Carl-Richard

The idolatry of nerds ("pencilnecks") has infected the bodybuilding and fitness space

10 posts in this topic

Thanks to creators such as Dr. Mike Isratael and Jeff Nippard, "thinking about lifting" has become more important than lifting itself.

Commandments:

- Listen to the mind first, listen to the body second.

- Rely on a summation of studies with dubious generalizability first. Figure out what works through experience second.

- Rely on counterintuitive, awkward and kinetically stifled movements first. Maximize flow and intensity second.

Rick Bugenhagen has accurately identified the problem:

 

 

 

Edited by Carl-Richard

Intrinsic joy is revealed in the marriage of meaning and being.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Why is he so angry? xD

Yes I partially agree that thinking might play to large of a role in some peoples training. I personally experienced it myself getting lost in concepts. But you notice that and adapt to it and find a balance. Dr. Mike and Jeff Nippard are not advocating to not listen to your body though, they encourage you to listen to your body always and adapt accordingly to the bodies signals. 

Training very hard with bad form never felt good to me though. That you need to train hardcore (ego lifting) to grow is a thought coming from the ego mind and not a signal of the body. 

Focusing on the deep stretch and control is what my body tells me is growing my muscles the most. 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Posted (edited)

5 hours ago, Jannes said:

Why is he so angry? xD

Loads of steroids and coffee 😤

 

5 hours ago, Jannes said:

But you notice that and adapt to it and find a balance. Dr. Mike and Jeff Nippard are not advocating to not listen to your body though, they encourage you to listen to your body always and adapt accordingly to the bodies signals.

It's not that they don't listen to their bodies. It's that they listen to their mind first and body second. The way they structure their training penalizes intensity and flow, which is what makes training feel good and how you perform the best. They make training feel like you hate yourself.

 

5 hours ago, Jannes said:

Training very hard with bad form never felt good to me though.

Back in the day, bad form meant "not full range of motion". Today, thanks to Dr. Mike and Mr. Nipples, bad form means anything else than slowly controlling the excentric, ridiculously deep stretch and pausing at the bottom. You can train intensely with full range of motion (good form), no problem.

 

5 hours ago, Jannes said:

That you need to train hardcore (ego lifting) to grow is a thought coming from the ego mind and not a signal of the body.

Not at all. Training hardcore is what feels good. It is what comes naturally before your nerd brain takes over and overanalyzes everything. And really, fearing being judged as an "ego lifter" is the real ego lifting.

Edited by Carl-Richard

Intrinsic joy is revealed in the marriage of meaning and being.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
12 minutes ago, Carl-Richard said:

It's not that they don't listen to their bodies. It's that they listen to their mind first and body second. The way they structure their training penalizes intensity and flow, which is what makes training feel good and how you perform the best. They make training feel like you hate yourself.

I think you are onto something. When you train with passion you can go with what feels the best and what comes naturally and not what is on your plan. Like when you start benching and you feel like flys would be the shit for your pecs next you go and do that and not because it is the most logical thing to do. You are more in touch with your intuition and spirit. I trained mostly with a plan but it's not the most fun way. 

12 minutes ago, Carl-Richard said:

Back in the day, bad form meant "not full range of motion". Today, thanks to Dr. Mike and Mr. Nipples, bad form means anything else than slowly controlling the excentric, ridiculously deep stretch and pausing at the bottom. You can train intensely with full range of motion (good form), no problem.

It is the most effective way to train as you get more stimulus but it can be a bit annoying to do that all the time. Although in many exercises this approach really feels great. I wouldnt have fun doing any sort of pressing movement without this technique for example, it's simply the best. 

12 minutes ago, Carl-Richard said:

Not at all. Training hardcore is what feels good. It is what comes naturally before your nerd brain takes over and overanalyzes everything. And really, fearing being judged as an "ego lifter" is the real ego lifting.

I just learned that I should train to failure and thats what I have been doing all my life as it is burnt into my psyche by now. Not sure what a newcomer would naturally gravitate towards.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
9 hours ago, Jannes said:

I think you are onto something. When you train with passion you can go with what feels the best and what comes naturally and not what is on your plan. Like when you start benching and you feel like flys would be the shit for your pecs next you go and do that and not because it is the most logical thing to do. You are more in touch with your intuition and spirit. I trained mostly with a plan but it's not the most fun way. 

It is the most effective way to train as you get more stimulus but it can be a bit annoying to do that all the time. Although in many exercises this approach really feels great. I wouldnt have fun doing any sort of pressing movement without this technique for example, it's simply the best.

I train with a plan but still try to go intense. I did try the slow and controlled approach for about a year when I was trying to fix my muscle imbalances, but now in the last few weeks when I tried the usual intense training, it's night and day in terms of how it feels (mood, energy, pump, etc.). It's also night and day for your cognitive functioning (for example, lactate is directly involved in glutamate transmission).

 

9 hours ago, Jannes said:

I just learned that I should train to failure and thats what I have been doing all my life as it is burnt into my psyche by now. Not sure what a newcomer would naturally gravitate towards.

If it's one thing a newcomer does not naturally gravitate towards, it's slow, controlled, deep stretch, pause at bottom.


Intrinsic joy is revealed in the marriage of meaning and being.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
On 10/2/2024 at 7:11 AM, Jannes said:

Why is he so angry? xD

It's called Testosterone.

And steroids. Most definitely steroids.


“The eye through which I see God is the same eye through which God sees me; my eye and God's eye are one eye, one seeing, one knowing, one love.”  ~ Meister Eckhart

 

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Internet is all content peddlers trying to monetize their efforts these days... it's why you have so many echo chambers and so many niche diets. Truthfully as you get older there's more you have to think about with fitness, such as managing things like golfer's elbow, tennis elbow, shoulder impingement, lower back pain from improper form or too much volume, etc.... stuff they really don't tell you in a lot of these videos.

Enjoy your 20's and early 30's while you can, because life is short and age will catch up with you.  Just lift stuff. If you feel pain that is not muscular, figure out why and adjust your workout to stop the pain.   Sometimes I question just how much people actually need to exercise and that overdoing is simply wears the body out faster. It's all about moderation.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
On 3.10.2024 at 6:46 AM, Carl-Richard said:

If it's one thing a newcomer does not naturally gravitate towards, it's slow, controlled, deep stretch, pause at bottom.

But newcomers are not really a blank piece of paper when it comes to training ideas, they have all kinds of ideas instilled in them from movies, videos, etc. of what training is. Mostly that training must be hardcore. Although back in the days I had a friend who just started out who only trained slow and controlled, so these cases exist for sure. 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
23 hours ago, Jannes said:

But newcomers are not really a blank piece of paper when it comes to training ideas, they have all kinds of ideas instilled in them from movies, videos, etc. of what training is. Mostly that training must be hardcore. Although back in the days I had a friend who just started out who only trained slow and controlled, so these cases exist for sure. 

True, but if you're a young male and say 15 years old like I was when starting out with basically zero knowledge about lifting and only a workout program that I got from an introductory PT lesson, it's in your primal instincts to smash that weight to pieces. Your surging testosterone levels and ape level brain simply won't allow anything else. In such cases, it takes a lot of "brainwashing" with getting spammed with dozens of YouTube shorts each day of Mike Isratael hammering in his tightened anus approach to lifting before you transcend those impulses.

I had a friend who when he tried deadlifts for the first time, he instantly put on 100kg without warming up and fucked his back. Luckily it wasn't too serious.

Edited by Carl-Richard

Intrinsic joy is revealed in the marriage of meaning and being.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

@Carl-Richard I trained like that when I started working out when I was 15. Always training to or beyond failure with bad technique on every exercise. I cant really capture the emotions back then, I liked the hardcore but I also thought this was the way to grow muscle. My friend who trained very controlled was 16 trained and I dont know what his thought process was.

I had such insane pumps back then because of all the testosterone. 

Interestingly females dont train this hardcore way, they train slow and controlled. So maybe it has to do with testosterone, that because of the extra energy and aggressiveness that comes from testosterone that it feels more natural to train hard. 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!


Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.


Sign In Now