This thought
hit me on my way walking into work after lunch, as I was contemplating the fact
that I just ate my 4th identical lunch of the week (combination of chicken
tenderloins and thighs in a sugar free teriyaki marinade with cauliflower rice
and broccoli, eaten with chopsticks, because I am California yuppie scum)
recovering from a morning workout that included 350 dips and 50+ reps of
benching with a planned 5 minute run of my daily kettlebell Armor Building Complexes,
contributing to a total amount of pressing reps somewhere in the
bajillions. THAT is one hell of an
opening sentence: let me take a moment to be proud of that. But anyway, I’ve already digressed: the above
mentioned diet AND training program are absolute loony tunes bonkers and
conform to pretty much no “ideal” approach out there. But I woke up like this this morning
And I am the
product of SOOOOO many bad decisions and ideas as far as eating, living and
training go. I am doing everything
wrong, yet achieving results that have gotten me multiple accusations of both
superior genetics AND drug usage. The
past 2 weeks I’ve been accosted by 3 strangers who wanted to inform me that I
have large arms (thank goodness: I hadn’t noticed!), despite the fact I do 1
set of curls once a week. I train the
whole body everyday, I perform ludicrous challenges like this one weekly
And here I
stand: a living testament to this one fact: your body WANTS to change.
And writing
this is so weird, because I’ve written on many occasions about how much the
body DOESN’T like change. How it will
fight VERY hard to maintain the status quo.
How you have to beat it into submission in order to FORCE it to
grow. But that’s the thing: that’s ALL
you have to do to get it to grow. You
have to bend and shape it to your will…but it’s all TOO willing TO be beaten,
bent and shaped. It is modular,
flexible, shapeable and transformable.
The body CRAVES change: it’s up to YOU to be the one to do what it takes
to give it what it wants.
Don't leave it up to others |
And the
implication of this (man, I’m starting a lot of paragraphs here with ‘and’: my
1st grade teacher would kill me) is that it REALLY doesn’t matter HOW you
attempt to force the body to change: it wants to change so bad that it will
accept just about ANY stimulus whatsoever…as long as it remains
CONSISTENT. THIS is where the body not
liking change comes into play. The body
tends to respond to consistent, repeated patterns. It’s why I constantly say “it’s hard to lift
weights wrong”: it REALLY is. You just
need to send the effort and consistency and the change will happen. But if you’re little Johnny Program-Hopper
and you’re constantly changing your approach, the body has no idea what the
Hell the demand is, and never realizes an opportunity to change. It wants that change SO badly, but because of
your constant self-doubt and desire to optimize before you’ve even figured out
how to achieve “good enough”, you’ve squandered that opportunity and denied the
body it’s one real desire: to change.
Your body
wants to change because it’s unsatisfied with what it is…and who can blame
it? It has SO much more potential just
WAITING to be unlocked…and YOU hold the key…and it’s REALLY pissed at you for
not opening it up! All it wants is a
chance: an opportunity. It is champing
at the bit here: give it what it wants!
Dan here doing his damndest to try to give it everything all at once
It’s why
every single diet on the planet works.
Why? Because a diet is simply a
codified approach to eating. It’s a
consistent, repeatable approach based on SOME sort of principle, and that will
ALWAYS achieve AN outcome when compared to the chaos that most people subject
their body too nutritionally. So many
people live off the “wait until I’m hungry and eat whatever is around until I’m
full/it’s gone” diet, and their physique and health are a reflection of this
depressing approach. How negligent: to
subject your body to such mistreatment when ANY other approach would be better. People who take control of their diets start
by doing the most important thing first: they exercise MINDFULLNESS of what/how
they eat. Vegans and Carnivores BOTH
experience improved health markers, because they went from someone who NEVER
thought about what they were eating to someone that took time to think, even
for a minute, about what they were putting into their bodies. They provided their body what it needed in
order to change: a mind willing to steer it.
“But isn’t
chaos the plan?” Oh my goodness
yes! BECAUSE chaos is the plan, my body
has adapted into an outstanding avatar of chaos. My body is an “on demand” body. THAT is why I can roll up to a strongman
competition having trained multiple times a day leading up to it INCLUDING that
morning and still take first in 2 events.
It’s why I can accidentally drop to my leanest level of bodyfat ever
when I’m living off fast food for a week.
It’s why I can “break all the rules”: because chaos IS the consistent
variable I keep slamming my body with.
It’s not “chaos Monday through Friday, structure on weekends”. It ONLY knows chaos, and, in turn, it is
consistently changing to adapt TO chaos.
Consistency in chaos: how chaotic!
I realize
how much I’ve tooted my own horn here, but the world will beat you down enough
that it’s worth overcompensating on your own end in order to achieve some
semblance of balance (future blogpost: be on the lookout). I do so because, again, I am a living
example. With awful genetics, no drugs,
substandard nutrition (ask the internet: you need carbs to grow!), and a ridiculous
training plan, I’ve still succeeded.
It’s because your body really REALLY wants to change. It’s so tired of looking like a melted
candle, it’s so tired of feeling like it’s got pasta sauce for blood, it’s so
tired of BEING so goddamn tired. It was
to move, fight, strain, grow, overcome and achieve: give it what it wants!
Can you run through your arm routine, the one that gets you accused of running gear? Arms have always been my weakest body part. Solid back. Solid chest. Solid legs. But I just can't seem to get those damn pythons. :P
ReplyDeleteWhat has been the most recent change that seems to have had the most significant impact is my inclusion of a 5 minute daily Armor Building Complex workout w/24kb kettlebells. Dan John has spoken/written about how the double KB clean is a solid bicep builder, and I'd have to say I agree with him based on results.
DeleteBut otherwise, I do a once a week set of Poundstone curls, where I do 1 rep more than the previous week (This week was 210 reps with the axle), and I also do 25 band push downs and 50 dips a day.