Anthony Roberts said:I don't think it's really appropriate for most of the people who use it. That being said, it's ok for what it's meant for.
nefertiti said:You're gonna need to elaborate on that...
AAP said:I know many people who have used it. Basically what it comes down to is exercising/training the body as a whole entity rather than selective training the body broken down in individual muscle groups. You still follow a training routine but it is not as specialized as selectively targeting one muscle group at a time per bodybuilding standards. Think of it as overall core training, if you like that new age "core" slang that every PT and their Balleys wannabees harp about.
A lot of the training is through compound movements designed to strengthen the body as a whole. It is (supposingly) for overall physical improvement, not just for muscle hypertrophy or adding some weight to the bar powerlifter style. Mostly it is focusing on stimulating the entire central nervous system through training so the effort is synergestic for the body as a whole.
I see a lot of triathletes, firemen, and track jocks following it here in South Florida. I don't know exactly the principles the program advocates, but I see them doing some of the exercises. Mostly in groups of 3 -5 people each lead by a 'trainer'. But then again, I see some people with a log book (or whatever) doing it by themselves. I don't know if you can buy the program or if they have someone to evaluate them and write one out.
AAP said:I know many people who have used it. Basically what it comes down to is exercising/training the body as a whole entity rather than selective training the body broken down in individual muscle groups. You still follow a training routine but it is not as specialized as selectively targeting one muscle group at a time per bodybuilding standards. Think of it as overall core training, if you like that new age "core" slang that every PT and their Balleys wannabees harp about.
A lot of the training is through compound movements designed to strengthen the body as a whole. It is (supposingly) for overall physical improvement, not just for muscle hypertrophy or adding some weight to the bar powerlifter style. Mostly it is focusing on stimulating the entire central nervous system through training so the effort is synergestic for the body as a whole.
I see a lot of triathletes, firemen, and track jocks following it here in South Florida. I don't know exactly the principles the program advocates, but I see them doing some of the exercises. Mostly in groups of 3 -5 people each lead by a 'trainer'. But then again, I see some people with a log book (or whatever) doing it by themselves. I don't know if you can buy the program or if they have someone to evaluate them and write one out.
They have classes here as well. I guess many people are addicted to that training. Though I also know a lot of people who were injured by being pushed to do movements that they were not flexible, or strong enough to do, and others who keep going back although they complain to me of being super sore. It has a hint of boot camp style to it from what I hear, and there is a website as well with some of the routines they use.nefertiti said:Well...I like the idea of functional athleticism. Stength combined with flexibility and agility. Things that would serve the lifestyle I like to lead. This fall I'll be teaching ballet and unfortunately lifting the way I have really doesn't lend itself to being a part time ballet teacher, at least not for the way my body wants to be when i do it. I guess I'll have to just see what the boot camp is like and take it from there.
nefertiti said:I signed up for this crossfit boot camp in DC (after smurfy mentioned it a few months ago), and I'm thinking of joining the gym afterwards. Has anyone here had any experience with this? Opinions?
Anthony Roberts said:I don't think crossfit really gets you in great shape for any one thing...it kind of gets you in mediocre shape for several, to my way of thinking.
thebadguy54 said:AR, I hate to disagree with you bro, but in this case I do. Here is why:
One would be in great shape (far from mediocre) after a few months of following crossfit.
You are correct that the point of crossfit is NOT to specialize in any ONE thing. For example, a crossfitter will not lift as heavy as a power lifter, will not be able to clean and jerk or snatch as much as a O-lifter, will not be as symmetrical and aesthetically pleasing as a body builder and will have a slower 10k time than a runner. So if you want to specialize, crossfitting isn't for you. If you want to be good at everything, then it is. That is why it is mostly use by police, fire and military. A fireman does not know if he is going to need a 10 second burst of power, 5 minutes anaerobic work or 20 minutes of cardio type work to get the job done at his next call. He must prepare for everything. A 1000lb squat is not going to help you carry 100lbs of equipment to the 15th floor of a high rise. It just isn't.
Good powerlifters can deadlift 700 lbs. but their 5k time would be embarrassing (if they can even run 5k). At 200lbs., a crossfitter should deadlift 500 and run 5k in about 20 minutes, 10k in 40 minutes, snatch his own body weight and do 40 pull-ups in a row. If you ask me, that is as impressive as the 700 lb. deadlift.
he-man said:hit it on the head - most people who think that it's no good have never tried it before. it's about improving all around ability in everything......
tejfrog said:Crossfit gets you in awesome all around shape! Running, strong as an ox, crazy cardio shape because you heart rate is going to be near 100% during most of your workouts. It's great if you're a combatant, firefighter, cop, etc. It's not just for looking pumped up and not being able to run or swim, it's great for work related stuff, like clearing a compound full of fuck heads at 7000 ft elevation in Afghanistan.
nefertiti said:You guys realize this thread is a year old, right? lol.
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