FitZone Atlanta

2135 Defoor Hills Rd Ste. N.
Atlanta, Georgia 30318

At the corner of Hills Ave and Defoor Hills Rd.
(404) 351-3751
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CrossFit Women are B!tches

General Messages • Posted by FitZone Atlanta

http://www.crossfitmc.com/?p=1470albums/thumbnails

Some time ago I came across a website called Heartless Bitches International, and was unable to resist browsing through it a little. What I found was fantastic, and I quickly came to the conclusion that the name of the website, while most likely offensive to several people, is nothing more than their (probably accurate) description of how society views women who have strength, confidence, independence and intelligence, and the resolve to be openly proud of that fact.

Having been a CrossFitter for the past couple of years I’ve found that the women I’ve met who embrace CrossFit as a lifestyle embody all of those wonderful traits and outshine the hoi polloi to an astronomical degree. I want to get to know them and to meet more of them. They don’t lie down and accept defeat, nor do they allow fashion magazines or television shows to mandate who they should be and how they should act. I believe this is a good thing, and I hope that it continues to spread like wildfire. CrossFit women are amazing, incredible human beings, and I feel that the “stop whining and get over yourself” attitude of that website is representative of what CrossFit women possess naturally.

The word “bitch” is very volatile – to some it’s the deepest, harshest name anyone could call a woman, and to others it’s completely benign. If, however, a woman who has strength, confidence, independence and intelligence falls under the general category of “bitch” (when used as a description of her character) simply because she has those traits, then I will do anything and everything in my power to help my 8-year old daughter become one. I can’t think of a greater gift I could ever possibly give her.

I’m just sayin’…


Sport is Art

General Messages • Posted by FitZone Atlanta

From www.crossfitunlimited.com

Olypic

I had a great weekend at the cert in San Diego. Grab a seat, I feel like writing a bit. I’m on a flight home and have some uninterupted time.

CrossFit is constantly varied functional movements executed at high intensity. There are a ton of exercise disciplines practiced under the CrossFit umbrella. None claimed to be invented by CrossFit but rather organized in a different way by CF. Here’s a way to think of it…take Moby Dick, a classic book written by Melville, and flip through the pages then randomly pick out any word in the book. Check the dictionary and see if Melville invented the word. The answer is no. There is not one word in the book invented by the author. He just organized the words in a specific way to deliver them like no one has before. Very similar to what CrossFit has done with functional movements. We squat, deadlift, clean, press, snatch, jerk, run, climb, throw, etc.

If you talk to three different elite powerlifting coaches about their lifts you will get some small differences in body positioning and execution of the lifts. It’s true in any discipline. You see, to become a master at anything you have to log hours upon hours. During your hours you try different things. Some work and some don’t and beliefs are born based on personal experiences. I’m talking very subtle beliefs that the average jane wouldn’t give a hoot about. It really turns into an art for coaches. The difference between starting with shoulders over the bar, behind the bar, or in front of the bar. The difference between a high bar back squat and a low bar back squat. The list can go on and on.

Although I think it’s important to discuss these diffeneces to grow CrossFit. I think sometimes coaches in the community spend a little too much time and energy debating who has the “better” way. CrossFit is the future of fitness. As it stands now I’d guess less than one half of one percent of the population is deadlifting, squatting, cleaning, etc. The battle should not be about the differneces of 3 inches in a starting position of a deadlift. The battle should be against donkey calf raises machines, three sets of ten, and the couch. Get people deadlifting. If they want to be an elitist then they can get into different positions. Look, not everyone is going to excel only one way at one movement. Watch the olympics for example. Look at the difference in foot positioning of some of the Chinese lifters versus some of the other lifters. It’s just one example, but the point is summed up by a classic saying…different strokes for different folks.

There are always going to be small differences in movements between elite athletes and that’s okay. Once you learn to deadlift and master it one way, try a different starting position and see if it makes you lift more weight. If so keep it. If not, dump it. The main point here is that CrossFit has done a better job than any single functional movement discipline at bringing these movements to the masses. We need to continue to fight the battle against the couch and bad fitness programs. Not fight micro battles within the community.

Thanks for reading


Don't Be Another Stat!

General Messages • Posted by FitZone Atlanta

From CrossFit SweatShop blog

trend

This graph was taken from Google Trends.  It shows the internet search popularity of CrossFit, Bally Fitness, Gold’s Gym, and 24 Hour Fitness.  Notice the huge spike each New Year for all big commercial gyms.  CrossFit’s growth in popularity has been steady with the occasional spike due to large newspaper or magazine publications.  However, it appears CrossFit will soon overshadow even 24 Hour Fitness in popularity. 

One of the key differences with CrossFit is that it is a program and supportive community that seeks to improve the health, fitness, and well-being of it’s members, not a membership driven gym with several hundred or even a few thousand members which relies on an extremely high turnover rate for it’s success.  CrossFit is a process of continual learning and refinement, both in regards to the exercises, as well as nutrition and other lifestyle habits.  With the New Year right around the corner, don’t be just another jackass that makes a resolution to get in shape, only to give up come February.  Make a change that will improve your long term health.


On the Kettlebell Swing

General Messages • Posted by FitZone Atlanta

albums/The Exercises

Pictured: variations of the top of an American style Kettlebell Swing, by Jeff Martone.

Be careful when going this far overhead, I don't want anyone getting bonked on the head!


What about booze?

General Messages • Posted by FitZone Atlanta

From CrossFit Brio Blog:


So you've taken the plunge and decided to jump with two feet into the caveman style of eating. You're buying and cooking real food and you've given up on take out for a whole week and then realize you have plans to go out for dinner with friends on the weekend. You prepare like any good paleo person and check the menu ahead of time to figure out how to get your meats and veggies with out any grains or dairy. You meet your friends feeling confident you'll stick to the food plan without being a pain in the butt when the waiter arrives and asks the table "Can I start anyone with a drink?"

You panic... all your friends are having drinks, that's partly why they're there. Are you going to have to stick with water? Is beer Paleo? Did cave people have long island ice teas? Crap, what to do!?

Everyone enjoys and evening out with their friends or family and it's just become common place to have a drink or two. There's been many studies discussing both the benefits and disadvantages to alcohol. So, how does alcohol fall into the caveman style diet?

I'm pretty sure that our caveman ancestors did not have a brewery, but alcohol has been around for a long time. There have been beer jugs found from the Neolithic period that date back 10,000 years and Egyptian pictographs show the use of wine 4,000 years ago. So we've certainly had it a heck of a lot longer than high fructose corn syrup which has allowed us to adapt to its use. The fact is some people do better than others with alcohol. You need to figure out how well you do with it.

If you can eat meats and veggies, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch, some alcohol and no sugar and still meet your health and fitness goals then by all means have a glass of wine here and there. But if you are doing the above and not meeting your goals, you might want to try to kick the booze. This is especially the case if one of your goals is to lose weight. This article from our other site discusses the effects of beer on body weight.

Just remember you can get noticeable results from following the caveman style eating plan 80-90% of the time. If that other 10-20% involves a drink or two it's not the end of the world. Just listen to your body and make healthy decisions. If you do decide to have a drink check out this link from Mark's Daily Apple for a guide to making the right choices on what drinks to have.