Thursday 31 December 2009

How NOT to fail on your New Year's resolutions this year!


Every year we have good intentions with New Year's resolutions which we then fail by the second month of the year.
Here are some tips on how to keep to your resolutions- follow these and make 2010 a successful year!

  1. Make the resolutions REALISTIC! Don't aim to run a Marathon in Spring if you haven't started jogging yet... make the resolutions achievable to avoid dissapointment.

     2. FUN should be the key to your resolutions...don't go for boring goals- the more exciting the better! Aim for something that will inspire you and keep you excited for the rest of the year. It doen't always have to be diet or booze related!

     3. Try something NEW! Try a new sport, a new class or learn a new skill. Don't be afraid to do what you've been putting off for ages!

     4.  WRITE down your resolutions and put this in a prominent place for you to see. If its diet related keep it in the kitchen, if its fitness related put it somewhere near your sports kit. And NO...this doesn't include the WiiFit!




     5. Tell OTHERS about your intentions. The more people you tell the more support you'll have and the more likely you are to stick to your goals.

     6. TEAM UP with others with similar goals or aspirations. Join a team or a group class which will keep you motivated and inspired when things are getting hard. Get your partner involved!



     7. Enlist a Personal trainer or coach. These professionals will help you set realistic and  measurable goals- and give you the motivation to keep going! Ensure the trainer is REPS registered. CVPT is a good start.

Follow these steps and you're sure to succeed! Most importantly don't beat yourself up if you stumble at the first hurdle! Get back up and try again!

NEW YEAR-NEW YOU!

Want the support of a group and a Personal trainer?
Join the New Year- New You Guranteed Results training bootcamp- beginning on the 11th January.
Having seen many people fail in their efforts to try and sort their life out in January, I have put together this easy to follow programme which guarantees results to every person that attends...or your money back!

What have you got to lose?

Spaces are limited with a few left at £90.

For full info please see: NEW YEAR- NEW YOU WEBSITE
or e-mail me at christian@cvpt.co.uk

Thursday 24 December 2009

Merry Xmas!

Wishing all my Kettlebell friends a very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!


Please note we have one more class before New Year on Tuesday 29th December- 7.30pm- meet in Cheetahs gym.

The next class after that will be Simon's class on Saturday 2nd December- 12.30pm@ ZT Fitness.

All classes resume as normal thereafter.

Have a good one!

Monday 30 November 2009

Oli's fitness is going through the roof!

With Christmas and New Year looming, Oli Thompson is showing no signs of letting up on his preparation for the ZT Fight Night- Heavyweight Tournament in January.

Christian Vila, from Brighton Kettlebells is phasing Oli's training in blocks so he is in peak condition for the tournament.

Tournament
This one of a kind event will be one of the most exciting things to happen in UK MMA, with some of the top UK heavyweights fighting for a £15k Prize money.

Held at the HMV Forum in London, tickets are now selling fast.

See: http://www.ztfightnight.com/


 THE TRAINING


The gruelling sessions with Christian involve the use of bodyweight exercises, bands, kettlebells and anythings heavy Oli can throw around.

To warm up Christian has Oli perform Tabata Jump squat to sprawls- throwing punches in the rest periods.
They then use IHPCombat's MMA Matrix with dumbells to build all over endurance and flexibility whilst on the move.



As an MMA fighter, Oli needs to be a multi-faceted athlete. He must have great cardio, agility, power, strength and flexibility to survive the tournament. Rounds last a gruesome five minutes and are relentless!

Saturday 14 November 2009

Heavyweight MMA fighter Ollie Thompson begins 11 week training camp.

This week ZT Fight Skool's Heavyweight fighter, Ollie Thompson began his preparation for what will be the biggest test of his MMA career.

Ollie who won the title Britain’s Strongest Man in 2006, was also ranked in the world strong man top ten. He has also competed in the prestigious World’s Strongest Man competition.

Ollie in action:


He is now persuing a career in Mixed Martial Arts, already winning his first three fights (3-0) with great ferocity. Christian Vila and his revolutionary training techniques has been brought in as Strength and Conditioning coach Ollie's weekly training sessions leading up to the highly anticipated ZT Fight Night- The Tournament on January 30th in London.



The tournament

The eight confirmed fighters for the tournament are Rob Broughton M1 Challenge Team, James Thompson Pride Veteran, Martin ‘THE OX’ Thompson UK MMA title holder, Tengiz Tedoradze UK MMA legend, Neil Grove UFC Veteran, Karlos Vermola CFC Heavyweight Champion, Oli Thompson former Britain’s Strongest Man and Neil Wain UFC Veteran.

This is going to be one not to miss!


Strongman attitude


Using his wealth of training knowledge, Christian will be pushing Ollie to his mental and physical limits, both of which are very strong thanks to his strongman training.


 Ollie's mental attitude is what allows him to move his 125kg frame for extended periods, like someone weighing in at 85kg. Christian, who always tests circuits and programmes on himself was truly shocked to see how quickly Ollie finished his circuit despite his size.

The test

Using a Concept Rower and Kettlebells, Christian decided to test Ollie's power and endurance with a series of gruelling exercises running against the clock.



 Ollie finished the circuit in 23 non-stop minutes and even had enough for some core work at the end. 




Keep checking back to see how Ollie's training is progressing leading up to the big day!


Friday 6 November 2009

TacFit ISS

Think you're fit?

Try this....

This is the intermediate level skill version and intermediate level fitness version of the workout. Advanced skills are too difficult unless you’ve mastered the intermediate level. However, if you’re gutting it out and can perform the 6s. The advanced fitness level version of the program is with 8 reps per exercise; beginning fitness 4 reps each.

Each minute on the minute for 20 minutes; finish 20 rounds in 20 minutes of:

* 6 Quad Hops to Flat Foot Squat
* 6 Knee Drop Spinal Rocks to Butterfly
* 6/6 Springing Tripods
* 6/6 Swinging Planks.

If you don’t get all of the reps finished in 60 sec, you don’t get credit for the round! You start the next round as soon as the next minute begins, whether you finish the prior round and get credit for it or not!

Wednesday 4 November 2009

Tonight's workout!

We haven't done the Newport workout by the Art of Strength guys for a while...so its time to get sweaty and go for it tonight!

Here's what you can expect:

Circuit style kettlebell workout divided into 10 “rounds” including a 5 minute snatch test.
Most rounds take about 4 minutes and consist of continuously alternating between two exercises for 4 minutes.
We'll rest between rounds with 1 minute of abdominal work! (Active Rest jejeje!)- followed by a proper rest of 1 minute!
All exercises will be done with just one Kettlebell!



Check out the Art Of Strength Website for more videos and cool info!

This is one workout you won't want to miss...so come on down tonight to the King Alfred Leisure Centre, Kingsway, Hove! We kick off at 7.30pm!
Bring a towel!

Tuesday 13 October 2009

BRIGHTON KETTLEBELLS LAUNCHES ATTACK ON TEENAGE OBESITY!


Brighton Kettlebells has introduced a new membership package which allows people under the age of 21 years to attend unlimited Kettlebell classes to help tackle the increasing levels of obesity among teenagers. Owner and operator, Christian Vila said: "With ever increasing levels of inactivity in school leavers, this has become a serious problem which needs to be tackled now!"



At just £20 per month, children from 16 years old will be able to participate in any of the five weekly kettlebells classes held in Hove, East Sussex. Classes incorporate fun exercises done with Kettlebells which burn fat, improve muscle tone and flexibility in a safe and effective way. These are coupled with bodyweight exercises for a truly holistic approach to training.

"The government just isn't doing enought to tackle the obesity epidemic", says Christian, "so it's down to organisations like us to take positive steps to counter it".

Children are playing more computer games and eating more junk, resulting in more calories being stored as bodyfat. Teenagers just aren't moving enough.
In the sessions, everyone under the age of 21 will receive advice on what to eat and a sheet detailing healthy diets to help educate teenagers as many don't know what to eat.

To sign up please see: BRIGHTON KETTLEBELLS or contact Christian on 07876-558850.



Monday 21 September 2009

5 Strength and Conditioning Mistakes Made By Fighters by Jon Le Toq

5 Strength and Conditioning Mistakes Made By Fighters



Thank you to Jon Le Toq for allowing me to publish his excellent post- taken from:
http://worldstoughestworkouts.com/5-strength-and-conditioning-mistakes-made-by-fighters/


Fighters of all disciplines are a different breed. Whether amateur or pro, it takes something special to drill yourself into the ground in training just to earn the right to face off in the ring with someone who has the sole intention of knocking you out or forcing you to submit.

The dedication is unparalleled, especially in the pro ranks where hours and hours of sparring, strength and conditioning, flexibility and mindset training are required. Ignore any one of these components and it could become the chink in your armour that ultimately determines whether you’re now 10-1-0 or 9-0-1.

Unfortunately, whilst the dedication may be unquestionable, tradition and misguided information often mean parts of the training are.

Here are the five biggest mistakes made by fighters in their strength and conditioning training.

Long, steady-state runs

Gone are the days of fights fought using the Marquess of Queensberry rules which dictated that fights took as long as was required to determine a winner and ‘rounds’ only ended when either man was knocked down. He was given 30 seconds to sort himself out then the fight was restarted. Jack Smith and James Kelly may have gone for 6h 15 minutes, but today’s fighters don’t.



conditioning for fighters
The rules, and consequently the requirements, have changed.

MMA fights currently consist of the longest rounds at 5 minutes. There is no longer a need for extreme endurance at a relatively moderate intensity.

It makes little sense therefore, for fighters to be spending an hour every day, pounding pavements at a moderate intensity over 5-10km. This will serve only to develop the ‘slow-twitch’ muscle fibres of the legs at the expense of the ‘fast twitch’ fibres which are critical for developing power in punches, kicks and knees. The risk of injury also increases.

Obviously the fighter will build cardiovascular strength, but there are much better ways to achieve this.

For example, a combination of hill sprints over 100-200m and interval sessions of 5 x 2.00-3.00 minutes at 85-90% of maximum effort with around 1 minute rest or active recovery (walking or jogging) between intervals, would be much more appropriate for a Muay Thai fighter. 

The rest interval is not long enough to fully recover and the heart rate will stay at least as high as that achieved for the duration of a long run developing the cardiovascular strength necessary to last a 5 round fight (many are shorter).

If we were to look at a graph of the heart rate in both runs we would find the maximum heart rate to be much higher in the interval run but the average to be about the same, if not higher in the intervals.

However, the fighter will have also developed the anaerobic capabilities to handle the lack of oxygen associated with the intensity of repeated two minute flat-out bouts in the ring.

Anaerobic exercise develops aerobic capacity but not the other way around.

We must also consider that most fighters maintain a high training volume already. Adding to this unnecessarily is crazy especially when the benefits gained from the training can be achieved with other methods.

Focussing on the working muscles only

Punches require power to be generated by the legs, torso, chest and shoulders.

However, many fighters struggle to improve punching power because they will spend a disproportionate amount of time working with resistance bands, medicine balls and clap push ups to develop power in the chest muscles which accelerate the punch.

Whilst this is clearly a requirement, there is little attention paid to the upper back muscles which act as decelerators to the forward momentum. 

Consequently every time the fighter attempts to unleash a bomb of a right hand, their body senses a weakness and an inability to decelerate the arm. The body is always looking to protect itself and will restrict the power that can be generated in the punch because of its awareness that the back isn’t strong enough to decelerate it properly. Unfortunately it doesn’t know that the other man’s jaw is supposed to do this job!

This is an in-built injury prevention mechanism which must be addressed in training.

Spending a little time performing exercises like single arm rows and kettlebell snatches can work wonders for developing punching power, not through direct effects on the working muscles but by ‘releasing the brakes’ imposed on them by the body’s protection systems.


kettlebells for fightersNobody would slam their foot on the accelerator of a car knowing the brakes don’t work, and neither will a fighter’s body!

The same applies to knees in Muay Thai. 

The power from a knee may appear to come from the hip flexor muscles which is true to a certain extent. However, the strength and power in the glutes (buttocks) are also critical. 

First, they enable the thrusting of the hips forward into the movement for real damage to be done, and second they act as the opposing muscle to the hip flexors as the back muscles do to the chest.

Take the brakes off and get your butt working for maximum impact! Glute activation exercises, kettlebell swings and snatches, front squats and plyometric split squats should be included in a training program.

Building strength and power but keeping it locked up.

If a fighter has poor flexibility they are not only increasing the risk of injury, but also preventing their abilities from getting out!

Too much running (as mentioned above) and time spent on the heavy bag without sufficient flexibility work, often results in tight hamstrings, rounded shoulders and hips that couldn’t win a hula contest.

Imagine a coiled spring with glue between some of the rings. it’s not going to rebound very fast. That’s the state many fighters find themselves in.

Holding static stretches for 30 seconds is not enough and techniques such as PNF (proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation) stretching must be employed regularly to not only ‘loosen up’ after a session and return muscle length to normal, but actively improve flexibility.

An example for ‘kick’ fighters would be to go from standing to taking the feet as wide as comfortably possible, making a triangle out of their legs.

Once at this point, contract the inner thigh muscles pushing the insides of the feet into the floor as hard as possible for 6-7 seconds. Release the tension then immediately slide the feet further apart.

Continue repeating the cycle until no further gains can be made then hold the new position for at least a minute to ‘set’ the new muscle length, developing range of motion at the hips.


flexibility for fighters
This method also improves strength by developing the ability to generate strength in extreme range of motions. Anyone who’s ever been submitted in an MMA fight will understand why this is important!

Similar techniques can be used on most muscle groups.

Avoiding strength training altogether

Many fighters (or more often the case, trainers) still have the out-dated belief that strength training results in muscle-bound, inflexible, slow athletes.

This is true when the methods used focus on the bodybuilding protocols of 3 x 10 reps with sub-maximal weights.

The use of power based training which develops the efficiency of the nervous system without building new or larger muscle fibres is absolutely critical to athletes of pretty much every sport.

Some essential exercises for fighters include…

Single arm kettlebell jerks
Kettlebell snatches
Jump squats against resistance

Working within a range of 1-3 explosive reps will develop awesome power without unwanted bodyweight, and high rep sets will develop the power endurance required to avoid being a first round, one-hit wonder but go the distance without fading. Again, this is a much more effective and specific way to develop endurance than long runs.

Concentrating on the ‘abs’ and static core movements

Too often fighters will perform hundreds and thousands of crunches each week, maybe paying a little attention to the core muscles with planks and side bridges.

This is a good place to start (apart from the needless crunches) but few understand the need or the methods involved to develop core strength in a dynamic situation as in a bout.

Exercises which require a good deal of body awareness and utilise the whole body will transfer over to the actual art of fighting. Throwing a punch requires the ability to transfer power from the legs, through the hips into the upper body and ultimately into shoulder and arm.

Exercise such as the Get Up, Renegade row, and Windmill are all great examples of core strength being built using the body as an integrated unit.

Medicine ball throws should also be used extensively to build core strength and rotational power simultaneously. Again think specific to fighting. Punches are rarely thrown in a perfectly straight line but with a degree of rotational power to deliver the knock out blow! 

Think specifics and you’ll see your performance levels rocket – there’s no point looking like Floyd Mayweather if your abs and core turn into jelly in the ring.

Conclusion

These are some of the biggest mistakes made by fighters in their strength and conditioning training.

Everything in training should be directly correlated to a physiological or technical requirement in the ring and careful attention should be paid to every session to avoid unnecessary volume, stress and time wasting.

All of this becomes even more important as an amateur who doesn’t have time for full time training. 

Make every second count or you may find yourself facing a ten count.

Jon Le Toq

Wednesday 16 September 2009

Phew! What a weekend! - MMA Strength & Conditioning Certification

WOW!

What a weekend! The MMA Strength & Conditioning Certification really lived up to expectations. Fifty Personal Trainers, MMA fighters and Strength & Conditioning coaches from all around the country came together to learn from one of the top conditioning coaches in the world- JC Santana.


JC owns and operates the world famous Institute of Human Performance (IHP), at Boca Raton in Florida. If you want to prepare for a fight or competition, JC is your man to ensure you peak at the right time, and in top shape.

UFC fighter Jeff Monson, and World Jiu Jitsu champion Pablo Popovitch are amongst the many athletes who have used JC’s revolutionary protocols to prepare for their gruelling battles. As someone who is looking to emulate this work and become a specialist in fighter strength and conditioning, I jumped at the opportunity to learn from the best!





Simple-yet effective
Most of the exercises learnt where simple- yet effective, using bands, slings and bodyweight to tax the nervous system and muscles, and groove movement patterns which are identical to combat situations. You just can’t get any more fight specific!The thing I loved most was JC’s honesty and simplistic way of looking at things. The fitness industry loves to complicate things in an effort to be taken seriously and to add validity to what is often common sense!
JC reffered to strength training of combat athletes as “Making you strong enough to break shit...including bones”!


Jeff Monson- UFC
The improvement of the clinch was paramount in the preparation of Jeff Monson leading up to his UFC fight. Monson, a heavyweight, could crush the head of an opponent to the extent that he would offer their neck for a choke submission. So JC had Monson using the sling and hang with a gable grip for up to 2 minutes for Strength Endurance.


If anyone wants to try this, I’m getting those slings, and believe me- I’ll be putting them to good use! This will have my toughest clients whimpering!

My favourite section was the bodyweight exercises..no equipment- just a partner! Years back JC was asked to coach a wrestling team and had little equipment at the time. So he devised a bodyweight only programme, which made perfect sense as a fighter needs to be able to handle his own weight, and the weight of his opponent before going in to the realms of throwing artificial weight around!




 Chisel Your Chest
 JC's “Chisel your chest” programme featured in Men’s Health is a big seller so far. One of the drills involved (feel free to try this!):

10 Press Ups with Left Hand on a Med Ball
10 Press Ups with Right Hand on a Med Ball
10 Press ups hopping hands from one side to the other
10 Press ups with both hands on ball
10 Explosive press up going from floor to ball

 Carry me home!

Chest completely fried! Then came a partner carry. Carry a person who is stiff as a board like a fork lift truck, by doing a lap around the room. The weight of your partner crushes your ribs, making it hard to breathe...sound familiar? Ever tried to breathe with someone on top of you in a grappling situation? Prior to that, JC ensured we where adequately tired by making us do 20 Sprawl to Jumping squats...then pick up the body and do the lap! Killer...but fun!


Thanks to Joel from the Strength Company and JC for working together to put this excellent programme together.
There will be another one in December for those that missed this one!

Anyone attending this week’s Kettlebell Figher class on Thursday (2.30pm@ ZT Fight Skool) will have the pleasure of experiencing the body weight drills. No equipment needed...just good old muscle!
I just can’t wait!
;-)
Christian

Monday 7 September 2009

Christian to Certify with JC Santana as an MMA Strength & Conditioning Coach.

Christian to gain his MMA Strength and Conditioning Certification- this Friday!

This weekend I'll have the honour of training with one of the world's leading Strength and Conditioning coaches from the U.S.A.

JC Santana is the owner and director of IHP and has been acknowledged as one of the world's leading authorities on training and performance. Men's Journal voted JC as one of the top 100 Personal Trainers in the United States, and Men's Health voted IHP as one of the top 20 facilities in the USA.



JC Santana has dedicated his years of research and practical knowledge of the fitness industry into creating world class training products and programs.
Many of the tools I use at my classes, in particular the Kettlebell Fighter classes, have been developed by JC. It will be an honour to train under him and come back with lot's of great ideas for our training in Hove!



Get ready guys...I'm going to come back AMPED from this course!
;-)
Christian
BRIGHTON KETTLEBELLS

Thursday 3 September 2009

Why do Kettlebells?

As if you didn't know!

Kettlebells are the fastest way to achieve your fitness goals in a safe and effective way!


Come and have a go at any of Brighton Kettlebells classes in Hove!

Beginner classes every Monday, 7.30pm- at ZT Fight Skool!
For more info contact Christian on 07876-558850 or christian@cvpt.co.uk

Thursday 27 August 2009

ZT Fighters kill it 6-0!

Fighters trained by Brighton Kettlebells sweeped the board at the last ZT Fight Night- Night of the Champions at Hove Town Hall last Friday!



Amongst them was Ivam Maciel, a Brazilian Jiu Jitsu practitioner who's signature triangle choke caught out his opponent Matt Plock.
Ivam has been attending the Kettlebell Fighter classes and believe me he kills it during the long rounds of kettlebell and body weight exercises! Some circuits last up to 8 minutes!



The full-to capacity crowd saw a great spectacle of fighting, ending with a glorious win by ex-Strongman Oli Thompson, who defeated his opponent with a furious ground and pound. Well done also to Laura Howarth who must've looked so mean, her opponent did not want to fight her and pulled out! Nice job!

Awesome night guys...now lets get back in the gym and kill it!

Thursday 20 August 2009

ALEX: Crossfit Certification in Belgium: FRAN workout.

This is the biggie! What killer!

21 Thrusters
21 Pull Ups
15 Thrusters
15 Pull Ups
9 Thrusters
9 Pull Ups

fastest time possible!

Tuesday 18 August 2009

DAY 2: Crossfit Certification

Waking at 7am, my whole body was sore and tight in all the wrong places! Man this was gonna be hard! Hopefully you read the report from Day 1 (below), Day 2 also had some nice little surprises up its sleeve!


The format was similar, learn some moves and the theory behing them, then practice them in front of your group till you get it right!
The cherry of the day was the four station circuit: Pull ups, then snatches, then ring muscle-ups, then a monster workout involving some med balls and push ups! (see pic below!)
You had to do 7 med ball cleans (10kg), run to the far end of the hall, then do 7 press ups, run back to the ball and repeat over and over....for 10 minutes!

Let me take this opportunity to thank all the professional Crossfit Cert team, who led with inspiration and true professionalism. Thanks also to Sol and Alex for sharing this wicked weekend with me...now let's go kill some clients!

Saturday 15 August 2009

Crossfit Certification: Day 1

Day 1 is over and Christian, Sol and Alex are well and truly mullered!


What a day it's been! Baking 28 degrees conditions, squatting, pressing and deadlifting in an exposed Army Air base is a hell of a day to spend the day!

We've loved every minute...lot's learnt and plenty of inspiration to take back to our classes.
The format is great...learn shit, read about shit, absorb shit, then get out there and do the shit!




The cherry on the icing was having to do the FRAN workout. For those not familiar with the pain, here it is:
21 Barbell Thrusters (squatting then pressing the bar overhead)
21 Pull ups
15 Thrusters
15 Pull Ups
9 Thrusters
9 Pull Ups




This is done without rest..and for time! I achieved a 5.01 time, with bad form, light weight and jumping pull ups. Its a killer..gonna work on this one!

Wonder what tomorrow will bring us!

Thursday 13 August 2009

Christian is off to Belgium for his Crossfit Certification!

SO? What is Crossfit I hear you shout?!?

Crossfit is a phenomenon spreading worlwide which is revolutionising the way we train.

Taken from the Crossfit website:

What is CrossFit?
CrossFit is the principal strength and conditioning program for many police academies and tactical operations teams, military special operations units, champion martial artists, and hundreds of other elite and professional athletes worldwide.

Our program delivers a fitness that is, by design, broad, general, and inclusive. Our specialty is not specializing. Combat, survival, many sports, and life reward this kind of fitness and, on average, punish the specialist.

The CrossFit program is designed for universal scalability making it the perfect application for any committed individual regardless of experience. We’ve used our same routines for elderly individuals with heart disease and cage fighters one month out from televised bouts. We scale load and intensity; we don’t change programs.


Boarding the Eurostar tomorrow with Christian, will be ZT head-honcho Sol Gilbert, and Alex Backhouse (ZT Manager)
Its gonna be a gruelling weekend, with lots of WOD's (Workout of Day's) and major lifts to go through.
Always looking at new principles to apply to their training, the boys will be bringing back some wicked ideas.....which I'm sure you all be "feeling" soon!

Tuesday 21 July 2009

Beach body programme is half way through!

....and everyone is feeling great!
Ten lucky participants are embarking on a journey of self-recognition, by cutting out all toxins from their diet and exercising up to five times a week with Kettlebells.



As a result, energy levels are now at an all time high.. and bodyfat stores are released as toxins which bind to the fat are purged.
Most, including myself, report feelings of well-being and energised throughout the day. I'm sleeping at least eight hours each night, always waking at 6.30am feeling well and rested!


Most have stuck with the strict diet, which has you cut out all:
Caffeine
Sugar
Alcohol
Wheat
Dairy
and all processed foods with additives.

The results are amazing!

This week we have a great recipe, courtesy of Lynne Norman.
SPELT BREAD

650G Sharpham Park Spelt Flour
2 tsp Sea Salt
15g Soft Organic Butter
Sachet of Yeast
400ml Water (100ml warm, 300ml cold)

- Rub butter into flour and add salt, and stif in yeast.
- Add warm water to form a soft dough
- Knead for 10mins on a floured surface
- Cover and leave to rise in a warm place for half an hour until it has doubled in size
- Bake in a pre-heated oven at 230oC for half an hour.

You can also add dried fruit and nuts for a sweet version.

Enjoy!

Christian

Tuesday 14 July 2009

Christian and Mark certify with Steve Cotter!



Last weekend Christian and Mark Stroud joined other Kettlebell freaks from all around Europe to train with master trainer Steve Cotter from the International Kettlebell and Fitness Federation (IKFF)

The IKFF "Certified Kettlebell Teacher" training programme is considered one of the best in the world, with a gruelling exam to pass it. Who better to train us, than one of the best kettlebell trainers in the world, Steve Cotter who is renown for his amazing strength and endurance.

Steve in action:



Steve and his team strive for excellence, and put us through extended sets of up to eight minutes of snatches and overhead squats. Squatting with a 24k extended at full lock out above your head for time really has to be experienced!


< Mark and Christian practice the overhead Squat.

We where also assessed on the double kettlebell squat, which involved squatting with 48kg (2 X 24kg) for 4 minutes. Pure evil!



We where amazed how many people had flown in for the two day course from all parts of the UK and Europe, a testament of how highly regarded the qualification is internationally.



It was great to finally meet Jonathan Lewis from Industrial Strength London who was assisting Steve on the day, and Ranoch Donald (Simple Strength) the daddy of Kettlebells in Scotland. Also assisting was Charlotte Ord, who I trained with back in 2007 to gain my first ever Kettlebell qualification. Thanks to all of you for your help and assistance over the gruelling two days!

Tuesday 7 July 2009

The False Athlete

Maximum respect to Jon Le Tocq, who wrote this superb post.

Posted on 04 July 2009
Source: The False Athlete

Go into any gym in any country in the world and at least 90% of people will tell you they are there for some variation of ‘building muscle and burning fat’.
We have been programmed to pay homage to the ‘inspirational’ figure models we see on the front of magazines.
I find it quite comical how many guys take the piss out of girls who literally come to worship or at least idolise the ‘Size Zero’s’ who make all the headlines, then slip into the downward spiral of eating disorders and the rollercoaster that is crash dieting.

get an athletes body

The fact is boys, you are no different. You are obsessed with a similar journey, just in an opposite direction. Life becomes about what you can do to add another pound of muscle and get another 1% of your body fat.
too have these goals but my approach has some very critical differences which I want you to explore or at least consider.

Stop for a second.

When have you EVER been satisfied with your results?


You may well have hit a target you set in terms of adding muscle or burning fat but I am willing to bet my bottom dollar you still felt the need to go out and buy more supplements, another magazine or got sucked into another ‘insane muscle building’ program on the internet.
athlete physique

I truly believe the reason for this is that you are well off target in terms of what you THINK you want.
The truth is, you want to look BE an athlete.
You want a muscular physique with minimal body fat all year round right?
That is fair enough.


However, you are not willing to train like an athlete and simultaneously achieve a body that performs like one.

You marvel at the Floyd Mayweather’s and ripped MMA fighters of this world but you refuse to think like them, let alone act like them.

Until you can achieve this you will never reach fulfillment with your training and will constantly be like the little girls who are obsessed with appearance only.

Not only this, but what you fail to realize is that many of these cover models are either ‘one hit wonders’ or don’t really look like or act like you think they do.


Last year I was part of the Men’s Health team that competed in the inaugural Survival of The Fittest event. Two or three of our team members were cover models. Not only did I finish ahead of all the models in the event who struggled massively when their bodies were challenged beyond a camera shot, but their bodies were nowhere near as impressive as what you seen on the magazine cover.

Yes they had more muscle than me but the definition of the photoshoot wasn’t there and if I hadn’t been told otherwise I wouldn’t have known.

I have heard many bodybuilders talk of how their abs only look great once or twice a year when they have stripped down and dangerously dehydrated themselves to get ‘stage ready’.

You believe they look like this all year and begin to chase the dream.

It’s like Stevie Wonder walking through a minefield.

See you’re not only being sold dreams that are actually ‘photo-shop’d with clever computer trickery, but even if you do achieve a great LOOKING body, you are still aware you are just pretending to be an athlete.
You know it and it niggles at you even if people tell you how good your guns look.

It’s a built-in animal trait to want / need to be the strongest, leanest animal in the pack.
Unfortunately many humans are trying to APPEAR this way whilst missing out the middle man of training and performing like an athlete.
six pack abs

As a result, they are always aware of their inferiority and so keep trying to add more muscle to APPEAR even stronger and leaner.
It’s like drinking caffeine to increase energy levels. It will give you some short term gratification but ultimately still leave you wanting.

It’s like teenagers who walk around with gold bling hanging around their necks, their trousers hanging off their arse and dropping a hip every time they take a step. They want to PRETEND their a superstar rapper without putting the effort into the steps that need to be taken to get there.

It’s like up and coming city bankers who take out loans to buy Ferrari’s so they APPEAR to be at the top of their profession and earning the nost money, before they actually get there.

We all know where this misdirected impatience and thirst for appearance-only results has got the world’s economy. We also know these people will not learn and we will be in this situation again in a few decades.

See right now, if you are focussed on ‘build muscle, burn fat’ you have no hope of quelling the burning desires you have deep down.

These burning desires are to look AND PERFORM like an athlete; to BE strong, lean, powerful and capable of outperforming everyone else in your gym, sports arena or circle of friends. That is what makes you the leader of the pack.
esterday I waltzed into a hardcore gym in my area and proceeded to hammer out some kettlebell jerks for time, tyre flips and gymnastic based exercises which the other boys in the gym sat and watched from the bench press.

After being told about my forthcoming kettlebell conditioning tour by the gym owner, two of them came up to me and asked about it.

Soon, the age-old question came…

“Will it get me ripped and show my abs because I can never get them like yours even though I do loads of weights?”

I picked up my stuff and left.

Another example of someone who wasn’t concerned about trying to perform like an athlete but just wanted the body of one by lifting a few weights and finding the next magic solution to getting the cover model body.

It’s about time the world wakes up to the fact that training solely for a better looking body is an empty, meaningless, unfulfilling way to train.

In a few weeks time I am embarking on a mission to go from complete beginner to lean, ripped Muay Thai fighter.

Not only will the desire to win my first fight drive me to PERFORM better but, training to be lean, strong and fast will bring an athletic body people will envy.

No need to pretend.

No need to go to the gym to LOOK like a fighter.

No need to constantly buy the latest muscle-monkey program.

No need to associate myself with the false, misguided BS of the commercial fitness world.

Men have an innate desire to be strong, powerful and athletic. In the years gone by, athletic physiques were earned through training to be this way.

Now we try to PRETEND we are athletic. We try to be athletes by looking like one first.

It doesn’t work.

At some point in your life you will realize how meaningless your training is – everyone does.

We get wiser and realize that life is about the experiences we have.

The more athletic you are in terms of stamina, strength and power, the more experiences you will have that actually satisfy your inner desires to get the most out of life.

You will much more able to make the most of a world which is being destroyed by the very greed and false cravings for appearance and pretense that has infected the fitness industry like many others.

I hope this opens your mind a little more!

Jon Le Tocq (www.worldstoughestworkouts.com)