We recommend three distinct approaches for beginning
CrossFit depending on your fitness experience and available
facilities.
1) If you are largely familiar with the stable of CrossFit
exercises then starting with the WOD (Workout of the Day) is
a perfect place to start. If you've had exposure to Olympic
weightlifting, powerlifting, and gymnastics this is the
recommended approach to beginning CrossFit. Where our
terminology or an exercise is unfamiliar you can immediately
acquaint yourself with the movement by finding the video
clip for the movement from our
exercises section of the site. This is often the best
starting approach for athletes with an extensive experience
in athletic strength and conditioning - jump right in.
2) If some or many of the exercises are unfamiliar to you
and you are only modestly acquainted with elite athletic
training then we recommend that you follow the WOD and
substitute other exercises for those where you don't have
either the equipment or skill and then devise a plan for
acquisition of the necessary skills or equipment needed to
participate completely. We are developing a Substitution
Chart in the
FAQ for replacing exercises for which you've not
developed the skills or don't have the equipment.
3) If many or most of the exercises are relatively or
completely unknown to you, then we recommend that you begin
learning the movements for a month or two until you can
either perform our common exercises or have substitutions
worked out for those movements under development. This is a
great place to begin for anyone with little or no experience
with serious weightlifting or gymnastics. We are developing
supplementary workouts designed to introduce our stable of
basic movements building towards the capacity to
productively follow the WOD with substitutions, and will
post that material here soon.
We are a "minimalist program" and this is reflected by the
functionality and limited number of our exercises and the
simplicity of the equipment we use compared to most
commercial gyms. An Olympic weight set and a place to do
pull-ups and dips is essential to doing CrossFit. Gymnastics
rings and parallettes, plyometrics boxes, a Dynamax medicine
ball, dumbbells, kettlebells, climbing rope, Concept II
Rower, and a glute-ham developer will equip your garage with
more than enough to follow the WOD very closely. (See
CrossFit Journal, September 2002, "The Garage Gym" for
information on building a world-class strength and
conditioning facility in your garage.)
In any case it must be understood that the
CrossFit workouts are extremely demanding and will tax the
capacities of even the world's best athletes. You would be
well advised to take on the WOD carefully, cautiously, and
work first towards completing the workouts comfortably and
consistently before "throwing" yourself at them 100%. The
best results have come for those who've "gone through the
motions" of the WOD by reducing recommended loads, reps, and
sets while not endeavoring towards impressive times for a
month before turning up the heat. We counsel you to
establish consistency with the WOD before maximizing
intensity.
The
Message Board is a great place to find technical help,
clear up confusions, or receive words of encouragement. One
regular commented that hanging out on the message board for
a week was more instructive than struggling with the WOD for
a year. Don't be shy!