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7 Truths About Strength Training
7 Truths About Strength Training
7 Truths About Strength Training
Tags:
Motivation
Powerlifting & Strength
1 – It's not really about the training program. It's about belief.
Regardless of which program, template, or exercise set/rep combo you
choose, the most important thing of all is to believe in what you're doing.
Nothing else comes close. Even an average training program will
become great when you buy into it 100 percent. If you truly believe in
your training approach, the beliefs become your reality and nothing can
stop you. Most reasonable training programs have the same basic
components, so it's not really about the program. The key is being "all
in."
"My football coach tells me that if I gain 50 pounds over the summer,
increase my bench press from 225 to 300, and get faster, I have a good
chance at playing. What template should I follow? Also, what do you
think about creatine?"
While the enthusiasm is admirable, you wish the kid had at least one foot
set in reality. Maybe the football coach is having a bit of fun with him.
"Sure kid, you'll play. If you gain about 50 pounds of muscle and get
faster and grow a foot taller."
Now we can all have a good laugh about this as we've all been there, but
way too many people stay in this dreamland. Their commitment and
effort isn't on par with their goals. Here's how to correct this problem:
First, lessen the goal; make it smaller. Now before you go all self-help on
me and scream, "You gotta dream big!" let's look at this in a practical
way. Progress in the weight room, no matter how small, is still progress.
Anyone who complains when they're making progress, even if it's small,
is simply a chump with a suck attitude. Instead of thinking big, think
small and keep your head down.
If you squat 300 pounds right now, focus all your effort on getting to 305.
Never look up. Never calculate where you might be eventually. Figure
out where you're going next, and then 310 will drop. Soon after, 315 will
be there and if you keep focusing on the process — the work you do
every day, every week — 400 pounds will be there before you know it.
The greatest success comes from those that love the process and focus
on getting a little bit better. The trick is to not come up for air and admire
the view. That's when you get shot in the head. You must love the grind,
the unsexy mobility work, and the discipline to keep going day after day.
All people seem to see is the glory on the field. They think, "Man, I wish I
could run out on the field and the crowd would roar for me!" But there is
no glory without the sacrifice.
3 – It's the average days that result in the paydays.
The stronger you get, the longer you do this, the harder it becomes.
There is no linear progress in training, at least not through the vast
majority of it. And once you get to a certain point, it becomes harder and
harder to make progress.
Dave Tate once said that the average life of a "fitness enthusiast" is
around three years, then they move on to something new. That's okay,
we all have a few hobbies we didn't stick with. Just check your basement
or closet. But perhaps not so coincidentally, three years is also about the
time things get really hard with lifting weights and the physical changes
and strength gains really slow down.
There's nothing wrong with being frustrated with lack of progress. But if
you remain positive in your mission, the big breakthrough will come. I've
been working with this one guy for years. He of course made great
progress in the beginning. Now, he has a lot of average workouts and
he's learned that a lot of average days end up resulting in a few amazing
weeks where he hits huge PR's and smashes boundaries. That period,
of course, is then followed by a whole lot of very average days.
It's the average days that result in the paydays. Because the longer you
do this thing, the more average days you have, along with some very
bad days. You have to learn to keep the faith and persevere. As Joey
Waters once told me, "The longer I'm stuck, the bigger the payoff."
It's easy to get stuck in one way of thinking or one modality. But the
bigger your toolbox, the more you have to draw upon when you need to.
Let's say you hurt your shoulder and can't squat with a barbell on your
back. What are your options? What if it's snowing and you can't go
outside to push the Prowler? How will you adapt? What about being on
the road with no access to a gym? How will you plan your training? What
about getting older and finding yourself unable to bench press? What's
your next choice?
It's always funny when people debate some topic and it gets heated,
especially in the strength world. The words are pointless and spending a
lifetime trying to convert others is a lifetime wasted. Just go about your
business and get the work done. If your shit is good, it'll show in the
results. I'd rather show someone how to make progress rather than show
them why someone else's ideas won't work. Hell, I know I'm right
anyway.