Tag Archives: CrossFit

Athena Profile – Valerie Worthington, BJJ Black Belt & World Champion

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I became friends with Valerie Worthington a few years ago — our worlds overlapped in both CrossFit and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. Val has since earned her black belt and now instructs at New Breed Academy and she trains CrossFit at Team CrossFit Academy. Her dedication has led her to achieve world-champion level in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and submission grappling.

Val is passionate about sharing BJJ with other women and does so as one of the head instructors of the Women’s Grappling Camp.

And Val also has an awesome sense of humor, so it’s a pleasure to share her wit with you.

Do you think it’s hard for people to see women as both physically strong and beautiful? Why?

I do think it’s difficult, though I also think that is changing as women become more prominent in domains like mixed martial arts and CrossFit. More and more women are drawn to those domains, perhaps precisely because they get to give expression to their inner badassery in addition to those facets of them that are more traditionally perceived to be feminine.

I think it’s difficult for people to “allow” women to be both strong and beautiful because we are reacting to a long history of damsel in distress-type stories and expectations. For instance, not too long ago I was watching Lady and the Tramp with my nephew, and when Lady was being menaced by some mean dogs, Tramp saved her by chasing them away. Don’t get me wrong. That was nice of Tramp and all, and I would not refuse help in that situation. But Lady just hid behind a wall rather than helping to protect herself while Tramp did all the work. And this is just one example of how we tend to reinforce, at a very early age, stereotypes about men and women, particularly that women need saving and that men are the ones to fill the need. Even in the animal kingdom! Tramp is brash and brave, while Lady is dainty and demure. (I am no Lady; I would have scarfed down that meatball toute de suite instead of blushing prettily at it. Just sayin’.)

What about being seen as beautiful and smart? Do you think women sometimes think they can’t be both?

I’ll go you a step further. I associate humor with intelligence, and to me, the demonstration of a good sense of humor correlates with a decent level of smarts. And I identify myself as a fairly witty person (at least, I find myself pretty hilarious. Don’t tell me if I’m the only one who does). And it seems that women tend to be seen as either humorous (e.g., the wacky, loud, opinionated sidekick) or attractive (e.g., the beautiful leading lady), but it is kind of rare for women to be able to be perceived as both.

Again, that is changing, thankfully. Women like Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Maya Rudolph, Whitney Cummings, Kristen Wiig, Kaitlin Olson, Aisha Tyler, etc, are both hilariously funny and quite attractive, and it seems like maybe the world is starting to make room for women to be beautiful, strong, intelligent, AND funny, the whole nine yards. It seems like we’re at some kind of turning point culturally, which is great. And probably confusing. But that’s a different conversation.

Have you ever felt judged for being too pretty or too athletic, by either men or women?

I don’t think I’ve ever been judged for being too pretty! I imagine it is a real issue for some women, but see above; I have always identified as the funny one, or one of the funny ones, and in retrospect, perhaps that has affected the way people have perceived me aesthetically. In terms of being judged as too athletic, the choices I have made in recent years to become basically a full-time grappler and CrossFit/strength training enthusiast have caused definite changes in my physique, to the point where some of the guys I train with have pulled me aside to ask if I’m on the juice. Obviously, this is the question that every woman dreams of being asked, right behind “Does this look infected?” and “Are you gonna eat that?”

Granted, I have spent the past 13 years working on improving my ability to physically dominate another person, and the past 4 years working on picking up heavier and heavier things. So this combination can definitely affect how I feel about myself, given that my interests and goals may seem to be more along the lines of what men find interesting.

How do you deal with keeping up your feminine side while being an athlete?

I cry a lot.

Seriously, I think about this quite a lot, actually. I keep my hair long, and every now and then I’ll get a pedicure or put on makeup, but in addition to the external things, I have worked very hard to make peace with the fact that there is no right or wrong way to express femininity. I love what I do and am grateful that I get the opportunity to do it, because trying to live up to the challenges and requirements of BJJ and CrossFit make me a much better version of myself than I would able to be if I did not do them. (Translation: I am much less of an a**hole when I train than when I don’t.) I understand that this puts me in situations where feminine energy is kind of put on the back burner, but that doesn’t stop me from wanting to do them. I just try to be myself, and to celebrate that I have gotten to a point where I like who I am, that I am a woman, and that my ways of expressing my woman-ness are valid ones for me even if they aren’t common ones for women—yet.

And happily, it seems I am able to clean up fairly nicely, as evidenced by the reaction I got at a wedding I went to recently. I was wearing a nice dress, heels, updo, etc. The people who were there who usually see me on a grappling mat or all chalked up and in my weightlifting shoes didn’t recognize me at first, but then I got several thumbs up.

What is your favorite part of being a woman?

I do get to run the gamut of emotions more than men traditionally feel comfortable doing. I’ve even worked on expressing anger; I think historically women have not really felt okay getting pissed off, but that is changing too. And while I don’t LIKE to cry or be upset, the fact that I am able to means that I feel the feelings and then I move on, rather than burying them or letting them fester, where they will come out in some other way.

What is the hardest part about being a woman?

Long lines for public restrooms or having to answer the call of nature while actually in nature. And notwithstanding my comments about identifying as a funny person, I’m not even really joking that much. Another difficult thing, now that I’m getting older (I’ll be 41 in a couple months), is how much less okay the world seems to be with women aging than with men. I am in better shape and probably healthier now than I was 20 years ago, but I have committed the cardinal sin of spending more and more time on this earth, a sin that men seem to be able to be absolved of more easily.

Do you have any guilty girlie pleasures?

I have guilty pleasures: Ice cream. Judge Judy. Scrabble on Facebook. Naps. I don’t know if those are particularly girlie; as you have probably ascertained, I’m not the right person to ask about the relative girliness of such things. But they are my guilty pleasures, which makes them feminine, in my book.

Did you ever wish you weren’t a woman?

I haven’t wished I weren’t a woman, but I do wonder sometimes what my life would have been like if I had been a man, what things would have been easier, what things would have been more difficult.

Has being female ever held you back in any way? (career, sports, etc)

There are sexist people everywhere, in every domain—grappling, CrossFit, all the professional contexts I’ve ever worked in. And I have experienced some sexism in those domains. But those few negative experiences have been FAR overshadowed by the incredible support, love, and genuine investment in my development and well-being that countless people—men and women alike—have shown in all these domains. I have far more to be thankful for than I have to be bitter about. And when I do feel bitter, I check my own behavior, I check the other person’s behavior, and I try to talk it out.

How has being female been an advantage? (career, sports, etc)

I feel like being ME has been an advantage. A crazy confluence of events has led me to where I am today, and I’m a lucky DOB (as opposed to SOB). I have a wonderful family who support me no matter what crazy shenanigans I get myself into. I have had—and continue to have—amazing opportunities in school, in work, and in grappling and CrossFit to learn from people who are some of the best in the world at what they do. I have been able to take risks and make them work; I like to think I have taken advantage of most opportunities afforded to me, even when doing so has been scary. And since I am a woman, I have to imagine that some of the advantages I have experienced have had something to do with that. I just can’t separate out what is attributable to me being me and what is attributable to me being female.

If you could go back and give your 12 year old self one piece of advice, what would it be?

Everything I can think of has been said multiple times before. Be yourself. Live in the moment. Eat your vegetables (and that meatball). Even my favorite quote ever, from the movie Breaker Morant, which is “Live each day as if it’s your last, and one day you’ll be right” has been said a lot, if only by me. (And Breaker Morant.) So in addition to all of those, which I still believe fervently, I’d suggest to my 12-year-old self that she start paying attention to her intuition/inner voice and use it to guide her decisions, even if they seem crazy, ill-advised or unsupported by logic or evidence. Doing so will not make her unsafe, and it WILL get her closer to the most fulfilling life she can possibly imagine.

 

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The Couple That Works Out Together…

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One of my favorite things as a coach is seeing couples work out together. I love the idea that health and fitness is valued in a relationship and it is something enjoyed together. It is a wonderful way for couples to inspire and encourage each other and to give each other the gift of more happy, healthy years together.

But, working out together isn’t always so easy. And, to be frank, some couples are better at it than others.

At my gym I see a few different types of scenarios:

Overprotective Guy & Annoyed Gal – Guys are built to protect women. They just are. Some of them, however, are better at mediating their caveman ways than others. When I see couples in this scenario the guy is typically trying to teach his girlfriend/wife how to do all the movements, handing her the lightest weights, and over-coaching her. She then gets annoyed and tries to ignore him, which only causes him to coach more.

In general when I see this couple, I send them to opposite ends of the room and tell him he’s not allowed to coach her anymore. He’ll spend the rest of the workout peering over his shoulder checking on her and she’ll spend the rest of the workout oblivious to his presence in the room.

Bad-Ass Chica & Frequently Injured Guy – Like I said, I love couples who share a love for working out and especially the intense working out that comes with CrossFit. As anyone who follows CrossFit knows, though, there are women who really take to it and excel. Personally I think this has something to do with women not growing up trying to “muscle” their way through things and focusing instead on technique and finesse. On the flip side, guys with athletic backgrounds will come in with mobility issues and injuries and want to use heavy weights even when it’s not yet appropriate. They let their egos come into play a little more than women do.

So with these couples, when the girlfriends or wives start kicking major butt…suddenly we start seeing the guys less and less often. The female becomes hooked and the guy has too much work, too many injuries, or has another sport he wants to focus on. These are the sort of couples I think are actually best not working out together. Sometimes a thing is best shared by doing it separately.

Wonder Woman & Superman – I love these couples. These are the couples who are competitive, but in a supportive and productive way. They drive each other to be superheroes and are inspired by each other’s accomplishments. Sure, they probably talk some mad smack over the dinner table, but they do it because they love working out and they know it’s about having fun and becoming better athletes. They know their partner’s success is not a statement about them, instead they treat it with admiration. And on the days when we do partner or team workouts and these couples work out as a unit – all bets are off because their superpowers magnify when they are a unified front!

What’s even better is when these superhero couples bring their future firebreathers to my children’s classes. The only thing better than seeing a couple work out together in a positive, productive manner is seeing a whole family make it a priority and have FUN!

Do you work out with your significant other? Do you see yourself in one of these descriptions? Maybe you are not too excited about how things currently are when you work out with your girlfriend or boyfriend, but it doesn’t have to be that way. With some communication and reminding ourselves that other people’s successes don’t mean anything about us – that we can all succeed and the comparisons we imagine are only in our minds – then we can truly enjoy prioritizing health and fitness in our lives and share it with the people most important to us. The people with whom we’re actually going to share all these hard earned healthy happy years.

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Athena Profile – Roxy Richardson, Professional Fighter & Personal Trainer

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I first met Roxy a number of years ago when I started training Muay Thai. She was a senior student, already had a few fights under her belt, and generally beat the crap out of me on a daily basis.

In other words, she rocked it even then.

Since then Roxy has evolved into a champion fighter, a dedicated coach, and a beautiful woman. She was the IAMTF Women’s Lightweight champion from 2008-2009 before turning pro. She is a CrossFit coach, personal trainer and nutrition geek. Her latest passion is her new gym, Function 5 Fitness.

Do you think it’s hard for people to see women as both physically strong and beautiful? Why?

I believe that gender differences exist for a reason and women generally have less overall physical strength and aggression. When we see a very physically strong woman, or a weak man for that matter, it defies our innate feelings and people’s first reaction is to hate and make fun of what they don’t understand. It’s not that I don’t think women should be strong… they should, but I don’t think they should try to be men. I find joy in defying stereotypes, lifting heavy weights, fighting in the ring and being an entrepreneur, but I also like to cook, clean and wear dresses. Being strong doesn’t mean I don’t like doors being held open for me, just as I don’t think a guy crying in a movie is a wimp, but not everyone is open minded so I know I’ll get some heat for trying to be both strong and feminine.

What about being seen as beautiful and smart? Do you think women sometimes think they can’t be both?

I think women get confused about this. Women can be both, but they can’t go on dates and put down a man or make him feel insecure and expect to be taken out for a second date. That doesn’t mean women need to dumb themselves down, sometimes it just means shutting my mouth and being a lady, there is nothing wrong with letting guys be dominant as in leading a conversation or doing things for me like carrying a suitcase or fixing a drain – that’s what they love to do, it makes them feel like men and me feel like a woman and it doesn’t make me stupid for allowing that dynamic to occur.

I own my own business, a gym with my boyfriend, which is challenging. At work I make decisions, I argue, I tell people what to do, I teach and am a leader. At home I try to shut that off. I cook, I relax, I try not to be bossy.

I think women get it wrong because they think being smart means you have to be assertive and dominant all the time. That just turns people off. Women can be smart and beautiful and lady-like. They just need to be a hard-ass at work, in the ring, on the field or in the gym and turn that off in their personal life, unless they want to date a shy sensitive guy – but that’s a different story.

Have you ever felt judged for being too pretty or too athletic, by either men or women?

Only on the Internet, mostly by men (LOL), but I don’t let that crap bother me. Anyone can be an Internet hater, but they wouldn’t say mean things to my face. I have gotten some heat for putting an image out there in Muay Thai. I’m good at marketing myself and being flashy is part of that. I don’t go the “sex sells” route, I’m more punk rock than that, but I still get some heat for it. The good thing about my sport is that my fists and shins can do the talking and I can back up my image by winning fights.

I know some guys that are not into athletic women, but there are also some guys that don’t like skinny girls, or dark skinned girls or girls with red hair. There is someone for everyone and I found an awesome man who loves athletic girls with short hair and tattoos. Everything works out if you are comfortable just being who you want to be.  It’s a waste of time to go around trying to be something you are not. If girls want to be skinny with no muscles and get osteoporosis that’s fine with me, but chances are those girls won’t come to me for training, they will go to Tracy Anderson!

How do you deal with keeping up your feminine side while being an athlete?

I get pedicures, I let guys open doors for me, I go to the spa, I  talk to my girlfriends, I go shopping, and I wear make-up, dresses and heels when I go out on weekends. My weight lifting shoes are grey with pink. I wear a white or pink skirt that flares when I fight Muay Thai.

What is your favorite part of being a woman?

I would say childbirth but I haven’t had that experience yet, so I guess the verdict is still out. So, I’ll go with dresses, heels and make-up. It’s just like when I was a kid and played dress-up. I can be a whole new person with a new outfit and hairstyle.

What is the hardest part about being a woman?

Balancing the gender roles I talked about before. The modern woman has to wear many hats and know when to put them on and take them off. I feel like my days are often juggling acts and I’m not even a mother yet. I’m sure it gets more complicated later, so I’m not complaining.

Do you have any guilty girlie pleasures?

Sometimes I watch a REALLY cheesy romantic drama or comedy alone like Clueless, 17 Again or 27 Dresses. I do this while drinking red wine, laughing out loud and get teary-eyed. That pretty much fills my girl quota for the month. I won’t do this with other women, which is probably makes me less girlie?

Did you ever wish you weren’t a woman?

Never. I’m super happy being me.

Has being female ever held you back in any way? (career, sports, etc)

Maybe in ways I didn’t notice, but I never saw being female as something that was negative. I was raised by a single mother who said I could do whatever I wanted to do. She didn’t think this would be my life and doesn’t approve fully, but she’s happy that I’m happy. If you don’t see obstacles in life there are none.

The only thing that has been challenging as a female in Muay Thai is finding sparring partners and opponents, because there are many more men in the sport. There are far fewer female Muay Thai fighters in the US in particular, which makes it difficult, but that never stopped me from going forward.

How has being female been an advantage? (career, sports, etc)

I’ve made a good career out of specializing in female fitness. I train men too, but the comfortable atmosphere I offer women has been a big selling point in my services and has helped me carve out a niche in the fitness industry that I couldn’t do as a man.

As far as my sport, since the pool of women in Muay Thai is smaller it was easier to get to the top. They are typically only 1 or 2 female fights on a card of 8 or 10, so we stand out. It wasn’t long before I was the main event on cards. More women drop out of Muay Thai because they get married or have babies. Very few of the women that started competing when I did are still active. I had to look to fights with overseas fighters as soon as I turned pro.

If you could go back and give your 12 year old self one piece of advice, what would it be?

I would tell myself to not screw around so much in high school and college and get committed to combat sports earlier (I didn’t start seriously training Muay Thai until I was 24). I would also tell me that the horrible feelings of insecurity and life confusion would dissipate by 30. But I think my advice would be useless as I was a stubborn teenager and wouldn’t have listened to a word the older, wiser me said.

For more about Roxy visit her gym website at Function5Fitness.com.

 

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In 3 Months I’ll be 37

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In three months I’ll be thirty-seven. I will be thirty-seven years old. I am not sure how this happened. On my thirtieth birthday I remember my mother saying to me, “How did I become the mother of a thirty year old? When did you get to be thirty?” It seems like yesterday she said this to me.

This year is the first year I don’t feel fitter than the last. For over a decade now each year has brought me to a place of increased fitness and performance. This year, I don’t feel as fit as last year. I eat better, but oh my goodness how strict I have to eat these days to be as lean and to feel as good as I desire. I think of the foods I consumed when I was younger, how much I should have weighed, and the mysteriousness of how calories count differently now than they did then.

People always used to think I was so much younger than I really was. Maybe now they still do, but it doesn’t feel as rewarding to be told you look like you’re in your early thirties. It felt good to be told I looked as if I was in my twenties. That doesn’t happen anymore.

Maybe what’s happening is quite natural and healthy. Maybe I’m not running in circles anymore – overtraining, overworking, over thinking. Maybe I’m a more well-rounded person now and with that comes the price of not being so good at absolutely everything. Does it matter if my lifts are a little lighter than they used to be? Does it matter if I haven’t tried for a max set of pull ups in a long, long time? Because, oh, my elbows ache in a way they never used to.

And I think I wouldn’t trade those aches for anything. With every ache and pain, with every broken bone and bit of scar tissue, came a tiny lesson. Those tiny lessons built up into the experience that is my life in the gym. The baby toes that stopped working years ago. The broken rib that tells me when it’s going to rain. The crooked collar bone that grates against the barbell. I can feel the scar tissue, the crepitus, and I find it strangely comforting. It’s a scrapbook of where I’ve been.

It is my life in the gym. It is my life.

In three months I’ll be thirty-seven and if I wanted to, I could be fitter than last year. I could train every day. I could write myself a program and work on my weaknesses. I could throw my name into the competition again.

But I won’t, and I’m okay with that. I love what my body can do and I also love that I am a writer, a businesswoman, a coach, a traveller, and a perennial student.

In three months I’ll be thirty-seven. This year I am better at being a human being than I’ve ever been before.

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Friday Link Love – Shameless Self Promotion Edition

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Typically Friday is about linking to other blogs, but this week’s link love is all about me!

It occurred to me, despite my sharing on Twitter and Facebook, readers may have missed some of my favorite articles.

So, periodically on Friday Link Love I’ll be posting my own stuff – not because I want to brag, but because I think these articles can either provide you with some needed information…or some needed delight.

Not Fit For Print! – Unpublished Chael Sonnen Interview

I interviewed UFC Fighter Chael Sonnen recently and wrote this article for a website on spec…and then the website decided they weren’t comfortable with the content. So, rather than waste this delight, I posted it on the Underground Forums.

Breaking Muscle – MMA 101: The Arts Behind Mixed Martial Arts

“Having been involved in Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) for almost a decade, I sometimes forget it is still a new sport to most people. As such, the concept of the sport may not be very clear for people encountering the sport for the first time. What exactly does the name mean – Mixed Martial Arts? What are the “arts” involved in MMA?”

NerdJockPrincess – The Nature of South Central

“The first day I moved to South Central I noticed a stench that filled the air outside my door. Two days later I realized it was the body of a dog rotting in the neighbor’s backyard. The flies persisted for weeks.

I was just finishing my first semester as a graduate student at USC. I lived in the overpriced university housing north of campus. For five hundred and fifty dollars a month I could stand in the center of my apartment and nearly touch three out of four walls without moving. My refrigerator came up to my thigh. The toilet never flushed properly. The mattress had what I told myself were not blood stains on the side I flipped down to face the floor.”

CrossFit Journal – Perspectives for a Successful CrossFit Kids Affiliate

“You want to create a program where children get fit, learn good movement patterns and have fun. You want to establish good nutrition habits and build the lifestyle of fitness from an early age. To create a successful program, you need to be able to approach these goals from two different standpoints—the concerns of the children and the concerns of the parents.”

Momtastic – What to Look for When Choosing a Gym for Your Child

“First and foremost before choosing a school or gym is to be clear about what your child’s goals are in this pursuit.  These goals can change over time, as can your choice of schools, but knowing going in will make your decisions much easier. Be it martial arts, gymnastics, wrestling, or dancing , there are competitive routes your child can take.  Is your child in pursuit of a career or college scholarship?  Or are they just exploring and want to have fun?”

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