Thursday, February 28, 2013



Thursday, Feb 28th, 2013

I am feeling sore. Why? Well last night I had my 2nd Crossfit workout. I knew going into Crossfit that my body was going to be pushed to the limit. Boy was that an understatement. The funny thing is, I am loving it. Why? Well for me, at 45 years of age, I feel like it is getting harder and harder to maintain my weight and to stay in shape. I must admit that I slacked off a bit during Nov and Dec and paid the price on the scale. I needed to do something different, something to shock my system. Crossfit I have known for some time to be a solution.

Here is what my workout looked like yesterday, I challenge you to try this and be rolling on the floor like a dying cockroach:

Warm-up
3 rounds
10 wallball shots (14 lbs)
10 pull-ups
10 muscle snatches

Strength

1) Press 1Rep Max  (I got up to 95lbs Max-I am pretty weak on these. Explains why I struggle so much with handstand pushups)

 2) Back squat 1RM (I got up to a 275lbs Max, which I was pretty happy to get to considering I have not done a squat in maybe 10 years)

WOD (Workout of the Day)
For time:
15-12-9-6-3 reps of
Power snatch

Burpees
The workout of the day was one of the toughest experiences in working out I have ever been through. Initially I started out with 95lbs for my Power Snatches, but after the first 15 reps of this I was in trouble. So, I dropped down to 75lbs to be able to get through all of the reps. Not sure that made it any easier though, because coupled with the reps of burpees I was fully exausted. I am sure I was in Zone 4 or 5 with my heartrate, but I was not measuring it. Nothing has made me feel more out of shape than this workout. I have much respect for Crossfit Athletes!

Finish off the workout with what they call a Cashout:

Cashout
2x
12 band pull aparts
25 sit-ups

All in all, the workout was tough. I am super excited by the journey I am on though. I want to be in better shape overall. Not just for triathlons and running, but just for life. I want to feel good in my clothes and how I look in the mirror. One step at a time, one burpee at a time, one day at a time, results will come slowly.

Join the journey with me folks! It is fun!

Monday, February 25, 2013

Feb. 25th, 2013- Well another week has flown by. Monday is moving along kind of slowly, but I got back to work after a nice weekend. The snow came on Friday and dumped a good 8 inches on us. Wendy, Zach, and I got up on Saturday and hit Chesterwoods Park to do a nice 3+ miles of Cross Country Skiing. The weather was perfect! Totally loved skiing together. Zach really made Wendy and I work, he is getting fast on those skis. Here they are smiling. Sorry about the dark spot on the picture, my phone case got in the way.



After we got done skiing, I went over to the Bike Show at Mayo Civic Center. As an avid Harley Davidson rider myself, I couldn't help but want to go check out the cool bikes on display. I only took pictures of one bike in the show. Turns out it later it won the award for the Best Bike of the show. This is a classic 1971 Triumph that was absolutely stunning! I met the builders who are really just a husband and wife farming couple from Stewart, MN. They were so humble and nice. They sure created a beautiful machine.


Spent Sunday discussing what we wanted to do for 2013 for training and such. Since Wendy and I are not doing an Ironman triathlon this year, we thought about starting back at Crossfit Credence. Need a different kind of training to get in shape for 2013. We love crossfit, but we stopped going a month before Ironman last year. So, I think we are going to start going to Crossfit again.


I am thinking about signing up for an October marathon this year. I am either going to register for my 3rd Twin Cities Marathon or I will register for the Chicago Marathon. They both are great races.


Anyway, I will let you all know how the first week of Crossfit training goes for us. Hopefully, I will have made a decision around the marathons.

I stumbled across this article that you all might find interesting:

The Truth

Jan 27, 2012  -  by Jon Gilson  

Everyone has their caveats. This is the warning reasonably intelligent people deliver after every definitive statement in an attempt to cover their ass.

"Yeah, fasted cardio is the only way to get your body fat below 8%. But, you know, that's only true for most guys. It might not work for you."

The caveat absolves the speaker of any responsibility for the effectiveness of their advice, shifting the blame for failure to the listener. In the world of athletic training these cop-out statements are often necessary--there's not a whole lot out there that's strictly black and white.

Nonetheless, I was lying in bed last night wondering if there are certain unalienable truths out there, statements about training that require absolutely no caveat. In my mind, every pursuit has an essence that lends itself to description and explanation. Fitness is no exception. Here, I humbly present the truths of training, caveat-free:

1.) You will not get stronger without overload.

This one is simple. Training has two guiding principles--volume and intensity. The first refers to the number of repetitions performed, while the second refers to the relative demand those repetitions place on the body. Over time, you must expose your body to gradually increasing volume in order to reap fitness benefits. You must keep intensity high throughout. 

I like to track this in my workout log by recording the total amount of weight lifted in any session divided by the number of repetitions performed in that session. This calculation gives an average weight per repetition. This number must increase over time, or you're just spinning your wheels.

2.) You will not get bigger without eating more or smaller without increasing energy expenditure.

My buddy Eva Claire loves this one. All the girls want to get smaller and all the boys want to get bigger. Most women try to get smaller by eating less when they would be better served by increasing their energy expenditure. Most men try to get bigger by increasing their energy expenditure, although they'd be better served by eating more. 

Each gender should take a page out of the other's playbook. 

Eating less only serves to lower your metabolic rate, meaning your body will attempt to conserve every precious calorie for future use. What goes in stays in, stored as fat. Rather than lower their metabolic rate, women would be better served by lifting heavy to maintain lean muscle mass and exercising with high intensity to ramp up fat-burning.

In the same vein, lifting heavy and often will only increase lean muscle mass if the attendant caloric intake will support the new tissue. The boys need to take in more food, not lift more. Nonetheless, they'll spend three hours a day in the gym, burning off those stray calories that would've turned into new tissue if energy expenditure had been a little lower.

3.) Steady-state cardiovascular work will not lead to fitness.

The body uses three distinct energy pathways, each employed based on the demands placed on the body. Two of these systems (the alactic acid system and the glycolytic system) are called into play when the rate of muscle contraction exceeds the body's ability to produce contractions using oxygen.

These two systems, collectively known as the anaerobic systems, are not trained during steady-state cardiovascular work. Steady-state work utilizes the aerobic energy system, which is only capable of producing muscle contractions in the presence of oxygen.

Unfortunately, the anaerobic systems are critical for high to moderate power output activities, such as the squat, the clean and jerk, and the 400-meter sprint. If they aren't properly developed, the corresponding activities suffer. 

Road jocks aren't worth a damn when it comes to performing anaerobic activities, because they haven't developed the contractile strength that comes with heavy anaerobic training. Primary practitioners of steady-state cardiovascular work are incomplete athletes.

4.) Mental focus is more critical to training success than physical ability.

We are limited by our bodies, but our true limitations exist in the mind. Flat-out lying to an athlete about weight on the bar will often get them to lift a personal best, absence any organic change in the body. I attribute this phenomenon to the power of belief. "Knowing" that you can do something will instantly bring you closer to doing it. Combine an ardent belief with months of training, and you have a recipe for excellence.

On the flip side, God-given ability is easily negated by a poor outlook. I've seen otherwise-talented sandbaggers spend a lot of time claiming inability, giving them a ready-made hedge against failure. These folks fail a lot, and they remain in the realm of the novice athlete for years. 

5.) There is an inverse relationship between the complexity of a piece of exercise equipment and its effectiveness.

The most effective implements for building lean muscle tissue and shedding fat are heavy, blunt, and simple. They have few or no moving parts, and they don't plug into the wall. A barbell, some weights, a few dumbbells, and a pull-up bar are all you need to achieve world-class fitness. Everything else just adds variety.

By their nature, these things require effort to use. You've got to pick them up off the ground and hoist them around. They don't give you a place to sit, and they don't read your heart rate every ten seconds. 

If your exercise regimen involves blinking lights, vibrating seats, or imbedded televisions, you're doing yourself a disservice. Find the stuff that's cold and heavy and made of metal. It's the only route to fitness.

There they are--five unalienable truths about training. You could disagree with my assertions, and probably make a good case of it, citing fifteen scientific studies and the extensive knowledge of the over-certified polo shirt-wearing pseudo-trainer down at the local Y.

The problem is you'd have to use an awful lot of caveats.

Jon Gilson is the founder of Again Faster. Photography of Stacey Kroon courtesy of Patrick Cummings


Friday, February 15, 2013

February 15th, 2013- Well another week has flown by. Just spent the 15th Valentine's Day with my best friend, Wendy-my wife. Also, on Valentine's Day we heard from our son Shawn, 21, college student at the University of St. Thomas. He is an Air Force ROTC Cadet and a Mechanical Engineering student. Success just keeps on coming to our boys. Shawn just was informed that he has earned a flight slot in the Air Force. I can hear Kenny Loggins in my head now, "Highway to the danger zone...!" Tom Cruise better look out, because here come our high achieving son, Shawn. I joked with him yesterday about what his call-sign might be. Anyway, we are super happy for him and equally proud of the type of man he is becoming.

We are headed out of town for another one of Zach's wrestling tournaments this weekend. Zach has been very busy working hard at becoming a great wrestler. He joined Innerdrive Wrestling this week and now is wrestling 4 nights a week in practice and tournaments on the weekend. This schedule will continue until State Championships in April. Another thing that happened this week for Zach was youth lacrosse registration. Zach is following in his big brother's footsteps in the Rochester Area Lacrosse. We picked him some new pads, gloves, elbow guards, and a helmet. He is using Shawn's lacrosse stick. Zach is doing great and is just like his big brothers in so many ways. We are super proud of him.


I had a tough week with my workouts, or lack there of. I have been going to the gym across the street from my job, but this week I just was very busy and did not get there until Thursday. So I went 4 days with a workout and I paid the price. I was 221 lbs on Friday last week. I weighed on Wednesday night and found a gain to 226.5. :( Not good! I did get a workout in yesterday though, mostly after the humiliating episode on my scale Wednesday. Then this morning I rode my bike before work. I also started a new Chia Seed/Greek Yoghurt/Fruit smoothie diet plan yesterday. The smoothies are really good and seem to control my hunger. I weighed this morning and I am now back to 222.7. So, heading back in the right direction. My goal is to get down to 195lbs by June 9th for Trinona triathlon in Winona, MN. So, roughly 28 lbs or so to go, which will be no small task. Consistency of workouts in a busy professional's life with a kid in sports is TOUGH!


So, anyway, everyone have a great weekend. I hope by next blog post I will be down in the 210's range. :) 

Friday, February 8, 2013

Hello Friends,

Happy Friday, Feb 8th, 2013! We are heading into another weekend of Winter weather approaching. Just a normal type of weather up here in Minnesota. Going to busy tonight leading my Webelos Den for a night of Bowling and Pizza. The scouts are going to be earning their Bowling Belt Loop and Activity Pin. I spent some time researching the history and background information on the sport of Bowling. Zach has a full day of wrestling at the Chatfield Youth Wrestling tournament on Saturday. Sunday morning is the Lace Up Against Breast Cancer 10 mile Run/5K Run/Walk. That is if the snowstorm coming doesn't end up cancelling the race.

Today I officially kicked off my fundraising effort with Team RWB or Team Red,White, and Blue. Team Red White and Blue (aka Team RWB) is a group I joined this year. Team RWB's mission is to enrich the lives of America's veterans by connecting them to their community through physical and social activity. Focusing on: 1. Reintegration through physical fitness; 2. Personal connectivity between Veterans and citizens in the community where they now live; 3. Galvanization of esprit de corps and team membership.

As a 10-year Army Veteran, I have a strong connection to activities supporting Veterans like me. I love triathlons, duathlons, and running events. The multisport community is a welcoming and supportive group of regular people having fun competing and training in the sport they love. I believe Veterans can find a great sense of friendship and motivation through multisport activities.

I am fundraising with Team RWB leading into the 6th Annual Rochesterfest Triathlon. I would like to raise money for the Team RWB cause. I would love to participate with other people in the triathlon too. Please join me in the event, check out:

https://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/ironbillygoat/6thannualrochesterfesttriathlon


Donating through this website is simple, fast and totally secure. It is also the most efficient way to support my fundraising efforts.

Many thanks for your support -- and don't forget to forward this to anyone who you think might want to donate too.

To join the triathlon, please go to: http://www.finalstretch.com/triathlon-events/rochesterfest-triathlon/info/

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Hello from Minnesota!

2-06-2013  Initial blog post: Hello Folks! A friend of mine is a blogger and I found the posts to be interesting to read through. I chose the name "IronBillygoat's Blog" simply to find something that has not been used, but is connected to me. My name is Bill and my 9-year old son has nicknamed me Billygoat for some reason. The "Iron" stands for Ironman, since I finished my 1st Ironman Triathlon in 2012. Ironman was arguably the toughest thing I have ever done. I recommend the challenge to anyone!

I live in Rochester, Minnesota with my wife and son. I work in Stewartville, Minnesota as the Director of Quality at Halcon Corporation. My life has been busy the past 15 years with family, work, education, and training. In 2010 I graduated with an MBA and I have started working on a PhD.

I have made a declaration for 2013 with my resolution to be a better husband, father, friend, and hardworking professional. This year is "Zach Year" for me, that is my son. We have been dragging our son around for the last 5 years to numerous triathlons, duathlons, and running events. I have decided to focus primarily on activities where I get to spend quality time with Zach. So no Ironman event for me in 2013. My wife and I are signed up for 3 triathlons each so we are only busy with triathlons for 3 weekends in 2013. The training for Ironman triathlons is so time consuming and takes away most of the quality family time I had. Zach deserves my full attention for sure.

So, I am spending a great deal of time taking Zach to wrestling practice and events. He is a good wrestler. He just signed up for lacrosse and will be starting the season in April. I will most likely coach his football team in August. I just want to spend time with my son.

I do plan to run a marathon in 2013, just not sure which one. Ironman Wisconsin is on my mind for 2014, but is a long time from now. It may get pushed to 2015, but I am not sure.

Anyway, I am working out daily and trying to stay fit. It is a daily struggle.




Bill