Metis (X), *00:18:48 (PB)
Loose Exercises (PBs)
The second and last day of training of week #8 was a special feature. Good old Metis –but the strength version, which
I’m doing for the first time- plus some loose exercises: 10 pushups, 25 squats, 50 situps and 10 Froggers (also
the first time I have to do loose exercises to complement a WOD… if I recall
correctly).
I could “hear” the Coach saying: “You’ve got Burpees under control? That’s
cute; let’s try Burpee Squat Jumps
(BSJs) then!” The strength version of Metis has BSJs instead of regular
Burpees, Froggers instead of Climbers and High Jumps instead of Jumps; all nice
little changes to push you a bit further –and you can feel those little things
add up and matter a ton! BSJs start like
regular burpees but when you go from the ground forward and up you have to first
get in a squatting position with the hips below the knees and from there
perform a high jump (knees above hip line) instead of the usual small jump
forward and up. It was a bit challenging to modify the movement pattern I’m
already used to, but once I did a few reps and got the hang of it was
good. I got tired a lot faster than with regular burpees though because, let’s face
it, during regular burpees I jump just high enough to make both feet lift the
ground but not any higher to save as
much energy as possible. I liked the
strength version of Metis. Doing Froggers is easier for me than Climbers. I always struggle with the Climbers, keeping
the hips below the knees and the shoulders, hips and knees aligned while moving
one feet forzard, then the other… I
think the problem there is that I’m still short on strength in my upper body and
core so I can’t keep everything tight. Jumping forward with both feet made
things simpler. Also I was already doing pretty high jumps during standard
Metis, so nothing much changed there. The only thing I can point out is that I
think I performed particularly slowly. The adjustment to the BSJs was very
noticeable and I stopped to catch my breath probably more often and for longer
periods of time than I really needed to. Lately I’ve been feeling this a lot,
like I’m giving in to what my mind says
more than what my body says. I felt it during Aphrodite (the previous WOD) too,
like physically I could have gone faster but for some (mental) reason I just
didn’t. I’m going to pay more attention to that in the next WODs, to make sure
I’m pushing myself into giving my all at every rep.
I did this WOD at 8
AM on a Monday, during my holidays, while my GF went to her CrossFit class because
we were leaving –just the two of us- for 7 days to the beach afterwards. A lot of people
train early in the morning on empty stomachs and I think that’s a terrible idea.
I’m in the process of writing a post about nutrition on morning training sessions, so there will be more explanations
on why I think it’s a bad idea there. I’ve been wanting to try one of the
recipes of the Nutrition Guide to
make high protein snacks for these type of situations, because if you eat a
whole breakfast you’d have to wait a couple of hours to digest before dropping
to the floor. In the meaning time, we
bought commercial protein bars that provide
15 g of protein a piece. We ate those (they tasted a bit funny so we do not
think on eating these regularly) with a small cup of coffee and then trained
about a half an hour later. The coffee decided to pay me a little visit during
the first round of burpees, but other than that it was all good. I didn’t feel hungry
or fatigued, so it was a good call to eat that prior to the workout. After
training my GF came back to the apartment and we ate a proper breakfast with fruits, a bit of bread with turkey breast and
tea with milk. Then OFF TO THE BEACH we
were!
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