How Alex Raised over $1 million before she died

Ragnar Wasatch Back Run for Alex

Thousands of runners and non-runners alike will line up in Logan, Utah on June 20th and 21st to start the Ragnar Wasatch Back Relay. Some will run for pride, some will run for the challenge. Some are veterans with thousands of miles behind them. Others are new runners persuaded to join the party mere days before the race.

You get to rise above it—to run for more than yourself. You get to spend two days making a difference. You get to run for Alex.

Northwest Financial will double all funds raised by Mt Olympus CrossFit, Salt Lake City, Utah  generously donated a Ragnar Wasatch Back Relay team to raise money for Alex’s Lemonade Stand and will match every dollar donated.   

Meet Alexandra

A tumor wrapped around the spine of Baby Alex. On her first birthday, doctors told her parents she would likely never walk, if she even survived. By two-years-old a determined Alex could stand with braces.

The day after she turned four, Alex told her mother she wanted to start a lemonade stand so doctors could “help other kids, like they helped me.” That lemonade stand raised over $2000 with the help of her brother.

Alex succumbed to cancer at the age of 8. In four short years she had started a movement that raised more than $1 million to help find a cure for the childhood cancers.  Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation is a legacy to a little girl who cared about the suffering of others.

Double Alex’s Money at the Ragnar Wasatch Back

Our team goal is to raise the $1380–the normal entry fee for a Ragnar team.

We ask each runner to ante up with at least $25 personally then we will help raise the additional funds as a team.

Get Involved

What We Need

  • 12 People willing to run 3 legs of the Ragnar Wasatch Back on 20-21 June. Desire to help matters more than speed for this one
  • 2 Vans
  • Lemonade Stand volunteers with buckets and wheelbarrows full of money

Get Started Today

Call Mt Olympus CrossFit at 801.935.4032 or email jeremy@crossfitmtolympus.com with all offers to help or race for Alex.

Double your donation at Mt Olympus CrossFit in Salt Lake City, Utah

New, Improved CrossFit Mt Olympus T-shirts: Smart and Sexy

CrossFit Mt Olympus, Salt Lake City, Utah Logo

Show Your CrossFit Mt Oly Pride

CrossFit Mt Olympus T-shirts: Smart and Sexy

Do you need some new threads to show off your remodeled CrossFit body?

Do you want to show everyone the two words of ancient Greek you know? (Hint: it means Know Thyself)

Your new CrossFit Mt Olympus shirt will do all this and more!

The  CrossFit Mt Olympus logo and motto are printed on Next Level Premium CVC tees, which substantially reduces the need to rip it off mid-workout due to the cotton allergy common in so many other CrossFit shirts.

The new shirts are only 14.99, plus tax.

But Wait, There’s More!

You look good in Black AND Storm Blue?  Of course you do, you’re a CrossFitter, you look good in everything.

Act now and get 2 for 24.99, while supplies last!

Our operators are standing by, ready to take your order.

Be the first kid on your block to sport the new CrossFit Mt Olympus logo.

Make your mom proud with how popular you’ll be.

 

Big Budah Good Day Utah CrossFit Workout

The Samurai Bishop

Samurai Bishop and Big Budah at CrossFit Mt Olympus, Salt Lake City, Utah

The Samurai Bishop and Big Budah


Fox 13 Now spent the morning with the Kishindo Martial Arts Academy and CrossFit Mt Olympus in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Good Day Utah CrossFit Workout

Watch Big Budah interview Coach Turbo about CrossFit

Benefits of CrossFit for Moms

Words from a CrossFit Mom

CrossFit Moms at CrossFit Mt Olympus, Salt Lake City, Utah

We can’t top this

Join our CrossFit Moms Class at 8:45 Monday, Wednesday and Friday

Roads Closed Saturday

Roads Closed

Salt Lake Marathon Road Closure

Salt Lake Marathon this Saturday

Remember, Saturday is the Salt Lake Marathon and sections of 20th East and 27th South will both be closed from 5:45-9:15am.  We recommend accessing CrossFit Mt Olympus from the parking lot on 20th east and coming down the alley on the north side of the building.

Check the map to find a route from your house.

To all those running, best of luck.  Few things have provided such a sense of accomplishment as finishing a marathon.

Salt Lake City Marathon Route

How to Pace CrossFit Games 13.5

CrossFit Games 13.5 Strategies

I recommend following one of two strategies for CrossFit Games 13.5, depending on your personal Fran time.

Fran Greater than 4 Minutes

If your Fran time is greater than 4 minutes, you need to sprint and get as many reps as possible in your 4 minutes of fame.  Unbroken sets will make a big difference here.

Fran Less than 4 Minutes

If your Fran time is less than 4 minutes, you need to pace yourself at 3:30-3:45 for all three rounds.  This is important to conserve energy for an 8 or possibly 12 minute workout.  

The Power of Pacing

CrossFit Metabolic Pathways

Metabolic Pathways

During the last two workouts, Tony D and I experimented with pacing ourselves slowly at the beginning, which left plenty of gas in the proverbial tank for the last part of the workout.  

Going out too fast strains your metabolic systems and can result in a much lower score.  Even a 4-minute CrossFit workout will move from Phosphagenic to Glycolytic and possibly finish in the Oxidative pathway.  

As time progresses, your total power output drops.  With time and training you can increase your power output over a longer period of time.

More simply, you can move large loads long distances quickly.  This week we’ll test that.
 

 

Slow Cooked Corned Beef Recipe

Corned Beef Recipe with Horseradish Mustard Sauce

Slow Cooked Corned Beef Recipe

Corned Beef has become an American staple for St. Paddy’s Day.  All meat and veggies make this a relatively healthy recipe.

To make a paleo version, you could substitute broth for the ginger ale (but it tastes amazing with it!)  You can also make this using a normal brisket cut and add Pickling Spice.  Around St Patrick’s Day you can buy corned beef briskets with the spice packet included.

The horseradish mustard sauce

Ingredients:

3-5 pounds Corned Beef brisket (with spice packet)
1 large Onion, cut into wedges
6-8 Red New Potatoes
2 lbs Baby Carrots
1 head Cabbage, sliced into 1″ wedges
1 cup Ginger ale
1 cup Water

Sauce

Combine:

1 cup Sour Cream
2 tablespoons Prepared Horseradish
2 tablespoons Spicy or Deli-style Mustard

We always make extra sauce.  It’s great on sandwiches and any leftovers!

Directions

  1. Combine the ginger ale, water and spice packet
  2. Spray slow cooker with cooking spray
  3. Cover the bottom with the potatoes, cabbage and onion
  4. Rinse the corned beef and pat dry
  5. Place the beef in the slow cooker on top of the potatoes and onions
  6. Pour ginger ale and spice mixture over the beef and veggies
  7. Cover and cook on low for 8-10 hours
  8. Add the carrots for the last 2 hours of cooking

Serve the beef and vegetables with a dollop of the horseradish mustard sauce.

For faster cooking, you can brown the beef before placing in the slow cooker.

 

Fake It Until You Make It

Fake it Until you Make it at CrossFit Mt Olympus

Fake It Until You Make It

The military spent a lot of effort to make sure I could tell what you are thinking.

One of the biggest keys is body language.  If you turn off the sound of an interview and watch only the interaction, your ability to tell if they are lying goes up to about 80%.  Some things you just can’t hide, unless you’re a psychopath.   You have non-verbal cues that help listeners know you’re telling the truth.

The obvious factor most people fail to consider is that body language is a form of communication–a complex give-and-take where we influence one another.  I learned to use my body language to open people up and make it easier for them to talk.  Portraying a powerful, trustworthy persona was essential.  Before someone would trust me to reveal secrets, they needed to feel they could trust me.

In other words, if I played the part of the trustworthy figure with power to help, people trusted me to help them.

We have these interactions everyday with spouses, teachers, coworkers, and strangers.

Your Amygdalae Are Showing

Despite our iPhones and modern civilization,  our lizard brain still creeps to surface and sabotages our best efforts at  success.  Fortunately you can not only “quiet the lizard brain” but you can completely reprogram it through conscious effort.

Research shows that your body language feeds back to your brain.  In other words, you can “fake it until you make it,” and your body and mind appear hardwired to do so.  If you take on a “power pose” you are perceived as more powerful, which then results in a greater feeling of power.

Tame the Lizard

Practicing good posture actually creates a metabolic response that results in others perceiving you more positively.  As eloquently stated by Dr Amy Cuddy,

“Our bodies change our minds

…and our minds change our behavior

…and our behavior changes our outcomes.”

CrossFit and the Lizard Brain

Everything we do requires assuming a power position — then we add weight.  As coaches we love watching someone the changes as you come in: afraid at first and not wanting to stand out then gaining some confidence when you do a first pull-up, a heavy squat with a bar heavier than you.  We love watching you nervously excited, holding back your fear as the clock starts its 10-second lead in.

Everyday CrossFit gives you the chance to stand up to fear.  At CrossFit Mt Olympus we strive to create a safe environment where it’s okay to fail.  We’re practicing and helping each other get better.  We all gain when someone refuses to listen to the lizard brain and stands tall.

We all cheer when someone struggles through a seemingly impossible workout and refuses to quit.  There is something empowering about posting your time, even if you came in last.

Stand tall and own it.  You won’t be last forever.  And others will notice.

I

Know Thyself through CrossFit

Know Thyself at CrossFit Mt Olympus, Salt Lake City, UT

ΓΝΩΘΙ ΣΑΥΤΟΝ

Visitors in ancient Greece  seeking wisdom at the Oracle at Delphi encountered a two-word inscription on the temple wall:  ΓΝΩΘΙ ΣΑΥΤΟΝ, an ancient Greek phrase meaning “Know Thyself.” We started CrossFit Mt Olympus to change our own lives through physical fitness.  We knew that being stronger and faster would make other aspects of our lives better.  Like Prometheus, we wanted to share the CrossFit fire with humanity. This is why we chose the name CrossFit Mt Olympus: we found the way to unleash our inner gods and goddesses.

As we have contemplated over the last four years why we do CrossFit, “Know Thyself” summed it up succinctly.

Change Your Life

Our goal is to help you be a better person outside the gym walls.  We all have different goals and purposes for life.  As coaches, we know you will be better parents,  , spouses, teachers, whatever you choose to be, you will be better because you are stronger in body, mind and spirit.

Everyday you will face your inner fears and that lying voice that says, “You can’t do this, you’re not good enough.”  Hopefully nothing in your day will approach the challenge of the Workout of the Day.

 Join us on the journey.  The quest to “know thyself” will change you.  And you’re going to like who you become.  I guarantee it.

 

CrossFit Games: The Cubs Have a Greater Chance of Winning Than I Do

The Lovable Losers

The Chicago Cubs have extended their championship drought–104 season have passed since the Cubs won back-to-back World Series wins in 1907 and 1908.

My current streak for not winning the CrossFit Games now stands at 6–merely 98 years behind the Cubs!

If I were a betting man, I would place real money on the Cubs winning a World Series before I win the CrossFit games.  Even the newly formed Masters’ division for 40-year-olds won’t lower the bar enough to get my broken body on the podium.

Obstacles

Why I Won’t Win the CrossFit Games

Our motto at CrossFit Mt Olympus is “Know Thyself,” from the Greek phrase γνῶθι σεαυτόν written on the Temple of Apollo at Delphi.

CrossFit has forced me to deal with some difficult realities.  It pains me to admit it, but I am no longer a competitive athlete.  In 2007, the year I found CrossFit, I represented the Utah National Guard on the All-Army Rugby team and Combined Service All-star teams as part of the World Class Athlete program.

Since then I have been diagnosed with diabetes, broken my leg in a motorcycle accident, and had surgery on my hip and ankle. This on top of a previous major head injury, multiple shoulder surgeries and a knee surgery mean I need more recovery time than even an average CrossFit athlete.  Sometimes (often) I overdo it and have to take several weeks off training to heal.

Last year I entered the CrossFit Games Open, but couldn’t physically complete the final events.  I had to ask myself “why am I doing this?”  when one of our coaches pulled me aside and said, “I don’t think you should do this event until your hip heals,” (thanks, Holly!)  Wisdom overruled my ego for once.

I will be surprised if I can do everything this year.  My repaired shoulder would probably come apart if I did a muscle-up unscaled, just like Sergei Akmudov attempting a 1500 pound deadlift!

Why I Compete Anyway

Despite my limitations, I just paid $20 to register for the 2013 CrossFit Games. I have no chance of winning, but I have a 100% chance of competing.

The competition will push me beyond what I think I can do (7 minutes of burpees with people watching, anyone?)

Coach John Wooden said it best in his book, Wooden: A Lifetime of Observations and Reflections on and Off the Court:

The qualities I observe in successful athletes are common among people who enjoy success in business.  Both love the battle, the journey, the challenge.  Both of them consider the final outcome a by-product.

Both have what it takes to get there and get fired up when the challenge is formidable.  They know it presents the potential for greatness and provides the greatest satisfaction.

For only $20, I get to test myself against five incredibly challenging workouts.  I get to COMPETE.  I get to feel the momentary feeling of greatness that comes only after doing something hard.

This summer, someone else will stand atop the winners podium; I will walk again into CrossFit Mt Olympus with self-respect after having tested myself  alongside others who also dared.

We train for the Unknown and Unknowable.  We gain a greater understanding of the unknown and unknowable within us.

Know thyself.

At the end of the Open I will know something more about myself.

Join me.