I'm not a fan of bodybuilding competitions or the whole vibe of that sport,
but I did pay attention to bodybuilding in the 90's and 20's.
Although I realize that the professional IFBB guys all use steroids, I still like to read about their various workout philosophies.
There has been one guy in that time who's lifting philosophy made the biggest impact on me.
Lee Haney.
Lee Haney won the Mr. Olympia title 8 times.
Here was Lee's lifting motto.
"Stimulate, don't annihilate"
He never destroyed himself in the gym and never lifted dangerous amounts of weight.
In fact, Lee Haney rarely ever squatted over 315 pounds.
He also NEVER used deadlifts, because he believe it had a bad risk-to-reward ratio.
Here's what he said when he retired.
“I’ve never been injured—no tears, no pulls, no joint or ligament damage.”
Let's contrast that with Ronnie Coleman.
Ronnie Coleman also won the Mr. Olympia title 8 times.
Ronnie's philosophy was to lift as heavy as humanly possible.
At the peak of his career, he squatted and dead-lifted over 800 pounds.
He's had 7 surgeries since retiring.
- Decompression of L4-L5 spinal disks (December 2007)
- Decompression of L3-L4 spinal disks (July 2011)
- Fusion of C4-C5-C6 neck disks (December 2011)
- Left hip replacement (July 2014)
- Right hip replacement (August 2014)
- Fusion of L3-L4 spinal disks (July 2015)
- Refusion of L3-L4 disks (February 2016)
He has been using a wheelchair on and off for a few years due to all the damage to his spine.
Here's what he said about that:
"Do I have any regrets?, if I had a chance to do it all over again would I change anything? Yes if I had a chance to do it all over again I would change one thing. That is when I squatted that 800lbs I would do 4 reps instead of 2, that is my only regret in my career. Those 2 reps I did still haunts me today because I know I had 4 in me but the coward in me only did 2. That is my only regret."
This is madness, in my opinion.
I think people need to be smarter if they want to feel good long-term.
I like strength training, but also believe you must listen to your body.
For instance, I can tell that bench pressing any weight over 225 pounds is slightly risky for me.
So 90% of the time I'll stick to this weight, or lighter.
The only time I will lift a bit heavier than this is when I'm following Visual Impact Frequency Training.
...but I only use that workout once per year for about 3 months (really fun workout, by the way).
I don't limit myself as much on "pulling exercises" like Back and Biceps.
If you like to lift heavy?
Be careful that you don't harm your body in the process.
Putting up big numbers in lifts when you are in your 20's and 30's can haunt you later in life.
I recommend being cautious with weight...
Use the weight as a tool to squeeze the muscles harder for maximum contractions to improve tone and density of the muscles.
This is the irradiation technique I teach in my book "12 Weeks Physical transformation Journey".
Don't let your ego today, create a painful tomorrow.
I completely understand the natural drive to want to improve and hit personal bests.
This doesn't have to mean lifting as heavy as possible in a specific exercise.
You could aim for a lower body fat percentage, ability to do sprint intervals on a StepMill at a higher level, improve on a Concept 2 Rowing Machine, etc.