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Happy Saturday! This past week I visited San Diego for the first time, and it is a beautiful city!While I was there, I met up with some of our San Diego FitFam, and we had an awesome time talking about body alignment, health, nutrition and fitness – and we got in a great body weight circuit!I post a lot of body weight workouts, and people always ask me if it’s as effective as weight training. I think there’s a perception that body weight workouts aren’t as hard as weight training, or won’t allow you to build muscle and strength. There’s a perception that without going to the gym, or without some complicated program, getting that really shredded body just won’t happen.But that’s just not true – fitness doesn’t have to be complicated.

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San Diego Made Fat Cry HIIT Circuit | Betty Rocker

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Adopting a philosophy of self-experimentation can make a tremendous difference in your life. Choosing to experiment with new ideas can help you start a successful business. Choosing to experiment with sharing your work can launch your career as a writer or an artist. And choosing to experiment with different diets and workouts can help you discover a fitness and health strategy that works for you.Image remixed from Skylines (Shutterstock).This post originally appeared on James Clear’s blog.Of course, self-experimentation is exactly the opposite of how most of us want to approach things. We would prefer that someone hand us a one-page sheet with the answers to our problems and say “Do this and you’ll be good to go.” Furthermore, if someone shares an idea that seems outlandish or weird, most of us would rather dismiss it than experiment for six months to see if it can actually work for us.Just to be clear, I’ve made my fair share of mistakes and have dismissed ideas without trying them in the past.

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What I've Learned From Two Years Of Intermittent Fasting …

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TABATA Training

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emailEditors Note: This is a re-posted article from April 2012 to provide easily referenced information on Tabata work. It comes to us from Kelsey Romshek. Kelsey is a CrossFit L1 Trainer, NSCA-CPT and he is a Firefighter/EMT-B, in Lincoln Nebraska. He also works as a trainer at CrossFit Lincoln.As Firefighters, we have to be fit, and we have to be strong.  We wear over 70+ pounds of gear each time we go to work at an alarm.  Our hydraulic tools weigh 40+ pounds.  We have to move medical patients, rescue victims, and downed firefighters.   That said, we have to be able to move our bodies efficiently, as well as be able to apply force to move external objects.  This is where the CrossFit training program comes into play for Firefighters.As Chris has pointed out, CrossFit is simply “Constantly varied, functional movements, performed at high intensity.”  How does CrossFit do this?  By incorporating a good balance of three things: metabolic conditioning, gymnastics, and weight lifting.  For quick reference, metabolic conditioning is considered to be a repetitive, full body movement that causes a rise is cardiorespiratory output such as running, rowing, or jump roping; gymnastics is simply moving the body through space;  and weight lifting is applying force to move an external object.In February, Travis Rask wrote a great article about the back squat.  I couldn’t agree more with what Travis wrote about the back squat and the importance of lifting and training heavy for our profession.   But what about the guys in the fire houses that don’t have access to that equipment?  What about when guys take off on a vacation to the beaches of Cancun, or the mountains of Colorado? How can they maintain what they’ve trained so hard for

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TABATA Training

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