Weights: To Lift or Not to Lift


Photo by Tom Peterson, Zimbabwe, early '70s

Download the full Draper here newsletter
in printable, live-link, pdf format, here.

Time flys. You’re 40-something and wondering if weight training is the thing for you. Okay, so you’re actually closer to 50-something, closing in on 60, and considering lifting weights to improve your health and strength before you’re 70 in a few months. Yes, no, maybe -- couch, remote, bowl of crunchies... you’re uncertain.

Anyone knows barbells and dumbbells are crude and unwieldy devices designed for muscleheads, brutes and inmates. Hoisting the objects is a tedious and nonsensical expenditure of time and a source of much labor and pain. Weightlifting at this time of my life... hmmm... the idea sounds as appealing as tapping my forehead with a ball-peen hammer, or grooming alligators. I must be losing my marbles.

I take it you haven’t experienced the fascination and fulfillment and fury of engaging the iron. You haven’t grasped a pair of hefty well-balanced dumbbells, stood with them suspended mightily by your sides and comprehended their energy and force -- their sheer gravity. It’s a powerful and exciting thing to behold and to reckon. Pure joy! They and their attributes are at your command to reward and benefit you in unimaginable ways.

Weights and lifting them make men and women of all ages strong in body, in mind and in soul. They build muscle and strength, as surely as they build character. They improve energy and endurance, as certainly as they improve acuity and physical calm. The iron, though cold and lifeless, is instructive and endearing and dependable.

Spirits are raised as the weights are raised. Patience grows as the weights, sets and reps are counted and accrued. Physical ability and utility advance as the lifter diligently practices his or her lifting skills. And they, the pursued skills, are not a thing of mindless routine. They are the graceful and deliberate application and performance of the body’s mechanics and the mind’s focus.

Few things are more fulfilling than personal progress. One workout leads to another, effort fortifies effort, control delivers control, and once-unattended physiological systems respond and develop. The infamous clanging and thudding of weights are a study in disguise and worthy of the trainee’s attention. The study is as simple as 1, 2, 3 and A, B, C. No encyclopedia needed, commonsense and instinct will do very nicely, indeed, plus an ad hoc memo of a dozen elementary terms.

To lift weights or not to lift weights, that is the question.

Exercise vs. training: Exercise is as a canary is to birds -- caged and cute. Training is like the soaring eagle -- awesome and free. Training includes a wholesome lifestyle with plenty of rest, thoughtful dietary practices and regular weight-resistant engagement. Training is positive action and attitude; exercise is a single good thing to be done, a part of the whole. Training is the whole. I suggest you train for life.

The first workout is the toughest. It’s usually the result of long consideration, intense anticipation and heady confrontations with doubt, procrastination and hope and fear. Gee, we make mountains out of molehills, or in this particular scene, cavernous iron mines out of barbells. Tough is good. It’s time to be tough. The tough endure.

Lifting the iron might not be easy, but it is quite simple. You need an agreeable gym with the basic equipment, and there’s likely one in your neighborhood... unless you live in the outskirts of Sleeping Mule, Nevada. Once the right gym is selected, plan to visit it three alternate days a week.

How to choose a gym

Your goals are to build muscle and strength, tone and shape, and energy and endurance. Lucky you, the wholesome lot go together, like musclehead stew; add one and you add them all. Further, I suspect more than one reader wants to lose weight and bodyfat while pursuing your delectable goals. This, too, is in the pot. What a deal, what a meal! Everything in one: robust health, sound physical fitness, vigorous conditioning and gorgeous good looks.

One caveat, potential metal-moving maniac: You’ve got to eat smart to ensure your devoted actions are effective -- wholesome foods, no junk, hearty protein, valuable carbs and good fats. No problemo. Easier than apple pie... a lot of which, by the way, is not highly recommended.

Hello. Are you still with me? Remember, this iron stuff is guaranteed to please: muscle and shape, strength and health, no matter how old you are. Some respond better than others -- we’re all different -- but we all respond positively. Trust me. I’ve been both young and old. I’ve known both youth and maturity.

Finally, permit me to cut out the boring medical research, elaborate instruction and the horrid details of physiology and get to the steel-packing, iron-pumping basics. Let me tell you what I would do if I were you. This is a general training plan for the 50-, 60-, 70-some individual of decent health and condition, you being the definer of the terms, decent health and condition.

Buck up. Take a quick look at yourself and make a valid self-evaluation. Intimidating (downright scary), but it helps to face the truth.

The Procedure for the first-degree mature novice:

Go to the gym. Sounds like a no-brainer, but this can be the most difficult exercise of the workout. We quickly become expert at devising reasons not to go. Don’t listen to them. They’re lies.

Hop (crawl) on the stationary bike and fake it for five minutes. This diversionary technique gets you rolling, figuratively speaking, and warms you up, giving you time to prepare yourself mentally and physically for the good work ahead.

Musclebuilders think of the body in basic sections, or muscle groups: chest, back, shoulders, arms (biceps and triceps), torso and legs. There are many exercises for each group and their actions often overlap. I have chosen the following for their ultimate worth. Smile. Drink lots of water.

Now the fun begins. You’re a soaring trainee about to arouse and invigorate the muscles of the entire body through a series of five push and pull exercises, my favs, and I pass them onto you. It’s a darn good start.

Two sets of each exercise for 10 reps every other day, three days a week --

1) Dumbbell bench press -- chest, shoulders and triceps

2) Barbell curl -- biceps, upper body stability

3) Machine dips -- triceps, chest, shoulders, upper back

4) Seated lat row --back, biceps

5) Lunge -- legs, torso

Walk for 15 minutes on off days. Excellent workout.

There’s nothing like personal instruction for a day or week from a worthy instructor. Be aware. Some of the very best learn on their own by observing or working with a relative or friend who has a clue. Some engage in Brother Iron Sister Steel and, thus, the world of bodybuilding vividly unfolds. One set of 10 reps and you’re the teacher and student at once.

You're ready to start and have found a gym, here's what to do next

Break a leg -- Build an arm.

Draper

About Irwin "Zabo" Kazewski, the guy from New Jersey:

We must be prepared in all seasons. Zabo, the deeply tanned and rippled musclehead who most embodies the original Muscle Beach of the ’50s, my compadre of 45 years, has left the gym -- the bars and bells, the chins and dips, the sets and reps. His affair with life as we know it came to an end this past Saturday. He was 85.

Zabe was with his loving daughter, Nancy, and her family in Pennsylvania when Old Age, the last intruder, came knocking on the door. Three weeks ago he was knocking out leg raises at Gold’s Gym in Venice. We compared notes on the phone that same afternoon.

Anyone who knew Zabo, dubbed “the Chief” by Joe Gold, is sad today. He was the greatest, long-renowned for his deeply etched abdominal structure. He was also known for his dry one-liners, like “Who’d he ever beat?” “Where’s the hook?” and “What’s it all mean?”

The lattermost question is no longer a mystery. We miss ya, man!

---

Did you know Bomber Blend will provide the least expensive and most nutritious meals in your daily eating regimen? It’s not an added extravagance to your food budget; it reduces your budget and improves your nutritional intake. It builds lean, strong and shapely muscle. Regular servings of Bomber Blend raise your IQ and enable you to time travel. Made into a poultice and smeared on the scalp will prevent baldness and kill tics. Good stuff.

Scoop the blend into a glass, stir and drink with pleasure and satisfaction, when you need to, want to or should. All the time.

Soak yourself in a taste of bodybuilding’s Golden Era with Dick Tyler’s on-the-scene record, written in his easy-going, one-of-a-kind style, West Coast Bodybuilding Scene.

Take a trip over to our
New Musclebuilding Q&A Blog
... where Dave allows us a peek into his email outbox.

Did you sign up for Dave's expanded email yet?
It's free, motivating and priceless!
We'll also send you a link to Dave's free
Body Revival Tips and Hints e-report with your confirmation notice.

BILL PEARL/DAVE DRAPER LIVE SEMINAR DVD

The  Package includes a one-hour-and-fifteen-minute tape of the July seminar, two muscular slide shows, plus a 32-page booklet outlining the subsequent interview between the mighty one, Bill Pearl, and me in which we discuss some favorite subjects untouched by the seminar. ~Dave

Cut through the confusion! Grab your copy Brother Iron Sister Steel to make your training path clear.

Readers agree: Dave new book, Iron On My Mind, is non-stop inspirational reading.

Our IronOnline Forum will answer your training and nutriton questions right here, right now.

Golden Era fans will rejoice in this excerpt from West Coast Bodybuilding Scene.

Are your shoulders tight? Do your shoulders hurt when you squat? It's practically a miracle! Dave's Top Squat assists squatters with shoulder problems.

Here's Dave's previous week's column.