drtbear1967
Musclechemistry Board Certified Member
Dumb Motivational Sayings<!-- /react-text -->
<!-- react-text: 716 -->by Jim Wendler <!-- /react-text --><!-- react-text: 928 -->
<!-- react-text: 929 -->What’s the dumbest motivational saying in fitness? Well, most of them are horrible. The one that comes to mind is "the best workout for you is the one you aren't doing." This just reeks of stupidity, but you can lump in "work your weakness" or "the exercise you hate most is the one you should do" in there too. These are regurgitated turds from cheerleaders. How about we all agree on this: if you are full of cliches, you are full of shit.<!-- /react-text -->
<!-- react-text: 930 -->One of the things I've noticed the last 10 years or so is the chasm between what real professionals (coaches) are doing and what is being preached by mainstream/social media/current trends is massive. My advice to anyone who's interested in training, either as an athlete or as a coach, is to completely abandon trends and mainstream "workouts" and start looking for answers via real professionals. You'll have to do some work to get there. Many of them are too busy working/training/learning to post on the internet all the time. But if you're serious about your training and want to separate yourself from the narcissistic drones, you'll find a way.<!-- /react-text -->
<!-- react-text: 716 -->by Jim Wendler <!-- /react-text --><!-- react-text: 928 -->
<!-- react-text: 929 -->What’s the dumbest motivational saying in fitness? Well, most of them are horrible. The one that comes to mind is "the best workout for you is the one you aren't doing." This just reeks of stupidity, but you can lump in "work your weakness" or "the exercise you hate most is the one you should do" in there too. These are regurgitated turds from cheerleaders. How about we all agree on this: if you are full of cliches, you are full of shit.<!-- /react-text -->
<!-- react-text: 930 -->One of the things I've noticed the last 10 years or so is the chasm between what real professionals (coaches) are doing and what is being preached by mainstream/social media/current trends is massive. My advice to anyone who's interested in training, either as an athlete or as a coach, is to completely abandon trends and mainstream "workouts" and start looking for answers via real professionals. You'll have to do some work to get there. Many of them are too busy working/training/learning to post on the internet all the time. But if you're serious about your training and want to separate yourself from the narcissistic drones, you'll find a way.<!-- /react-text -->