Contreras on Assisted Lifters

[quote]Paul Carter wrote:

[quote]DoubleDuce wrote:

[quote]MattyXL wrote:
Paul Carter’s response…

Hey Bret, you’re just a little off here…
I happened across this article from booty guy Bret Contreras this morning, and while interesting and informative, is also just a little bit off in some regards…

First off, I want to say I agree with Bret on a few things.

Namely, I don’t think it’s cool for anyone to look down on another lifter who is natural if he is enhanced.

Hell, I will take that one step further. I don’t think we as lifters should be looking down on each other at all, thought it does happen at times, and even I have been guilty of this. But it’s a bad habit and all of us need to do a better job of offering up the minimum amount of respect to each other for simply putting in the work, and being brothers in iron.

With that said, I want to go over some things Bret wrote in this piece…

Anabolic steroids make the average lifter WAY stronger and more muscular. When steroids are added to the mix, it changes the rules.

This is more or less a half truth.

Some guys respond really well to drugs, and some guys get very little. All the studies in the world don’t back up all the years and years of anecdotal evidence behind what I am saying here.

Some guys can take a little, and get a lot out of it. And some guys can take a lot, and get very little.

Taking anabolics will make you stronger and more muscular, but the degree to which it will varies greatly from person to person. So my gripe here is using the words “WAY stronger”.

One thing missed in this is that some guys can’t take a large enough dose to get “WAY stronger” because they end up with side effects so great that “upping the dose” isn’t possible for them.

Regardless of what guys read on the internet, or what studies read, each individual will respond quite differently to different drugs. I know guys that flat out cannot take tren because of the side effects they get from it. And I know guys that can run a gram a week with virtually no side effects at all. There is no “one size fits all” model here.

I also know guys that can run tren, and get almost superhuman strong on it, and I’ve had other guys tell me they got very little from it. So if you’re using the phrase “way stronger” or “more muscular” then I guess we’ll play semantic games. Some guys get “way stronger” from the same compounds that another guy does not get “way stronger” from. The same rule applies to the “more muscular” quote. That is a pretty ambiguous term, to say the least. I’ve known guys that got “more muscular” from cycles but not to the degree you would expect, given their overall dose.

So this is a fairly broad stroked phrase.

Steroids don?t do the work for you, sure they help you recover faster but you still have to put in the work,? and, ?Natural lifters love to play the steroid card, but 90% of it is hard work, nutrition, and consistency.?

I have to agree with the guys that said this.

Regardless of how much a guys drug cycle is doing for him, if his training and diet are not dialed in, then just like a natural trainer, his results are going to be sub-optimal. Now will those sub-optimal results still be greater than what he would get if he weren’t on cycle? Of course. But training and diet are still going to be the corner stone of efficient and optimal results.

In other words, both the drug user and natural guy can’t take advantage of their “environment”, i.e. a highly advanced anabolic state/natural genetics unless he makes training and diet the most important parts of his program. Otherwise they both end up with the short end of the stick. Again, this doesn’t mean the drug users short end isn’t longer than it would be if he were natural, but the drug user is doing himself a massive disservice if he isn’t programming and eating in the most efficient manner as possible.

In my experience, many steroid-users grossly underestimate the role that steroids play in their strength development. I?d have a lot more respect for the lifter who admitted that without steroids, he?d be pretty ordinary in terms of strength and physique.

That completely depends on when the guy started using anabolics, and what he accomplished naturally. Ronnie Coleman became an IFBB pro completely natural, I do believe. Now he didn’t start winning Mr. O titles until he found the “holy grail” however there are LOTS of guys out there that have built impressive strength and physiques without playing the drug card. I myself managed to work my way up to 250 pounds without being a total fat ass before I ever took a single thing, and was accused on being “on” quite often.

I could name off about two dozen guys that are incredibly impressive as natural strength athletes. So I feel that your broad stroke here is again unwarranted. SOME guys might be unimpressive completely natural, but this doesn’t apply to everyone. Genetic ability ranges greatly from world class sprinters and powerlifters to dudes that can’t get off the couch without tripping over their Xbox controller while covered in Cheesy Puffs crumbs.

Many steroid-using powerlifters don?t have a good grip on what transfers best for the natural lifter, and they don?t optimally understand program design for the natural lifter. Why? Because many of them have never controlled variables. Fluctuating drug cycles confound training/nutrition cycles. Because when the going got tough, many of them simply took more steroids. Many figure out quickly that taking another gram of testosterone or adding in trenbolone transferred very well to strength and got them through their training ruts. Because it came too easy for many of them. Most never spent 8 months hammering the bench press, only to gain a meager 10 lbs of strength. Many never took the time to learn the effects of different protocols. When they were stagnating, many simply took more juice.

Eh, this is misinformed at best.

I know of at least one guy that literally got worse, or at least he didn’t get any better, over a 4 year span despite virtually doubling his dose in that time.

It’s not as simple as “taking more drugs” for every guy out there. Yes, that works for some guys, and doesn’t work for others. There will always be a point of diminishing returns when it comes to “doses”.

Not only that, I know lots of guys that use and work their asses off for very little in the way of returns. I know guys that spent a year working the shit out of their bench or squat to add that extra 10-15 pounds on it. There comes a point when even with drugs, you start to reach your genetic ceiling and no amount of drugs can push you past it without an incredible amount of hard work. In that regard, the user is no different than the natural trainer. When both of them get close to the ceiling of what their environment is allowing, then it’s going to take a metric fuckton of hard work to inch upwards even in the smallest of increments.

As a consequence, I?ve found that many training programs written by steroid users are too harsh for natural lifters; some of these programs contain excessive volume which the average natural lifter could not recover from.

I used to believe this too. However what I’ve really figured out is, that it’s not the recovery factor that comes into play. It’s that the drug user tends to see results faster than the natural dude. I’ve never had to adjust for a guy being on or not. Some may find that hard to believe, but it’s true. And I’ve never had a client that didn’t see extraordinary results. In fact, I’ve had some guys that were on drugs, that actually needed MORE recovery time than guys that were natural. It came back to things like age, and injury history as being the reasons why. So once again, there are too many factors here at play than JUST drugs in that regard.

In your last segment you go into the drug cycles as listed by Ryan Kennelly, and basically paint the picture that Ryan’s drug cycle was the primary reason for his enormous strength.

And that’s where a lot of guys using get sort of irritated.

There are LOTS of guys using similar stacks to what Ryan listed, and will never ever be as strong as him, or anywhere close. And that’s where the argument of “steroids don’t do the work” come into play. All the drugs in the world won’t turn anyone into a 700 raw bencher if mom and dad didn’t give them all the things they needed in order to achieve that.

I know you understand this, but the article more or less paints a picture of a guy that simply took more drugs to get where he was, and as I’ve stated before my guess is Ryan would out bench most everyone else by a wide margin if drugs never existed. In other words, even if you took all of the drugs away MOST of the same guys would probably still be at the top. Sure, it would cancel out some guys, but the NFL isn’t filled with awesome athletes because of drugs. It’s filled with awesome athletes because of genetics and personal interest in a sport by the individual.

I don’t think strength sports would be much different. If you removed all the drugs, genetics and personal interest in strength sports would still probably produce the same world record holders that you see now because they were “made” to be world record holders.

Steroids are powerful, and without a doubt will make some better than what they would be if they didn’t take them, however they won’t turn you into a world beater if all of the other variables don’t co-exist along with them.

In closing, I do agree that there’s no reason for a guy that is using to look down on a guy that is natural, and there’s no reason for the natural guy to scream out that the drug user is only where he is because of some injections and orals. Every guy is going to decide what path he takes on his strength journey and be responsible for the choices he makes. As lifters we should simply respect each guys person choice one way or the other, and no look down on someone for using or not using. [/quote]

Ronnie was not a natty as an IFBB pro. Period.

Kenelly wasn’t THAT strong without roids. According to his interview, the best he could do without them was in the 500s.[/quote]

Also, this made me laugh and laugh and laugh and laugh.

A 500 anything bench for a natural guy is ridiculous.

A 500 bench for a guy “on” is still strong as balls.

And I do believe that Ronnie was natural when he turned pro. This was confirmed through Flex Wheeler I believe, in an interview he did when they were on the Grand Prix tour and Flex opened up to him about all the shit he was taking. You can find out later that Flex introduced him to Chad Nichols. Well what do you think Chad Nichols does???

A 500 bench isn’t that strong…I mean come on guys. [/quote]

Flex wheeler is so full of shit it’s absurd. No, ronnie wasn’t remotely close to being natty. And Pamela Anderson’s boobs aren’t real either.

And a 500 pound mulit-ply bench while not weak is’t good for a SHW. Literally, Kenelly natty was an average to maybe even below average bencher. On he set a world record. On literally doubled his bench strength. I’m 200 pounds and I probably bench about as much as Kenelly ever could raw and natural.

[quote]Pantherhare wrote:

I used it because that was the latest year they had in an idiot-proof format. I figured out how to use their database and he would rank at 77 in 2014. That’s out of about 200 lifters (who have all 3 lifts) in his class.
[/quote]

That seems more reasonable. When you factor in that this is just for 1 fed, and then cross compare him with all the other raw feds/numbers out there, it shines a lot of light on things.

I’ve seen many impossible things actually happen so i don’t have an opinion on any of these except, yes, Pamela’s boobs are fake.

But i would like to know how you can say for fact that Ronnie was not natty at the time(which i agree him being natty is a stretch) and yet entertain the possibility that the world record holder in the bench press would not be able to bench much more that his bodyweight raw without the use of steroids.

[quote]dt79 wrote:

I’ve seen many impossible things actually happen so i don’t have an opinion on any of these except, yes, Pamela’s boobs are fake.

But i would like to know how you can say for fact that Ronnie was not natty at the time(which i agree him being natty is a stretch) and yet entertain the possibility that the world record holder in the bench press would not be able to bench much more that his bodyweight raw without the use of steroids.
[/quote]

The kennelly info isn’t from my imagination. It’s from an interview with him from prison where that’s what he claims.

[quote]DoubleDuce wrote:

[quote]dt79 wrote:

I’ve seen many impossible things actually happen so i don’t have an opinion on any of these except, yes, Pamela’s boobs are fake.

But i would like to know how you can say for fact that Ronnie was not natty at the time(which i agree him being natty is a stretch) and yet entertain the possibility that the world record holder in the bench press would not be able to bench much more that his bodyweight raw without the use of steroids.
[/quote]

The kennelly info isn’t from my imagination. It’s from an interview with him from prison where that’s what he claims.[/quote]

Yes i have seen that “interview” which was made in mitigation of his sentencing by his defense lawyer.

From what i remember, he also claims he took steroids after training for THREE YEARS and that he suffered from some sort of body dismorphic disorder to account for his abuse of steroids.

The extremely excessive steroid stack he outlines in his interview (and which Bret has selectively described in his article) is also part of his claim that the stuff he was arrested with was for PERSONAL CONSUMPTION.

The stuff was found in his home by investigators, and in a seperate apartment along with $20,000 and $80,000 in gold coins(lol).

I am surprised there were no ninjas involved.

[quote]dt79 wrote:

[quote]DoubleDuce wrote:

[quote]dt79 wrote:

I’ve seen many impossible things actually happen so i don’t have an opinion on any of these except, yes, Pamela’s boobs are fake.

But i would like to know how you can say for fact that Ronnie was not natty at the time(which i agree him being natty is a stretch) and yet entertain the possibility that the world record holder in the bench press would not be able to bench much more that his bodyweight raw without the use of steroids.
[/quote]

The kennelly info isn’t from my imagination. It’s from an interview with him from prison where that’s what he claims.[/quote]

Yes i have seen that “interview” which was made in mitigation of his sentencing by his defense lawyer.

From what i remember, he also claims he took steroids after training for THREE YEARS and that he suffered from some sort of body dismorphic disorder to account for his abuse of steroids.

The extremely excessive steroid stack he outlines in his interview (and which Bret has selectively described in his article) is also part of his claim that the stuff he was arrested with was for PERSONAL CONSUMPTION.

The stuff was found in his home by investigators, and in a seperate apartment along with $20,000 and $80,000 in gold coins(lol).

I am surprised there were no ninjas involved.[/quote]

I’m not sure why he would claim to have been so weak without them. You are saying that fit into his defense somehow?

[quote]DoubleDuce wrote:

[quote]dt79 wrote:

[quote]DoubleDuce wrote:

[quote]dt79 wrote:

I’ve seen many impossible things actually happen so i don’t have an opinion on any of these except, yes, Pamela’s boobs are fake.

But i would like to know how you can say for fact that Ronnie was not natty at the time(which i agree him being natty is a stretch) and yet entertain the possibility that the world record holder in the bench press would not be able to bench much more that his bodyweight raw without the use of steroids.
[/quote]

The kennelly info isn’t from my imagination. It’s from an interview with him from prison where that’s what he claims.[/quote]

Yes i have seen that “interview” which was made in mitigation of his sentencing by his defense lawyer.

From what i remember, he also claims he took steroids after training for THREE YEARS and that he suffered from some sort of body dismorphic disorder to account for his abuse of steroids.

The extremely excessive steroid stack he outlines in his interview (and which Bret has selectively described in his article) is also part of his claim that the stuff he was arrested with was for PERSONAL CONSUMPTION.

The stuff was found in his home by investigators, and in a seperate apartment along with $20,000 and $80,000 in gold coins(lol).

I am surprised there were no ninjas involved.[/quote]

I’m not sure why he would claim to have been so weak without them. You are saying that fit into his defense somehow?[/quote]

He said he started taking them after training for only 3 years. That seems a reasonable amount of time to be benching 500lbs suited(?) but definitely not all he could ever attain naturally.

I don’t think his numbers were part of his defense but i guess the early age stated was to establish the claim of long term “addiction”.

Actually, come to think of it, its also likely he used his poor numbers to “explain” his dependence on steroids leading to the excessive amounts he claims he took as a professional bencher.

[quote]DoubleDuce wrote:

[quote]Paul Carter wrote:

[quote]DoubleDuce wrote:

[quote]MattyXL wrote:
Paul Carter’s response…

Hey Bret, you’re just a little off here…
I happened across this article from booty guy Bret Contreras this morning, and while interesting and informative, is also just a little bit off in some regards…

First off, I want to say I agree with Bret on a few things.

Namely, I don’t think it’s cool for anyone to look down on another lifter who is natural if he is enhanced.

Hell, I will take that one step further. I don’t think we as lifters should be looking down on each other at all, thought it does happen at times, and even I have been guilty of this. But it’s a bad habit and all of us need to do a better job of offering up the minimum amount of respect to each other for simply putting in the work, and being brothers in iron.

With that said, I want to go over some things Bret wrote in this piece…

Anabolic steroids make the average lifter WAY stronger and more muscular. When steroids are added to the mix, it changes the rules.

This is more or less a half truth.

Some guys respond really well to drugs, and some guys get very little. All the studies in the world don’t back up all the years and years of anecdotal evidence behind what I am saying here.

Some guys can take a little, and get a lot out of it. And some guys can take a lot, and get very little.

Taking anabolics will make you stronger and more muscular, but the degree to which it will varies greatly from person to person. So my gripe here is using the words “WAY stronger”.

One thing missed in this is that some guys can’t take a large enough dose to get “WAY stronger” because they end up with side effects so great that “upping the dose” isn’t possible for them.

Regardless of what guys read on the internet, or what studies read, each individual will respond quite differently to different drugs. I know guys that flat out cannot take tren because of the side effects they get from it. And I know guys that can run a gram a week with virtually no side effects at all. There is no “one size fits all” model here.

I also know guys that can run tren, and get almost superhuman strong on it, and I’ve had other guys tell me they got very little from it. So if you’re using the phrase “way stronger” or “more muscular” then I guess we’ll play semantic games. Some guys get “way stronger” from the same compounds that another guy does not get “way stronger” from. The same rule applies to the “more muscular” quote. That is a pretty ambiguous term, to say the least. I’ve known guys that got “more muscular” from cycles but not to the degree you would expect, given their overall dose.

So this is a fairly broad stroked phrase.

Steroids don?t do the work for you, sure they help you recover faster but you still have to put in the work,? and, ?Natural lifters love to play the steroid card, but 90% of it is hard work, nutrition, and consistency.?

I have to agree with the guys that said this.

Regardless of how much a guys drug cycle is doing for him, if his training and diet are not dialed in, then just like a natural trainer, his results are going to be sub-optimal. Now will those sub-optimal results still be greater than what he would get if he weren’t on cycle? Of course. But training and diet are still going to be the corner stone of efficient and optimal results.

In other words, both the drug user and natural guy can’t take advantage of their “environment”, i.e. a highly advanced anabolic state/natural genetics unless he makes training and diet the most important parts of his program. Otherwise they both end up with the short end of the stick. Again, this doesn’t mean the drug users short end isn’t longer than it would be if he were natural, but the drug user is doing himself a massive disservice if he isn’t programming and eating in the most efficient manner as possible.

In my experience, many steroid-users grossly underestimate the role that steroids play in their strength development. I?d have a lot more respect for the lifter who admitted that without steroids, he?d be pretty ordinary in terms of strength and physique.

That completely depends on when the guy started using anabolics, and what he accomplished naturally. Ronnie Coleman became an IFBB pro completely natural, I do believe. Now he didn’t start winning Mr. O titles until he found the “holy grail” however there are LOTS of guys out there that have built impressive strength and physiques without playing the drug card. I myself managed to work my way up to 250 pounds without being a total fat ass before I ever took a single thing, and was accused on being “on” quite often.

I could name off about two dozen guys that are incredibly impressive as natural strength athletes. So I feel that your broad stroke here is again unwarranted. SOME guys might be unimpressive completely natural, but this doesn’t apply to everyone. Genetic ability ranges greatly from world class sprinters and powerlifters to dudes that can’t get off the couch without tripping over their Xbox controller while covered in Cheesy Puffs crumbs.

Many steroid-using powerlifters don?t have a good grip on what transfers best for the natural lifter, and they don?t optimally understand program design for the natural lifter. Why? Because many of them have never controlled variables. Fluctuating drug cycles confound training/nutrition cycles. Because when the going got tough, many of them simply took more steroids. Many figure out quickly that taking another gram of testosterone or adding in trenbolone transferred very well to strength and got them through their training ruts. Because it came too easy for many of them. Most never spent 8 months hammering the bench press, only to gain a meager 10 lbs of strength. Many never took the time to learn the effects of different protocols. When they were stagnating, many simply took more juice.

Eh, this is misinformed at best.

I know of at least one guy that literally got worse, or at least he didn’t get any better, over a 4 year span despite virtually doubling his dose in that time.

It’s not as simple as “taking more drugs” for every guy out there. Yes, that works for some guys, and doesn’t work for others. There will always be a point of diminishing returns when it comes to “doses”.

Not only that, I know lots of guys that use and work their asses off for very little in the way of returns. I know guys that spent a year working the shit out of their bench or squat to add that extra 10-15 pounds on it. There comes a point when even with drugs, you start to reach your genetic ceiling and no amount of drugs can push you past it without an incredible amount of hard work. In that regard, the user is no different than the natural trainer. When both of them get close to the ceiling of what their environment is allowing, then it’s going to take a metric fuckton of hard work to inch upwards even in the smallest of increments.

As a consequence, I?ve found that many training programs written by steroid users are too harsh for natural lifters; some of these programs contain excessive volume which the average natural lifter could not recover from.

I used to believe this too. However what I’ve really figured out is, that it’s not the recovery factor that comes into play. It’s that the drug user tends to see results faster than the natural dude. I’ve never had to adjust for a guy being on or not. Some may find that hard to believe, but it’s true. And I’ve never had a client that didn’t see extraordinary results. In fact, I’ve had some guys that were on drugs, that actually needed MORE recovery time than guys that were natural. It came back to things like age, and injury history as being the reasons why. So once again, there are too many factors here at play than JUST drugs in that regard.

In your last segment you go into the drug cycles as listed by Ryan Kennelly, and basically paint the picture that Ryan’s drug cycle was the primary reason for his enormous strength.

And that’s where a lot of guys using get sort of irritated.

There are LOTS of guys using similar stacks to what Ryan listed, and will never ever be as strong as him, or anywhere close. And that’s where the argument of “steroids don’t do the work” come into play. All the drugs in the world won’t turn anyone into a 700 raw bencher if mom and dad didn’t give them all the things they needed in order to achieve that.

I know you understand this, but the article more or less paints a picture of a guy that simply took more drugs to get where he was, and as I’ve stated before my guess is Ryan would out bench most everyone else by a wide margin if drugs never existed. In other words, even if you took all of the drugs away MOST of the same guys would probably still be at the top. Sure, it would cancel out some guys, but the NFL isn’t filled with awesome athletes because of drugs. It’s filled with awesome athletes because of genetics and personal interest in a sport by the individual.

I don’t think strength sports would be much different. If you removed all the drugs, genetics and personal interest in strength sports would still probably produce the same world record holders that you see now because they were “made” to be world record holders.

Steroids are powerful, and without a doubt will make some better than what they would be if they didn’t take them, however they won’t turn you into a world beater if all of the other variables don’t co-exist along with them.

In closing, I do agree that there’s no reason for a guy that is using to look down on a guy that is natural, and there’s no reason for the natural guy to scream out that the drug user is only where he is because of some injections and orals. Every guy is going to decide what path he takes on his strength journey and be responsible for the choices he makes. As lifters we should simply respect each guys person choice one way or the other, and no look down on someone for using or not using. [/quote]

Ronnie was not a natty as an IFBB pro. Period.

Kenelly wasn’t THAT strong without roids. According to his interview, the best he could do without them was in the 500s.[/quote]

Also, this made me laugh and laugh and laugh and laugh.

A 500 anything bench for a natural guy is ridiculous.

A 500 bench for a guy “on” is still strong as balls.

And I do believe that Ronnie was natural when he turned pro. This was confirmed through Flex Wheeler I believe, in an interview he did when they were on the Grand Prix tour and Flex opened up to him about all the shit he was taking. You can find out later that Flex introduced him to Chad Nichols. Well what do you think Chad Nichols does???

A 500 bench isn’t that strong…I mean come on guys. [/quote]

Flex wheeler is so full of shit it’s absurd. No, ronnie wasn’t remotely close to being natty. And Pamela Anderson’s boobs aren’t real either.

And a 500 pound mulit-ply bench while not weak is’t good for a SHW. Literally, Kenelly natty was an average to maybe even below average bencher. On he set a world record. On literally doubled his bench strength. I’m 200 pounds and I probably bench about as much as Kenelly ever could raw and natural.
[/quote]

Then just get on and you’ll bench 700 raw.

Superheavyweight Ryan Kennelly, benched 1070 pounds (476.3 kg) on 4/13/08 at the APA West Coast Iron Wars held in Kennewick, Washington using a bench shirt. It is said that his ?raw? max is less than 700 pounds.

Using a shirt or Raw -Those numbers are amazing for either style of bench.

Edit: Found another article where it states a Raw bench of 680. What is amazing to me besides the weight is the amount of carry-over he gets from a shirt–close to 400 pounds!!! WTF

[quote]FISCHER613 wrote:
Superheavyweight Ryan Kennelly, benched 1070 pounds (476.3 kg) on 4/13/08 at the APA West Coast Iron Wars held in Kennewick, Washington using a bench shirt. It is said that his ?raw? max is less than 700 pounds.

Using a shirt or Raw -Those numbers are amazing for either style of bench.

Edit: Found another article where it states a Raw bench of 680. What is amazing to me besides the weight is the amount of carry-over he gets from a shirt–close to 400 pounds!!! WTF

[/quote]
People get more than 400lbs out of multiply shirts lol, pretty sill really.

can you really get an extra 400lbs out of a bench shirt???

I dont know why… But biomechanics and glutes made me lol

[quote]Yogi wrote:
can you really get an extra 400lbs out of a bench shirt???[/quote]

Don’t really follow powerlifting (or any strength “sport” for that matter) outside of this site, but remember someone offered Gene Rylchak (the first person to ever bench a grand) a relatively large sum of money to bench 6-hundo raw. Rylchak never took him up on it.

To Paul Carter - isn’t a bit contradictory to claim that drugs effect everyone extremely differently but then claim that the same guys would be winning even if drugs never existed?

Or did I miss something? (entirely possible)

[quote]Yogi wrote:
can you really get an extra 400lbs out of a bench shirt???[/quote]

Idk, this at least put things into context a bit for someone unfamiliar with gear

[quote]Spidey22 wrote:

[quote]Yogi wrote:
can you really get an extra 400lbs out of a bench shirt???[/quote]

Idk, this at least put things into context a bit for someone unfamiliar with gear

Vid blew me away first time I saw it. It’s insane to me that 4 plates just floats like that. Love the “you drive an F-1 car differently than your mom’s minivan” line.

People downplaying the dramatic effects of PROPERLY using AAS are as retarded as those who believe they are LITERALLY magic. I personally find the former camp worse since they are usually people who know better and are lying, while the latter are typically simply ignorant.

Perfect example is the whole Bostin Loyd abortion on the interwebz. Sure taking in 12g of AAS/week is not what the average pro is doing to get where they are, but at the same time it surely isn’t predominately hard work and only just a tiny bit of AAS. Blast & cruising with 3g+/week + a buttload of HGH and Insulin for 5-10+ years will turn ANYONE (who is serious!) into a MONSTER. Yes, the chances that they will be the next Ed Coan or placing well at the Mr Olympics are very slim (genetics card), but monsters they will be nonetheless.

[quote]infinite_shore wrote:
People downplaying the dramatic effects of PROPERLY using AAS are as retarded as those who believe they are LITERALLY magic. I personally find the former camp worse since they are usually people who know better and are lying, while the latter are typically simply ignorant.
[/quote]

Now this is something worth discussing. I find the latter camp worse actually, especially when it comes from some supposed “authority” on training because a lot of people are actually going to believe it.

For every few trainees that train for months or even years and see no results because they simply don’t know how to eat and train right or just won’t put in the hard work required, there is always going to be 1 that decides to take steroids because he believes in these “magical gains”.

I have already had 2 of such people in my gym ask me if i knew a source in the last few months. Both were under 150lbs and couldn’t bench their bodyweigh for reps. They read about these magical gains online and want to believe it. They cannot understand the simple logic that if you can’t eat to gain weight naturally, any weight increase on a basic cycle will be mostly water weight and they will lose everything and even current muscle mass when off because of the period of shut down following a cycle.

We all know the potential side effects of AAS. I doubt guys that can’t even get their training and diet in order will take proper steps to prevent these.

Btw, nowadays i’m reading about new designer steroids under the guise of “prohormones” with potentially WORSE side effects as there is much less research and trial with these products. And they are LEGAL.

I can understand why some may choose to downplay the effects of AAS and emphasize hard work and dedication.