Must See Video
We are coming into week three of the Touchstone CrossFit Program, and I am starting to see some improvements already from some of you who have been coming regularly; I see a few kool-aid drinkers are amongst us already.
I encourage you to keep taking it easy for a few more weeks, go slow, keep something in reserve, learn the movements, work on form, watch lots of video of CF athletes.
That being said, in a few weeks, when I feel some of you are ready for it, I am going to start pushing you a bit, to simultaneously improve form and intensity.
Some excellent examples of the intersection of form and intensity can be found here:
Note the absence of form breakdown, despite what is, by any standard, a nearly superhuman effort.
and here:
This is worth watching all the way through. Note Annie is able to breeze through this with near-perfect form. Nicole, however, is at the limits of her ability and experiences severe form breakdown at the end; however her effort is nothing less of inspiring, and the breakdown is not a result of less focus and effort than she can muster, but of having nothing more to give.
From AGAINFASTER.COM:
The Non-Negotiability of Perfection
CrossFit is the pursuit of athletic perfection--performing difficult workouts with technical mastery under conditions of duress. We're looking for flawless form with a jackhammering heart, bursting lungs, and battery acid-filled veins.
When this is accomplished with unyielding intensity, the result is nothing short of beautiful. When we fall short of the mark, the result is horrifying at best.
Athletes often set up a false dichotomy between perfect form and intensity, assuming that as one increases the other must necessarily fall. This idea is a thinly disguised excuse for athletic complacency. Rather than revisit proper technique through low-intensity, low-excitement skill work, the athlete chooses to pursue personal records with diminished form. The unstated reason for this choice: it's easy on the ego to put up "good" WOD times. Taking a hit to your "Fran" time in order to perform perfect thrusters is not going to move you up the records board--at least not right away--and the blow to the ego is too much to bear.
In reality, form and intensity are not mutually exclusive, but the non-linearity of their relationship leads novice athletes to the wrong conclusion. For the novice, maintaining form becomes a cruel joke as intensity increases, leading to the erroneous conclusion that the two cannot coexist. Advanced athletes believe the opposite. These athletes recognize that continuous high-intensity work is nearly impossible without strict attention to form. The advanced athlete knows that perfect form is perfect for a reason: it imparts structural advantages that poor form does not.
Take the thruster as an example. Performed poorly, the movement relies on the small muscles of the anterior shoulder to support the weight at lockout. These muscles fatigue extremely quickly, leaving the athlete with reduced capacity in short order. When the thruster is performed well, the weight is supported by the large, hard-to-fatigue muscles of the posterior chain, allowing the form-conscious athlete to continue at peak power long after his sloppy brethren have stopped to rest.
The advantages of good form are not isolated to the thruster. Clear structural advantages can be had in the majority of our movements if one chooses to pursue perfect form. Most of these advantages are based on the physics of power transmission, specifically the fact that it is easier to send power through a rigid structure than through a limp one.
Squatting provides a wonderful illustration. The squat utilizes power from the hip to propel the torso through a complete range of motion. If the spine is rounded and the torso is loose, power is lost and the torso becomes difficult to move. If the spine is kept in a neutral or arched alignment and the torso is rigid, as proper form dictates, power flows freely and the load is easy to move. Nonetheless, we'll often see novices blasting through flaccid, rounded-back squats, heedless of the power-draining effect of their substandard form.
Condoning bad form for the resulting intensity ignores the big picture. In doing so, we rob our athletes of their long-term potential, artificially capping their progress in the name of immediate gratification. An athlete with poor form and an ugly three-minute "Fran" will always have an ugly three-minute "Fran", while a similar athlete with good form will soon find himself pushing the limits of possibility, utilizing the structural advantages of the perfect thruster to close in on two minutes.
For the CrossFitter, perfection should be non-negotiable, regardless of the near-term outcome. Progressing to the elite level--heart jackhammering, lungs bursting, and records falling--depends on it.
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