-My overhead press got better when I did less pressing and
more bodybuilding shoulder work. My
shoulders also started feeling healthier too.
-Goo Gone takes off tacky way better than baby oil and
WD40. It comes in a spray now too. Get it.
-If you want to get people to move out of your way at a
strongman comp, just yell “I am covered in tacky!”
-My ghetto log did a great job prepping me for a 12” log in
a comp. It was a bitch to clean and
absorbed leg drive on the press, so in a comp the real log felt like nothing.
-You don’t get extra points for not using straps in a
contest.
-Instead of wearing stringer tank tops and having purple
mohawks, maybe people could draw attention to themselves at a competition by
actually being big and strong? Food for
thought.
IS ANYONE PAYING ATTENTION TO ME YET?!
-I notice a lot of people foam rolling are hurt. I wonder which came first.
-I sometimes feel bad for how uncomplicated my training is
when I see/hear what other people are doing.
Am I missing out?
-It’s funny how, the more successful you are, the less
effect “appeal to authority” has on you.
-I will always cheer louder for the guy zeroing in the open
class than the guy winning the novice class.
-Front squats are a great movement for strongman…so I’ve
been told…I guess. I don’t do them. Should I be squatting to depth too?...shit.
If this was a front squat, this guy would be DESTROYING competitions
-My squat took off when I stopped treating it like a primary
lift and started training it like assistance work.
-I train my deadlifts touch and go and my squats dead stop
(off chains). What is wrong with me?
-I find that a key variable for success is being unaware of
what you “can’t” do.
True Story: Once this movie came out, I could no longer play basketball
-Quest protein bars are the only kind I can eat that don’t
trigger some sort of allergic reaction.
If you have a similar affliction, give them a try.
-I haven’t performed an overhead press with a barbell since
I started training for strongman.
-I slap my forehead every time someone equates more time
under tension with lifting slower. Think
outside the box for just a second.
-Speaking of “the box”, box squats seem like they would be
great for strongman. Curious why we
don’t see it more often.
Oh yeah....that...
-I’m honestly pretty let down by fat gripz. A sound idea, but they never really worked
like I hoped they would. I find that
they rotate around the bar too much to get a solid grip.
-The notion of “beginner, intermediate, and advanced” is FAR
more destructive than it is beneficial.
-Once a trainee cites another author in a discussion on
training, I realize that they have no faith or pride in their own results. Consequently, I stop listening to them.
-It’s amazing how, when I was young and “didn’t know
anything”, I made significant changes to size and strength. Meanwhile, I spun my wheels for years
training “the right way”. Enthusiasm and
intensity go far…but so does being 17 I guess.
-It’s weird how the only people concerned about “recovery”
are the people who have read that it’s super important.
-It’s funny how people see the presence of so many
conflicting opinions on training as LIMITING.
This is liberating. It means there
are tons of ways to succeed.
QUIT LIMITING ME!
-Training by myself in my garage has been a boon mainly
because my sense of normalcy is totally shot.
I have no idea what good numbers are to lift, nor do I really know what
movements are supposed to look like or how most other people train. Considering the majority of the people in
gyms are actively failing at meeting their goals, this is a good thing.
-Whenever someone asks how much weight you get out of a
belt/sleeves, I look at them like they’re from another planet. I can’t even understand what that question is
trying to ask.
-I got into a discussion online wherein someone asserted
that we should always presume a person desires to keep their health intact
while training and I asserted that we should never assume health is a goal
unless overtly stated. I have to laugh
at how crazy we each thought the other person was.
-One of the most damaging things I ever did in my training
was worry about if my assistance lifts were increasing. So much time and energy wasted, didn’t have
my eyes on the prize. However, part of
the issue here was that I wasn’t competing, so really, what WAS the prize?
-I genuinely miss the days where I thought I could eat
myself bigger. Seeing the scale number
go up was awesome. However, I realized
that all I was doing was just making myself fatter. It’s not even the junkfood I miss, it’s more
just the IDEA that I could do something to make myself even stronger aside from
just all the heavy lifting I do. “I just
gotta finish this gallon of milk and then I’m sure to have another deadlift
PR.” Eating reasonably is so boring.
Pictured: Anabolism
-It’s funny how the internet has made me so vocally
anti-abbreviated training when it’s something I used to promote so
heavily. The pendulum swung too far.
-Oh my god I can’t stand how many people are putting
“farmer’s walks” into their routines now.
Was there a Men’s Health article about them recently or something? I already wrote about how people are ruining
this exercise, but it’s still ridiculous.
-I want to create a method that is so complicated that even
I don’t understand how it works. Then I
can constantly berate everyone who claims to be using it that they’re not using
the REAL method.
-Everyone thinks it’s pithy to comment on the fact that
weightlifting should be called powerlifting because it’s all about power. They fail to take this to its logical
conclusion, realizing that ALL the strength sports got it wrong. Weightlifting should be called powerlifting,
because it’s all about power. Strongman
should be called weightlifting, because you lift a variety of weights in
it. Powerlifting should be called
strongman, because it’s a sport that’s all about strength.
-T-nation had a thread once called “Squat Rack Curls”. In it, successful lifters mocked unsuccessful
lifters for doing stupid things in the weightroom. Elitism?
Sure. However, as the thread went
through multiple iterations, it ended up becoming unsuccessful lifters mocking
successful lifters for doing effective (though unconventional) things in the
weightroom. Oddly enough, I feel like
this is an accurate reflection for what has happened in lifting in general.
-If you are an atheist who buys testosterone boosters at
GNC, I question the strength of your convictions.
"Trust? No....CONVICTION!?...No....gotta have something....?"
-It’s weird how heated the debate on deloading can get.
-I stopped going to elitefts once they changed their website
layout. It’s weird, because I used to
start everyday at that site. I must be
getting old.
-Terms we need to retire: bulk, cut, skinnyfat, buttwink,
gains, optimal, endomorph, ectomorph, powerbuilding, non-competitive
bodybuilder, IIFYM, GOMAD, mobility.
-A co-worker of mine asked me what my diet was like. I told him I don’t do anything special, and
eat fairly normal. He then asked if I
ate bread and I looked at him like he was from another planet. It made me realize that maybe my idea of
“normal” is probably radically warped.
"Yeah, you know, just like 72oz of steak and some veggies, normal stuff"
-Fitness products I regret buying: an agility ladder, a foam
roller, animal pak vitamins, jump ropes.
-I can’t help but notice that it’s usually people that sell
equipment who tell me “buy nice, don’t buy twice”. I subscribed to the philosophy of “buy twice
as much stuff with the money you would’ve spent on the nice stuff”.
-I made everyone jealous of me at my last contest by having
a little pop-up tent. Canopies are cool,
but they’re bulky and have a huge footprint, whereas the tent was big enough to
fit 2 adults and chairs in while providing shade and covering the ground but
still space economic. It only cost like
$40 at Costco too. Get one.
-I was joking with a buddy of mine at my last contest about
how vendors take themselves too seriously.
So many t-shirts saying crap like “Pain is weakness leaving the body”
with pictures of Vikings and cliché’ garbage.
If someone was selling shirts that said “Bill’s House of Waffles” with a
little smiley pancake on them, I’d buy it in a second.
-MAS wrestling is poking its head into strongman. Most folks
don’t like it. Promoters are fond of
saying “real men don’t cherry pick contests, and do the events they are
given”. Bullshit, real men are too busy
raising a family as a single parent while balancing 2 jobs to go hang out for 9
hours on a Saturday and lift heavy things.
Let’s not get confused here people: this is a game, playing it doesn’t
make you a man.
-On the above, let us also remember that just because
something is tough doesn’t mean it’s worth doing. I won’t do MAS wrestling as an event at a
strongman competition for the same reason I won’t drive a nail into my foot as
an event at a strongman competition.
Both require an incredible degree of fortitude, and both are a really
bad idea.
Reading these always make me wonder if there's some amusing internet forum action I'm missing out on.
ReplyDeleteAt my first strongman contest I thought the optional MAS wrestling part was the ring-out wrestling they used to have in World's Strongest or something and was pumped as hell for it, haha.
Forums contributed to this, but for the most part it's just boredom. I have a word doc opened at my job, and when I have a thought, I throw it there. Had a lot of time for thinking recently, haha.
DeleteI think I'd prefer the ringout wrestling. Or maybe, just a random combat sport at each contest. 1 time MAS, then boxing, BJJ, Judo, fencing, jousting, pistol duels, global thermal nuclear war, archery, etc.
Why limit ourselves?
http://www.reddit.com/r/weightroom/comments/2tv0w0/the_farmers_walk_why_you_should_do_them/
ReplyDeleteThat might have something to do with it...
I remember being really excited when I saw that article, thinking how great it would be to get more people to do farmer's walks.
DeleteI should've predicted it would've gone that way.
Nothing ruins things like people!
Delete