10 Components of Complete Fitness


CrossFit workouts train your body in all 10 of these components of complete fitness:
Cardiovascular/Respiratory Endurance- The ability of the body systems to gather, process, and transport oxygen.
Stamina- The ability of the body to process, store, deliver, and utilize energy.
Strength- The ability of a muscular unit, or combo of muscular units to apply force.
Flexibility- The ability of maximizing range of motion at a given joint.
Power- The ability of a muscular unit, or combo of muscular units to apply maximum force in minimum time.
Speed- The ability to minimize the time cycle of a repeated movement.
Agility- The ability to minimize transition time between one movement pattern to another.
Coordination- The ability to combine several distinct movement patterns into a singular distinct movement.
Balance- The ability to control the placement of the bodies’ center of gravity in relation to its’ support base.
Accuracy- The ability to control movement in a given direction or at a given intensity.

"Failure"

Friday, March 6, 2009

To Chuck...Ruck this crap, I'm going home, and I'm taking my ASS with me!!! LOL


As a Tribe Called Quest put it...

Watch, as I combine all the juice from the mind
Heel up, reel up, bring it back, come rewind
Powerful impact BOOM! from the cannon
Not braggin, try to read my mind just imagine
Vo-cab-u-lary's necessary
When diggin into my library

I'm going to rewind, and come back with a powerful BOOM!


I must apologize to myself (cause I'm pretty sure no one else reads this or even cares for that matter)for the last few weeks. We have been extremely busy at work, like 13-15 hour days of drilling and getting our team ready. Some of this has been PT in the am, and not all of that PT has been bad. I have not however been following the main site WODs and have not continued with my "strength bias" WODs that I started.

Here is the thing...I am not very good at doing the "group/team" PT sessions that we do at work, even if they are CrossFit "style" workouts. I am a "ME" person when it comes to working out. I like to follow a "routine" (like the main site) and not deviate from that too much in order to log my progress and be able to compare myself to myself (I sound like Austin Powers) and others that post. When we do Ruck runs, group CrossFit "style" circuits, or various other workouts, I get "out of the grove". Put that together with not being able to workout at all for around 5-6 days and I am ALL JACKED UP!!!

I feel like crap (in context, still better then most "normal people I'm sure), I have not made any progress, I have nothing "real" to log, and now it will take at least a week to get back into the "grove" again. Not to mention, I do NOT have the discipline at this point to sustain a strict diet on this type of schedule. I am currently watching a CrossFit video on Chastity Slone and here dieting, and now I feel like a failure for not being able to be strict. Anyway, on a side not, no one can be perfect all the time, and I think realizing that, and being able to get back on track is very important...

So, with that said, here is the deal. It's time to start over, rewind a few weeks, or maybe a few months, forgive myself, but not forget this "major" F-up in training and eating and get my ass back on track!!!

I took my "Cheat" time and now it's time to get back to work. I will still have to be on a slightly modified schedule (we did "Fat Cindy" today, with 20# vest on) and Monday is suppose to be a "rest day" for the Main Site, but I will be training with the team, but other then that it's back to 3 days on 1 day off, and the strength bias integrated into it all.

O, and Chuck, if you read all of this, I'm just kidding man, well, kinda...F those ruck runs, they SUCK!!!!

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