No need to be jealous. You could definitely do that.From yesterday:Deadlift max effort program:5 x 75%5 x 80%5 x 85%5 sets of 8-10 x60%My form actually got better as I increased weight. Also, I don't know why, but I sleep really hard after doing deadlifts. It's great. And then the WOD:5 sets for max weight:Hang Power Snatch, 3 reps Then, 5 rounds for time:Knees-to-elbows, 15 repsRest, 30 seconds95lbs / 8:35Didn't go max weight because I wanted to focus on form.
12/10/2011 10:40:30 AM
the handstand would take more work, as well as weight loss..i cant wait to start deadlifting again
12/10/2011 12:02:23 PM
To everyone, what are your favorite lifts?Here is mine in decreasing order:power cleanoverhead squatdeadliftback squatfront squatthrustersumo high pullsSNATCH(hate hate hate hate)PS-Here is Camacho's take on that Strongman video. I'm with him on this one. Sometimes, trainers take the word functional fitness too far.http://crossfitoneworld.typepad.com/crossfit_one_world/2011/12/12102011.html
12/10/2011 10:16:47 PM
Dead LiftBack SquatFront SquatClean and JerkPower CleanPower SnatchOverhead SquatThrusterHate both of those, the only reason I hate the overhead squat is because I need to work on my flexibility (I have a hard time staying on my heels with just light weight). Thrusters just wear me out worse than any other lift, absolutely hate those things.
12/10/2011 10:33:16 PM
deadliftsnatchback squat front squat overhead squatthrusterspower clean (I did get better at them from when I was having major issues, but still am not a fan)
12/11/2011 12:40:30 AM
Okay, so let me preface this by saying I'm not here to rain on anyone's parade, or start a fight...I have a legit question.If Crossfit is so effective, why is it that I see a lot of people who do it on a regular basis who don't look particularly good? I know that results vary, but I have met people before who hit the gym regularly, and swear by Crossfit, but they just look...average. (I'm not discounting the workout...I have seen people in phenomenal shape who do Crossfit.)I looked at one of those videos above where they were making fun of the Crossfit people for doing the Strongman lift, and those girls really didn't look like they were in any kind of shape at all. You guys obviously see far more Crossfitters than I do...am I seeing an unrepresentative sample?
12/11/2011 10:40:49 AM
It's not like all runners look like they're super in shape. Or all people who follow the Starting Strength program, or do Zumba, or whatever. There are always going to be all types on any kind of program. And you also can't judge fitness purely by appearance. People can be really strong or fit in some other way without you being able to look at them and think they're ripped. That part depends on diet. I don't think anyone claims that doing Crossfit = being ripped for all people. I'm certainly not, but I'm stronger than I was before I started it, and I'm happy with the way I look, and that's really my goal.
12/11/2011 11:28:09 AM
12/11/2011 11:40:26 AM
12/11/2011 12:48:23 PM
There is absolutely only ONE answer to the question about how people look...DIETThere are people who kill WODs, but still eat like shit. "Doing CrossFit" will not somehow magically counteract shitty dietary habits.
12/11/2011 5:10:04 PM
if it were just a matter of diet, then there wouldn't be bodybuilders that eat complete garbage yet look ripped and muscular.Crossfit is designed to make people good at a whole lot of things, but not great at any one thing. It won't make you look super muscular because it's not supposed to be all about muscle hypertrophy. If anything, muscle hypertrophy is the only thing that crossfit doesn't do. It will make you stronger and it will improve you cardiovascular health, but it's not going to make you look like a bodybuilder.I personally feel like most crossfit workouts overtrain the type of hardgainer bodytypes that tend to flock to crossfit. As a result, their bodies hold onto body fat and water and cause them to have a soft look.
12/11/2011 8:32:30 PM
I think that comes down to what you consider "looking good"there's a difference between looking athletic and being large (like most bodybuilders)Bodybuilders are not eating complete garbage and looking ripped and muscular. They might be eating that shit and getting larger in the off season, but I guarantee you they aren't eating it when they're weeks out of competition. You also have to account for the fact that bodybuilders are NOT average people. The one's your referring to are probably already ridiculously muscular...they can swing 10-15lbs and still look pretty good.There is no such thing as overtraining...just under-eating and under-resting
12/12/2011 9:15:24 AM
if you don't believe that overtraining is a very real and very common condition, then you need to stop offering advice in any thread about training. food and rest are not enough to recover the body from excessive training volume. you could even add massive amounts of steroids into the mix and still be capable of overtraining if you're doing too much volume training.and if you don't believe there are bodybuilders who eat pure garbage, then you don't know enough bodybuilders. There are a few in my gym that will freely admit to being able to eat nonchalantly and stay lean and muscular. Some do it with genetics, some do it with drugs, but they all focus on making sure their weightlifting is limited in volume and make up for any extra calories they want to burn off through low intensity cardio.
12/12/2011 11:23:04 AM
I get tired of going back and forth with youYOU KNOW EVERYTHING^ eating lots of garbage (and also doing cardio to compensate) and looking ripped is not the same as "eating tons of garbage and still being ripped"Also, I was making a very broad statement about overtraining. It really is going to vary on each individual person. There is no set amount of volume that every single person can handle. The key is listening to your body and resting when needed. I've seen too many people doing lots of volume and not eating enough as well. Take home message: listen to your body and don't be fucking stupid.[Edited on December 12, 2011 at 2:45 PM. Reason : ]
12/12/2011 2:41:33 PM
12/12/2011 3:58:50 PM
Wait what?Diet affects body weight, but not body composition?
12/12/2011 4:12:14 PM
For people who spend a couple hours in the gym every day compensating for eating crap, no, diet might not make a huge difference. But the average person doesn't do that. The original argument was over people who "do Crossfit" looking average. It's because many of us are average. We do the workouts a few times a week and aren't entirely strict with the diet side of things, because we're OK with that (or not dedicated enough, or making excuses, or don't know any better, or whatever).I feel like I am in better shape when I do Crossfit, and most of all I enjoy it, so it works for me. I know I'd see better results from a "you go to the gym to get lean and ripped" perspective if I never ate cookies or drank beer, but I like cookies and beer, and I think I look pretty decent, so what's the big deal? "Looking average" doesn't always equal being out of shape or weak or what have you.
12/12/2011 4:17:35 PM
12/12/2011 4:48:40 PM
If you're spending a couple hours in the gym every day to compensate for "eating crap", you're doing it wrong...really, really wrong.You don't have to choose between "being ripped" and eating good food. Using intermittent fasting or just utilizing portion control, it's possible to cycle between building muscle and losing fat. Cardio isn't even necessary - check out leangains.com to see what I'm talking about.To keep it simple, you want to structure your eating habits around your training. Note here that when I say training, I don't mean doing 500 burpees and some poor form pull ups - that's going to strip muscle off pretty quickly. It'll burn some calories for sure, but it won't give you the shape you most likely are looking for. To get "toned" you need to build muscle, i.e. gain strength. To get "lean" with a good degree of muscle definition, you need to lose fat.Again, Crossfit is a pretty good way to lose weight and burn calories. Losing weight is easy, though. Body re-composition is more complicated, and whether or not most people realize it, re-composition is what they want from an aesthetic standpoint.
12/12/2011 5:02:13 PM
I love bro science
12/12/2011 5:14:47 PM
Then you probably love Crossfit and this thread.
12/12/2011 5:23:50 PM
This is turning into the bodybuilding thread.Why do people make things more complicated than they need to be.I'd wager that people who compete in sport (the sport of CrossFit, nfl, nba, even bodybuilders) are going to be borderline overtrained at some point. For the average person doing crossfit as its meant, taking rest days, eating properly the majority of the time....not so much
12/12/2011 5:33:43 PM
12/12/2011 5:48:49 PM
Again though, what's "too much volume"I've seen some bodybuilding regimens (umm Arnold's routine rings a bell) that is WAY more volume or at least comparable in volume to a CrossFit WOD.
12/12/2011 7:10:29 PM
you could read 50 different "Arnold" training programs and they all would say something different. If there's one thing Arnold was known for, it was lying about his training routines. A lot of his workouts were extremely overinflated in writing, as he was instructed to do by Joe Weider, mainly because Joe Weider didn't like the marketability of the low volume workouts made famous by the Mentzer brothers around that same time. Keep in mind that you're also talking about a genetically gifted individual training with the help of steroids and other pharmaceuticals. He also didn't train very fast either. A doctor once commented that Arnold probably burned about 350 calories in a one hour training session. I'd imagine the average crossfit workout is twice that rate, if not more, for an athlete his size.Any bodybuilder that trains for more than 45 minutes in a session is either dragging ass or doing WAAAAAY too much volume. Powerlifters train much longer because they train at much slower speeds without a lot of intensity.
12/12/2011 8:03:08 PM
I'd like to note that when losing weight, keeping a high protein diet will aid in lean mass retention. Combined with appropriate strength training, recomp results are usually optimal.
12/12/2011 8:44:57 PM
So for my overtraining log, here's what I did Saturday. NOTE, this was for competition. I've taken 2 FULL rest days off (plenty of rest, food, and hydrating)http://www.carolinafitnesschallenge.comEvent 1Max ground to Overhead (3 min time cap)clean and jerked 225#just missed 230#Event 2As many round as possible in 12 min20 Air Squats, with 45# plate20m Overhead Walking Lunges, w/45# plate20 Hand Release Plyo Pushups20m Run, w/45# plate3 Rounds + squats, lunges, and 1 pushup (this was miserable)made the first cut...Top 50 went onEvent 321-15-9Wall Ball, 30# slam ballDeadlifts, 275#Burpee(10 min time cap)immediately upon completion:2 min max toes-2-barmade it to the round of 9's and did 5 of the wall balls. Wasn't going to finish, so I rested for 15 seconds and then did 26 toes to barfun event over all....lots of great athletes from NC
12/12/2011 10:21:47 PM
Nice job. How many people showed up for that?
12/13/2011 12:14:54 PM
That last WOD looks like hell. I love how they take what would be a WOD I would enjoy and then basically say screw you by adding burpees haha (not that I would really enjoy the 30# wallballs either)
12/13/2011 12:20:31 PM
^^there were at least 500 people there (competitors, spectators, judges, vendors)There was mens open, masters men, womens open, and masters womenI placed 46th/80 in mens open....my goal was top 50I'm happy with that based on what I've actually been able to do to prepareNow my focus is on the opensALSO, the FINAL event (for top 10) was:100 double understhen:90 squat thrusters, 95#90 pull-upscomplete for time in any order[Edited on December 13, 2011 at 4:21 PM. Reason : ]
12/13/2011 4:21:06 PM
I've ran with a med ball before which I thought was pretty awkward...I can imagine running with a plate is twice as awkward
12/13/2011 4:43:18 PM
Running with a plate sucks, I put it behind my neck and get a nice bruise on the top of my back/bottom of my neck. Sandbags are so much better.[Edited on December 13, 2011 at 5:37 PM. Reason : .]
12/13/2011 5:36:53 PM
Was it a bumper plate or did it have "handles "
12/13/2011 5:57:04 PM
When I ran with a plate it was a bumper plate, one with "handles" would be a lot easier, would still prefer a sandbag though.
12/13/2011 6:07:57 PM
Good dayMax effort:Bench press3 x 1853 X 1954 X 2055 sets of 10 x 135Then GP:7 sets of 1 rep max Clean and Jerk - 95lbs-135lbs Tabata Ab Wheel
12/14/2011 10:49:26 PM
Snatches up to 145then superset, 5 roundsHang Snatch + snatch 115#*1&1/4 Front Squat 145#x3rest 2minPush Press up to 165x2then:3 rounds3 muscleups50 abmat situps6:54*1&1/4 squats - go all the way down, up to parallel, back down, all the way up = 1 rep
12/15/2011 8:32:45 AM
Eva!!5 rounds for time:Run, 800 metersKettlebell Swing, 30 reps, 70/53#Pull-up, 30 repsThey put a 35 minute cap on it and I was only able to do 3 rounds in that time.
12/15/2011 7:41:54 PM
5 Rounds30 Double Unders10 MB Cleans, 20#4:48then immediately after:Power Cleans165x1185x1205x1215x1185x3
12/15/2011 9:09:29 PM
Kelly is worst than Eva.YUCK!!!
12/15/2011 9:30:15 PM
What's Kelly?
12/15/2011 9:35:25 PM
KELLY is:5 rounds400m run30 box jumps30 wall ballsALL LUNGS. I tested out my back Tues since the injury about 2.5 weeks ago with some weight on the bar(25lb):AMRAP 25Start at one end of the floor with:7 hang power snatch7 OHS7 back of the neck jerksthen, walk with the bar overhead to the other end of the floor. Repeat movements here.Would love to do this with heavier weight when my back is 100%.[Edited on December 15, 2011 at 9:53 PM. Reason : Didn't have any means to measure the floor, but it was a decent distance.]
12/15/2011 9:52:37 PM
Max distance in 12 min2600mAMRAP 141 DL, 315#9 bar facing Burpees6 dead hang pull ups3 muscle ups48 single unders5 rds + 17
12/18/2011 2:29:39 PM
...[Edited on December 19, 2011 at 8:26 AM. Reason : ..]
12/19/2011 8:26:03 AM
So I'm moving soon and it looks like there's a Crossfit gym right near my new place. I'll only be there for 3 months, so the fact that this gym has a 3 month "membership" is pretty optimal...Except for the fact that 2x a week is $382.50 and 3x a week is $471.75.It's entirely possible that I just don't get it, but how in the world is that reasonable? Is that really what people are paying to go to these classes?
12/19/2011 9:35:34 AM
Yeah, I think it's ridiculous. When I was at a box, I did a punch card for 20/$250. Which comes out to be 12.50/class. Obviously, the more you classes buy the less you pay. Most gyms will sell unlimited packages anywhere between $150 to $180 a month. Means you can come as many times as you want in that month. The best rates I've seen is $75/month unlimited at CrossFit Springfrield(MO). But then again, they have about 500 members; they can afford lower rates. The newer gyms will charge you more. Money has to come from somewhere to pay for the affiliate dues, etc.I think CF headquarters charges $2,000 for affiliate dues. And then the recertifications is about the same price I think. So yeah, given the high fees headquarters charges the box/owners, I understand why rates are so high, especially for the newer boxes with few members.Don't quote me on the affiliate dues though,Packman probably knows for sure...
12/19/2011 11:39:46 AM
I know some people in Charlotte that pay ~$200/month for their memeberships
12/19/2011 11:42:33 AM
OH YEAH. Equipment and rent/lease. That's the main thing.Kettlebells, bumper plates,Olympic bars, etc.They're expensive as hell.
12/19/2011 11:44:13 AM
How often does one generally do Crossfit?Like -- in the past I've gone to the gym between 2 and 4 times a week. I'm guess you tend to go less with Crossfit?
12/19/2011 12:32:12 PM
Affiliate dues are now $3k/yearI CF 5x/week
12/19/2011 12:54:03 PM
When you ultimately open your own Crossfit gym, I want you to be wildly successful.(and give me a discount, thx)
12/19/2011 2:33:47 PM