How CrossFit Changed My Idea of Body Image

I’ll be the first to admit that, like any person, I’ve struggled with my body image. No matter how much we tell ourselves that we’re awesome (which, let’s face it, human bodies are a miracle unto themselves), the concept of “perfect” is constantly drilled into our heads through television, magazines, movies, blogs, etc.:

Women want to be thin and voluptuous at the same time. We want long legs, and we “need” the ever-coveted thigh gap. Men need to be muscular and have a body fat percentage below 10%. Only six-pack abs allowed!

Seriously, society?

CrossFit

Since starting CrossFit, though, I’ve noticed a definite 180* turnaround in the way I view “body image.” My focus isn’t on being supermodel thin–it’s a focus on health and strength and seeing my body achieve what I never thought it could. I’m about to tell you something that I never thought I’d hear myself say in my lifetime.

CrossFit is the only place where I’ve not been “proud” by how little I weigh. 

At CrossFit, what I’ve found important is building muscle, working to get stronger and faster, and eating to fuel your body, not losing pounds and looking thin.

Sweaty Run

One morning long before I broke my leg, my 5:15am class was working on dead lifts. I was still pretty new and struggling with the concept of “fighting for a lift.” In every other weight lifting class I’d ever taken, you were supposed to chose a weight you knew you could lift over and over–because you were going to be doing it for a long time, repeatedly.

In CrossFit, you work to get the highest weight you can for 5 reps, 3 reps, and even just 1 rep. This means you’re lifting heavier–but for much shorter periods of time.

Back to dead lifts. A CrossFit friend of mine who is always super encouraging, was rooting for me to try more weight since I always let myself off easy. So, for this class my goal was to dead lift at least my body weight. I got up to around 5# over my body weight, and it wasn’t that hard. When I told her my goal, she said something like, “Good job, but I know you can do more! You’re stronger than you think you are.”

Cute Cat

For some reason, the concept of “numbers on a scale” struck me instantly, and I realized that the pounds I’m lifting and the times my workouts take are far more important numbers than the ones on the scale. I also realized that if my *important* numbers are going to get better, the numbers on the scale will also go up as I build more muscle.

And I’m ok with that.

Sure, I still want my clothes to fit (because I’m not buying new ones–see my New Year’s resolution), but I’m not worried about whether I’m at the lowest weight I can be or the thinnest I can be. Heck, I’ve even come to appreciate all my legs can do for me–even if they are thick!

Splint Fashion

Thoughts on Thursday and More CrossFit

Sean and I were talking this morning, and we agreed that Tuesdays and Thursdays are kind of the losers of the week. There’s no excitement behind them. Monday’s the first day back to work, Wednesday marks the middle of the week, Fri-Sat-Sun is the glorious weekend, but Tuesday and Thursday don’t really have any claim to specialness. No one looks forward to those days because of their own merit (unless they don’t work Mon-Fri, I suppose).

Thursday It's Not Friday

(source)

Anyway, I skipped CrossFit this morning because my runner friends from work want to go on a 10-mile trail run tonight. I’m honestly a little nervous since the most I’ve run at one time recently was 7 miles, and it was 2 weeks ago. Today’s WOD was 15-9-3 front squats and chest-to-bar pull ups. I haven’t mastered the pull ups yet, so workouts like this always make me feel lame. I’m sure my legs will be crying tonight, so I’ll be glad I skipped the squats, though.

Speaking of CrossFit, I think I’ve become one of those who “drinks the Kool Aid.” My box posts the WOD every night at 8pm, and I always check it before going to bed. Even if I think to myself, “There’s no way in hell I can do this!” Or, “I’m going to be the last one finished!” I still feel like I need to go. I need to try it. I need to prove to myself that I can do those things I think I can’t.

It’s weird because, I’m not seeing huge drastic differences in the way my body looks (not that it was bad to start off with and after just a month and a half, I shouldn’t be seeing a drastic difference), but I am seeing huge leaps in what I can do. It’s a big deal that I push an extra 20 pounds over my head after just a month (shoulder press 55#). I know that’s not much to people who have been CrossFitting for years, but that seems amazing to me.

We’re going on a family vacation with Sean’s family sometime this summer, and I can’t wait to try out a new box when we’re there. I found 2 close to where we’re staying. It’s sad, but it’s true.

Anyway, I’m starting to ramble now, so I’ll leave you. I hope your Thursday gives you something to look forward to. Mine is a 10-mile run with friends who will hopefully understand how slow I am. :)

Happy One-Day-Closer-To-The-Weekend!

P.S. Don’t forget about the May HIIT and Plank Challenges!

March! And Phone Pranks

February is pretty much over already! I think the older you get, the shorter the years get. It was just Christmas! I’m going to bookmark this blog to remember to link back when it’s Christmas again (practically tomorrow), so I can remind you guys how quickly the year goes by.

Also, happy Thursday! Tomorrow I’ll recap on where I am with New Year’s Resolutions!

Have you guys seen this? A guy thinks it would be funny to text a random number saying, “I’m outside!” Except for the random number guy trumps his prank with an even better one. I had to share:

Best Phone Prank EVER