The longer I exist in this space, the more I refine my thoughts, which to the outsider can be interpreted as changing positions/opinions or just flat out flip-flopping, but the reality is that we often begin with a primitive operating premise that becomes more complex and sophisticated as more information and a better understanding presents itself. Much like how many trainees are so upset that Jim Wendler dared to IMPROVE 5/3/1 over the years (which is to say, it worked just fine at the start, but now it works even better) or how people got mad at Louie Simmons for basically doing ANYTHING, it seems many in the physical transformation sphere (and, in truth, humanity) prefer that, once an idea is had, it never changes. These are the people that listened to all of ACDC’s albums, despite them all sounding the same, and got mad at Madonna for reinventing herself every 3 years or so. But, ultimately, what I want to discuss is where I’ve currently landed in regards to what it is that compels us to act in regards to physical transformation, because, quite often, this question gets asked. “How do I start training hard and eating right? Every time I try to start, I fail”. This then turns into a question of how do I get motivated enough to do this, to which the individual is chastised because they have to be DISCIPLINED enough to do so, meaning they lacked the necessary degree of willpower, and even I have made a mistake because I claimed it was a matter of WANTING the results…whereas, now, I realize (for now) that it’s a matter of identity. Much like my notion of “being that which does”: we do the things we do because we are the thing we are.

In turn, some of us are REAL scary
So again,
back to the beginning (as that’s a good place to start), we like to believe
that the road to physical transformation begins with an initial spark of
motivation. We see that montage from a
Rocky film or New Year’s rolls around and we decide that THIS is the moment
that we are going to totally transform ourselves. We’re going to start working out EVERY day,
and we’re going to cut out the junkfood and soda and eating nothing but kale
and chicken breasts and we’re going to get ripped inside of 3 months. And by day 4, we’ve slept through the alarm,
stopped at the drivethrough on the way home, and our shaker bottle smells
rancid because it’s been in the back of the car for 3 days and hasn’t seen any
use beyond the first shake. What
happened? The internet tells us that
motivation failed, and we needed DISCIPLINE all along.
What is
discipline? It’s what compels us to act
even when we don’t want to. We don’t
brush our teeth every day because we’re motivated to brush our teeth: we do it
because it’s part of our routine, and we are disciplined about following our
routine. The same is true of the
training and the eating: we do it out of duty.
But here’s the thing: discipline is implying that we are working AGAINST
our nature. Discipline is a noun and a
verb: we discipline people so that they will DEVELOP discipline, and, quite
often, discipline applied as a verb is unpleasant, in order to compel someone
to perform unpleasant things. The
military employs discipline in basic training in order to compel new recruits
to have the proper discipline to function as a solider, which is to break them
of their individuality and have them conform to the needs of the unit. But how does one develop the noun of
discipline in the absence of the verb?
To this, my
answer was willpower, which I defined as the energy that was developed and
proportional to the incongruity between who we wanted to be compared to who we
are. The question is frequently asked
“how do I develop more willpower”, and my answer was “you have to be so upset
with what you are compared to what you hope to be that it empowers you to take
the actions necessary to rectify the situation”. Much like newbie gains: the further away you
are from your maximum potential, the more rapidly you accelerate toward it, and
as you get closer, it moves slower. That
individual that is only half a pound away from their goal weight isn’t going to
have as much willpower to accomplish it compared to the individual that is
200lbs away, assuming that the dissonance between the two is strong
enough. But, the more I pondered, the
more I learned, the more I realized that willpower is, in truth, a finite
resource. It eventually runs out, and
any method dependent upon it as the sole means of accomplishment will
eventually fail, and fail hard. When
we’ve been relying PURELY on willpower to not eat the donut everyday for 4
years, when that dam breaks, we are eating ALL the donuts, to include all the
ones we didn’t eat for 4 years. So, if
not willpower, what then?
My initial
thought was “want”. Almost in a means of
going back to motivation, we simply needed to WANT the results of the effort
MORE than we disliked the effort. THIS
was the only real way for us to perpetuate success on the realm of physical
transformation. Humans will,
fundamentally, ALWAYS do what they want.
The only way to get them to do otherwise is through motivation,
discipline (verb and noun) and willpower, and, as we’ve observed: ALL of these
are finite and prone to failure.
Motivation frequently fails, willpower runs out, and disciplined
soldiers will eventually crumble if the situation is dire enough. But want NEVER runs out: it simply
changes. In the instance of the 3
aforementioned failures, one observes that the WANT changing is primarily what
impacted things. At that moment of
failure, we simply no longer wanted physical transformation more than we wanted
something else instead. When we comply
with the diet, it’s because we want the results of the diet more than the 4
years of the donuts. When willpower
failed us, we wanted the donuts more than the results. So then it simply becomes a matter of WANTING
the results more than anything else, and once we accomplish that, we’re in the
clear!
In truth, I
still like that theory…but it definitely falls into an issue of being
reductionist. And, of course, now the
question becomes “how do I MAKE myself want this?” and we’re back to square
one, trying to get motivated again. No,
instead, where I’ve settled is this: in order to achieve our goals (true, in
physical transformation, but even in other spheres), we must change our
identity to suit the goal we pursue. And
no, not change identity as in get a new name and issued identification card: we
must change who we ARE in order to change what we DO. A reverse of Nicomanchean ethics, which
presented the idea that virtue was what we practice, this concept premises off the
idea that who we ARE dictates what we do.
Joey is, in fact, an entire swarm of locust
How do I
mean this? I get up at 0400 4 days a
week to exercise. People ask how I do
this, and I don’t have an answer to give.
Why is that? Because it’s not
motivation that makes me do it, it’s not discipline, it’s not willpower, and
it’s not want: I am simply the guy who gets up at 0400 to exercise. It’s who I am. It’s what I do. To NOT do it would be to go against my
nature, and THAT would be difficult and cause me some manner of cognitive
dissonance. Similarly, I don’t eat
processed food. To the point that I
don’t even recognize it AS food. I’ll
walk through a grocery store or a gas station, surrounded by all the shiny
boxed products claiming to be some form of food, and it doesn’t register in my
brain as “this is something I can eat”.
Like an alligator looking at a piece of bamboo or a panda looking at a
fresh killed elk, I can recognize that it’s food for SOMETHING: just not
me. Why?
Because I’m the guy who doesn’t eat that. It’s simply who I am.
And this is
CRUCIAL for the success of physical transformation: we CANNOT transform into
something we aren’t. Attempting to do so
is simply fighting our nature, and our nature ALWAYS wins. We can attempt to hide from our identity, but
it always shines through at the end.
It’s why we see former Biggest Loser contestants put all the weight back
on (and moreso): they were always a fat person, even when they lost the
weight. Lottery winners will go bankrupt
in a year, because they were still poor, even with money. Whenever we try to white knuckle and
willpower a change to happen, we’re simply stretching that rubber band of our
identity, and when it snaps, the results in a vacuum that is filled with some
sort of binge behavior to course correct us back to who we are.
It IS rather impressive how his calves remained the same size. Bodybuilders take note.
Which means,
when embarking on a journey of physical transformation, the question is not
“can do I do these things”, but “can I become the person who does these
things?” It’s not “can I wake up at 0400
to exercise”. Anyone can do that. Either through motivation, discipline, or
willpower, we can get ANY person to wake up early and exercise. But to keep doing it? How does THAT happen? It happens by BECOMING the person who does
that. We stay on point with nutrition
not because it’s the right thing to do, not because our discipline compels us,
not because we have a competition coming up, but because we ARE the person who
eats this way. Which means, when we see
these challenges, we ask “can I become the person who does these things”. And, fundamentally, we KNOW the answer to
that question. One of the greatest tools
we, as humans, possess IS the ability to become that which we need to become
when the situation presents. We CAN
reinvent ourselves to better suit our environment. We BROKE natural selection through the power
of our intellect and allowed ourselves to become what we needed to be in an
environment that is completely alien to what nature ever intended for us. We are the single most adaptable species on
the planet: what CAN’T we become?
Herein, you
stare down Sartre’s horrible “radical freedom”.
You have no limits here: it’s all a matter of, can you become what you
need to become in order to accomplish what you desire?
Just another way to take inspiration from Mark Henry. Why work out? Because that's what I do!
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/Cwg45KkrOxY?si=l1OKVEK0F5MNFvti
Could do far worse than listening to Mark Henry. What a freak of nature.
Delete"Identity" is kind of a vague solution; everyone from Aristotle to Carl Jung to Stan Lee has an opinion on what it looks and tastes like, and it's tough to say if any of those answers are truly wrong.
ReplyDeleteI do agree with you though. A lot of what keeps me lifting weights came from some posts you'd written a few years ago, about running 5/3/1 BBB and squatting 5x10 @ 400lbs.
The rough summary as I interpreted (without any of the truly interesting parts) is "Before I squatted 5x10 @ 400lbs I knew I was the guy who squats 5x10 @ 400lbs. This is what the guy who squats 5x10 @ 400lbs does to squat that much."
I'm the guy who snatches motorcycles. Haven't done it yet but I'm figuring it out.
Love it! And so happy to hear that post was of value to you. Was definitely an interesting time in my life. More and more folks out there are discussing identity, and it's certainly a wide open realm of existentialism to explore.
Delete