AggieLAX said:
Here's my unsolicited and, what's going to be, wildly unpopular advice:
1) Dedicate a much larger portion of your training to mobility/joint health. Your joints hurt because they suck.
2) Diversify your movements (vary the speeds/rep ranges/planes of motion, choose unilateral over bilateral, etc).
3) Abandon arbitrary lifts with high risk:reward (i.e. squat, bench, deadlift).
4) Get in better cardiovascular shape.
5) Drop the fat.
I get the appeal of powerlifting/weightlifting. I really do. Who doesn't love hitting a PR? But, it's all ego.
Start playing the long game.
I'm 54 and this is the advice that I would give to my 30-year-old self.
Whatever you choose to do, please don't ignore #1.
Wow. I am so glad I haven't been on this board in a while. I would of gotten into trouble. If I may...
LAX and I don't agree on a lot of stuff but he does know his sI-Iit. I know I should stay out of this, but as everyone knows I'm an azz ole and sometimes just can't help myself.
I'm 53 and broken from powerlifting.
1. I would of phrased it as dedicate more or at least SOME time to mobility/joint health. I sure wish I had.
2. I agree 100%
3. Arbitrary lifts was a poor choice of words. Unless you are competing, there are better options than benching with a straight bar. Dumbbells are much better on the shoulders than using a straight bar. There is no point squatting with a straight bar. Use a safety squat bar, cambered bar or duffalo bar.
4 and 5 I agree with. Use a hex bar instead for deadlifting (or just don';t deadlift)
It is all ego, no. Ego does play a part. One of the dumbest measures of strength is "How much can you bench?" If you say, I don't know, I only use dumbbells, and you can't correlate... your perceived strength is discounted. So... we all bench with a straight bar. Even though there are safer alternatives and better alternatives to build muscle.
Quite frankly, I wish I would of gotten into the strongman thing instead of powerlifting. When I first REALLY got into lifting strongman was a fringe sport. There wasn't a gym out there that had sandbags, kegs, t-bar trainers, etc. I think strongman does a good job at developing muscle but also gives you a better cardiovascular base than just lifting. It isn't the best for cardio. It isn't the best for building muscle, but it is a good combination. I can also tell you without hesitiation that I was a much better powerlifter than I could of have ever been a strongman.
I enjoyed competing - the comraderie, competition, all of it. I had moderate success competing. It was very humbling to be as good as I was but there were people out there with so much more talent than I had. Going back to the ego thing, I'm not going to lie. There was something about going to almost any place and KNOWING you were the strongest guy there or at least one of the strongest. Fat and out of shape, but still...I used to travel all over the US. I would train on the road in a lot of commercial gyms. It was fun watching people gawk. I loved it when I was benching three plates and someone would come over to spot me and then watch the look on their face when I said thanks, but that was a warm up set and I'd let them know if I needed a spot.
But for most people, myself included, if your goal really is to just get strong, there are better and healthier choices than your traditional lifting.
But LAX, this is the weightlifting thread. I believe your heart was in the right place when you gave life advice but no one on this thread gives two cents about our old man advice. It is a discusssion about weight lifting - bouncing ideas off one another, sharing experinces, etc. How many thousands of post training discussions did we have (not you and I personally) that mirrored the exact things that are being discussed here. When we old men show up and try to dispense with some of our old man wisdom on how weightlifting isn't the best thing to be doing, we come off very cringe.
We have no place here. Lifting is a young man's game. Old men who have dedicated a lot of their life to lifting... well, we can't lift anymore. Our hearts are in the right place in that we want people to avoid the mistakes we made, but quite frankly a young hoose would probably have had some of the same reactions. It is funny, an old very accomplished lifting friend of mine that I would say was one of my mentors... he said the exact same things to me when I was young. Did I listen, no. Do I wish I had, yes.
LOL, now troll hoose will sling back away for awhile since I probably have ticked off everyone. But cut LAX some slack.