06-10-2016, 09:34 PM
Part 2
...volume, drop sets, all kinds of sets and reps during long workouts. Kaz, and another workout partner of mine who was getting his phd in chemical engineering, were two of the biggest humans I'd ever met. Needless to say I went along with their methods. I also lost my "natural" virginity if you will and grew a significant amount of muscle. This even caught the attention of a local pro wrestling outfit in Columbus GA. I wrestled on local tv and thought I was pretty cool. (I'll attache another image here. I'm sure there is a way to insert one thought my writing which would be cool but I have no idea how). I loved training with these guys. It was like going back to my Muscle and Fitness magazine days when I first started lifting weights.
During this phase I began to see value in all kinds of different training methods as they related to growth. I would train with these guys during school and then go home and train with world champion power lifter Jesse Kellum for 2-3 months during the Summer. This was a good cycle of variety.
Then one day a pretty bad accident happened in pro wrestling that I don't want to write about. I quit. I got off gear too. Suddenly, I couldn't keep up with my workout partners and had a new bodybuilding/training dilemma.
I did what I always did and found someone who'd achieved something like I wanted. This time I searched out what was considered the best natural bodybuilder on the planet. I called Skip Lacour for our first phone consult my senior year of college. Back then you could pay $9.99 per month and follow Skip's workouts diet plan and prep on a membership site. Funny enough I was back to a variety of Heavy Duty called Max OT. I was able to make progress once again and so I converted back to heavy low volume and swore off all I had learned from Kaz and my other partner-as only working for the unnatural. I exchanged getting a great pump for getting an extra rep and writing it down in my daily planner. I was also Skip Lacour disciple. After all he got me out of the doldrums and that bred a certain kind of loyalty that I still have for him today. But I got stale on Max OT too. I'd had too many tastes of different training varieties to follow such a rigid protocol, and I'm a guy who loves to train.
It was sometime after I graduated that I discovered the most odd name for a training philosophy... DoggCrapp. (to be continued geez, explaining why I like FT is taking longer than expected)
...volume, drop sets, all kinds of sets and reps during long workouts. Kaz, and another workout partner of mine who was getting his phd in chemical engineering, were two of the biggest humans I'd ever met. Needless to say I went along with their methods. I also lost my "natural" virginity if you will and grew a significant amount of muscle. This even caught the attention of a local pro wrestling outfit in Columbus GA. I wrestled on local tv and thought I was pretty cool. (I'll attache another image here. I'm sure there is a way to insert one thought my writing which would be cool but I have no idea how). I loved training with these guys. It was like going back to my Muscle and Fitness magazine days when I first started lifting weights.
During this phase I began to see value in all kinds of different training methods as they related to growth. I would train with these guys during school and then go home and train with world champion power lifter Jesse Kellum for 2-3 months during the Summer. This was a good cycle of variety.
Then one day a pretty bad accident happened in pro wrestling that I don't want to write about. I quit. I got off gear too. Suddenly, I couldn't keep up with my workout partners and had a new bodybuilding/training dilemma.
I did what I always did and found someone who'd achieved something like I wanted. This time I searched out what was considered the best natural bodybuilder on the planet. I called Skip Lacour for our first phone consult my senior year of college. Back then you could pay $9.99 per month and follow Skip's workouts diet plan and prep on a membership site. Funny enough I was back to a variety of Heavy Duty called Max OT. I was able to make progress once again and so I converted back to heavy low volume and swore off all I had learned from Kaz and my other partner-as only working for the unnatural. I exchanged getting a great pump for getting an extra rep and writing it down in my daily planner. I was also Skip Lacour disciple. After all he got me out of the doldrums and that bred a certain kind of loyalty that I still have for him today. But I got stale on Max OT too. I'd had too many tastes of different training varieties to follow such a rigid protocol, and I'm a guy who loves to train.
It was sometime after I graduated that I discovered the most odd name for a training philosophy... DoggCrapp. (to be continued geez, explaining why I like FT is taking longer than expected)