For my readers out there that aren’t parents, allow me to expose you to a pitfall modern parents will experience that did not exist when I was growing up: you can accidentally let your kid watch 8 hours of television. Its true! One minute, it’s Saturday morning and your kid is watching cartoons, and suddenly you turn around and it’s Saturday night and your kid…is STILL watching cartoons. How?! Because television is STREAMING these days: it’s on demand! What does that mean? It means your kid can pick a show and bingewatch it, just like any degenerate adult can do. As opposed to? As opposed to when so many other of us grew up, when there were Saturday MORNING cartoons that ran for about 2 hours (WITH commercial interruptions) and then it transitioned onto terrible infomercials for the Chuck Norris TotalGym and the Flowbee (look that up). Sure, you COULD sit there for the rest of your Saturday and watch that awful programming…but why would you? At that point, the cartoons were over and you moved on to something ELSE on Saturday: playing some sports outside, reading comic books, playing video games, arts, crafts, just plain ANYTHING else. But now? Now, the cartoons NEVER end, and if you let your attention slip, when your kid asks “can I watch some cartoons” and you say “sure”, you created a Saturday television zombie. Why do I even bring any of this up? Well, for one: it’s legit something to watch out for as a parent (don’t be fooled: EVERY parent is just winging it, there is no book, and just like lifting, it’s often good to learn from the bros that have “been there/done that”), but additionally, this streaming on demand access can absolutely negatively impact your training and nutrition.
Granted, THIS particular show definitely helped me find some training intensity (RIP Akira Toriyama)
I started this by going back
to the past, so allow me to continue that approach in discussing what physical
transformation USED to be like: the information was controlled. And not controlled in the sense that there
was some sort of conspiratorial elite mastergroup out there that was hoarding
all the knowledge on lifting and nutrition and parsing it how they saw fit: the
FLOW of the information was controlled.
Much like old television, information was released episodically,
typically in the form of a monthly muscle-magazine (Muscle and Fitness, Flex
and Powerlifting USA if you wanna talk the 90s, Hardgainer for the 80s, and
Strength and Healthy for the golden era, and I’ll give a shout to Mark Bell’s
“Power” magazine, which was pretty awesome when it was out) and a select few
books (EVERY lifter owns a copy of Arnold’s Encyclopedia of Modern
Bodybuilding, and you had Fred Hatfield’s “Power: A Scientific Approach” and
Bill Pearl’s “Getting Stronger”, or perhaps something from the HIT crowd). In both cases, you, the consumer, had to WAIT
until the next installment of information was released. You’d read every article in your magazine,
tear out the routines and bring them to the gym, go to the grocery store to buy
the food for the diet du jour, and THAT was what you had to work with for that
month. You poured over Arnold or Fred or
Art Jones’ book and THAT was all the information you had until the next book
got released. There was a DELAY between
chunks of information…which meant you had time to digest it all (whether you
chose to use that time or not was entirely up to you).
Now? Information is streaming: it’s ON
DEMAND. At any point you can plug in to
nearly LIMITLESS information on the realm of physical transformation:
irrespective of if any of it is of value.
On that last bit: at least these magazines and books had editors, I say
FULLY aware that I’ve written a blog rife with typos and grammatical errors for
well over a decade now, because I’m part of the problem (but at least you have
to wait a week between my posts!) And
you can absolutely literally bingewatch lifting media if you so choose: you can
lose 8 hours on youtube sifting through various channels and talking heads and
still not even SCRATCH the surface of all available content. And that’s just LIFTING: if we wanna discuss
nutrition, that world is SO diverse and rife with varying opinions that it’s
effectively endless. No one human will
ever consume all of the media that is out there: we simply don’t live that
long, and in the process of ATTEMPTING to consume it, MORE will come out. It’s a truly Sisyphusian task.
At least rolling a big rock up a hill will get you pretty jacked...
And what’s the consequence of
all this? Aside from the fact that you
can lose a whole day to what is effectively brain poison, we’ve once again lost
the opportunity to actually think, digest and marinade on the information we’ve
received. Much like economics, when you
increase the supply, you decrease the VALUE of the supply. We’ve created information inflation, and now
we the consumers don’t actually take the time to appreciate anything of value:
we just immediately move on to the next bit of information. “Everything contradicts everything else”
cries to babe in the woods of physical transformation, who finds themselves
swamped with information from a variety of sources, not able to understand or
appreciate how the words of a 1000lb squatter turned coach or the words of an
elite track athlete that has COACHED elite athletes SHOULD hold more weight
than some dude on TikTok with a set of abs.
No different than how you can equally choose to watch “Casino” or “The
Human Centipede” on your streaming service: it’s on you, the consumer, to make
wise choices.
But this binge watching also
points to another interesting bit of duality: we have an attention span willing
to sit down for 8 hours and consume media, yet too short to actually see
anything through! In an era where
information and entertainment was released episodically, we HAD to be
patient. “Stay tuned!” we were told, as
the commercial breaks interrupted our programming, and “tune in next time!” as
the show concluded and we had to wait a whole WEEK before the next
episode. To say nothing of waiting for
next month’s muscle mag to come out, or YEARS for the new book to come
out. We waited because we HAD to. Which is to say, we weren’t necessarily
BETTER at waiting, we didn’t necessarily have a longer attention span: we
simply had no other choice. But the
IMPACT of not having that choice was profound, as we were forced to engage in
de facto periodization: we changed in accordance to the rate that information
was received.
When demand attempts to meet supply...and yes, this is SUPER old school television
You see this play out
perfectly in John McCallum’s “The Complete Keys to Progress”. John was fully aware that his articles were
released monthly, in accordance with the rate that “Strength and Health” was
published, so he would WRITE programs to be followed for a month, tell the
trainee to stick with the program, and in the next month he would release the
next phase. When you read the book, the
sections end telling the reader something to the effect of “Focus on this for
now, and next month we’ll move on to the next phase”. And after 3-6 months, an entire training
block would be accomplished. He had a
similar approach with nutrition too: slowly adjusting and phasing things over
time. The irony of all this being that
my only exposure to John’s work was a book that had compiled all the articles
into one spot, which I, in turn, absolutely bingeread, further demonstrating
the very problem we have with wanting to consume everything all at once rather
than taking the time to digest it and appreciate it. …which is, in fact, where
we are today.
There is a complete absence
of patience as it relates to periodization BECAUSE we exist in a state where
“the next phase” is already there for us.
Trainees of the heyday understood the value of phasic training and nutritional
approaches: there were off seasons and in seasons, various times to emphasize
certain qualities depending on the specific demands we had. Now?
Trainees want to be good at everything all the time, and getting them to
stay with one program for a week is already a significant ask, and they’ll be 2
weeks into a half-hearted cut before they decide they got too small and need to
add size OR they’ll watch a slight degree of blur happen to their abs on a bulk
and decide it’s time to pull all the carbs out and try to get shredded. And let’s talk about THAT for a second now,
shall we?
It's not as though you actually get a vote on the matter
Another interesting byproduct
we see from information being available instantly on demand is that WE are, in
turn, available instantly and on demand.
What do I mean? Once again, in
the past era, lifters, even famous ones, like top level bodybuilders, were NOT
visible 100% of the time. Not every
single training session was documented, people weren’t taking photos of their
meals and sharing them with the world, there was not a daily selfie update:
we’d have month long stretches where we would not see or hear from these
folks. During THESE times, these
trainees tended to make the MOST growth: it was the off season, where they
could focus on bringing up weaknesses and letting their physiques soften up a
little while they focused on growing some size.
What does that sound like to a modern trainee? That sounds like a period of time where you
AREN’T setting a PR every time you step in the gym (doing something you’re WEAK
at? Why would you ever do that?!) and it
sounds like NOT looking your absolute best for your adoring fanbase. How horrifying! If I can’t always be at my most absolute best
while everyone is watching me ALL the time, why bother?
Because sometimes, in order
to make a giant leap forward, we need to take a few steps back for a running
start. If you’re already AT your peak,
you can’t “peak more”: really, all you can do is just get slowly and gradually
worse. But if we take a strategic pause
to come down from our best, rest, recover, soften up and shore up some weak
points, we’ll have recovered and grown enough that we can easily blast forward
and surpass our previous best. We just
needed to “stay tuned” for a moment there.
We needed to be patient enough to wait for “the next episode” of our own
lives. If we try to bingewatch our
lives, we end up going nowhere, but when we take an episode, pause, wait,
reflect, contemplate, and grow, we get SO much more out of the experience.
Because even the greats knew to let their abs go away every once in a while
Don’t hit that “next episode”
button on your physical transformation: stay tuned and take it one episode at a
time. You’ll enjoy the show more, and
being on the couch for so long isn’t good for you.
This is completely true in all aspects of " modern " life ,and this is definitely the best post i have read of yours ,and i have read your stuff for years,thanks for putting in the time and effort .
ReplyDeleteDude, that is SUCH high praise. Thanks so much for reading.
DeleteThe doing something you're weak at is reasonating heavy right meow. I'm in a second round of easy strength with a knee recovering from overuse injuries. All the upper body and ab work improves at a steady pace, but meanwhile I'm doing snatch rack pulls with 65lbs. I'm. It even trying to increase the weight because that isn't the goal. The goal is to get my joints strong enough again where I can build strength again in full body movements.
ReplyDeleteSo happy it could click dude. It's such bitter medicine to swallow, but it's good for us.
DeletePiggybacking on the TV commercial callbacks: "It tastes awful, but it works."
DeleteOh man, I feel bad I don't even know where that is from, haha.
DeleteGreat post! So many good points. Although you did forget MILO magazine, the best of them all, and for such an Ironmind fanboy as you are too.
ReplyDeleteI've been re-calibrating my own technology back to ~2008. Yes to high-speed internet; no to the dehumanizing perma-connectivity of smartphone ubiquity. I still have a flip-phone: it does everything necessary for mobile connectivity without dominating life, and I have a laptop/computer for everything else. I've started buying DVDs and CDs again as streaming has gone enshittified. Books are still the best knowledge, where people have cared enough to try to create something permanent, instead of something always editable or retractable.
Something else in your favor is that by "staying tuned," you've consistently created this large body of work. Plenty of people "binge-produce" with a ton of content and then stall. I remembered the other day that Derek Poundstone had that whole "I'm back" Youtube thing, but I went and looked and he did like 3 videos right away and then no more.
~WR
Good to hear from you Will! Sadly, I got into MILO well after the internet had infected me, haha. But you're absolutely right: that was an amazing influence, and perfectly punctuated with it's delivery.
DeleteAwesome to hear you going off the grid that way. There's a lot of value in that. And too true on the binge production. I HAD to pace myself when I started this, because I knew what would happen otherwise. Hell: that's happened with the book I'm writing: big surge at the start, now I'm dead. Having the recurring deadline of the blog just keeps me honest.
Derek used to have a radio show too: I wish I could get access to it, because he's so BAD about getting info/a presence out there otherwise.
I resonate a lot with this post and this is something I'm working on at the moment.
ReplyDeleteI'm trying to stop this mindless consumption of media and taking things a bit more slowly and being more mindful how much and what I consume.
Consuming less media about lifting actually helped me to stick to a routine and just focus on putting effort into my training.
I love your blog and I'm always looking forward to reading your posts!
That means so much dude: thanks for writing it. It's so dangerous out there: too easy to become a zombie and not even realize it. Are we "lifters" or are we "watchers"? Haha.
Delete