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Thoughts from the Bodies Exhibit; the animal version (you are what you are)

A while back I wrote about my experience at the Bodies Exhibit in VegasI was recently traveling through Chicago and had no idea there is a Bodies Exhibit in their Museum of Science and Industry. Except it’s all animals.

A common theme in these exhibits is displaying the qualities each animal possesses. I, and many others I’ve talked to, come away from the human version thinking, “Shit, I can’t believe how amazing the human body is.” I’m not sure about other people, but I came away from the animal version thinking, “Shit, I can’t believe some of the things certain animals can do.”

I came away from this thinking

You are what you are

Physically, there’s only so much you can manipulate about your own body. Perhaps one day it’ll be more, but currently, you can’t change too much about yourself.

There’s variation in being human

A common issue in the training / fitness world is emulation. We constantly want to do what X pro athlete or Y celebrity does. Failing to realize,

Eating is the same way:

I remember years ago a rant by a bodybuilding coach. He was trying to get through to his forum the importance of genetics. He wasn’t trying to tell people they shouldn’t try to push their limits; he was trying to tell them they can’t expect to do exactly what someone else does and get the same results. There wasn’t some secret the top guys had, that, once these guys on the forum knew of, they’d suddenly be professional bodybuilders.

He used an example of a pro bodybuilder who had a lifting partner of 10 years. Side by side, for 10 years, they did the same program. The partner knew every single thing the professional knew. However, no matter what the partner did, he was never going to reach the same level as the professional. (Someone in the top .01%) He simply didn’t have the innate structure to do so. You can’t smell as well as a horse if your nose is 5 inches shorter. No matter how much you practice.

“Hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard.”

But what if talent does work hard? Talent wins. See: Lebron James. Plus, the more talent “talent” has, the less work they need to put in to compete with “hard work.”

Many would be much better off accepting they’re different (in whatever ways), ignoring what some professional does, and focus instead on themselves. With realistic notions in mind.

Meaning, if this is you,

You should probably not be thinking, “I’d like to lose weight, see my abs, bench press 300 pounds, and run a marathon this year, without any pain. I’m going to lift 4 times a week, run 5 times a week, stretch everyday, eat 1200 calories a day with 3 protein shakes.” Especially considering you have a significant other, 2 kids, a mortgage, and work at a desk 50 hours a week.

What exactly am I training for then?

For the overwhelming majority working out, training, how you eat, health, fitness, whatever you want to call it, is to help your life. Your life is not meant to improve those things. Those things improve your life. You don’t perform squats so you can one day out lift someone. You perform squats so you can go up a flight of stairs without knee pain and falling down.

The people out there who refuse to stop bench pressing or deadlifting or running for a couple months while they get healthy, because they don’t want to lose 10 pounds or 20 seconds on an activity they don’t make a living from, one which causes them pain, and at the end of the day is arbitrary, are missing the boat. They need to accept in the long run why they are exercising, eating better, and taking care of themselves.

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