Ours is not a gym built of 20-somethings straight off of competition’s fields or olympic athletes preparing for for their next event.  Not that we don’t have fine athletes or fierce competitors, but our main clientele is more likely to be in their mid to late 30′s, married with kids.  That’s probably because Matt and I are in our late 30′s, coming up on 16 years of marriage with 2 kids.  The pluses to 20-somethings is that they haven’t got the wear and tear on their bodies yet that will slow them down later.  Hopefully, with training in CrossFit, they can avoid so many of the problems that plague those of us a shade older.  The pluses of being an older athlete, and if you train hard with us you ARE an athlete, is that you are usually more aware of your body and its abilities, strengths and weaknesses.  Each of us needs to be an active participant in keeping/getting our bodies in top shape and keeping them there.

2 weeks ago, I went to Austin to hear and learn from Kelly Starrett how we can be active in our own injury prevention and health.  Aches and pains, poor posture and poor mechanics in movement all add up to first, small aches and discomforts and then bigger problems until you’re not comfortable or able to do a movement in that new ‘sport’ that you’re doing over there at CFC.   The problem isn’t CrossFit, not to say that CrossFit or all trainers in CrossFit are infallible.  The problem is most often that CrossFit points out or highlights your problems.  It finds the weak point in your game, the hole in your armor.  That slumped forward position that you’ve had ever since you first started to sit at a computer for hours on end per day is damaging to your shoulders when you then attempt to take a bar over your head with regularity.  Believe it or not, but your thumbs are not supposed to point at each other when you stand.  Weird!  And swayed backs are not okay, even after carrying children or running for miles on end.

Getting functional and into top shape takes a multi-pronged approach to fix.  Firstly, if the issue is something that is a gross imbalance/tightness/weakness then there needs to be professional help in getting you out of the hole.  We, Matt and myself, have had dramatic improvement with Airrosti treatments with Dr. Doug Pendegrass.   As any of the CFC athletes who have worked with Dr. Pendegrass can attest, his is not a relaxing kind of massage help but a much more aggressive type of soft tissue therapy.  The plus to what he does is get in and get on with the fixing.  This leads to the second part of the fix – you HAVE to be a partner in your own healing.  You have to do your best to straighten up and walk tall and move smoothly.  Each workout should be preceded by and then followed by stretching, foam roller and lacrosse ball work.  The warm up and cool down processes listed on the board at the gym are the bare minimum.  If you do any of the prescribed movements and don’t feel truly stretched or warmed up then you need to do something…more.  Something bigger, different, greater than the prescribed warm up and stretches in order to make the improvements in your flexibility that you need to.  Each of us has different needs in every area and flexibility is no different.  Hunt for the tight muscle group and stretch it!  Static stretches shouldn’t be the only method that you use to increase your flexibility.  Utilize the foam rollers.  If you don’t know how to use them just ask!  Rest/skill days would be great for this.  Short workout days would be great for this.  Every day is great for this!  If the foam rollers aren’t doing the trick then get in that knotted muscle with a lacrosse ball.  Those are the hard, yellow balls usually residing in the red shelves.  If you can’t find them then ask where they are.  This isn’t rocket science folks.

Our bodies, as we age and as we push them harder and farther than generations before us need to be taken care of or they will shut us down.  Do your part for your health!

If you’ve read Matt’s blog post today you know its the 2 year anniversary of when he was fired from his corporate job.  Well…really we all were fired.   It is what it is and Bowne provided us with an good income, limited growth potential, great insurance and much needed vacation time away from them for 11+ years.

My take on the whole thing is this…we, each of us, are constantly weighing and evaluating the pros and cons of everything in our lives from the foods we eat to the relationships we maintain to the careers we pursue.  Am I getting more out of this in a positive than a negative?  We each have our tolerance levels for the various stressers in life and what we can put up with.  If what you get out of a particular thing isn’t enough to compensate you for your input then you can either stay and be unhappy or find a solution to the problem.  That is the case whether we’re talking about that slice of cake I had last night (and know I’ll pay for this week) or a job that supports your family but crushes your soul.  At some point a decision has to be made about what can and will be lived with.  Such is the beauty of free will and life in this great country (for now).

In regards to Matt’s corporate life and our decision to be a family in full support of his career, well, it was our choice to trade his time for a decent check and great insurance.  Over the years it got to be a really nice check and pretty good insurance and excellent vacation time and ultimately it was more stress than it was worth.  Oh well.

That’s where CrossFit comes in.  Prior to Matt being fired, we were more or less playing CrossFit.  Don’t get me wrong.  We loved it and everything about it but were so attached to that job and the thinking that keeps you settled for less that we just knew we couldn’t make it without that sized paycheck and the insurance and…and…and.  Truth be told I don’t know how we made it last year except through the love of a lot of folks.  My mom came through for us – like she’s always done and we can’t thank her enough for it – and clients helped us out.  Luck played into it a little and a lot.  Our kids are fantastic and were a huge motivator and source of clarity.  (Give a level headed 9 year old all the bullet points and pros and cons of an issue and ask what the right thing to do is and you’ll be surprised at how simple life can be.)

We work more and harder than ever before but the difference is that its 100% our choice and our business.  We’ve not settled for a job.  We’ve not settled to hold onto insurance.  Has it been scary?  Hell yeah!  Have there been months we’ve both thought it was more than we could handle and maybe we should both just go talk to the folks at the Harris County Sherrif’s Dept. to see about jobs?  Most definitely!  What’s kept us going during the lows has been the fantastic folks who train with us.  What makes it soo incredibly much fun and worthwhile when things are rocking are the folks who train with us.

I wouldn’t trade a moment of it for anything in the world.  If life is throwing career changes at you or threatens down-sizing in your near future…maybe its a sign that you are getting the opportunity to really look at what is important to you and what  honest to God makes you happy.  Maybe this is the break in the cycle that you’ve needed to finally just do it as they say at Nike.   Whether you go out on a limb and be your own boss or pursue that job that you always wanted to do but it wasn’t the “smart” thing here’s your chance.  Go for it and swing for the fences!

Happy Fired Day!

We would love to have more trainers.  More trainers = better attention for the clients = happy people all around.  Right?  Not necessarily so.  They have to be the right trainers.  Not just anyone will do.  That’s why we don’t just take someone walking through the doors with a regular certification looking for a j – o – b.  CF Champions isn’t just a business, it’s our life.  It matters who is coaching, who is training folks, who is assisting you and, right or wrong, we are emotionally invested in our clients.

Everyone of our trainers, with the exception of Matthew A., has been a client first, then a dear friend and then a trainer.  Not to make it sound like Matthew isn’t a dear friend, but he actually did come to us with resume in hand, already certified through CrossFit and A.C.E.   He really did have a resume it up and he was willing to train for months first to see if he liked us and if we liked him and, most importantly, the clients liked him.  He did, we did and they did.

Not to say we’ve been rock solid in bringing folks on but there have been very few trainer issues.  Thank goodness!  The biggest thing is finding folks who get that this is a small business really still in its infancy and who want to be a part of its growth.  We firmly believe that there is no greater purpose in life than to serve your fellow man.  That’s the goal.  That’s the ideal and that is the basis for everything we do.

We’re always looking for new trainers.

“I noticed the other day that not everyone at your gym is in shape.”

We hear this fairly regularly and I’m glad that folks walking through the door notice that.  They also notice that everyone is getting a great workout and making progress, but the conversations always lead back to how we don’t seem to screen out the out of shape athletes, the middle aged moms (that would be me, too!), the injured or rehabbing individuals.  No, we don’t and we won’t.  While CrossFit is hard, it is also doable for anyone.  I truly believe that!

I also believe what Coach Glassman said forever ago at our first certification in San Diego and it’s what he’s always been saying…

The CrossFit program is designed for universal scalability making it the perfect application for any committed individual regardless of experience. We’ve used our same routines for elderly individuals with heart disease and cage fighters one month out from televised bouts. We scale load and intensity; we don’t change programs.

Those words are what differentiates CrossFit from other programs.  The workouts that my kids do, that I do, that I would have my mother do if she were to train with us are the exact same aside from scaling.

*****************************************

All that other gym owner asked was if she could pay.  She didn’t have to fill out any info on her health or do any Elements sessions or anything.”

We’ve heard this one this week and many times before and the only thing we can say is that, again, CrossFit is not like any other gym.  We are not a franchise like any of the $10 – 30/month-do-what-you-want-but-preferrably-don’t-come-use-the -equipment gyms.  What we are is an independent business paying for the use of the CrossFit name, continuing our education as we see fit and as we feel is needed past the attainment of initial certifications and people looking out for the welfare of those who walk through our doors.  Helping you achieve your goals is important to us at CrossFit Champions.   That being said, we have no control over what another gym or affiliate does or does not do.  Coach Glassman believes in the free market principles strongly and feels that a person should have the opportunity to succeed or fail on their own merit versus him playing God and deciding, without knowing that person or their abilities, based on money or written test or connections, etc. who should be able to be an affiliate.  I can tell you that in the time we have been affiliates we have gone, through nothing we’ve done, from being around the 100th affiliate to the 80th.  What the stories are of the folks who have left the CrossFit community are, I don’t know.  But for whatever reason not everyone survives.

With that in mind, I am sorry that folks have had poor experiences with affiliates.  I’m sure there are folks who have had poor experiences with us.  Like I say in my “sales pitch”…CrossFit isn’t for everyone and you might walk away thinking we’re crazy but I believe anyone can do it.

Finding the right training home for you is what is important.

© 2010 p. e. munson Suffusion WordPress theme by Sayontan Sinha