When
in Doubt, Ramble On
April 5, 2003
We
live in a small town on the coast of California 75 miles south of
San Francisco. Our gym is located in Santa Cruz, a neighboring town
popular for its tourism, surfing and idyllic environment. One major
coastal road, Highway 1, carries the travelers, commuters and locals,
this way and that and over the past decade has become increasingly
crowded. Sound familiar? The neighborhoods are stuffed, though a
no-growth policy clutches the edges of the small governments concerned.
Absolute gridlock between 3 and 7PM has tortured the residents in
recent years, more than a few pulling up stakes and heading to points
north, south and east where open space has yet to become shopping
mall.
We,
Laree and I, are immovable objects and have noticed a curious change
of activity in the past six months. Not only is there less traffic
on the gym floor, but also we can zoom home at 6PM just like the
good old days. One gets the strange feeling that the planet is being
deserted, a creepy Twilight Zone hush whispers in one’s ear.
What’s
up? Where’d everybody go? The population is growing on all
continents and we know darn well they’re not turning them
back at the borders. Is everyone hiding out, less busy with work,
less motivated and energized to play outdoors, poor or pennywise,
strung out on TV, videos and Pizza Hut home delivery? Could it be
the economy confidence or the lack thereof, big time heartless thieves
deep in our pockets, bad guys with bombs who hate us lurking in
the dark, disputes on national fronts between swollen egos and a
world growing smaller where the lives of oppressed people under
fascism make us sad and anxious? Nah. How about Hollywood and television
and violence glorified; something there might be distorting the
enrapt minds of the rather large viewing audience, ya think? The
experts say no. Acceleration of daily living, dilution of home and
family, magnification of trivial differences, elaboration and validation
of political correctness – do they have root in the curious
local decrease of man and vehicles on the go in my neighborhood?
I
can get used to this: more time, less aggravation, easier and simpler.
I get to the gym and my compact workday quicker, when I choose and
not determined by traffic flow. I return home sooner and less stressed
by the bumper-to-bumper boredom and battles. This goes for me, Laree
and him and her. We’re all smiles. Hi, neighbor.
Once
at the gym I can dig into the jobs at hand with more energy and
a clearer mind, including my popular workout, which secretly supersedes
all other occupations. And some days, like you, I need every bit
of clarity and energy I can muster, every ounce of purpose and inspiration
lost in the cracks and retrievable and every thread of hope rewoven.
Days without bright attention and optimism go by as if shunned or
lost or buried. This is wrong. I must do my best always or suffer.
Suffering
(there are those among us who love the diversion) often takes the
form of hiccups, eye tics, spasms, shuddering, twitching and gas.
On a bad day I’ll have all seven and squatting can be a nightmare.
By the sixth rep I’ve lost count and can be half way across
the gym floor, a revolting predicament, but the show must go on.
I
see a list forming.
We
must always do our best.
The show must go on.
We must rally clarity of mind, energy, purpose, inspiration, hope,
optimism, enthusiasm and bright attention.
The
right foods are important and the right routine is significant.
These can be devised with resourcefulness and written in your log.
There they are for your application in black and white. The application,
however, comes in a rainbow of colors from red through yellow to
purple, hot and cold shades based on attitude, emotions, mental
and physical well-being – well, what do you know, the list
above. It’s important to be in conscious tune with these variables
regularly, thus providing the opportunity to dial them in, a preparation
for your dynamic equalizer, the workout. It’s part of the
psyching process we go through as we approach any occasion of consequence.
I
hear someone muttering in the bleachers that I’m a mental
case and should be ignored. I’d add that was I not adhering
to the above precepts I’d be a mental case that should be
restrained. I’m not alone. Some of the healthiest people I
know agree with my insanity.
So
what’s your point, Bomber? Okay. It’s not in the dance;
it’s in the dancer. It’s not in the act; it’s
in the actor. It’s not in the bomb; it’s in the bomber.
I don’t expect everyone to be ripping-nuts about their training
– certainly some of us would be better off if we were not
so wrapped up or enslaved, but positioning and casting a spotlight
on it while it’s onstage is your job, your role, your charge.
Mark
entered the gym and walked past the juice bar where the famous Bomber
Blends are blended and exciting discussions about building brawn
take place. He looked up, nodded and plodded on toward the locker
room. “Hey Sparkle Plenty, what’s new,” I asked,
suspecting he could use a friend. Passing the test, he retraced
his steps and leaned on the counter like a sack of wet sand.
“You
feel okay, you got the bug?” I asked.
“No.
Just one of those days,” he said.
“Nothin’s
injured, you’re not overdoing it,” I asked, probing
further as if I was the doctor on duty.
“Nope.”
“How’s
your fuel supply? Have you exhausted yourself on the job? Have you
been getting adequate sleep, nourishment, protein? Any unordinary
stress, feeling sorry for yourself, unfulfilled, how’s your
relationship with your girl? Am I going too far here? No, I’m
not writing a book,” I said.
I
didn’t have a thermometer so his temp remained a mystery.
I thought twice about taking his pulse (Mark had that “do
not touch” look, if you know what I mean), but his forehead
was dry, his eyes clear and his responses, though unexciting, were
lucid. Stooped shoulders indicated a heavy unseen burden. This boy
needs an attitude adjustment, I thought.
He’d
dumped his hope in yesterday’s garbage, unrenewed and unattended.
His optimism was under the pile of dishes in the sink, sticky and
gathering flies. Peak performance was in the laundry with his dirty
underwear and socks.
Mark
needs a transfusion of good thoughts to replace the negatives that
have penetrated the thin skin of his unconscious mind. A fresh supply
of encouragement would act as a natural stimulant and redirect his
energy to a forward motion rather than draining his fuel stores
in useless back-pedaling. He’s a good and generous man who
works hard and it shows in his daily walk and talk and structure.
He’s simply forgotten and needs to be reminded, as we all
do.
Because
life seems to repeat itself (a total lie), we become bored and disregard
the newness of each moment. Mark had submitted and his creative
fluids ceased to flow. He had stalled. With no air under his wings,
the bomber was in freefall. A jumpstart was needed. Training enthusiasm
had to be regenerated by a massaging of the imagination and the
suggestion of sure muscular growth and power advances.
I
needed to act now while he was pliable and conscious. Condescension
must not be detected and sincerity must rule. Easy.
Order,
the primary stabilizer, was quickly gained by pausing to restate
his goals, list his menu and review his workout scheme. Where doubt
was raised or discontent evident, we sorted and smoothed things
out with basic touches. I hate hanging leg-raises and press-behind-necks;
get rid of them and do rope tucks and seated front presses instead.
Keep it happy. I hate tuna and water. Dump them and eat sardines
and goat’s milk instead. Smile. Small joke from the Bomber,
though it might carry some real credibility.
Laree,
stop at the health food store on the way home and pick up a gallon
of goat’s milk, please. I want you to try a little experiment,
sweetheart.
I
asked Mark if he’d thought about standing curls and how they
recruit a vast complex of muscles providing muscular benefits and
body power beyond the biceps’ activity only. We talked about
smart ways to combine exercises with pace to affect a momentum and
spirit in training that captures our attention and promotes harder
work and greater muscle response and maximum fulfillment. I revived
the subjects of stress reduction, hormonal stimulation and balance
and the joys of power in the grip and health in the bones and the
absolute thrill of not being a turnip.
Mark
was sitting upright on the swivel stool sipping a Jucy Lucy, his
favorite Bomber special. His voice had gained muscularity and his
eyes, intensity. He said, as if reading cue cards from the rejected
Brother Iron screenplay, “This isn’t something we must
do to live a long and strong life only; we lift weights because
we love it and because it’s a sure way to express ourselves
positively in a world where too many pretend, imitate, lie and waste.”
He gripped the Styrofoam cup and I thought it was gonna burst, Jucy
Lucy all over the ceiling. “The only way to train is to blast
it.”
I’ve
created a monster.
The
Bomber
Keep
your eyes to the skies and may you see forever.
Click
here to order your personalized, autographed copy of Dave's new
book, Your Body Revival, $18.95
Click
here to see the previous week's column
What's
New | Online
Store | Weekly Columns | Photo
Archive | Weight Training
| General Nutrition | Draper
History | Discussion Group
| Mag Cover Shots | Magazine
Articles | Bodybuilding
Q&A | Bomber Talk | Workout
FAQs | World Gym Listing | Santa
Cruz Local | Muscle Links | Need
More Help? |Site Map | Contact
IronOnline | Privacy Policy
All IronOnline pages copyright© 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004
Dave Draper
All rights reserved.
|