Equinox Shockwave

As I’ve mentioned a few times, Bo and I are trying to find ways to save money easily for the next few months. No, neither of us lost our job nor are we planning for a child. Instead, we’d just like to be able to put a bit more away in savings. One way in which I’m saving money is by cutting out a personal trainer for the two months that my personal trainer is on maternity leave and not paying for any fitness classes during the summer.

Since I’m a member of Equinox, the easiest way for me to do this is to take full advantage of the classes Equinox offers to its members.

There are a few things I look for in a class:

  • Is the teacher qualified? Is he/she friendly and willing to assist students?
  • Can I master the movements?
  • Will it be worth my time?

Even though I took ballet and jazz from the age of 3-15, I’m not the most coordinated person and therefore classes which are highly choreographed or have fast transition time between movements tend to be tough. I would rather have slow movements where form isn’t compromised. So while I love 30/60/90 and MetCon3 for their sweat factor, sometimes I find my form suffers due to the speed.

Therefore, when I heard about a great new class that not only offered one of my favorite cardio machines, the rowing machine, but also only 3 other stations, I was intrigued. This rowing machine is different than the average as it actually uses WATER! The Indo-Row engages more than 80% of the body’s muscle mass with each stroke, using the water’s resistance

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Upon doing some research, I really liked what I read about the class and was super excited to try it at Rockefeller Center Equinox on Wednesday night.

Extreme cross training at its best! This total body circuit challenge combines the Indo-Row machines for high-intensity calorie burn with dynamic, functional exercises using ViPR, Body Bars, BOSUs and Kettlebells to sculpt and transform the body! Max effort, and EXTREME results!

While each class is different, the concept remains the same.

  • Class is approx. 45 minutes
  • Class is divided into 4 groups upon entering
  • There are 4 stations which each group rotates around during the class (arms, abs, legs, rowing)
  • The team who is on the rowing machine sets the time of each station, depending how long it takes for everyone on their team to finish the distance (500, 400, 300, 200, 200)
  • When everyone finishes rowing, teams rotate.

The stations for our day were right up my alley: rowing, stability ball planks, lunges with overhead weighted press, and pushups while passing back and forth a medicine ball.  Each of these movements are low impact and since you’re doing each one for at least 1 minute, you are able to focus on form.

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The instructor, John, did a great job walking around the room to check people’s form and motivate the group. His music mix was upbeat and high energy which kept everyone moving. I personally loved the rowing segment as there was a great competitive spirit to see who would finish first. The team competition and social atmosphere was something I hadn’t experienced before in a group workout class.

To see the class in action, check out this video below: 

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When the 45 minutes were over I was sweating and my arms were still shaking from the more than 100 pushups I completed! This class is one that I’ll hopefully frequent during marathon training since the low impact didn’t push my body too hard but the circuits allowed me to focus on some weight training and core work. I’m curious to see how the stations change next week! Rumor has it this instructor also has some mean BOSU ball stations he’s incorporated historically!

Equinox Shockwave is currently offered in Boston, LA, Chicago, and New York. For locals, the class is offered at Columbus Circle, 17th and 10th, Wall Street, and Rockefeller Center Equinox locations.

Question: What do you look for in a group fitness class?

*Also, I am so sorry but just realized that I never chose a winner for the Athleta giveaway! Oops! The winner is: Christina! Please email me your mailing address!

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Easy Weeknight Dinner

For over two years, Bo and I have come up with every excuse in the book not to cook on weeknights.

I’m too tired.

It’s already 8:30.

I need to workout.

Our fridge is empty.

I don’t want to clean up.

It wasn’t until a few weeks ago, when we both seriously decided to clean up our act and take our health to the next notch that we realized a healthy dinner was only 1 pan and a few ingredients away.

OMELETS!

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For the past few weeks we’ve been enjoying omelets in almost any way you can imagine. We’ve filled them to the brim with almost every ingredient imaginable revolving around a different theme each time. 

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  • Greek
  • Caprese
  • Italian
  • Mexican
  • With yolks
  • Half white/half yolk

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Lately our favorite creations have come from leftovers such as our taco dinner or homemade Greek. We are able to sit down and enjoy a home cooked dinner within five to ten minutes of walking through the door. The meal is filling, nutritious, tasty, and easy to cleanup. You can’t ask for much more than that.

What is your favorite omelet ingredient? My favorite is spinach and feta cheese!

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NYCM 2012 Marathon Training Week #2

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I’ve got a feeling that this week is going to be even better than last week. This evening’s four mile run relieved all of the day’s stress and left me excited for the week. It’s views like this, the time with my thoughts, and inspirations from my coach and friends that have me ready for a great week. The biggest advice I give to anyone who is marathon training is to keep putting one foot in front of the next each day. I know that there will be more than a few rough runs during these 16 weeks of training but tonight’s run made it all worth it. Warm air, a fresh breeze, time with my thoughts, and other runners on the path smiling and waving left me smiling at 8pm.

You can’t ask for much more than that from a run.

This week’s mileage is 29 versus last week’s 25 but it’s broken up across 5 days with my longest run being 12 miles and shortest being Friday’s 3 miles. The goal for this week’s long run is to listen to my coach.

  • Start early
  • Log 8 miles as close to 10:30 pace before the NYRR Central Park 4 miler
  • Log 4 miles during the race at either 10:30 or faster, depending on how I’m feeling.
  • Bring fuel
  • Listen to Tina Fey’s book during my run to help me get in the zone

Since I don’t know anyone training at this pace, I’m going to leave the house early and run solo. I’m also going to pick my bib up on Thursday so I don’t have to worry about doing that Saturday before the race. Ideally I’ll show up right as the race starts and just get in the back so I don’t have a long downtime.

If you’re training, how was last week? Any tough lessons you learned or changes you’re making?

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