Posterous theme by Cory Watilo

26th Feb Post Wod-Pre-Comp Partaaaaay

Work hard, Train hard, Partaaaay hard, and Compete harder

Members of Team CFR are hard working citizens of our planet, and deserve all the good and happy things that come their way. Being part of Team CFR means they get to make awesome friends who are more then happy in sharing in what ever excuse there is for a celebration.

 

This past week, there were multiple birthday celebrations for several of our members, including Jules and Georgia and a couple of others to tag on. This meant another CrossFit Reading Social, which are starting to have a bit of a cult status for their Epicness of Fun.

 

To quote:

 

‘Just experienced her first night out with CrossFit Reading = EPIC! You animals! Bring on the next social :)

 

But of course, there’s some training to be done, and they guys have been really busting their chops this week in preparation for an epic weekend of Partying and Competing…in that order.

 

 More details of the competition coming up, but it is essentially an opportunity to get some of our CrossFit friends from other boxes to come to CFR, hang out and give the chance for more of our members to get exposed to a team competition, because as we know, there’s nothing like a bit of competition to bring out the best in you. The emphasis here though it ‘Fun’.

Gripping night!

Excuse the pun but anyone who did tonight's session might find picking things up a struggle tomorrow. Session ran as follows:

Deadlifts 5x3

15 Pull Ups
20 Swings
25 DUs 5 rounds

Also tonight we had a visit from Mr Nick Jones from CF Velocity who was in the area and dropped by to get involved - he's the guy on the left who hasn't broken a sweat...!

Photo

Sent from my iPhone

Jan 22nd. 'You must hate me, why all the double unders?'

Those were the words of one of our members this week...Iain, he's the one with 110kgs over his head (jerks for doubles).

My response was, 'No it's because I don't hate you. I put them in to make you better cause you're $hit at them.'

And in all honesty all this was in jest, becasue that's how we are fun caring and cuddly. Our guys know what weaknesses they need to work on and working on them they do. In addition to the double unders in the WOD, Ian also checks out each session with 50 double unders....and once these are fixed, it's another piece in the jigsaw of Iain being better, in some cases, most excellent, at nearly everything....and that's a good thing. And this goes to everyone. Feed you GOAT.

 

16th Jan 2012: 4% Done, 96% To Go, but 100% every step of the way

Already, we’re two weeks into the 1st month and how fantastic it’s already been. CrossFit Reading members are already back with a bang and a vibe of expectation of the great things they will be achieving in the year ahead.

 

Right now, Team CFR are preparing for a friendly competition at the end of the month with some Friends, Britannia CrossFit and AFS of Andover. This is meant to be a fun competition and an opportunity just to expose more of our members to that competitive environment and gennerally have a blast of a time. Then right after this, there is a matter of the London Throwdown in which Team CFR will be entering in what is looking to be a fantastic competition.

 

Then before you know it, the CrossFit Open will be upon us..and all this is just by end of February.

 

With events growing there are more qualifiers taking place, which are events in themselves, such as the UK CrossFit Games hosted by CrossFit Central Manchester. There’s the ever growing epic Divided We Fall Games at CrossFit Velocity, the CrossFit – British Weightlifting event at AFS. Among all that there are numerous Throwdown events with fellow affiliates and on line challenges taking place. Take your pick.

 

And of course we have the UK Strength and Power Series, qualifiers and Final for those who fancy a bit of StrongMan based challenges…what surprises are in store this year from this event?

 

This is all not even taking in the what are now becoming pretty special CFR socials…

 

There are so many things to look forward to in the CrossFit calendar that we’re almost becoming spoilt for choice. The key though is that there is something for everyone who is a member of Team CFR, be it competitive or just ‘non-competitive’…that term is used loosely, but its intention is all positive. To compete or not compete, the choice is yours. We only ask that members give 100% in what they do and we promise, they will have an AWESOME time and meet even more AWESOME people doing it.

 

Check out what some out members at a recent Saturday Open session. The vibe is relaxed, but the attitude is positive and doing what we love and getting fitter doing it.

 

Cometh the hour, cometh the Team!

Hi all,

Haven't posted on here for a while, apologies for this but 2012 has been pretty hectic so far!

Just wanted to comment on how impressed and proud I was with everyone at tonight's session. As people looked at the WOD when they came in they were talking about time caps and not being able to finished - but everyone did. In what ever fashion they attempted it everyone still made it to the end. And this is all I would every ask of anyone who comes down to train with us.

Well done Team CFR

Promise that normal service will resume with pics and post.

Paulo x

Sent from my iPhone

It's 2012, Another year to make yourself more awesome...and your objective is...

Most of you know Mike one of our Team CFR competition athletes. Mike started 2012 with a big BOOM...a 105kg snatch. This is no accident, through hard work and dedication and also having clear objectives and GOALs, Mike was able to go from Snatching just under bodyweight over 12 months ago to where he is now.

 

CFR believes goals are vital. Not only do they give you something to aim for, they will drive you to be faster, stronger and fitter. They will ensure that when you come to the box you have a reason for being there, not just turning up for the sake of turning up!

 

If you are new to goal setting or are a seasoned goal setter, I hope this will help you set the goals that suit you best.

 

Your goals should follow this simple acronym S.M.A.R.T

 

Specific -

A specific goal has a much greater chance of being accomplished than a

general goal. “I want to be better” is not the best goal to set. “I want to do a sub 7, 5 or 3 minute FRAN” is a good goal to have.

 

Measurable -

Establish concrete criteria for measuring progress toward the attainment of each goal you set. Luckily in CF you will do a couple of repeated WODs in the name of the set GIRL WODs, you will also do your 1RM, both are perfect examples of measurability. However if you feel there is another way to measure your goals then by all means use it.

 

Achievable -

must be accepted as worthwhile, realistic and attainable. No point in putting down 1000 MUs in under 10mins (unless you are Mike Palmer). However don’t make them too easy, you need to push yourself.

 

Recordable –

write down your progress. This is best done in a training log. There are CF relevant ones available, or you can use a Note book, up to you as long as you record your progress.

 

Timely -

 when setting your goals be realistic in the time you want to do them. I recommend this:

 

SHORT – something you want to achieve by April 2012 (3 months)

MEDIUM – to be achieved by July 2012 (6 months)

LONG – these are the hardest of your goals and you are aiming to achieve these by Christmas next year.

 

Goals can be whatever you want them to be. Diet, Olympic lifting, WODs, turning up to the box at least 3 times a week ;-) Remember you’re the only person that can reach YOUR goal, so make it relevant to what YOU want to achieve and can achieve.

  


2nd Jan 2012. Are you rested? If so get ready for the year ahead, because what doesn't kill you..

Hello All and 2012!

 

So, hopefully we're all rested fully? And if not, why not? There's a whole year ahead to make yourselves awesome, and being recharged for this is going to nothing but of benefit to you. This leads on nicely to our first article of 2012 from our resident nutritionist Chris Chapman...

 

What doesn’t kill you...

 

This is a follow-up to my earlier article about my experiences of, and continuing recovery from, overtraining. One of the things I vowed to do once I started training again was to listen to my body, and learn when to back off from training. So, 7 weeks into my new programme, I started to feel some twinges in joints, and a little bit of overall fatigue. In the past, this is exactly the kind of thing I would have ignored, and either continued to train regardless, or carried on training and just not used the body part(s) where the twinge was. After all, if I had a shoulder twinge, I was programming smartly by sticking to running and leg-centric lifts, right? This time, I figured it was time for an experiment: have a week of reduced load before I felt burnt out, and see how it affected my subsequent training, and how I dealt with it psychologically.

 

My plan was simple. Since my training plan consisted of 2 days of strength work (a mix of barbell lifts and gymnastic exercises), and one day of sprints, my back-off week would look similar: 2 days of reduced-load bodyweight exercises, and one day of sprint technique work. The first strength day came along, and involved nothing more than some static gymnastic holds, and a few rounds of Cindy (5 pullups, 10 pushups, 15 squats). Nothing too strenuous, just enough to work out some kinks really. The following day came a blessing-in-disguise – I got a cold. This led to a big decision, namely to forget the back-off week, and turn it into a week off so I could get rid of the cold. Again, beforehand this idea would have horrified me, as I found a way to train around my illness. This time I did nothing more strenuous than walking the dog, and at no point did I feel guilty for not training. Typically I would beat myself up over not training, convincing myself that I was losing metcon ability and body composition all the while. However this time, whenever I felt the (admittedly faint) urge to train, I just kept reminding myself that you don’t get stronger when you are training, only when you are resting.

At the end of the week, I was fully recovered, cold-free, and bursting to continue training. The next Monday’s workout involved back squats, and gymnastic upper body work. And guess what? The squats flew up, with me practically leaving the ground at the top of each rep, while the gymnastic exercises felt like I was moving a body considerably lighter than my own! So not only did I hit that workout with the enthusiasm of someone who hadn’t trained in a while, I also hit it with the capacity of someone who was fully rested!  Despite not having trained for over a week, I had clearly become stronger. The week off had been a complete success, one I had never previously allowed myself to experience.

While on paper all this seems obvious, it is also the first time I have actually tried it out. I know I am not the only one to get carried away with the great linear progression you get from Crossfit, the constant metcon PBs and increased weights shifted. This becomes a real driver as you push and push to get more and more gains, and you start to ignore little niggles and signs of fatigue in favour of more volume/weight/frequency in your training. After all, if exercise is good for you, then more is better for you, right? Wrong! What this has shown me is that “rest” is not a four-letter word. It’s only the most-ignored, and least-sexy aspect of training. And it shouldn’t be – in fact, it’s probably the most important aspect, and the hardest lesson to learn