The Heart of America 4 competition included 5 workouts over 3 days that were unknown to the competitors beforehand. Each team was comprised of 3 men and 3 women. When we arrived, the first workout was announced. All six athletes on each team had 5 minutes to do as many rounds of the following exercises: 5 overhead squats, 10 kettebell swings, and 15 double-under jump ropes. This may sound pretty hard or complicated, but to the average Crossfitter, these were perfectly reasonable requests. We had trained on these exercises and felt pretty confident we could do it. The rest of the weekend included lots of other difficult tasks, but we did it all and came away with a great sense of community, accomplishment and team work. It was really hard, but really fun. We had some successes and some failures. The most touching moments came when our female athletes struggled with new movements and weights they had never done before, but kept going and going until the clock stopped. Even though we struggled, these were our biggest bonding moments of the weekend as we hugged each other and shed a few tears for the disappointment all the while congratulating our athletes for the effort.
One thing I really love about Crossfit, is that there is no defined body type of a crossfitter yet everyone has to do the same workout. I'm a bit stocky at 5'9" and 180lbs, but two of the guys on our team were well over 6 feet tall. One of our female athletes is barely 5 feet tall and 100lbs. Some of the women on other teams were nearly 6 feet tall and stronger than many of the men. But through our experience of Crossfit, we all approached every workout with the same attitude: "OK, I can try this." Certain body types do play to certain strengths and weaknesses, but the goal of Crossfit is to be well-rounded and capable no matter what you are asked to do. I think this translates well into mental health and life in general. Our lives are unpredictable. You never know what surprise, joy, or tragedy is coming around the next corner. Every human has their own strengths and weakness, personality types, and experiences. If you have never tried something, you are going to be afraid of it. If you have never allowed yourself to experience failure, you become mentally stuck and sell yourself short of your true potential. But if you approach life with the attitude of a Crossfitter, things can be very different. What am I afraid of? Let's go do it. What is my weakness? Let's work on that. What have I accomplished so far? Maybe I can do even more. Crossfit helps the individual become more prepared for the unknown and the unknowable. It helps you become confident that you can get through adversity.
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library.crossfit.com/free/pdf/CFJ_Trial_04_2012.pdf
heartofamericacrossfitthrowdown.blogspot.com