Wednesday, September 27, 2006

PHYSIQUE: Bodybuilding vs. Male Aestetics - Whats correct? Whats Attainable

I am asked all the time by both clients, co-workers and the man on the street: "...hey man, I'm not gay or anything followed by, "...you've got a kick-ass body ... what do you eat?" Or, "you know ... Marky Mark [ see photo right ] has a kick ass body ... how do you get like that?"

When I was the skinny kid growing up, I would see a guy with a fantastic, well built physique that looked awesome but didnt know how to approach him. I eventually overcame that problem one day when I walked straight up to a huge bodybuilder outside the Gerlands store in Sugar Land, Texas (where I grew up) and asked him point blank: "Pardon me sir ... your physique is awesome, what do you eat and drink?" This titanic mass looked at me and smiled and then picked up a carton of eggs, "These!" and then lifted a 12-pack carton of Miller Lite still smiling, "and I drink this!" The ice broken and laughter aside, he spoke to me for about twenty minutes about diet and nutrition, exercise and weight-lifting. But he then made a very interesting comment: "I don't think the question is how do you get to look like me, but what would be the proper physique for you. Or better yet, whats attainable for your body type?"

I later realized this was a brilliant statement. All men want to know how to have a great body, but the real question is: with the body type that you have, what can you attain?

When I was growing up I read the Joe Weider mags and was glued to the commercial with the Soloflex guy, the former college gymnast Mitch Gaylord. Little did I realize that the commercialization of the male physique was central to big business in supplements, protein powders, ab crunchers, ab exercizers; money. Mitch Gaylord wasnt a weight-lifter, but a gymnast; his super physique was chiseled after a decade on the high bar, pommel horse and rings not from bodybuilding in the gym. The Soloflex advertising wasn't really misleading, for the issue with most men is not the physique, but the requirements and sacrifices necessary to acquire the cut, defined physique.

It's not about bodybuilding, weightlifting or gymnastics. Its about your body type: ectomorph (the super thin / Brad Pitt, Seth Green, Edward Norton); the endomorph (round and soft / Roseanne, John Goodman, Jack Black) and the mesomorph (well defined muscles and large bones / Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzennegger).



So the proper question is: Bodybuilding vs. Male Aesthetics - what is attainable?
I am of the beleif that the lean, cut, defined look of Vietnamese actor Hy Nyugen [ photo left ] is more attainable rather than the traditional bodybuilding physique (or look) of Rory Leidelmeyer [ photo right ].

Both physiques are fantastic, but Nguyen's physique is more attainable (short term) versus the beautiful (but long term) size of Leidelmeyer. [ NOTE: I consider Rory Leidelmeyer the greatest bodybuilder in the modern era, due to his incredible physique, definition and size. The grotesque look of todays lifters are simply that: completely out of porportion to the traditional, accepted, Roman-style, male physique. Although he never won Mr. Olympia or Mr. Universe because of the politics, money and corruption inherint in the IFBB structure, Leidelmeyer displays the finest male porportions of any bodybuilder, then or now. If pressed for someone "close" to him - the only other bodybuilder who could match Rory's sheer asthetics was his one-time follower and student, Bob Paris. Paris' attributes and genetic structure mirrors that of Leidelmeyer. It's no wonder that Leidelmeyer trained Paris and instituted in him, the training technique of lifting heavy. Bob's books on bodybuilding and weightlifting are replete with emphasis on heavy weights and his favorite exercise, the squat. But this is from a bygone era.... -MWS ].

So ... we are back at the question: What Male Physique is attainable for you?

To answer that question, I divided bodybuilding / weightlifting into three (3) era's:

The Roman Era. I see the male asthetic as something more akin to the concept of the male body in the Roman era. The Romans (and the Greeks before them) patterened the concept of the lean, cut, defined form in the Roman nude. This standing nude is a superb example of the incredible form of the Roman male during this time. The exigencies of the Roman lifestyle, adherance to hard work and the emphasis on supreme physical fitness is well expressed in the statues and releifs of the period.

The Pre-Modern Bodybuilding Era. Eugene Sandow (1867-1925) was considered the father of the bodybuilding / physique movement. This era, centered in England and Germany started with men like the Canadian Louis Cyr, in Vaudeville shows, P. T. Barnum's Circus' with advertising like, "The Strongest Man in the World". It was from the physique and aesthetic form of Sandow though that came men with superb, cut physiques like Edward Aston ("who could bend a horseshoe with his bare hands!"), the near perfect symetry of Staff Sergeant Alfred Moss, and the incredible striation of Alan C. Mead (who lost a leg in World War One). The Germans were well represented with Adolf G. Pitz, Anton Mytysek and Karl Busch. Even the American silent film star, Rudolf Valentino was an iron addict. Many were early enthusiasts, film stars, nutritional specialists or military veterans; most were staunch Victorians; the body was seen as natural, undefiled, developed, wonderful. These men (real men some would say) built their physiques entirely on old fashioned principles of hard work, rest and nutrition ... without the insanity of today's emphasis on mass suplementation and steroids.

The Current, Modern Bodybuilding / Weightlifting Era. You will not find any of the modern post 1990 bodybuilders here! Instead, I think the photos I've found on the internet provide a much closer example of "Modern Male Physique" as opposed to the grotesque, drugged monsters you see in the competitions today.

Early pre-WWII bodybuilding superstars like Vince Gironda (the "Iron Guru"), Bill Pearl, and Steve Reeves were well known as well as the unknowns of the "Classic Bodybuilders of the Golden Era" (1900-1965) like filmstar Ed Fury, Mickey Hargitay, Don Peters, and Eddie Weller.

However, many pics I've found on the internet from the non-bodybuilding world include these I found from a google search using the words, "male physique" which show proper attainable porportion:

...a cover model from Amazon.com.

...a male prostitute.

...a cover model from a book on male nudes selling on ebay.

...this guy, Dylan Rosser, who has his own website about his body!

... an early pic of Mitch Gaylord the gymnast-cum-Soloflex icon.

...a black and white nude taken in Belgium.

...page from a ladies calendar dedicated to the French Rugby Team.

...here's a pic I found of Dennis Rodman!

...a member of the Michigan Wolverines football team.

...a pic from an NYPD Firefighter calendar.

...a pic from Houston's Firefighter calendar.

...and finally some pics off the Vegan Bodybuilding Website.

Finally, find your bodytype, establish your goals to reach it and do it!

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

PERSONAL: There is no such thing as genetics



The lean, Romaneque, supercut body is probably evidenced by Mark Wahlberg -- Marky Mark -- but not for the reason everyone thinks...
I remember seeing him years ago on t.v. strutting across stage with his shirt off. I was literally shocked at his physique. Wahlberg's chest was very titanic, defined and 'built' in such a way that, coupled with his supercut abs, gave the illusion of being larger than he really was (which, interestingly, was the training technique pioneered by Vince Gironda). Plus Wahlberg was able to craft an incredible set of biceps with excellent definition from the forearm to the delts. All I heard at the gym during this time among the more austere 20-something lifters were his "excellent genetics." It was a bloody mantra for years and I beleived it, thinking no person could build such a body unless they possessed comic strip enhanced DNA.
Though I never found out whether he had a personal trainer or not (I was told from a legitamate source that he did not) Wahlberg was able to move from skinny kid to Calvin Klein model to movie star in a realtively short time. Years ago, I saw a teenager's picture book of Wahlberg (meant to sell exclusively to young, burpy, teenage girls) at Half Price Books. I found this gem in the back, written by his brother Donnie in the hundred-odd page photo spread: "Mark's body is his entire making. When you say that he has a great body, your only saying what is the truth. I mean, man, he did it himself, by himself." This statement was somehow lost in translation by the only-superior-genetics-will-work faddists within the bodybuilding community.
I don't beleive in genetics, good or bad. Only good eating.
That probably should be the epithet for Wahlberg's early photographs. Later, CNN carried a cover story about Wahlberg, "Marky Mark: The early years" and while being interviewed by the talking heads, briefly mentioned his excellent diet; when the rest of his band and road crew stopped to get something to eat while on tour, everyone made their way to the chinese buffet. Wahlberg settled for fresh fruit and a smoothie. After the concert the band and roadies would light up and use. Wahlberg would run, do calistenics, drink a protein shake and eat raw celery with peanut butter. Diet, not genetics seemed to be his magic pill, if there had to be one.
Superior Genetics is just a term, perpetuated by the Weiderites and the other thousand-odd bodybuilders and weight lifters who have paid the price in the gym. Genetics my ass. You went to the gym, lifted, ate right (at least six out of seven days of the week), rested and built a superior physique. Genetics had absolutely nothing to do with it. You can still be dumbshit but have a great body; there is no clear dilineation on this!
Marky Mark simply reminds me of the reasons why building the right body is all about diet, nutrition and will power ... the most important being will power.
If there is a statement to be made about Mark Wahlberg, it really isnt his body even though it is impressive (even today) but about his will power. How a young teenager was able to rise from a life of crime and obscurity in Boston to super stardom without missing a beat -- while building a superb physique -- says bushell loads about his integrity, character and ability while a teenager, not as an adult.
Genetics my ass.

HEADLINES: Arnold Schwarzennegger


This is probably what Arnold did not have in mind for retirement.
If your objective is to use steroids and put on a hundred pounds of muscle ... remember when you get old, this may happen to you. It was a pic taken of The Terminator in March, 2005 by the Daily Mail in the UK.
You can see that Arnold's once famous, ultra lean, ultra definied body has deteriorated considerably with time, age, a few heart operations and years and years of packin' on the muscle. I always wondered why Arnold (pictured here at 68) and Jack LaLane (who is nearing 100, or any of Arnold's 70+ Pumping Iron cohorts, like Ed Corney) look much the worse for wear than the century old LaLane? Arnold is a billionaire and could certainly find time to work out; or has he simply given up? Was it the multiple heart operations? What was it?
The key is not bodybuilding for size - but bodybuilding for definition and cuts. MASS is something you have to live with for the rest of your life; MASS could be defined as a CEO (you) as the owner of a crapload of different companies, spread out all over the place (your body) that you have to watch, hire, fire and pay for (exercise, rest and feed) for life. The more MASS, the more work. Arnold is (or was) a good example of MASS ... that went south. This is just a hypothosis, but I beleive that with Arnold's sheer size, it became too much. He could no longer work out two hours a day to maintain the size and mass and it simply shacked up and went south.
The key to not looking like Arnold (as he looks now) is to:
  • find a routine for life that will keep you slim and trim;
  • a heart healthy nutritional diet (meat, veggies, plenty of H2O);
  • work out to maintain a slim, lean, cut and defined physique that will be easy to care for as you enter your golden years.
Definition worn on a body that is cut, slim, and picturesque - male - or female (the way we were meant to look) is a body you can take into retirement. Yes, the women love MASS -- huge, blood-engorged, outrageous muscle ... but you must either maintain it, loose it or have it go south. Your choice. MASS is something that will haunt you for the rest of your life if you intend to powerlift or compete in bodybuilding. Take note all you Mesopmorphs!
I suggest you spend time considering not putting on weight but slimming down to a normal size and find a homeopathic way of maintaining it that does not involve someone sticking a gloved hand inside your rib cage. Live for retirement. Build up equity in your body by keeping it slim and trim; eat right at least six out of seven days a week; drink plenty of water. Sweat equity in your body, not just your house. The real key to life is how you will enjoy your golden years. You will either end up like most geriatric Americans - clogging the doctor's offices, getting stints, purchasing a hover-round or taking meds to stop the heart disease. Or live it up like Jack LaLane. Hell, with the health care costs now -- if you are really screwed (overweight, sick, diabetic) you'll probably end up in a care center (much like England) where your put on med's and eventually a morphine drip...
Spend time training for your retirement by slimming down.
Like home decorating, less is more.
In bodybuilding, less is better and easier to maintain.
ITEM: Workout to maintain a slim, defined, cut, easily-maintainable body. As you enter your golden years, your body will thank you for it.

HISTORY: Vince Gironda (1919-1997) - Bodybuilder, Trainer, Nutritionist


If you never heard about Vince Gironda, or have and are interested in more information, go to this website dedicated to Vince. He was the greatest trainer and nutritionist that has ever lived. Vince broke the mold. And yes, you should eat both the egg and the yolk!

Sunday, September 24, 2006

WELCOME TO STRAIGHT TALK ON FITNESS...

At first ... I did not want to 'do' a blog.

There is so much information on the internet (especially fitness and nutrition) that I thought my opinions and ideas would be of no use to anyone and better left on the right side of my brain. However, in the past year, I have made such extraordinary gains after changing my diet and fitness regimen that I began to recognize the need to post my info online, test my hypothesis for workout regimens and diets, (non-paid) endorsements for supplements that work, criticism for those that don't and take the time to cover customer service at local gyms, fitness retailers and vitamin stores. I am opinionated, just like the next person (or personal trainer) so, STRAIGHT TALK ON FITNESS (STF) was bound to happen. And logically, I guess it was the next step since starting my personal training business a year ago.

Over the next year, we will cover:


  • Fitness
  • Nutrition
  • Diet
  • Bodybuilding
  • Weightlifting
  • Fitness trends and fads
  • Customer Service at vitamin stores / outlets
  • Customer Service at local gyms and retailers
  • Equipment retailers and consumer reports
  • and any number of items that picque our interest

What you may have noticed if you are new to weightlifting / bodybuilding is that for every personal trainer, gym and supplement there are an equal number of opinions on what works or does not work; hundreds, thousands ... all of which are usually coupled with the prefix/suffix "diet". Someone is trying to hawk a product and it is usually some fad or trend that is hot. 90% of the time it doesnt work and the advertising is false. But with bodybuilder's doing your visual bidding in the magazines it's bound to sell. Everybody has an opinion. Everybody has a product.

Customer service is an area that is never touched. Until now.

For years, vitamin stores, retailers and gyms have been given a pass on how they treat customers. Gyms smell like urine, the equipment is dirty; the faces at the front desk are not smiling and when you have a complaint, your told to call corporate. Until now.

We will cover customer service in such a way as to try and get local gyms, local vitamin stores and retailers to give us what we pay for and that includes good customer service.

Until then, hang on and email me any questions you have.

Cheers,
Mike Stewart BST (C)
Mike Stewart Fitness