Why You May Not Be Seeing Results
more isn't better, BETTER is better.

training too much
This seems to be a recurring issue in a lot of gyms.
People are chasing results — whether it’s better conditioning, more endurance, increased strength, fat loss, or overall fitness — but they’re not actually recovering enough to get those results.
When you look back at the original CrossFit model, the recommendation was often:
- 3 days on, 1 day off
- sometimes 5 days on, 2 days off
- built-in recovery
- varied intensity
There was intention behind it.
Some days were heavy strength days.
Some days were conditioning-focused.
Some days were skill-based.
And sometimes the workout was literally centered around one movement, like a back squat.
There was separation between stressors.
Now fast forward to today.
More and more people are training 5, 6, even 7 days a week, constantly pushing intensity, constantly chasing exhaustion, and wondering why they feel stuck.
Part of the problem is what people think fitness is supposed to look like now.
They watch elite athletes online doing multiple training sessions a day and think:
“That’s what I need to do to get results.”
But you have to remember:
That’s their job.
They’re professional athletes.
Most people are not training for the CrossFit Games.
Most people are trying to:
- get healthier
- build strength
- improve longevity
- lose body fat
- feel better
- have more energy
That requires a different approach.
You have to account for:
- work stress
- family responsibilities
- sleep
- recovery
- nutrition
- overall lifestyle load
And if you’re not fueling yourself properly or recovering properly, all that extra training can actually slow progress down instead of helping it.
Not every workout should leave you lying on the floor.
That doesn’t mean training should be easy.
It means training should have purpose.
Every workout has a stimulus.
A good coach should explain that stimulus clearly and help athletes stay within it.
If the workout calls for an RPE 7 and you turn it into a 9 or 10 every single day, you’re missing the point.
Intensity only works when it’s managed correctly.
More is not always better.
Better is better.
For most people, the key to getting results isn’t doing more.
It’s recovering better, training smarter, and staying consistent long enough for the process to actually work.
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