Meathead TV
Member
When I got into lifting weights (at around 16) I had done sports competitively since I was 6. However, I was far from an athlete. I was smoking, drinking, eating unhealthy, playing video games all day and night. Basically doing everything unhealthy except for drugs. I wasn't obese, because I was still forced to do sports by my parents but I was definitely on the thicker side. I was doing terribly in school and girls weren't interested in me.
When I began lifting weights my life changed completely. I became disciplined, I stopped taking the shortcuts, I got healthy, I started doing well in school and started to look more like an athlete. Lifting weights became the backbone to my life. I became better at all aspects of life. I actually became proud of myself.
At 19 I won a national championship in bench press and set some teen world record for that federation. Without really proper training in powerlifting. At 20 I was bench pressing 200 kg / 440 lbs at a even lower bodyweight than I did at 19. I was progressing so fast it was pretty crazy. I wanted to become the best in the world. Every year when I went to a cardiologist for a check-up I basically just ignored what they were saying. However, I did start taking some longer breaks (6-9months) from lifting heavy weights, until I couldn't resist going back.
At around 23-24 I began taking their advice even more seriously. Since then it's been a mental battle every day. I'm just waiting for the day post-operation when I can start lifting like I want again. I don't think it even matters what the doctors will say then. I don't ever want to return to what I've been going through mentally the past years.
I wish it wasn't like this. I wish I could just enjoy what I have and what I'm capable of doing (safely). I just haven't gotten there yet. For me, lifting weights goes so far beyond just being healthy. It's what made me the person that I am today and everything that I'm proud of in my life. I feel like if I loose it, I loose myself.
**
..just so this doesn't get too dark.. as a Finnish dude I can confirm what my comrades said about their Scandinavian spouses.
When I began lifting weights my life changed completely. I became disciplined, I stopped taking the shortcuts, I got healthy, I started doing well in school and started to look more like an athlete. Lifting weights became the backbone to my life. I became better at all aspects of life. I actually became proud of myself.
At 19 I won a national championship in bench press and set some teen world record for that federation. Without really proper training in powerlifting. At 20 I was bench pressing 200 kg / 440 lbs at a even lower bodyweight than I did at 19. I was progressing so fast it was pretty crazy. I wanted to become the best in the world. Every year when I went to a cardiologist for a check-up I basically just ignored what they were saying. However, I did start taking some longer breaks (6-9months) from lifting heavy weights, until I couldn't resist going back.
At around 23-24 I began taking their advice even more seriously. Since then it's been a mental battle every day. I'm just waiting for the day post-operation when I can start lifting like I want again. I don't think it even matters what the doctors will say then. I don't ever want to return to what I've been going through mentally the past years.
I wish it wasn't like this. I wish I could just enjoy what I have and what I'm capable of doing (safely). I just haven't gotten there yet. For me, lifting weights goes so far beyond just being healthy. It's what made me the person that I am today and everything that I'm proud of in my life. I feel like if I loose it, I loose myself.
**
..just so this doesn't get too dark.. as a Finnish dude I can confirm what my comrades said about their Scandinavian spouses.