ESC - Strength training, group fitness, personal training

STRENGTH + HEALTH

Eastside Strength & Conditioning offers group training and workouts as well as individualized personal training services for all fitness and experience levels. 

Established in 2005, ESC is located in downtown Bellevue, Washington, just off Interstate 405.

It's all upstairs from here

Come climb with us!

CrossFit Eastside has a team of folks who will be rockin' the stairwells of the Columbia Center tower in downtown Seattle on March 19, 2006, as part of the annual Big Climb to raise money for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.

Specs:

  • 69: flights
  • 19: steps per flight
  • 1,311: total steps
  • 788: feet of vertical elevation
  • 1,000: dollars we aim to raise to fight blood cancers
  • 11: minimum pairs of fried CrossFitter thighs once the deed is done

To join us (c'mon, it'll be fun!), register by March 13.

Or, if cleaning behind the refrigerator with a Q-Tip sounds like a more appealing way to spend your Sunday, but you still want to support us and leukemia/lymphoma research, you can pledge online for the team or any of the individuals (use the "Select Member Page" drop-down menu at the top of the page).

Beats pumping away on a StairMaster while watching CNN!

Toe jam

Hanging inverted from your toes (you can also use a bar), fully extend (open) the hip, and then close the hip, reaching up to touch your toes. For reps.

Be smart, know your abilities and limitations. Stay low to the ground, and use a spotter as well as matting.

Hand maintenance

Because the question of how to deal with hand callusing has been reoccurring lately, it is time to address it here. We are not promoting manicures. We are promoting maintenance to your hands, so that you can continue to be successful with your training--not tapping out because your hands are thrashed. Take care of business so that you can stay in the game.

Callusing is the body's natural means for dealing with surface friction. In an effort to protect the dermis, a think mass of skin develops at frequently used contact points, most notably the pads at the top of the palms.

If you do not regularly maintain your hands (keep them semi-smooth on the surface, yet still deeply callused), you will end up tearing skin from your hands. It is only a matter of time.

Many methods exist for hand maintenance. We know people who use an electric dremel, on low speed, with a drum sander attachment. It is quick, taking about 5 minutes, and not as scary as it may sound--once you get the hang of it.

Another great, highly recommended tool is the Pedro callus stone. It works better than conventional pumice stones, and, with a proper soak prior to filing, will effectivley take down the roughness of your calluses and keep them from getting too thick--both of which are sure to lead to tearing on your next big pull-up, deadlift, or o-lift workout. File frequently.

What to do, though, if you do end up tearing the skin from your hands, despite our cautions about the importance of preventative maintenance? One option is to clip off the remaining skin flaps and keep the wounds clean. Of course, this is going to limit your pulling activities until your hands heal.

Another possibility is to use glue to mend the lesion--after thoroughly cleaning the affected area. Gluing down the edges of the torn skin can get you back to training while you heal. Gluing also allows the tender area under the abrasion to heal and toughen. As the skin beneath grows out, keep gently sanding the top level skin to keep the edges smooth. Eventually the glued top layer will have to be removed, but by then the newer layers of skin will be tougher. Ordinary Super Glue or Krazy Glue-type products (methyl-2-cyanoacrylates) can work for this, though they are not recommended because of concerns about potential toxicity. There are, however, medical-grade tissue adhesives designed and approved for human or veterinary uses (containing butyl, isobutyl or octyl esters rather than methyl alcohol) that would work.

Obviously, the best cure here is prevention. Get filing!

[Note that we are not medical professionals and are merely passing on lore and the results of personal experience. Don't try this at home, use at your own risk, YMMV, keep your hands in the vehicle at all times, we are not responsible for lost or stolen items, and all other caveats and disclaimers apply.]

Learning to kip

Heels, toes, jump, land. Repeat.

More than you probably cared to know about the kipping pull-up.

We teach the active pull-up to all our athletes. Not only is it a prime indicator of athletic development (or lack thereof) in terms of how someone can move and/or coordinate movement, but it is a gateway to many things functional that involve the hip. Drive is initiated with the hip, stabilized by the midline, and transferred through (like a hand-off) to the shoulders and arms. The action moves from core to extremity.

It's functionality that kids seem to naturally possess. When we are born we strive for it. When we get older we strive to remember what having it was like.

While athletes are developing this fundamental movement, they are also chasing flexibility, coordination, power, stamina, agility, accuracy, balance, speed, cardiovascular/respiratory endurance, and strength--everything required to dominate athletics.

The active pull-up carries a signature--everyone has their own unique style.

Pull-up bar installation

Elves working on the pull-up bar while most of you were still sleeping…

Allied steel came through on Friday and dropped off the fabricated work, a Genie lift and fasteners. The apparatus was bolted together and then lifted into place. Paul marked the holes, and out came the roto-hammer. Almost instantly we were pounding fasteners into the wall and securing the braces. Installation was silky smooth -- the finished product a work of art. Final images will be posted tomorrow.

GSGA.