No, these don't count
Yes, of
course this is a metaphor. You know that’s how I work by now. However, it’s literal too, because when I
look at the diets of many trainees, they aren’t eating any goddamn
vegetables. I blame this on the prevalence
of the whole “If It Fits Your Macros” culture, because a bunch of nerds decided
they wanted to make lifting and nutrition a mathgame and figured that as long
as you hit the calculated numbers, you “win.”
The notion of the benefits of micronutrients and fiber eludes them
because it’s not as easily quantifiable or measurable compared to scale weight,
but ask anyone living off of BigMacs how they feel once they “detox” and start
eating steak and salad, and it’s night and day differences. “If it tastes good, spit it out”, as quoted
from Jack Lalanne, still holds true. If
all you’re eating is stuff you enjoy, you’re probably missing out on stuff that
could benefit you.
It goes even
further than nutrition though. In
training, we have our “vegetables” too.
Conditioning is one of the most unappetizing vegetables out there, as
evidenced by the fact that very few people are eating it. Lifting weights is “fun” to most people,
because it’s only about 20 seconds of exertion max, but you get to feel like
you accomplished something, you can move heavy weight, and it makes you look
bigger. Additionally, you get to spend
way more time recovering than actually training, so you can tell people you
train for 90 minutes, when it’s really more like training for 15 minutes with
75 minutes of rest. Conditioning is the
complete opposite; you strain for far longer, you’re not really moving anything
heavy, and it doesn’t generate the outward physical presence that lifting
weights does. Additionally, once it’s
done, you feel like you’re going to die for a LONG time after the fact. However, what conditioning DOES do is make
the weight training more effective. It
reduces rest times and improves recovery, which means you can lift more weight
for more volume in a workout, which means a better training effect from
lifting. We eat our vegetables here, so
that we become better elsewhere.
Yes, I've seen people do this after conditioning AND after eating vegetables
But even in
the “fun” part of lifting weights, we STILL have our vegetables. We all have
those movements that we are terrible at, and in turn, we tend to avoid. I was absolutely awful at the continental
clean, so I decided I was just not going to train it. How did that work out for
me? At the same comp where I ruptured my
ACL, earlier in the day I ended up zeroing my first ever event in a competition
by not being able to get a 245lb axle to my chest. That’s a weight I have strict pressed before,
and could have easily managed at least a few reps on had it made it off the
floor. I failed to eat my vegetables in
training, and now I wasn’t getting my dessert.
I apologize, even I am getting upset with how hamfisted my own metaphor
has become here, but I’m too committed to change it at this point. However, it
took that moment for me to prioritize the movement, and in my most recent
training cycle, I’ve been hitting the continental 2-3 times a week, to include
using it as a conditioning exercise with a 10 minute EMOM workout, effectively
combining 2 “vegetables” into some sort of vegetable medley. How many other folks decide that they are bad
at benching so they’re no longer going to do it? Bad at squats so they cut those out? Or what about the guys who are too cool for
school and decide they’re not going to do any direct arm work?
You’re an
adult, and you can do whatever you want now.
You can set out on your own and eat dessert for dinner every night of
your life. You can never eat another
vegetable again, and live out your childhood fantasies of what you would do if
you were alone. But guess what? The people that are out there eating their
vegetables and doing the things they don’t’ enjoy are going to be the ones that
beat you. They’re going to be the ones
who toiled and suffered enough during training that, come the big game, nothing
will stop them from succeeding. They’ll
be the ones standing at the podium, reflecting the efforts of their labor,
while you stay in the stands, munching on French fries and calling ketchup your
vegetable.
How many folks are living these days
Grow up and
eat your vegetables.
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