I’m fairly
certain I’ve shared this before, but if not, one of my favorite quotes comes
from a mentor of mine, who was in turn a Star Trek fan. One day, he shared the Klingon proverb “In
battle, make a decision. If it’s a good
one, even better.” That day was a
monumental one for me, as it has in turn shaped how I approach life, and has
accounted for a vast majority of the success I have encountered. It’s such an amazing pithy saying that holds
so much truth in everything you do in life, not just battle. When pressed with a choice, MAKE one, for a
wrong decision will ultimately be better than no decision. Choose the road less traveled by, choose the
well trodden path, take the high road, take the low road, just take A path so
you can keep moving in A direction.
You're about to really train your conditioning by running the f**k away
No
transition sentence in the above, because I couldn’t think of one, but hey,
look at that: I made a decision.
Trainees are fundamentally CRIPPLED by an inability to make a decision,
mainly because they feel there is some sort of ridiculous demand for them to
make the BEST decision. I’m not sure who
told them this, but that man was clearly a lunatic and should be disregarded at
all costs. There’s no need to make the
best decision at all here: if there were, we surely wouldn’t leave it up to
you, the inexperience and uneducated trainee.
No, merely A decision needs to be made.
If it is good is dandy, but if not, it’s still A decision, which is
better than NO decision.
Examples? “What training program should I use?” Who cares: pick one, run it until it doesn’t work,
then try another one. “Should I do high
carb or low carb?”’ Doesn’t matter: pick
one and try it. If it doesn’t work, try
a different one. I can say with 100%
certainty that making a bad decision and moving forward with it will yield more
positive outcomes than making no decision.
Do you know what kind of progress you get if you spend 3 months refusing
to go to the gym because you STILL haven’t found the optimal program yet? Do you know how much further along you’d be
if you just did 100 push ups a day for those 3 months? That’s a DUMB program, and it’s STILL far
more effective than no program. Not only
would your super optimal program have to overcome the damage of 3 months of sedentariness,
but it would ALSO have to overcome the 3 month head start “sub-optimal you”
achieved with their dumb, half-cocked plan.
The same is true of people that refuse to pursue some sort of
nutritional program, some sort of training philosophy, some sort of coaching
service, etc. Just make A decision and
go with it.
I genuinely don't know why this meme exists, but I'm glad it does
To say
nothing of the immense value inherent in LEARNING from bad decisions. Bad decisions are how we grow: through
experience. Your childhood was marred
with bad decisions, as you (like all children) were incredibly stupid and inexperienced
and never understood your parents’ warnings until AFTER the fact. But man, the first time you touched that hot
stove, you learned right quick WHY you should never do that. The same is true when you try out setting a
1rm everyday of the week for 8 weeks, or max effort continentals, or the
variety of other bad decisions out there.
You learn what doesn’t work, and, by extension, what does THROUGH these
bad decisions. What do you learn through
indecisiveness? Simply that you need to make
a decision.
And this
includes deciding on what the hell your goals are in the first place. Were it not for my exceedingly low faith in humanity
I would be absolutely shocked at how frequently I am asked “Should I bulk or
cut?” I, of course, have to stifle my
disdain for those very words before I ask my inevitable obvious question “Do
you want to be bigger or do you want to be leaner?” And BOY does that follow-up question upset
people, because apparently they want ME to decide their goals for them. They have abdicated their future to a
stranger: what madness is this?! This is
so incredibly simple. If you want to be
bigger, eat more. If you want to be
leaner, eat less. If you want to get
better at weightlifting, weightlift.
Running? Run. These are such obvious ideas: why will no one
make this decision?
I'm sure this is exactly what this guy decided he wanted to be better at
“But I want
ALL those things!” Hey, that’s cool: me
too. Which one do you want the most
right NOW? Again: no one likes that question,
because they don’t want to make that decision.
The battle is waging on, and they’re stuck deciding on if they want to
use a mace or a sword or an axe or a spear before some ogre with club smashes
unarmed skull in. Folks, I’ve been
training for over 18 years now, and that is through multiple injuries and
surgeries: you get to spend a LOT of time doing this. You will have no shortage of opportunities to
pursue multiple goals, which means you don’t need to pursue them all at the
same time.
Think about
that 18 years statement, realizing full well that I STILL have life left in me
and more time to train: what if I spent 1 year pursuing a different goal. Just dedicated myself to a full calendar year
of chasing 1 physical goal? I honestly
don’t think I’d be creative enough to manage that without some overlap in
years. And meanwhile, how awesome can
you get at something if it’s what you dedicate your sole focus to in the span
of a year? Hell, people can learn to
play the guitar over a summer with enough dedicated practice time, people have
lost an entire human being’s worth of weight in less than a year, you can
accomplish AMAZING things when you make it your singular dedicated focus for a
prolonged period of time. And these
skills don’t go away once built, assuming you return to them with some
semi-regularity. It certainly won’t
require the initial build up that it once took.
This means, if you dedicate yourself to getting lean, and then don’t get
too terribly fat again, it’ll be easy to get lean again. Build a big deadlift, take some time away
from it, and it won’t take long to come back to it. Run fast, take a break, run fast again. It’s all there: you just have to make A
decision to pursue A goal at some point, and know that you can come back when
the time comes.
I imagine being The Terminator means you can train for a VERY long time
The battle
is on: make a decision. If it’s a good
one, I’ll be happy for you. If it’s a
bad one, I’ll still be happy.
Hey man look what I´ve found , it may be a substitute to the photo of the guy squating on a bosu ball
ReplyDeletehttps://puu.sh/BGG43/b2b4d5017b.png
Great stuff. Machiavelli speaks about this in The Prince... just ignore the blatant misogyny:
ReplyDelete“I certainly believe this: that it is better to be impetuous than cautious, because Fortune is a woman, and if you want to keep her under it is necessary to beat her and force her down. It is clear that she more often allows herself to be won over by impetuous men than by those who proceed coldly. And so, like a woman, Fortune is always the friend of young men, for they are less cautious, more ferocious, and command her with more audacity.”
I've used that quote a LOT in my undergrad and masters, and think I had a blogpost about it a while back. It's such a great bit of information. You have to be willing to take advantage of situation when the time comes and adapt as needed. Great quote: thanks for sharing it.
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ReplyDeleteDitto on the work you do staying with you, even after a long break. I just got back in the gym and so far my Deadlift hasn't gone down. In some ways it's better because I can do touch n go with the weight i hadI had before, where I did dead stops all he time. Pulling it a lot faster too. Grip strength is holding me back now.
ReplyDeleteEm, any good ways to train grip strength for deadlift?
I'm a fan of timed holds. Pull a double overhand rep, hold it for as long as you can. When you can hit 90 seconds, up the weight.
DeleteThanks.
DeleteI have been doing those with dumbbells, but I'm going to switch to doing those with a barbell today.
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ReplyDeleteAnd stick as far as wise
ReplyDelete