Anonymous wrote:
Lemme guess - he was doing high rep olympic lifts in a fatigued state??
Anonymous wrote:My DH does it, he likes the intense workouts, but he doesn't "bring it home" and talk about it constantly. He is by far the exception. We have other friends that do it elsewhere and they will.not.stop.talking about it.
Lots of injuries. Crossfit basically just leases their name out to whatever gym wants to use it and then sells the gyms training. They don't have any oversight on what is happening in the gyms that are using their names. Lots of these dudes running these gyms have no idea what they are doing.
Dh is pretty conservative and just competes against himself, not against others, and he still got hurt. It's ridiculous. He had to take like 6 months off to heal his back and he still has trouble with it if he sleeps completely flat. My DH is super fit and only 30.
I don't know ANY of our friends who do crossfit who haven't gotten an injury from it or an existing injury majorly exacerbated.
Expensive as hell too. And lots of them aren't air conditioned.
Anonymous wrote:My DH does it, he likes the intense workouts, but he doesn't "bring it home" and talk about it constantly. He is by far the exception. We have other friends that do it elsewhere and they will.not.stop.talking about it.
Lots of injuries. Crossfit basically just leases their name out to whatever gym wants to use it and then sells the gyms training. They don't have any oversight on what is happening in the gyms that are using their names. Lots of these dudes running these gyms have no idea what they are doing.
Dh is pretty conservative and just competes against himself, not against others, and he still got hurt. It's ridiculous. He had to take like 6 months off to heal his back and he still has trouble with it if he sleeps completely flat. My DH is super fit and only 30.
I don't know ANY of our friends who do crossfit who haven't gotten an injury from it or an existing injury majorly exacerbated.
Expensive as hell too. And lots of them aren't air conditioned.
Anonymous wrote:I find the best part of it is how they say at first no, people don't get injured doing it and then within a few months or so they get hurt.
I have worked in a gym for many years, these fads come and go, I have told many of my clients who want to try it to go ahead but they will not get the same results as working hard, doing the exercises through a full range of motion without bouncing and throwing the weights.
They all come back, most injured, some because they do not see results they have been getting.
Anonymous wrote:I think crossfit boxes can be good if they are run by folks that actually know something about weight lifting but that is really rare. Most only seem know about weight lifting from and in the context of cross fit and haven't spent any time learning about proper form. You end up with people doing terrible lifts and hurting themselves badly.
I also can't stand the near religious fervor people seem to have for it. It seems to be a life cycle instead of a workout for them. Anything less than full devotion is unacceptable and you sure as hell better have an instagram full you doing your WOD and your Sunday meal prep of unseasoned baked chicken breast and steamed broccoli.