Its been a while since my last post. I have been very busy, which is an incredibly awesome thing! With Regionals just around the corner for me I have been focusing on being ready for that but with my eyes on the Games. My goal is to get 1st place but I know that all I can do is push my body to the limit and let the cards fall. With that being said I am very confident in what my Coach Brian Mackenzie of Crossfit Endurance has been able to do with me this year. I am a completely different athlete in many ways. First off, since mid to late January I have dramatically reduced my overall intake on my nutrition. For those of you familiar with the Zone, I went from about 18-20 blocks per day to 13 blocks a day plus a Post Workout Recovery shake from Stronger Faster Healthier which is pretty much just protein along with amino acids and a few other things to assist in recovery. The shake consists of about 20g of protein or 3 blocks. So my total intake daily is at 16 blocks. I went from 205# to 185# in a matter of a couple months. My energy has not dropped but the exact opposite. I am thriving more than ever in my workouts and my strength numbers are extremely close if not better than before. Not to mention EVERYTHING has improved. The biggest changes in me have been that I now enjoy running, rowing, and am KILLING body weight movements. More details on my drastic body changes and my increase in performance and training after Regionals. For now, just enjoy my video of Amanda from the other night. 3:45! I will take that. My last performance was at the 2011 SoCal Regionals where I got 6:09 due to a bar dropped on my shins and multiple no-reps on the turn out of my muscle up at the bottom (which I think is an erroneous rule since I don’t use a false grip). My previous best was 4:11 so thats a pretty decent PR. Just SPREADING THAT BUTTER!
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Guest Speaking
On Sunday, February 19th, 2012 from noon to 4:30pm I will be speaking at Crossfit Inland Empire in Mira Loma, California. I was invited by my good friend Paul Castenada, owner of Crossfit IE, to come out to speak to their athletes as well as anyone else interested in attending. I will be talking about all things Crossfit. From my journey from Fat to Fit to my experience in the 3 Crossfit Games that I competed in along with the differences in all 3 (2008, 2009, & 2011). I will also be discussing how I have balanced my life with being married, having 2 kids along the way, running the box, and keeping my sanity. There will be plenty of time for an open floor of Q&A. I am an open book and enjoy sharing my experience and my struggles in my almost 5 years of Crossfit with everyone.
The goal of this gathering is to share what I have learned and get people pumped up and ready for the 2012 Reebok Crossfit OPEN. I would like to extend the invitation to all who would like to come and listen to me chat about Crossfit and finish up with a great Workout with me. If you have any questions please let me know. Thanks for following me. I will continue to do all that I can to better myself in every aspect of life. Here is the link to the “Being a Badass: – with Jeremy Kinnick” by the way I did not pick out that name. They had Katie Hogan of Valley Crossfit come out and speak to their women. It went so well that they invited me out. I am more than honored and feel very privileged to be able to inspire and help others reach their goals.
Crossfit is Hard
Crossfit is hard. But “hard” is relative. There are more normal, average, getting in shape people doing Crossfit than there are BEASTS destroying times and moving crazy heavy loads. Those crazy Beasts are what most people want to be one day but the reality is no one starts off as one. I wish we could dispel all the false beliefs that say Crossfit is only for the Elite or the Monster athletes. Crossfit is for those people but its also for grandmothers and grandfathers. Blue collar and white collar workers. Teachers, students, husbands and wives. Crossfit is for you if you want to be healthy and fit. If you want to challenge yourself and see real results. I love when new people walk in the door with the idea that they CAN’T do Crossfit because they haven’t worked out in years or ever. I love helping them realize they can do it.
**Pictured about is my mom. She has been Crossfitting since mid 2007 and is a very busy Grandmother of 6 so far. She fits it in when she can and we make the work outs challenging for her. She is closing in on 60 years old and doing just remarkable!
Ask Jeremy
Back by popular demand. Had a few people ask me to bring this back. I get asked on a regular basis different questions regarding my training, my background, my nutrition, who I train with and other various questions like what gear I prefer and so forth. None of it is set in stone but it is consistent, if that makes sense. Meaning that I am always learning and changing for the better. As my body changes and improves so does my training and nutrition. There are some constants with what I odo. Here is your chance to shoot me a question about anything you are wondering about. I will answer any and all questions to the best of my ability. Thanks for checking out my site and I hope its helpful.
Q & A: How did you get where you are today? (re-posted)

Photograph by Mary Siani Photography @ 2011 Reebok Crossfit Games
Before Crossfit November 2006 weighing around 235#s
QUESTION:
“Jeremy,
Your blog is so sick bro! I’ve found a lot of helpful tips and great motivation through your posts. My question to you is how did u do it? I have seen your before and after pictures and I see that you have achieved great results and have became a great crossfit athlete. How do I follow your steps? I am a college student and I hope to qualify for the games one day in the future. What can I focus on to one day get to where you are at? How do I get deeply involved in the crossfit community to learn from the best in every modality? I just want to learn and get better everyday. Thanks man and i’ll really appreciate it if you take time to answer this.
Juan”
ANSWER:
Juan,
Thanks for the question bro! I love answering this one. 🙂
How did I do it? One day at a time bro. Seriously. It all started with just doing it. Taking it one day after the other. Not looking for anything amazing or special just trying to lose weight and get fit & healthy. No more no less. The lifestyle I was living wasn’t a healthy one. I wasn’t exercising or eating right. I didn’t take care of myself but more importantly I really had no clue how to take care of myself. When my bro asked if him and his friends could start working out in my garage I just wanted to get back in shape. I had no expectations of achieving anything more than just not being fat and unhealthy. In fact, at that time the Crossfit Games didn’t exist. Lucky for me Crossfit is the greatest thing in the world and actually works so I saw amazing results.
That first year of Crossfit was pretty inconsistent. We were very new to it and it hadn’t really become an obsession yet. I struggled at everything and my brother and his friends beat me a lot at first. I got tired of that pretty quickly and slowly started pushing myself. My wife and I started doing the Zone but again we weren’t that consistent. I did, however, lose a bunch of weight, which made bodyweight movements much easier. I slowly became more consistent as the year went on. My first FRAN was rx’d out of a rack and took 17:22. But a month later I crushed that PR with a sub 9 minute effort. We were so new to all the movements that it took so much longer to learn them-like the olympic lifts, power lifts, and technical stuff like double unders & muscle ups. We affiliated in November of 2007 but I had nothing to do with training anyone. I helped our friends and family out when I worked out but nothing more than that. We used to workout late at night around 9pm-11pm in the garage with yelling and screaming and groaning. We didn’t play any music for some reason though. I am pretty sure my neighbors hated me but were afraid of us so they never said anything. By the time the end of the year rolled around we started thinking about getting a box and I started thinking about getting Level 1 certified.
The 2008 Games are nearing and we all wanted to go but my wife was 8 months pregnant and we weren’t very good. But anyone who signed up could go and compete so a large group from the gym decided to head up. I wasn’t one of those people planning on going for a bunch of reasons. Wife was 8 months pregnant, we were broke so we had no money for a hotel room, etc. The night before my brother, Jonathan, somehow convinced my wife that she should come and sit in the back of a Motorhome for 9 hours to get to Aromas, Ca and watch us all compete in the dirt and heat of the 2008 Crossfit Games. Haha I still have no clue how that happened. So we packed up and we were off. I owe all my success to my bro for being my sugar daddy and always taking care of me and always making sure I have what I need to prepare myself for competition, my wife for being more supportive that humanly possible, and my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for blessing me with my ability to suffer and endure more pain than people are supposed endure.
We had no idea what we were getting into when we went to the 2008 CF Games. It was one of the biggest life changing moments and has directed me to the point I am at today. Being around all those athletes that I had learned from and seen in videos and getting obliterated by them. It sparked something in me that I didn’t know existed. I told myself and my bro that if I got serious about my nutrition and worked hard I could beat those guys. The rest well, as they say is history. I took everything serious from that moment on.
The key to my success has always been the basics. Focusing on RANGE OF MOTION & TECHNIQUE. Not rushing to get a good time or to pick up heavy weight. Spending time learning the movements and being smart about it. I have never been the best at anything. But I have always been pretty darn good at practically everything. That has stayed true with my Crossfit Career. I am not the strongest or fastest or most skilled athlete but I work on what I struggle with and work very hard. I am honest with myself and with what I need work on. My secret is nutrition. I believe that everything that I do matters. I never cheat or cut a rep short. I have always held myself to a higher standard than others. I am willing and ready to suffer and endure day in and day out. You must come to terms with that. Be a student of the sport. Read and re-read the crossfit journal articles. Watch the videos over and over and over again. Understand whats important. Be efficient with your movement. Tap into your fear and anger and use it. Get crazy and yell when it hurts but don’t stop. When you dry heave just keep going. Teach your body that your mind is in control and you will keep going. This doesn’t happen overnight but slowly implement this and be sure to REST. I workout 3 on 1 off, 2 on 1 off. Thats been my schedule for 90% of my Crossfit career. If I’m destroyed I will rest or take it easy. I’ve rarely done multiple workouts in a day. Just go as hard as you can on your workout and spend time working on skills and technical stuff. The faster you recover the more you can do and get out of what you do.
The best way to get connected with community is just to get involved in it. Figure out what you can bring to it and do it. Get to know and become friends with Crossfitters worldwide. Volunteer and judge if possible any and all events in your area. Make Crossfit your life and your passion and others who are like-minded will gravitate to you. Study the Crossfit Endurance site & videos, Study the Crossfit Gymnastics videos, and all the other free stuff out there. Contact them with questions and send out videos to them. Get involved at your local box. There is so much you can do Juan. Just have to start doing it.
I really hope I answered your questions Juan. If you want to know what I have done specifically as far as workouts and extra work over the years visit my Beyond the Whiteboard profile page and you can see every single workout that I have done since starting Crossfit in mid 2007. I have followed Main Site programming and thinks its a valuable tool for everyone. Take care bro and get after it!
Before I go though I will go back to what I said at the beginning. You just have to keep going. No one becomes amazing at anything overnight or in 3 months. We all have different backgrounds in athletics and different genetics and so forth. It has taken me over 4 years of Crossfit to get where I am today and I have busted my butt the whole way. Sure I have some background in sports with growing up and playing my entire childhood and early adulthood but so have so many others. The difference is I never stopped moving forward. Nose down and go bro. Don’t come up for air for awhile. Stay focused and get after it. Don’t worry about the numbers everyone else is putting up. Just make yourself better everyday.


