Contact Us

Phone 1:  (617) 460-5999
Phone 2:  (617) 771-0626
Fax:          (617) 608-5144
Email:       service@againfaster.com

Join us on Facebook
Search
Again Faster Newsletter
Get The Again Faster Discount Newsletter

Login
« Taking Seconds | Main | The Sport of Fitness »
Tuesday
04Sep2007

The Evils of Undertraining

IMG_2171.JPG


If you’re not making progress at CrossFit, you’re not trying hard enough.  More specifically, you’re not trying often enough.

Coaches and athletes are quick to blame nutrition, sleep, and overtraining for lack of progress.  While these factors can certainly slow your journey to speed, strength, and power, I’d bet they aren’t the principal reason you’re still languishing in the CrossFit minor leagues.  You just don’t workout enough.

Contrary to the popular ideal, working out three days a week is a shitty path to fitness.  While a tri-weekly program will sustain weight loss, muscle size, and (perhaps) strength, it will not enhance recovery ability, metabolic capacity, and power output beyond set levels.

The name of the game, whether you’re a CrossFitter, a cyclist, or an Olympic weightlifter, is to train as hard as possible as often as possible.  This places ever-increasing stressors on the body and mind, forcing adaptation.  Training below this threshold—whether you’re sandbagging or just staying at home—causes stagnation or worse.

The rub in our formula—train as hard as possible as often as possible—is the word “possible”.  Fear of injury, general fatigue, and conventional wisdom dictate a cautious approach to training, causing athletes to underestimate the limits of possibility.  Forever training within the margins, they fail to make progress.  

Keep in mind that “as hard as possible” may vary from day to day, based on accumulated training load, but your perceived intensity must always be at 100%.  Simply, you need to give every ounce of your being every time you’re in the gym.  It may not result in world-record times every day, but it will result in progress.

“As often as possible” is easier.  Get out of bed and get to the gym at least five times a week.  The effects of consistency are absolutely astounding.  You’ll make progress, even if you neglect just about everything else.  I’ve seen this first-hand.  Those who climb the record boards at CrossFit Boston are those who show up.  They may drink their weekends away, supplement a solid Zone lunch with Twinkies, and sleep six hours a night, but in the end, they’re in the gym.  They have great gym days and bad gym days, but most importantly, they have gym days.

Next time you decide to skip your workout, don’t.  Get up and get your WOD done.  You’ll make progress—guaranteed.

Stewart shows his appreciation for another great workout at CrossFit Boston.

Reader Comments (4)

Nice article, Jon. There's a fine line between overtrainng and undertraining.

September 6, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterThor

Are you saying I'm not training hard enough or often enough? 'cause I'm pretty worn out evey time I leave Crossfit!

September 6, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterStewart

Stewart,

No hidden messages, buddy! You work plenty hard and often!

Best,

Jon

September 7, 2007 | Registered CommenterJon Gilson

Nice post Jon, as always!

September 12, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterDanny V

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>