A Year of Strength, Confidence, and Comebacks at CrossFit Roselle
Lynne Steiner • December 3, 2025

One year ago, I opened my inbox and found a message from a former CFR member. He was one year out from a milestone birthday and said he was intent on not entering his 50th year in the same shape he was entering his 49th.
He wanted to feel healthy again.
He wanted to train with purpose.
And he was honest about something many athletes feel but rarely say out loud.
He was worried.
After years of back problems, he felt like he needed to eliminate many movements. Over time, that had made him feel like an outsider in the gym. He wondered if he could come back and train safely without feeling limited or isolated.
He decided to try anyway.
Fast Forward One Year
Last week he walked into the gym with a huge smile and said,
“Another PR! I PR’d last week, too.”
And he was not exaggerating.
So far this year, he has set new personal records in:
- Front squat
- Dumbbell push press
- Dumbbell bent over row
- Back squat
- Bench press
- Dumbbell pullover
- Dumbbell bench press
- Push jerk
- Deadlift
- Hang power clean
- Reverse lunge steps
All without back pain.
All without modifications that made him feel alone.
All with a level of confidence that grows every single time he trains.
The Best Part
You can see the pride on his face every time he walks in. He pushes himself to explore movements that once felt intimidating. When we talked about how box jump overs build real-life athletic skills, he chose to challenge himself with those instead of modifying to regular box jumps.
This past year has been an incredible example of what happens when you show up, stay consistent, listen to your body, and trust the process. The physical progress is impressive, but the mindset shift has been even more amazing to watch.
Here Is What This Story Proves
Progress is not reserved for people without injuries.
It is not reserved for people who feel confident on day one.
It is not reserved for people who never fell off track.
Progress belongs to anyone who decides to return to the work, no matter how long it has been or what their starting point looks like.
It has been one amazing year of growth. I cannot wait to see what the next decade brings.
Happy almost birthday, Chris. Your story reminds us why we do what we do at CrossFit Roselle.
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You know the move. Event's at 5pm, so you skip breakfast. Skip lunch too, just to be safe. You're "saving up" like calories are airline miles. By the time you walk in, you're not just hungry. You're ravished. That gap between "saving calories" and "inhaling three plates before anyone's even cut the cake" isn't a willpower problem. It's basic biology doing exactly what it's built to do. Why Starving Yourself First Always Loses Here's the part nobody explains: hunger doesn't politely wait for your decision-making to catch up. It barges in, kicks your discipline out of the room, and orders for you. A few things happen when you show up running on fumes: Portion control disappears. Your brain isn't measuring servings anymore, it's running a hostile takeover. Everything looks like a yes. The potato salad you'd normally skip? Suddenly it's calling your name. You overshoot what you actually needed , often by a wide margin, because your body is trying to make up for hours of nothing. And here's the real cost. This isn't a one-time slip. If you do this at every birthday party, every BBQ, every family thing, you're training yourself into a boom-bust cycle. Restrict, then ransack the buffet. Restrict, then ransack again. Your body starts treating every social event like a famine followed by a feast, and that pattern is exhausting, both physically and mentally. The Fix Is Almost Insultingly Simple Eat a normal meal before you go. That's it. That's the secret. A plate with some protein and a little fiber an hour or two beforehand keeps your blood sugar steady and your brain in the driver's seat instead of your stomach. You walk in already satisfied, which means you get to actually *choose* what goes on your plate instead of grabbing whatever's closest out of sheer panic. Think of it like showing up to a negotiation. Would you rather walk in calm and clear-headed, or starving and desperate to take the first deal offered? Food works the same way. One Thing to Remember Showing up hungry isn't discipline. It's setting a trap for yourself and being shocked when it springs. Eat something solid before the next BBQ, vacation dinner, or family gathering. Protein, a little fiber, done. You'll walk in steady, in control, and free to actually enjoy the food instead of attacking it. The party was never the problem. Arriving starving was.

Ashley competed in powerlifting. She knows what a loaded barbell feels like, what it means to step onto a platform, what it costs to train for a specific lift. She is not someone who needed to be convinced that strength matters. And yet, in her mid-forties, she found herself starting over. Not from scratch. Nobody with Ashley's history starts from scratch. But starting fresh, with new goals, in a new place, with a new definition of what being in the best shape of her life actually looks like. That kind of restart takes a different kind of courage than lifting a heavy bar. She joined CrossFit Roselle two months ago. Her boyfriend Joe, a long-time CFR member, had been talking about it for a while. "He has always had the BEST things to say about CFR," she says. Still, she was intimidated. She came anyway. What the On-Ramp Actually Does Before Ashley ever walked into a regular class, she went through CFR's on-ramp program. For someone with her background, you might assume that's unnecessary. It wasn't. "My on-ramp gave me a chance to get familiar with CFR, the culture, the coaching," she says. "It gave me confidence quickly in what I was doing, no matter where I was starting. I try to carry that into every class." This is exactly what on-ramp is designed to do. CrossFit is a specific language. The movements, the pacing, the culture, the way a coach cues you versus how a coach at a powerlifting gym cues you. None of that translates automatically, even for experienced athletes. The on-ramp is where you learn to speak it before you're expected to perform in it. Ashley walked into her first class already belonging there. That's the point. Twice a Week, on Purpose Ashley trains twice a week. For someone with her competitive background, that might sound conservative. It isn't. It's strategic. "For me to be consistent, I wanted to master that," she says. Consistency is the thing most people skip past in their excitement to do more. They come in four days a week for three weeks, then they burn out, or life intervenes, and then they're back to zero trying to rebuild momentum. Ashley decided she would rather own two days completely than chase four days inconsistently. It's working. In the past few weeks, she's added a third day. That's how sustainable frequency actually builds. Not by starting at your ceiling. What She's After Now Ashley's goals right now are specific: build lean muscle while continuing to lose fat. She is direct about the fact that those two things don't always cooperate with each other, and she is not in a rush. "I know these two things require different focuses," she says. "For now I am working on getting my workouts in, keeping my diet clean and getting the protein I need on a daily basis. Some days are better than others, but being consistent is the key." That's not a beginner speaking. That's someone who has been on a long road, who has tried faster approaches, and who has learned that slow and steady is not a consolation prize. It's the whole strategy. She's been working on her weight for most of her adult life. The version of Ashley who walked into CFR is down 225 pounds from her heaviest. Sixty of those came in the past year. Twelve since she started training here. None of that happened quickly. All of it required building habits that survived real life, not just good weeks. Her Tools, Her Terms Ashley is also using peptides as part of her approach, including a GLP-1 compound that helps her preserve muscle while losing fat. She came to it through her own research, and she is thoughtful about how she talks about it. "They are not a magic bullet," she says. "Like any other tool, they need to be accompanied by proper nutrition and weight training." That last sentence is worth reading twice. We are seeing more members come through our doors who are using GLP-1 medications and similar compounds to support their weight loss. And we think that's genuinely great. What those medications do really well is lower the barrier to change. What they do not do is build muscle, improve your cardiovascular capacity, or teach you how to move well. That part still requires showing up, putting in the work, and listening to the guidance of a coach. Ashley's approach is what this looks like when someone uses every tool available and uses them correctly. The medication supports the process. The training and nutrition build the body she actually wants. What She'd Tell You If you asked Ashley what the difference is between this time and other times she's tried to change her health, she'd probably tell you it's the consistency. And the community. "CFR is a place I get excited to go," she says. "Between the people and the workouts, it's become one of my favorite parts of the week." For someone who left CrossFit 10 years ago, came back through powerlifting, battled her weight for most of her life, and still showed up nervous to on-ramp anyway, that's not a small thing to say. It took her a decade to come back. She's not going anywhere. Ready to find out what the right start looks like for you? Our on-ramp program meets you exactly where you are. Reach out and let's talk.
We've all played this game. Who can move a trunkful of groceries to the house in the fewest number of trips. Four bags stacked on each arm, milk swinging off two fingers, keys clenched in your teeth, foot kicking the screen door shut. Nobody films it. But that's the actual Olympics of your life. Now picture the gym mirror instead. Flexing under lighting built to flatter, comparing your reflection to a stranger online whose entire job is looking like that. One of those scenes builds the body you need. The other just builds resentment. The Mirror Lied to You First Aesthetic training chases a look: bigger arms, a flatter stomach, a number that feels like a report card. Nothing wrong with wanting to feel good in your clothes. But when "looking strong" becomes the whole goal, your body optimizes for things that do nothing for you on a Tuesday. Functional training chases capacity. It wants you to pick things up, carry them, and put them down without your lower back staging a protest. From the outside, both paths look the same. Same barbells, same sweat. The difference shows up later, when your body actually has to do something instead of just sit there looking good. What Your Body Is Actually Practicing Strength training isn't one thing. It's a set of patterns, and each one teaches your body a different real-life skill. Squat : getting off the floor, out of the car, up from a low couch Hinge : lifting laundry baskets and suitcases without your back arguing Carry : hauling groceries or a duffel bag while walking like a normal human Push and pull : opening a stuck door, rearranging furniture, lifting a suitcase to an overhead bin None of that requires a mirror. It just requires showing up, because eventually your life depends on it. That's what gets you on the dream trip without hesitating, or up the trail on a 5-mile hike without needing a rest every quarter mile. Train for Tuesday, Not for the Camera Stop asking "does this make me look strong" and start asking "does this make me more capable." Small shift in language, completely different gym. The deadlift isn't about hamstring shape. It's about handling the heavy thing without flinching. The farmer's carry isn't about shoulder definition. It's about loading a full trunk of groceries without a rest break. Aesthetic results show up anyway when you train this way. They're the receipt, not the goal. The body you build for real life will always outlast the one you built for a feed. So next time you're choosing between chasing the pump or chasing the strength, remember the groceries don't care how your arms look. They just want to make it up the stairs in one trip.


