| | | | |

Why is mental fitness important in CrossFit?

In the CrossFit world, we tend to think of mental fitness as merely mental toughness. That usually boils down to two things: the ability to pick up the barbell one second earlier than you’d want, or the ability to go through long grinds of highly metabolically challenging workouts designed by someone trying to be the Dave Castro of our lives. In other words, we think of mental fitness as the ability to suffer.

Yet, in your pursuit of physical fitness, your mental game is much broader - and just as important.

Understanding the purpose and objectives of a given workout, analyzing your own behaviors and movement patterns, knowing what to prioritize in training, understanding your nutritional needs beyond a macro breakdown, consuming information, programs, and supplements critically are all fundamental parts of getting you fitter and shredded AF. 

All of these are mental or cognitive skills. They’re all encompassed by your ability to perceive and process information, to convert information into knowledge, to understand and employ your emotions, to orient toward a clear sense of purpose, to manage your time and resources and, of course, in some small percentage, to be mentally tough.

Get this: to maximize physical fitness you must optimize mental fitness.

And no, I am not saying you need to be able to prove the Galois Theorem while quoting Robert Musil and explaining the Lombard's paradox to your mom (are those references obscure enough?). What I mean is that in order to be the most well-rounded athlete you can be, you must be able to make excellent decisions both on the fly and under stress. 

You must have the critical thinking ability to discern if a given supplement actually works for you or not; if your relationship with your coach is hindering you more than helping you; or if pushing through an injury is the right or wrong decision at that moment of your life. 

All these instances of your fitness journey require that your mind is honed, as well trained as your quads, and as flexible as your shoulder. Well, maybe more flexible than the average CrossFitter’s shoulder, but you get the point. How much you can suffer through a workout - while important under a specific set of circumstances - will not help you all the time.

The ability to pragmatically assess your situation at any given time and make the right choices based on all the knowledge you’ve gathered during and outside your training sessions - in essence, to be mentally fit - is just as important as your physical preparedness. 

The cool thing is that, just like you can train and develop your physical fitness, you can train and develop your mental fitness and improve your mindset. Solving cognitive problems requires energy. It is an energetic bio-process and just as you can become more efficient at any movement, you can become more efficient at being smart. There is hope, people! 

Just like you would do in training, you can push your cognitive limits beyond your current baseline to learn faster, reason better, make better decisions, and be more efficient with your cognitive resources. 

On top of that, if you learn how to be vulnerable and accept that we all are emotional biological beings, then your mental game will strengthen exponentially. What I see with my athletes is that when they move from trying to not be/get too emotional to expecting emotions and analyzing them, then they start making better decisions. 

I see it all the time with male athletes and Olympic lifting, often they are scared, and they have a hard time understanding that emotion. It is not that they are faking it or covering it. It is just that they have been culturally raised to deny it. 

Yet, if you think about it for a second, it is only natural your body produces the signal of fear when performing snatches or jerks. Throwing a heavy metallic object on top of your head putting yourself in a position that demands lots of flexibility and balance can be dangerous.

Understanding that this can create a lot of fear, even if just in your body, is fundamental. It will guide your training to create skills and strategies to feel safe. For example, learning how to drop a barbell or developing strength and flexibility in the specific ranges of motions. The athlete that cannot understand or even detect this fear will always find other ways to explain why his Olympic lifts lack, which slows the whole process down. 

When the athlete embraces that emotions are just a way our bodies perceive external phenomena then you can more effectively deal with those emotions and improve your mental game.  And this, my friend, will bring you to, believe it or not, a faster Fran time--which is all that matters, after all. 

Now you are probably thinking: “Okay, cool, but where do I start?” Anywhere! Keep in mind that just like in physical training we have different domains that guide our training, in mental fitness we do too. Here are six areas, based on Dr Gareth Furber’s domains of mental fitness, that might help you understand how this works. 

MENTAL FITNESS DOMAINS*

  • Positive emotion and the ability to understand and regulate negative emotions
  • Sense of identity or purpose
  • Ability to modify your environment to achieve your goals
  • Memory and the ability to find, store and organize relevant information
  • Decision-making 
  • Concentration power

For now, just pick one of these six domains. Choose the one that calls your attention for any reason and start working on it. 

Get your mind super fit! 

*Loosely based on this: https://blogs.flinders.edu.au/student-health-and-well-being/2018/04/09/domains-mental-fitness/




If you liked this post, you will love these...

Similar Posts

  • | | |

    Two Brains: Short Term vs. Long Term

    Somebody more intelligent than me pointed that we never fully understand anything. What we do is we go one step back in the line of causality. That step back gives a sense of ease and brings us calm. The more I study neuroscience, the more I agree with that view. Today's video is one example of what that means. When making a choice, do you ever feel like you have two brains? ... Well, neuroscience kind of says you do. However, my aim isn't to give the step back but to use that description to improve your decision-making process in the future.Okay, okay, alcohol is complicated, and I wish the answer were that simple. In today's video, I try to embrace its full complexity. I present some ideas I consider valuable when thinking what's the role that alcohol should play in your lifestyle. If you like this video or this topic, make sure to check the references below.

  • | |

    Positive Habits of Mind

    You see, Mindset is one of those concepts that has become very popular and because of that, it has lost specificity. It is often vague. On top of that, our ideas around it come from academia, especially from the Psychology departments -although not exclusively. This means that we often look at it from one of two points of view 1) a very superficial one; or 2) a pathological one. The first case is represented in the average daily use. When a person says mindset most of the time they just mean attitude. When Henrick tells me: “Juan I went to that meeting with the right mindset, I was ready to crush it.” That’s not a mindset, it is an attitude. The second case means that we have become very good at identifying mindsets that are unproductive. We have identified general trends and their negative consequences. In other words, we are better at understanding the commonalities among the mindsets of people with poor ones, than among those who have good ones. All together, this means that when it comes to Mindset we need a little bit of a Francine attitude in the world. We need to be positive and specific. Just tell people what to do! This post is for you Francine. Let’s do this.

  • | | |

    Functional Fixedness

    However, because we humans clearly cannot have nice things, the term has been bastardized, oversimplified, and not problematized enough. When Henrick laughs at my suggestion of doing curls, he is just repeating a learned behavior. It is common in the functional world to look at other forms of training and think they are poor, vain, or irrelevant. On the one side, this is how every culture is created, by creating an other to separate from. That’s how we define our existence as a thing. On the other hand, this attitude is the representation of a very bad case of functional fixedness (FF). Think of this as a bad habit of the mind, a way of thinking that hinders more than helps, and that in the case of Henrick will limit his performance and his movement capacity. The purpose of this post is to explain to you what FF is so that you can catch yourself in this trap, and do something about it.

  • | |

    Training Hard

    We all love to train hard. We love the feeling of working our asses off, yet I think training hard, truly training hard, is greatly misunderstood. Hours of media featuring Energy Drinks, Athletic Shoes, and awesome-sports-movies-action-montages has lead us to confuse training hard with intensity. We have this image in our head that training hard is finishing a workout sweaty and gassed, lying on the floor looking up at the ceiling like somebody just punched us in the face and stole all our money while quoting Jame Joyce. That outcome turns out to be  fairly easily achieved: just do 50 burpees as fast as you can without stopping... it will take you less than 5 minutes and if you really commit to not stopping you will finish on the ground regretting life.

  • | | |

    Building Confidence

    Confidence is not an end-point. Confidence is based on habit -the folks at Harvard Business Review have it right. You see, the main thing is that confidence is the trust you have in yourself. It is not how much you weigh, or your marathon time. Roger is not waiting to win the Olympic gold to feel confident, on the other hand, he might win it because he is. Your weight or your marathon time will not give you confidence. Trust is not built on one particular outcome. Trust is built on regular delivery.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *