Friday, May 6, 2022

QUIT ASKING FOR MORE RULES


I’ve been bigger and stronger than my peers for longer than I haven’t been at this point.  I started lifting weights 22 years ago, and once I got to college and had access to a real weight room and a dinning hall that served me all the food I could want, I exploded in size and strength and road that out for quite a while.  Along with that, I’ve trained martial arts off and on since the age of 9.  I say all this not to bloviate about what a badass I am, but more to point out that I’ve never felt a need to threaten physical violence on anyone.  If nothing else, there’s always just been an assumption of my capabilities (which fits in well with my “more trouble than I am worth” approach).  But ONE time, I was compelled to break kayfabe and actually threaten someone.  Allow me to explain.


Oh my god I just love this



One time, as part of a workplace “leadership building” seminar/retreat, I was put in a team of around 10 people, and we were given a task to accomplish and told the rules of engagement.  Right away, my deviant mind identified some holes in the rules that were going to make the project MUCH easier…and suddenly, to my horror, I saw one of my peers raise their hands and ask a clarifying question about the rules that, in turn, resulted in MORE rules being established there on the spot, reducing my ability to exploit loopholes and game the system.  I said point blank “Oh my god: did you really just ask for MORE rules?”  They laughed it off and raised their hand again, at which point, I said flat out “If you do not put your hand down, I will beat you into a coma”.  Once again, they laughed…then looked at me and saw no smile or sign that I was joking.  They looked at the person proctoring our assignment, looked back at me, and then put their hand down.  The best part of that story?  The proctor thanked me after that.


So first, a good lesson that, sometimes, the simplest solution is the most effective.  Rather than try to argue, persuade, or convince this person, I resorted to the quickest solution I had.  Let’s take that lesson with training and nutrition and keep things simple until they can’t be.  But the REAL big lesson here: QUIT ASKING FOR MORE RULES!  Oh my god, seriously!


You are everything I can't stand whenever we play



What do I mean by this?  I’m talking about all the self-imposed rules that trainees inflict that absolutely limit themselves in reaching their goals.  I spend a LOT of time on a subreddit dedicated to gaining weight, which I’m sure to many readers is a confounding idea when we exist in a world where obesity is rapidly becoming the number 1 killer of the population, but that just goes to prove the point.  The folks who are struggling to gain weight struggle BECAUSE they keep asking for more rules.  Gaining weight should be simple: eat more food.  If we want this weight to be MUSCLE, it’s a LITTLE more nuanced: eat more food AND train so hard it becomes muscle.  But you’d be SHOCKED at some of the “more rules” these folks want.  They have to hit certain macro percentages, they can only do it while eating “clean” bodybuilding foods ala chicken breasts, white rice and broccoli, they have to do it while intermittent fasting, they have to do it using only shakes, they have to do it eating only yummy food that is cheap and takes no effort to prepare (let’s call a spade a spade there and just say they’re being lazy), etc etc.  WHY do they want so many rules?  Why can’t it simply be “I want to gain weight, there’s food to eat, I’ll eat more of it!”  There are SO many stories of athletes crushing Little Debbies and fried chicken and burgers and pizza and etc etc on their quest to gain: surely we can at least put away a PBJ and not have an existential meltdown?


And oh my goodness the rules around training that we HAVE to follow.  We apparently HAVE to train a muscle group 2x a week or else we wasted ALL of our gains.  And this means the only appropriate way to train is a push/pull/legs split where we lift 6 times a week, or else we didn’t use enough volume to generate stimulus.  Jesus Christ, folks, Stuart McRobert has programs where you train the whole body 3 times in 2 WEEKS and he STILL got kids to grow.  People have been lifting weights without rules for SO long and seeing crazy growth.  It’s honestly REALLY hard to lift weights wrong: believe me, I’ve tried.  My best growth happened when I started doing EVERYTHING “wrong”.  My 3 “rules” are effort, consistency and time, which, surprisingly enough, so many trainees try to come up with their own rules to circumvent THOSE rules.  “I HAVE to leave 2-3 reps in the tank if I wanna grow!”  Sure thing chief: let’s talk about the fact that when you go “to failure”, you’re ALREADY leaving 2-3 reps in the tank, so when you make the choice to do that, you’re leaving like 6-7 reps in the tank.  But no, I’m sure you’ll grow: you’re following the rules!



When reps DON'T get left in the tank



Should I even get started about the rule on how you absolutely can NOT get injured from training?  How about rules regarding overtraining? What about the rule that says you HAVE to have a coach if you want to learn how to power clean?  Never mind that, every year, thousands of high school freshmen learn how to do it in 15 minutes at some football summer program.  How about the rule that says if you want to get bigger that means you’re training a bodybuilding program?  Ever see how goddamn huge a pro-strongman is?


Quit asking for MORE rules!  You are doomed by your freedom: appreciate that and make the most of it.  You can absolutely carve your own path through this process, do things the way you want to do them, and get the results you want to get.  The only “rules” are working hard, staying consistent, and being patient.  Go low carb, go high carb, go low protein (GASP), do single sets, do 100 sets, do machines only, do natural stones only, pick whatever rules you want and quit asking for MORE of them.  There are TONS of people out there that will give you more rules if you ask for them: it’s how they make money.  They are fleecing new trainees with the enticement of limitations and restrictions, because people ultimately fear freedom and crave confinement.  Embrace your freedom: quit asking for more rules, go out and exploit the loopholes, and if someone wants to limit you, beat them into a coma.





…metaphorically, of course.  


11 comments:

  1. "Strong Convictions loosely held." I have to disagree that it's more rules that hurt. In my experience, it's a lack of ability to follow ANY set of rules. The issue with the person asking for rules isn't that they want more rules; it's that they want to keep changing the rules. Like you said, the basic dogma for gaining weight is simple: "eat more + train hard". You can do this a million ways (Clean, dirty, Shakes, fasting, high Carbs, high fats, etc), but once you've set some rules, don't deviate at all. Have a strong set of rules that you follow to the T with the central dogma of eating well and training hard. Your rules can be simple or elaborate, but stop changing them all the damn time.

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    1. Seems like that's another issue entirely and both are equally valid. You have to be able to commit to SOMETHING to avoid your issue. But once you've committed, don't commit to things you don't need to commit to.

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    2. I don't feel you're disagreeing at all. We're saying the same thing: people are doing what is necessary to succeed. What I'm talking about is how they're trying to find more and more rules that will prevent them from doing those things. When all you need to do is work hard to grow big and strong, making up rules like "MUST leave 3-4 reps in the tank", "MUST train a muscle 2x a week", "NOT allowed to overtrain", etc etc, is a creative way to keep yourself from actually working hard and doing what it takes to succeed. A rule like "eat big to get big" is a simple enough rule, so when we say "chicken breasts, rice and broccoli only", we create rules that prevent us from actually following the rule that helps us succeed.

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  3. "Perfection is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away"

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  4. Awesome post. Love it.

    I like the idea you outlined of just going out and doing power cleans. Got back into the gym recently after a 4-5 month hiatus from it, and I think I should add those to my routine.

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  5. I always feel motivated to train when I read your blog.
    According my trainer pull ups are too hard. More than three sets of an exercise is overtraining.

    I had to leave two or three reps in the tank, otherwise I would end up with back and shoulder issues.
    The push up is too risky.

    Maybe I should listen to him and do exactly the opposite to get results.

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    1. Appreciate the sentiment dude! And there have been worse strategies. My grandpa always said "Look at what 90% of the population is doing and go do the opposite"

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  6. You can tell the person asking for more rules never played DnD. The DM should have to look at you and some point and just shake their head in resignation for whatever stupidity they let you get away with

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    1. Hell yeah! Some people see the rules and think "this is all I'm allowed to do", and others see the rules and think "if they didn't say I'm NOT allowed to do it: I am"

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