Friday, December 23, 2011

The last 365: Reflections on Life and Lifting

I feel like I've done a lot of growing up since this time last year, but feelings can lie. Even still, life is becoming more focused for me, and I just wanted to share a few things that I have learned in the last 365 days. Hope you find something useful. Enjoy.

  • Have a lifting contest with your friends in your backyard. Grill some meat, it'll be one of the highlights of your year.
  • Take the box out of your squat. It's a crutch. Put a heavy barbell on your back, and squat up and down (to at least parallel) like a man. Box squats are a tool for the toolbox not the main thing, use sparingly.
  • Buy a good camera. Life is too short not to have your memories captured in fine detail. And quit using your cell phones as your primary photography tool, it's fine when there is no other option, but endeavor to have another option. (my Canon Rebel T3i is my weapon of choice).
  • You are what you tweet. Use social media wisely.
  • Be humble, ask questions of your peers in the sport. Seek and receive advice from people stronger and smarter than you. (I sent two friends in the Strongman game an email just last week that said “what do you eat?” they responded with two polar opposite answers, both were useful, both are impressive lifters.)
  • Don't freak out if you hurt yourself, just back off, work around it, and give it a little time assuming it's nothing serious.
  • Deadlift more. I deadlifted twice a week most of this year once for speed and once for strength. Keep the volume low and manageable. No more than 10 reps per workout.
  • Go outside, go on walks, take the family, take the dog, take a ball, run, race someone.
  • It's ok to listen to something besides raging bloody death metal when you train. Listen to what inspires you. (I've been digging Shane and Shane / Mumford and Sons all year)
  • Drink a lot of milk, it makes cows big and strong and it will do the same to you.
  • Don't hate people for being fans of your rival, even if they aren't especially nice to you. I am a lifelong fan of the Auburn Tigers and two time Auburn Alum. I used to think how nice it would be to have Tuscaloosa (home of our most bitter rival, the Alabama Crimson Tide) wiped off the map. Well, on April 27th, 2011 I just about got my wish. A huge tornado ripped right through, the heart of Tuscaloosa, and several other parts of the state, killing hundreds of people. Families ripped apart, loved ones blown away, lives crushed... I would gladly watch Auburn lose the next 100 Ironbowls by double digits in exchange for having those people back... Even if I did have to listen to them yell “Rammer Jammer” at the end of the game. Football is foolish compared to family and friendships. Life is desperately precious and extraordinarily short. Show respect for people, keep rivalries in proper perspective and have fun with them. Your rivals are image bearers of God, just like you.
  • You can train for a year doing the squat, deadlift, log press, and clean/jerk almost exclusively and make excellent strength gains.
  • Read Dan John. Just trust me, he'll be like your wise strength coach internet uncle.
  • If you aren't training at a gym with bumper plates, you aren't training at a gym. I cannot imagine not being able to do variations of the olympic lifts and send barbells crashing to the floor with no hesitation. They've made me better and more powerful lifter.
  • If going to the gym interferes with obligations to your immediate family, don't go, rearrange your schedule. Some people may say that makes you a poor strongman. I would say to those people, you need to rewrite your definition of strongman.
  • Use old fashioned mouse traps, they still work the best. (glue traps are sometimes ok)
  • If you have children, invest in them starting at the earliest possible age. I've spent plenty of time playing in the floor and with a doll house this year with my little one, not enough, honestly. Trust me, the reward is immeasurable.
  • If you pull a max effort deadlift with perfect form, it wasn't a max effort deadlift.
  • Don't “technique” beginners to death. If a person is just starting, let them figure a little out on their own, if you do give instruction keep it simple. Don't make it rocket science just to look smarter. The body has a way of figuring it out if they practice the movements enough.
  • Coffee is the only energy drink any self respecting lifter should need. Seriously, I see people walking around with $3 Monsters and Red Bulls, and neon stuff that looks like antifreeze and I can go make 12 cups of chest-hair-growing coffee for about 25cents. If you read enough about the legends of the iron game you will find one common denominator among many of them, if they wanted a little perk before training, they poured up a cup of Joe. Old time strongmen drank coffee, your dad drank coffee, and you need to too. And not that $5 hot milkshake crap they serve at Starbucks – Real, Man, motor oil thick, burns the end of the spoon off, give you the shakes, Coffee.
  • Having more choices or variety in your lifting equipment doesn't mean more progress. “Oh I would be so much stronger if I could just purchase (insert latest gimmick here)”. Stick to the basics, use what you have. Heavy barbells work every time.
  • Compete. Train for and compete in something at least once a year.
  • Take Personal Records 5lbs. At a time. Gains get slower the stronger you get.
  • Swim.
  • Go to the beach, eat lots of seafood, take pictures with that new camera I told you to buy.
  • Give some things away, and get rid of some stuff.
  • Go watch an major international strength sport event. (ie. World's Strongest Man, or some other world championship. I did, and it was awesome.)
  • Sit in a hot tub. It's super therapeutic.
  • Establish traditions with your family and friends. Do special things every year that you look forward to. We spend time with close friends every New Year's Eve, I spend about 364 days looking forward to it, we are growing up together.
  • If you meet someone that acts like they know everything, run the other way. The people that know the most are the humble ones that have learned so much that they realize they can't know it all.
  • Speak up for those who have no voice. Defend the helpless, the orphan, the widow, because that's what strongmen do.
  • When it's time to flip the switch, flip it... and pour every single last fiber of your being into making that one big lift, 
  • no retreat, no reserves, no regrets. 

Monday, November 21, 2011

Thankful

Rebekah Grace on our first trip to Astrakhan, Russia - December 2009

It was right about this time two years ago when we got the call. "Well, they don't have any little boys, but they do have a little girl" the lady from our adoption agency said... We didn't care, boy or girl. We just wanted to be parents, and give a child a home. Two years removed from that phone conversation, we tucked that little girl in a warm bed at her grandparents house last night.

Today, The turkey is in the oven, the dressing and sweet potatoe casserole too. A feast is being prepared, a celebration. And two years from standing on the fearful edge of the unknown, the little malnourished girl we found in the dark of south Russia is about to sit at the table, again, with her family, on a warm Thanksgiving day in Alabama.

 My daughter, to whom everyday is a gift, will never know hunger again, and her family is to numerous for my aging mind to count. She's a Boman, and a Felton, and a Cleland, and a Burt and she holds all the rights and priveledges associated with belonging to a large, loving family.

But I'll never look at my beloved daughter sitting at the table, with a plate full, and not think of the feast to come. For those belonging to Christ, one day we'll all gather around at the feast of the Marriage Supper of The Lamb of God, and not a stranger will be found on that day, and for all of enternity we will rejoice in what Jesus Christ has done to bring us into His family. And every day between now and then we will continue to point Rebekah to the God that saved Mommy and Daddy and sent them to get her. So, remember the fatherless today, and, if you are not a part of God's family, allow me to invite you in, there are plenty of seats at table.

Today I am most thankful that we were not left as orphans.

z


1"Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me. 2 In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? 3 And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also... 18 I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you." John 14:1-3,

Thursday, November 10, 2011

World's Strongest Man Finals in Photos

I'm a loser for not wrapping up this whole WSM '11 sooner. But here we go. 

 The Man, The Myth, The Legend - Randall J. Strossen... He's probably reading one of my tweets..



 The truck pull lane

 This is the view from competitors angle.


 This is what a world record looks like.







I can't believe I was there to witness all of this, and got to play photo journalist at World's Strongest Man for a few days... best use of vacation time ever...  Brian Shaw deserved the win, but like Paul Ohl said once "if you give Zydrunas enough events, eventually, he'll win."  If there had been one more event Zydrunas would have claimed his 3rd title, he was just warming up at 6 events. Nevertheless I'm proud for Brian, he worked hard for it.

To view all of my photos from the finals Click Here for Day 1 and Here for Day 2.  

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Breaking Stuff

Had the chance to experience some of the more stunt oriented strongman feats.  Gym member Nick brought some bricks and a bat for us to try and break. It was a great night. Enjoy.

for more information about where I train visit www.auburnbarbell.com