Roy Taylor's Body Construction
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A Pizza IV?!!

Friday, February 04, 2011


On my program, if you train hard and eat clean 6 days a week, on the 7th day you get to cheat and eat whatever you want..all day  long!!  I won't bore you with the details of why that cheat day actually helps to accelerate fat loss, but it does, and in the following e-mail that I just received yesterday from my client Noel, he explains in vivid detail the carnage that he is prepared to impose on his body on his upcoming cheat day...Super bowl Sunday. So read...Enjoy...and impose some carnage of your own!

"Roy, I love this diet. I love that I’m back in your gym. I love feeling sore, and that I can’t walk, or drive at the 10 & 2 position, or shampoo my hair (why I cut it short now).

I love the fact that I am going to look like a bad ass again in a few months. But I love the Super Bowl even more. I intend to eat nachos with cheese and meat, rinse it down with beer and whiskey, and while sitting in my “throne” (note, chair not toilet) I will have an IV to Pizza connected to me.

CHICKEN WINGS TOO! OMFG I forgot about chicken wings.

 I will eat them too. And then I will be in the gym on Monday morning for some sick, sadistic, twisted Roy workout to punish all of us who were bad at their Super Bowl diets. I love it. I can’t wait for it. I’m looking forward to eating like a pig so bad. I can’t stop smiling."

Noel Barton Business Development Manager - Tampa

 

 

WOD
Baby Got Back
7RFT
10 Power Cleans 135/95
10 Dips
10 Hypers 45/25
100 Rope
Warmup
50 Step-Ups
40 Situps
30 Pushups
20 Pullups
 


Comments(0)  Tags: crossfit | body construction | super bowl | power cleans | dips

Gods Workout

Tuesday, August 02, 2011


By Virginia Hefferman

The superfit walk among us. They saunter or strut, depending on whether they’re showcasing their magnificent agility or their oxlike strength. They ignore the chatter in the health media over treadmill technique and pedometer steps. They scoff even at seemingly rigorous practices like Mysore Ashtanga yoga and marathon training.

They are America’s self-styled fitness elite, adherents of a punishing online exercise regime called CrossFit, which orders its followers to cultivate a distinctly martial — not to say paranoid — ideal of “physical preparedness.” Related Comment on this article The Medium For adventures in digital culture, don't miss The Medium, a blog by Virginia Heffernan. RSS Feed Virginia Heffernan » CrossFit has 450 chapters in 43 states (and several other countries).

The network has a message for the merely healthy: “Your workout is our warm-up.” Every day, its members consult CrossFit.com like a Book of Common Prayer, receiving instructions for their workout rites and periods of rest. Performing caveman feats like hauling, clambering, trudging, snatching, hurling and deadlifting,

CrossFitters deliberately overwhelm and distress their bodies, executing near-impossible stunts with as much weight as they can bear. A Workout of the Day, or W.O.D., might include 50 kettlebell swings, 3 800-yard dashes in rapid succession and 10 pull-ups. Then repeat. No breaks. No weight machines. All you need is a body built for discipline and a mind that can justify so much apparent self-abuse.

The spare site is the foundation of the CrossFit ministry. It resembles not so much a gym as a system of alleys, a rough-hewn underground network designed to train a super-race that wouldn’t be out of place in Marvel Comics. On a typical day, some 200 people post responses to the workout. (This looks fun, if by fun I mean painful and heinous . . . cry from pain . . . my hands are toast . . . lightheaded and dizzy . . . whoop, whoop!)

It’s an exercise phenomenon custom-made for this moment in Web history: CrossFit couldn’t exist without lots of speedy, uploadable video; social networking; and an expansive platform for international, demographically varied community interaction. Many of the official demo videos feature women, and even among the rank and file, women are everywhere. A scan of members’ posted ages shows that participants are between 20 and 60, with many in their 30s. (There’s also a kids’ program.)

Even if handstand pushups have no place in your life, there’s something eye-opening and even inspiring about the site’s aggressive ambitions for the human body. Like urban-gymnast traceurs and other daredevils who have come into their own on digital video, CrossFitters offer themselves as evidence that people are capable of more than merely giving up sugar for Splenda and taking the stairs occasionally; according to the CrossFit creed, they can and should also be prepared to fell trees, tame bulls and carry families of four on their backs. Olympians, soldiers, police officers, firefighters and devoted fitness amateurs convene on the site, reveling in max squats and circus-strongman stunts, which they repeat as many as 100 times per workout.

This is exercise not for vanity or for longevity but for an imagined moment of heroism that may never come. CrossFit’s founder, Greg Glassman, is referred to by his disciples simply as Coach, which contributes to the program’s cultlike vibe. A former gymnast who put his longtime training program online in 2001, Glassman is known for his impatience with exercisers who fear injury: “There’s nothing about crashing that makes you drive faster, right? But you’re not going to learn to drive real fast unless you’ve wrecked once or twice.”

In brazen, inventive, hortatory speeches and prose, he leans on the conceit of “forging,” blacksmith style. His Web site is “forging elite fitness,” and his message board is “forging elite community.” CrossFit represents a ministry for Glassman, who is intent on drafting and redrafting his program — so intent, in fact, that he has said he works out inconsistently.

The enemies in the eyes of the CrossFit crowd are “Stairmaster chumps” (who log long, drowsy hours on the machines but huff and puff on actual stairs) and myopic “specialists” — athletes or exercisers who neglect versatility in order to refine one or two skills.

The CrossFitters’ critique has chastened at least one specialist. An essay by a triathlete named Tom Demerly titled “How Fit Are We?” appeared on a biking blog, conceding that if triathletes “found ourselves in a jam that required overall physical fitness to survive, we’d probably be in trouble.” Further admitting that he could barely do a single pull-up, Demerly went on to praise the fitness of a CrossFit type he had met named Joe Sparks, who “gave a demonstration using a 50-pound kettlebell making it look like he was maneuvering a tennis ball.”

The CrossFitters are not always so admirable. If you hang out long enough on the site, you’ll stumble on a garish cartoon clown called Uncle Rhabdo. This is one of the network’s mascots — a hideous figure, often shown vomiting — who suffers from rhabdomyolysis, a dangerous condition in which damaged muscle tissue enters the bloodstream. He’s disgusting.

The clown is worshiped only half in jest by the CrossFit crowd, which can see exercise-induced injury as martyrdom to the cause. In a 2005 interview, Glassman said of CrossFit: “It can kill you. . . . I’ve always been completely honest about that.” 


WOD
LIZZIE

For Time
12 -9-6-3
Power Cleans 185/105
Ring Dips
Warmup
4 Rounds of
25 Sledge
25 Tire Jumps


Comments(0)  Tags: WOD | crossfit body construction | ring dips | power cleans | lizzie

What's Your Carrot?

Wednesday, August 17, 2011


In CrossFit we always say that we specialize in not specializing...that we don't train to be great at any one thing, but to be good at many things. It's about becoming a more complete and well rounded athlete, to be able to work hard and play hard, or, as we like to say...to not suck at life.

With that being said, there is much work to be done, skills to learn; double unders, overhead squats, kipping pullups, power cleans, snatches, plyometrics, etc, and to get good at these things we need to practice...to come early and stay late. If you find yourself in that category, but seem to be lacking the motivation to do the extra work to get good, perhaps you should consider using a reward system.

In other words, pick a movement that up till now has been the bane of your existence...say double unders, and set a goal of being able to do 50 straight. If you really want to increase your chances of hitting the goal, then set a deadline for accomplishing that...say 3 weeks...then get to work, practicing 10 minutes every day.

Finally, dangle the carrot...the prize, if you will, that you will reward yourself with for reaching the goal. How big should the prize be? I don't know...maybe it all depends on the suck factor of what you're trying to master. If it's something that you know you'll probably be able to pull off in a reasonably short period of time, them maybe make the reward a new pair of Vibrims.  However if it's something really big that's been eluding you for months, like your first muscle-up, then maybe a new Vizio 55 Inch HD LED with 3-D will do the trick!

For many, just the satisfaction of attaining the goal itself is enough of a reward, but for the rest of you, I'm thinking...dangle a big-ass carrot, baby!

 

 

Daniella, on crutches, helping to motivate Greg and bring him on home...
or maybe she's racing him and trying to show him that she can kick his ass with
only one leg...



WOD

Bradley / CrossFit Hereoes Workout -  BC Style!
10 rounds for time of:
Run Parking Lot Perimeter (approx 150 Meters)
10 Pull-ups
Run Parking Lot Perimeter (approx 150 Meters)
10 Burpees
* The running part is almost double the running of the Heroes version...woohoo!
 


Comments(0)  Tags: WOD | crossfit body construction | power cleans | snatches | reward | vibrims | vizio

Birthday Girl!

Thursday, November 17, 2011


Happy 39th Birthday To My Sweet Melissa...
The most amazing wife, mother and friend a guy could ever ask for...
I love you!!

 

WOD
The Ensign

3 Min AMRAP / 1 Min Rest / 6 Rounds
3 Power Cleans 155/95
6 Pushups
9 Dips/Squats
* Rounds 1-3-5 do all dips / rounds 2-4-6 do all squats  Score is total rounds completed. Partial rounds count, but only if you complete the exercise in its entirety before the bell sounds.
Strength
Find 1 Rep Max Power Clean
Warmup
Active Stretching and light power cleans


Comments(0)  Tags: squats | crossfit | pushups | wod | ring dips | power cleans | melissa | birthday
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