I’m going to
take you into my personal life a bit here, dear reader. I have a friend that I love dearly. They are incredibly close, have been there
through thick and thin, and they are very loving and nurturing. However, when I’m driving, this person is
terrifying, and it’s BECAUSE of their loving, nurturing, and caring
nature. You see, this person wants to
ensure that the driver isn’t worried, and so, when I drive, they spend the
entire trip reassuring me. If we see a
police officer, they’ll be quick to point out “Don’t worry: you’re going the
speed limit. They have no reason to pull
you over.” If we go through a traffic
light that is yellow they’ll say “Don’t worry: the light was yellow. You didn’t run a red light.” If we’re driving by a cyclist they’ll be
quick to let me know “You’re on your part of the road. You’re in the right. You get to share the road with them just like
they do with you.” But all this serves
to do is get me wondering about WHY I need this reassurance. If all of this stuff was obvious, wouldn’t it
need to NOT be said? The only time you
NEED reassurance is if something is wrong.
Dude needed no one's opinion but his own
Am I
wrong? And did you appreciate the irony
of such a question? Perhaps I’m just
completely off base on this one, but getting reassurance I did not ask for
simply means, to me, that I’m doing something wrong. Why?
Because correctness is self-evident, and typically further exemplified
by results. I pour the cereal into the
bowl, then pour the milk into the cereal and breakfast is made: no one needs to
reassure me. Meanwhile, if I pour the
milk into the bowl first, someone needs to say “Hey, its ok: you just have to
pour the cereal in carefully now.” Well
crap folks: it’s pretty obvious I f**ked up.
It’s NOT ok. I’m being reassured
because something is WRONG and now someone is coming around to help damage control
the situation.
And I bring
all this up because those of you seeking “reassurance” are, in fact, seeking
ASSURANCE. Specifically, you KNOW you’re
screwing up, and now you’re hoping someone can come around and make everything
better. You post your training plans
online KNOWING that they’re a dumpster fire and hope that someone will come around
and say “Hey, its ok: you just need to swap preacher curls with hammer curls!” You haven’t eaten a vegetable since the last
time a good Star Wars was in theaters and you hope someone will come and
(re)assure you that vegetables are overrated and protein and carbs are all that
matter. You would not seek reassurance
unless you already had the seeds of doubt sewn, and the reason you doubt is
because you KNOW you’re making a mistake.
That's why there are two people in this photo
The power of
positive thinking is real, as is the detriment of negativity. You possess the ability to MAKE results
occur, but when you seek reassurance, you, instead, take the very action needed
to cripple your results. BE your own
reassurance. When you decide on a plan
of action, know that it’s the right one and seek no one else’s approval on
it. The sheer act of asking for a sanity
check, reassurance, a second opinion, an expert eye, etc etc, is an admission
of even the slightest possibility of error, and has no room in the place of an
infallible conqueror. When the decision
has been made by YOU, that is the assurance.
And this
means, if you’re unwilling to make that decision, DON’T act until you are. My goodness folks, nothing hinders results
better than “committing” to a plan that you won’t actually commit to. And I know that’s going to chap a bunch of
readers out there, but I am telling you that it does not matter HOW well put
together a plan is if the person executing it does not believe in it. I know we want to think that science dictates
belief is unnecessary for outcomes, and that a trainee that performs the best
approach (as dictated by science) in their training will get better results
than someone employing an inferior approach, but I’ve seen it first-hand enough
to know that it simply is not true. Programs
that I’ve witnessed first-hand result in fantastic growth with the majority of
trainees will fail catastrophically when a trainee sets out and says “I don’t
really think this program will work, but I’ll give it a try because everyone
says it will.” The “everyone says it
will” is the reassurance that trainee sought because they KNEW they were doing
something wrong. In turn, that
reassurance was worthless, because the trainee STILL couldn’t commit themselves
to the training and, in turn, could not get the benefits of it. You need to find something you’re willing to
sign off on, and then execute it with full faith and confidence.
No matter HOW much it upsets everyone else
Abandon all
plans and actions that require reassurance.
Let THAT be your reassurance. “If
I need the approval of others, then this is not a good plan.” And let the inverse be true as well: if it IS
a good plan, it requires NO approval of others.
Hell folks, the majority opinion is worth so little that it honestly has
an INVERSE value. I’m at the point in my
training career that, if I hear enough people say something is a good idea, I
quit doing it. I genuinely don’t know
WHAT a scapula is, but I’ve heard so many weak people say that I’m supposed to
retract it that I’m about to open up an anatomy textbook and learn some latin
so I can find my scapula and detract it when I lift. If the majority starts reassuring you on
something, you KNOW you messed up. And,
in turn, if they start questioning things, there’s a fair chance you’ve made
the right call. Among the
accomplished? I’ve got a feeling a fair
majority of them will say “if it works for you: keep doing it.”
Isn’t that
reassuring?
"if it works for you, keep doing it."
ReplyDeleteMy current litmus test for knowing if my plan is working is to see if I was capable of more during the current workout than last workout.
More doesn't even have to be a whole lot more. An extra 5-10lbs. And extra rep. An extra set. If I add 10lbs to a set and have to strip weight on the other sets, then I keep that top set and improve the other sets.
But that's just me, and how I have decided to build my base. I don't think I could do the exact same work out (as in sets, reps, weight) 4 weeks in a row, and be ok psychologically, even if I knew I was improving. I'll gladly take week after week of tiny PRs over a few big ones.
Finding some way to progress is always key. Sometimes, it may not be immediately obvious, but it's out there.
DeleteAnd off of my own programming, too. Granted, I'm definitely taking a few steps back every time I add to the top set, but I'm still having lots of fun with actually building a base. Next meet is either in early October or late November depending on if I go to the academy for correctional officers in September.
DeleteWord. I'm knee deep in a program I came up with that has so, so much wrong with it from a sciencey 'fitness expert' POV that I just KNEW it would work. And it does, like gangbusters. I could give a rats ass what anyone thinks of it, as 80% of everyone I queried online would say I should be doing Stronglifts and working out 3x a week rather than 'about 7 days on and then a day or two sort of off'. Life is good.
ReplyDeleteHell yeah dude: absolutely true. Majority opinion is bunk anyway. No one wants to see a plan that differs from the norm succeed, because it forces them to re-evaluate their own values.
DeleteDon't worry, you wrote a great blog post :)
ReplyDeleteLol sorry, couldn't resist. Awesome advice and thoughts as always. This one has stuck with me through the past weeks as I'd been reading through 531 Forever trying to find my next leaders/anchor, but then getting stuck by googling for program reviews to see what's most effective. I stopped googling, picked a program that will work for me rather than random internet program reviewers, and am excited to start it in a couple weeks. Thanks man.
That's awesome dude! 5/3/1 Forever has the built in reassurance of being designed by a dude that knows what he's doing, haha. You're going to be in good hands.
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