Archive for February 7th, 2010

February 7, 2010

i would like to start an information page or category. Everyone can throw in a question about nutrition, exercise, muscles, recuperation, whatever you can think of related to the CrossFit community. We will ask for questions to be submitted on Monday and Tuesdays, and we will pick a question to answer on Fridays. The answer will be a post added to the page. If we don’t know it ruhht off, we will have one of our expert partners answer it for us.

Ley me know what you think of this idea and we can have it put in motion or not.

10 Ways to be a better CrossFitter

 

10 ways to be a better CrossFitter

by Forrest on January 21st, 2010 – CrossFit SouthBay

                                                                                                                                                                             Image from www.crossfitwatertown.com. Thanks Lisbeth! 1. Have fun – Whether it be in CrossFit or your favorite sport or shopping with grandma, make sure you try and have fun. Honestly, you can do CrossFit just about anywhere with anyone or by yourself. You choose to come to CFSB for a reason. You work hard all day, make the time at CrossFit be the one hour a day where you can be yourself and let loose.

 2. Show up on time – Actually show up early and leave late. Foam roll, stretch and get rid of all that junk in your lower back and shoulders. Showing up late will only cheat you out of a sufficient warm-up. Without a good warm-up, your chance of injury increases exponentially. If you show up early you have two options, cheer on the class that is finishing or start warming up.

   

 3. Don’t whine – It’s okay to cry, just make sure that we can’t see or hear you and remember to clean up your tears when you’re done. Maybe the song that comes on isn’t your favorite, in the immortal words of Josh Everett “If you need music to motivate you, go find something else to do”. Be careful of asking me to change the song, I might just put on Miley Cyrus’ Party in the USA on repeat. I’m your coach, not Mix Master Mike. You have a task to accomplish, so do it. Yes I know that every workout is hard and I know that you hate running and I know that the bar hurts your delicate hands, but there comes a time when we have to nut up or shut up…or both. CrossFit is constantly varied, so the odds are that you will see some workouts you hate. That’s why it’s CrossFit and not alltheshityoulikeFit. When you come to CrossFit, be ready to work. Come prepared to face all those pains and things you hate head on. Accept the suck.

 4. Give it all – More than strength, speed, flexibility or endurance, effort is what matters most. I don’t care if you’re Joe Thruster with a sub 3 minute Fran, if you half-ass a workout, you’re a pussy. Grandma doing jumping pull-ups and thrusters with a PVC kicked your ass because she gave everything she had just short of a stroke. Times and weights matter, but they fail in comparison to effort. Keep pushing yourself to your most extreme limits. I don’t care if you have a 500 lbs or 50 lbs deadlift as long as you put forth the effort and don’t sandbag.

   

 5. Listen to your coach – We are here to help you get more fit and accomplish your goals. When we say things like “you’re lifting with your back, use more hips” don’t act surprised when your lower back is sore. When we tell you that the foam roll and lacrosse ball works, we aren’t just being sadistic. We tell you to rest because you need rest, just as we tell you to get in the gym more because you need to be in the gym more. If you want to get better at something, you have to practice it. Plain and simple. Yes there are some of you who are naturally good at some things, but why not get better? Why not be the best? Our goal is for you to accomplish your goals.

 6.Fail sometimes – The unique thing about CrossFit is that the only way to achieve excellence is through failure. The strength portion of our workouts are designed to where you may fail at a set. If you don’t fail you aren’t trying hard enough (see #4). CrossFit is an environment where no one will laugh at you or put a permanent letter in your file for dumping an overhead squat. Don’t be afraid to fail, there’s always next time. Pushing yourself to fail is more of a mental thing than it is a physical thing. We have conditioned ourselves to think that failing is bad and therefore don’t push ourselves in fear of failure. Take that fear away and see what you can accomplish.

 7. Eat good food – The short answer is eat Paleo. If you don’t want to eat Paleo, just eat meat, some fruit, vegetables, little startch, no sugar, no grains no dairy. If you’re low on energy, then you’re not eating enough. I remember a lot of people starting off on Paleo complain of low energy then proceed to tell me that they didn’t eat anything all day because they didn’t know what to eat. Is it that hard to eat meat and vegetables these days? I ate ice cream every day and pizza every other day. If I can do it, you can too.  

 8. Count it – Tracking your workouts matters. That’s why we printed the log books for you. When you don’t count the reps on your workout, you lose valuable information that will keep you accountable for your progress. Make sure to record as much information as you can. Write down what you ate for the day. Everyone has those days where they ate like crap and had a crappy workout. Those are the hardest days to write down, but those will provide you with the best motivation to get better.

 9. Be nice – CrossFitters are notorious for making fun of people who go to globo gyms (present company included). People achieve their personal fitness goals in their own ways. Some may like the pace of a spin or pilates class and some may like the intensity of CrossFit. Instead of pointing out their propensity for douchiness on the elliptical, try introducing them to CrossFit. You’ll get a better reaction and won’t come off like a jerk. You were once that guy on the hacksquat machine or that girl on the eliptical. If someone made fun of you and then said CrossFit was the way to superior fitness, you would tell them to go F themselves.

 10. Get involved – CrossFit is more than just an hour of working out. We are a family and you can get as involved as you like. Just like anything else, you get out what you put in (TWSS). Hold monthly social events and do quarterly charitable events. Other events like our Redondo 5K team and our CrossFit affiliate team will compete this Spring. During the summer we are planning on having a co-ed flag football team, volleyball team, kickball team and 6-man team. There are many opportunities for you to get involved and if you have any suggestions, we would love to hear them!

What’s your opinion?

Short repping a WOD.

This is a concern for all CrossFit affiliates. And upon reading some posts on the main site, I found some opinions that I would like to share, then I would like you to comment and give your perspective.

Posted by Jesse Grey:
I think to begin with, there is a lot of gray area in what constitutes a short repped WOD. At one end of the scale, you have a competitive person purposefully omit a rep or two on a tough WOD to finally break a gym record; that’s flat out cheating. On the other hand you could just have a person who doesn’t count well when they’re really pushing it or someone who does all the reps but cheats the range of motion when fatigue starts setting in.
It’s been my experience that calling a person out is a touchy subject and has to be done in the right way. Of course you want everyone on the up and up but bringing this stuff out the wrong way can have poor results for everyone involved. If I catch a client doing it I’ll usually have words with them privately and explain that a) if they want to put a score on the board they need to have someone watching for the next few WODs and b) more importantly, they’re only cheating themselves. If they want make themselves less fit, that’s their prerogative but they would be better off just scaling the WOD in a standard fashion.

Posted by Ben Black, CrossFit Burnaby Central

Catching an improper count should be brought up immediately, and without being confrontational about it. If the one having missed the count, purposefully or not, argues, just mention that the disagreement can only be resolved by redoing the WOD under more scrutiny.

That usually shuts everyone up fast.

At CrossFit Saint John, I believe we are all doing a great job getting our work done.  I believe everyone is being honest. I just want to bring this up as I’ve had this discussion recently with other trainers and wanted to know what our members thought….Share please.

If someone were caught, how would you expect it to be dealt with?