AO: Oakery
QIC: @Goon
PAX: @Output, @Coinage
Conditions: 46deg & overcast
MISSION | PRINCIPLES | DISCLAIMER
The mission of F3 Nation is to Plant, Grow and Serve small workout groups for men for the invigoration of male community leadership.
F3 is a community of men holding one another accountable to become better.
Fitness is what brings us together,
Fellowship is what creates long lasting relationships, and
Faith is what motivates us to serve and improve our communities.
Warm-O-Rama
SSH – IC – 30
Imperial Squat Walkers – IC – 10
Don Quixotes – IC – 10
Harry Rockettes – IC – 10
Daisy Pickers – IC – 10
Leg Swings – OYO
Partner Arms – OMC – 10sec
Halos – IC – 10
Slow Merkins – IC – 10
MOSEY 2 laps
THANG:
Marked the parking lot in 10 yard increments/2 parking spaces with cones.
Perform 10 Merkins, 1 Burpee (11’s) at the 10, sprint the remaining 90 yards. Recover jog back to the 20.
Perform 9 Merkins, 2 Burpees, sprint the remaining 80 yards, recover jog to the 30.
Repeat until all 100 yards and 11’s have been completed.
- [PAX picked up the 6 to finish together.]
Extra Lil THANG:
Catch Me If You Can Style – Wall Sits
PAX hold wall sits. 1st PAX drops for 5 BBSs & tags next PAX.
Repeato till all 3 PAX went through twice.
Wall Sit variations at each tag: Cherry Pickers, Night Clubs, Toes Up.
MoM:
Mountain Climbers – IC – 30
Plank Jacks – IC – 10
Jane Fondas – IC – 10 (each leg)
Hello Dollies – IC – 7
COT:
The Comfort Crisis: Embrace Discomfort to Reclaim Your Wild, Happy, Healthy Self, by Michael Easter
Scientists in the United Kingdom recently found that our brain has a trancelike “autopilot” or “sleepwalking” mode. Once we’ve done something over and over, our mind zones out of whatever old thing it’s doing. Instead of being present and aware, we’re far more likely to be lost somewhere inside our noggin. We’re planning what we’ll eat for dinner, wondering when the new season of that one show comes out, speculating about our office frenemy’s salary. We live in a state of constant mental churn and meaningless chatter.
My months of preparation changed much of that. New situations kill the mental clutter. In newness we’re forced into presence and focus. This is because we can’t anticipate what to expect and how to respond, breaking the trance that leads to life in fast forward. Newness can even slow down our sense of time. This explains why time seemed slower when we were kids. Everything was new then and we were constantly learning.
…
This slowing down of time is something Parrish told me happens in misogi. “I become incredibly focused on the task at hand,” he said.
“When I look back on a misogi that was a few hours it will seem like days, because I remember every detail.”
Additionally, stepping outside our comfort zone to learn useful skills that require both mind and body alters our brain’s wiring on a deep level. This can increase our productivity and resilience against some diseases.
…
Having too little of the stuff is connected to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s. Researchers at the University of Michigan, for example, found that dementia significantly dropped in people who dedicated more of their lives to learning. The fascinating part about that study was that dementia went down in the learners even though their rate of diabetes, a condition that increases the odds of developing dementia, went up. Which basically suggests that dedicating ourselves to learning new things could help offset some of our poor habits.
- [Great mumble chatter about doing better with each little task to better ourselves and our habits as a whole.]
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
- Timberline Trail in August.
- Leadership roles available everyone.
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