Archive for February, 2013

Goal Setting Seminar with Julie Felsher

Tuesday, February 19th, 2013

Julie Felsher – Crossfitter and life coach – notes from seminar at CrossFit Mercer

Benjamin Elijah Mays said:

The tragedy of life doesn’t lie in not reaching your goal. The tragedy lies in having no goal to reach. It isn’t a calamity to die with dreams unfulfilled, but it is a calamity not to dream. It is not a disaster to be unable to capture your ideal, but it is a disaster to have no ideal to capture. It is not a disgrace not to reach the stars, but it is a disgrace to have no stars to reach for. Not failure, but low aim is sin.

If you have no goals, or if you have goals that are so high, you are set up for failure.

Typical Goals a lot of people have:
I wanna lose weight. I want a new job. Make more money. Fall in love. Get a new house. Get a new car. I wanna “get things.”

But the question for everyone is: Why?

Too often, people put their lives on hold because they are chasing a goal. They are so focused on that, that everything else happening in their lives is disappearing. They are not actually enjoying themselves. They get to a place in life where they think: “It’s been ten years, and I don’t even remember raising my children.”

Julie doesn’t want this to happen to us. So we are going to look at goals in a whole new way.

Would you say to your child: “I will love you when you are skinny.” Or, “if you get straight As, I will love you more.”

Of course not. Never.   So why do you say this to yourself?

There are 5 key points that people want to change in life:

1)   Body: be skinnier, leaner, more muscle, stronger
2)   Finances – more money, better job, bigger house
3)   Relationships – new one or eliminate one
4)   Recreation – what am I doing to have fun? Have more excitement in life.
5)   Personal growth – this industry has exploded in recent years, because they know people are looking for change. All kinds of programs, podcasts, certs, etc.

But people chase these achievements, and they still feel bad.

Motivation and willpower are NOT enough. Motivation and willpower are a fight, and you get tired from fighting and fighting.

We need connection and inspiration. This is what is missing from people when they chase goals. We need to be inspired by our goal(s), and be connected to them.

Less than 46% of adults, who set a New Year’s resolution, are still chasing it in February.

Maryianne Williamson (http://www.marianne.com/ ) author said:

You must learn a new way to think before you can master a new way to be.

So to be successful in this 90 day challenge, we need to change the way we think. Julie wants to leave us with a new way of thinking.

Two things she has discovered in life:
1)   even when you achieve things, you don’t always actually feel better.
2)   people want a feeling of hope when chasing goals.

Before we can understand “Goal Setting 2.0”, we need to revisit 1.0.

Remedial Goal Setting – “1.0”
“SMART Goals” – acronym for:

  • Specific – Details are important so flesh out your goals fully.
  • Measurable – How will you know you are getting there? If your goal is specific enough, it should automatically be measurable
  • Attainable – It has to be something you can get to. If you can’t do any pull-ups now, a goal of 20 unbroken pull-ups is probably not attainable in 90 days.
  • Relevant – Is it important to you, or relevant to your life? You want to feel good about doing something you weren’t able to do before, and CrossFit is great for that because you often finish a workout that you didn’t think you could complete.
  • Timely – How long? 90 days, or 6 months or a year.

The worksheet she shared with us factors all these attributes of goals.

So, this works, 46% of the time. 🙂

Let’s take goal setting to another level.

Goal Setting “2.0”

Think about a goal on your front burner, then close your eyes and visualize how you feel after accomplishing your goal. Who else is there? What do you look like? What are you wearing? What do you hear? How do you feel?

Some adjectives, feeling words you might have thought of:

  • Relaxed
  • Satisfied
  • Proud
  • Confidant
  • Strong
  • Powerful
  • Excited

And what are some words that describe how you feel right now, or when you woke up this morning? When you first committed to doing the 90 day challenge, what were you moving away from?

  • Uninspired
  • Frustrated
  • Tired
  • Sore
  • Annoyed
  • Stagnant
  • Comfortable
  • Stuck
  • Lazy

The road from here (frustrated) to the SMART goals is tough. There are lots of obstacles (in the center).

Uninspired Lots of “stuff” lies between your current place and your target. It is in the way of you getting from the feelings on the left, to your smart goal feelings on the right. How do you break through these obstacles? Relaxed
Frustrated Satisfied
Tired Proud
Annoyed Confidant
Stagnant Strong
Lazy Powerful
Comfortable Excited
Sore Relaxed
Stuck Satisfied

Those obstacles make it really hard to get from the Left to the Right.

So, what we are really after when we are chasing a goal, is a feeling. We want a feeling. We don’t really want to lose 20 pounds or do 20 pullups. We want to feel strong, or proud. We want to feel confident or sexy. We are really chasing a feeling.

But once we work our tails off trying to get there, pushing and fighting, and finally get there, we discover the feeling is not there. This is because we weren’t attached to it along the way. These are false positives.

Talking about goals is just enough to feel like you are doing something, without actually doing something. You share your goals with people, feeling really good, then go on your merry way and eat pizza, or peanut butter, or drink diet coke.

So, that feeling that you want is not something outside. It’s not something six months from now. That feeling you are chasing is in you NOW, since you can visualize it now.

Go through this exercise on your own.
Write down the top 3 feelings you want to feel. Here is one example:

  1. Confident
  2. Accomplished
  3. Happy

Have you felt these feelings before in your life? Next to each feeling, brainstorm and write down all the tiny, tiny things that you do that make you feel that way right now. For instance, maybe you feel confident replying to an email and you know you have the answers for the other person. Or you feel happy every time you leave the gym after a good workout. Or every time you eat a good, healthy meal.

Pay attention to when you feel these feelings, and remember them. They happen every day, so focus on them.

Focusing on these feelings will help clear the path so you can get from the left side of the chart above, to the right. Focus on the positives.

On the goal worksheet, set the goal for a year from now, then pull back and detach from it. We often feel like our goal is this pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. But actually, the goal is the accumulation of single coins you collect along the way. You need to pay attention to these.

Your mind desperately wants you to reach your goal. But if you tell yourself you feel crappy, you will focus on that instead of the positives. People will definitely bug you, and you will definitely feel tired. But if you focus on feeling relaxed, confident, and happy, your mind will focus on noticing more of those things, breaking through all the obstacles to help you reach your goal.

Let’s take a new look at Goal Setting 2.0:

This is GOAL SETTING 2.0. Add the following attributes (+) to the original list:

  • Specific
  • + Sensory – You have to feel this – how do you feel setting a PR, or dropping body fat? You need to practice feeling this more.
  • Measurable
  • + Meaningful – What does it mean to achieve that goal; to feel satisfied, confident, etc? Who else does it affect? Does it affect your children, spouse, friends, your productivity at work? Of course it does.
  • Attainable
  • + Actionable & Attitude – Actionable: You need to know what the steps are. What do you need to do to reach the goal? If you don’t know what to do, find someone to help you. The attitude has to be positive. State your goals in the positive. Not what you want to LOSE – what you want to GAIN.
  • Relevant
  • + Resourceful – You need to find the resources to accomplish your goals. If something is not working then there is a resource missing. You have a gym, a kitchen, and people to talk to. Find an accountability partner.
  • Timely
  • + True – It is easy to get wrapped up in other people’s goals. Make it YOUR goal, not someone else’s. Make it truly important to you.

Motivation and willpower are what push you away from the initial pain, the initial discomfort.  For example, you’re motivated to fix your weight because you are uncomfortable right now. But that only gets you so far. The Connection, Emotion and Inspiration pull you toward your goal.

Find the deep reasons for your goals.

Resources:

Go to facebook and like http://www.facebook.com/HealthHappy. You can post questions there and Julie will answer them.

Website: sign up for the newsletter at http://www.healthhappy.com. There is a group program starting in first week of April: waking up energetically, waking up to your life.

Gratitude journal – Check in, be present every day.

Notice when you are falling back to your negative feelings. “I’m so sore”, “I’m so tired”, “I’m so frustrated.”  Catch yourself there and notice that, then you’ll be able to move away from it.

Make sure to remember what makes you happy.  Stay “tapped-into” those activities and feelings.

Use a dry-erase marker to write things on your bathroom mirror. But first make sure the dry-erase marker erases from your mirror 🙂

Often you choose to feel bad. You can choose to feel good instead.

Wrap up:

Do the work of writing down your three goal feelings, then recognize when you feel them. Remember them.

Last quote about “Weightlessness” by Astronaut Robert Crippen:

The real pleasure was having the chance to enjoy being weightless, and the other was to spend some time looking out at this beautiful Earth that we’re all lucky to inhabit.

Workout 02/19/2013

Tuesday, February 19th, 2013

Karate
Sparring 1-step (w/Rob R.), Jion, Hangetsu, Gankaku

Crossfit
Warmup: 1.5 mi run barefoot
Squat therapy; hold a pole and squat, trying to bring the hips to the pole for 3 minutes
Couch Stretch – 2x each leg

Strength: Front Squat, 5×3
Worked on finding the right weight:
115 x 3
135 x 3
145 x 3
165 x 3
165 x 3

WOD: 12 minute AMRAP
3 Kneeling to Squat
5 KB Swings (16kg)
7 Toes to Bar

I completed 8+ sets (in the last round, I completed the 3 kneel to squats but not the KB swings.) I think I need to start keeping track of my set count because I almost lost count along the way. And a few times, I did 7 KB swings instead of just 5 because I wasn’t thinking straight.

The ‘kneeling to squat’ is a dynamic movement. Start on your knees with feet extended (shoelaces to the floor), then jump up into a squat.

‘Toes to bar’ is done on the pull-up bar. Start in a hanging position, then raise your feet up in front of, then above you to touch your toes to the bar. I have never done these before. As my hands got sweaty, I was concerned my grip would slip and I would fall to my back. So I used the chalk for the first time. I managed 8+ sets, so doing 56 of these was a great workout and I’m starting to build the needed callouses on my hands.

Cooldown
Couch stretch (2x each leg, 20 sec hold), good mornings, PVC rolling

Monday, February 18th, 2013

Some paleo advice from a friend:

Strictly paleo recipes – No grains, Legumes, Dairy, or alcohol:
http://pinterest.com/capturedcraving/whole30love/ 

Best Price for Grass Fed Beef: Wegmans
Best Price for Ghee: Wegmans 

This is not a low-fat diet and it is imperative to use oil (coconut oil, ghee, or olive oil) to cook vegetables. 

Best Price for Coconut Oil: Wegmans
Refined Coconut Oil: Doesn’t taste like Coconut
Unrefined Coconut Oil: Has a hint of Coconut flavor 

Starches are important. Sweet Potatoes, Purple Potatoes, and Spaghetti Squash should be eaten daily.

 The diet says it is best to not eat a ton of fruit, but 1-2 servings a day are ok.

 It is best to not go to any restaurants for the 90 days.

 Egg Yolks are good! Do not eat only egg whites.  Your cholesterol level is not going to shoot up.  J

 Great site to buy your meat from:
http://www.grasslandbeef.com/StoreFront.bok


Workout 02/18/2013

Monday, February 18th, 2013

Karate at Gold’s
No one showed up but me on Presidents’ Day 🙂 I did lots of stretching.

Crossfit
Warm-up: 15ea of air squat, frog sit up, ring rows

Mobility: couch stretch (4x each leg), down dog to cobra (5x)

Strength: find 2 rep max in the dead lift; I’ve never done heavy weight on the deadlift so I wasn’t sure what to expect. I worked up, starting with 2x45plates and a 45lb bar:
135 x 2
155 x 2
165 x 2
205 x 2
235 x 2
255 x 2
When I first went to pick up the 255, I picked it up and inch and put it back down, thinking it was too heavy. Dolph walked over and I mustered the resolve to do it again. I did two with no pain and good form, but it was a challenge. So, my 2-rep max is 255 at the start of the 90 day body composition challenge.

WOD: 12 min EMOM (every minute, on the minute)
65lb – 3 Power Snatch to 3 OHS (Overhead squat)
The overhead squat was pretty easy for me, but I don’t feel I’m squatting low enough yet; need to work on hip and knee flexibility. The snatch is a work in progress. During the last few sets, it turned into more of an overhead press than a snatch. I don’t feel my shrug is effective yet; need to work on that.

Misc:
800+ meter cool-down run.

Masahiko Tanaka – Shotokan

Tuesday, February 5th, 2013

Tanaka is a legend in Shotokan karate. Here is a link to a video where he takes some students through some of his sparring techniques.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a17zNsVJWrY

Natural Foods for Running Long

Tuesday, February 5th, 2013

In my quest to follow the paleo diet, and still run long distances, I need to determine good foods to eat during long training runs or races without resorting back to GUs or Shot Blocks, etc. I found this list of 10 natural race food alternatives from active.com.

Race nutrition can be an experiment if you aim to fuel with whole foods as much as possible. It’s important to look for food that is natural, compact, easy to carry, and tastes good. These 10 race foods fit those criteria. Give them a try when training for your next race.

1. Dates

These can be used for making your own energy bars, or can be eaten on their own. They contain natural sugars and simple carbs that will keep you running over long distances. They’re also easy to chew.

More: 5 Foods to Try This Spring

2. 100% Natural Coconut Water

This drink provides the electrolytes your body needs to replenish the minerals you lose through sweat. It also tastes great and is extremely refreshing on a run.

3. Homemade Baby Food

Use a variety of fruits and vegetables to make your own “baby” race food. Anything is fair game, so get creative and use your favorite fresh ingredients to blend flavors that you will love. Just mush everything up so it’s easy to digest. You can pack it in small Ziploc bags and just suck it out like a gel when you’re ready to fuel.

More: How to Fuel Your Body for Energy

4. Sunflower Seed Butter

This has a great nutty taste and is a source of both healthy fat and protein. Sometimes you can find these in small gel-like packs that are easy to carry. Otherwise you can pack your own in small Ziploc bags. A good brand is Sunbutter, which is completely peanut-free and gluten-free.

5. Frozen Grapes

Frozen grapes are just as sweet as candy. They cool your mouth and they’re easy to carry. Freeze small bags of grapes and carry them on your long runs.

More: 5 Best Carbs for Athletes

6. Homemade Gels

Making your own gel is fun and saves you money. Here’s a recipe to try.

Combine:

7 and 1/3 tablespoons of honey
3/4 teaspoons of blackstrap molasses
1/10 teaspoons of table salt

7. Watermelon Dipped in Salt

The watermelon rehydrates you while the salt replenishes your electrolytes. This is a refreshing and satisfying snack that can immediately boost your energy and help you pick up the pace.

More: 7 New Super Foods

 

8. Dehydrated Fruit

I bought my own dehydrator so I could make a lot more of this. Dehydrating fruit allows it to keep longer and it’s easier to carry. I also find it sometimes makes fruit taste sweeter. With a dehydrator you can make your own natural fruit rolls, and you can even dehydrate meats and vegetables. You could almost carry entire meals. The possibilities are endless.

9. Honey

Use raw, natural honey as a sugar source. Your body will appreciate the fuel and the good quality honey can also boost your immune system.

More: Eat Green to Run Better This Spring

10. Navitas Power Snacks

These are just a combination of fruit and nuts. They come in small bite sized pieces and they are gluten-free and dairy-free. They’re less chewy than a bar, but not as watery as a gel. I enjoy the consistency and the flavors are delicious.

Don’t be afraid to experiment with different foods during training and long runs. On race day, always stick to what you know will work.