The Ultimate Guide to Fitness and Strength Training and Weight Loss
Monday, 9 February 2015
Captain America Teaches Us Why Old School is the Best School
It seems every day, there’s a new workout plan, piece of
equipment, or plan to get you more in shape than ever before. It usually
involves BREAKTHROUGH technology, a scientific discovery, or patent pending
workout strategy that is gripping the nation. These things make me laugh (and weep)
for humanity.
It’s no wonder we act like cats chasing shiny objects, with
our brains being subjected to this all day every day. These products and
systems aren’t designed to actually get you healthy – they’re designed to
target your insecurities and make the companies MORE money – until they create
the next break-through to get you to spend more money.
Today I’m gonna share some harsh truths about the trend of
mainstream modern fitness, and encourage you to see through the bullshit… and
start thinking old school.
It’s time to think more like Captain America, and less about
what the latest and greatest is. (Yes, I see the humor in the fact that he was
turned into Captain America with a super serum, but hear me out!)
It’s time to learn why Old School is the best school.
Way back in the day, the first caveman, Fred Flintstone (I
assume that was his given name) invented the wheel. He used that wheel to help
him transport things great distances.
When it comes to getting stronger and more fit, we pretty
much had things figured out as cavemen too:
Pick up heavy things occasionally.
Move your body weight in ways you move every day (think
squats, push ups, and pull ups).
Move around at different speeds (walking, running,
sprinting).
Rest
Those principles are the same principles that will help you
get in the absolute best shape of your life today. The problem with these
principles and methods of training? They’re boring! They are tough to market,
repackage every month, and get you to commit to paying money to learn about.
Which is why every marketer is tasked with trying to
reinvent the wheel – not to help you get in better shape, but to sell gym
memberships, magazine subscriptions, supplements, and workout DVDs.
Think about it:
Every gym you walk into has all the fancy new machines,
ellipticals, and equipment front and center. Buried in the back corner is the
free weights. The machines and ellipticals break, require maintenance, and are
replaced with more “technologically advanced” version every few years with the
latest features. The free weights never change and rarely need to be replaced.
Every workout DVD has a “special proprietary workout
solution” designed to stimulate/annihilate/shred blah blah blah. This is done
to get you to buy this workout plan after you bought the last plan. The
principles are the same, it just has a fresh coat of paint on it…to sell you
the latest craze.
Every fitness magazine has “Get shredded with this new
secret workout!” on the cover. If they told you to eat better and lift heavy
things every week, people would stop reading and buying issue after issue. So
they make a few small changes, throw in some nonsense terms, and BAM! “The
Secret Workout You’ve Been Missing Out On.”
If you want to see success, start thinking, training, and
living like Captain America. The Cap was frozen in time when old school
strength, honor, courage, camaraderie, and values were important. In this story
arc he’s thrown into a crazy modern world, with questionable morals, crazy new
tech, and advancements that make him wonder if we have gone to far.
Steve Rogers continues to serve as a concrete pillar of
morality and values – When the world goes to hell, Cap knows what he needs to
do, and has his rules and beliefs to fall back on for how to proceed. He trains
in an old school way and he attacks problems with old solutions that have
worked.
When everybody else is racing to a new secret or advanced
whatever, he simply puts on his helmet, reaches way back to how he was brought
up, and gets to work.
It’s this faith in the old school process that allows him to
succeed where others fail.
Be Old School Like Captain America
Captain America is the poster child for “If it ain’t broke,
don’t fix it.”
Go way back, and you’ll find cavemen climbing trees, moving
rocks, picking up logs, dragging animal carcasses back to caves, sprinting from
predators, and so on.
Next, we have the ancient Greeks, who trained in
“Gymnasiums” to improve their strength and muscle through training. Believe it
or not, there wasn’t a single elliptical machine, ab cruncher, OR smith machine
present – it was real world movements and competitions among the Greeks to
improve their physiques in tribute to their gods.
Have you heard the tale of Milo of Croton? He was said to
have achieved the feat of lifting of a full-sized bull by starting in
childhood, lifting and carrying a newborn calf, and repeating the feat daily as
it grew to maturity. Today we call this progressive overload!
Fast WAY forward to the 1940s and 50s (what’s up Captain
America!), the predominant method of well accepted “exercise” for people was
strength training!
I’m not surprised that my workouts of today, and those of
the most fit people I know (just look at any gymnast or power lifter) are no
different from those same workouts of the past. I’m now in the best shape of my
life, and my workouts consist of mostly the same movements I’ve been using for
the past decade:
Squats, front squats
Deadlifts, romanian deadlifts
Gymnastic ring work
Pistol squats
Pull ups and push ups.
It ain’t sexy, it ain’t new technology, and it ain’t very
marketable. But it gets better results than any of this newfangled nonsense you
see on TV. It requires dedication and consistency over a long period of time –
which is why you should be putting fitness first. A strong body is a healthy
body, and the methods to build awesome, powerful,functional strength haven’t changed.
I would argue that our pal Rocky Balboa was successful in
his fight against Ivan Drago because he chose to train in the old school
fashion rather than chasing science and technology. Plus, what a great song!
I’m sure Captain America would be proud of Rocky’s training
methods. So how can you train more like Captain America?
Stop chasing the latest and greatest. Look backwards to what
methods haven’t changed for decades and decades. These anti-fragile training methods
produce results.
Stop looking for improved technology and quick fixes when
old school focused hard work gets the job done.
Focus on functional and strong over flashy and showy.Tough
to fight Nazis and terrorists if your muscles aren’t built to help!
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