Big Picture Reason to get Shredded (or just healthy)!

I am choosing to get shredded! Reasons to get SHREDDED (or just healthier):

“A chain is only as strong as its weakest link.” We are all inter-related, the action of one person effects the lives of everyone else. Have you ever noticed that when you spend time with a person who at that moment is happier than you, you become happier? Or when you are with a highly enthusiastic person, you become more enthusiastic? This is always occurring  regardless of scale. You being happier makes the rest of the world a little happier. You being negative make the rest of the world a little more negative. Although we are all physically separate, we are all connected to each other. Cells in our body are all separate, yet they all work together to create the larger system, YOU.

I was reading my physiology textbook one day, and came upon the concept of diffusion. The textbook explained that  each individual particle has the capability of moving to any location it wants, at any given time. To us humans, we might consider this “free will.” Even though the particles have free will, they ALWAYS choose to move to the less concentrated area, to promote homeostasis. I thought about this, and drew a parallel to us as a species. Although we have free will, and are able to make our own decisions about anything and everything, we will always “choose” to do what is best for the homeostasis of whatever is above us on the scale. Just as cells freely move to where is best for the organism they make up, we will move to where is best for whatever it is we make up, on a larger scale.

The more unhealthy and/or overweight people exist on this planet, the more unhealthy/overweight we are as a species. The more healthy each of us can be as an individual, the more we can counteract those who negatively effect our health. As referenced in Habits are Easy, this generates a snowball effect. The more people get healthy, the more momentum is generated for others to do the same. The more momentum we have, the easier it is to overcome the state of unhealthiness we are facing. Getting healthier helps our entire species!

Here is what I mean by becoming physically healthier: chinupbar

-Forging the body through resistance training (anything that puts a positive strain on your body, causing it to adapt, making you stronger/faster/flexible/more efficient etc).

-Eating what your body wants and works best with.

Why become physically healthier? I will list the larger, personal benefits I have experienced as a result of resistance training and proper diet:

-Greater ease in everyday movement (as I am stronger, more flexible and can adapt to strain better)

-A more clear state of mind, which in turn makes everything else much easier to do, and allows for more creativity and problem solving abilities

-A deeper sense of peace with myself and my life

-Increase in mental health and spiritual connection (being able to better be guided by that which is within me). Again, a chain is only as strong as its weakest link.

You can imagine how each of these benefits provides even further positive attributes to your life. For example, greater ease in movement allows you to physically get more things done, and faster. A clearer mind state allows you to better understand how you function and how you can use your thoughts to achieve whatever you want. A deeper sense of peace allows you to take things in one at a time, positively, thereby moving through life much more smoothly and enjoyably. You create a more positive relationship with yourself and with other people. A deeper connection to your spirit, however, is the most formidable reason to be more physically healthy. The connection to spirit is your doorway to the infinite, to becoming the best you can be at anything and everything. Intro to Spirit and Motive goes into depth on this subject.

In conclusion, being physically healthy not only tremendously increases your own quality of life, but you also help the entire world become a little bit more positive. The best thing you can do for others, is to work on yourself! This is not to say that being selfish and repelling others is the way to go. What I mean by this is that when you better yourself and become more positive, you effect the quality of life of everyone around you as well. People become more receptive to you, and more positive, like you. You help others by going through things they must go through. For example, if you become more compassionate towards yourself, you become more compassionate towards others. In turn, this helps others become more compassionate with themselves and others as well! We again eventually see a snowball effect! Now get out there and get healthy and positive for yourself, for me, and for everyone you know!

Habits are Easy

The more time you invest in one specific thing, the more it grows. The more you give to it, the vaster it becomes. This is simple transference of energy, and it is absolute. The more bricks you add to a house, the larger it gets (whether it be taller, thicker or wider). The more energy you invest into your body, the more it becomes like the energy you put into it (this alone should speak volumes about proper diet).

A habit is a repetitive action performed over time, and often becomes subconscious. However, a habit will build up the more you do it, whether or not you are conscious of it. Habits deepen with time, and the deeper a habit is engrained in your life, the harder it is to break. Therefore, we can use habits to our advantage to effortlessly reach our goals.

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“The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step” – Lao Tzu

A goal is set into motion when the intention to accomplish it causes someone to take action towards it (this does not even have to be done consciously). The first action sets you up for other actions, and each consecutive action can bring you closer to or further from your goal. This happens one action at a time. Baby steps become giant leaps given time. By building habits that will move us towards our goal, we set ourselves up for success!

Say our goal is to develop an aesthetic physique through bodybuilding. The entire process might begin with the thought: I want to look like Brad Pitt/Tyler Durden in Fight Club! Or something like that, whatever would encourage you to begin researching bodybuilding or lifting weights. At first, you would do a lot of thinking about how to move towards your goal, or you may spend time researching how to do certain exercises, or how to eat. Eventually your thirst grows, and you find more and more resources that you build off of. Say you begin lifting weights, and are at the gym 3 times per week. You read that you need to eat a lot more food than you previously have been eating, to grow bigger. You begin putting in a lot of time and energy towards going to the gym, and eating properly.

Gradually you begin to figure out what exercises you like, which ones work best for you, when to do them, when to eat, what to eat, etc. By this point, simply the feeling of becoming stronger and moving towards your dream physique every time you leave the gym is enough to keep you going back every day you have scheduled. You develop a habit of achieving that feeling. The more you do it, the better you get at it. This even further propels you into doing more research, gaining a better understanding, and paying more attention to what you eat and how you lift. Day by day, you build upon what you knew the day before. The original thought has snowballed into a lifestyle change, one step (action) at a time!

After much effort and time has been placed into bodybuilding and many steps (actions) have been taken, you realize: hey, I’ve been going to the gym 3 times a week, every week for 6 months now! You were never really even noticed that you hadn’t skipped a single day, or that the feeling of gaining on your goal was keeping you on track. Day by day, you had simply been learning about your interest, online, in magazines, from your ripped neighbor, or in the gym. Until now, you had just been following what your research said, and were trying to adapt that into your own regimen. You understand how simply a habit can enter your life, inch by inch. 

The next step is to consciously use what has worked for you, based on your own experience, to (consciously, this time) form habits that will bring you even closer to your goal. You decide : “I’m going to lift this many times a week, and eat this at this time, and bring my notebook to track every session.” Day by day you incorporate what you have learned into your life. Every day you learn more, sometimes you alter your routine or diet, based on new information. At this point, you have consciously created a habit that is moving you in a direct path towards your objective. Every time you do something out of habit, you remember your reason for it. Before taking any action, you ask yourself: “will this bring me closer to my goal, or further away?” Avoiding certain things, or bringing other things into your everyday life is altering these habits, but your momentum is so powerful at this point that you only choose actions that will bring you closer to your goal. Your habits become subconscious, and every day they are helping you progress. This allows you even more room to figure out/think about how your day to day living could be directed at faster achieving your goal, or even heading towards another goal at the same time. Therefore, while you are preoccupied trying to move towards new goals or moving faster towards your original goal, you are already moving towards your original goal on autopilot! 

Just to show you how powerful you can be, imagine you have 3 goals set for yourself. All you have to do is set the intention for this goal to become a reality (anywhere, however you can, it does not matter). Once your first action towards each of these goals is taken, all you have to do is follow with a second action in the same direction. And then a third action, anytime after the second. The more actions are taken, the closer you get. When moving towards three different goals at once, take action towards one goal, and then the next goal, and then the next. This is easy if you just go one step at a time. Each action catalyzes the next, and before you know it your everyday habits will grow into an avalanche of success. Imagine doing this with 10 goals!

“Proper Preparation Prevents Poor Performance” – Kai Greene

The most successful bodybuilders are not successful for any reason you cannot be successful (granted in this domain, at the very top, because judges are involved, genetics can in fact play a role.) Their equation is simple. Figure out what works best for them as an individual, and repeat that over and over and over. It takes tremendous numbers of repetitive action to achieve success on a worldwide scale. The important thing is to keep doing these little things, day by day, week by week, year by year. All these little actions grow and grow, until they become the physical manifestation of your goal. They become success. You become success. 

Intro to Spirit and Motive

The motivation behind aesthetically developing the human body and growing holistically as a human being through bodybuilding are on 2 entirely different spectrums. One is rooted in physical reality, and has limitations and exhaustion. The other is the most fulfilling and exquisite state of existence, separate from the world of form. Additionally, the latter can be used to reach the former’s objectives.

Bodybuilding at first glance seems like (and is) a means to look better, to develop a physique and therefore boost health, confidence and ego, amongst other things. It looks like an entirely physical and intellectual process, based solely on facts and scientific information. We move more weight for the sake of moving more weight, for that feeling of progression, to add that extra quarter inch to the biceps, to obtain that shredded six-pack we see in all the magazines and on television.

Many also lift/exercise to promote physical and mental health. The diet is incorporated into the equation, because it’s hard to grow when we lack the energy and proteins to build new muscle. We also want to keep the body working effectively so we don’t get sick or injured and therefore can’t train. We want to have a healthy system when we get older and need it more than we do now. After all, the physical body is the only thing we will have with us until the day we die, it makes sense to prioritize its maintenance and well-being.  All these external reasons are very effective in motivating one to train and be healthy. However, they will all eventually fade away, when the physical body dies. Our physical world is enclosed in Time. Because time passes, all within the physical world passes. None of it lasts forever.

The other motivation behind bodybuilding (or doing anything else, for that matter. This article and website happen to be about bodybuilding) is that which lies within. It is the tranquil, knowing, ever-steady flame that burns inside each end every living being. It is always there, waiting to be consciously observed and put to use. Everything you have learned and known in this physical reality, it has always known. Anything you could ever do through your body, it can create. The Spirit that lies inside us all is in fact our ticket to the everlasting. This Spirit is what tells you what exercise to do next, not your structured, pre-made workout plan. This Spirit is what moves the weight those 3 extra reps, resulting in hypertrophy. When you get so lost in your work that you are unaware of your surroundings, when you become the experience, and cease to be the experiencer. Rather than YOU contracting YOUR biceps, You ARE the biceps. You enter a realm where you there are no limits, no pain, no suffering, no effort. There is just you, and this you is the entire world, all at once. You are the biceps contracting, and you are the person contracting the biceps, at the same time. There ceases to be a YOU separate from the world.

“The Tao that can be told, is not the eternal Tao.” -Lao Tzu

This state of being is not a state of words, for it is not in Time. No words can describe it. Although a picture can be painted for others, the picture is merely an interpretation, someone else’s end result. One must experience it firsthand to understand, until then it is not possible. I use the analogy: “Contract your pecs, and watch the weight move, rather than moving the weight with your chest.” Contracting the pecs is what moves the weight, it is the WHY. And then you watch it move. This is different than moving the weight with your chest, which is an end result, the HOW.

When that connection to Spirit is made, is almost feels unfair to others (although while in this state you make no distinction between yourself and others) because any limitations you ever thought you had or could have are now gone. When you previously could do 8 reps, you can now do 30! The reason I have ever stopped my set in this situation is because the muscle literally feels like it is breaking (not tearing, but breaking! weird, I know). Fear steps in and returns me to my physical reality, where I put the weight down for fear of actually breaking my arm.

When I lift a weight, it is because the absolute only thing I want to do at that moment is to contract one individual muscle against a resistance so that it takes the shape of the contraction. Nothing else exists in my mind at the moment when the muscle is pulling against resistance. Throughout the entirety of the rep, and throughout the set, 100% focus is placed on the contractions. I am aware of absolutely nothing else around me. One set like this feels 5fold better than an entire workout without this kind of focus/awareness.

On compound lifts it is the same, except I will only be focusing on one or maybe two muscles/pairs of muscles that are working for that specific lift. For example when I am squatting, I will place all my attention on pulling with the glutes and/or hamstrings. I know the quads are working hard already, and they are not the ones that need the extra work. I focus all my attention on the hamstrings/glutes and do not even feel the quads working, but I know they are. Near the top of the movement, I feel the glutes contract hard, and the hamstrings are locked out (similar hamstring position to on an abductor machine). After completing a set to failure with the hamstrings/glutes, it isn’t very difficult to hammer out another 3-10 reps, incorporating the quads to a much greater degree.

The Spirit knows what is best for you, under any and every circumstance. After all, it is a part of you, maybe it IS you, underneath all the external layers you have accumulated. You want to develop your physique? Go to that quiet place inside of you and let it guide you effortlessly through your workout. Let it guide you through your entire day, as your physical gains are made outside the gym rather than while lifting. You want to experience the Void, where there is nothing but emptiness, endless possibilities? Return to that eternal place inside of you, and hop on for the ride. It will always be there for you, whenever you want it. All you have to do is find it, and it will do the rest for you. Or rather, YOU will do the rest for yourself 😉

 

My BB Beginnings

I began caring about my physical appearance around 6th grade. I didn’t think I was ugly or had an unaesthetic physique, but I began doing leg raises. I noticed my stomach begin to flatten out a little bit. It wasn’t until high school that I purchased a pull-up bar and began doing crunches. All that was cool but I don’t think it did much for me. I would occasionally use my dad’s 20 lb dumbbell to do biceps curls and the likes, until I learned a few more exercises. So at this point I was doing dips with furniture, goblet squats with the dumbbell, abdominal work and any other exercise I had heard/read about. I attained decent results, but never took nutrition into account with the aesthetics.

I took a weightlifting class as a freshman in college, and that’s when it hit me. My instructor was a grad student who had won several competitions (must have been powerlifting because he definitely didn’t look like a bodybuilder). He started me off on a program 3 days a week doing 3×8 of clean and press, bench press, squats, deadlifts, and 4 other complimentary exercises. I bombarded him with questions, many of which he was not sure of. I asked him if I could leave early, as I had finished my workout one day. He said “Dylan, you work harder than anyone in this class, you can do whatever you want.” I have never missed a day since, always planning around vacations and events that might prevent me from lifting.

powerbelts1Throughout freshman year, I was partially lifting to develop my physique, and partially because I enjoyed the health benefits from the sport, but my main motivation became the feeling of lifting a heavier weight than last time. I continued to rapidly progress, still following the same program, but discovering more resources, such as bodybuilding.com. I learned immense amounts of information from that website, and applied it to my training. I joined Xsports Fitness over the summer, and decided to switch it up to a higher rep/lower weight program in an attempt to lose some fat (I was probably around 13-14%). I followed it all summer, along with eating less food and being more physically active. When I returned to IU, I had reached around 12% body fat. I hit the gym and noticed that a lot of my lifts were much lower than they used to be. It took me a month on a lower rep program to get back to my original stats.

I have since tried many different lifting routines, namely staying in the 8-12 rep range. I have time and time again changed my schedule, altering the frequency, volume and intensity. I have tried dozens of different muscle groupings (which muscle(s) to work out which day) and have tracked a large amount of my progress. My bodybuilding has been interspersed with several powerlifting bouts, and many different dietary approaches. I consistently learn more about what my body responds best to and how it responds to all the different types of stimulus.

My most notable dietary experience was beginning Intermittent Fasting, as prescribed on the leangains.com website. This approach to eating not only tremendously helped my bodybuilding, but has done wonderful things for me in my day to day life. IF basically gives you a certain window of time in which you take in all your calories, and you don’t eat during the remaining hours of the day.

At first I started with an 8 hour window from 12-8pm. At first i was very hungry in the mornings, this lasted about 2 weeks. Gradually, the hunger subsided, and for about a month a only had hunger pangs for about 20 minutes in the morning.  I noticed I would always be hungry after 8 and before bed, so eventually I decided to push the window back from 2 to 10, so I could eat up until going to bed. This worked well for a while, and the hunger became less and less consuming. The next change came months later, when I decided to lose body fat. For convenience, I pushed the feeding window so it began post workout (around 5:30 usually) and ended when I went to bed (around 10). This 4.5 hour window made losing body fat really easy. I was up and about all day, not hungry. When meal time came, I would have usually 2 meals, and would actually struggle to meet my minimum calorie requirements. The combination of food I was eating (mostly fresh fruits and vegetables for carbs, sometimes spaghetti. Grass fed local chicken and longhorn steak) and rather large daily energy expenditure helped me drop from 12% to about 7.5% in months. The effects of stimulants and caffeine seemed to be accentuated. Keeping my carbs low (high enough to train intensely though) made me look really lean, I was lean entire time I was cutting. During this time, I was lifting 3 times a week, bicycling or walking everywhere (I don’t own a car) and doing a good deal of martial arts. I would take 10 grams of BCAA before working out, no food was ingested until after training.

Presently, I continue to explore different exercise and dietary avenues, building upon what I have already learned. I highly encourage everyone to keep searching for a way to progress, whatever the domain may be. There is never an end, always something that can be done to further approach your goal. The trick is to find it, because if you were consciously aware of it, you would probably already be doing it.

“There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and we must not stay there.” – Bruce Lee