As of my writing this, I am proud to report that I am 5 weeks sober. I had a near pack a day habit, and I quit cold turkey. The hardest part was after meals, as that’s when I tended to crave it the most. No, this isn’t smoking: it’s gum. And as innocent of an addiction as that may seem, it was one of many that I’ve managed to quit recently, and, specifically, it was an addiction I had traded. Before that, it was an addiction to eating in general, with my reported instances of eating something every 30 minutes, taking the Deep Water “never be hungry/always be eating” philosophy to WAY too stupid of a direction, wherein I found myself addicted to simply CHEWING something at all hours of the day, my mouth ALWAYS needing to be in motion. Along with that, I’ve managed to go from over a gram of caffeine a day (once again, taking Jamie Lewis’ recommendations in “Feast, Famine and Ferocity” and running them WAY too far into the ground) to 1-2 green teas a day, over a gallon of diet soda a day to none of that stuff, and, of course, my various documented fast food addictions. I don’t say this as some sort of testament to my willpower, because the truth is, if I REALLY had decent willpower, I never woulda ended up addicted to this stuff in the first place. No, I say this more to speak to a patter of behavior that I DO find worthwhile: the habit of habit BREAKING.
Although sum of us can make addictions look cooler than others
Habits are
comfortable, and they are comforting.
They, effectively, alleviate us of the burden of thinking. They free up bandwidth: we just fall back
into our habits and auto-pilot ourselves through life. But, in turn, ask yourself: do you endeavor
to BE like one who is on auto-pilot? In
the realm of “being that which does”, do we WANT to be that which does things
without thinking, without being “in the moment”, without living authentically:
an automaton simply coasting through life?
Are these the behaviors and actions that result in greatness? Or do we, instead, observe that those who
have accomplished great things are those that have broken out of their habits,
gone above and beyond the norm, and sought to do the things that were
uncomfortable BECAUSE it was through this discomfort that they were able to
experience growth and progression?
And yes:
quitting gum does NOT elevate one to godhood…but the HABIT of breaking habits
DOES put one on that path. Because
consider the other habits we can break.
What of the habit of ALWAYS including the bench press in our
programming? Why? Because we HAVE to? Because we’ve been benching since we were 14
and it’s our favorite lift? Because it
ALWAYS gets results? But what if we were
to break that habit, decide to run a training cycle with no benching in it
whatsoever, in order to see what impact this has on our training? And what if we observe that removing the
bench allows our anterior deltoids to recover better from training, as they’re
getting beat up less, which allows us to perform better in the barbell squat
(since our shoulders don’t scream at us when we hold the bar in position
anymore) and the strict press? What if,
through breaking the habit of benching, we LEARN more about our own body, how
it responds, how to program other lifts in the absence of this stimulus? What if, through breaking the habit, we
actually end up STRONGER on the very lift we abandoned once we return back to
it?
Doesn't this dude know that behind the neck pressing is dangerous and won't help your bench at all?
What if we
break the habit of avoiding conditioning because it’s supposed to compromise
our gains? And what if, by doing that,
we break our habit of ALWAYS needing to set PRs in training in order to know
“the training is working?” We allow
ourselves time for the lifts to drop a little bit while the conditioning comes
up, and, soon enough, we see the maximal strength come back and SURPASS our old
numbers while our conditioning ALSO improves?
What if we break the habit of doing “what always works” once it STOPS
working? Instead of trapping ourselves
into 3x10 for every movement and just banging our head against the wall when
progression stops, we try a different split, different rep ranges, different
movements, different protocols, etc etc?
What if we allow ourselves the discomfort of doing something new and
different that ISN’T our habit?
And, of
course, our nutritional habits. I
receive frequent messages from folks that want to know HOW to train without
carbs, because they simply can’t fathom this idea. They are in the habit of ALWAYS having carbs
pre, post and DURING training, because “that’s where I get my energy”. I found out it was possible by breaking the
habit, because anyone that has read through my “going full circle” piece on
nutrition knows that I was definitely a carb monster in my earlier years, to
include going through a full box of Pop tarts and a pack of minidonuts at my
strongman competitions, after loading up the night before on pizza and
pancakes. My most recent competition had
me eating steak and eggs in the morning and fasting through the comp, and I had
no issues with energy, which I would not have discovered had I not broken the
habit. And even my most current approach
of Vince Gironda’s Maximum Definition Diet is me breaking my habit of relying
on protein powder as my primary source of nutrition, thanks to my time on the
Velocity Diet, which, in turn, was me breaking the habit of eating every 30
minutes from Deep Water, which was, in turn, me breaking the habit of my fast
food based diet. And through all this
habit breaking, I took away something from every experience and LEARNED
something.
I love the irony of getting this tattooed
Find your
own habits in training, nutrition and life, and make a habit to start regularly
breaking them. The more you make a habit
of breaking habits, more the habit OF breaking habits BECOMES a habit and, in
turn, the discomfort associated with habit breaking diminishes, to the point
that, eventually, you become uncomfortable HAVING habits. You get the itch that you’ve been stagnant
for too long and need to start making changes, because you recognize the
toxicity inherent in being stagnant. You
enjoy the freedom associated with being unchained to any one methodology, able
to freely maneuver and adapt to whatever environment and situation you are
presented with, armed with a toolbox full of experiences and lessons learned,
readily able to apply them as needed.
And when
that happens: you need to break the habit of breaking habits. Because life is funny that way.
This is a great post and resonate a lot with Aristotle ethics (been reading that again the last few weeks). Continent individuals struggle internally with their desires but ultimately act in accordance with what is right, while incontinent individuals fail to resist those desires and act wrongly. A moderate man abstain but feels no pain/difficulty in doing so.
ReplyDeleteVery much appreciate the comment dude! The ancient Greeks had some amazing thoughts from so long ago, and that one certainly holds some value.
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