Sure, but once you’ve conceded that yes, CrossFit has an unusual increased risk of a disorder both deadly and detrimental to fitness, then you need to deal with objections that CFers would be better off with the next alternative
This is news to me and of relevance to my exercise choices. Is it the consensus of all the people on lesswrong who have the name ‘gwern’ that following CrossFit’s workout of the day routine is on net detrimental and to be avoided in favour of something else?
Haha no way. I hadn’t even heard of rhabdo or CrossFit before I noticed this thread. I just read the article and realized it was a great showpiece for one of the rare circumstances where anecdotes can actually be informative.
Haha no way. I hadn’t even heard of rhabdo and CrossFit before I noticed this thread. I just read the article and realized it was a great showpiece for one of the rare circumstances where anecdotes can actually be informative.
Thankyou for explaining. Your reputation as an independent researcher is such that if you had researched the subject I’d just take your word for it. The expected value of information would have to be damn high before it would be worth looking into it myself to confirm. And even then my first thought would be “Value of information is high? Hire gwern at his going rate to do a more thorough analysis.”
From my experience (anecdotal observation) is that with Crossfit what the participant brings into it largely determines what they take out of it. Now perhaps not all Crossfit boxes(gyms) share the same culture. But where I go there is a focus on form and scaling of workouts. Also those that are serious about progressing know how to hold back because rhabdo would destroy their(my) work and gains. Those who have no real goal except some loose idea of improved fitness and health never seem to push themselves hard enough to do damage. I’d say rhabdo would take a unique kind of desire to win over the pain to achieve.
Just to brag and promote: after a year of CF I’ve gained 6kg~ of muscle mass from 78kg to 84kg at 185cm. Crossfit is a tool to achieve fitness goals it doesn’t provide the goals or the motivation just the means exercise both.
This is news to me and of relevance to my exercise choices. Is it the consensus of all the people on lesswrong who have the name ‘gwern’ that following CrossFit’s workout of the day routine is on net detrimental and to be avoided in favour of something else?
Haha no way. I hadn’t even heard of rhabdo or CrossFit before I noticed this thread. I just read the article and realized it was a great showpiece for one of the rare circumstances where anecdotes can actually be informative.
Thankyou for explaining. Your reputation as an independent researcher is such that if you had researched the subject I’d just take your word for it. The expected value of information would have to be damn high before it would be worth looking into it myself to confirm. And even then my first thought would be “Value of information is high? Hire gwern at his going rate to do a more thorough analysis.”
From my experience (anecdotal observation) is that with Crossfit what the participant brings into it largely determines what they take out of it. Now perhaps not all Crossfit boxes(gyms) share the same culture. But where I go there is a focus on form and scaling of workouts. Also those that are serious about progressing know how to hold back because rhabdo would destroy their(my) work and gains. Those who have no real goal except some loose idea of improved fitness and health never seem to push themselves hard enough to do damage. I’d say rhabdo would take a unique kind of desire to win over the pain to achieve.
Just to brag and promote: after a year of CF I’ve gained 6kg~ of muscle mass from 78kg to 84kg at 185cm. Crossfit is a tool to achieve fitness goals it doesn’t provide the goals or the motivation just the means exercise both.