From the Archives: Dedication
Tuesday, March 31, 2009 at 10:46AM 
You think you know pain, but you have no idea. The heart thumping, chest expanding, lactic acid burn of your last workout was a walk through the meadow.
Somewhere, there’s a guy who did it in half the time it took you. He suffered. Plasma forced its way into his lungs, causing him to hack on repeat. He choked down bile halfway through, and ended on his back, pupils dilated to the size of dimes.
While you were walking around, telling your friends how hardcore your workout was, Guy Number Two was still collapsed, the prospect of driving home as daunting as climbing K2 during a snowstorm.
When he finally stood up, he didn’t say a word.
CrossFit is a decidedly masochistic pursuit. To be any good at it, you have to enjoy the pain. You have to push back the threshold day after day, until last year’s traumas feel like an hour-long rubdown at the Canyon Ranch. One day, you find a threshold that takes the whole thing just a little too far, and you get scared to go back.
The men and women that decimate your times are not superhuman. They’re not particularly genetically gifted. Hell, most of the top CrossFitters in the world would get absolutely pummeled in your standard game of rugby, buried by larger athletes begat by larger parents.
What differentiates these individuals is not a gift, but an unreasonable desire to push self-imposed suck beyond its logical limits. What comes out the other side becomes legendary.
Like any human pursuit, we seek ways around the hard part. Limited range of motion and new techniques. Dropping the deadlift from the top, bouncing it off the floor. Squatting above parallel and not standing up all the way. Chicken-necking above the chin-up bar, and reviewing the tape to see if we made it.
We want the reward (speed) without the sacrifice (pain).
This is not conscious cowardice. It’s pure out-and-out rationalism. Atsomepoint, the next threshold is the one that takes it too far, leaving us in an exercise-induced hallucination that lasts a few moments too long. Our hearts bounce around our insides for one beat too many, and our lungs beg to explode for an unwanted extra second. Every exhalation coincides with a constriction of vision, and the cold taste of copper.
No sane human being would enjoy such a feeling.
Still, the glory beckons. Surely, with enough training and the right supplements, there’s a way around the Hard Part. Enough sleep and enough vitamin B will get you the sub-whatever time without the attendant pain. There’s no need to redline your heart rate or pop capillaries. No need to ache so badly at night that you can’t sleep. Surely, there are ways around this.
Fortunately, the steroids are a no-go, and the exercises are done correctly or not at all. The only way to legend is through ever-mounting piles of pain. The meadow has to tilt at 45-degrees, and he rubdown at the Ranch must be done with Brillo Pads. If you can talk, you’re not trying hard enough. If your nerves aren’t frayed and ready to rebel, you’ll never get there.
Do yourself a favor, and realize that there’s no technique in the world that will save you. There are no pills, no secrets, no passwords on the path to greatness. You’ve got to embrace the pain, push the threshold, and feel the suck, and then you’ve got to muster the courage to go back six times a week.
After all, the world is a lot brighter when your pupils are the size of dimes, and massaging your sternum with your heart starts to feel good after a while. The plasma finds its way out of your lungs, and eventually you’ll be able to drive.
Sometimes, lying on the floor is its own reward.
Dave Castro takes his kettlebell for a walk. Picture courtesy of CrossFit.com.
Jon Gilson |
9 Comments | 

Reader Comments (9)
This was exactly how I felt after doing Fran at the Crossfit level 1 cert.
Now I know you knew exactly how I felt and that I would be fine.
Thanks for checking up on me that day :-)
Awesome article!!! Good description of what it feels like to push yourself to limits. Its all worth it in the end.
GET SOME!!!
Um... I think Dave Castro is pictured here walking 2 kettlebells.
Unbelievable!
Another AWESOME article Jon! You don't stop amazing me! Keep writing buddy, I can't wait for the next one.
I think that the day a Crossfit Athlete learns to push themselves to this place, when they learn to push past that threshold and to not be scared of it, is as big a landmark in their training as getting a muscle-up or learning how to squat. And I think many trainers/athletes would agree with me. I, personally have just learned how to really put myself in the "hurt locker" as Speal calls it. Nothing seems hard after that.
Wow ... pushing it to the limit had a new meaning now.
im glad this article has been reposted... ive probably read this at least 20 times. its def awesome
Sometimes i don't think I can eat another 12 glazed Krispy Kremes, or finish that next bucket of chicken. But this has inspired me.
No more rationalism, those donuts won't be as good tomorrow, the chicken won't be the same in the morning. Thank-you, I will keep pushing.
You can do it, Joel! Again Faster believes in you!