I’m going to
be honest with you readers: I haven’t read a study on lifting since about 2005
or so. Some of you may be aghast at such
a statement, but some of you may also be in the same boat as me and not even
realize it, because reading an abstract about lifting is NOT the same thing as
reading a study about lifting. I’ve
already digressed from my main point, so getting back on track, the truth is, I
genuinely don’t care about what any study has to say on the topic of lifting. About the only exception to this is when Will
Ruth over at r/strongman shares studies with me, but even then, he tends to do
it with stuff that is more related to coaching than lifting, and we have many
shared interests on the topic. As for
books on lifting, I haven’t read anything remotely academic on the topic since
about 2008. I greatly enjoyed Jim
Wendler’s “5/3/1 Forever”, but that was more a tome on all things 5/3/1 rather
than all things lifting. Otherwise, the
only book I read about lifting these days is an annual read through of Paul
Kelso’s “Powerlifting Basics Texas Style”, as it’s an incredibly enjoyable and
told as a story, rather than an academic text.
What I tend to gravitate towards reading, whenever I have the opportunity,
is philosophy. Why? Because I’m not interested in learning how to
think about lifting: I want to learn how to think about thinking.
Although not enough that I'm willing to kick a woman down a flight of stairs...
Allow me to
inflict a multi-pronged assault on you here.
One of the biggest reasons I advise trainees NOT to read studies is due
to the sheer, uncomfortable, stark, true reality that many individuals simply
lack the ability to UNDERSTAND studies.
Folks, my undergrad and masters was in POLITICAL science, and even with
that barely tangentially related “scientific” aspect to my education I can tell
you that there is SO much that needs to be understood when it comes to studies
that, as a layman, it’s best to not trust your own ability. Do you have a necessary understanding on what
makes a sample size relevant, or how to prevent biasing in the collection said
sample sizes, or which method of measuring outcomes is free of bias AND
accepted within its own community, or what is considered statistically
significant when measuring outcomes, or etc etc etc. Studies can be great for the people that are
trained and educated to understand them, but for the vast majority of people,
having access to them just confuses them, and when read with an intent to
specifically prove or disprove a belief, they’re basically worthless. Actually, not worthless: dangerous.
The above
paragraph is already going to chap a lot of folks, but if it does, ask yourself
if you’re the exact kind of person I’m talking about when you get mad about
it. Then see if you can find an
individual educated on the topic and see if they agree with me or agree with
you. After that, allow me to get into my
other issue when it comes to the reading of studies: all this does is teach you
something about lifting. Isn’t that
worthwhile if you want to get better at lifting? Ya know, maybe it CAN be, but, alternatively,
I find that all studies do is LIMIT an individual rather than enhance
them. When a trainee reads that “protein
synthesis is maximized with 72 hours of training”, they just sigh with
resignation and go “well I guess 3x a week full body training is the best and
only way to train”, and eliminate for themselves a SIGNIFICANT amount of
training programs and opportunities.
They read that the squat and the deadlift release a significant amount
of growth hormones and, with defeat, resign themselves to HAVING to have squats
and deadlifts in every single program they ever run. It’s rarely a case of “now I have a secret
weapon” and far more often “now I have an albatross around my neck”. And, consequently, rarely do I ever have
someone share a study with me to share with me that I’m right about something,
but more to “prove” to me that I’m wrong about something because a study says
it’s not possible.
Well good luck with all that
My interest,
instead, is to learn how to think about thinking rather than how to think about
lifting. In the case of the latter, I
rely on someone/something else to tell me WHAT to think when it comes to
lifting, which is fundamentally just being an information bank, holding and
dispensing words from studies (ideally CORRECTLY remembered, but often
not). With the advent of the internet and
electronically stored memory, it honestly seems silly, for I can simply look up
information as needed rather than have to memorize tomes of it. Thinking, true thinking, is not simply
memorizing information and recalling it when needed. You can train a fish to do that trick. Thinking is taking that information and being
able to comprehend it, extrapolate it, apply it and, if necessary, totally
reject it. Going even further, thinking
eventually reaches a point where no new information is needed in order to reach
new conclusions but, instead, all one needs is new WAYS of thinking in order to
reach new conclusions based off old information.
Yes, so many
trainees feel that what is lacking in their lives is information when, in
truth, what they lack is the ability to take what is already out there and
think about it in a new way. The human
body has existed for millennia, making it work hard has existed for just as
long, there’s genuinely not going to be anything new under the sun when it
comes to making it get bigger and stronger: all that’s limiting us is how we
THINK about approaching it. I read
philosophy because I want to learn about different ways to THINK about
thinking, and I take that different way to think about thinking and use it to
think about getting bigger and stronger.
And the more I learn how to think about thinking, the LESS limitations I
find. Whereas those that dedicate
themselves to learning how to “think about lifting” tend to wind up only
knowing one way to go about the process, I continue to find more and more ways
to get bigger and stronger.
And ways to not do that
Instead of
getting into study wars with people, where you go back and forth citing
different studies and tearing apart the methods of your opposition, allow
yourself to not CARE about what the studies say. If someone quotes something at you “proving”
that you’re wrong, allow yourself to be unaffected by this. All this person is demonstrating to you is
that they have given up on thinking and are putting all faith, trust and
confidence in one source. This
information is all already out there, it’s been out there forever, it’s simply
a question of how you want to think about it.
If you’ve already found a way to think that contradicts what in that
study, it simply means the studies need to keep up with your thinking: NOT the
other way around. Continue to expand how
you think about thinking and you will continue to find more ways to think about
anything you want to think about and, in turn, more and more ways to succeed.
Great post, as always.
ReplyDeleteI don't have a lot, just that two of the most effective things I have done in my opinion have been running the Delorme protocol with my main lifts and just buying into Bud Jeffries ideas on kettlebell swings.
Jeffries seems borne out of crazy and I can't even find any supporting literature to back up high rep swings. The Delorme protocol, well, I don't even know where the study exists.
But I have found that in the absence of being right, the only thing left is to force things to work through effort.
Thanks dude.
DeleteGreat article ,most people want something to be right or wrong ,but somewhere in between these is "simply correct" ,at that time ,place ect.In Buddhism we have "attachment to view " ,where we are so used to thinking in a certain way it becomes " our truth" our reality,like you say ,the ways to train are in most ways ,pretty much established,but the ways to think about them is absolutely limitless .
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated dude. Appreciate sharing the perspective as well. Even these ideas have all been thought of before, haha.
DeleteThey certainly have !! Our deluded pride makes us think we're all geniuses!!
ReplyDeleteI think the pubmed lifters get two fundamental things wrong in their approach to research.
ReplyDelete1 - The whole basis of science is experiment. It's doing a thing and reporting what happens. Most of these guys will argue for hours quoting this or that study, without ever actually applying any of it.
2 - the current science is a best guess of how we think things work right now. Much like before the advent of microbiology, medical science thought bad smells caused disease. It's not gospel, yet it's taken to be ironclad and immutable.
Not only that, but if your hypothesis disagrees with experiment then it's wrong, so telling me I can't do xyz when I have done it for years and it works... the science is wrong.
100% dude. So many people hold science of the highest esteem without really understanding it. It's more religious faith than academic rigor. But good luck ever trying to convince someone they aren't as smart as they think, haha. I'm prone to asking the question "Is it at all possible that you personally are not smart enough to understand all of this and that you are wrong?" When one refuses to even admit to that possibility, you know that no beneficial dialogue can be had.
Delete