mobility

Midline Stabilization

Jenga!
Jenga!

Midline Stabilization

"So what do you do for abs?"

A question common for CrossFit gyms, as if the only measure of fitness is a 6-pack.

Much of the public believes that the road to a strong midsection involves a multitude of crunches, curl-ups, sit-ups, and any and all other abdominal exercises.  The goal is almost always aesthetic.  “Core work,” it gets named.

In reality, stomach muscles can be seen with minimal body fat, no matter how strong a person is.  If six little abdominal bumps are the goal, much of what people are looking for can be achieved through nutrition. And sometimes, even unhealthy individuals have visual abs. Skinny isn't necessarily fit, remember. Everyone has a 6-pack, it's just a matter of what exists on top of it, between the muscles and the skin on the subcutaneous level.

If core strength is the goal, perhaps the best analogy would be the game of Jenga.  The strongest position is with all supporting pieces in place. The more the blocks are moved out of sorts, the less stable the tower becomes.

This is like our body, if we consider our spine like a midline of building blocks then the supporting pieces stabilize our overall structure.

If we look at the anatomy and physiology of the abdomen, our musculature is set up to stop unwanted movement of the spine.  Sure, the abs do in fact flex to bring the ribs and hips closer to each other, and our back muscles extend to open that distance, but resisting movement is one of the primary functions of the muscles in our midsection. Thus, resisting movement is one of the greatest core strengthening exercises an athlete can do. This is an additional reason why gymnastics positioning or squatting heavy or going overhead with weight are all such great moves.

UltimateWarrior025
UltimateWarrior025

If we resist movement, the midline strengthens.  Like a solidified tower in Jenga, complete with the middle blocks intact.

A common example is the following scenario: Imagine you are going to help a friend push their broken down car. For whatever reason they ran out of gas and you’re with them, close to the gas station—but instead of walking for gas you need to help push while they steer. Just go with it, alright?  As you prepare to push, you don’t stand straight up and place your hands on the car as if you were in a vertical push-up position. You want multiple muscle groups involved, right? Well, actually, this thought probably wouldn’t go through your mind... instead you'd say to yourself, “Why couldn't they watch the damn gauges?"  Nonetheless, you sigh and then realize you'll need to use your entire body.  You put one foot in front of the other, drop your body down low, and use legs as well as upper body to get the car rolling.

What most people rarely realize in this situation-- never think to do, but would come naturally-- is we'd all take a deep breath, hold it, and brace for the push by tightening our core and midsection.

Functional fitness at its finest.

The body is staying safe by resisting spinal movement, but it's also putting itself into the strongest position possible.  Like a Jenga game, before anyone starts picking the pieces apart. And like Jenga, we want all our pieces in place. This requires strategy, a steady hand, and maybe even a touch of luck.

The Jenga Lottery
The Jenga Lottery

Our abs are in plain vision any time we look in the mirror. Maybe we worry about our flaws, like the holes in a Jenga tower.  But while we constantly see our front, the posterior human anatomy is just as important when aiming for strength and athleticism. Plus, a solid back side of the body keeps us young for years past our prime; think of our weak elderly population who have lost the posterior strength to stand upright. Our great-grandparents can often be seen staring at the ground is an atrophied state of posterior musculature.

Bounded by the abdominal wall, the pelvis, the lower back, the diaphragm and their ability to stabilize the body during movement are key to any athletic endeavor or general fitness program. The main muscles involved are the rectus abdominis, the transversus abdominis, the internal and external obliques, the quadrates lumborum, the psoas, the diaphragm, the erector spinae, the multifidus, and the gluteus muscle group. [1] [2] [3] [4]

Core-muscles
Core-muscles

When the abs, back extensors, glutes, and surrounding muscles are “on,” the body is as rigid as it can be. Couple that physical work with healthful nutritional choices, and muscle cells increase while body fat decreases.  A steady stack of Jenga blocks, the midline is strong and protected. No matter what the abs look like from the outside.

Washboards
Washboards

Movements for a Strong Midline:

Handstand Work: in order to not fold on top of yourself while upside down, the abs and back need to be strong. This gymnastic move also flows best when a hollow position is understood and put into practice.

Hollow Handstand Positions
Hollow Handstand Positions

Hollow Rocks: this is a static global flexion that tightens from the legs through to the shoulders.  Hollowing out is a set position in much of gymnastics and related exercise-- in CrossFit, this is namely push-ups, handstands, ring dips, pull-ups, and muscle-ups.

Hollow Rocks
Hollow Rocks

Overhead Work: shoulder press, push press, and jerk exposes midline stabilization issues.  Holding heavy weight overhead requires a strong and set midline.

Overhead Finish Position
Overhead Finish Position

Kettlebell Swings: hit a few of these and you can tell that the midline needs to be tight to keep from losing the bell between your legs.  Remember, it's not just the front of the body that stabilizes the spine; these will hit lower back stabilizers and immediately expose any lumbar weakness.

KB Swings
KB Swings

L-sits: this isometric hold can leave your upper abs sore for days.  Soreness is not congruous with fitness benefits, but just like handstands, L-sits can only be performed if the midline is strong.

L-sits
L-sits

Sled Push/Pulls: remember our car example from before? Besides the sheer work capacity and leg drive development, setting the midsection in order to move heavy weight is a great midline exercise.

Sled Push
Sled Push

Squats: maybe it's not traditionally thought of as a midline developer, but squat with a load in the back, front, or overhead position and stability is extremely necessary. Do a "dog shit squat" and injury is leaning your way, like a faltering Jenga tower. Squat heavy and squat often, but squat correctly.

bad squatter
bad squatter

Deadlifts: once again, it's not all about the front of the body. The midline is stabilized with the posterior muscles as well.

Picture courtesy of Star Factory Fitness
Deadlift technique

Of course this all transfers to simple body posture as well... both sitting and standing body positions.  Once you see it, it cannot be unseen. And once you experience a solid midline, you can feel the change in trunk positioning any time it is compromised.  This is where spinal disc issues can arise, in the unprotected spine.  Muscles of the abdomen all exist to support core stabilization and protect the spine from unnecessary shifting and shearing in the structures of the vertebrae.

Bad-and-good-posture
Bad-and-good-posture

So there it is.  Teetering like Jenga blocks, but delegated as a major player in overall fitness, midline stability deserves attention so the entire body structure remains sound.  Tighten the core muscles and stabilize the spine, because the work typically required in CrossFit, or any quality fitness program, has no mercy for a weak midline.

Your move, or lack thereof.

- Scott, 8.19.2014

Jenga
Jenga

Variance

mixtape1.jpg

Variance

Variety is the spice of life. But is it the key to fitness?

CrossFit defines fitness as increased work capacity across broad time and modal domains. And what does all that mean? It refers to the ability to do varied physical work at varied lengths of time. And the way to achieve fitness has been a trial-and-error, test and retest journey through the centuries.  Heavy lifting, bodyweight gymnastics, and metabolic conditioning through running, rowing, jumping... these aren't new concepts. More recent scientific involvement, however, has put mathematics and exercise physiology into the fitness equation. This strengthens the claims of what works and what doesn't.

If you're involved with CrossFit, then, much of what you are using is constantly varied, functional movements performed at high intensity. It's a generalized physical preparedness program for the public. One size fits all? Well, yes and no.

It's like the nearly defunct pop radio, playing a variety of songs and artists to appease the masses.

You can hear it in your head now, right? In your best radio voice: "CrossFit.  Tune in for the hits of today, with all the classics from yesterday."

Finished with whatever slogan or tagline fits for the now. The cutting edge of fitness. More movement variety. All the lifts, all the time.

Sound effects engaged. *Ka-Boom* Here on Amp-101.

Radio Radio Radio!

Radio Radio Radio!

With the advent of internet music, having to listen to a radio station and wait for your favorite songs to come on is no longer an experience today's youth has to endure. The luck-and-chance of hitting the radio music lottery no longer exists. You can simply skip to your favorite songs on Spotify, YouTube, Pandora, or whatever online platform you choose.

But back in the day, you had to wait it out. Fingers crossed for your favorite teen anthem. For the older readers in the crowd, perhaps you even sat nearby, ready to record onto cassette for your newest mix tape. For those even older, you really paid your dues, didn't you? Maybe you did household chores or saved up your weekly allowance to buy the single on a 45. It was the only way.

On the radio, the music being played was varied but it definitely wasn't random. Stations played, and still play, certain artists, record labels, and song singles. Mostly according to what will sell, or more accurately, what has been sold to them. Frustrating, maybe, as we all realize it's yet another industry of money and marketing. Sometimes talent doesn't even win out. A century of progress, but only to the highest bidder.

Old School

Old School

But let's digress.

Just as in radio, in CrossFit the workouts aren't randomized. There is a difference between varied and random. In order to make gains in a meaningful, measurable way, increasing work capacity requires variance. Yet it also requires structure and consistency.

Consistent... variance?

Variety is a necessary perk in life. When used correctly it can keep us entertained, even in our weekly flow of monotony. But without some semblance of consistency, humans actually get uncomfortable. We lose our sense of direction, get confused and even unhappy without purpose in daily life. It's the same in the gym.  With physical fitness we need structure and direction along with the variance to achieve results.

So, consistent and varied, yes. Both have a place on the fitness radio dial.

CrossFit is a strength and conditioning program which attempts to optimize fitness through strategic variety. Not just throwing exercise movements together at random, like a sales bin in the music store. (All the crap no one wanted in the first place, at a discount price!)

It's a common misconception of the variance in CrossFit-- we don't actually piece together workouts out of thin air, like a mix tape of movements to give to our latest crush. A true CrossFit program sees the big picture; has set goals in macro and micro cycles of strength and conditioning, like any developed fitness program. There is structure. There is routine. Just not the type of routine that leaves us stagnant on a perpetual fitness plateau.

Generalize in 10 physical skills but capitalize on consistently revisiting lifts, gymnastics movements, and many other exercise modalities.

10 General Physical Skills of CrossFit

10 General Physical Skills of CrossFit

In the pursuit of physical fitness, achieving central nervous system responses, muscle overload, and skill progression will not occur through randomization. In addition, goal setting and weakness training would never pan out if that were the case.

We see it in the now-gigantic health and fitness industry, where people get antsy and impatient with following a set workout regimen. Many bounce from program to program, always searching for that new thing, that new breakthrough. Like a music scout and a record label, squelching all they can from an artist, chewing them up and spitting them out in hit singles until the public overdoses and wants the new what next.

There's never any chance for growth. There's no room for improvement.

Fad fitness programs capitalize on this human characteristic (oftentimes called "boredom"), and sell get fit quick equipment and schematics as fast as record, cassette, and CD sales in the previous decades of music. And just as fast as they sold, they flicker out with all other obsolete technology.

CrossFit is sometimes viewed as that fad, that here-and-now type of fitness program. And we do in fact see people come through the gym and leave after just a short period of time... never giving it a chance to manifest, to work for them, to grow into more than a 3 minute pop song. They didn't get the results they were looking for in a few weeks so they abandoned ship. They jumped on the bandwagon but stepped off before the headlining act.

For those individuals, CrossFit is a one hit wonder.

For anyone willing to dedicate themselves, however, it looks to have promise for lifelong involvement in fitness. CrossFit groupies? Perhaps, yes.  Since the concept is to be good at anything and everything, a results-based general physical fitness program has an allure for many.

Which is where variance comes back into airplay. Especially because that variety keeps things fresh; enjoyment is high even though workouts with borderline masochistic physical suffering are still present.

So what movements do we benefit from being consistent in, and what should we vary?

Let's start with all the major lifts, both Power Lifting and Olympic Weightlifting.

  • Squat - in some form or fashion 3-4 times a week. Include Back, Front, Overhead, and bodyweight air squats as well.
  • Deadlift - pick something up and put it down at least 3 times a week. This may not always be a traditional deadlift, which is just fine.
  • Clean - are you an Olympic Weightlifter?  Almost every time in the gym.  General public?  1-2 times a week, from different start and finish positions.
  • Jerk - same as the Clean.
  • Snatch - same as the Clean and Jerk.
  • Other Presses - without a specificity, go overhead at least 2 times a week in some form or fashion. Bench/Floor Press as time and function allows.

Also, gymnastics elements like Pull-ups and Handstands need consistent attention as well. If you have a weakness in a bodyweight movement, then that exercise can be incorporated nearly every day in the gym, probably pre- or post-workout so as not to overtrain. Need to get better at running? Rowing? Swimming, biking, etc? Spend some time with it the same way as gymnastics.  Read more here.

Not very random at all, right? Extremely consistent, actually. So what does change, what does vary, is the set and rep scheme for progressive overload. Remember, this variety is the good variety. And the variance in all movements mentioned above fits the CrossFit athlete, where the specialty is not specializing.

The time frame for conditioning should also be varied, if you are looking to be generally physically fit. Everything from short bursts of anaerobic work (think sprints), to mid-level time domains (30 - 120 seconds), to longer, aerobic work (120 seconds+). These are our energy pathways, expressed in a synopsis in the CrossFit Journal here and with other references throughout the internet fitness database. [1] [2] [3]

It's this variance in metabolic conditioning that is particularly beneficial, but can also pose issues as people get comfortable working within their specific strengths... comfort can lead to a lack of variance, in some cases.

CrossFit's official definition is constantly varied, functional movement, performed at high intensity.

What we find in fitness and in life is that consistency can get us results, while variance can make those results optimal. There amidst the static of physical work you can find your favorite song, your personal anthem, loud and clear. Just make sure you're listening for the gains.

Meet you in the fitness airwaves.

-Scott, 8.12.2014

The Deadlift

Danse Macabre by Michael Wolgemut, 1493
Danse Macabre by Michael Wolgemut, 1493

The Deadlift

The lift of the dead.

An orchestrated revival of dead weight. Just sitting there, laying on the ground like a corpse. Begging in absolutely no words to be picked up and resuscitated.

But with all its allure and seduction, it can bury you too.  Like a Danse Macabre.

According to myth, the Deadlift got its name somewhere in ancient Rome, after military battles when young Roman soldiers would go out into the field to lift their fallen comrades onto wagons to later be buried. Literally, “lifting the dead.”  This was used not only to help young soldiers get familiar with battle and death, but to also increase overall strength. [1] [2]

A horrible notion, but again, just a myth. Perhaps.

Picture courtesy of Upstream Fitness
Picture courtesy of Upstream Fitness

A more likely scenario is that strength training developed for various reasons of survival and/or sport, and the movement was similar enough to casualty care during combat to name it the Deadlift.  Plus, the weight on the ground is at a dead stop and is performed with “dead arms,” or no motion in the elbow.

Curiously, it has a history of also being known as the "Healthlift," and there are even professionals attempting to rename it the "Lifelift" in recent years because of its use in maintaining health and well-being. Quite the opposite of death.

Name origin aside, it's such a brute power movement, the Deadlift.  How much can you pick up off the ground? There's a sexy something there, in lifting terms. All that chalk and iron and sweat and grit.

Instead of “How much can you bench?” maybe the bro question at the gym should be “How big is your deadlift?”

Franco Columbo
Franco Columbo

It’s as much form as will power, which is perhaps a bit unfortunate because it can get a little ugly at times. Rounded, like a scared cat on Halloween. Drooping, like a wilting daisy without water.  Shaking, like a dog shitting razor blades.  Sorry to be crude, but at least you get the picture.

Sometimes ego gets in the way of technique, and people pull a barbell off the ground with little or no regard for their spinal future.

Picture courtesy of Star Factory Fitness
Picture courtesy of Star Factory Fitness

Yet besides just feeling cool, besides just the sheer power output, the Deadlift has outstanding transfer of technique to other lifts and other facets of fitness. It’s like having sprint speed or a strong Back Squat in this regard.

It's never a bad thing to be fast and strong.

As an example, completing a safe and efficient Clean or Snatch uses a stable back position, and thus the Deadlift transfers to the Clean, and both conventional as well as wide grip deadlifts aid in the Snatch pull. The hip position of the Deadlift is not exactly the same as in Olympic Weightlifting, but the strength transfer is present even though body positioning is not a direct correlate.

Much of what is taught with midline stabilization from the Deadlift is transferable when discussing and working on a set and stable midsection for other movements as well. It’s not just for safety while lifting weights, good posture and an emphasis on being strong and athletic is just as beneficial. For instance, performing good pull-ups utilizes similar body positioning as the Deadlift, as does running, jumping, rowing, and moving weight overhead. Spinal safety tapped and fully realized.

Crank it up!
Crank it up!

There are quite a few starting positions possible in the Deadlift, as well as foot and hand placement. We can work from a deficit or from blocks to change the set-up.  A stiff-legged deadlift allows very little movement of the legs, as the name denotes. A sumo deadlift involves very wide feet, all the way out close to the weight plates during a barbell deadlift, with hands inside the legs during the pull. World record deadlifts are now pulled in this style, which allows for less hip movement necessary to perform the lift, and has a ton of merit for moving the most weight off the ground as possible.

Deadlift Grip Pics
Deadlift Grip Pics

In 1990, Olympic and world champion and world record holder Nicu Vlad, of Romania, along with his coach Dragomir Cioroslan, combined a stiff-leg deadlift and traditional deadlift, explaining they felt it would make Vlad’s back strong for the Clean in competition. Since they didn’t give it a name, U.S. Olympic Weightlifting team coach Jim Schmitz witnessed the lift and decided to call it the Romanian Deadlift, or RDL for short. The name stuck. [1]

But it’s the traditional deadlift that will get our focus here for transferrable technique.

A conventional Deadlift becomes less lower back and more legs and posterior chain from where the lifter can garnish power-- hamstrings, gluteus muscles, up into the spinae erectors of the back. The quadriceps and other supporting leg muscles get involved, and even the lats and the biceps are recruited to a certain degree. A nice combination for many overall benefits.

posterior chain
posterior chain

CrossFit.com published a short narrative on the lift, found here.  Other valuable sources can be viewed here, here, and here.

There are also scores of video demos you can find online from the above sources. Pick a starting point and see what you can learn.

Feet shoulder width apart, hands and arms just outside the legs, back set, chest up, hamstrings and glutes loaded. Knees pull back slightly to keep the shins virtually vertical as the bar moves up the leg, then hips press forward into the bar once past the knees.

It's better with visuals.  Here’s a pictorial breakdown of a few key points:

Set-up

Courtesy of David Skelly
Courtesy of David Skelly

Pull

Picture courtesy of A Gym Life
Picture courtesy of A Gym Life

Return

Deadlift hips back return
Deadlift hips back return

And Repeat

Courtesy of CrossFit One World
Courtesy of CrossFit One World

Of course this is all well and good if the implement is a loaded barbell, placed at the same height at your shins each rep, 8.5 inches from the ground, with no other variables to factor. Picking up a random heavy object from the floor while working around the house or within your profession will not look like a barbell deadlift. The mid back, or the thoracic spine, will curve quite a bit if the object being lifted needs to be gripped or "hugged" to the body.

In fact, while on topic, the thoracic spine will actually go through curvature during a max effort barbell deadlift anyway.  It's the lower back, or the lumbar spine, that is set.  The mid back will almost always see some form malady occur in super heavy repetitions.  Not entirely unsafe, but that choice always needs to come from the athlete him/herself-- "Can I safely pick this up?  Is it worth a potential injury if I keep pushing this rep?"

Finally, our variance in body types will require slightly different starting points, specifically in regards to hip height.  Limb length plays a small factor, which is where a coach can help to best set up an athlete for success.

Differing Body Dynamics in the Deadlift
Differing Body Dynamics in the Deadlift

Considering all variables, it's relatively easy to benefit from the Deadlift-- find something heavy, pick it up, repeat.  The skeletal muscles, the central nervous system, and the endocrine system will combine to elicit growth in fitness.  Don't get too buried in the details, but do find eternal comfort knowing the ins and outs as it applies to your goals.  Stay safe, stay strong.

Away you go, into the dead zone.  Let us know what it's like in the beyond.

- Scott, 8.4.2014

Deadlift End
Deadlift End

The Fitness Equation

The Fitness Equation

Things can look so simple on paper: fuel, work, rest, repeat.

In reality, we mess this up quite a bit.

If life were a math test, at best we’d earn a C. Maybe a C+. Deserving, since we zone out during most lectures, only hearing half of each life lesson. We probably fell asleep on our proverbial desk a handful of times, and we definitely asked to see a friend’s homework more than once. Plus, we never show our work.

And it's extremely likely we ordered ourselves a pizza at one point or another.

If I'm here and you're here, doesn't that make it our time?
If I'm here and you're here, doesn't that make it our time?

Pay Attention
We live in shortcuts and half-truths, cutting corners when possible. It catches up quick, in terms of lifelong health and well-being.

But we also try to make up for our fitness shortcomings, often compensating by overdoing. It’s like cramming for a test the night before.

We're slackers, and we should just pay attention already. Class is always in session.

Way to go, Einstein
Way to go, Einstein

In months and years past, topics within the fitness equation have received article attention. We recently focused on nutrition and using food as fuel, we previously examined sleep and soreness, and we constantly look into the wide spectrum of exercise movements and related aspects of physical work. But just because we examined one piece of the puzzle doesn't mean we solved all of our problems.

There's a big picture present, and in fitness it involves plenty of real math. VO2Max, caloric intake, metabolic rate, power output, and so on.

To Err is Human
It’s not hard to make mistakes in our training equation, though. In fact, if we’re honest, we all do. Or at least anyone pursuing physical fitness has.

It wasn’t necessarily a huge error, but something has gone wrong at one point or another, right? Simply because we’re human. We’re not perfect. Maybe it was moving incorrectly, with sloppy form. Maybe it was overtraining, putting our body through too much for one day, one week, or one training cycle. We’re not talking about a life-threatening mistake, necessarily; these minor issues just prove our training is in a constant flux. It’s a learning process through each and every week as we work out and advance in this fitness journey.

It’s not hard to make mistakes in nutrition either. I mean, come on… some of these issues aren’t even accidental. Because, donuts… that’s why.

Purposeful cheat meals are actually a usable tool for some people, and a personal belief that, for many of us who won’t spiral out of control, it keeps us sane. Yet nutrition is very often a missing piece of our equation, like a little mathematic misstep that takes us further away from the correct answer as things get complicated.

And what about recovery? Well, if it was possible to mess up something as simple as doing nothing, leave it to us humans. But we get impatient sometimes, neglecting to take rest days. Or else we use too much time off, starting over almost from square one each time. In addition, we might not even know what to do with the recovery time that is taken, or how to use activity in the correct way on rest days to stay loose and maximize physical gains.

Passing This Test Called Life
Follow the fitness equation. It doesn't have to be as complicated as we sometimes make it.

1. Fuel up, primarily for function.

  • Eat. Don't be afraid of food. It is our energy source, after all.
  • From Food = Fuel: "Our brain runs on carbohydrates. Our muscles do the same, and replenish with protein.  Our body systems use fats in so many ways... it's unfortunate they get such a bad rap. [1]  These are our calorie providing macronutrients, and with help from vitamins, minerals, and the almighty water, our day to day tasks can be completed."
  • Know your body and find out what works both before and after your workouts and competitions.
Calorie Balance

2. Correctly use the progressive overload principle.

  • The body systems respond to work. But they especially adapt when overloaded. Use the overload principle by placing your muscles and cardio system under duress yet within an exhaustion level that doesn't cause degenerative tissue breakdown. This will be noticed with overuse injuries, longer recovery cycles, and/or immune system weakness. A bit tricky, yes, but that's why you don't go run a marathon every day or attempt to deadlift a car just for fun. [1] [2]
  • From Scaling: "Keep the body adapting to new stimulus. Your muscles, connecting tissues, energy systems and central nervous system will thank you because you’ve improved. CrossFit doesn't really get any easier, you just become fitter. This allows more workload to occur."
Progressive Overload

3. Follow up overload with recovery.

  • Healthy food can be put on the table. Strength and conditioning work can be done. Mobility issues can be addressed. Weaknesses can be attacked. But sore muscles should receive rest days as well as sleep and replenishment.
  • From Sleep: "We may spend an hour in the gym each day, but it's the 23 hours spent recovering where you make actual gains in your fitness. We do work and our cells adapt. The body rebuilds. Muscle cells, connective tissue, and cardiovascular efficiency all improve to resist future stress. During recovery, there are a series of natural hormone responses to the work that has recently been completed; growth occurs with your central nervous and endocrine systems as well."
  • Actively recover by using movement to stimulate repair. Our body can do its inherent job after a stressful workout or competition with mobility exercises and self-massage, aiding in recovery. But rest days are used for just that-- rest. So doing as little physical work as possible will help. It's tough, but try not to get roped into another hard workout, even if it sounds awesome. See the bigger picture.
stress-recovery-cycle.jpg

4. Repeat.

  • Cycle through these steps in an effort to be consistent, while still using variance. But remember, variety is not the same as being random; follow a program for maximal results.
  • Fuel up, work hard, rest when needed, and reap the rewards.

Alright, nerds, don't even ask if this will be on the test. Of course it will. This is the test.

- Scott, 7.27.2014

Nerds!
Nerds!

Cherry Picking

Cherry Picker

Cherry Picking

You want to get better, don't you? Stronger, faster, healthier?

So why shy away from the very workouts you need? Why skip the movements that could use improvement because you're not good at them? Why stay home because you hate what you see planned at the gym?

You're a cherry picker. That's why.

You are mentally weak. But you're not the only one. It's the proverbial "you" we're talking about here anyway. You... me... all of us. We are all cherry pickers.

cherry pick (v.) 1. To select the most desirable item. Attempting, or picking, things that are easily obtained, or only what best suits your taste, as a cherry might. 2. To choose easy tasks over challenging ones. In sports, a "cherry picker" is someone who prefers to take only easy shots. 3. To drive your Amplify trainers crazy. In daily workouts, to "cherry pick" is to only participate in exercises which are deemed strengths. Movements that are difficult are avoided, almost at all costs.

The Path of Least Resistance
Humans are inherently built to find the path of least resistance.

The human body is fighting an internal battle to function at its highest level of energy efficiency, saving calories, effort, and exertion for the most needed output on a day-to-day basis. Evolutionarily speaking, this is in case we need to outrun a wild animal, or if we are forced to go a day without food, etc.

This is most easily identifiable if we look at heart rate and cardiorespiratory efficiency. Our heart beats only as fast it needs it to, slowing for the majority of the day to transport just enough oxygen through the cardio system in order to stay alive and keep the organs running. Up the physical work and the heart and related systems respond, only to slow again when the work is done or the energy system is depleted.

In science, much of this is known as homeostasis: the process that maintains the stability of the human body's internal environment in response to changes in external conditions. [1]

Our brain does it all the time too. We skip the unimportant items to save energy, to focus on the input that really matters. For instance, our peripheral vision only gives us the blur of movement. Our memory throws out old recall that no longer matters. Our hearing perks up when we need it to, ignoring sounds while falling asleep with the TV on or music playing.

It has actually been documented that if we focus on something, if we really, intently put our energy towards one important task, we become temporarily deaf and blind. We work with selective hearing and tunnel vision, completely missing things that happen around us. We have "fast thinking" and "slow thinking" processes for similar reason. [1] [2]

To our brain, if everything is important, nothing can be important.

Take Care of the Little Things
Let's link the above to fitness. If a person doesn't have a specific plan and has no program to follow, then results aren't fully optimized.

If too many things get the focus, nothing gets the focus.

You cannot reach the physical gains you are looking for if you aren't following a regimen that provides consistent stimulus for growth in muscular strength and cardiorespiratory endurance. Repeatability is important, for several reasons in physical fitness.

Interestingly enough, this is one of the biggest knocks on the CrossFit philosophy and its workout programming. The argument is if you are trying to be good at everything, then you can't excel at anything in particular. Not a bad point, unless we're looking for a generalized fitness program. If a person want to perform at their peak in a specific sport, then of course that sport needs to be the focus point and workouts can, and should, be geared towards maximum performance in said sport. But this is also assuming that a CrossFit program doesn't have consistent focus points in itself. It certainly can; we just work variance into the program, primarily into the conditioning aspect of fitness. Movements are always repeated. Yet outside of benchmarks, specific workouts may not be.

Be ready for anything, by consistently practicing everything.

So for the general public, if everything isn't important, nothing is important. Confused yet?

Let's clarify, then: it's useless to focus on one little aspect of health without seeing the big picture-- overall physical fitness. However, in contrast to that, if you don't take care of the little things, how do you expect to excel at the greater things? The grandiose cannot come without support.

Which brings us back to you, the cherry picker. You cannot fulfill your goals of becoming the fittest "you" by merely doing a few of your favorite movements. You aren't just skipping unpleasant exercises, you are ignoring overall strength and conditioning. If something is difficult, and you don't try to get better at it, then of course it will remain a weakness. It will always be your goat.

I cannot tell a lie; it's you chopping down your own cherry tree-- full of ripe fitness, never to come to fruition.

Everything Is Everything
Time to replant and reap the benefits. Work ethic bleeds across all spectrums, all aspects of life, especially in the gym.

Everything is everything, in the sense that your work within the small stuff will filter through to the bigger items in life. The vigor you take while hitting your favorite exercise movement should be the same when attacking your weakness. If you find a certain lift difficult, or you hate an exercise, then ask yourself why that is. Do you find the struggle difficult? That's normal. Do you have personal limitations for one reason or another? Accept them and do the best you can. Do you simply dislike not being good at something? Check your ego and get to work.

"But I'm horrible at pull-ups." You never put the strength work in when you should. This doesn't mean just once in a while. Every week, people... and multiple times a week at that.

"But I just can't overhead squat." Mobility doesn't improve without perseverance. Settling for bad form will allow you to always settle for bad form.

"But I hate running." That's because you're not good at it. Very rarely does a person hate what they excel in.

Recommendations to Eliminate the Internal Cherry Picker:
1. Just show up.

  • Making it in to the gym can be therapeutic, in the way that the community can help you rally around tough workouts or dreaded exercises. Sometimes just setting foot inside can help get the process started. Work from point A to point B, versus point A to point Z. Just show up. But obviously don't "just show up." Be ready to go to work.

2. Learn to embrace the suck.

  • This fitness stuff is hard. It's not like you're sitting on the couch eating a slice of cherry pie here. Sure, the movements you hate can turn into small favorites as you improve, but more likely, they will remain the movements you hate. No one is condemning you for disliking something in life. Particularly that which makes us sweat. The fault comes if you want to be stronger, faster, and healthier and you are purposefully avoiding the things that will help reach those goals. Find the right attitude and get after it.

3. Stop taking "I don't wanna" for an answer.

  • Set your workout plan and stick to it. Make the time. Yes, listen to your body-- don't force workouts or activities during injury. Common sense still applies. But if you aren't injured, be honest with yourself and get to work. Stick to your weekly routine of set days, no matter what the programming calls for. Your coach has a larger scope in mind, and that's the best part about having someone else create workouts for you; you won't skip the stuff you really need.

It is the dedicated we see make great strides. And the devil is in the details.

Life isn't a bowl of cherries, after all. To be successful in life you have to take on every challenge, every obstacle that you meet. You can't just pick and choose the ones you like.

- Scott, 7.21.2014

The Jerk

The Jerk
The Jerk

The Jerk

It can make or break you, the Jerk.  It's that tiny difference between a successful lift and the feeling of utter failure.

There you are, having cleanly racked a barbell to your shoulders, spectators cheering your name, a few even shouting quick motivational cues. You can feel the positive vibes. All eyes on you. Your adrenaline soars for an attempted personal record. A deep breath in, you brace, you dip, you drive, you drop under, aaaand... you miss lock out.  Hopes fall to the floor like a barbell full of bumper plates.

What a jerk.

Just like our focus on the Snatch and the Clean from previous years, all pieces of Olympic Weightlifting deserve attention in our pursuit of fitness and athleticism. Specific goals include overall strength, power, and coordination, while maximizing ROM and focusing on results.

Which brings us to the Jerk. That aptly named element of Oly Lifting that exists as part of each summer Olympics.

Olympic Jerk
Olympic Jerk

Usually in conjunction with the Clean, the Jerk is a completion of taking an implement (typically a loaded barbell), and moving it from shoulder height to overhead. But it also can stand alone as its own lift and the move deserves a focus in itself.

Particularly because the Jerk is a dream crusher.

It sucks the life out of lifters. To hit a Clean but miss the Jerk can be traumatizing. It cuts you down to size; it picks you apart like a bully. The Jerk senses your weakness, leaves you insecure, and talks shit behind your back.

Like any bully, it needs to be squashed. Yeah, sure, we all know bullies have their own insecurities-- the Jerk is always playing second fiddle to the Clean, nothing but a shadow in the highlight reel of the Snatch. But a jerk is a jerk and needs to be put in its place.

Hammer technique and positioning and you can defeat this brute of a bully.

A handful of start and finish positions can and should be utilized to stage a counterattack on the Jerk. The goal is to build power and muscle strength and also elicit a central nervous system response (memory of body position) for future development.

Pow, right in the kisser.

Split Jerk Silhouette, courtesy of CrossFit Peoria
Split Jerk Silhouette, courtesy of CrossFit Peoria

Jerk Checklist: 1. Set-up 2. Dip 3. Drive 4. Drop 5. Finish (base change to catch position in power stance or split position)

Let's focusing on a couple of these steps in conquering the Jerk...

Set-up Feet flat under hips, bar sits on the shoulders with the grip slightly wider than shoulder width. (A Snatch grip Jerk is a great exercise, but if we're looking at finishing a ground-to-overhead movement, the Jerk will occur in the front rack.)  Elbows adjust to sit below and slightly in front of the bar. Stance is approximately shoulder width. With neutral neck position, head is tucked slightly back allowing bar to pass.

Drive Extend the hips after a short and purposeful dip before dropping under the bar.  An early drop leaks power.  Use the legs and hips to drive the barbell into the air and past the face.

Drop Also known as the "re-dip," dropping under the bar creates the movement as a Jerk versus just a press.  Actively drive your body under the bar by pushing with the arms to use the barbell as counter momentum.  This is an under-utilized portion of the Jerk, causing misses of the lift when in actuality the barbell was plenty high in the air above the forehead.  It takes confidence in getting under a barbell, and experience in being brave enough to drop without losing stability in the core and midline.  Keep the bar over the center of the body rather than pushing it forward and away from a solid shoulder position.

The Jerk
The Jerk

Again, we use Jerks and related movements at Amplify to foster athletic development, and we can safely perform the lift even while members are learning the movement. See a synopsis from CrossFit.com here.

There are also plenty of great technique and instructional videos out there. Use the following as a starting point:

California Strengthhttp://www.youtube.com/user/CaliforniaStrength

When discussing barbell jerk technique, like other Oly Lifts it's flat out essential to have visuals. So first up is a slow motion Clean & Jerk by Chad Vaughn. Next in line is Coach Mike Burgener, well-known CrossFit instructor and the resident guru of Olympic Lifting. Finally, you see a few videos of elite level C&J, both men and women.

Slo-Mo Clean & Jerk

Coach Mike Burgener (more start-up instruction here)

Hossein Rezazadeh World Record

2013 Women's World Championships

We will not be putting too much emphasis on the kettlebell, but KB Clean & Jerks are a great conditioning tool. They look a little like traditional barbell movements, with similar hip action needed, but are definitely their own exercise.

Kettlebell Clean & Jerk

If we look at the common errors in Jerk development, it would make sense to examine a few limiting factors. What we often find are flexibility/mobility issues, bar path errors, and poor footwork. Overhead strength and confidence might be lacking as well, which can keep an athlete from developing that experience and repetitions with the lift so necessary to make gains.

Mobility We've focused on this in the past, but it is always a recurring theme: maximize your flexibility and range of motion, and your missed lifts will become fewer and fewer (not to mention you'll remain safe through the lift).

  • Work all movements overhead: strict shoulder press, push press, push jerk, and split jerk.
  • Remember, dropping under in a jerk is a high-skill move requiring balance and coordination. Warm-up is needed, as well as drills to maintain active shoulders. PVC and light loads will help alert the joints, namely the shoulder sockets.
Split Jerk, courtesy of CrossFit Mildenhall
Split Jerk, courtesy of CrossFit Mildenhall

Bar Path In a front rack, if the bar is not moving up past the face correctly then the whole lift is compromised. (IE: the bar moves too far down and away from the body in the dip.) Drop the hook grip, drop the elbows slightly, but remain tight.

  • Lose jerks forward a lot? You're probably lacking the upright upper body strength and positioning, and maybe even the confidence, to get a good drive on the barbell. Correct this while keeping your chest and shoulders up on the dip and keeping the bar over your midline.
  • Actively push yourself under the barbell as you drop. Drive fast under the bar, finishing with your head through yet still neutral. Maintain active shoulders, even after the catch.
  • Keep pushing the bar upwards and move your body accordingly to finish your lift, instead of chasing the bar around the gym.
Split Jerk, courtesy of Catalyst Athletics
Split Jerk, courtesy of Catalyst Athletics

Footwork Perhaps overlooked in importance is our footing while dropping under the bar in the Jerk.

  • Push Jerk: Move the feet from your start to finish position, jumping to landing if that helps, with a slight move in feet. No need to land super wide; you may get lower in your drop but it doesn't necessarily help stability in the lower body.
  • Split Jerk:  This is the go-to for most Olympic athletes to drop deeper for potentially heavier weight.  Keep the bar over your center mass and move your feet in a lunge as you re-dip.  Since we can't get as much elevation on a heavier barbell through the drive, this allows a lifter to get lower underneath in the catch. Feet go as wide as a Push Jerk, but obviously split-- keep forward shin mostly vertical and back knee slightly bent. Finish your lift by pushing the front foot back a shuffle, then the back foot moves to return feet under center. This keeps the bar from moving forward too much as the lifter stands up fully.
  • Squat Jerk: Landing is similar to a Snatch Balance, but this is quite the difficult move requiring enough mobility for a narrow grip overhead squat. Drop is fully into a squat. Some flexible Olympic athletes can be seen using the Squat Jerk in competition.
Jerk Footwork, courtesy of CrossFit Invictus
Jerk Footwork, courtesy of CrossFit Invictus

Now get to work standing up to that Jerk. Stay strong, friends, and remember to seek help from a trusted adult if needed.  And if you happen to get knocked down, wipe the dirt off and get back up fighting. You'll be better for it.

-Scott, 7.7.2014

Jerk Store
Jerk Store

The Clean

The Clean

Sibling to the Snatch and in the same sentence as the Jerk, the Clean gets a focus in CrossFit because of the athleticism it develops. It is also one of the most difficult lifts we perform.

Take a look at the previously published Snatch write-up for similar focus points and explanation.

In quick review, the Olympic lifts are essential while pursuing fitness and athleticism, specifically overall strength, power, and coordination (while increasing ROM and focusing on results). They are of course the lifts we have seen for years as a part of the Olympics. We use the Clean and related exercises at Amplify to foster athletic development, and we can safely perform the lift even while members are still learning the basics of the movement.

So let's get to it.

In looking at Cleans, as with any important lift or physical exercise, some debate surrounds the move and the pursuit of the best and most efficient technique. Like the Snatch, a variety of start and finish positions exist as well as countless drills to build power and muscle strength. These lifts and drills for the Clean all aim for the same goal of standing a barbell up into a front rack position, and also hope to trigger endocrine and central nervous system responses for future development (energy use, hormone development, impulse transmission, and memory of body position).

Often times a Clean and that goes through a full squat gets the designation "Squat Clean" in CrossFit. Interestingly enough, there is no such thing. (n00b)

A Clean is a movement where an athlete picks the barbell up off the ground and "cleanly" stands it up in the front rack position. The term Power Clean is used to refer to such a powerful pull that the athlete did not need to drop under the bar as much, and thus a full squat was unnecessary. Power Cleans always/must keep the hips above parallel in the catch before standing. Calling a Clean a Squat Clean is mostly for beginners to help them understand the difference and also realize a trained athlete must squat fully in order to receive the barbell for maximal load. If the term "Hang" is used, it means the barbell starts up at the hips at some point... not the ground. High-Hang, Hang, and Low-Hang are common terms for positioning that starts higher than the floor.

Coming from the floor, both the Clean and the Power Clean use the same mechanics, so the remainder of this write-up can pertain to both.

  • A synopsis of the Clean from CrossFit.com can be found here.
  • A Weightlifting 101 section on USAWeightlifting.com can be found here.
  • A write-up of Olympic weightlifting from CatalystAthletics.com can be found here.

Although the general Olympic Lifting community stays away from high repetition workouts, CrossFit embraces and pushes these into its weekly programming as well as its competitions. The critique is that an Olympic Lift like the Clean should be done explosively, at a repetition rate that develops speed, power, balance, and coordination. The argument is that in order to develop this type of lift it should be performed with no more than 1-5 reps at a time, in a small set range. CrossFit often pushes upwards of the 100 rep mark for the metabolic conditioning effect and concurrently gets knocked for it. A response to this critique is that the movements used for conditioning purposes are at loads that are generally not near a 1rep max, and can be executed safely with efficient movement to develop strength endurance. Nonetheless it's a valid argument against our system, and one that questions overtraining or potential injury. This is why a smart workout progression and great technique are stressed in any good CrossFit gym.

bad technique or crossfit

Also debatable is the starting position of the feet. A wider stance may better suit more experienced lifters but a typical pulling position under the hips is best for most. Novice athletes tend to land extremely wide instead of in a squat stance and foot position. This will all be adjusted to the lifter according to skeletal frame as well as flexibility. Terms may differ (jumping vs. extending), but in general, a pull and land position are required.

ChalkPullingLandingStances-300x1611

Finally, width of grip on the barbell can vary. Again, this is mostly due to flexibility and the best set-up for a strong Jerk position. What doesn't tend to change is the need for a hook grip as an athlete progresses and wants to develop a heavy Clean.

A quick note on hook grip, for those ready: Let go of the hook grip in your "catch" as you drive your elbows up into your front squat position. Some athletes have the flexibility and confidence to hold on to the hook grip through the Clean and before preparing for the Jerk (if called for), but most people will allow the barbell to move onto the fingertips better by releasing the thumb. Play around with what's best for you.

Let's see what else we're focusing on with some quick video demos on Cleans.

California Strength http://www.youtube.com/user/CaliforniaStrength

We will stick to focusing on barbell Clean technique, but much of this can relate to any other object as well... although the body position will change slightly depending on the implement (dumbbells, medicine ball, heavy stone, keg, or other item).

Next up is a slow motion Clean & Jerk by Olympian Chad Vaughn. Focus on the Clean as he explains back angle, shin position, and riding down into the squat.

Slo-Mo Barbell Clean

Note that the set-up for the Clean is slightly modified from a traditional Deadlift starting position. Kelly Starrett, with help from Jesse Burdick and Diane Fu, goes over the basic differences in this excellent video: Deadlift vs. Oly Lift Set-up.

Other videos for reference...

Coach Mike Burgener (more beginner's instruction here)

USA Weightlifting How-To

 

Which leads us to the final points. What can we gain from all the debate and research as well as coaching and athlete testimony and video? What is usable for us mere mortal athletes... the person simply looking to develop fitness from the Clean?

A Quick Clean Set-up Checklist: 1. Feet flat 2. Arms straight 3. Chest up 4. Back set 5. Hamstrings loaded

Slight nuances in form are mostly a result of a person's specific biomechanics and coach/athlete preference.

Common Errors in Clean Development: 1. Flexibility/Mobility 2. Bar path problems 3. Too much arm involvement 4. Poor hip extension 5. Immature squat technique

Mobility We've focused on this in weeks and years past, but it will be a recurring theme: maximize your flexibility and range of motion, and your missed lifts will become fewer and fewer (not to mention you'll remain safe through the catch). Make sure you can properly hang power clean, power clean, and front squat first. Remember, this is a high skill move with lots of balance and coordination required. Warm-up is needed, which includes drills and segments of a full Clean. PVC and light loads will help alert the joints, namely the hip sockets.

Bar Path This is the most common flaw, and starts in the set-up. If the bar is not moving up the body correctly from the ground (ie: moving away from the body at the start) then the whole lift is compromised. A very common result from a very common error. Correct this while keeping your chest and shoulders up and over the bar and your success rate increases immediately. Which leads us to...

Hip Extension It's the point where the barbell gets to what is commonly referred to as your power position... the bar makes contact with the very top of your thighs and you've put an acceleration on the weight in set up for triple extension (hips, knees, and ankles). It is sometimes coached as the "jump," although that can often be a bad cue for certain people, since they may move to the balls of their feet too early or kick the bar out from their hips too far à la a kettlebell swing. Full hip extension is a requirement in a max effort Clean.

 

So... can you spot successful lifts with good form? But more importantly, knowing what to do and actually doing it are two different things. Get to the gym and be ready to get better.

Just tell your significant other you'll be cleaning. And done.

-Scott, 6.24.2013

Soreness

Soreness

Owie. How about those stairs? Washing your hair? Fun stuff after some brutal workouts.

Being sore, medically known as DOMS (Delayed onset muscle soreness) is that pain and stiffness felt in muscles several hours to days after exercise. Especially after unaccustomed or strenuous work. Soreness is felt most strongly 24 to 72 hours after exercise. We all know how two days post-workout can actually be tougher than the next day. Soreness is most commonly caused by eccentric exercise, which is any "negative" action of the muscles-- basically being under stress while contracting or resisting movement.

We also know that after this stress the muscle adapts rapidly in an effort to prevent future muscle damage if a given movement is repeated. This is where recovery in the sense of nutrition and sleep play so valuable of a role.

But in the meanwhile, what to do about that soreness?

First, let everyone realize it's okay to work sore muscles. However, you need to be the person deciding if the muscle will be further damaged with more exercise, to the point that it would be unhealthy. As in, overtraining.  Two days in a row of squats may counter what was previously taught in terms of variance, but we need to realize that "real life" often calls on us to use the same muscle groups two or more days in a row... even every single day of life. In an emergency situation, the joke is always, "Oh, I can't help save that person's life right now by helping to lift that heavy item off their body because I just did legs yesterday at the gym. Sorry." Ridiculous, right?

So if we get down to the research on off-setting muscle soreness, the leading advice for years has been to reduce inflammation. In basic terms, ice. Anti-inflammatory medication has been an option more recently, specifically with the following:

  1. NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs). These include aspirin, ibuprofen (Advil and Motrin), naproxen sodium (Aleve), and ketoprofen (Orudis KT).
  2. Acetaminophen (Tylenol and Panadol).

There are of course other health risks researched and associated with use of these meds, as seen in quick terms on the website linked above. Use of naproxen sodium in short periods of time and in the smallest quantity possible is quick and reliable and a recommendation if the muscle soreness is just too much to overcome on a given day. I am not a doctor and by no means is this a daily prescription. The opposite, actually.

Daily use of natural anti-inflammatory foods has become widely accepted in terms of supplementing Fish Oil or Krill Oil. It is proven that the omega-3 fatty acids are utilized in the building material for prostaglandins. According to research, when prostaglandins are made they work in an efficient manner in their "healing" effects with less risk of the inflammatory damage from above medication.

Just recently Physio Tape has received a lot of use.  It increases blood circulation to the taped area, also numbing the area to allow less fatigue.  People who use it love the immediate benefits, although it doesn't seem to do much in terms of DOMS.

Compression Gear has also been marketed to help improve blood flow during workouts and cut down on muscle soreness.  See Helpful or Hurtful? for runners or Do compression clothes really impact sport performance? just to cite a few.

There are also Sportscreams and gels that can be used (namely Bengay, Biofreeze, and the like). The goal is to bring more blood flow to the area in attempts to break up inflammation and trigger cell growth and tissue repair. They get no endorsement from me, for what it's worth, since your body can do the same thing through active recovery.

"Active Recovery" has been promoted recently instead of icing; the use of movement to stimulate repair lets the body do it's inherent job after a stressful workout or competition has been experienced. This is actually fairly controversial and I look forward to more research and debate surrounding this concept. The idea is mobilize and self-massage to aide in recovery. Proponents included in the video below are advocates for letting the body do its job by protecting the stressed muscles and connective tissue and then rejuvenating cells in the reconstructive stage of recovery.

People, we've got to stop icing Read more here.

So what gets the stamp of approval? Well, keeping up with the research, I suppose. We don't have the exact answer since we're in the same boat as everyone else-- hoping that the medical and exercise physiologist community can do their jobs in providing the public with constant, accurate information.

Recommendations (For Now):

1. Icing It seems that the word is still out on the subject of ice: To ice, or not to ice? That is the question. Does it work for you? Have at it. Think you can clear up the soreness with mobility? Perhaps even better.

2. Foam Rollers Massage therapy for before and after workouts, foam rollers are like a sports massage without the high price tag. Rolling out increases circulation, breaks down soft tissue adhesion, and provides myofascial release.  Google it.

3. Lacrosse Balls Used as a mobility tool, it can hit deep into the trigger points like a foam roller on steroids. Try it, you'll be pleasantly in pain.

4. Medication Use anti-inflammatory meds as a last resort.  Naproxen sodium (Aleve), one to two tablets. Give it a day, maybe two doses 6-8 hours apart, and that should be just fine.  Anything over that and there's more going on there than simple DOMS.

Now, off to recovery you go. Just go easy on the stairs.

-Scott, 9.17.2012

The Snatch

The Snatch

All jokes aside, it deserves attention. It's arguably the most difficult lift we perform.

While pursuing fitness and athleticism, specifically overall strength, power, and coordination (while increasing ROM and focusing on results), it's an excellent move.  Possibly the best.  One of the Olympic Lifts that has been competed for years and is of course part of every Olympics.

We use snatches and related movements at Amplify to foster this athletic development, and we can safely perform the lift even while members are learning the movement. See a quick synopsis from CrossFit.com here.  A variety of start and finish positions as well as countless drills build power and muscle strength and also the central nervous system response (memory of body position) for future development.  You'll hear us use a slew of terms, so if you aren't yet accustomed to it, get used to those entering your vocabulary.

Just use it. You can ask why, but basically it sets the bar in your hands and allows a better pull.

A Quick Snatch Set-up Checklist: 1. Feet flat 2. Arms long 3. Back set 4. Chest up 5. Knees back

Let's see what it is we're focusing on with some quick video demos.

There are plenty of great technique and instructional videos out there; it just takes a YouTube search to find some.  It's the quality clips you'll need, though, so start here:

California Strength http://www.youtube.com/user/CaliforniaStrength

 

When discussing barbell snatch technique, it's flat out essential to have visuals.  So first up is a slow motion snatch by Natalie Burgener.  Next in line is her father, Coach Mike Burgener, a well-known CrossFit instructor and the resident guru of Olympic Lifting.  Finally, you see a few videos of elite level snatches, both men and women.

Slo-Mo Barbell Snatch (Blurry, but great "scoop" and hip extension)

Coach Mike Burgener (more start-up instruction here)

Behdad Salmi World Record

2011 Women's World Championships

Note, we will not be putting too much emphasis on the kettlebell snatch here, simply for the sake of brevity. KB Snatches are a great conditioning tool, and look a little like a traditional barbell snatch, with similar hip action needed... but are definitely their own exercise.

Kettlebell Snatch

If we look at the common errors in snatch development, it would make sense to examine a few limiting factors.  What we see often are flexibility/mobility issues, bar path errors, and poor scoop technique.  Confidence is sometimes lacking as well, which can keep an athlete from developing that experience and repetitions with the lift so necessary to make gains.

Mobility We've focused on this in weeks past, but it will be a recurring theme: maximize your flexibility and range of motion, and your missed lifts will become fewer and fewer (not to mention you'll remain safe through the catch). Make sure you can properly hang power snatch, overhead squat, and snatch balance before putting the snatch grip ground to overhead in effect through a full squat.  Remember, this is a high skill move with lots of balance and coordination required.  Warm-up is needed, which includes drills and segments of a full snatch.  PVC and light loads will help alert the joints, namely the hip and shoulder sockets.

Bar Path This is the most common flaw, and starts in the set-up.  If the bar is not moving up the body correctly from the ground (ie: moving away from the body at the start) then the whole lift is compromised. Lose snatches forward a lot?  You're probably not pulling the knees back enough or you're allowing the bar to float forward around the knees early on.  I know that's my personal issue when snatching, for sure.  A very common result from a very common error.  Correct this while keeping your chest and shoulders up and over the bar and your success rate increases immediately. Which leads us to...

Scoop Technique The "scoop" comes naturally in a good snatch. Also known as the double knee bend, it's the point where the barbell gets to what is commonly referred to as your power position... the bar makes contact with your thighs and you've put an acceleration on the weight in set up for triple extension (hips, knees, and ankles).  It is sometimes coached as the "jump," although that can often be a bad cue for certain people, since they may move to the balls of their feet too early or kick the bar out from their hips too far à la a kettlebell swing.  The scoop is a result of keeping the barbell close to the body so it can travel the straightest line upwards overhead.  Search "snatch scoop" and you'll get more visuals and technique instruction.  But a bad idea is to try too hard to scoop.  It'll cause an early arm bend and loss of power.

 

And look at that... I made it all the way through a Snatch post without one bad joke or innuendo. Yay!

-Scott, 9.10.2012

Range of Motion

R.O.M.

Range of Motion. Heretofore, ROM.

It’s a somewhat tricky topic. Because of the variance in human bodies, human movement through a full range of motion looks different for each person. The concept of a full ROM in itself is generally understandable; for instance, taking a squat below parallel so that the hip crease sits below the knee joint, bringing the femur past 90 degrees. In simpler terms, ass to ankles.

It’s the issue of broadening and strengthening the ROM of an athlete that deserves a closer look. Not broadening in the sense of going beyond ROM, but fully executing it. Strengthening ROM in relation to the development and fitness benefits that are fully realized if performed correctly. Flexibility can be a limiting factor, but that’s correctable.

Imagine, if you will, a stereotypical old man or woman-- walking along at the grocery store, let’s say. Let’s put this elderly person at age 80. No, 90. How do they walk, in your mind? Hunched over, head down, short-stepping their way to the shredded wheat. (It has fiber, you know.)

What happened along those years that caused the posture deficiencies? Well, many things-- but the deterioration of ROM occurred in some shape or fashion. Decades of atrophy and joint issues limit ROM because our elderly population tends to stop being active. Or at the very least, mobile.

But this is about you, not Grandma or Grandpa. It’s about becoming the best athlete you can be. It’s about maintaining a quality of life that will always allow you to see... well, to see the stars. So, if you were to do some basic ROM tests on yourself, and you pay attention to moving your body through the intended ROM during specific exercises and throughout your workouts, you can remain the spry youngster that you are. Head up, shoulders back, striding your way to the almond butter. (It has good fats, you know.)

This brings us to the two glaring issues we see with ROM at the gym: 1.) People don’t have the ability to move a joint/joints through a full ROM. 2.) People don’t try to move through a full ROM.

Issue #1: Ability
CrossFit Mobility guru, Kelly Starrett, has done a year’s worth of videos for his website MobilityWOD.com and has also released a text on “becoming a supple leopard.” While he is most certainly not the only resource out there, he is definitely one to pay attention to, and has a great presence on the web.

Here's a taste of Starrett's style and message:

Overhead Squat/Snatch Prep

Church of pain Overhead squat/snatch prep Adductor and Roaming Pigeon Mob Keg Drill with a new twist. Band bully SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/1bRdYec About MobilityWOD: MobilityWOD is the ultimate guide to resolving pain, preventing injury, and optimizing athletic performance. Humans have been evolving for 2.5 million years and the human body is extraordinarily engineered.

Shoulder Mobility

Best shoulder mob ever External Rotation in Flexion Front Rack Rescue, Bench Torque DailyRX: http://bit.ly/2gqm1Zt SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/1bRdYec About MobilityWOD: MobilityWOD is the ultimate guide to resolving pain, preventing injury, and optimizing athletic performance. Humans have been evolving for 2.5 million years and the human body is extraordinarily engineered.

Better Pull-up Mechanics

For more information on CrossFit Specialty Courses, visit: http://www.crossfit.com/cf-info/specialty_certs.html

Issue #2: Integrity
It’s about not taking shortcuts. It’s about refusing to get caught up in the clock, no matter how much emphasis we place on timed workouts in the CrossFit world.

Do you want to stay safe, remain uninjured, and better your fitness? Take yourself through the full movement.

That means press overhead and complete the extension at the arms, head through, ribcage down, midline safe. That means complete your kettlebell swing in a similar way. That means squat below parallel to recruit all targeted leg muscles, striving to activate glutes, hamstrings, and quads. That means get your chin over the bar without breaking or over-extending your spine on your pull-ups. That means touch the ground with your sternum on your burpees or push-ups, hit your thighs on sit-ups, open your hips to stand up on your box jumps, lock out your dips or handstand push-ups, and, and, and...

If you are moving forward, bettering yourself in this endeavor of strength and conditioning, then you’ll make ROM a priority. All the time. You’ll have the integrity to reel yourself back in during a fatigued state once a WOD gets going and the clock starts ticking. You’ll listen to your trainers, who prompt you to do so. And you’ll see critique for what it is—a chance to get better.

 

So, get to work on your ROM limitations. Ask, if you need some more help.

Cutting your ROM in a workout? You may beat someone else’s time, even your own, but you’re otherwise cheating yourself in both the short and the long run. Longevity, not the virtual whiteboard, should prevail. Remain self-aware, and check your ego if you have to.

-Scott, 7.23.2012