“The majority of my 47 years were blissfully Crossfit-free, and I lived out my days happy and free of the dread associated with upcoming workouts and the soreness associated with past workouts. It was all good. (Except for the whole fat, weak, undisciplined, out-of-shape, crappy-quality-of-life part of it.)
And then, my do-gooder wife shamed me into it because she wanted to ālose weightā and ālook and feel better.ā Kicking and screaming, I went, lost 50 pounds, and had to listen to an incessant stream of I-told-you-sos. Sheās now one of those annoying people who gushes on and on about how much she loves Crossfit and couldnāt live without it.
Iām not one of those people. What I love about Crossfit can be summed up quickly: I love it the second the WOD (workout of the day) is over. Everything up ātill then sucks.
With all that said, hereās the top 12 reasons ā specifically and in no particular order ā why this 47-year-old absolutely hates Crossfit.
The trainers tick me off. Iāve had several of them and theyāre all the same. First of all, theyāre all built like Greek gods and goddesses. B, they always act like they ācareā about me and are all concerned with my welfare, though I suspect itās all an elaborate put-on, like the moon walk. Third, they never seem to buy any of my perfectly good excu- reasons why I canāt do something or complete a WOD. The fact that I could be my current trainerās dad hasnāt earned me one modicum of respect or sympathy. Whatās with these people?
The Posting of the WOD. Every morning, my trainer posts the WOD on Facebook, and for some stupid reason, I read it. This is at around 6:30 a.m. I work out at 5:30 p.m. Using my fingers to do the math, that gives me 11 hours to dread the WOD. I can do it driving, while playing Candy Crush on my phone, working, sitting on the pot, giving a work presentation, just anywhere. Iāve become quite proficient at dreading the WOD and trying to figure out ways not to go to the box.
My conscience. There are WODs where I really, truly believe that if I try to do one more pull-up, my arms will actually fall off. Or that my bleached skeleton will be discovered under the bridge at the 400-meter mark because I decided the run back to the box (what we call a Crossfit gym) was too much trouble and it was easier and more comfortable to go ahead and die there. It would be quite simple to just cheat and not complete all my reps or rounds, but for some reason, I rarely do. Donāt get me wrong ā I might accidentally cheat a rep or two here or there ā but I seem incapable of really letting myself off the hook. It may be that Iām afraid the Crossfit gods will catch me, send me to Hell, and program an eternity of āheroā WODs. And I aināt going there, buddy.
Young people. OK, I know that many people will say that at 47, Iām still a young man. But those people are, like, 92. My box is full of people who are actually young ā 20s and early 30s and such. I marvel at them. I was watching one young guy, Phil, doing burpees the other day with the strength of an Olympian and the finesse of a dancer. Ten or 20 at a time without slowing, bouncing off the floor and into the air with an arrogant defiance of gravity. By comparison, Iām like a six-foot-five-inch sack of dog food repeatedly crashing to the ground and struggling to re-animate itself back into an awkward standing position, topped off with a pitiful hop that wouldnāt clear an earthworm. Young people suck. I hate them.
Thrusters. Who the hell came up with this exercise, anyway?? Hitler? Thrusters involve doing a front squat ā often with heavy weight ā and then elevating into a push press at the completion of the squat. Rinse and repeat. Frankly, itās rude and uncalled for. Arenāt we already in here working our asses off when we could be home on the couch like normal people? Must you squash our very spirit, too?? If the punishment for crime was five years of 135-pound thrusters, I guarantee you, prisons would be unnecessary. There would be no crime.
The music. So, weāve established that there are young people in the box, right? Much to my displeasure, it seems that young people donāt want to work out to James Taylor, Dan Fogelberg, or ELO. Quite the contrary. Hip hop music seems to be the sonic driver of fitness these days, and itās actually educational. Yesterday, I learned some new words while doing hand-release pushups. Unfortunately, I canāt use these words unless Iām attending, perhaps, a drive-by shooting or a drunken frat party. (They might be a little harsh for the frat party, now that I think about it.)
āRounds-for-timeā WODs. As much as I try to convince myself that I donāt have much of an ego, I have to admit that I really do hate always being last. RFT WODs, if you donāt know, are a collection of movements and reps that are repeated over a set number of rounds, usually five, until completed. All participants start at the same time and finish, well, whenever they finish. By contrast, AMRAPs ā as many rounds as possible ā are completed within a specified time range, usually 15 or 20 minutes. Everybody starts AND finishes at the same time, recording their total rounds at the end on the whiteboard. I love AMRAPs. I love them because Iām not left there trying to complete my workout in desperation while others have long since finished, stretched out, showered, dressed, gone home, gotten married, had kids, grown old, and died.
Partner-carries. It is what it sounds like. As part of the WOD, you have to literally carry your partner some specified distance ā perhaps 200 meters. Iāve done this once. My partner was my trainer, Nick, who is 28 years old, 240 pounds, and built like Tarzan. Iām 235 pounds, NOT 28, and NOT built like Tarzan. We had to do a bunch of other crap before carrying each other 200 meters apiece, as if that wasnāt insanity enough. Iām not sure which was worse ā being the carrier or the carry-ee. Slung over Nickās back like a bag of garden mulch, his shoulder jammed into my already-upset stomach, I was being rattled to pieces, upside down, out of breath, trying desperately to hang on and not puke all over me and him both. At one pitiful point, Nick scooped me up in his arms like a gasping, gangling, bald-headed, white-bearded, Benjamin Button baby and ran down the busy street, cars passing with aghast faces peering out in shock and people deciding whether or not to call 911. It was one of my crowning moments, let me assure you.
The smells of the run. Most Crossfit boxes are in retail strip malls or in industrial areas. This makes running very interesting. My favorite parts are the smells I encounter along the way. On a 400-meter run, those of us at Crossfit Barefoot run a gauntlet of fragrances that waft from a Chinese restaurant, a Pep Boys auto shop, an exhaust-laden street, a pee-smelling highway overpass, and numerous dumpsters, cigarette depositories, and trashcans. I feel like Katniss in āThe Hunger Games,ā dashing to reach her bow in the cornucopia and not get slaughtered in the process, except my opponents are disgusting odors. Combined, these odors usually win. (By the way, you may enjoy this blog I wrote about attempting my first trail run. You decide: Daniel-Day Lewis or Jerry Lewis? Click here.)
Handstand pushups. When executing a handstand pushup, you literally stand on your hands with your feet overhead resting again the wall. Then, you lower your head to the mat and back up again, like a pushup. That is, if you can do them. You first must be able to āget on the wall.ā This is my problem ā getting on the wall. Call me an elitist, but I prefer to walk on my feet. Iāve been doing it all my life and Iām good at it. Iām not a gymnast and one look at me will confirm this to everyone except, perhaps, Stevie Wonder. Me trying to get on the wall resembles a gawky 4th-grade girl attempting cartwheels in a city park, the difference being that gawky 4th-grade girls can actually DO cartwheels. I have yet to complete a single handstand pushup, but Iāve certainly mastered the art of the failed attempt. Nailed it!
Encouragement. This, I know, sounds non-intuitive, but I really hate receiving encouragement. You see, when Iām the one offering the encouragement, itās usually because Iām impressed with the person and their performance. āHey, way to go, Alex! Great job!ā or āGood job, Andrea! Youāre killing it!ā But when others encourage me, I suspect itās because they are sad for me or they are truly afraid that I might die and they want me to go out on a positive note. āGood job, Mark! Weāll be sure to send your belongings home to your family members! Great work!ā Encouragement sucks.
Positive change. OK, I said these werenāt in order, but I actually saved this one for last because itās the worst. Iām here to tell you, if youāre considering taking up Crossfit, for Godās sake, DONāT! Itās an insidious trap, because much to your eternal horror, positive changes will enter your life despite your best efforts. Youāll lose weight, get stronger, start looking like Tarzan (guys), and literally feel better, which will piss you off. If youāre like many people ā my wife, for example ā youāll even enjoy the process itself and cherish the camaraderie and new friendships. And what will this mean?? Yep. You guessed it. Youāll have to keep doing it. More trainers, posted WODs, guilty consciences, disgusting young people, thrusters, hip hop, rounds-for-time, humiliating partner-carries, odor runs, thinly-veiled encouragement, and positive change. Itās a vicious circle. Run! Run while you still can!
Oh, and your do-gooder wife will keep telling you she told you so.
(I hate Crossfitā¦)”

