Your Resolution Survival Guide

Your Resolution Survival Guide

I love this time of year. It’s the dead of winter in the Midwest, yet there’s always a sense of renewal. Of a slate being wiped clean. The turning of the calendar is the opportunity to make the New Year the one of positive, lasting change. I sat down to write this as a “here’s where everyone gets New Years Resolutions wrong” piece, but my resolution this year is to lift up and affirm the positive. That being the case, here are some easy concepts and perspectives to chip away at your 2015:

Easter Island
Easter Island
Capital Gate
Capital Gate

1. Build a historic landmark

Take a minute to think about the human-built landmarks that we hold up as great works of art and building. Macchu Picchu, Easter Island, towering gothic cathedrals of Europe, the Great Pyramids. If you were an alien visiting Earth without historic context, you’d look at Easter Island next to Capital Gate and find no comparison or wonder in the simplicity of the former.

However, we all know that the great wonders of the world were built without cranes, trucks, or modern technology. They were chipped away at for decades, sometimes for a century! Go into 2015 building a pyramid, brick by brick, with the widest base possible, knowing that construction will always be underway.

2. Simple behavior modification

Most people hit the ground at 100 miles per hour this time of year (see #1). My suggestion: hit the ground at 10mph and accelerate to 100 by the end of 2015. Here are a few ways to ensure your resolution is simple and successful.

Exercise: Go to classes. For 95% of Americans, going to a gym is 180 degree turn from their normal schedule. Now, not only do you have to show up, but you have to do your own programming; wandering aimlessly amongst machines & treadmills, hoping to not be seen. Ultimately, you do the same routine you do every year, get bored, and stop going back. Get a coach or go to a class. Now, all you have to do is step through the door and you’re forced to move. Someone’s done the programming and has the motivation covered.

Diet: You’re busy. I get it. So, keep it really stupid simple. Personally, winter is the easiest time to lose weight and get lean because of the simply elegant appliance known as a crock pot: the holy grail of healthy meal planning. Seriously: throw 8 chicken breasts, some chicken stock in a crock pot, fill it to the brim with veggies, set it on low for 6 hours and you have a delicious, healthy lunch for everyday this week. I know you’ll be tempted to go out and get a bunch of Swiss chard and kale to make fancy green salads with homemade dressing. That’s all good. For now, let’s keep it simple, tasty, and repeatable; we’ll get to the chard in April.

 3. You have to feel it

There’s no way around this one. Let me be clear: if you do not feel a sacrifice in time, money, and instant gratification YOU WILL NOT MAKE IT TO MARCH. Anything that seems like a shortcut will derail you. Any super-special supplement (protein shake, green coffee extract, diet pills) is a BS way to get you to part with money unnecessarily. Anyone claiming that you can achieve a healthy diet by any means other than less crap, more broccoli is misled at best, dishonest at worst.

Also, you’ll see a bunch of specials for gym memberships; some as low as $10/mo. Quick business lesson: let’s say a gym costs $20,000/month to stay open. How many $10/month memberships must you sell to cover your expenses? Yes! 2,000 (keep in mind you’re not making money yet, just covering overhead). But your gym only has a maximum occupancy rating of 150 people. Won’t you get shut down when all your members come in to get great results?

I think you see where I’m going. Traditional gyms set their price points based on the statistical likelihood that people will continue to pay, but never use it. In fact: 50% of gym-goers never step foot in the facility to which they’re a member. ONLY 5% OF MEMBERS ACTUALLY USE THE FACILITY. That’s the business model. So, if a gym that 5% of members use costs $10, it would stand to reason that a gym that 100% of its members use can be up to 20x that amount. Usually it’s not though and, when seen in this light, is typically a great value.

So, how much should you invest in fitness? My suggestion is 3.5% of your gross annual income. Coming from a background in long-term healthcare planning, I’ve found that spending 3.5% annually on fitness and preventative health will yield nearly a 50% return over the course of your lifetime (Long-term care for lifestyle diseases averages $10,000/month). So, what does that mean? Make a budget, join a gym that people actually use, get a personal trainer, get a massage, meet with a nutritionist. 3.5% won’t break the bank, but you’ll be more inclined to stick to something if you feel it.

4. Change is relational

With advances in functional MRI’s, research scientists are beginning to develop hard evidence to support what social psychologists have claimed for years: the self is realized through an interpersonal context. Meaning, I develop as a person only as much as I develop relationships with others.

Unfortunately, the last part of the self that people expose to each other is health, diet, and fitness. That, somehow, I’ll white-knuckle this one on my own. That doesn’t work. Here’s my last and most important suggestion: Workout with friends. Have healthy movie nights with friends. Share recipes, benchmarks, frustration, and failure with others. It’s only through this interpersonal context that you’ll come to realize your potential.

Specialty Class FAQ

Who can do the Specialty Programs?

Anyone who is a member of CrossFit Memorial Hill has access to the specialty programs. Just like anything we do, everything can be scaled to current abilities with a goal of progression.

Must I use Specialty Programs to get fit?

Absolutely not! CrossFit is a general physical fitness program designed for maximum efficiency, work capacity, cardio, strength, flexibility, and speed. Specialty Programs exist for people that choose to focus on one or more aspects of fitness under more focused guidance from a coach who has received additional certification, training, or mentorship within a specific domain, such as olympic-style weightlifting, yoga, or gymnastics. The group CrossFit classes will all continue to provide ample programming and coaching opportunities to get you optimally fit.

How long do the programs run?

All specialty tracks will be 8 weeks long followed by a 2 week break.

How much do the specialty programs cost?

1 coached class/week for an 8 week session is $39 and 2 coached classes/week for an 8 week session is $79. Included in this is free access to over 20 hours of open gym time + an additionally programmed day of open gym work ($20 value).

Where does the money for specialty programs go?

On average, 1 specialty class costs a member $4.90. Here’s where that’s going:

$0.45 – Sales tax & bank processing fees
$2.16 – To your coach
$1.62 – New equipment for specialty programs
$0.67 – Operating expenses

For every hour that you’re being coached by a specialty coach, they’ve spent another hour behind the scenes programming, building, testing, and evaluating your program. Additionally, they’ve spent between $500-$1000 and hundreds of hours on certifications and continuing education out-of-pocket.

Additionally, the average equipment cost per athlete for a specialty program is $3,000 per class. That means you’re guaranteed access individually to that amount of equipment. As an athlete specializes in an area of fitness, the equipment needs also become more specialized. For that reason, we will begin to purchase specialty equipment, such as jerk & pulling blocks, to specifically serve the specialized athlete depending on the interest in specialty programming.

Where can I sign up?

Here are the upcoming specialty programs, beginning Jan. 5th. Go here to sign up:

Iron Hill
The Hill Strength Club

My schedule is weird. What if I can’t make all the classes?

You can purchase a specialty class punch card to be used for any of the specialty programs (Yoga, Iron Hill, The Hill Strength Club, etc). These are 5 Classes for $40 and 10 Classes for $70. These expire after one year.

Go here to purchase these:
5 Classes
10 Classes

I don’t want to do the specialty classes, but I’d like access to the staffed open gym times. 

Keep in mind Open Gym is free during a period you’ve purchased a specialty class. Additionally, Saturday 10-noon is still included in any group class membership. If you don’t currently have a specialty program membership and would like Open Gym access, follow the link to purchase Open Gym:

Open Gym Add-On

I still have questions. Who should I contact?

Iron Hill (Women’s Strength Club): Coach Al — alamp13@gmail.com
The Hill Strength Club: Coach Josh — Josh@CrossFitMemorialHill.com
General troubleshooting — matt@CrossFitMemorialHill.com

I want some specialized programming, but none of these strike my fancy. 

Awesome! I always love to receive feedback on what you want. Nutrition groups, mobility, education, gymnastics, rowing, etc are all options on the table. Let me know what you want to see in 2015!

2015 Newsletter & Announcements

Happy Holidays!!!

From your entire coaching staff at CrossFit Memorial Hill we’d like to extend our warmest wishes for a joy-filled holiday season and a Happy Healthy New Year to you all. By now you’ve probably been contacted by coach Bri for your mailing address to get a gift sent out. If you haven’t arranged this, please email Brianna@CrossFitMemorialHill.com

The Hill-Cast

We’ve started Podcasting!!! Check us out for some awesome info and funny stories about CrossFit, our training history, coffee, nutrition, and putting meat into a Vita-Mix. Please subscribe and enjoy! New episode every Tuesday.

Better Know a Coach – Al

Programming in 2015

If you’re interested in any of these programs, please use the following links to sign up (this is for the entire 8 week program, not monthly):

The Hill Strength Club — 2 Programmed classes/week + 1 programmed Open Gym Monday & Wednesday @ 5:45 pm

Iron Hill Women’s Strength — 1 Programmed class/week + 1 programmed Open Gym Monday 6:45 pm & Wednesday 6:00 am

Welcome Back Sabrena!!!

If you haven’t yet had a chance to meet Sabrena, it’s time to change that!

Open Gym

After polling several of our members regarding Open Gym, I received common feedback: 1. I never know what to do, and 2. None of the times work for my unpredictable schedule. This year, we’re looking to solve both of those problems.

In 2015, we will open up 20 hours/week of staffed Open Gym time. This will be a time to come in and get some specific programming from a coach to work on your own or as a way to get a workout in around an unpredictable schedule. This time will only be open to CFMH members.

As of right now, these times look something like this:
Mon & Wed: 8a-noon
Tu & Thurs: 1p-4:45p
Fri: 1p-3p
Mon-Th: 6:45p-7:45p

This expanded Open Gym time will be included with any specialty programs (Iron Hill, The Hill Strength Club, etc.) for which you’re participating and will be an additional $10/month for anyone else on an Unlimited Group Membership. Saturday 10a-noon will not be included in the expanded times & will remain a part of your Group Membership at no additional cost.

Upcoming Events and Holiday Schedule

January 3rd, 2015 9:00AM — Kansas City’s Fittest comes to CrossFit Memorial Hill for the 9am WOD. Follow KC’s Fittest on Facebook for more updates. This event is free and open to the public.

Please check your class schedule, your Wodify app, or our Holiday Closings for any schedule changes.

A thank you.

It’s around the holidays that we begin to reflect on the previous year. It’s been a wild ride. It was in 2014 that I left a steady job, a retirement plan, healthcare, a bonus, PTO, and a 40 hour work week. It was a really scary decision that caused many restless nights and endless trepidation. My only regret during that time was how long it took me to turn to a community for support.

Whatever excitement and fear 2015 holds for you, my only hope is that you look around at your community for support. Every day you walk in the gym, you’re doing more than sweating with strangers. You’re experiencing life with other people. Take solace in the thought that everyone walks through the same door with just as much baggage as you.

Whatever your resolution for 2015, make it a shared one. Experience your health and wellness with like-minded friends who won’t judge or scoff at your goals. Lift each other up. Praise the positive. Give thanks.

Thanks for allowing myself and all your coaches at The Hill to be a part of your 2014.

Cheers to a new year!

Matt.

 

CrossFit Sucks.

I’ve noticed an interesting phenomenon since my response to the question “What do you do [for a living]?” has shifted from something related to low-level management to owning and running a fitness facility: strangers voluntarily (over) share their feelings & experiences as it relates to their own fitness hopes, fears, self-doubts, and advice. I’m not complaining; I really enjoy it. Plus, it’s given me thousands of reps at reading and communicating with people on such a visceral level.

If this conversation lasts more than 30 seconds it will undoubtedly turn to one about CrossFit. This conversation goes one of two ways: 1. “My _________ does it (CrossFit) and has great things to say about it” or 2. “Oh my gosh I want to try it but I could never ever do that because of ______.”

Those of you reading for whom CrossFit literally puts food on your table, probably have the same response I’ve always given. Something like this: “Oh, no, you could totally do it.” “Everything is scalable.” “Even your grandma could do it.” “We have great coaches who will help you along the way.” “There’s an On-Ramp/Foundations/Fundamentals/CrossFit 101…” Ad nauseam. Most coaches who have taken the plunge to full-time all typically feel a deep connection to helping others see a better version of themselves. We’re helpers, coaches, mentors, and probably a tad co-dependent. Our canned answer for “I could never do it” is our attempt to mitigate someone else’s self-doubt.

Over this most recent Thanksgiving I had a shift (and some Merlot) in my approach to this. For the thousandth time I heard the same refrain of self-doubt: “CrossFit? I’m sure I could never do it.” My response changed. “CrossFit sucks. Not because the movements or the workouts or the coaches suck, but because change worth having sucks.

CrossFit sucks because change sucks. CrossFit will force you to look back on how you’ve treated your body for the past decade or two or three. It will force you to meet new people. It will force you to look at your diet. It will force you to move. It will force you to invest your time and finances toward your long-term health. You’ll be told your moving incorrectly. Your ego will be checked.

This is the time of year that people begin to look at making healthy choices. You’ll hear about fad diets, starvation challenges, 8 easy steps to six-pack abs, $10 gym memberships. I’m going to clue you in on a very simple litmus test: if it’s not uncomfortable, you will not stick to it. Think about times of change: marriage (or its dissolution), having children, changing jobs, moving to a new city, or starting a business. The two common denominators in all of these examples are: 1. They all have times of complete, utter sucky-ness and 2. The growth and change on the other side of the suck would not have occurred without the suck.

Whatever your resolution is this year, I sincerely hope it sucks 🙂

Register now for Yoga!!

YOGA WITH JAIME!!!
Sundays at 11am starting in December
==>Go here to reserve your spot in the 8-week yoga session!!<==

Yoga is good for your snatch!! Are your shoulders or hips tight which inhibit your ability to gain full range of motion in certain CrossFit movements? Please join me on Sundays at 11am to move through a vinyasa flow that will help to improve overall flexibility and general mobility. Yoga is the perfect complement to the intensity and butt kicking we often put our bodies through during wods. Take the time to refocus and re-energize from your daily workouts by engaging in active recovery that will help bring your body back to full range of motion. I will work on proper alignment and positioning of a multitude of poses while also taking into consideration each participants mobility concerns. You will learn how to breathe more efficiently and develop a greater ability to balance. Think “Fran” lung and handstand push ups or pistols.  I  want this to be fun and interactive and a place where you can breathe, move and stay fit in a way that might be different that what you’re used to. All levels are encouraged! I look forward to seeing you all on your mat! Email jaimelytle3@gmail.com if you have any questions.