Monday, September 19, 2011

Period 2 Weight Training What is Fitness?


Last weeks blog was a bit technical, but I want you to get an idea of how complex the muscle cell is. In an upcoming post, we will compare the muscle cell to the fat cell and see which is more beneficial for you.


For this weeks post I want to get more philosophical. Read the essay below, it was written by a guy named Blair Morrison and touches on the question of; are you pushing yourself or just getting by? You can find more of his essays here.

For this weeks blog. You have to leave two separate comments. First, tell me what the essay means to you. Do you agree or disagree? You can include where you think you fall in his 90% to 10% example and/or examples of what you do that place you in that category. Then you have to leave another comment about someone else's comment. You can agree with someone, disagree, ask a a clarifying question etc.

You will have two weeks to complete this blog assignment and I will post comments at the end of each day so that you can comment on them. I will also go over the directions in class, but if you have any questions let me know.

Fitness Is...

Potential.

Everybody has it. Few reach it.

It’s easy to assume that people despise mediocrity because the world is littered with evidence of humanity’s desire to excel—our obsession with talent, our reverence for heroes, even our love of money. It’s easy to assume that everyone wants to be his or her physical best because everywhere there are those wishing for a better body type or a better lifestyle. They fill our virgin ears with a symphony of sincerity and aspiration, but listen closer. They clamor with empty voices.

The truth is that 90% of people just want to get by. We pretend our ultimate goal is to be the best version of ourselves, reading the right literature, quoting the right sources, joining the right gyms; but the reality is far less compelling. If we are truly honest we will admit that the level to which we might possibly rise is rarely our chief concern. More important is reaching the level where we can merely survive or, at the very least, mock survival. Getting there is much easier. Getting there requires less time, less pain, and less effort. Getting there is too often there enough.

I was speaking with my father the other day about a friend of ours whose son wanted to be a college football player. He had good size and natural talent, but he was a little slow and lacked the explosive quality most big programs look for in an athlete. One evening while having dinner with this family my dad suggested that the kid hang a bell at the top of the hill abutting their property and ring it every morning before going to school. Not only would sprinting up the hill begin to build the explosive power needed for speed and acceleration but the sound of the bell would become a symbol of his dedication to the goal. I wish I could say the kid went out and rang that bell every day, or committed himself to some other program in its place, but this isn’t that kind of story. He, like many others like him, chose instead to remain a card-carrying member of that mediocre 90%.

Why? Because greatness is HARD. Our bodies don’t care about potential. They were built to survive, not to excel, and survival has gotten pretty easy as of late. Our bodies don’t know that by being stronger and faster and leaner the likelihood of illness, disease, and injury drop dramatically. Our bodies only know that it hurts like hell getting there. It takes supreme physical and mental fortitude and an unflinching, genuine ambition to overcome these hurdles. Most of us lack this and it shows.

In this story his ability wasn’t being measured against theirs or any others, only against his own potential as an individual. He claimed that he wanted to be the best that he could be, to give himself the best chance to be a college football player. But when faced with the reality of what it would take to reach that goal he balked, exposing his ambitions as half-hearted and insincere, and his athletic future to be one ridden along the tired road to the middle. This is an all too common tragedy.

After hearing this story, I sat for a minute and observed my father. He was visibly disappointed by the kid’s inability to commit himself to his goal. Yet I knew for a fact that my dad had wanted to lose weight for years and failed to commit himself to doing so in much the same way. This struck me as a prevailing irony, not just in this conversation but in our culture in general, so I decided to ask him when was the last time he “rang the bell.” He was lost for a second, then smiled wryly as he got my meaning. “Too long,” he replied.

Sadly, it seems that our praise of greatness and our distaste for mediocrity is an appreciation and expectation reserved for others. We expect Jordan or Tiger or Ronaldo to reach their potential every time they compete and we shake our heads when they fall short. But we shrug off our love handles and that occasional chocolate cake as acceptable losses. We cry for the children growing up without physical opportunities, yet lie on the couch and amicably waste ours away. We claim we’re too old, too fat, too injured, or too tired. The truth is we’re too obsessed with getting by.

The good news is that physical potential does not expire. It has no shelf life. Whatever state you’re in at whatever moment, you can always be better. SO BE BETTER. Too often people try to do this by setting a number to hit, a person to beat, or a mirror to impress, implicitly attaching a finite quality to the process. This focus is flawed. As you change and improve, so too should your potential grow and your ambition swell. Remember that fitness is a goal inadvertently attained through the systematic overestimation of yourself in all fields. It’s a byproduct of setting the bar too high, of striving for perfection and falling just short. It’s knowing that you’ll never get there but trying your damndest nonetheless. It’s constantly pushing your limits in every direction regardless of your skill. It’s finding a way to keep ringing the bell.

28 comments:

  1. i disagree with his comment. I dont agree that people imagine alot, and 90% dont achieve what they imagine. If you go lift weights and take care of your body, you are achieving your fitness goals in one way or another. I cant leave a comment about someone elses' comment because it shows up at 0 comments posted so far.
    -matt bussard

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  2. I agree with the majority of the article, but no the part about just wanting to get by. Ambition is fairly common, and not only because people believe that they will fall short but still survive. It's an actual desire to be above the norm.
    -David Oganesyan

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  3. To comment on the above comment, I think Matthe is right about the method of setting goals for yourself, but I believe the 90% category is accurate.
    -David Oganesyan

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  4. i dont agree with the part that 90% of people just try to get by. like signing up for weightlifting is a way to better your self while i could pick an easy class like food trends or art to "just get by"

    Keivan Ramezani

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  5. I agree and disagree with the article. People can have ambitions in all parts of their life, however it is not plausible to attempt to reach extraordinary standards in all of them. The kid may have not wanted to lose sleep, social opportunity, and or grades if it meant being a better football player. All decisions have negative and positive impacts. So 90% may strive for mediocrity in any one area of life, however almost everyone strives to be the best in something.

    Alec Jasen

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  6. I agree wutg David in saying that many people desire to just be above the norm. Or even at the norm. Fitting in is, paradoxically, just as important as standing out to many people. It's the fear that we are insufficient and below expectations that can allow people to be content with mediocrity.

    Alec Jasen

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  7. I agree with Matt because there is a certain time when you become responsible for yourself. And if you set goals, you can achieve them. But you'll have to work hard !

    -Jason Bernard

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  8. i agree, most people will go through life being part satisfied with being mediocre. In my case when im am doing a cardiovascular workout i need a coach to make me be a part of the 10% although when power lifting all i need is a spotter for me to work hard

    -josh strauss

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  9. Response- Matt Bussard

    I dissagree with bussard, most poeple set goals that they will not and probablly cant acheive for one reson or another. Only the extremely determined actually acheive their true goal.

    -Josh Strauss

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  10. I agree with Josh Strauss's reasoning. A powerlifting workout is a lot easier than cardio. Cardio requires motivation.

    -John Shi

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  11. I agree with this article. Everyone has potential. Few reach it.


    -John Shi

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  12. i disagree with the author. everyone wants to get better and improve but the truth is that it's hard. i worked hard as hell to lose 25 pounds and still stay strong it is alot of work. i know people and see people who work out as often as me but their bodies and minds just can't take the beating. i think i fall into the 10 percent because my body just lets me. i rarely get sore and rarely get little bumps and bruises that make me not want to work. the easiest thing for me is that i never have to be afraid to fail because i know if i do i'm still stronger than everyone else.
    - Ralph Bernardo

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  13. josh if you take the step fom only pushing yourself when someone is watching to just always pushing yourself you will turn into a super beast
    -Ralph Bernardo

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  14. we all try to better ourselves and achieve more but usually we find an excuse to stop what were doing.
    Keivan Ramezani

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  15. I agree with this article, peoples level of potentials may increase and strengthen you
    --Andrwe Yang

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  16. i agree with alec's comment above, people may have other things that may be more important to them which can possibly be the reason why he ended up looking like a total loss of dedication, but everyone has the potential to do what they really desire

    --Andrew Yang

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  17. I agree with this article 99.9%
    I believe everyone has potential, but only few can make something out it. you have to be determine to do whatever it may takes to reach beyond your expectations.
    -John Gomez-

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  18. I agree with this article, that you need potential to reach goals. I want to be that 10% that reaches those goals i strive for

    -Rafi Hadhiman

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  19. @ Keivan maybe you're actually striving for your goals. thats why you are part of that 10%

    -Rafi Hadhiman

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  20. I agree with josh cause people do set goal that are out of there reach and they cant achive. And the people have there mind set in there goal are the ones wo achive it.
    -stephen potemken

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  21. I agree with this essay. Most people who strive to be that 10% get overwhelmed and intimidated by the physical and mental work and desire it requires. i beleive I am in that 10% because I know that everything I do will make me that much better; I thrive on my pain.

    --Skyler Santomartino

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  22. @Keivan
    but even if you take a weightlifting class you could still just be trying to get by. You wont better yourself until you actually do every workout to the best of your ability.

    --Skyler Santomartino

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  23. I agree b/c most people just go to the gym and half ass a workout. It takes that 10% in order to push yourself to the max that you can go
    -Charles Li

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  24. I agree with this essay. People just set a goal and are satisfied when they reach it. They dont want to push themselves
    - Ethan Gladner

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  25. I agree with Rafi. You need potential to reach your goals
    -Ethan Gladner

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  26. I agree with the article mostly, but i dont think that 90 percent of people are just trying to get by, i think that a lot of people make an effort to be above average. The difference is that most people just lack the motivation to reach their full potential.
    -Mehrzad Van Gieson

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  27. i agree with john shi, that most people just dont reach their full potential, although every person has it
    -Mehrzad Van Gieson

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  28. John Stoeber

    I agree with the notion that only 10% of people are willing to give everything they've got to reach their peak. Khavon, just because you are in weight training does not mean you are in that 10%, you have to push your limits everyday to be in that 10%. Being in a weight lifting class is simply a step to reaching that 10%/

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