Garbage

Eric Karls • October 23, 2024

Change The World

A plastic bag filled with wires is sitting on the ground.

Garbage


Last week I wrote about my take on “75 Hard” after 1 week. Something I left out was how much it was like CrossFit. Anyone doing either, talks about it constantly! I’m no exception. 😊


Part of the challenge is 2 – 45 workouts every day, one being outside. The majority of my second outdoor workouts have been walks. I thought I was going to hate this, but I have come to actually enjoy and look forward to them. It just takes some planning/organization of my day to fit them in.


I started these walks by doing 200m laps around the gym, trying to kill two birds with one stone and post something on social media while walking. That didn’t go so well, so I expanded my loops and found myself all around the Fayette mall area.


During these expanded walks, I noticed garbage, garbage EVERYWHERE! What the fuck?!?! Now I have always noticed it to a degree, but walking by it daily and at a much slower pace than driving, makes it even more evident to how bad it is.


Two things then come to mind:

1.    Who the fuck is leaving this garbage everywhere?

2.    Who is responsible for cleaning it up?


I don’t know the answer to #1, or #2 for that matter, but what I do know is I hate when someone complains about something and does nothing to try and fix it. So, if I’m walking every day, I might as well pick up the garbage as I go. I bought a grabber tool on Amazon for $13, got me some garbage bags, and off I went.


The first day, I stayed within the complex where CrossFit Conductor is located and filled a garbage bag in less than 20 minutes. I had to stop and grab another. Over the days, I started taking 2 bags with me and on every walk, I can easily fill them both. The most common items, pop cans and drink cups. Just another reason to stop drinking that shit! It’s killing you and the sea turtles, you’re a monster!


I wrote about this for a few reasons. First to let you know that I’m better than you because not only do I take daily walks, but I’m simultaneously cleaning up my neighborhood and saving the planet. The other because if we want to save the World, start with your Country, and if you want to save your Country, start with your State, and if you want to save your State, start with your Town, and if you want to save your Town, start with your Neighborhood, and if you want to save your Neighborhood, start with your block, and if you want to save your Block, start with your Yard, and if you want to save your Yard, start with YOURSELF.


Now go out there and save the WORLD!!!


MORE RECENT POSTS

By Eric Karls February 1, 2026
Risky Business I read an interesting article from USA Today Weight-loss drugs draw thousands of lawsuits alleging serious harm But let’s first talk about CrossFit. Every time CrossFit comes up, someone eventually says: “Isn’t CrossFit dangerous?” “I heard people get hurt.” “My physical therapist says CrossFit keeps them in business.” “My cousin’s friend has a neighbor and their co-worker blew out his shoulder doing CrossFit.” At the exact same time these conversations are happening, millions of people are jumping on weight-loss drugs and medical interventions with very little discussion about risk. But now, lawsuits are popping up and the headlines are changing. Let me be 100% Clear, I DON’T CARE WHAT YOU CHOOSE! If you decide to take a weight-loss drug, that’s your call. If your doctor prescribes it and you feel good about it, go for it. Just like it’s your call if you want to do CrossFit, run, lift heavy, do Pilates, yoga, bootcamp, or never exercise at all. I don’t care about the choice. What I care about is people making choices without actually understanding what they’re signing up for. CrossFit Has Always Been Honest Here’s what people get wrong about CrossFit. We’ve never said it’s risk-free. We talk about intensity. We talk about load. We talk about mechanics. We talk about scaling. We talk about recovery. We talk about coaching. We don’t pretend that pushing your body to produce adaptation comes with zero downside. “In the pursuit of mitigating cardiovascular disease, you run the risk or orthopedic calamity.” ~Greg Glassman, Founder of CrossFit Simply put, pursuing fitness, of any kind, comes with risk. Ironically, Nobody Warns You About the Couch You know what almost never gets labeled as risky? • Losing muscle every decade after 30 • Weak bones • Chronic back pain • Metabolic disease • Eating like a 10 year old • Medications piling up year after year • Feeling tired, stiff, and fragile at 50 That stuff doesn’t happen overnight, so no one panics about it. It’s quiet, slow, and gets normalized. But it’s not safe. Sitting on the couch for years is a risk. Driving a car is a risk. Crossing the street is a risk. Drinking alcohol is a risk. CrossFit just happens to make the trade-off obvious. The Weight-Loss Drug Conversation Proves the Point T he issue with the recent weight-loss drug lawsuits isn’t “meds are evil.” The issue is this, a lot of people didn’t fully understand the potential downsides until after they experienced them. That’s the same mistake people make when they talk about CrossFit. They hear a headline or a story, but they don’t ask better questions. Good CrossFit Is Not Reckless or Random At CrossFit Conductor, we don’t throw people into the deep end and hope for the best. We coach movement. We scale workouts. We adjust volume. We meet people where they are. We play the long game. We use CrossFit to improve Fitness and MetFix to address Nutrition, and when the two are combined, we produce Health. Fitness = How much work you can do. Health = Fitness over the years of your life. Our goal isn’t to make workouts “safe” by making them meaningless. Our goal is to make them effective without being stupid. There’s a difference. You Don’t Get To Avoid Risk, But You Do Get To Choose It The truth most people don’t want to hear: You don’t get to opt out of risk. Y ou only get to choose which one you’re willing to live with. The risk of lifting weights and learning to move well. Or the risk of never building strength, eating like shit, and paying for it later. The risk of EFFORT or the risk of DECLINE. Final Thought I’m not here to scare you into CrossFit. I’m not here to shame anyone for taking a drug. I’m not here to tell you there’s one perfect path. I am here to tell you this. I f you’re going to do something with your health, anything, you owe it to yourself to understand the risks, the benefits, and the long-term consequences. CrossFit doesn’t hide that conversation. We lead with it. And I’ll take honest risk over comfortable denial every time. In Strength, Eric Karls, M.Ed. CrossFit Conductor Chief Awesomeness Engineer CrossFit Level 3 Certified Trainer (859) 494-9119
Football Game
By Eric Karls March 12, 2025
“You Can’t Slip” The other team has the ball, 3rd down and 5 yards to go. We’re playing our biggest crosstown rival who we haven’t beaten in years. It’s a close game and this is a big possession in the momentum of the game. Sweep right and I’m the outside linebacker to that side. I shed my blocker, set the edge so the running back can’t get outside me. As he nears me, the rest of the defense forces him out to where I’m waiting, he makes a cut, and as I go to make the tackle, I slip on the rain soaked field. I’m only able to try and make an arm tackle, which against the best running back in the state, wasn’t enough. 6 yards, 1st down! Myself and the rest of the defense had set up perfectly to stop this play. We just didn’t finish, I didn’t finish, I slipped. The resulting 1st down play ended near our sideline. I got up off the ground to my coach right in my face, “YOU HAVE TO MAKE THAT TACKLE!!!” “I slipped” “YOU CAN’T SLIP!!!” In that moment, my 17 year old brain’s immediate thought was, “fuck you! I slipped, that’s not my fault.” We went on to lose that game by a more than we would have liked. That play was a big momentum shift, but again, I slipped, that wasn’t my fault, or at least that’s what I thought at the time. In my opinion, football is the ultimate team sport. Though my years of playing didn’t do my body any favors, the lesson it’s taught me were invaluable. The biggest being, “YOU CAN’T SLIP!” I don’t recall how long it took me to realize what my coach meant at the time or even if it’s actually what he meant, but it has gone to guide almost every aspect of my life from that moment on. It was a critical moment. Did I want to make the play? Yes. Did I want to slip? No. Was slipping my fault? No, the field was wet. Was slipping my fault? No, the running back made an amazing cut. Was slipping my fault? The defense did their job and force him out, the field was wet, the running back made a move, I wasn’t in the right position, I slipped. Was slipping my fault? YES. In the moment, I blamed factors outside of my control, but the BIGGEST factor, the one in my control, my position, was what lead to me not making the play. Had I positioned myself better, there would have been no room to make that cut, the running back would have either been funneled back to my awaiting teammates, right into my tackle, or out of bounds. By my position being off by just a small fraction, there was just enough room to make a cut, and I slipped. What went from “FUCK YOU! It wasn’t my fault” turned into “if I’m in the right position, I make the play.” Was slipping my fault? YES! Yes it was, I wasn’t in the correct position. I now apply that mentality to every aspect of my life. Am I in the correct position to make the play? Am I in the correct position for: My Marriage. My Children. My Family. My Career. My Health. My God. Every aspect of my life depends on whether or not I’m putting myself in the correct position to make the play. That’s life. You can’t control outside factors, but you can control how you position yourself to handle them. If you don’t like where you’re at, change your position. You must put yourself in the positions that will make you successful. “YOU CAN’T SLIP!”
A gallon of water with a red cap has a date stamp on it
By Eric Karls January 3, 2025
8-25-20 1 part alcohol, 3 parts water. The disinfecting spray bottles we use at the gym were low the other day and I filled them. While doing so, I noticed the date on the old milk jug I use to mix the solution, 08-25-20, and then one-by-one I fill the tiny spray bottles. For the past 4 years, I’ve mixed this same solution, filled the same bottles, and then repeated about every 2 weeks. I’ve mopped the floors hundreds of times, vacuumed just as many. I’ve made sure the frig is stocked with drinks, kept the bathrooms cleans, restocked toilet paper and taken the towels home to wash. I’ve cleaned the windows, wiped off the mirrors, restocked the cleaning supplies, repaired holes in the wall, wiped down dirty equipment, and dusted the rowers and bikes. I’ve repaired countless broken items, ordered new ones, refilled chalked buckets, and ordered shirts and protein. I’ve removed old ceiling insultation, installed, moved, and reinstalled Big Ass Fans, I’ve laid 6000 sq. ft. of rubber flooring, I’ve replaced a garage door spring, I’ve installed a gas force heater, torn down walls, built a locker room, torn down a locker room, painted walls, refinished floors, and unclogged toilets. I’ve taken out countless bags of garbage, cleaned parking lots, hung TVs, and mounted pictures. I’ve erected rigs, installed pull up bars, hung ropes and rings, and then moved them all hundreds of times. I’ve left my house at 5am and returned at 7pm. I’ve had countless sleepless nights, anxiety over bills, and worried about everything. I’ve also gotten to meet new people and make new friends. Friends of every size, shape, color, believe, and background. I’ve gotten support and encouragement through tough workouts. I’ve gotten to laugh till it hurts, gotten my heart filled, and been made to feel special. I’ve gotten support of my wife and family and been helped with every task written above. I’ve been surrounded by unbelievable coaches and witnessed unbelievable athletes. I’ve been told I’m doing a great job, to keep going, and that everything will be OK. I’ve seen people lose weight, gain muscle, become more confident, and do things they never thought they could. I’ve celebrated victories, learned lessons, and become stronger physically and mentally. I’ve seen people give for no reason, love big, and show up when they didn’t want to. This gym continues to give more than its asks for and I feel like the luckiest person alive!
More Posts