I’m just getting sick of this, so allow me to rant. Every time I see a video of someone
accomplishing some ridiculous feat of strength, I see the same dumb thing in
the comments. No, I’m not talking about
the steroids accusations, I’m not talking about the bad form comments, I’m not
talking about the “my back hurts just watching that” nonsense; I’m talking
about the miscreants that make the video all about THEM. And they do it in the stupidest way possible;
using it as an opportunity to talk about how weak THEY are. “Oh man, here I was happy doing only HALF of
that”, “Oh wow, if I tried that I’d
blow a gasket”, etc etc. Jesus Christ;
quit being so self-centered for a second and let this person have their
glory. It’s not about you!
Oh man, if I tried to get a nosebleed like that, I'd probably only get 1 nostril going!
“But I’m just pointing out how STRONG that guy is!” No you’re
not; you’re trying to reinforce your toxic mediocrity by shifting attention
AWAY from greatness and focusing it on weakness. You’re trying to create a culture of
under performing to justify your OWN failings rather than letting magnificence
shine when it is present. There was no
doubt whatsoever that Eddie Hall was strong when he deadlifted 500kg; you
pointing out that you’d be happy to deadlift 500lbs is trite and a meaningless
statement that did nothing to benefit the rest of us. Respect the lift by admiring it or by
shutting up about it, but when you try to take attention away from the athlete
by shifting the focus onto you, you are truly committing a crime.
And quit your compliment fishing; this isn’t a therapy session. You don’t need someone to tell you to buck up
and that everyone has to start somewhere; we all know this already. And hey, for those of you that watch these
videos and say “that’s it, I quit”; good.
Get out, because your monument to weakness is offensive and is setting
us all back. “But my self-esteem!” I
HOPE your self-esteem is low, because hopefully you’ll resent yourself enough
to want to make a change. People that
are content have no reason to improve; it’s the people that absolutely DETEST
their very being that are going to be out there making meaningful changes. If you want acceptance, go make a tumblr, but
if you strength, quit making this about you.
You won't BELIEVE the sort of tumblrs this image shows up on...
“Hey man, I just want to establish some realistic
expectations”, no, go away. What you’re
doing is the exact opposite of helpful.
Let’s abolish realistic expectations and give EVERYONE unrealistic
expectations. Let’s get bored of 1000lb
deadlifts, let’s see so many 3000lb totals that it’s trite, let’s get so inundated
with greatness that we expect nothing else.
When we normalize greatness, achieving it seems almost inevitable. What you’re doing is dragging us all down
with you as you do your best to turn the topic of conversation around and back
to you.
Hey, know what you can do to get people to start talking
about you? GO DO SOMETHING! Go do something that is WORTH talking
about. Don’t pride yourself on how weak
you are; go into hiding and turn into some sort of horrific unstoppable
juggernaut and come back decades later so that the whole collective internet
hivemind sees you and says “What the F**K?!”
Go EARN the right to be spoken about.
Don’t try to steal it by attempting to turn the spotlight onto your
weakness whenever given the chance; remain silent until you have something to
say, and then say it so loud that no one can hear over your awesomeness.
Eddie couldn't hear over how awesome he was...and because he was bleeding out of his ears
And why CAN’T it be you?
Why spend so much time wallowing in maudlin self-pity when you could go
out and BE these things you idolize? No
time? Genetics? Drugs?
Excuses, the whole lot of it.
Because even if you can’t reach THEIR level, you can certainly maximize
your potential, and in doing so you will reach levels that few other humans in
total will ever experience. You WILL be
spoken of by others, because the person that has peaked, in whatever form that
takes, IS impressive among others. You
won’t have to hog the spotlight or shift attention away from others or play
weird psychological games to trick people into noticing you; you’ll be noticed
because you finally went and achieved something.
But until that time, it’s not about you. Don’t make it about you. Let the greatness that is occurring occur
before you, and praise it for what it is, and reflect on it for what it means
to you, and give that person what they EARNED by achieving this feat. One day, you might be able to earn it too.
Thank you man
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading!
DeleteHit home,thanks
ReplyDeleteNo problem man; I needed to hear it too, haha.
DeleteJust watched the video on Eddie. He says it damn near killed him, but he would go for it again if needed, just to keep his spot in history.
ReplyDeleteWould it be fair to say, to go with this post, to figure out what these guys are doing differently and train accordingly? Or is this pretty much the idea?
That doesn't necessarily go with this post, but it's not a bad idea. That said, you also have to ask if you're willing to make the same sacrifices as those people to achieve what they did. But interestingly enough, from a training perspective, Eddie isn't doing anything really unique. In fact, he's training in a way a lot of the internet has decided doesn't work; body part splits with lots of assistance work, like a bodybuilder. Damndest thing really, haha.
DeleteWait, he does body part splits? Well, then! Obviously his greatness is due to his genetics, drugs, and his beard! Obviously!
DeleteHaha, I've honestly concluded that people just overthink fitness. They want to find "shortcuts", when they would just progress a lot faster by realizing there isn't one, that the best method is one that you enjoy doing as a routine, and that the way you get it to work is you just apply it consistently, and understand that at some point it may not work and so a different approach might be needed.
Purely anecdotal but it does generally seem that most of the top guys aren't doing anything all that unusual in their training. Sure there's differences from person to person but it's pretty rare to find someone way outside the norm (and if you do, odds are someone else did it decades ago). They're just doing it with a bloody-minded stubbornness that'd rather hack off a limb than admit defeat.
DeleteI would believe it. Every so often a novel approach comes along, that changes the game, and it becomes the new norm, but I haven't heard of that happening often. I know I have gotten a lot more out of my current efforts just by putting more work in each session and being (fairly) consistent.
DeleteAnother great post!
ReplyDeleteThanks dude!
DeleteI wish i could write an article this good, but I would probably just end up writing somethìng unintelligable and boring.
ReplyDeleteYou got me good, haha!
DeleteBest thing I've read in a while.
ReplyDeleteThanks man! Felt good to write it.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteDamn fine article man
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated dude!
ReplyDeleteThis is bs
ReplyDeleteI am sorry you feel that way.
DeleteOh man I love this. It especially makes me nuts when people do that with adaptive athletes. "I can't even lift that much and I have both [hands/arms/legs/etc]!".
ReplyDeleteOh geez, how completely criminal. Humanity is amazing.
DeleteNext time that comes up, ask them what their excuse for not being able to do [x] is.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis is exactly why I seldom bother to read the comments section when I watch elite weightlifters train on Hookgrip Youtube.
ReplyDeleteI love the focus and purpose these superb athletes show in all their lifts, from the empty bar to their heaviest sets of the day. They KNOW you can't have a high peak without a strong base.
Thanks for this post. It was well worth the reading time. May you smash some PRs soon!
Thanks man. And absolutely correct. So little value in the comments.
Delete