Friday, December 4, 2009

***INVICTUS SCHEDULE – CrossFit Invictus will be closed on Saturday. Our coaches will be at a retreat learning how to provide even better coaching and service. We hope our members will attend the Miguel Flores Memorial WOD at CrossFit San Diego at 9:00 a.m. Please let us know if you plan to attend so we can let CrossFit San Diego know how many to expect. Thank you.***

Workout of the Day:
Thrusters
3-3-3-3
and then,
Three rounds for max reps of:
30 seconds – Thrusters (135/95 lb. or 80-85% of 3-RM)
30 seconds of rest
30 seconds – Burpees
30 seconds of rest
30 seconds – Hang Power Cleans (135/95 lb.)
30 seconds of rest
30 seconds – Pull-Ups
Rest one minute

From our Coast Guard friends in Sitka, Alaska - makes for a chilly WOD, but the view is hard to beat.

From our Coast Guard friends in Sitka, Alaska - makes for a chilly WOD, but the view is hard to beat.

The Chalk Conundrum
Written by Mike Hom

It began as an off-handed joke.  It progressed into semi-serious statements.  It evolved into full-blown declarations.
“Chalk is overrated.”

Pro-Chalk

I used to be pro-chalk.  I used to believe dusting up my hands to a coat of pearly, bleached white would ensure victory in my workouts and help bring about improved performance.  I would clap my hands and kick up white dust to provide self-encouragement.  My “breaks” would give me an opportunity to re-chalkify.  I avidly thought chalk was the reason I could do more pull-ups.  I thought chalk was the reason I could pull more weight.  Chalk was the driver to help me press more weight overhead.  Running with chalk on my hands would get me in and out the door faster.  Chalk was the hero of my work out.  Chalk drove me to success.

Then something happened.  My hands started tearing more.  I spent more and more time letting my hands heal.  Chalk slowed me down from the constant re-application.  A friend gently told me I was using chalk as a crutch to rest more.  After hearing that, I tried my hand at a few benchmark workouts while forgoing chalk.  My times improved.  I tore my hands less.  I attributed my success to giving up chalk.  Thus, this began the No-Chalk Era.

No-Chalk

I used to be no-chalk. I used to think chalk was unnecessary.  I would avoid using chalk at all costs, even if there was a legitimate need for it.  I thought chalk was something newbies used as a means to sneak in more rest.  Chalk made people tear and bleed.  Chalk was a downright detriment to performance gains.

Then something happened.  With sweat coming down my forearms to my wrists one day, I was performing muscle-ups in my workout.  Just another set until I was back out the door.  Just another rep.  Roll my shoulders over the rings, dip, and lock out.  And then my right wrist slipped and my armpit met the ring.  I lost control and let go of the left ring.  Bless my moderate reflexes for saving me from any permanent damage to my limbs.  After some rapid introspection, I chalked up my wrists (and just my wrists) and finished my workout.  But, I began to re-think my position on chalk.  Thus, this began my most pragmatic era, the Some-Chalk era.

Chalk is great when used responsibly.

This means using the minimal amount of chalk necessary to help with certain exercises–mostly pulling exercises.  Some people, however, take chalk-use to the extreme and use it for EVERY exercise, which is completely unnecessary and creates additional clean-up work.  Is it really necessary to chalk up when doing push-ups?  How about squats?  Push presses?  The fact is, some people view chalk not as a tool but as a habit.  These are the ones creating a dust storm around them by over-chalking and then clapping their hands to get rid of the excess.  This not only accelerates the consumption of chalk for those that genuinely need it, like those who sweat excessively, but it also simply annoys those around you.  A crime scene is not a look we’re going for at the gym.  I know the rebuttal is that we at CrossFit Invictus are not a globo-gym and chalk usage is one of the appeals for some people.  But let’s be candid for a moment.  If you don’t get sweaty hands, how much chalk do you need to get through your workouts?

How To Chalk

Chalk serves the purpose of drying hands to assist with grip issues.  It is not magical fairy dust that will make your grip hulk strong.  A little bit can go a long away provided you understand where the chalk needs to go.  The only part of your hand that needs chalk is the part that will be in contract with the bar, ring, or other apparatus you are utilizing at that moment.  The back of your hand does not warrant chalking.  The next time you chalk up, understand where your hands are making contact. Take a bit of chalk and rub it in that area.  You don’t need a lot, just a light coating.  Take your other hand and rub it against the chalked one.  Carry on with your bad self.

An Alternative

If you are part of the population that depends on chalk, let me present an alternative: wrist bands.  You may see some people in the gym using them already.  They are great for the primary reason of soaking up sweat that would otherwise run into your hands.  Barring the obvious swagger you gain from wearing them, the wrist band will help control your chalk usage and possibly eliminate your need for it.

In closing, let me reiterate that chalk is a great tool when used responsibly.  Over-do it and you run the risk of doing more damage to your hands than good, as well as annoying your fellow CrossFitters.  Do yourself and your CF family a favor, use the chalk responsibly.

10 Responses to “Friday, December 4, 2009”

  1. M says:

    I know a lot of chalk monsters!

  2. Ken from NIMITZ says:

    Without generous use of chalk, how am I going to make that paste I used to eat in kindergarten?

    Great post Mike…I am one of the usual suspects that depended upon chalk to get through any WOD with pulling exercises for the main reason that it helped me maintain my grip, and would allow me to complete more consecutive pull-ups or other exercise without loosing my grip. I know a big part of this is based on grip strength and that is something I have been working on since starting CF, now over 2 yrs ago. However, in my experience you could have vice grips for hands but if there is enough moisture on your hands it will be difficult to maintain a descent grip for pull-ups let alone a heavy DL, snatch, or power clean.

    I have been on the no-chalk WODs for the past 4 months since there isn’t an abundance of chalk out here on the ship which has really helped improve my grip strength. Carrying a 55lb KB the length of the NIMITZ, walking from my stateroom to the gym doesn’t hurt either.

    Hope everyone there is doing well. Hello to CJ, Calvin, Snax, Dani and all the hard core CFI crossfitters. Take care-

  3. joe says:

    We are planning on going to the Mcflurry wod at CFSD on Saturday. Here is a video of last years Wod http://media.crossfit.com/cf-video/CrossFitByOverload_McFlurry.mov It is quite moving and really captures the crossfit community. Hope to see you there.

  4. lizzle says:

    I am so glad they are doing the McFlurry WOD! I did it in the Bay Area last year and it took my breath away when I drove up to the Diablo XFit and the earlier class was doing McFlurry.
    Word on wrist bands. I have sweaty hands and forearms and I have come to depend on my wrist bands.
    Perfect combo- light chalk dust on hands and wrists, seal it with a wrist band.

  5. ET says:

    For those of you who don’t know Miguel AKA McFlurry, his face may actually be familiar to you, he is the third person from the left on the Invictus “Building Communities” photograph. Hope to see you there.

  6. M says:

    It was great to see so many Invictus faces in the photos from the McFlurry WOD today! You guys are awesome!!

  7. courtland says:

    Rippetoe says that if your gym doesn’t have or allow chalk, you should consider another gym.

  8. CJ Martin says:

    Courtland,
    I am glad we have chalk.

  9. [...] To chalk or not to chalk, is this the question? [...]

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