What is Your Motivation?

What motivates your training? People from all walks of life and with vary different personalities gravitate to the fitness lifestyle. I wish to gain perspective on why people make the conscious decision to train and live a healthy lifestyle.

Some of the most interesting articles on tmuscle are on the experiences and motivations that brought the top athletes and trainers into this way of life; what drives their elite mindset and what motivates them to be more than average. Just by being a member of this website makes you different than the vast majority of the population. Please share your experiences good or bad that keep you motivated, passionate, and aggressively focused.

Family.

I seek to maintain as high a level of health as possible, so I can be there to support and enjoy my family for as many days as I am blessed to get. There are plenty of secondary benefits that come with it (the high, the appearance, the status, etc,), but now that I have graduated from college and no longer play collegiate athletics, the desire to be with my family for as long as I can is what motivates me to live a healthy lifestyle.

For me, it started out as curls for the girls last year. Now, I’m glorying in my growing strength and how it makes everything in my life easier, since I work on a farm.

kind of irreverent, but that’s the gist of my motivation: satisfaction in achieving strength goals. i’m also chasing the rare moments when the intensity becomes mind-altering, similar to the effects of a strong drug.

not that i’m a powerlifter, but here’s a quote from captain kirk that i like.

[quote]Kirk Karwoski said:
Most powerlifters share some common defects. We, as a whole for whatever reason, LOVE to punish, beat and torture ourselves beyond the limits of mind and body. It is our spirit that prevails. This defect of intelligence and sensibility pushes us on to the next level, makes us better and stronger. We all have lifted sick and badly hurt. When this subject comes up with normal people and other meatheads, we all have that prideful smile when we talk about lifting with a 100 degree temperature or a torn groin. Thank God that therapy doesn’t work on us.[/quote]

Peer pressure, everyones doing it.

I enjoy lifting weights.

Seriously, that’s it.

I wish I could write some overly poetic shit about clouds of chalk dust, bleeding shins from deadlifts, jealous stares from people eating Eskimo pies…but no. I just like it.

my girlfriend has an attitude problem that gets her into problems that only someone my size can get her out of. lol

I originally started lifting to get bigger, partly to get girls and partly because I hated being skinny. Then I started to love lifting for the sake of getting stronger. Then I was diagnosed with a chronic disease and now my motivation is to be as fit, strong and healthy as possible so I can fight off infections better. My secondary goal is to be as strong as possible and be really big (~240).

I sweat a lot, and in the gym that’s O.K.

That’s and I’d like to be sexy.

I don’t lift weights, I’m an overweight slob who has never step foot into the weight room. I have no motivation, and lifting weights are for people who caught teh ghey.

Too make my penis look smaller so girls don’t think they’re being attacked by a Boa Constructor every time my pants come off.

I’m kind of a survival nut. I really think bad things are coming, and it will be a matter of Darwinism taking over. Being stronger, faster, more flexible, and having more endurance will mean I’m more able to carry me and mine through.

I also like the sexiness and bragging rights.

its fun being big.

So that I weigh more than the average woman.

The voices tell me to.

Symmetry. I used to be 215 pounds of fat, now I want to see what 215 pounds of muscle looks like…

its cheaper than seeing a shrink

My last job was in a factory that required fighting with steel supension parts for transport trucks. Average day was 60’000 pounds of parts…on a furnace line. Hot beyond belief. It was either get stronger or fail to bring a good paycheck home to support my family. Also, in those kind of environements a little size gets respect.

Last but not least I don’t want to suffer from dickey-do disease.

& what would that be Mike? LOL

I could go into numerous reasons into why I got into lifting (breakup with a highschool GF, fat bastard, boredom, clinical depression, etc.) BUT this article I read in Details Magazine when it used to be a decent magazine really closed the deal for me; a very therapeutic read now & then to reaffirm why I lift…

It’s been posted ad nauseam on this website but let’s give it another go for those who may have never read it:


“Iron & The Soul” by Henry Rollins

I believe that the definition of definition is reinvention. To not be like you parents. To not be like your friends. To be yourself. Completely.

When I was young I had no sense of myself. All I was, was a product of all the fear and humiliation I suffered. Fear of my parents. The humiliation of teachers calling me â??garbage canâ?? and telling me Iâ??d be mowing lawns for a living. And the very real terror of my fellow students. I was threatened and beaten up for the color of my skin and my size. I was skinny and clumsy, and when others would tease me I didnâ??t run home crying, wondering why. I knew all too well. I was there to be antagonized. In sports I was laughed at. A spaz. I was pretty good at boxing but only because the rage that filled my every waking moment made me wild and unpredictable. I fought with some strange fury. The other boys thought I was crazy.

I hated myself all the time. As stupid at it seems now, I wanted to talk like them, dress like them, carry myself with the ease of knowing that I wasnâ??t going to get pounded in the hallway between classes.

Years passed and I learned to keep it all inside. I only talked to a few boys in my grade. Other losers. Some of them are to this day the greatest people I have ever known. Hang out with a guy who has had his head flushed down a toilet a few times, treat him with respect, and youâ??ll find a faithful friend forever. But even with friends, school sucked. Teachers gave me hard time. I didnâ??t think much of them either.

Then came Mr. Pepperman, my adviser. He was a powerfully built Vietnam veteran, and he was scary. No one ever talked out of turn in his class. Once one kid did and Mr. P. lifted him off the ground and pinned him to the blackboard.

Mr. P. could see that I was in bad shape, and one Friday in October he asked me if I had ever worked out with weights. I told him no. He told me that I was going to take some of the money that I had saved and buy a hundred-pound set of weights at Sears. As I left his office, I started to think of things I would say to him on Monday when he asked about the weights that I was not going to buy. Still, it made me feel special. My father never really got that close to caring. On Saturday I bought the weights, but I couldnâ??t even drag them to my momâ??s car. An attendant laughed at me as he put them on a dolly.

Monday came and I was called into Mr. P.â??s office after school. He said that he was going to show me how to work out. He was going to put me on a program and start hitting me in the solar plexus in the hallway when I wasnâ??t looking. When I could take the punch we would know that we were getting somewhere. At no time was I to look at myself in the mirror or tell anyone at school what I was doing.

In the gym he showed me ten basic exercises. I paid more attention than I ever did in any of my classes. I didnâ??t want to blow it. I went home that night and started right in. Weeks passed, and every once in a while Mr. P. would give me a shot and drop me in the hallway, sending my books flying. The other students didnâ??t know what to think. More weeks passed, and I was steadily adding new weights to the bar. I could sense the power inside my body growing. I could feel it.

Right before Christmas break I was walking to class, and from out of nowhere Mr. Pepperman appeared and gave me a shot in the chest. I laughed and kept going. He said I could look at myself now. I got home and ran to the bathroom and pulled off my shirt. I saw a body, not just the shell that housed my stomach and my heart. My biceps bulged. My chest had definition. I felt strong. It was the first time I can remember having a sense of myself. I had done something and no one could ever take it away. You couldnâ??t say **** to me.

It took me years to fully appreciate the value of the lessons I have learned from the Iron. I used to think that it was my adversary, that I was trying to lift that which does not want to be lifted. I was wrong. When the Iron doesnâ??t want to come off the mat, itâ??s the kindest thing it can do for you. If it flew up and went through the ceiling, it wouldnâ??t teach you anything. Thatâ??s the way the Iron talks to you. It tells you that the material you work with is that which you will come to resemble. That which you work against will always work against you.

It wasnâ??t until my late twenties that I learned that by working out I had given myself a great gift. I learned that nothing good comes without work and a certain amount of pain. When I finish a set that leaves me shaking, I know more about myself. When something gets bad, I know it canâ??t be as bad as that workout.

I used to fight the pain, but recently this became clear to me: pain is not my enemy; it is my call to greatness. But when dealing with the Iron, one must be careful to interpret the pain correctly. Most injuries involving the Iron come from ego. I once spent a few weeks lifting weight that my body wasnâ??t ready for and spent a few months not picking up anything heavier than a fork. Try to lift what youâ??re not prepared to and the Iron will teach you a little lesson in restraint and self-control.

I have never met a truly strong person who didnâ??t have self-respect. I think a lot of inwardly and outwardly directed contempt passes itself off as self-respect: the idea of raising yourself by stepping on someoneâ??s shoulders instead of doing it yourself. When I see guys working out for cosmetic reasons, I see vanity exposing them in the worst way, as cartoon characters, billboards for imbalance and insecurity. Strength reveals itself through character. It is the difference between bouncers who get off strong-arming people and Mr. Pepperman.

Muscle mass does not always equal strength. Strength is kindness and sensitivity. Strength is understanding that your power is both physical and emotional. That it comes from the body and the mind. And the heart.

Yukio Mishima said that he could not entertain the idea of romance if he was not strong. Romance is such a strong and overwhelming passion, a weakened body cannot sustain it for long. I have some of my most romantic thoughts when I am with the Iron. Once I was in love with a woman. I thought about her the most when the pain from a workout was racing through my body. Everything in me wanted her. So much so that sex was only a fraction of my total desire. It was the single most intense love I have ever felt, but she lived far away and I didnâ??t see her very often. Working out was a healthy way of dealing with the loneliness. To this day, when I work out I usually listen to ballads.

I prefer to work out alone. It enables me to concentrate on the lessons that the Iron has for me. Learning about what youâ??re made of is always time well spent, and I have found no better teacher. The Iron had taught me how to live.

Life is capable of driving you out of your mind. The way it all comes down these days, itâ??s some kind of miracle if youâ??re not insane. People have become separated from their bodies. They are no longer whole. I see them move from their offices to their cars and on to their suburban homes. They stress out constantly, they lose sleep, they eat badly. And they behave badly. Their egos run wild; they become motivated by that which will eventually give them a massive stroke. They need the Iron mind.

Through the years, I have combined meditation, action, and the Iron into a single strength. I believe that when the body is strong, the mind thinks strong thoughts. Time spent away from the Iron makes my mind degenerate. I wallow in a thick depression. My body shuts down my mind. The Iron is the best antidepressant I have ever found. There is no better way to fight weakness than with strength. Once the mind and body have been awakened to their true potential, itâ??s impossible to turn back.

The Iron never lies to you. You can walk outside and listen to all kinds of talk, get told that youâ??re a god or a total bastard. The Iron will always kick you the real deal. The Iron is the great reference point, the all-knowing perspective giver. Always there like a beacon in the pitch black. I have found the Iron to be my greatest friend. It never freaks out on me, never runs. Friends may come and go. But two hundred pounds is always two hundred pounds.

Saw Casino Roayle and wanted to look like Daniel Craig so I could get the ladies. No joke.

Now I’m addicted to lifting and I don’t really need any motivation.