I really,
truly appreciate the support I get online from all the folks that read my blog
and watch the videos I upload to youtube.
When I first started this, I had no idea it would pick up any sort of
following. In truth, I just wanted to
get some thoughts down, and ultimately have a lot of my arguments “pre-built”
so that, when things escalated online, I could just link to my thoughts on it
instead of having to re-write things every single time. I frequently get messages from various
readers that let me know that what I’ve written has changed their lives,
changed their training, had them hit goals they never thought possible, etc,
and reading that blows my mind and brings me joy. I write all that because, sometimes, I feel
like there may still be some miscommunication between what I’m writing and
saying and what is being understood. And
I say THAT because I find that, often, I am asked “what is the plan?” Folks: CHAOS is the plan.
For the past
few years I’ve been asked if I have any plans to compete in strongman
again. The question baffled me every
time: was I the only one experiencing a global pandemic these past few
years? Sure: I had TONS of plans to
compete: none of the came to fruition.
Why? Because chaos. Completely unforeseeable events occurred and
there was no defined end state to reach.
Travel became impossible, along with mass gatherings and all those other
things that are kinda necessary to compete in strongman. I stopped planning and decided to just let
fate sort itself out. And in that
regard, a competition has opened up within 20 minutes of where I live, so I can
travel there, and we seem to be on the downward trend currently for infection
rates, so I can mass gather. And
IMMEDIATELY upon signing up, people asked “So how do you plan to train for the
competition?” How do I plain to train
for a competition that JUST opened up and has no events listed? I don’t.
CHAOS IS THE PLAN.
I share my
insanity on youtube. I took it upon
myself to run “Keg Grace” for 6 weeks on my pressing days as a way to get in
some extra volume. After that, I took up
a workout Jon Andersen detailed where you squatted for 20 reps and turned
around and immediately deadlifted for 20 reps.
JUST recently I took up a challenge to get in 30 of Dan John’s Armor Building
Complexes with 24kg kettlebells in 5 minutes.
In ALL of these cases, I had multiple people ask me “what’s the
plan?” “You’re SO close to sub-2 minutes
on Keg Grace: what’s the plan to get there?”
“What’s the plan to determine starting weights for the 20 rep squats and
deadlifts?” “What’s the plan to get from
20 rounds to 30 on the ABCs?” Folks:
CHAOS IS THE PLAN!
Quit trying
to understand this: understanding it will cheapen it. It will make it less effective. This NEEDS to be “not-understandable”. Observing it should be confusing and
disturbing. It should be
concerning. It should break your brain
and make ZERO sense, because this is chaos.
Order is gone, reason does not exist, trying to copy, emulate or adapt
this for yourself is just going to make it yet another plan. In order for chaos to be the plan, even YOU
have to not understand what it is that you’re doing.
My goal is
to be “more trouble than I am worth”: I can’t be going around having
plans. Plans are the first step toward
adaptation, and adaptation is the first step toward stagnation. We are endeavoring for TRANSFORMATION! This requires placing the body in a situation
where it NEVER adapts. It never has a
chance to get used to the demand being placed on it, it’s constantly being
assaulted from every angle with multiple differing intensities and requirements
and all it understands is that it needs to start changing NOW, but it has no
idea how. So it just grows in EVERY
direction. It gets bigger AND stronger
AND faster AND better conditioned, because the information it’s receiving is
“We are in a highly stressful, chaotic environment, surrounded by violence,
with no end in sight”. There’s no plan:
it’s been thrown into the meat grinder and is just trying to survive.
It's just one long battle at Stamford Bridge for my body
“But don’t
you follow training plans?” Had that
question pop-up recently, because folks love plans. I sure do follow training plans, and mutate
them into something horrible. I’m
currently undergoing my third run of Deep Water. Remember when Jon told you to do Tabata front
squats with kettlebells everyday through the program? Me neither.
I also remember Dan John effectively saying “Good luck!” at doing just
that as well. And here I am. Along with conditioning sessions tacked onto
the end of every workout. Along with
daily work. Along with my weighted vest
walks on weekends. Along with taking all
my sets from the floor with my overhead work.
Oh, and I’m training for a 10 mile race that I’ll be running tomorrow as
of me writing this…which is also the day after I did my 100 squats in 9
sets. There sure was a plan, and I
threw a whole heaping load of chaos at it.
And I’ve
written about those Tabata KB front squats a lot recently because I’m loving
this new element of chaos I’ve come up with.
4 minutes a day and I’m gassed.
And suddenly, I’m squatting everyday: that thing that people spend WAY
too much time trying to figure out how to do.
And I don’t even like squatting.
And I have NO idea what the end state of this looks like. I might do it for a full calendar year just
to be able to say I did and it could be done, or something shiny might come my
way and take this off course. Because
chaos IS the plan. Because I want a body
that is formed and shaped BY chaos.
Because I’ve seen the bodies that are shaped by order. You have too.
You’ve seen what happens to those that have settled into a rut, go to
work, come home, slump on the couch and stuff themselves with some sort of boxed
comfort until they’re ready to sleep and start it all over again. They NEED some chaos.
“But haven’t
you written about eating every half hour?
About book ending? About
‘starting with a win’?”
Yup, I sure
have.
And there,
folks, is duality. Which we’ve talked
about before, and will do again.
When? Who knows: chaos is the plan.
"Show up, work, repeat" is the plan!
ReplyDeleteCountpoint: "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth"-Mike Tyson, haha.
DeleteTraining today felt exactly like that, and my counter plan was to headbutt the fist that was punching me in an attempt to injure it. Take THAT, assault bike.
DeleteHah! Crazy is a fantastic plan
DeleteI've thought a bit about randomizing my assistance work like you wrote in another post. This post makes me to want to try it even more.
ReplyDeleteSo I guess I'll give it a chance even though giving up control makes me feel very uncomfortable.
It's an interesting bit of play here: you're operating under the impression you had control in the first place in order to be able to give it up, which many would argue that we are all set on a pre-destined course and simply watching the events unfold (future blogpost: stay tuned!) OR, alternatively, you maintain control BY giving up control. It's YOUR decision to do so: no one can take it from you.
DeleteI personally do think there is some control over our lives. While live itself is chaos, a lot of random events strung together, we still can decide how we react to those events.
DeleteAnd about your other point do you mean since I am giving up control willingly I am still in control? It is not really chaos because I decide to make the decision?
Aside from the philosophical stuff I tried this yesterday and it was quite nice to just concentrate on doing the work.
Free will is always a fascinating topic to discuss...or so I choose to think, haha. But you grasp what I'm saying with the second point: we can choose chaos, which is giving it order.
DeleteIt's getting weirder here and we love it.
ReplyDeleteWR
Weird is all I know, haha.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThrough this blog, i witnessed a paladin in his quest to strength has become a champion of chaos, week by week. Muscle for the Muscle God
ReplyDeleteHah! A tale as old as time.
DeleteI do really appreciate your blog, it has changed the way I think about life.
ReplyDeleteThat's a HUGE comment my dude. It's wild to think that, but I appreciate your appreciation. Glad I could play a role.
DeleteI think when "work" becomes the goal, rather than some arbitrary number or weight or measurement, it all falls into place!
ReplyDeleteLove the writing man and love the approach!
Thanks man! And that's incredibly well put: I dig it.
DeleteLive in the present. The past does not exist. The future does not exist. You live only now. The eternal now. Thinking too much of the past will burden you with regret, the future only brings anxiety. The animals that survive are those that bias themselves toward the present. Don't try it tomorrow, do it now, yolo, carpe diem, etc.
ReplyDeleteReally subtle and tricky to do in practice. It requires you to forgive yourself about your past mistakes. You have to stop daydreaming who you'll be and accept who you are now. Requires you to let go of your ego and abandon justifications and excuses. To start doing your best, not just occasionally. To stop trying to fit in and to look inside rather than outside. Introspection, self-reflection, reality checks.
I've only high praise that you're sharing your journey and thoughts.
"The path of the mystic is a secret path, in a sense, and a silent and wonderful path. Yet it is open to all men, and is so simple and so near at hand that many, who long to tread it yet turn away from it, thinking it to be something else.
...
The true doctrine is secret, hidden; not by the teacher, but in the very nature of the teaching itself, and to gain it, the student must enter by the only door which gives entrance — the living of the life.
...
Many who have reached a certain point sometimes wish to have full explanations given to them so that in some way they may derive personal benefit from the knowledge; but without the stimulus of effort, without trust, without faith, nothing is possible." [1]
[1] https://www.theosociety.org/pasadena/pathmyst/path-3.htm
Appreciate you putting that all out there. It's absolutely an undertaking.
DeleteThanks for this! It's exactly how I'm feeling at the moment. I've moved from so many routines (PPL, 531, Nerd math, and just starting the 12 week KB master plan), that I'm starting to feel as though I should just go with it and workout how I feel like working out!
ReplyDelete