I sat down and started typing out the title to this blog as “How Is CrossFit Different”. While at first thought, it doesn’t seem that very much removed from “why”, i quickly hit the backspace and changed it just that. I think the “how” is something that we all understand. Even if we have never done a CrossFit class, if we have ever watched something on YouTube or social media, we get the “how”. No where else incorporates the high skill gymnastics and Olympic lifts to the same extent as CrossFit. Unfortunately, many perceive those movements as a barrier to entry. What they do not see in those videos - a coach. A good coach. An attentive coach. A coach who knows how to make sure Joe Blow who walks in to a CrossFit gym for the very first time can get the same stimulus of a muscle up or squat snatch without actually being able to perform those movements.
This is exactly what we pride ourselves on at 306! Unapologetically, we do not shy away from programming difficult movements and difficult workouts (in fact, we also pride ourselves on that!). We do that because we have high level coaches who are able to adjust those difficult movements and workouts for each person in the class. This sets CrossFit, and 306 in particular, apart from all the other “group fitness” things out there. I am not saying we are any better or worse. That’s for you to decide. We are certainly different.
Below is an article from “Morning Chalk Up”. The Morning Chalk Up is essentially a daily newspaper for all things CrossFit. This was on of their headline stories a few days ago. It paints a very good story of “why” CrossFit is different.
I’m guessing you’ve probably had a conversation with someone who doesn’t do CrossFit that goes slightly like this:
“It’s not so much about the workouts, it’s the community.”
“Oh, my boot camp feels like a community.”
“Yeah, I know. But it’s not the same.”
“How so?”
“Umm… it’s hard to explain.”
Right? We’ve all experienced this weird cult-like phenomenon that is the CrossFit Community, but it’s quite hard to put a finger on what exactly that is. It’s the encouragement, the shared experience, the obsession with shoes, etc, etc. But what causes it? Where does it come from?
Well, I think I may have stumbled across the answer.
I recently moved, forcing me to find a new box. There were 3 or 4 within a couple of miles of my new place, but there was also something else. A gym literally next door. It looked like a CrossFit box. It smelled like a CrossFit box. There was a rig, all the equipment was Rogue, Assault and Concept 2. Everyone sure looked like CrossFitters in their No Bulls and Metcons. There were ripped guys with no shirts on, moms, people in their 20’s through to their 60’s — everyone you’d expect at a regular CrossFit box.
In fact, among my non-CrossFit friends, upon hearing where I was moving to, without fail, told me the place next door was a CrossFit gym. I wouldn’t be surprised to hear many of the members there believed they do CrossFit.
But they definitely do not. So, what was different?
Well, in an effort to be less “scary” (I’m projecting here – I don’t know for sure why this is the case), they removed many of the things non-CrossFitters fear. No Olympic lifts — that is, no snatching and no jerks. No gymnastics — at least, no kipping or muscle ups. Not even double-unders. The prospect was not ideal, but at the time, I was re-entering workouts for the first time in months having had minor knee surgery and figured I wasn’t ready for a muscle-up or a snatch for a while anyway. And boy, this gym was convenient. No need to drive. I didn’t even have to walk on a sidewalk. So I joined, figuring with it being a month-to-month membership, I could use it to get back to reasonable shape, then find a CrossFit gym close by if I so chose.
Spoiler alert: I would so choose.
First, it’s important to note that the classes provided great workouts. Without fail, I would leave feeling exhausted. My t-shirt was soaked through on a daily basis. It felt like we got 3 WODs in per class. In fact, we did. Every class. There was no variation in the class structure — or the warm-up. However, no one spoke to each other. I tried to engage with people (those who know me, know I talk… a lot) but nothing ever stuck. Within 2 minutes of class being over, everyone was gone. No community. Nothing.
Why? What was so different?
What became apparent early on is that without anything to learn, there was little need for coaching. Which was handy, because in the two months I was there, I didn’t receive any. Each “WOD” would be preceded by a quick demonstration, then… go!
What I discovered is that if you’re not struggling to learn something new, the opportunity to band together to help each other is lost.
For example, if you were to take a cooking class in order to learn a new skill: people struggling, burning, spilling, making a mess, creating bizarre foul-tasting concoctions, is what would ultimately bring people together. The shared struggle forces people to help one another and you quickly bond. If that same group instead spent the evening in a fast food restaurant flipping burgers, you’d imagine less interaction would take place. They’d sure make a lot of food though.
And that’s what was happening. I was getting in a ton of fitness, but wasn’t learning, meeting anyone or having any fun.
Coming back from injury, knowing I’d have to scale just about everything for a while, and being relatively technically competent in the various lifts we were doing, this may well have been the perfect gym for me. Did I mention how close it was? I could have gone home for bathroom breaks mid-workout! But it would have been nice to make some friends.
I love CrossFit. It’s changed my life in countless ways and I’ve always looked forward to going to the gym. However, at this CrossFit-like gym, which if you squint your eyes just right is almost imperceptibly different from a real box, I never once looked forward to it.
Removing the difficult things in order to make it easier for anyone to jump in and go, took away the soul of CrossFit. The feeling when a bunch of strangers help each other to learn something new (something many people haven’t done since they were in High School) and in the process become a community is what makes CrossFit so special.
Two weeks ago I walked into what is now my new CrossFit home. My first class was an AMRAP, which included a run at the end of each round. Towards the end, Tim, a guy I had just met who was (at least) a round ahead of me, stopped during his run. “Come on Will,” he’d already remembered my name “Keep up with me. You got this.”
I got this.
A quick story. I’ve experienced this type of thing two times in my life. One is in a CrossFit gym. It’s all explained above so I don’t need to say any more on that one. The other, was in my career in fire rescue. Whether it was the people in my class at fire college or the people I worked with at the department, despite knowing these peoples for relatively short periods of time, they were as close to me as any friend I have known for my whole life. I would without hesitation put myself into harms way to help them. Just like in CrossFit, its because of the hardships and difficult things we had gone through together that those strong bonds developed so quickly.
So there it is. That is “why” CrossFit is different.