WHAT YOU WILL FIND ON PERFORMANCE QUEST FITNESS & ATHLETICS' BLOG

A collection of websites, articles, blog posts, videos, comments, studies, etc. from other forerunners in the areas of performance that will be covered, along with my own rants, raves, thoughts and ideas about selected topics. Also this blog serves as a showcase of the accomplishments and achievements of the hard-working athletes of Performance Quest Fitness & Athletics.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Technique vs. Intensity - Keeping Your Training In Perspective (Part III)

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1ST, 2011

7:00pm


NOTE: There will be no class this Thursday or Friday as I will be travelling to San Jose to compete in the Reebok/CrossFit 2011 Regionals as a member of the CrossFit Redding team. It appears that there will be a recap or video update of each of the day's events, which will be held Friday, Saturday and Sunday. You can view these updates at http://games.crossfit.com/regions/northern-california



Technique vs. Intensity - Keeping Your Training In Perspective (Part III)

By Coach Justin

Continued from the Previous Day...

To pick up where we left off previously…the goal of training is to reach the next level of intensity (whatever the type of intensity it is that you are training) proficiently/competently without a breakdown in form previously recognized (in other words without failure). AND TO DO IT SAFELY! Remember this, “failure in a controlled environment facilitates success; failure in an uncontrollable environment generally facilitates, well…anti-success.” And it is this “failure in a controlled environment” that is the model for making super-humans.

Obviously training becomes counterproductive when you get injured doing it and cannot then perform what it was you started training for. Duh!

You laugh, but you’d be amazed at how many people overtrain or, more appropriately for this article, push past the point of “technique failure” and continue to deadlift/clean in the “flexed dog poo position” for example, just because they are strong enough to still lift the weight, though it’s gonna cost them in injury. Or because they are too prideful to admit that, even though they might have been able to begin the workout safely at a given weight, it just became too heavy and they need to decrease the weight because it is forcing them into a sub-optimal position.

Oftentimes, people believe they are mentally tough enough to push through ANYTHING! Don’t get me wrong, the mind is inconceivably powerful, but at some point those people break! It’s when you combine that mental toughness with the wherewithal to harness it toward a positive progression, not a dangerous one, that you begin to see the true fruits of your labor.

The moral of the story is this…Train HARD! Break mental and physical barriers. Sweat, bleed, cry, fail. Set goals and don’t give up until you achieve them. But do it SMART! You don’t have to achieve your goals the same week that you set them and you don’t have to achieve them all at once. Training is a process! And that need be understood.

This is not to say that if we’re all hiking in the woods and a tree falls on poor ol’ Coach Justin that you can’t round out your back lifting that sucker off of him. God knows that he’d do it for you. But at that point this it is not training, it is survival and this is what the training is carried out to facilitate. For many of you training facilitates your athletic endeavors. That’s great. I would rather see you get injured going all out on the field/court/track/water/etc. than do it in your training and not even get to slip your uniform on for gameday.

For some of us, our athletic careers are behind us and we are CrossFitting for life or to be better at our jobs. That’s great. Injure yourself at your job or doing an extreme sport that you’ve always wanted to do. You get the idea.

I’d prefer we never get injured, and that is also what the training facilitates – injury prevention – but if you do, make it worth while.

Yes, injuries in the gym will still happen…but don’t make them stupid ones!

Always remember "You Can't Push The River".

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Technique vs. Intensity - Keeping Your Training In Perspective (Part II)

TUESDAY, MAY 31ST, 2011

4:00pm



NOTE: There will be no class this Thursday or Friday as I will be travelling to San Jose to compete in the Reebok/CrossFit 2011 Regionals as a member of the CrossFit Redding team. It appears that there will be a recap or video update of each of the day's events, which will be held Friday, Saturday and Sunday. You can view these updates at http://games.crossfit.com/regions/northern-california.



Today was Jazmin's (Jazzy) first day back from a very successful track and field season in which she broke the school record in the Hammer at 165', placed 2nd in the State in Hammer and 1st in Discus! Great job Jazzy...welcome back.
Also help me in welcoming Ryan who is a former D1 offensive lineman from New Mexico and is pursuing a career in the military. Ryan will prove to be a valuable addition to our team. If you weren't present to witness the abuse he gave the tire today you missed out!


Technique vs. Intensity - Keeping Your Training In Perspective (Part II)


By Coach Justin

Continued from the Previous Day…

The flip side to this intensity however is often accompanied by a tradeoff in form. This tradeoff is compounding against your efforts two-fold! Not only are you opening yourself up for injury, but you’re also not training the specific movement patterns and musculature that you’re supposed to be training to prevent said injury. For example; if I don’t go below parallel in a weighted squat not only am I placing undo amounts of pressure and strain on my knees, but I’m also NOT recruiting the same muscles I’m supposed to be recruiting to protect those same knees! (For more on this see “Going Deep” by Mark Rippetoe)

This interplay between intensity and technique is a very fine line that is interpretively set by both you and I. And the breakdown of technique when you push intensity is what makes training so fun and ultimately is the goal of training. That is to say, to reach the next level of intensity (whatever the type of intensity it is that you are training) proficiently/competently without a breakdown in form previously successfully recognized.

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Technique vs. Intensity - Keeping Your Training In Perspective

MONDAY, MAY 30TH, 2011

6:00pm


NOTE: There will be no class this Thursday or Friday as I will be travelling to San Jose to compete in the Reebok/CrossFit 2011 Regionals as a member of the CrossFit Redding team. It appears that there will be a recap or video update of each of the day's events, which will be held Friday, Saturday and Sunday. You can view these updates at http://games.crossfit.com/regions/northern-california.



Technique vs. Intensity - Keeping Your Training In Perspective

By Coach Justin

In CrossFit there always seems to be some sort of external motivator levied to push you beyond what you even think you’re capable of achieving. These motivators are what drive us out of our comfort zones and part of what makes CrossFit so effective and rewarding. These motivators are bigger than us. Bigger than our personal suffering and mental anguish. They force us to accomplish an amount of work that is approaching superhuman!

Sounds amazing no?

These motivators include pushing ourselves to find a maximum weight in a lift, a minimum time in a given workout, a maximum amount of reps in a given time period, a fastest sprint for a given distance, a maximum height or distance in a given task, or test our cardiovascular/respiratory endurance, stamina, strength, flexibility, power, speed, coordination, agility, balance, or accuracy, and may combine any and all of the aforementioned and more! (see 10 generally recognized physical fitness skills)

What all this boils down to is becoming proficient in various types of intensities. There is no argument that finding a 1 rep max squat is INTENSE but drastically different that finding your fastest mile time, which is also INTENSE!

Herein lies the beauty of CrossFit. CrossFit, in its most fundamental and elemental forms, trains you to not necessarily be the strongest person in the world (which is accompanied by poor endurance and long-term stamina) nor the best endurance athlete in the world (which is accompanied by abysmally poor levels of strength). CrossFit is designed to combine these varying types of training methods to develop athletes that are equally competent in all facets of fitness. This type of athlete will be better prepared to efficiently and proficiently accomplish a wider variety of both known and unknown tasks that they face. Life, survival and sport reward this type of fitness.

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Friday, May 27, 2011

Know Him Or Pay The Consequences

FRIDAY, MAY 27TH, 2011

6:00pm


The Most Dangerous Man In American Healthcare

By Dr. Darrell White

The most dangerous man in American health care is Greg Glassman. That’s right, the man who will make the biggest difference in making our country healthier, and thereby reducing the cost of providing health care, is a fitness trainer from Santa Cruz California. And you have no idea who he is.

That’s okay, though; you’re in good company. There are lots of really important, really influential people in American healthcare who have never heard of Greg Glassman. Donald Berwick, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services? Not a clue. Toby Cosgrove, CEO of the vaunted Cleveland clinic foundation? Nope, never heard of him. So it goes, as well, for the presidents and executive vice presidents of all the various and sundry medical “letter” organizations like the AMA, the American Association of ophthalmology, and the like. The man who might hold the key to economic healthcare salvation is not even a blip on the margins of the healthcare establishment’s radar screens.

So what’s the big deal? Why is Greg Glassman the most dangerous man in American healthcare? There are two reasons, actually. First, he is right. Glassman has identified not only the most fundamental and foundational problem with the health of Americans, but he has also discovered, defined, and implemented the solution. Americans are not fit. There is an appalling lack of physical fitness in the populace. Fat and slow, or skinny–fat and weak, we are a nation of the unfit. What Science Daily calls “frailty” in an article linking a lack of fitness to poor health outcomes (ScienceDaily.com/releases/2011/04/110426122948.htm), Glassman calls decrepitude. Skinny or fat, how healthy can you be if you can’t get yourself out of a chair without assistance?

Somewhere around 2001 Greg Glassman co–founded a fitness system which he dubbed “Crossfit”(http://www.crossfit.com). He offered the first actionable definition of fitness ever created: work capacity across broad time and modal domains. How much stuff can you move, how far, how quickly. It’s not enough to be strong, you must also be able to travel long distances. By the same token, it’s not enough to be able to travel long distances if you are not strong enough to lift your own body. This definition led to a measurement of fitness, power output or work.

To achieve this level of fitness Crossett offers the equivalent of a prescription. Exercise should consist of “constantly varied, high intensity, functional movements.” Intensity is the key. Fitness gains are not only magnified but are achieved in the most efficient manner when the exercise is performed at relatively high intensity. Functional movements include fitness standards like running, swimming and biking, but also weight training using major lifts like the deadlift, the clean, and the squat. Crossfit has returned those staples of gym classes in the 60′s, pull-ups, push-ups, and squats, to a prominence not seen since the days of Kennedy’s Presidential Council on Fitness.

Caloric intake matters; you can’t out train a bad diet or a bad lifestyle. Crossfit’s dietary prescription is quite simple: “eat meats and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but NOT BODY FAT.” Crossfit preaches the merits of both quantity and quality when if comes to food. Carbohydrates with a low glycemic index, protein containing all essential amino acids, AND FAT are all essential to producing physical fitness. Food should be seen as fuel and should be measured as such. Even the highest quality foods consumed in the most balanced proportions will produce increased body fat and decreased fitness if taken in too high volume.

A funny thing happened on the way to revolutionizing the fitness industry. In addition to increased strength, increased endurance, and decreased body fat, which translated into a dramatically fewer inches and lower dress sizes, it seemed as if everyone who did Crossfit became healthier. Lower cholesterol. Lower resting heart rates. Decreased blood pressure. Elevated moods. It looked like a move away from decrepitude and frailty was actually a move TOWARD health. Toward WELLNESS. A scientist at heart, Glassman digested this information and in 2008 made the following statement: fitness is a proxy for health. Indeed, Glassman declared that fitness EQUALS health. In this, Greg Glassman is right, or at least more right than not. At a minimum, fitness is the foundation upon which health is built. A healthy nation is one that need not expend countless $Billions on curing diseases that could be prevented by becoming fit. This is the first reason why he is the most dangerous man in American health care.

The second reason is that he doesn’t care.

Greg Glassman is like the little boy standing at the side of the road watching the naked emperor parade by who declares “the Emperor has no clothes!” He is standing there watching a parade of the fat and the weak and he is saying “hey look…they can’t get their butt off the throne!” It’s uncomfortable to hear someone say that, but he doesn’t care; it needs to be said. The standard dietary dogma of high carbohydrate, low-fat diets with little or no meat? A straight ticket to decrepitude! He doesn’t care that statements like that make all of the Oz’s and Pritiken’s sputter and squirm. When asked once upon a time how to gain weight for a movie role Glassman famously responded: “ easy…non–fat frozen yogurt.” It’s no different with exercise. Walking and other low-intensity exercises? Better than nothing, but only almost. Cue the howls of the Jillians and the Jakes, and every glossy, muscly, fitnessy magazine editor in the English speaking world. Glassman is right, and he doesn’t care.

Greg Glassman has looked at what is wrong with the health of Americans and he is willing to say what that is and say it out loud. He is willing to say that we as a people are unfit, and that this is the primary cause underlying our lack of health, and our accelerating need to spend money to cure disease. He is willing to say that the vast majority of the advice that we have received to fix this is flat out wrong, whether it comes from the government or the cover of Fitness Magazine. He is willing to say the the road to economic salvation in American Healthcare leads through the gym, the grocery store, and the kitchen, not to or through something as meaningless as an “Accountable Healthcare Organization” (whatever that may be). Although he is convinced that he is right he is presently spending gobs of his own money studying the effects of the Crossfit prescription on the health of regular people.

Yup, Greg Glassman is right, and he doesn’t care that all of the so–called experts in healthcare don’t know who he is yet, or that they wouldn’t agree with him if they did. Judging by what’s going on in the physical fitness world right now as Crossfit grows 30% PER MONTH, I’d say that makes Greg Glassman the most dangerous man in American healthcare.

Better learn how to spell his name.

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Medical Doctors Hazardous To Your Health?

THURSDAY, MAY 26TH, 2011

4:00pm


TWO NEW STUDIES WARN -- MEDICAL DOCTORS MAY BE HAZARDOUS TO YOUR HEALTH

From Natural News

(NaturalNews) Today's doctors-in-training are learning how to think critically and clearly about the need for -- and potential dangers of -- any drugs they prescribe. And surgeons only operate if they are physically and mentally able to make sure they will not be putting their patient in any danger, right? Unfortunately, two new papers show that those assumptions are wrong. In fact, they reveal critical reasons why mainstream medicine can be a danger to your health and even threaten your life.

Bottom line: med students are being taught through a hidden curriculum devised and carried out by Big Pharma (and allowed by medical schools) to push the prescribing of their drugs. Meanwhile, countless surgeons are operating and sometimes harming patients because they are impaired by fatigue and lack of sleep.

Here are the facts. Medical students in the United States are being bombarded with the pro-drug propaganda of pharmaceutical companies -- and the students are exposed to this throughout their education, even in the years before they have clinical experience treating patients. According to research led by Kirsten Austad and Aaron S. Kesselheim from Harvard Medical School just published in PLoS Medicine, it turns out the drug giants have created what the Harvard researchers have dubbed a highly influential hidden curriculumthat pushes doctors-in-training into accepting and promoting Big Pharma's prescription drugs and other therapies.

The enormous and ongoing contact with drug companies is associated with medical professionals developing positive attitudes about the marketing of prescription medications. Moreover, the med students are not developing any healthy skepticism about potential negative implications of the drug pushing techniques -- or the drugs themselves.

The Harvard research team studied all published studies on this topic and collected the results from a total of 9,850 medical students studying at 76 different medical schools. The results showed that most medical students were interacting with the pharmaceutical industry and that contact increased in the clinical years.

In fact, up to 90 percent of all students working with patients in clinics were receiving some form of educational materials from none other than Big Pharma. And most of the medical students thought it was fine and dandy to accept gifts from drug manufacturers. They justified taking these freebies by claiming they were entitled to gifts from drug manufacturers because they had financial hardships; some med students said it must be ethical because most other students accepted gifts, too.

Almost two-thirds of students claimed that despite the fact they were receiving promotions, gifts and having other interactions with Big Pharma sales representatives, they were somehow miraculously immune from any bias from all this attention and all the "extras" from drug companies. Student opinions were split on whether physician-industry interactions should be regulated either by medical schools or the government.

The authors of the new study recommend better education for medical students on the subject of physician and drug industry relationships and they are also pushing for medical institutions to support reforms such as rules limiting the contact students have with Big Pharma marketing. However, in a statement to the media, the researchers noted it could be difficult to change the influence of the drug giants who seem to have a stronghold on medical schools and students."

Given the potential for educational and institutional messages to be counteracted by the hidden curriculum, changes should be directed at faculty and residents who serve as role models for medical students," the scientists concluded. "These changes can help move medical education a step closer to two important goals: the cultivation of strong professional values, as well as the promotion of a respect for scientific principles and critical review of evidence that will later inform clinical decision-making and prescribing practices."

Another article just published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) shows that doctors -- both residents still in training and experienced physicians -- may be putting patients at risk due to sleep deprivation.

"The problem may only be getting worse," CMAJ editors Drs. Noni MacDonald, Paul Hebert, Ken Flegel and Matthew Stanbrook wrote in an editorial. "Medical care today is more complex than in decades past....Increasing complexity of care at the bedside or in the operating theatre places unprecedented cognitive and physical demands on doctors who oversee and deliver care in these environments.

"They noted that a recent study indicated that lack of sleep is causing higher rates of surgical complications, especially if a surgeon had less than six hours of sleep the preceding night.

For more information: http://www.plosmedicine.org/article...http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/doi/10.1503/... http://www.naturalnews.com/032505_medical_doctors_health_hazards.html#ixzz1NRWYKf6o

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Know Your Fundamental, Frequently-Asked Nutrition Questions

WEDNESDAY, MAY 25TH, 2011


7:00pm


This article addresses so many of the fundamental questions that you ask me and your friends ask you. Take the time to read it.

I agree with MOST of the information contained in this article from Yahoo! Health. Those of you who work with me should be able to pick out the things that I would argue. Can you argue them yourselves? Can you make better suggestions for substitutes if necessary? If not...you've got some work to do!


15 Nutrition Myths



The supermarket is rife with less-than-accurate reporting, and not just in the checkout-lane newspaper racks. Walk the aisles scanning food labels and you'll see the fallout from millions of lobbying and advertising dollars spent to posit faulty claims about health and nutrition. You'll find row upon endless row of foods that promise—explicitly or not—to improve your life, flatten your belly, and make you a happier person. The fact is, many of these foods do just the opposite. Learn how to separate fact from fiction and you might finally shed the habits that are silently sabotaging your chances of losing weight. But I must warn you: The truth can hurt.

MYTH #1: High fructose corn syrup is worse than table sugar
Whether or not added sugar is bad for you has never been in dispute. The less sugar you eat, the better. But whether HFCS is worse than plain ol' table sugar has long been a contentious issue. Here’s what you need to know: Both HFCS and table sugar, or sucrose, are built with roughly a 50-50 blend of two sugars, fructose, and glucose. That means in all likelihood that your body can’t tell one from the other—they’re both just sugar. HFCS’s real sin is that it’s supercheap, and as a result, it’s added to everything from cereal to ketchup to salad dressing. Plus it may be affecting your health in ways not yet fully understood by the scientific community. Is it a good idea to minimize the HFCS in your diet? Absolutely. It’s best to cut out all unnecessary sugars. But HFCS’s role as nutritional enemy #1 has been exaggerated. SPECIAL EAT THIS, NOT THAT! REPORT: Eating fiber- and protein-loaded snacks between meals can help you control hunger and avoid overeating at mealtime.

MYTH #2: Sea salt is a healthier version of regular salt
Everyday table salt comes from a mine and contains roughly 2,300 milligrams of sodium per teaspoon. Sea salt comes from evaporated seawater, and it also contains roughly 2,300 milligrams of sodium. That makes them, well, roughly identical. Advocates point to the fact that sea salt also contains other compounds like magnesium and iron, but in truth, these minerals exist in trace amounts. To obtain a meaningful dose, you’d have to take in extremely high and potentially dangerous levels of sodium. What’s more, traditional table salt is regularly fortified with iodine, which plays an important role in regulating the hormones in your body. Sea salt, on the other hand, gives you virtually zero iodine. The bottom line is this: If switching from table salt to sea salt causes you to consume even one extra granule, then you’ve just completely snuffed out whatever elusive health boon you hope to receive. Plus you’ve wasted a few bucks.

MYTH #3: Energy drinks are less harmful than soda
Energy drinks like Red Bull, Monster, and Full Throttle attempt to boost your energy with a cache of B vitamins, herbal extracts, and amino acids. But what your body’s going to remember most (especially around your waistline) is the sugar in these concoctions; a 16-ounce can delivers as much as 280 calories of pure sugar, which is about 80 calories more than you’d find in a 16-ounce cup of Pepsi. What’s more, a University of Maryland study found energy drinks to be 11 percent more corrosive to your teeth than regular soda. So here’s the secret that energy drink companies don’t want you to know: The only proven, significant energy boost comes from caffeine. If you want an energy boost, save yourself the sugar spike and drink a cup of coffee.

MYTH #4: Diet soda is harmless
The obesity-research community is becoming increasingly aware that the artificial sweeteners used in diet soda—aspartame and sucralose, for instance—lead to hard-to-control food urges later in the day. One Purdue study discovered that rats took in more calories if they'd been fed artificial sweeteners prior to mealtime, and a University of Texas study found that people who consume just three diet sodas per week were more than 40 percent more likely to be obese. Try weaning yourself off by switching to carbonated water and flavoring with lemon, cucumber, and fresh herbs.

MYTH #5: Low-fat foods are better for you
As it applies to food marketing, the term “low fat” is synonymous with “loaded with salt and cheap carbohydrates.” For instance, look at Smucker’s Reduced Fat Peanut Butter. To replace the fat it skimmed out, Smucker’s added a fast-digesting carbohydrate called maltodextrin. That’s not going to help you lose weight. A 2008 study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that over a 2-year span, people on low-carb diets lost 62 percent more body weight than those trying to cut fat. (Plus, the fat in peanut butter is heart-healthy monounsaturated fat—you’d be better off eating more of it, not less!)

MYTH #6: “Trans-fat free” foods are actually trans-fat free
The FDA’s guidelines allow companies to claim 0 grams of trans fat—even broadcast it on the front of their packages—as long as the food in question contains no more than 0.5 grams of trans fat per serving. But here’s the deal: Due to an inextricable link to heart disease, the World Health Organization advises people to keep trans fat intake as low as possible, maxing out at about 1 gram per 2,000 calories consumed. If your cupboard’s full of foods with almost half a gram per serving, you might be blowing past that number every single day. The American Journal of Health Promotion recently published an article urging the FDA to rethink its lax regulations, but until that happens, you should avoid all foods with “partially hydrogenated oil” (meaning, trans fats) on their ingredients statements.

MYTH #7: Foods labeled “natural” are healthier
The FDA makes no serious effort to control the use of the word "natural" on nutrition labels. Case in point: 7UP boasts that it’s made with “100% Natural Flavors” when, in fact, the soda is sweetened with a decidedly un-natural dose of high fructose corn syrup. “Corn” is natural, but “high fructose corn syrup” is produced using a centrifuge and a series of chemical reactions. Other "natural" abusers include Natural Cheetos, which are made with maltodextrin and disodium phosphate, and “natural advantage” Post Raisin Bran, which bathes its raisins in both sugar and corn syrup. The worst part is, you're likely paying a premium price for common junk food.

MYTH #8: Egg yolks raise your cholesterol
Egg yolks contain dietary cholesterol; this much is true. But research has proven that dietary cholesterol has almost nothing to do with serum cholesterol, the stuff in your blood. Wake Forest University researchers reviewed more than 30 egg studies and found no link between egg consumption and heart disease, and a study in Saint Louis found that eating eggs for breakfast could decrease your calorie intake for the remainder of the day.

MYTH #9: Eating junk food helps battle stress
You’ve been there: Stressed out and sprawled across your sofa with one arm elbow deep in a bag of cheese puffs. In the moment, it can be comforting, but a study published in the British Journal of Psychiatry found that people who consumed the most highly processed foods were 58 percent more likely to be depressed than those who ate the least. Your move: Find a healthy stress snack. Peanut butter and Triscuits do the trick, or check out the next myth …

MYTH #10: Chocolate is bad for you
Cocoa is a plant-based food replete with flavonoids that increase blood flow and release feel-good endorphins. Plus, it contains a healthy kind of saturated fat called stearic acid, which research has shown can increase your good HDL cholesterol. But here’s the rub: When most people think of chocolate, their minds jump immediately to milk chocolate, which contains far more sugar than actual cocoa. Instead, look for dark chocolate, specifically those versions that tell you exactly how much cocoa they contain. A bar with 60% cocoa is good, but the more cocoa it contains, the greater the health effects.

Myth #11: Granola is good for you
Oats are good for you, and the same goes for oatmeal. But granola takes those good-for-you hunks of flattened oat, blankets them in sugar, and bakes them in oil to give them crunch. The amount of fat and sugar added to each oat is at the discretion of food processors, but you can bet your last cup of milk it’s going to far sweeter and more fatty than a bowl of regular cereal. Take this example: A single cup of Quaker Natural Granola, Nuts & Raisins has 420 calories, 30 grams of sugar, and 10 grams of fat. Switch to a humble cup of Kix and you drop down about 90 calories, 2.5 grams of sugar, and 1 gram of fat.

MYTH #12: Bananas are the best source of potassium
Your body uses potassium to keep your nerves and muscles firing efficiently, and an adequate intake can blunt sodium’s effect on blood pressure. One 2009 study found that a 2:1 ratio of potassium to sodium could halve your risk of heart disease, and since the average American consumes about 3,400 milligrams of sodium each day, your goal should be 6,800 milligrams of daily potassium. You’re extremely unlikely to ever reach that mark—and never with bananas alone. One medium banana has 422 milligrams and 105 calories. Here are the sources that earn you roughly the same amount of potassium in fewer calories:
Potato, half a medium spud, 80 calories
Apricots, 5 whole fruit, 80 calories
Cantaloupe, 1 cup cubes, 55 calories
Broccoli, 1 full stalk, 50 calories
Sun-dried tomatoes, a quarter cup, 35 calories

MYTH #13: Oranges are the best source of vitamin C
Far more than a simple immune booster, vitamin C is an antioxidant that plays a host of important roles in your body. It strengthens skin by helping to build collagen, improves mood by increasing the flow of norepinephrine, and bolsters metabolic efficiency by helping transport fat cells into the body’s energy-burning mitochondria. But since your body can neither store nor create the wonder vitamin, you need to provide a constant supply. An orange is the most famous vitamin-C food, and although it’s a good source, it’s by no means the best. For 70 calories, one orange gives you about 70 micrograms of vitamin C. Here are five sources with just as much vitamin C and even fewer calories:
Papaya, ¾ cup, 50 calories
Brussel’s sprouts, 1 cup, 40 calories
Strawberries, 7 large fruit, 40 calories
Broccoli, ½ stalk, 25 calories
Red Bell Pepper, ½ medium pepper, 20 calories

MYTH #14: Organic is always better
Often, but not in every case. Organic produce is almost nutritionally identical to its conventional counterpart. The issue is pesticide exposure—pesticides have been linked to an increased risk of obesity in some studies. But many conventionally grown fruits and vegetables are very low in pesticides. Take, for example, the conventional onion: It’s got the lowest pesticide load of 45 fruits and vegetables tested by the Environmental Working Group. Also in the safe-to-eat-conventional group are avocados, sweet corn, and pineapple. In general, fruits and vegetables with impermeable skins are safe to buy conventional, while produce like celery, peaches, apples, and blueberries are better purchased organic.

MYTH #15: Meat is bad for you
Pork, beef, and lamb are among the world’s best sources of complete protein, and a Danish study found that dieting with 25 percent of calories from protein can help you lose twice as much weight as dieting with 12 percent protein. Then there’s vitamin B12, which is prevalent only in animal-based foods. B12 is essential to your body’s ability to decode DNA and build red blood cells, and British researchers found that adequate intakes protect against age-related brain shrinkage. Now, if you’re worried that meat will increase your risk for heart disease, don’t be. A Harvard review last year looked at 20 studies and found that meat’s link to heart disease exists only with processed meats like bacon, sausage, and deli cuts. Unprocessed meats, those that hadn’t been smoked, cured, or chemically preserved, presented absolutely zero risk.

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

The Difference Of Being Strong, And Acting Strong...

TUESDAY, MAY 24TH, 2011

4:00pm


The Difference Of Being Strong, And Acting Strong...

By Practice CrossFit

Acting strong needs mirrors to workout, being strong needs a destination.
Acting strong needs friends to tell them how great they are, being strong needs friends they can help become great.
Acting strong looks around after a PR to see who's watching, being strong puts more weight on.
Acting strong eats clean because they have to, being strong eats clean because someone that may have to,may welcome the example.
Acting strong storms off when things don't go as planned, being strong controls the brainstorm we all feel, then plans for tomorrow.
Acting strong is hurtfully honest, being strong is honestly helpful.
Acting strong is there for whomever is there for them, being strong is always there.
Acting strong waits to see the outcome, being strong makes the outcome.
Acting strong needs an entourage, being strong builds a community.
Acting strong needs applause, being strong needs to make others feel like they are applauded.
Acting strong is the loudest coward, being strong is quietest fighter.
Acting strong waits for a better day, being strong lives everyday like its their last.
Acting strong will bow to a tyrant in hopes they may become one, being strong will rise against one.
Acting strong will pray as a last resort, being strong will pray as a first step.
Acting strong will give opinions, being strong will hear opinions...and keep going.
Acting strong will display trophies of themselves, being strong will display trophies of others.
Acting strong has unending pride, being strong can't be humble enough.
Acting strong joins a team so they can play, being strong joins a team so it can win.
Acting strong interrupts, being strong interprets.
Acting strong sets standards that value themselves, being strong sets standards that show value in others.
Acting strong is a burden, being strong carries them.
Acting strong fears the strong, being strong fears their own strength.
Acting strong will do anything to be accepted, being strong searches for those in need of acceptance.
Acting strong needs proof to believe, being strong is the proof others believe in.
Acting strong has no weakness, being strong is weakness overcome time and time again.


Coach Justin

Monday, May 23, 2011

Confidence

MONDAY, MAY 23RD, 2011

6:00pm


CONFIDENCE

CrossFit Inferno

Confidence is something that we MUST have in our daily lives. Confidence isn't about knowing you will win. It's not about beating someone. It's not about being the best. Confidence is about how you feel about yourself and your abilities. When you know that you will always give your best then you are confident in yourself. When you give your best then it really doesn't matter what the outcome is. We are only able to do the best we can. If you have put the work in, then all you have to do when its time to perform is......perform! Can you still be confident in yourself even if you have to do something in which you aren't very good? The not so obvious answer is YES!! Again, you can't be confident that you will win if its a race or event. But, you can be VERY confident that you will give your absolute all and you will do everything you can to do your absolute best. When you are able to concentrate on this instead of winning, then you are freed from the pressure of HAVING to win. All you can do is do the best you can do..... SO DO IT!!!!

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Friday, May 20, 2011

FRIDAY, MAY 20TH, 2011
5:00pm

CROSSFIT AS A TOOL
By CrossFit Nation

Crossfit, if used properly, is more than an exercise program, it's training for life. Your life. The reason we say Crossfit is as good for grandmothers as it is for Olympic athletes is because it is completely adaptable to everyone. Not only with scaling but with how you use the actual program. You are training for "your life". Just because you are in a class with someone who blows away every exercise doesn't mean that is how you need to train. Remember you are there for you and what you need. If you don't know how to do the exercises properly there is no sense in going heavier and not keeping form just to keep up with so and so. This is not an over night process. It takes time. You will know when it is time to push to the next level. Don't worry, we will let you know when you are ready to move if you fail to make the change on your own.

Use the WOD's as tools, it doesn't have to be balls to the wall every time. If you suck at something try to get better at it, practice. Don't have strung together double unders and Annie comes up. Don't worry about your time at all and practice your double unders. It doesn't always have to be a race.

Embrace heavy days, you don't always have to have your heart beating out of your chest. Strong muscles make life better period. Deadlift. Learn to squat. Learn to squat. Learn to squat. Then learn to snatch.

Quit hating running. It's very freeing. To be able to run is elemental, do it and get rid of running shoes your feet will thank you. Embrace the sprint, it's good for the spirit to run as fast as you can.

Love your community because they are there with you suffering through the WODS, celebrating your victories, laughing and crying (or in Diane's case whining).

Learn to love your body it's an awesome machine. You're worth it.


Coach Justin

PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

To Juice Or Not To Juice

WEDNESDAY, MAY 18TH, 2011

7:00pm



To Juice Or Not To Juice

From NorCal Strength and Conditioning

My thoughts are that juice tastes so yummy. I would love to drink juice every day. But the reality is that juice is concentrated forms of flavored sugar.

There are a number of reasons why juice is not ideal.

#1- It takes 4 large naval oranges to create only 1 cup of orange juice (Can you eat 4 oranges in one sitting?)

#2- Juice often times has just as many calories and sugar as a can of soda

#3- Juice is one of the number one causes of cavities in kids. 4 million kids at or under the age of preschool suffer from cavities

#4- More often than not, juice contains high fructose corn syrup

#5- Juice processing eliminates the actual fiber content of the fruit being juiced so all you are getting at the end of that cold glass of fruit is the sugar, carbohydrates, and lots of empty calories.

#6- Fiber is the filling portion of fruit so without it, it’s easy to drink more than 1 cup of juice in a sitting, let alone throughout the day.

Share This Post

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

TUESDAY, MAY 17th, 2011

4:00pm

When going over the Paleo Diet with people I oftentimes construct a decent-sized list to demonstrate the foods which are included and the "foods" that are excluded in the diet. If the person has never really heard of or educated themselves on what the Paleo Diet is I always start with the phrase, "lean meats and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruits, little starch, no sugar." My problem when constructing this list is that I almost always forget to include something that I eat nearly every day! ... Eggs.

Yes, eggs are okay on the Paleo Diet. There is some conflicting information about the frequency with which it is okay to eat eggs, but as I understand it, if you consume a certain type of egg frequency is virtually irrelevant.

Check out this brief, but thorough, thread from PaleoHacks (Choosing Eggs) and then add them on FaceBook if you haven't already. They have TONS of useful information!

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Sunday, May 15, 2011

10 General Physical Skills

MONDAY, MAY 16TH, 2011

6:00pm


GENERAL PHYSICAL SKILLS

If your goal is optimum physical competence then all the general physical skills must be considered


1. Cardiovascular/Respiratory Endurance: The ability of body systems to gather, process, and deliver oxygen.


2. Stamina: The ability of body systems to process, deliver, store, and utilize energy.


3. Strength: The ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular units, to apply force.


4. Flexibility: The ability to maximize the range of motion at a given joint.


5. Power: The ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular units, to apply maximum force in minimum time.


6. Speed: The ability to minimize the time cycle of a repeated movment.


7. Coordination: The ability to combine several distince movement patterns into a singular distinct movement.


8. Agility: The ability to minimize transition time from one movement pattern to another.


9. Balance: The ability to control the placement of the bodies center of gravity in relation to its support base.


10. Accuracy: The ability to control movement in a given direction or at a given intensity.


Read Further Here: What Is Fitness?


Coach Justin

Friday, May 13, 2011

Perfect Human Diet Trailer

FRIDAY, MAY 13TH, 2011
6:00pm

It’s tough to describe how important this movie is without getting pushy or sounding preachy. I hate that stuff, but it’s REALLY important. You will learn about the cutting edge research emerging from places such as the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Biology. I know, shady place, right? This movie is not about a preference for flatware and whether we should enjoy forks more than knives, this is an exploration into what it means to be human and what our history tells us about optimized health and wellness. If you have benefited from the Paleo concept please consider a donation and for sure please pass around this trailer and the link to donate.


Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Thursday, May 12, 2011

My Supplemental Foundation

THURSDAY, MAY 12TH, 2011

4:00pm

I've been getting a multitude of questions lately about supplements. Here are some of the foundational supplements I take daily:

Fish Oil


Vitamin D3 (5000 IU)



Digestive Enzymes



Magnesium Citrate



A more thorough write-up on supplements is sure to follow soon with alternative brands and recommended dosages.

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

WEDNESDAY, MAY 11TH, 2011


7:00pm


READ THIS!

Skinny Fat by CrossFit South Bay



Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com



TUESDAY, MAY 10TH, 2011

5:00pm


After some impressive numbers on the 5 rep max deadlift we played with 10 rounds of 5 lateral jumps and a 20 yard sprint with a minute of rest between rounds. Made for some interesting looking pictures.
Coach Justin

Monday, May 9, 2011

MONDAY, MAY 9TH, 2011

6:00pm


NOTE: Tuesday's class time will be at 5:00pm instead of 4:00pm this week

I hope you were all able to get through the workouts that were previously posted for this last week. Prepare yourselves for a heavy lifting theme for much of this week.

Can anyone name this guy is and what he accomplished with this lift?

Coach Justin


PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com

Monday, May 2, 2011

TUESDAY, MAY 3RD, 2011

No Class


NOTE: Normal class schedule will resume on Monday, May 9th.

In the meantime check out the workouts below and complete them before next Monday. Notice that there's an option for "in-season" and "off-season". If you are currently competing in a sport (i.e. baseball, club volleyball, softball, etc.) than you should choose the "in-season" option. If you are not currently competing, chose the "off-season" option. Have a great week all!


Workout #1:


In-Season: As many double-unders as possible in 2 minutes for 3 rounds. Rest 2 minutes between rounds. You should be doing double-unders for a total of 6 minutes. If you don't have double-unders practice them and perform the workout in singles and divide the total amount of singles by 3 to get your final score for each round. If you have double-unders but aren't good at them yet...struggle through them and do the workout Rx'd.

Off-Season: Do "in-season" workout or run a 5K (3.3 miles)

Workout #2:
In-Season: 75 burpees for time
Off-Season: 150 burpees for time

Workout #3:
In-Season: As many walking lunges as possible in 7 minutes.
Off-Season: 500 squats for time.

Workout #4:
In-Season: 3 rounds for time of: 20 yard bear crawl, 20 yard broad jump, sprint 40 yards (20 yards out and 20 yards back), 30 supermans, 40 sit-ups...Rest 1 minute between rounds.
Off-Season: As many push-ups as possible in 6 minutes and then 75 supermans.

If you have questions about the workouts/exercises look them up on the internet. If you are unnable to find them on the net...text me and I'll see what we can do.

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com
MONDAY, MAY 2ND, 2011

6:00pm


NOTE: Today will be the only day there is class this week.


Intimidated By CrossFit Women? That's a Good Thing.

By CrossFit Charlottesville

CrossFit levels the athletic playing field more than most mainstream sports: every gym-goer, regardless of gender or past athletic experience, has access to the same experience, the same weights, the same workouts. It’s how each gym-goer responds to that access that determines his or her outcome. But do women shy away from the bigger weights and the higher intensity more so than men? And if so, does that affect their potential to make greater gains and reach their full athletic potential? For some women, this is a big issue that prevents their ability to make continuous gains in the gym.

So why would women shy away from heavier weights or from pushing themselves to max intensity in workouts? It’s no secret that women in the United States are constantly bombarded with unhealthy ideas about beauty, and a lot of the time, those ideas are in direct conflict with good health. When eating disorders are practically a prerequisite for the modeling and entertainment industry, it doesn’t bode well for the body confidence of the general female population. The messages are bombarded: stomachs should be flat, boobs should be perky, and God forbid touching inner thighs! And never, and I mean, never, should a woman be able to open her own jar of pickles or take her own moving boxes down a flight of stairs. That’s what the menfolk are for!

Some women fear big shoulders. Some fear that leg muscles developed from heavy squats will cause us to go UP a size (now I’ll never fit into those Forever 21 leggings!). Some fear being hungrier, which means eating more and gaining weight. In short, we fear more because, as women, we think we should be less. Less big and less strong. Yet again, these ideas are in direct contrast with what we know about health. We KNOW that weight training improves bone density, weight management (you burn more calories at rest!), and cardiac health. Those three things alone (that could prevent osteoporosis, diabetes, and heart disease) should get you so jazzed about weights that you immediately pick up something heavy just for the hell of it. Seriously, pick up something heavy NOW. We also KNOW that women do not turn into Hulkish beasts because of heavy weights. Just see hot lady o-lifter #1 and hot lady o-lifter #2 if you need proof. Remember how much work went into making Forney “fat?” Well, it’s kind of the same for women. You’d have to work really hard and take drugs to look like this.

Strong is the new skinny, and pop culture be damned, because we will no longer be constrained with an impossible ideal. We should approach our fitness experience like any other gym-goer and not be afraid of more. Stepping up the intensity will give you results and can help you out of a training rut (stuck at the same shoulder press for the past eight months? I’ve been there!).
Weightlifting is a very new experience for so many women in our gym that I totally understand your hesitation and fear of doing it. No one in any important position is encouraging young female athletes to lift weights, but turn on ESPN or watch any dad with his son on the football team, and you will have evidence of a totally different cultural upbringing. Weightlifting, CrossFit and strength training are essential parts of your program. They are equally important as your metcon and your marathon time.

Women are built to be athletes, just the same as any human, and that’s the fundamental starting point for empowering yourself and realizing your vision of why you came to CrossFit in the first place. Not everyone has the willpower to suffer through pain and eschew popular conceptions about fitness and beauty. It’s a tough culture out there, but we want to be here to make you comfortable and to see you make constant improvement in and out of the gym. And remember, it’s okay to drop a weight or to miss a PR. Just ask Kyle, he does it all the time.

So, for the women in our gym and at other real training centers, dig deep inside and know that you are capable of more. Don’t fear going up in weight, don’t fear the pain, don’t fear the skills you don’t know. And for the love of all things healthy, don’t fear your potential.

Coach Justin
PerformanceQuestFitness@gmail.com