ROD 030312

ROD

Saturday, 03Mar12

 

Ace’s Up

All player’s will form a circle and the deck is placed in the middle. The first member will approach the deck and select a card. That card will, by suit & number, determine the movement & rep’s. This will be done until all 54 cards have been played or a time limit of 30 minutes has expired.

All movements will be performed together to ensure compliance.

Heart’s = Thrusters/Spades’s = Burpees/Diamond’s = KB Swings/Club’s = V-Sit Ups

Any suit = King’s = 25reps/Queen’s = 20reps/Jack’s = 15reps (i.e. King of Hearts 25 Thrusters)

The Big Joker = 50 Mtn Climbers/Small Joker = 40 KB High Pulls/Any Ace’s = 1 minute rest

The numbers 2-4 cards = 200 meter , 300 meter & 400 meter run.

(if it rains, the numbers 2-4 cards = jump rope rotations)

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Athlete ROD

AMRAP (As Many Rounds As Possible)

for 10 mins do the following

  • 5 DB Thrusters
  • 10 V-ups
  • 20 Split jumps
  • 100 Jump Rope Rotation

 AMRAP II for 10 mins, do the following

  • 7 Burpees
  • 14 Pushups
  • 28 Bodyweight squats
  • 100m Sprint

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Training Is Like Farming

Michael Boyle

I think I remember Stephen Covey in his book Seven Habits of Highly Effective People making reference to what I believe he called “the law of the farm.” The reference was meant to show that most of the truly good things in life take time and can’t be forced. Covey described the process of farming and alluded to how it requires patience and diligence to grow crops properly. In addition, farming requires belief in the system. The farmer must believe that all the hard work will yield an eventual long-term result.

As a strength and conditioning coach and sometime personal trainer, the concept has always stuck with me. The process of beginning an exercise program is much like farming or like planting a lawn. There are no immediate results from exercise and there are no immediate results from farming. First, the seeds must be planted. Then fertilizer (nutrition) and water must be applied consistently. Much like fertilizer in farming, too much food can be a detriment to the exerciser. Only the correct amounts cause proper growth. Overfeeding can cause problems, as can underfeeding. As I sit on my farm and wait for my lawn to sprout, I feel many of the same frustrations of the new exerciser. When will I see results? How come nothing is happening? All this work and — nothing.

The key is to not quit. Have faith in the process. Continue to add water and wait. Farming and exercising are eerily similar. Continue to exercise and eat well and suddenly a friend or co-worker will say, “Have you lost weight”? Your reaction might be, “It’s about time someone noticed.” Much like the first blades of grass poking through the ground, you begin to see success. You begin to experience positive feedback, clothes begin to fit differently.

When my friends or clients talk to me about their frustration with their initial lack of progress in an exercise program, I always bring up the farm analogy. We live in a world obsessed with quick fixes and instant results. This is why the farm analogy can be both informative and comforting.

An exercise program must be approached over a period of weeks and months, not days. The reality is that there is no quick fix, no easy way, no magic weight loss plan, no secret cellulite formula. There is only the law of the farm. You will reap what you sow. In reality, you will reap what you sow and care for. If you are consistent and diligent with both diet and exercise, you will eventually see results. However, remember much like fertilizer and water, diet and exercise go together. Try to grow crops or a lawn without water. No amount of effort will overcome the lack of vital nutrients.

The law of the farm and exercisinig.

Plant the seeds / Plant positive seeds in your mind

Feed and water properly / Feed your body right and drink water.

Wait for results; they will happen, not in days, but in weeks and months.

 

ROD 022312

ROD

Thursday, 23Feb12

 

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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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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ROD 021112

ROD

Saturday, 10Feb12

 

Insane Saturday

4 rounds of 40 seconds work / 20 seconds rest.

One minute rest between rounds.

  • KB high pulls
  • Russian twist on rope ends
  • Weighted step-ups (Heavy-Heavy-Heavy-sandbag/DB/KB)
  • Kettlebell bottoms-up presses
  • Ball slams
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Athletes ROD
 
30/20 x 4 rounds non-stop
 
  • Reclines w/overhead pulls
  • Dumbell push press
  • KB Weighted Dynamic squats
  • KB Deadlifts (heavy-heavy-heavy)
  • Dynamax single arm pushes against wall (one round r/l)

Rest for 1:00…

Finisher – 20/10 ratio for 8 non-stop rounds of:

  • Mtn. climbers on MB (make sure shoulders are over hands on ball)
  • Push-ups over MB (chest tap on ball)

 

ROD 020812

ROD

Wednesday, 08Feb12

 

This ROD is always requested by many members. They found it not only challenging but helped them in gaining mobility and flexibility. This is a classic NLP routine.

Bodyweight/Flex/Mobility Training

45 Max effort and 15 seconds rest. 2 rounds of the following 8 exercises: No Rest

  1. Low Jumping Jacks
  2. Plank Climbers (alternating lead arm)
  3. Single-arm overhead deep squat (right)
  4. Single-arm overhead deep squat (left)
  5. Close grip Burpee into sumo stance jump
  6. Diamond leg sit-ups
  7. Push-ups
  8. Plank (straight arm) to diagonal knee tucks to elbows

1 minute rest & then:

2 rounds of 8 cycles of 20 seconds MAX effort and 10 seconds rest of the following:

  1. Dynamic Squats x 2 sets
  2. Mountain Climbers x 2 sets
  3. Evil Jumps x 2 sets
  4. Burpees x 2 set

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Intermittent Fasting: A Female Perspective

Eat several times per day. Eat only small meals. Never go hungry. Keep your metabolism fueled. That is what I have been taught to think and what I have taught my clients for the past several years. That is how countless people have lost body fat (myself included) and created a new food paradigm. I was of the school of thought that fasting was “dangerous” for your metabolism and could slow or even halt your body’s ability to burn fat.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I am in no way insinuating that eating this way is not a beneficial, safe and effective option. What I realized this year, however, is that there is another way (several, in fact) and that one method does not fit all, at all times in every circumstance. My preoccupation with food preparation, portioning and eating every few hours was starting to take its toll. I was food obsessed and it had to stop.

I had heard a lot about Intermittent Fasting through the community and always thought, “absolutely, no way, not for me, EVER.” It wasn’t until John Berardi of Precision Nutrition published a free e-book on his experiments with fasting, did I begin to give it any serious thought. I read the e-book and subsequently decided to self-experiment to see how my body and mind would react to fasting. I started with one 16 hour fast per week, and now I fast almost every day for 15-17 hours. I began by only fasting on my non-training days and now I train fasted almost exclusively. I have no way of knowing if this method of eating will work for me a year from now, but I am confident that it’s the best method for me NOW and here’s why:

1. I created a healthy relationship with food.

As long as I can remember I have been food obsessed. I would count down the hours, even minutes, until it was “time” for me to eat again. If I wanted to eat something outside of my schedule or my plan, I felt guilt and shame. This usually resulted in weekend binging on cookies and pizza only to start the same strict cycle again on Monday. I was tired of thinking about food, preparing so many meals and worst of all-watching the clock. Intermittent Fasting allows me to go about my day without the thought of eating. I typically eat my first meal between 1-2 and my last meal between 7-9. Most of the time I eat lots of protein, vegetables and healthy fats but every now and then I don’t. I also do not require myself to fast. Meaning, if I want to eat, I eat and if I want to fast I fast. This has rid me of the guilt and the unhealthy ties I have associated with eating. I think about food much less, and more importantly when I am thinking about it, I am most certainly not obsessing over it. I feel a mental and emotional freedom that I gained mostly as a result of my fasting experiment.

2. I eat more at once.

Although I have (mostly) shed the negative food relationships of my past, I still love eating. I love cooking, creating healthy recipes and most of all, I love enjoying food and feeling satiated. Fasting allows me to have bigger meals in a smaller feeding window instead of tiny meals all day long. At first, the small meals really worked for me. They held me accountable, kept me energized and controlled my caloric intake. After a while I began to feel deprived and wanted more. I had constant cravings and often overate as a coping mechanism. In one sitting I will often eat 3 eggs scrambled with veggies and cheese, ½ an avocado and 4 slices of nitrate free bacon. For a girl my size, that’s a lot of food-yet I maintain a very low body fat, a lean physique and I get to enjoy a larger meal.

3. I spend less money and time on food.

Although my caloric intake is probably about the same, I actually buy less food because eating less often allows me to buy fewer varieties of food. Since I only eat 2-3 times per day, I don’t mind eating the same thing every day for a week. I buy less, waste less and prepare less. Now I spend a fraction the money I used to on weekly groceries and have much more time to write, train and study without having to plan, prepare and pack so many meals. I’m more productive and I have more money in my pocket!

4. I have better training sessions.

Initially, I doubted my ability to train in a fasted state. In the past I have felt shaky and weak if I hadn’t eaten for a few hours and my training would suffer. I felt instant anxiety at the thought of training fasted, until I realized that there was a method, not an accidental starvation period. When I adhered to the method, I discovered that not only could I train fasted, I liked it. I had a greater mental clarity and focus, and felt much more alert and energized. Typically I eat at 8 or 9 the night before, train at 11:30 or 12 with a BCAA and beta-alanine supplement and then eat a large, clean meal around 2. My lifts have not suffered at all. In fact, I have hit several PRs, including a 20kg strict pullup and 72kg single leg deadlifts. I will say, however, that sprints or other intense conditioning work at the tail end of a fasted training session have proved more difficult, especially if I haven’t taken the supplements.

Editors Note: I think she’s sandbagging us a little here. From the looks of things, she is still busting out some pretty crazy conditioning work that would leave most of us gassed.

Ultimately, I don’t call myself an intermittent faster and I subscribe to no dogma. This is part of my journey towards a healthy nutrition paradigm. But, Intermittent Fasting is something that has given me new insight to my body and my relationship with food, as well as helped me develop a more open mind to concepts outside of my comfort zone.

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To find more from Neghar, you can go to her website at http://www.negharfonooni.com/.

Also be sure to join her Facebook page called Eat, Lift, and Be Happy and also subscribe to her awesome You Tube channel.

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Have a great day!

 

http://youtu.be/e–xpsjMKEI Watch this!!

 

ROD 020612

ROD

Monday, 06Feb12

 

Monday Start-up

Let’s do this… movements will be performed for 30 seconds at each station, with no rest between exercises. Complete 6 rounds with a one minute rest in between rounds. You must move swiftly through the circuit of the following:

  • KB Swings
  • Half-Burpees (on these, lower your push-up to an inch from the floor)
  • DB Snatches (3rds L/R alternating - let’s go heavy)
  • Sit-outs
  • DB Squat cleans
  • DB Thrusters

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30 Day Challenge Update

How’s it going? Are you performing this challenge daily, weekly? We want to hear how it’s going. This is a plus workout to better improve your performance enhancement. We only ask once a year to do this challenge so why haven’t you been doing it? If you are, good for you. We want to hear your comments on how your doing it. Please folks, this is a good way to communicate your feelings about everything we do for you. Whether it’s a good or bad comment it doesn’t matter. We want to know how NLP has influenced your healthy lifestyle.  So sign up for our comment section and let’s hear from you.

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Have you heard, Spread the word

Starting today we are offering the ”Drop In Whenever” coupon book. You get 10 sessions plus 1 bonus session for $150.
The coupon must be presented to the class instructor before the class starts.
This is the perfect way to introduce yourself, friends or family to NLP. If you do some comparison shopping you will find that NLP’s program and price is unmatched.
To purchase the “DIW” coupon book call 917-922-8513 or send us and email by clicking “Contact Us”  in the lower right hand side column of this site.

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Post Football Depression Syndrome (PFDS)

Super Bowl Sunday. For most men, it makes their year. Unfortunately, for too many, the year ends the day after. PFDS, Post Football Depression Syndrome sets in and sets in with a vengeance. It begins the morning of February 6 this year. Look it up. No review needed for this call. No flag on this field. Emptiness, despair, panic! What now? PFDS is an all out blitz that hits most American males the day after the Super Bowl.

The good news is you get your husband back. For the last six months, men, young and old, have been watching football games like they have a stake in the team or might be called on to “suit up” and get in there at any moment!

Since August, from their “owner’s box” easy chairs they have put their feet up and were handed a bowl of chips and salsa. This helped get their spine angle set for college games in September. The next few months of three college games on Saturday and seemingly endless NFL games on Sunday are a blur for everyone but the wives and girlfriends whose only “fantasy football” was that the real one would end. And yes, they also sat through your Mondays and Thursdays, which always confused them. Women have to be thinking “Hey! I thought we only negotiated for Sunday.”

But alas now, Bang, it’s all over. From coast to coast, football-loving males literally don’t know what to do with themselves on weekend afternoons. They grab their remotes and aimlessly click from one channel to another, watching some NBA games, baseball spring training, perhaps a few minutes of hockey, even a second or two of women’s figure skating in the hopes that they add a cheer. Yet nothing seems to satisfy their inner ache to stare at a bunch of grown men in helmets colliding violently into one another.

Long ago, I went through my own bouts of PFDS, wandering the house like a ghost, my hands shaking from anxiety. I used to play football in college, for heaven’s sakes. The end of the season was, for me, like a small death.

But I have now come out of the other side, and I have to tell you guys, instead of suffering from post-partum Super Bowl sadness, you have a perfect opportunity to improve your life and make yourself happier in ways that might even surprise you. So here goes:

1. Pay Attention to That Woman Who is in Your House.
Let’s say you only spent three hours a week watching football this past season. From September through January, that adds up to 48 hours — two full days. Not bad, you’re thinking. What’s two days a month in return for the infinite joys of football? Well, throw in some golf on the weekends, maybe a few nights out with the guys — whatever male bonding thing you like to do — and add a few more football games, and you easily will have run up at least a week being completely on your own. To put it another way, you will have spent a week not being with the woman in your life.
Granted, your partner might be the type who says she loves having her weekend afternoons to herself or she’s the type who sits through games with you, cheering on your team. But even then, she might occasionally think, “I wish he’d sometimes pay attention to me the way he pays attention to his football games.” She might go so far as to suspect, deep down, that she isn’t as loved or as appreciated as much as she should be.

So, on the first weekend after the Super Bowl, why don’t you spend the hours you normally would spend watching football doing something to make your “football widow” feel special? I don’t care if Valentine’s Day is just around the corner. On the weekend of February 12th, take your partner to a movie that she wants to see or do something with her that you know she likes to do even if it makes you crazy, like antiquing. Then, for all those Sundays she’s fixed you halftime snacks, make her dinner — or take her to dinner. Give her a thank-you card for putting up with you for another season. And on another afternoon, take her for a massage, a manicure and a pedicure at your neighborhood day spa.

As I often tell my male guests who come on my shows and who don’t seem to have a clue about female life, “When Momma ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.” Get the message? This is the time to make sure Momma’s happy.

2. And Then Pay Attention to Those Kids Who Live With You.
It’s one thing to watch a football game with your kids, but it’s another thing entirely to do something with them in which they are the sole focus of your attention. And I’m not suggesting you have a quick catch-up talk one Saturday afternoon with your children or that you take them through a fast food restaurant for lunch. Why don’t you use one of those three-hour blocks you had spent on a football game and use it to take your children on an adventure. It could be something new, like a trip to a museum that none of you have been to before — or a day trip out-of-town. But make it something. Trust me, even if they roll their eyes and say, “Oh, Dad,” they won’t forget it.

3. Do Some Chores.
Don’t laugh. A lot of you have been putting off all the stuff that needs to get done around the house, thinking you’ll get to it when your weekends are free. And, of course, now that your weekends are free, you still don’t want to do anything. Deep down, you could very well be thinking your job is to work during the week and bring home the bacon, and that your weekends should be time to relax, except to take out the trash and mow the lawn. Sorry, but it’s up to you to get that broken gutter fixed. For one thing, you’ll definitely feel better about yourself at least having gotten something done, no matter how minor.

4. Get Out of Your Comfort Zone.
Are you one of these guys who tell people that you watch football because you love the thrill of competition? Or that you like watching the way players overcome seemingly impossible challenges and accomplish heroic feats?

Okay, I’m not saying you should go out and try something superhuman to get over your post-Super Bowl malaise. But please let me state the obvious: there’s nothing easier, and more comfortable, than sitting on your couch staring at a TV. So what about coming up with some project that pushes you outside your usual boundaries for three hours each weekend? Something that makes you take a chance? It could be as simple as sticking to a fitness program. I know a guy who started volunteering for a nonprofit charity instead of languishing in his PFDS when his Saturday college football afternoons came to an end. No, he didn’t change the world. He didn’t get his name in lights like an NFL star. But in his own way, he made a difference.

You can too. And who knows? By the time August rolls around again, you might surprise yourself and realize that you don’t have the desire to watch as much football as you once had.

Alright, I’ll admit, that’s a ridiculous suggestion. But maybe you’ll want to do something more with yourself than watch three games in a row? Would that be all that bad? And on a side note, how come they don’t add a football to figure skating?

ROD 012812

ROD

Saturday, 28Jan12

 

Cusick Crusher

I love the 15/15 work/rest ratio. So lets do it again for 20 mins or 10 rounds whichever makes you feel better…of

  • KB Swings
  • Mountain climbers
  • DB Thrusters
  • DB Renegade Rows
Oh boy, just thinking about this one makes me cringe. Lets have fun and work hard. Oh yea by the way, there’s no rest in between rounds.
“Every second counts, every rep counts.”
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Athletes ROD

This ROD is most effective when done nonstop & together.

  • 80 Mountain Climbers each leg is a 1 count
  • 25 Jump Squats
  • 10 plank shoulder taps
  • 25 Sit-ups
  • 15 Burpees
  • 15 Ball Slams with green MB’s
  • High Knees for 1 minute
  • 30 Kettlebell highpulls…. Repeat sequence as needed
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 Something to think about if your a runner.

ROD 012612

ROD

Thursday, 26Jan12

 

X- treme ROD

This is a timed set of 30 seconds on and 20 seconds rest for 5 rounds ~ No Rest

  • Deadlifts
  • Weighted Step ups
  • Wall Ball
  • Dbl KB Swings
  • Ball slams

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Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This 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 011712

ROD

Tuesday, 17Jan12

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This 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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Tabata Tuesday

Tabata these 5 exercises for 20 seconds rest / 10 second rest.  Stay on each station for the complete 8 rounds

  • TRX recline to a finisher
  • Wall Ball shots
  • KB swings
  • Mtn. Climbers
  • Ball slams

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Athlete ROD

 

A timed 30 seconds work / 20 seconds rest for 4 Rounds

 

  •  Med-ball push-ups
  •  180 Jumps on Stepper
  •  Air squats

 

Rest two minutes, then…

 

  •  Suitecase Deadlift Squat Jumps
  •  Mountain Climbers
  •  S/L Donkey kicks 15r/15L

 

ROD 011312

ROD

Friday, 13Jan12

 

This is a timed workout 30 work / 15 rest with a 40 second rest in between each of the 4 rounds

  • Reclines
  • Band Thrusters
  • Burps
  • 180? twist ball slam
  • Figure 8 to a hold
  • KB Back Presses

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Don’t forget the NLP Party is tomorrow evening!!

ROD 010312

ROD

Tuesday, 03Jan12

 

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This 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 is one of those classes that start with the foundations of Olympic lifting. You must be a diehard enthusiast of the art of weightlifting. This class is for the serious-minded X-treme member. We will review the deadlift.

X-Treme / ROD

This is a blazing fast workout with no time to rest / 10 Rounds for time:

  • 10 Deadlifts (bodyweight)
  • 10 Half-burpees

The only word that will describe this ROD is —- “OUCH!!!”