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baby1
07-23-2014, 11:37 AM
AWESOME article I just had to share



For some reason in the past year or so, it has become incredibly popular to compare lifting weights to war, Armageddon, the Holocaust, going to battle, and a bunch of other violent metaphors, most of which center around comparing your training and competing to participating in a brutal conflict, death, and violence.
People go #beastmode in the gym. They feel #nopainnogain. They walk in ready to #kill, #destroy, and #takenoprisoners, and they’re #fitnessaddicts. And #aboutthatlifebro. They #deathpress, do #skwatz, do #deadlifts, and are #hardcore. Did I mention that I’m #nattylikejesus?

Time for a reality check. You are lifting weights!
You are lifting metal poles with circular pieces of metal attached to them while lifting other pieces of metal with handles. This doesn’t automatically make you a modern day Spartan warrior among men. It makes you someone who lifts weights.

Stop pretending to be faux angry. You’re getting into your air-conditioned car to drive to your air-conditioned gym while blasting your rage mode playlist in hundred dollar headphones and walking into the gym with your fake anger and fake fury to attack circular hunks of metal with numbers painted on them. Add in the hundreds dollars a month you likely spend on food and supplements (mostly supplements), and I really don’t get what you are so pissed off about.

You aren’t fighting for your life, you aren’t in a warzone, and you aren’t morally superior to anyone else who doesn’t lift the same weights that you do. This is also incredibly disrespectful toward anyone in the military who has served in that capacity as well, so stop the comparison.

Meal prepping on Sunday and Wednesday will never make you hardcore.



Beast mode—where do I even start? How about this? Fly to Africa and run up to a lion on the Serengeti and try to punch it in the face. See what the fuck happens. You in “beast mode” now? I get legitimately pissed off about this, and it isn’t just because of the arrogance. It’s because this fake badassery overshadows all the positive aspects that come with lifting.

Part of me thinks that this is why “meatheads” have a popular media depiction of being shallow and vain dumbasses. Aside from being hypercritical toward each other (which is a whole other subject), fitness as a whole presents a vapid image of people who don’t care about anything other than lifting, the gym, and all the food they need to eat. And the really unfortunate thing about this is that it overshadows all the positive aspects that accompany lifting.

While I might have the most fun with specialized movement athletes, by and large, I’ve worked with regular people and I’m proud of the fact. Most human beings want confidence. They want capability. They want to feel strong and empowered.

I consider a truly healthy “training mentality” to be one in which strength is a devotion to the process. I’m not trying to impress upon anyone that lifting weights makes them a badass because it doesn’t. But it can give them the physical and mental fortitude to be stronger and more confident in their life outside the gym, and for 99 percent of people, that’s what keeps them coming back. Lifting weights doesn’t make you anything if that’s the only thing you care about. It’s what you do for you outside the gym that makes you something.

How are you showing up in your life everywhere else? I’m more inclined to admire the man who trains and is an example to his kids as someone who works hard and provides than a solo lifter whose existence begins and ends in the squat rack. If you’re a shitty father, shitty friend, lazy employee, and all around selfish prick, you think your lifting numbers really make up for all that? What’s badass about that exactly?

Your dedication to lifting weights shouldn’t come at the expense of everything else in your life outside the gym. And it sure as hell doesn’t make up for what you lack in those areas. Are you helping other people get better? Are you training people? Are you teaching? Are you making someone more awesome? Are you being a dad or a mom to your kids? Are you being a reliable friend?


In the words of Harry Selkow, “Strong people make other people stronger. They don’t put them down.” But that isn’t what I see on a daily basis. I see the opposite. I see people using lifting weights as a tool to insult people and make up for all the other things they lack in life. If you truly have no life outside of a barbell, I honestly feel sorry for you. I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again—no one cares how strong you are if nobody knows that you’re strong.

I’ve made enough selfish mistakes to know that the greatest use of any “strength” I’ve built is to apply it to helping other people. Being told I have muscular arms is a great ego boost, but I’m not making anyone’s life better for it and it sure as hell isn’t making me more badass. Whatever lifting you do—and I don’t care what kind—it should hopefully be a reflection of your dedication to get stronger. It should reflect your values and efforts. It should represent a work ethic. It should be something that you can tie into other areas outside your life and say that it does something positive for you.

Lift because it makes you a better person, not so that you can say you’re badass. I’ve known far too many tough people in my life who don’t squat, bench, or deadlift to say that doing those things makes you anyone special. Your experiences, your reactions to adversity, the care that you show to others, your cool under fire and ability to act—those are the things that make someone a tough person. To simplify them down to numbers on a bar and only that diminishes both yourself and everything that the iron could stand for.

Make the iron stand for something. Make it represent more than just bars and numbers. Make it something to be proud of. And use it in the service of others more than anything else.
http://articles.elitefts.com/training-articles/lifting-weights-doesnt-make-you-badass/

Vicious 13
07-24-2014, 04:33 PM
He's all over the place... He either doesn't lift or works at planet fitness 💪


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baby1
07-24-2014, 06:17 PM
He's all over the place... He either doesn't lift or works at planet fitness ��


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I loved it...thought it was an excellent read

BigBones
07-24-2014, 07:20 PM
"Fly to Africa and run up to a lion on the Serengeti and try to punch it in the face. See what the fuck happens. You in “beast mode” now?"

This had me rolling... I will be keeping this in my back pocket for the right occasion.

Nice post Baby!


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BB in Beast Mode
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Ironguruera
07-24-2014, 09:06 PM
Excellent post! well written article and I couldn't agree more. Some guys take all this shit waaaaaay to seriously in many regards!

MuscleAddiction
07-24-2014, 09:17 PM
Does it make someone feel more like a man to be a badass or something??? To be a badass or feel you are one is one with way too much ego...just my opinion.

BigBones
07-24-2014, 09:19 PM
Ego can be a healthy thing BUT it must be balanced like all other characteristics. :-)


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Show me what beast mode is... Please. Lol!
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baby1
07-24-2014, 09:21 PM
I always teach my competitive athletic daughter there is a difference between confidence and cocky!

MuscleAddiction
07-24-2014, 09:29 PM
You two knew where I was going with this, I try to be as humble, educating, helpful, not "I am better than you" mentality, my only competition is what I see in the mirror. I liked the read Baby, thank you...it just kills me, guess it just comes with age lol!!!

zedhed
07-24-2014, 10:23 PM
When I was growing there was a thing called good conduct in sports. Or good sportsmanship. It was all about while winning, maintaining humility. Far cry from our professional athletes of today. And of course from it stems right down the vine to collegiate and then highschool etc. Humility? Hell most of them cant even spell it let alone practice it.

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Vicious 13
07-25-2014, 10:29 PM
What people do to get pumped up to go to the gym is nobody's business. U lift hard and want to call it beast mode whatever. Because input in time at the gym doesn't mean i put it before my family. My mentality is that of an alpha. I do want to b be bigger stronger and faster.


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Vicious 13
07-26-2014, 11:05 AM
You aren't fighting for your life? That was a quote. Yea some people are. Some people got so unhealthy and big they are in the gym fighting for their lives. I read this again thinking maybe I took it wrong. No I didn't. It pisses me off still. Some lame ass loser mad and jealous so he get on the interwebs and complains about people lifting weights and living healthy. This whole article screams planet fitness and don't even get me started on that place maybe I need some time away from this board cause reading the comments just makes me laugh


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Vicious 13
07-26-2014, 11:08 AM
Everyone just strive to b mediocre... Bullshit we need more alphas to take charge and be badass's. I don't strive to b the number two carpenter at my company I want to b number one at whatever I do. And that's a mind set. I do walk around at wok saying yea Vic your better than that guy. Build it cleaner build it faster.


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Vicious 13
07-26-2014, 11:19 AM
And after reading all the comments that article doesn't even apply. No one hear that I know puts lifting before their family. And I don't know anyone that compares lifting weights to being a marine


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baby1
07-26-2014, 11:28 AM
It is just an article...everyone has their opinion, that's all. If I find something interesting, I like to share it.

Ironguruera
07-26-2014, 12:12 PM
It is just an article...everyone has their opinion, that's all. If I find something interesting, I like to share it.

Agreed! Thanks for sharing! I liked the overall message and feel many ppl do need a reality check!

I have have buddies that had fought for our country. I also have a friend who lost their navy seal brother serving out country( there's actually a movie). Point is... Lifting some weights does not make u a badass!

U wanna be a badass then strap up and get dropped off in a sea of shit 3rd world country in the middle of no place in a area of conflict and and danger and come back home......then u are a fucking bad ass!

Nothing wrong with getting amped and excited to train crazy and have drive and passion!