It’s no secret that major research is underway in the development
of life-extension substances, formulas and procedures. Ongoing disease
prevention, treatment and cure often share the same conduit as longevity
studies, and information supporting longer life has been carefully
gathered and gleaned for years. Hence, prohormones and similar agents
have been uncovered as hormone precursors or stimulants, and they
have made their way to the bodybuilding and athletic market. The
reports have been mixed; I haven’t heard any solid and persuasive
testimony supporting the cascade of "diones" choking the
articles and advertising of the muscle magazines today.
Trouble
ahead. Any good doctor will tell you prohormones have a place in
hormone therapy when diagnosis is certain, and they can upset the
ole’ apple cart if taken indiscriminately. Athletic commissions
will tell you it’s drug use. The media does its spin and you
decide.
Now,
that doesn’t mean I’m a prude and unwilling to augment
my system when the ingredient or practice is legitimate, sensible
and healthy. I wouldn’t pass on additional HGH if it was happily
flowing in my veins and arteries. Of course, it is not available
unless you have a liberal doctor and the key to Fort Knox. Instead,
I direct you to the recent studies by Tom Incledon, prominent World
Strongest Man contender, friend of IronOnline and research biologist.
I trust him like the great ball of fire in the sky.
Here
Tom refers to the Ageless Growth Formula as having definite and
substantial HGH- and IGH-1-factor-enhancing properties. He explained
his findings in person at our June Bomber Bash in St. Petersburg
six months ago. I believed then the research was real and indisputable.
No doubts. Tom said so; good enough for me. But I’m a bear
that has endured many winters and my hide is thickened by time,
and battered by wear and tear. Them thar woods is tough, what with
livin’ on berries and chasin’ them crazy salmon upstream.
Something you can get off the shelf that’s safe and unrestricted
is plenty good for domesticated pups, not ancient grizzly bear losing
their fur in tufts.
Others
tried it, others raved.
I
tried AGF and watched and waited. Laree joined me and raved immediately
and continually, "I’ve never felt so good. I’m
stronger now than I was when lifting at Dynamo in D.C. 20 years
ago." I remained watchful and patient.
I’m
suspicious, distrustful, cynical and leery, but remarkably pleasant.
I’m also holding my bodyweight without carrying a canvas feedbag
around my neck like a plowhorse. I wonder -- an indication of more
solid muscle, perhaps? My body throbs, but my lifts are going up.
Am I stronger? Maybe I’m throbbing ‘cuz lately I’m
training for two to three hours and don’t have any desire
or sense to stop. I want more, more, more. Greater endurance? Maybe
I throb because I exert with more muscle intensity set after set
-- one more rep, you can do it. Drive, enthusiasm, determination
and persistence! Or is it my insisting on intensity in my newsletters
that’s exciting my intensity on the gym floor? Am I becoming
a mental monster motivated by my own motivation, or am I becoming
a mental case -- delusional, schizophrenic -- in need of sedation
and observation? Neither. It’s the Ageless
Growth Formula. There, I said it; freely admitted it,
you heard me say it, it’s true, the word is out, stand back.
I’m a liberated man at last. AGF works. I cannot, shall not
deny it.
It’s not like creatine, which might give you an extra rep
or a tighter contraction, and it’s not stimulating like a
thermogenic. The response to Ageless Growth Formula is less specific.
It’s an overall dynamic or vibrancy; there’s a pump,
but not a puffy carbohydrate bloat; there’s intensity in performance,
but not from a central nervous system stimulus; power is available
from a deep internal well, not drawn from a dripping faucet of coincidence,
timing, technique, psych, an imperceptible bounce, tinsy bit of
undeclared assistance or lots of sugar. The subtle yet certain filling
of wellness and might I experience during my workout is real, natural
and comfortable. I feel solid and ready to go.
There’s
more to this sudden confirmation. It’s not exactly cheap.
Is the physical and mental response worth the investment to the
individual user; is its use tailored to the user’s chemistry
and needs and goals by intuition; is the favorable response greater
for some than others; are the responses consistent day to day or
do they pulsate with the user’s biorhythms; does one take
the formula regularly or when training urges suggest its support?
There, just a few queries that crossed my mind as I downed the caps
before plunging into my workout.
Placebo?
Nah. There were a few times in my enthusiasm to hit the gym floor
that I forgot to take my daily dose of the blue and white caps.
As I reviewed my workouts upon their completion and rated them as
merely adequate, I realized my most recent and favorite descriptive
word, "extraordinary," was missing from my appraisal.
It became evident after subsequent careless omissions that AGF was
responsible for the "extraordinary" element in my workout
performance and workout evaluation.
I
can live without it, though the added five to ten percent of "extraordinary"
in this n’ that is handy, sometimes exhilarating.
HAPPY
THANKSGIVING FROM AMERICA
Unless you live under a bridge, you probably noticed its Thanksgiving
across America. We want to say Happy Thanksgiving and wish you good
cheer. The holiday season has begun. December and its jingling bells
and tinsel, shopping, buying, worship and celebrating offers an
unusual assortment of experiences, obstacles and emotions no matter
where you go, stay or hide. Just remember: eat, drink and be merry
for tomorrow you train.
Tomorrow
you blast it; move the iron, lift the steel, squats, deadlifts,
cable-crossovers and presses. It’s the workout.
Workout.
Do you feel the warmth and security in that word? Like shelter and
food in a cold world, the foresail and rudder of a stormbound vessel,
the North Star and Morningstar to a lost voyager. Do what you must,
do what you do; you are safe when you work out. The workout protects
you. The workout strengthens, fortifies, energizes and restores
you. Should you eat and drink too merrily on those special occasions,
the workout cleanses and balances you. Sit in traffic on the way
to the mall, the workout soothes tensions and removes wild thoughts.
Pull the car from the huge snow drift, your back is strong and endurance
high from never missing a workout. It’s the middle of January
and people look like party balloons, they don’t work out,
never did. Sad… but don’t you feel like a million bucks?
You
are so cool, so very cool. Flex those lats.
Are
you ready for your third Cannonball Routine for winter training
when time is light and needs are heavy? Remember this: When the
mind is prepared and the course is plainly set before you, when
you are psychologically energized and your purpose is ingrained,
your workout is inevitable. It becomes a rolling stone; forceful,
unstoppable. Don’t let your mind slip into seasonal withdrawal
and accept a soft attitude of winter compliance. Keep the mind and
body ready and, if you must, the workouts short and sweet. But keep
them explosive and cannon ballistic.
I
have outlined below your dynamite workout for knocking down obstacles
like they were cardboard cutouts. Do this instead of nothing and
you will grow ten feet tall.
The
Works
(Instead
of midsection work)
Deep dumbbell deadlifts off two-inch block
Supersetted with
Stiff-arm dumbbell pullover
3
sets x 10 -12 reps
Close-grip
pulldowns, under grip
ss with
Overhead triceps extensions
ss with
Thumbs-up curl
3
sets x 10 -12 reps
There’s
no major explanation for these fundamental moves, but I’ll
toss out some random thoughts as we look them over.
The
dumbbell deadlift is a compact full-body movement if it is done
with full-body awareness. You can at any given time grab a pair
of dumbbells and execute an exercise like you were painting a fence
with a sticky, stubby worn-out brush. Or you can paint a fence like
it was the greatest fence in the world worthy of heavy and blended
strokes from a well-balanced tool managed by the strong arm of an
artisan.
Grasp
your dumbbells and stand erect, shoulders back and proud. Now inhale
and bend over with your arms slightly bent and back straight until
the weights hang just below the block level, pause long enough to
blink and return to the starting position. Exhale as you rise. The
weight is enough so you can do eight reps with 80-percent output.
This affords you the energy and comfort to notice what you’re
doing and to enjoy doing it. Flex the broad range of muscles involved
excessively throughout the exercise, as if posing before a camera
or captivated audience. With this intention you will realize greater
muscle exertion, engagement and fulfillment. Maximum energy on the
other hand -- 100-percent output -- beholds a different fascination
altogether and can be deliciously mean.
The
stiff-arm dumbbell pullover brings out the lats like the wings of
a Stealth Bomber. This not only looks cool, but is handy for short
trips to the market or soaring around the neighborhood.
The
close-grip pulldowns mimic the hanging chin. Adjust to a pumping
weight for eight reps -- total extension to engage the serratus,
lats and head of the biceps, and full, tight contraction for maximum
biceps engagement. This’ll assist those who have difficulty
with freehand chins.
The
segue to the triceps work is a relief from the tough pulling and
completes an arm workout, always a welcome injection in the middle
of the winter grays. With your back to the pulleys, grasp the handle
overhead, lean forward and extend the handle away from your body
seeking a tight contraction of the triceps. As the weight takes
its toll and begs for assistance, employ well-meaning extensions,
thrusts and contractions, recruiting the lats and serratus and enabling
the triceps continued work... extraneous muscle action here and
there, free for the asking. Get the most from every exercise by
being intense, creative and greedy.
The
thumbs-up curls are a neat diversion to the standard dumbbell curls
and attack the bis and forearms from likable angles. As the weight
becomes more demanding and you employ acceptable thrusts, you exact
thickness-building torso contribution. The shoulders and upper back
act as if you were doing minor cleans. Your breathing heavily, hot
blood is flowing and you say to yourself, "Go ahead, neighbor.
Eat, drink and be merry. I can have my weights and lift them, too."
Cannonballs
and cannons, wildflowers and honey.
Sweet
dreams, crew... DD
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