Hesitation Is Doubt
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January is not exactly hanging around gathering dust. Reluctant to welcome another year, many of us poked cautiously at its edges -- will it be better, will it be bitter, shall we commit, what's our strategy? And, then, oh, no, here we go again. The days, like cars of a freight train, are rumbling by.
Big plans or no plans, we cannot ignore the first month of the year, as if it were a pause for contemplation or a moment to reflect. Jump right in; be strong and courageous, hopeful and alert. Hesitation is behind us, bombers. Hesitation is doubt; doubt is absence of trust, and where no trust exists there is fear. Fear paralyzes.
Many of us never skipped a beat, the heavy metal accompanying us like a faithful dog (or a monkey on our back) from December across the imaginary timeline and into January. Some of us -- the noble -- are content to be back in our comforting refuge after an obligatory respite, our generous contribution to seasonal family joys and responsibilities.
Others read these words and bear a sharp pain, the distressing sting that attends procrastination, neglect and guilt. The gym and the shifting of weights and the thud of heavy metal are a fading memory and their minds, having exhausted the usual excuses, are groping for relief, ways to reinstall their workouts and catch up.
Each day is a starting line, and not of the variety that suggests a do-or-die, all-or-nothing and win-or-lose race to the end. We take our marks with purpose and charge, and we're off, no contest, no records, no spectators or fans. We push and pull and pile, toil and smile. We acknowledge our achievement with humility, make fitting assessments and prepare to do it again. Tomorrow is another day, another starting line.
This might not be the approach of champions, but it steadily engages us and readies us for bigger and better days ahead. Anything more is greedy, unrealistic, time consuming, disappointing and mind-, back- and spirit-breaking and dumb. That doesn't mean we won't slavishly tread the seldom traveled road, none of us having achieved a prize for brains during our musclebuilding antics.
Whoever we are, whatever the time of year and if we are yet with breath, we are always seeking more effective and interesting training methods. We know muscle develops slowly and strength builds gradually, and we've exhausted every training routine since the days of Sandow. Doesn't matter; like desperate lost souls in the desert we search for water.
Having convinced you there's hope, here's my new plan, which is in fact an old plan. The truth is, any plan, if you haven't practiced it in a long time and it isn't an outright bad plan, is probably a good plan. The only requirements are for you to execute it with form, focus, intensity, assurance and continuity.
Here's where many of us fall off the platform; the requirements are barely understood, partially applied or quickly ignored, and the resulting lack of success convinces us the routine is a failure.
The routine never had a chance. It was abandoned before it was sufficiently engaged.
Ah, yes, the plan: What is the plan?
The plan involves a pause for assessment and evaluation. Don't give me that long puss, that bored sigh, that impatient glare. This is not an intellectual exercise, a waste of time for the robust lifter of iron. Brief pauses to observe ourselves and our actions are hugely insightful, widely encouraged and universally neglected. Confront yourself with a few friendly inquiries.
Don't run off, scoff or hide. Intense lifters do this regularly; not idiotic Qs like who am I, what am I doing here, am I crazy? -- but introspective reflections with attention toward exercise and workouts, whole body and bodypart development, muscle density and muscle tone, bodyweight and bodyfat, undertraining and overtraining, diet and nutrition, mood and attitude, purpose and motivation.
Sounds profound and looks complicated, but review is simple and natural in the process.
I've painstakingly prepared the following incomplete, inarticulate and incomprehensible review list littered with meddlesome commentaries and daydreams. If you have your wits about you, you can do the contemplative deed as you sit poised at the end of the bench press between sets.
Are you enjoying your training or is it distressing? Is it an obligation, or a desirable pursuit? Is it fun, like a hobby, sport or recreation, or is it hard work, toil and trouble, like stacking cinderblocks or digging ditches? I know -- it's sort of a combination of all the above.
There are times when weight training is indescribably delicious and times when it is life-saving. There are those workouts that lift you up and those that beat you down. Some are just a plain nuisance. I wanna go home. You ever notice how, after a few days from the loathsome gym, you become irritable and unlivable and dangerous and you'd do anything for an annoying, troublesome, fabulous workout in your beloved refuge? Yeah, me too!
Do you consider quitting the noble activity of weight training on occasion, giving up on muscle and might, tossing strength and health, chucking the iron in a scrap heap? I see. Let me put it another way, do you think of resuming your lifting in the near future?
Quitting is so final. It's also so tragic. Quitting, even an extended layoff, is like close to dying while still breathing. You can't quit.
Are you stuck in a rut, experiencing a plateau in strength, concerned with overtraining? Have your workouts become dull and lifeless, and in need of amping, ramping and revamping?
If this is your conclusion, could it be the problem is not the workout but your attitude? A bright and hopeful and energized state of mind can often transform an apparently fruitless and lifeless workout into an inspiring mountain-mover where two steps forward are followed by three steps upward and another one onward, and again and again to the top. Imagine the view at the mountain top, sense the fulfillment of the steep slopes hiked and every crack and ravine crossed. We reach the top one workout at a time.
When did you change your workout last? Are you one of those impetuous lifters who changes his routine with his moods or muscle-Ts, or do you wait till it grows fangs before retiring it to its cage? Training methods need alteration periodically, but not momentarily.
Frequent routine changes can interrupt muscle overload, interfere with rhythmic training flow and muscle-exercise understanding, inhibit discipline and persistence and cause confusion and disorder. Think about it.
And, then, we get bogged down with routine: bored with exercise sameness and discouraged with diminishing muscle response. Our muscles become accustomed to the same overload and, thus, refuse to respond to that overload -- the same resistance direction, the same groove, the same joints and ligaments, the same weights, the same pastel, miserable world and I'M GOING TO SCREAM. Easy, big fella!
Some call these slumps, sticking points or plateaus. Others call them torture, twisted and the end of the line. I call them cowards. Change your routine and press on.
He who flies high and long has achieved his destination -- flying high and long. He also has achieved a larger-than-average fuel bill. No matter, we're rich.
Go... Godspeed... DD
*****
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