Jeff, Sara, and Preston are working through their Overhead Squats!
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WOD
PART 1: FRONT SQUAT
Build to a Heavy Set of 10:
*Score = Heaviest Load
PART 2: “ELEVEN ELEVEN”
For Time [12 Minute Time Cap]:
10 Front Squats + 1 Push Jerk
9 Front Squats + 2 Push Jerks
8 Front Squats + 3 Push Jerks
7 Front Squats + 4 Push Jerks
6 Front Squats + 5 Push Jerks
5 Front Squats + 6 Push Jerks
4 Front Squats + 7 Push Jerks
3 Front Squats + 8 Push Jerks
2 Front Squats + 9 Push Jerks
1 Front Squat + 10 Push Jerks
Barbell: (95/65)
*Score = Time it takes to complete the workout
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5FRx
TRAIN
Most of us know that strength training (with free weights, weight machines, or resistance bands) can help build and maintain muscle mass and strength. What many of us don’t know is that strong muscles lead to strong bones. And strong bones can help minimize the risk of fracture due to osteoporosis.
A combination of age-related changes, inactivity, and inadequate nutrition conspire to gradually steal bone mass, at the rate of 1% per year after age 40. As bones grow more fragile and susceptible to fracture, they are more likely to break after even a minor fall or a far less obvious stress, such as bending over to tie a shoelace.
Osteoporosis should be a concern for all of us. An estimated eight million women and two million men in the United States have osteoporosis. It is now responsible for more than two million fractures each year, and experts expect that number will rise. Hip fractures are usually the most serious. Six out of 10 people who break a hip never fully regain their former level of independence. Even walking across a room without help may become impossible.
https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/strength-training-builds-more-than-muscles