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By
Charles Staley, B.Sc, MSS
Director, Staley Training Systems |
Probably 90 percent of all
American adults are sedentary, fat, and/or just generally soft and
out of shape. The fact that you're reading this probably means you're
in the remaining 10 percent, which is to your credit.
When I look at the active minority
however, it's clear that 90 percent of them are what I call "exercisers."
Allow me to explain and define:
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Exercisers want to look better,
and despite years of neglect and bad habits, they want it
yesterday. They try to achieve this end through manipulating
the law of thermodynamics. Eat fewer calories, burn more calories.
In other words, create a caloric deficit and (hopefully) lose
weight and be somebody.
Athletes want to perform better,
and despite years of hard training, they still see new PR's
in their future. They achieve this end through consistent
and progressive training, directed toward a competitive goal
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Most exercisers assume that the more
an exercise hurts, the more calories it must burn, and therefore,
the better it is for you. Similarly, exercisers assume the worse
a food tastes, the better it is for you, and if you buy into the
law of thermodynamics, it's not hard to see the kernel of truth
in this assumption.
Ultimately,
being an exerciser is a hard way to go. The exerciser lifestyle
is about denial, self-loathing, and guilt.
You've got to make sure you put in
enough punishment on the treadmill, and you've also gotta make sure
you never eat anything that tastes good. No wonder people hate exercise
as much as they hate dieting. I happen to hate both practices myself.
There is a better way however, and
that better way is to adopt the mindset and lifestyle of an athlete.
Athletes, don't exercise, they train.
They don't diet; they refuel. They don't avoid, they seek. If you
go into any Olympic weightlifting club, you'll notice that they
don't do exercises, they do "the lifts." (meaning, the
snatch and clean & jerk). In fact, most weightlifters refer
to their workouts as "practices" as in "I'm going
to practice."
Exercisers are perpetually trying
to "lose weight." When a wrestler or MMA competitor needs
to drop weight for a competition, they call it "cutting."
Notice how the former sounds negative and reactive, while the latter
sounds positive and proactive?
The biggest problem associated with
having an "exerciser" mindset is that it compels people
to make exercise choices that are contradictory to speed, strength,
power, and generally, Type IIB physiology. Here's an example:
You read an article about "time
under tension," and since the author is a world-famous strength
coach, you decide to give it a shot. On your next workout you decide
to squat using a "4-1-2" tempo, meaning a 4-second descent
followed by a 1-second pause, and finally, a 2-second ascent. You
quickly learn that "TUT" is a very painful experience,
and since you associate pain with gain, you're hooked.
It's not
until 3-4 weeks later however, that you begin to realize that your
agonizingly painful squat routine hasn't put any beef on your quads
or hams, and as far as strength goes, you actually feel weaker!
Any motor-learning professor could
tell you why...your 7-second reps dramatically reduce the tension
on your working muscles, which in turn reduce Type IIB (fast twitch)
fiber recruitment in favor of more slow twitch motor units. This
sucks, because now you're weaker and slower.
You might assume that the athletic
lifestyle is beyond your reach. But being an athlete isn't the exclusive
domain of elite performers. In fact, quite the contrary: by strict
definition, most athletes are not elite! Instead, being an athlete
is a lifestyle and a perspective. It's the way you go about business
in the gym. It's a professional attitude, as opposed to an amateur
one.
The exerciser does
it because he has to; the athlete does it because he wants to.
Making the transition from exerciser
to athlete is simple, but not necessarily easy. Next week, I'll
present 5 Critical Practices that'll help you make the switch.
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About The Author
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His colleagues call him an iconoclast,
a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients call him The
Secret Weapon for his ability to see what other coaches
miss. Charles calls himself a geek who struggled
in Phys Ed throughout school. Whatever you call him, Charles
methods are ahead of their time and quickly produce serious
results. His counter-intuitive approach and self-effacing
demeanor have lead to appearances on NBCs The TODAY
Show and The CBS Early Show.
Currently, Charles competes
in Olympic-style weightlifting on the masters circuit,
with a 3-year goal of qualifying for the 2009 Masters
World Championships.

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and get your copy today!
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