The ramblings of a powerlifter who loves picking up big weights. No fuss, no apologies, no bullshit. This is my blog, my views, my opinions, my choices. You are free to read, agree, disagree, stay or not. Whatever you choose be respectful & play nice.
Wednesday, 23 October 2013
Interview Part 1
I thought I would give your reading glasses a little rest by sharing and interview I did with Big Tom and Bigger Al from T & A Muscle. Feel free to be offended at any time :0)
Part 2 to follow.....
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Tania George
Thursday, 3 October 2013
Did I Miss A Meeting?
A few years ago in the days when the heaviest thing I lifted
was a pint of Guinness and ‘sport’ of choice was pool I decided that I would
enter Race For Life. I did a pitiful amount of preparation for it. I probably
started doing a bit of running 4 weeks before the race and when I say run it
would have been more a walk-jog-blow out of my arse kind of interval cycle.
Still I had sent in my entry, collected money at the pub I was lodging in. The hairy
Glass Barrel rocking patrons believed saving tits was a good cause and so
generous donations were chucked in a pint pot that was passed around whilst the
bands took a piss break on Friday & Saturday nights. The day came and off I
toddled with Mr G and two friends who waited for me at the end with an ice cold
can of the black stuff as a reward. The sun was shining as I ran a bit, and
walked most of the 5km, with an additional flurry of speed up to and across the
finish line. I, along with hundreds of other women, that day took on a
challenge as had thousands before us and have thousands after.
I am sure many
reading this have done the exact same or similar race. I will also presume that,
for some, the preparation was a shit as mine. I can’t even remember how exactly how long it
took me but I do know I wasn’t in the front serious runner group.
Nope, I was like most, in the serious plodder group and gave no thought
at all to who would be the fastest. I
hadn’t researched what an average time was for 5km and certainly not what the
British, World, European records were over that distance…or how fast I would
have to be to get on the next British Athletic team for the next Olympics. I just
turned up. I plodded round. I finished. Just like everyone else. I enjoyed the
atmosphere which was a nice collective of personal achievement, individual survival,
elation and sadness.
At no point did I know that Paula Radcliffe could run this distance
in 14:29:11. I didn’t know that Tirunesh Dibaba holds the World Record of
14:11:15. Why would I? That would be silly right? Me, a complete novice compare
myself to some world class athlete or even the ones in the ‘serious’ runner
front group. That would be like telling five year old primary school child to
compare their reading abilities to a university graduate. Stupid right? So why then do ‘primary school’
lifters compare their abilities to lifting graduates? It’s just nuts.
There is an amazing
buzz at the moment in strength training with ever increasing numbers of women getting
bitten by the lifting bug. Not for aesthetics but because they like feeling fucking
strong. They enjoy the focus of the training, the grunt & grit that comes
with lifting heavy shit. They go to the gym, do all the training, watch all the
videos on You Tube, follow and interact with other female lifters on social
media. They do searches for other lifters who they perceive to be at their own
level. Searches for women at the same
weight, same age and then watch video after video and they will often leave
jaws dropping with the weights that some incredible female lifters are doing
and then the niggling thought ‘I can never do that!’ rears its’ ugly head. And
here in lies the problem.
Why the fuck are you comparing what you are doing in the gym
with no or little competition time to lifters who have more experience,
training, coaching, and who have put in
thousands of hours of training, athletes who have tried and tested training
methods, some with success and some not so successful, to get to the point in a competition that you are now seeing in a 2 minute clip? By all
means use these great strong women as inspiration, use them to kick the glass
ceiling royally in the bollocks so that you can really see what is within the
realms of possibilities when it comes to strength but DO NOT compare yourself,
do not clip your lifting wings before you have even hatched out of the egg with
these unfair comparisons. We all have a
starting point so ask these lifters what theirs was, I can guarantee it won’t
be anywhere near the numbers they are lifting now.
The amount of times I hear that someone would love to compete
but then say they aren’t lifting enough or they will look for a competition
when they are strong enough. Compared to whom? Where is this lifting measuring
stick? I must have missed that meeting. I can honestly say I had no idea what
anyone was lifting when I turned up to my first comp. What I do know is as a
new lifter everyone took care of me, encouraged me, advised , people shouted my
name and cheered when I lifted well. I saw some awesome strong women like Hanne
Bingle, Angie McNamara, Monique Newton & Emma James who really opened my
eyes to what strong can be. I made some great friends of these women and their
support is invaluable as is their brilliant competitive spirit. Best of all I
have no idea who won on that day!
So I guess the whole point of this ramble is if you want to
compete the just bloody do it. Don’t wait for the day you are breaking World
Records. Just do it. Get a total on platform with as many white lights as you
can. That will be YOUR starting point and from there you can only improve. With
your own personal results you will have your own lifting measuring stick and
not someone else’s.
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