WHY
DO YOU HAVE ALL THOSE MUSCLES?
MuscleMag
International, May 1990
By
Laree Draper. Property of Robert Kennedy, MuscleMag International
Two
girls at the beach were admiring the passing scene, which included
a bodybuilder who was strutting his best. "That's my type,"
said one. "Well, I don't know," the other replied. "I
have a friend who married a man who owns a two-car garage, but he
just keeps a bicycle in it."
Years
ago Merv Griffin hosted a program that included a few bodybuilding
guest. Merv asked them "What do you use all those muscles for?"
The bodybuilders answered by throwing a few poses. Merv asked again,
"No, I mean what do you use them for?" The muscular guests
again struck their poses, to which the unanswered host said, "I
don't think you understand. I asked what do you use them for?"
Merv
didn't get his answer that day, or maybe he did. If he did, the
bodybuilders were not only missing the point of his question, but
they also missed the point of their daily training.
Like
the strutting beach fellow, most of us spend our lives striving
forward toward goal after goal, PR after PR, pay raise after pay
raise, remembering only occasionally that it's a journey, not the
destination, that's so vitally important. As you move from workout
to workout, are you satisfied and joyful, or do you feel accomplishment
only after a monthly bench press PR?
One
way to appreciate your training more fully is to use your muscles
in your daily life. As Merv questioned, are your muscles useful,
or do you wear them only as your beach attire?
Dave
Draper (my confidant and source of material) tells the story of
Reg Park and him in South Africa in late 1969. The two strong men
were on the way from Johannesburg to Pretoria where they were to
guest pose in less than an hour's time. They stopped at a fruit
and vegetable market at the outskirts of Johannesburg, and discovered
that their car had a flat tire. At the edges of the bush country
and already late, they realized that they had a spare, but no jack.
Without choices, they matter-of-factly loosened the lugnuts and
lifted up the car, taking turns holding the car for the several
minutes it took to jockey the wheel into place. Without words they
tightened the lugnuts, threw the flat tire into the trunk and rolled
on toward Pretoria.
What
Dave remembers most vividly was not that they raised the car and
changed the tire, but that the feat took place without conversation.
They were late and the tire needed to be changed. Both of the men
had spent years pushing heavy weights around the gym, so when they
needed the strength, it was there. They knew it and they used it,
all without thought, doubts, or discussion.
The
following year in New York City after a Mr. America/Mr. World contest
in a Broadway theatre, Dave remembers walking with four other bodybuilders
from Nichol's Steakhouse to their hotel accommodations. It was 1970,
before muscular men and women had whatever vogue they now possess
- a time when five 230-pound men in a New York street at midnight
were more intimidating that impressing. Dave says he can't imagine
what they looked like, spread out across a side street, arms full
of trophies and excited to be in New York for a National competition.
A
half block off Broadway, they noticed a glamourously dressed woman
standing on the sidewalk trying to direct the driver of a car out
of a much-too-tight parking space. Back and forth, back and forth;
as they approached, the driver got more and more desperate, eventually
hitting the cars in front and back, damaging his own car but no
longer caring.
The
five bodybuilders walked up to the now damaged car, put their trophies
on the sidewalk, and, each taking a position at the frame, moved
the car laterally into the street. Finished, they picked up their
trophies and moved on toward their hotel, not looking back or waiting
for thanks, astonishment, or appreciation.
That
time again, Dave remembers the matter-of-factness of the chore.
Picking up and moving the car was simply a part of their trip down
the street. They'd never done it before, and perhaps never would
again, but it was almost a common experience to them. They had the
muscles available, and when needed, they used them.
But
these auto-moving experience are one or two in a lifetime, and if
you don't have a physically demanding job, it's essential to derive
your fulfillment daily in your training, lest you be a stuck strutting
the beach in search of your internal rewards.
Some
of the attributes (aside from the gain of physical strength and
endurance which make all of life's chores a little less taxing)
are the enhancement of heart, lungs and respiratory system, strength
against injury and therapy for injury repair. Weight training will
help put order in your life, eliminate useless fat, reduce deadly
stress, improve your appearance, body harmony, and concentration.
Mixed into the journey of a good training program are profiles of
character such a perseverance, patience, discipline and sharing,
all of which are foundations for self-esteem.
In
Dave's case, the qualities of the physical activity - the training
- have recently been significant. In 1983, Dave made an emergency
entrance to a hospital with congestive heart failure. After weeks
of intensive care where he was not expected to live from day to
day, Dave began his recovery. Over the past few years under the
guidance of his cardiologist, Dr. Thomas Murphy, Dave adjusted his
training levels to the results of echograms, cardiograms, and aniograms.
Dr. Murphy advised Dave that he would be able to train at only a
fraction of his maximum ability in fear of excessive strain on the
heart. Dave began his new weight training program slowly, adding
an aerobic program of an hour daily on the Lifecycle. One medical
appointment after another, Dr. Murphy became more and more impressed
with Dave's progress and the condition of his heart. Rather than
the cutback he was anticipating, Dave was surprised by Dr. Murphy's
instruction to "Keep it up. Whatever you're doing, it's working!"
Dave
used his training, not the mounds of muscles, but the activity.
The training improved him internally as he regained his strength,
health, and vitality.
For
you as well as Dave, each training day is a challenge, both physically
and mentally as you struggle through the valleys and over the mountains
of your training experience. These experiences are priceless when
you're involved in your training and pressing on, going to the gym
when you don't want to, bearing down on yourself, and leaving like
a champion.
Vince
Gironda once said, "There's joy on the gym floor." Only
those with a heart for training know heat he means. If you haven't
felt that joy in your workouts, next workout, leg the play with
the weights entertain you, and be gratified by the muscular pump
and burn. Enjoy the workouts. Determine your purpose for training
so that you feel the pleasure of accomplishment after each repetition
of every set. As Harry Chapin sang, "It's gotta be the going,
not the getting there that's good."
Whatever
your training goals, whether it's the size of the muscles, or the
use of them, don't miss the adventure along the way. And whether
you keep a car, truck, or bike in the garage, remember to take it
out once in a while for a spin around the block.
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