid is naturally active, a highly regimented program isn’t really necessary. Strict programs will help kids who have “forgotten” how to play and move around.

PBF’s movements are perfect for younger kids because they focus on manipulation of their own bodyweight. Even the most strident naysayer of youth weight lifting would admit that kids are equipped to safely move their own bodyweight.

My “Guidelines” and Recommendations

Here’s what I’d do if I had to raise a kid all over again and I wanted them to become a healthy, active, strong human. These are my soft guidelines and recommendations.

Provide Ad Libitum Play

Play must be the foundation. Play is fun, and the way kids play is usually active. You let kids play, then, and they’ll do so by moving their bodies and exploring the world, and this will create a powerfully positive association with movement and physical activity. Then, if you want to introduce something more regimented later on, they’ll be more open to it. But play must always form the basis of children’s movement.

Many adults can get away with grueling workouts as the basis of their leisure time (not me), but kids cannot.

Focus on Form and Technique

Untouched, unmarred kids will generally show pretty good – maybe flawless – form when squatting and lifting things. They’re bendy and flexible and mobile and their connective tissue hasn’t hardened or stiffened up from misuse or disuse. Thus, if you can instill excellent form and make sure they maintain that form from an early age, they’ll be set for life.

Most exercise injuries come from bad form and technique. If you want to avoid those dreaded growth plate injuries, whether your kids are weight lifting, doing plyometrics, running, playing sports, or just playing, focusing on form is essential.

Keep “Workouts” Short and Snappy

Don’t linger too much on one exercise. Instead of putting your six year old on Starting Strength for toddlers, work the movements into everyday life so your kid gets short bursts of activity. Bust out with squats in the middle of a walk to school. Do some Grok crawls down the produce aisle. Sprint to the stop sign. Pick up every rock you find on your hike, making sure your kid displays a proper hip hinge every time (this is a good way to cement excellent form for both parent and child).

When you do a workout, keep things moving. Don’t prescribe specific reps and sets every single time you exercise.

“Disguise” Your Workouts

Instead of five founds of Grok crawls, box jumps, and pullups, set up an obstacle course in the front yard or at the park. Tunnels that you have to crawl through, cones that you have to jump over, and a tree that must be climbed. Let kids be kids and keep things fun.

Push sports, but don’t put too much pressure on your kid, especially by focusing obsessively on one sport or activity to the detriment of overall general development.

Pressure breeds resentment and kills enjoyment. While an adult weight lifter going for a max deadlift probably benefits from his workout partner (read: peer) screaming in his ear to “Pull!”, a ten year-old kid isn’t going to get better at free throws because his dad (read: parent, authority figure) screamed at him to do so. You’re trying to organically foster enthusiasm for movement, sport, and fitness, and you do that by letting the kid discover his own path and being there to nudge him in the right direction when asked.

Get baseballs, soccer balls, footballs, and basketballs. Your kid should play the sport your kid wants to play, not the one you wished you could play.

Participate!

You’re not a coach. You’re the parent. Join in with your kid. Use him or her as a weight. Wrestle with them. Go outside with them. Race them. Climb trees with them. I see parents at playgrounds staring at their phone while kids play, often alone, and I shake my head at the missed opportunity. Get in there and play too!

Buy a small kettlebell for your kid. Make some sandbags, clubbells, and slosh tubes in adult and kid sizes.

Let Them Climb Stuff

Trees, pullup bars, ropes, fences. If you can, see about installing a pullup bar or rope climb at your place of residence. Have that kid climb on that thing as much as possible as soon as those opposable thumbs are functioning.

Let Them Jump Onto and Off of Stuff

Kids fall, a lot. Teaching them how to launch themselves into the air and handle themselves while there will help avoid many of the potential downsides of the inevitable descent. It may even lower the incidence rate of accidental falls, and it will certainly improve their ground-foot interfacing skills.

Let Them Balance on Stuff

Balance is an essential skill that will pay dividends down the line, in both everyday life and athletic endeavors. Simple planks of wood laid out in the yard make for a safe, effective balance beam. This will also make expert maneuvering of the cracks in the sidewalk (and avoidance of maternal lumbar fractures) possible.

Let Them Swim

Swimming is a valuable skill that will stay with your child for life. It’s like flying. At least, that’s how I saw it when I was a kid.

Relax!

Kids do dangerous things as a rule. They ride skateboards and make jumps. They climb trees and fall from them – sometimes on purpose to “see what happens.” They play football, get in scuffles, and make hairpin turns at breakneck speeds while dribbling a ball (with either hands or feet). Sports are dangerous, sure, but so is just about anything you do involving your body and the laws of physics. Let them figure it out. You’ll be there if something goes wrong.

It basically boils down to this: get kids moving and balancing and playing early, get them strong, mobile, and agile, and you’ll improve their ability to handle their own body in a dangerous world, thus reducing the chance that any serious injury will occur. And just like you never forget how to ride a bike or swim once you’ve learned it as a child, a kid who is active from the start will never lose that ability – or desire – to move as an adult.

That’s about the best gift you can give your child, if you ask me. (And in case you didn’t notice, all those guidelines are pretty effective for non-kids, too.)

So, parents and everyone else, what do you think?

Read more: http://www.marksdailyapple.com/how-should-children-exercise/#ixzz1nbtzcfSP

ROD 022412

ROD

Friday, 24Feb12

 

Happy Friday

These exercises will be done in 5 minute circuit and will change every circuit as the class progresses with a 1 minute rest between circuits.

Circuit A

  • Dbl DB Pushup to
  • Renegade Row to
  • Bear Crawl forward and reverse repeat for 5 minutes

Circuit B

  • Dbl DB Thruster to
  • DB Pushups to
  • DB Renegade Row to
  • Bear Crawl f/r repeat for 5 minutes

Circuit C

  • 5 Dbl KB Clean and Jerk to
  • 5 Windmill alt r/l  to
  • 20 Mtn. Climbers repeat for 5 minutes

Circuit D

  • 5 Dbl KB outside swings to
  • 5 Rear Lunge r/l to
  • 5 Deadlift jumps to
  • 10 Sit-outs repeat for 5 minutes…Done

 

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