Monday, September 19, 2011

Period 8 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.

39 comments:

  1. I know what its like to have working be difficult. considering my grade in this class i clearly dont work hard enough

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  2. Working hard is a must to be sucessful. Even though it is tough to do to be able to work hard is the first step towards your goal.

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  3. There will be many hard challenges in your life that you will have to over come, you cant over come those challenges without hard work.

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  4. Trenton Hamm said...

    i can relate to this because some things a half do it and don't give my all into it.

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  5. Working hard should be its one benifit. Because even though it is yough getting there the end result feels really good. So you should start with small goals and then work your way up.

    -Sean Avjian

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  6. I will admit that i do not always give my best effort in everything i do. I think that it is important to work hard in order to achieve everything that you want to in life

    Stephen Alder

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  7. I also agree with friedman that he needs to work harder in this class, and so do i

    Alder

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  8. I agree with the writer because on my soccer team there are people who claim to want to get better but dont show up for practice or dont push themselves that extra little bit during practice to get faster or stronger. We hear of the devastating stories of injures ending a career but what about the ones who chose to end their career?
    Teagan Pugh

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  9. Its always possible to be better, but it takes above and beyond to get there and not the minimum, half-assed, just enough. I learned from skateboarding that if you push and challenge yourself, there is a reward. the reward can be tenfold of the effort put in.
    -Eric Rogers

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  10. I know from personal experience that once you hit that low point it's hard to get back up, but it's so much easier to just get by, now i push myself and set goal... and i love it

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  11. I do agree with this essay. It's true that most of us will set goals but fall short and I will admit to being one of the 90%. Sometimes I have spurts where I set goals and I might achieve one or two but then I get tired of striving because I know I can put in less effort and get by. One of my goals was to do all my homework on time this year EVEN being a senior and I've already fallen short of "ringing that bell". I know I need to strive and to try harder and I know the satisfaction from achieving is greater than the content feeling I get when I just get by.

    ~Weaver~

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  12. I also agree with Jay, just as he said my grade too is already being affected and it's not just in one class either, but other classes too. Hardly getting by just doesn't cut it and causes more stress for me in the end. The extra stress makes me shut down even more and not want to do anything so I know its important to give my all know I gave my best from the beginning.

    ~Weaver~

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  13. I know I'm new to this class, and by now everyone probably have more knowledge on weight training than I do. But I'm willing to push that extra limit in this class, and put in 110% to whatever the challenge.There's a sign in the weight room that says "Who do you want to be remembered as?" I don't wanna be that guy who quit.
    -Daniel

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  14. This thing really spoke to me. i know that i can do better in school i barely ever do my homework at home and then my grades suffer. im really trying to change that this year and know that it will take hard work and dedication.

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  15. i agree with eric because everyone does have room for improvement. but if you dont try and just sit there and go through the motions nothing will be gained. Lastly the reward can always be an amazing feeling after putting in all that effort

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  16. This essay rings true in our own society. There are tons of people who have the potential for greatness, but miss out on opportunities to excel because they lack the motivation to feel "the burn" or to get work done.
    -Jackson Pierce

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  17. I agree with Bastien, that there is a point where you just hit rock bottom. There are too many Dads who wear stained college sweatshirts who are now overweight and alcoholic because they didn't think they could handle the amount of work,and just gave up. Now they miss the awesome feeling you get from meeting your goal.
    -Jackson Pierce

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  18. I agree with rogers exept for me it is skimboarding
    -Sean Avjian

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  19. Wow calvin, that was beautiful, but all jokes aside it really is all about attitude and trying to overcome a challenge. It is said that working is 20% talent/skill and 80% mental

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  20. Se Lee.


    I can relate myself to this essay. I say that I want to get ripped and stronger but I never actually work hard or put any effort to it. People that fall in the 90% category need to put their words into action and put some effort into what they want to do

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  21. I must agree. It's like scuba cert. You gotta go through the hard training to get there, but when you do, you get rewarded.

    -Matt Garmer

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  22. Like Se Lee said, a lot of people want to get stronger but cant push themselves to.

    All i have to ask is; "Isnt it Worth it?"

    -Guido Cialdella

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  23. This essay means a lot to me, for i used to be in the 90% that sat around and didnt do sh%#, Around Sophomore year i began to push myself harder and harder outside of class and in Weight training. I agree with this essay, there are a lot of people i know who are lazy but could be great atheletes if they tried hard enough.

    -Guido Cialdella

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  24. 1. I agree with the essay and relate on the fact that I want to work harder but usually give up too easily. I feel like I could push a bit further during class

    2. I agree with Jackson on the fact that most people have the opportunity to try har dnad can but never psuh themselves to the max
    -Juan Pataquiva

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  25. I dont agree with Jay that is 20% skill and 80% mental. Thomas Edison said, "Success is 1 percent inspiration and 99 percent persperation." I think that applys to our class.
    Teagan Pugh

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  26. I agree with the author working hard is difficult and it takes a lot of determination to reach your goals that you set. I would like to set higher goals for my self, not just fitness wise but grades wise also and achieve them through hard work and determination. Most people can push themselves harder but just choose not to.

    I also agree with jackson who said that most people have the opportunity to try hard and can but never push themselves to the max.

    -jason lazar

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  27. I agree with Teagan because when people ask, "how is that person so good, I wish i was as good as so and so at such and such" i wanna say to them, its because so and so is a hard worker and gives it their ALL 100% of the time.
    -Eric Rogers

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  28. Will Quackenbush

    I agree with the essay and i can see it in my own life. sometimes i will be working at something trying to do the best i can and then it will get hard and i realize i have done just enough to get by so i stop. I will admit to being in the 90%. (im not sure if my comment went through earlier cause the varification thing didnt show up so i did it again.)

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  29. Thanks jay my words are extremely beautiful.
    I completely agree with what jason says your goals do take determination.

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  30. I agree with the essay. There are many people out there who have the ability to work hard but don't. I am one of those people. Over the summer i was hanging out with friends, but when i wasn't doing that I was lazy. And when school came I wasn't ready to put in the effort. I got too used to sitting around and doing nothing.

    I agree with both Jay and Jackson. I too don't have the best grades because I would rather have fun than do my homework or study. That's why I don't have the best grades right now. Even in this class.

    -Kyle Saggar-

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  31. I agree with the essay. You have to make goals that you might think u cant do but you can always try. It always good to push yourself to do things you might have not thought was possible. Many people will slack in somethings because they might take it as a joke but others may take it more seriously. Always try your hardest and never give up.

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  32. jack wright is right about there always being challenges in a persons life, there is know way around it the challenges keep coming the only way to stay on top is to knock them down one by one.

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  33. I would choose to disagree with this essay. I know for a fact, that i always push myself because I don't believe there is any other way. On top of this, to say that 90% sit around all day and then for everyone hear to say they push themselves here is a hypocrisy. Instead, I believe that the majority of people push themselves to their limits, but only on occassion.

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  34. And Will. What you said was definitely true, people always push themselves but some people go past that SOMETIMES. No one can always exceed their previous fitness, there is a boundary.

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  35. I agree, without making goals or working towards them, you will never accomplish anything. the amount that you put in is the amount that you receive back.

    jason mei

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  36. Reading this has made me think about how I am in the 90%. Initially, I thought about how this essay is really inspiring and how I all of a sudden thought I would push myself harder. I realize that I've said this before after watching something like Rocky or going on a run. The truth is that so far, I never really have committed myself. That is why I joined weight training class. I want to learn to have the drive to do as best as I want to. Hopefully, this essay really has helped me to keep going.

    You told me I could do this comment tonight because last night there was a problem with loading some internet pages on my computer. My family computer is currently broken, so I could not use that either. Thank you for understanding.

    Todd Schleicher

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  37. Brodsky said that he does not try hard enough, and that he wants to try harder to do his homework. I relate to Brodsky because he wants to improve himself, but seems overwhelmed by the work that it takes. Brodsky, I hope you do your homework more. And maybe your achievements in school will convince me to push my physical fitness. Also, Brodsky made me realize that this can apply to anything you want to achieve- if you want something, it requires hard work. Nothing comes free.

    Todd Schleicher

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  38. At one point i had to pick between 2 sports, soccer and football. I wanted to play football more then soccer but i needed to be faster to do so. I started working hard on stamina, agility, and speed in order to play football. I sacrificed playing soccer over football and it turned out well. I am now on the jv football team, and i got there by working hard

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  39. Last one was me.

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