~EXCEED ALL EXPECTATIONS & BLOW AWAY THE COMPETITION~

~EXCEED ALL EXPECTATIONS & BLOW AWAY THE COMPETITION~
"It ain't braggin' if you can do it." ~Muhammad Ali~

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Testimonial from a 61 year old man/ aka Tommy D/ aka my Dad

This is something my dad wrote a few months ago. It's a testimonial from a 61 year old for the coaching and training we do at North Shore CrossFit. Thought I'd share.

It is almost 2 years ago that I decided at age 59 that it was time again for me to get myself into good physical condition. I had experienced some lower back problems from moving furniture several years ago and it essentially disabled me enough that I stopped working out and playing sports. I finally found a good chiropractor and he got my back problem corrected and now it was time to get back into shape.
I was looking for a personal trainer that could ease me back into shape with out my hurting myself and David Picardy at North Shore CrossFit was exactly what I was looking for in a coach.
It was perfect! The CrossFit concept got my strength, cardio, and reflexes back into "playing" shape..even at my age!
I lost some weight while adding muscle size and tone to my body. I worked out about 3 to 4 times a week. The beauty is I never got bored, it took only an hour for an intense workout, and the coaching was superb. It taught me things that I never learned in the gyms with cables and machines. My biceps are bigger and I haven't done a single curl in 2 years! Total body workouts! Period!
I'm now 61 and I am stronger and in better shape then I have been in over 10 years. My cholesterol count went from 205 to 165 and my ratio is now 3.7. My blood pressure is 115 over 70 and my last heart rate count was 50! All good stuff. No medication either.
And lastly, the camaraderie that I enjoy at CrossFit during these workouts with other members helps to inspire me to get even more enjoyment out of pushing myself to the max!
If your my age, then you too remember this is how we use to work out. You know, before the fitness industry went into machines and glorified "look at me" gyms.
I guarantee that you will move better and feel better then you have felt in years.


Training Log

Wednesday 8/20/08
(am)
ran 3.3 miles 25 mins
I did this same run back in March of 2007 in about 34 mins. I've done more than 1 mile once since then and that was only 2 miles. CrossFit works! And I did my best to POSE while running and I maintained a pretty good pace the whole way.
(pm)
Overhead Squats- haven't done these in over a month.
10 reps at 45#
5 reps at 95#
5 reps at 125#
5 reps at 135#
5 reps at 145#
5 reps at 155#
5 reps at 165#
3 reps at 175#
3 reps at 185#
1 rep at 195#
1 rep at 205# (previous max from 4/08, failed push press)
1 rep at 205# (good)
1 rep at 210# (good, new max)
1 rep at 215# (almost, mother f 'er)
Again, CrossFit works! You don't have to specialize and work on a specific thing to get better at it. Work on everything, your overall general fitness and skill-sets, and you'll continue to get better at everything.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Earnest - The Patient Man

Earnest Graham has arguably the most fitting name in sports and in life for that matter. I stumbled upon this story as I was looking through ESPN the Magazine. I used to watch Earnest play, six and seven years ago, for the Florida Gators, my favorite college football team. Last season, in the NFL, he got his first opportunity to start for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, because of injuries to Cadillac Williams and Michael Pittman. He was first introduced into the league in 2003 as rookie, and was cut three times in that one year. The most I ever new about the guy was the college he played for, the number he wore and that in watching him in college, I thought he was a pretty good running back. Today, I am very thankful to have been properly and fully introduced to Earnest Graham. I am always touched, and I guess, just happy to know and find more examples of good, honest, hard working human beings, with inspiring attitudes toward life and it's challenges. Of course I don't overlook the importance and beautiful spirits of the people who supported Earnest(his girlfriend(now wife), friends and family). Please take the time to read this story. Earnest Graham is a great example for all of us, as so many of us struggle with the virtue of patients. I love how he says, "patience is a form of open-mindedness." So true, I had never really looked at it that way. This strong character man epitomizes the true meaning of patience, perseverance and earnest.

TEN MIL THE HARD WAY

Like a lot of NFL journeymen, Earnest Graham had to go for broke to get his big break.
by Justin Heckert



The patient man comes home to another hotel room. In a borrowed truck, he comes home to his girlfriend and baby girl; to suitcases with clothes that used to hang in the closet of the apartment from which he was recently evicted. He comes home in a borrowed truck because his car has been repossessed. His mom and his friends lend him money, while his girlfriend covers the diapers, groceries and $10 drive-through dinners.
He can scarcely afford the $150 per week for his daughter's day care. But the patient man pays it, because if he were to look after her himself, he would have to wave good-bye to those long workouts at Bally's and the dream of playing in the NFL. The time in the gym doesn't pay a dime, but his girlfriend, patient woman that she is, drives him there anyway. He has to borrow a phone to call her to pick him up, but he is not ashamed. He has blind faith in his ability, although sometimes he wonders if what he's doing is for the best.
He and his girlfriend move again and again, out of Tampa, beyond the infinite strip clubs and gas stations. They follow hotel signs that stretch high above the road, taking the cheapest deals they find. His first big pro paycheck—$25,000 from the Buccaneers—is long gone, and since he has been cut three times in his short career, the patient man, Earnest Graham, will live this way until his family has nothing to fall back on but the virtue of patience itself, nowhere to go but the two-bedroom apartment of a friend who's agreed to let them live there, with three other men, for free.
In these spring months of 2004, Graham drives his girlfriend, Alicia, and daughter, Aiyana to the beach, away from their problems. To Clearwater, where they sit, still as sand dollars. Sometimes he and Alicia don't say a word. They just watch the dwindling sunlight as Aiyana sleeps in her stroller.
The NFL is not a place for patient men. It's not a league anxious to give players their first big chance five years down the line. There are no guaranteed contracts, only 16 regular-season games for men who have something to prove.
Graham talks about this in June 2008, drinking a cream soda, his legs dangling from atop his pool table, while he watches his children swim outside his brand-new house in suburban Tampa. The 28-year-old running back is medium-size, stocky, with a cleanly shaved head and a pointy goatee. A short-sleeve tee exposes ink on his left forearm: "Struggle Builds Character."

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Lesson Learned

Update on my hip: I learned my lesson very quickly. I have a very tight hip(already new that). But as I was going through the pain on Wednesday and Thursday, I listened to my intuition that where I was feeling the pain probably wasn't the route of the problem, as is the case with most every symptom we experience. So if the pain was felt in the adduction of my hip, then I had to look at the issue in the abducting muscles of my hip. Like I said I know it's tight, but good god when I laid on my Trigger Point "Quadballer," as it's called, what a great pain that was, that went all the way down my leg. After about 10 minutes of rolling into my glutes and all the way around to the front of my him flexor(the side of my hip being most painful on the roller), I stood up and started testing the movement of my leg. I had far more range of motion before I felt the pain I had earlier, and the pain was much less. So I did more rolling throughout the day and by the end of the day Thursday, I had no pain at all. What a nice miracle that was. The best thing I did was never got down or felt like I was going to experience any setbacks with the injury. Injuries are part of any athletes life. I just figured it happened for a reason and some good had to come from it. I'm rolling everyday now to prevent this from happening again, as I know I'm not out of the woods yet, I need a more balanced and flexible hip, actually both hips. Most important though, in learning more about my body, I can better serve others in sharing the knowledge I confirmed through my experience. I hope you all had a great weekend. Next week I'll try to have posts that have nothing to do with me ;) But I hope any of this was of some help to you. Even if it just gets you rolling and stretching more, as these are important and often neglected aspects of our training. Let me be your example of what happens when we avoid areas of weakness, but also what happens when we maintain a healthy focus on the bigger picture during times of misfortune. Basically, we create our own fortune with a healthy mental attitude.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

"An Ode to America"

My father emailed this to me yesterday. It was good to read while I was reporting for jury duty and sitting in the jury pool. Anyway, I liked it, and thought I would share. Everything in quotations was written by my dad.

"We rarely get a chance to see another country's editorial about the USA.
This article was written on September 24, 2001. (I verified this on Snopes 8/6/2008) Once again, it takes someone from the outside of America to remind us about our inherent greatness as a nation in spite of our imperfections.
(To Michelle Obama: We are not a mean spirited people.)
Read this excerpt from a Romanian Newspaper. The article was written by Mr. Cornel Nistorescu and published under the title 'C'ntarea Americii, (meaning 'Ode To America ') in the Romanian newspaper Evenimentulzilei 'The Daily Event' or 'News of the Day'"

~An Ode to America~
Why are Americans so united? They would not resemble one another even if you painted them all one color! They speak all the languages of the world and form an astonishing mixture of civilizations and religious beliefs.
On 9/ll, the American tragedy turned three hundred million people into a hand put on the heart. Nobody rushed to accuse the White House, the Army, or the Secret Service that they are only a bunch of losers. Nobody rushed to empty their bank accounts. Nobody rushed out onto the streets nearby to gape about. Instead the Americans volunteered to donate blood and to give a helping hand.
After the first moments of panic, they raised their flag over the smoking ruins, putting on T-shirts, caps and ties in the colors of the national flag. They placed flags on buildings and cars as if in every place and on every car a government official or the president was passing. On every occasion, they started singing: 'God Bless America!'
I watched the live broadcast and rerun after rerun for hours listening to the story of the guy who went down one hundred floors with a woman in a wheelchair without knowing who she was, or of the Californian hockey player, who gave his life fighting with the terrorists and prevented the plane from hitting a target that could have killed other hundreds or thousands of people.
How on earth were they able to respond united as one human being? Imperceptibly, with every word and musical note, the memory of some turned into a modern myth of tragic heroes. And with every phone call, millions and millions of dollars were put into collection aimed at rewarding not a man or a family, but a spirit, which no money can buy.
What on earth can unite the Americans in such way? Their land? Their history? Their economic Power? Money? I tried for hours to find an answer, humming songs and murmuring phrases with the risk of sounding commonplace, I thought things over, I reached but only one conclusion... Only freedom can work such miracles.
-Cornel Nistorescu
"It took a person on the outside - looking in - to see what we take for granted!"
Training Log
Tuesday 8/5/08
200 pushups
50, 30, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20
(later on)
4 mins "long cycle"(clean&jerk) double kb's (53#)
25 reps(cannot put kb's down for the 4 mins)
rest
6 mins single kb clean&jerk (53#)
46 reps(Left for 2 mins (switch), Right for 2mins (switch), L for 1 min, R for 1 min)
70 ring dips
18, 9, 8, 5, 5, 5, 7, 6, 7
rest
25 handstand pushups
6, 6, 5, 4, 4
Wednesday 8/6/08
Power Snatch
1x3x 135#
1x3x 145#
1x2x 155# (failed 2nd rep)
1x2x 155# (failed 2nd rep)
1x2x 155# (both good)
1x1x 165#
1x1x 175# (failed)
1x1x 175# (failed)
5x3 front squat
255#
on the last rep of my last set I badly injured my left hip flexor. when driving up out of the hole(bottom of squat) my knees adducted(drove inward), so naturally I forced them out, but clearly too late in my squat as I felt a very noticeable grind go through my left hip. drive those knees out all the way down in your squat and keep them driving out as you begin driving up, and all the way up(my advice to you). in my assessment my injury is not muscular, but much deeper in the socket of the hip joint, hopefully no serious ligament damage. you will see me walking gingerly, feel free to bust my balls(especially when you see me getting in and out of my car). funny thing is I can still do air squats, as long as my knees constantly abduct(drive outward) and my hips reach back as they should, and I am in my heels as always. so basically, if I do a very good squat I have no pain, if my knee adducts at any point during hip flexion, the pain can literally put me on the floor(joy!). all in all, I will not be doing anything, but pushups with my left leg resting on my right, dead hang pullups, ring dips, and presses for, I'm assuming, a good bit of time.
It's all good though :) Blessings will be found in every crisis. And let me say that this week has not been one of the best in recent memory, but that's why it's important to be present in the moment and not follow one emotion, or the other(pleasure, pain/elation, depression). It's all love when you grant yourself the wisdom to see the balance and have gratitude for all occurrences, good and bad(what lessons can be learned?, how can we grow from this?).
(I know everyone loves when I get to philosophizin' ;)

Monday, August 4, 2008

Dustin Pedroia: "170 Pounds of Mouth"

Great article from ESPN The Magazine on Dustin Pedroia.

170 POUNDS OF MOUTH
As Boston's relentless agitator, Dustin Pedroia dishes out a never-ending stream of smack. Good thing he can back it up.
by Jeff Bradley


This is just one of 162. Every day is pretty much the same. It's not quite 4 o'clock, three hours before the first pitch at Fenway Park, and Dustin Pedroia is in the Red Sox dugout, ranting. "No one's going to separate us," he says to backup catcher Kevin Cash. "I'm telling you, when we win the World Series, I'll high-five everyone, but then you and me are going into the outfield, and we're going to have a fistfight. And no one's going to separate us!"
Although Pedroia keeps a straight face, Kevin Youkilis and Jason Varitek cannot. Cash just looks straight ahead and with a slight smile says, "That's fine by me, man."
There's not going to be any fistfight. Not even a shouting match (at least not a two-way shouting match). Pedroia has no real beef with Cash. His only problem right now is that it's quiet. And that's got to change. You've no doubt heard the expression "Manny being Manny." Well, this is Pedie being Pedie. He's a little loudmouth punk. And in a clubhouse full of superstars, he's also the guy who energizes the defending champs—with a never-ending stream of smack.
Training Log
Friday 8/1/08
rest day for real
just playin' around: max turkish getups 96# left and right (both pr's)
static hang: 2:05
Saturday 8/2/08
max deadlift 485# last time I maxed out, about a month and a half ago it was 405#. a year ago it was at 525#, maybe someday I'll make it back there.
Sunday 8/3/08
NSC WOD
200m lunge
3 rounds
30 wall ball
20 power cleans 95#
15 burpees
200m lunge
33:00
What the f...!
Monday 8/4/08
NSC WOD (modified) subbed double kb swings for double unders
21-18-15-12-9-6-3
Double KB swings 35 one hand, 25 other hand (that was all I had)
pullups
elevated pushups
didn't time this: no watch

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Tyson Gay - One Story to Watch in the Beijing Olympics

LADIES MAN
(TYSON GAY IS THE FASTEST SPRINTER IN AMERICA. IN 2007, HE WAS THE FASTEST ON EARTH.)
In Beijing, Tyson Gay could be the man of the hour. But he never would have had the chance without three women.
by Luke Cyphers

He'd be getting off the bus when a girl he'd always looked up to would challenge him to a race and beat him, yet again. Or he'd be on his couch, whiling away a sticky Kentucky summer in front of the TV and a woman he always looked up to would push him out the door to run the hills behind their house. Or he'd be staring at his lane on the track, whiling away the minutes between training sprints on a hot Arkansas afternoon—no coach to tell him what to do, no telling what would become of his career—and a young woman he'd always looked up to would give a nod, and they'd line up and work on his start again. And when one of his million-dollar legs betrayed him, when four years of work seemed to evaporate in a painful instant, the women he always looked up to were there to stop the tears, to let him know things would work out. To reassure him that there's always a reason.
Tyson Gay is the fastest sprinter in America. In 2007, he was the fastest on earth, winning the 100- and 200-meter events at the world championships in Osaka. In an event normally dominated by bluster and machismo, the soft-spoken Gay forgoes trash talking and listens to gospel music before races. He radiates calm, but his demeanor masks volcanic energy, which erupts in his furious forays down the track.
At the U.S. Olympic trials in Eugene, that energy both lifted and defeated him. He ran the 100 in a U.S.-record 9.77 seconds, easing up before the finish. The next day, he ran the fastest 100 in history, a wind-aided 9.68 to win the final, setting up a showdown in Beijing against the Jamaican duo of Usain Bolt (who stunned Gay in May by beating him with a world-record 9.72) and Asafa Powell (whose record Bolt shattered). Then, six days after his 100 triumph, Gay returned to the track for a quarterfinal heat of the 200. But 40 meters into that race his left hamstring seized, and Gay dropped to the Oregon track like a bag of flour, his hopes of competing in both sprints dashed. Nonetheless, Gay will take his place in the blocks for the 100 in Beijing, vying again for the title of fastest man on the planet, on the planet's biggest stage. When he does, it will not be an act of defiance, but of perseverance. It is a trait he acquired from the women he's always looked up to.


Training Log

Wednesday 7/30/08
5x3 Split Jerk
185#

5x5 Back Squat
1x5x 255#
1x5x 265#
3x5x 275#

Thursday 7/31/08
Rest Day (I'll probably do a bunch of pushups)
so on my "rest day" I did the following, this was not planned just kept adding to it as I went. This is a borderline problem that this was considered my "rest day." But hey, that's what this group/blog/"Athletes Anonymous" is all about. We all have a problem with challenging ourselves to be stronger, healthier, more well rounded individuals and aspire to be better all the time. If you're not trying, you're not living.
120 pushups on 5" handles for extra range of motion
30,30,20,20,20
alternating sets pushups, ring dips (50 each)
20(rd),20(pu),10(rd),10(pu),10(rd),10(pu),10(rd),10(pu)
alternating sets strict pullups, rind dips (50 each)
10(sp),10(rd),5(sp),5(rd),5(sp),5(rd),5(sp),5(rd),5(sp),5(rd),5(sp),5(rd),5(sp),5(rd),5(sp),5(rd),5(sp),5(rd)
50 pushups
10,10,10,10,10
totals: 220 pushups on 5" handles, 100 ring dips, 50 strict pullups
total time to do all this craziness (unofficially) 54 mins
don't know or care if that would be a good or bad time, I did it just to get some real good reps in. I took a good guess on how long I spent doing it, so you don't think I blew right through this, it was all about good reps.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Olympic Feeling

I don't know how many of you care about the Olympics, I can't say I'm one to get into them too much recently, especially when they can be half way around the world and scheduling to watch an event is enough work on its own. But many amazing stories, that will often times go beyond sport, emerge from the Olympic Games as something we remember, always. Like I said, not necessarily remembered for world records, but for something human; a feeling, an emotion that all of us around the world will watch and share the same feeling despite our differences in government, religion, etc. I'm sure as you're reading this some of you are already thinking of at least one story that touched you. From athletes struggling through physical pain and adversity to win the gold for their team and country the way Kerri Strug did in 1996, when she stuck her dismount on the vault, with an ankle she could barely walk on. You saw the tears in her eyes, the smile on her face, and you knew they were not tears of pain, even as she stood there on one leg, but they were tears of elation for what she had just accomplished in putting her gymnastics team and country in position to take home the gold. I remember watching that, and though I was young, I knew.... I knew what I was watching, I could feel it. I didn't have to know much of anything about gymnastics, I just had to be human, and in the moment with what that young woman had just done. She displayed great courage and she was proud, as were her teammates, as were all of us watching at home and in the arena. This is just one example of many, but one that I remember personally so well, as the 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympic Games were the two that I watched most closely. Another example of heroism in the Olympic Games for issues of politics and race, is Jesse Owens an African-American running in Berlin in 1936 with Adolf Hitler in the stands. Owens, 22 years old, won four gold medals and broke the Olympic record for the 200m sprint. The Germans had previously been the dominant athletes in track and field events and were favorites on their home court.
Sports is the only true "Reality TV" there is today. It's real drama, real ups and real downs. As Red Sox fans we know this all too well, anyway, good to be on the upside as of the past few years. Cubs fans... we'll see. But I digress a bit here. Sports aren't really the most wonderful thing to watch because your team wins, though a great feeling, there is so much more that sports have to offer on many human levels of emotion; pride, courage, sacrifice, despair, elation - just to name a few. Good or bad all these dramas we watch unfold in sports can and will be appreciated. It's funny, I sat down and started writing this, not expecting it to be all this rambling, as I fully admit, I'm not the best writer I will never claim to be, but all in all I hope you hear what I'm saying. What I wrote here stemmed from a Visa Gold commercial for the 2008 Olympics I have seen many times. For whatever reason the commercial popped into my mind and I wanted to share. The commercial I'm referring to is the one about Derek Redmond from the 1992 Summer Olympics. I'm sure a number of you have seen it, he is running the 400m and pulls up lame about half way through with a hamstring injury. And you know, I don't really need to say anymore about it. Watch and let it speak to you. See what you feel. If you feel nothing then I recommend getting that chest of yours examined to see if it's got any heart. I will admit that the first time I saw it, and gave it my full attention and allowed myself to be there, I got more than chills, my eyes definitely welled up with tears. I still get chills when I see it now. They're the same chills I get when I see the clip of the 1980 US Hockey team jumping around on the ice after defeating the USSR Hockey team, it's just tied to a different story with different emotions, but they all remain human.

This is the commercial.
These are the reasons you and I should pay closer attention to the Olympics. Remember I admit I don't get into it so much anymore either. I'm right there with yah ;) I'm going to make more of an effort this time around.


This shows more of the race and interviews.


This one shows the race as broadcast and an interview with his father about 2min in. Watch this one to see the full interatction between Derek Redmond and his father. This camera is on Derek from start to finish.


Now for some impressive running. Here is my all-time favorite sprinter Michael Johnson and one reason why I'm not into the Olympics so much anymore. He isn't in them! I recommend youtubing more of Michael Johnson especially his 200m WR at the '96 Olympics.



Training Log

Sunday 7/27/08
NSC WOD
1 mile run
5 Rounds
20 double unders
10 burpees
total time: 12:25
mile time: 5:56

Monday 7/28/08
NSC WOD
3 rounds
21 kb swings 70#
15 ohs 95#
21 box jumps 20"
10:07

Tuesday 7/29/08
NSC WOD
5 rounds
15 burpees
12 pullups
9 thrusters 135#
17:30