Author Topic: The almighty SQUAD rules Getbig!  (Read 659172 times)

deadbeach

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brianX

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You are a joke, McFarland. Even with copious amounts of steroids, growth hormone, and insulin, you still look like a skinny bastard with no muscle thickness whatsoever. You have no traps, no arms/forearms, no back, and no chest. It's obvious you've never trained heavy, and that you've relied on drugs to gain what little muscle you have.

I see roid monkey clowns like you in the gym all the time. Doesn't it suck to know that you don't have the genetics to get big without drugs?
hahahahahahahahahahahaha

McFarland

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You are a joke, McFarland. Even with copious amounts of steroids, growth hormone, and insulin, you still look like a skinny bastard with no muscle thickness whatsoever. You have no traps, no arms/forearms, no back, and no chest. It's obvious you've never trained heavy, and that you've relied on drugs to gain what little muscle you have.

I see roid monkey clowns like you in the gym all the time. Doesn't it suck to know that you don't have the genetics to get big without drugs?

"The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself."
  --Friedrich Nietzsche

The Showstoppa

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Nietzche was sickly and lived with his mom and sister WAY to far into life.

BroadStreetBruiser

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I hope everybody is having a good morning. So much negativity anymore.
$

The Showstoppa

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I hope everybody is having a good morning. So much negativity anymore.

Ah sweet bitterness in the morning.  Nothing like it.

BroadStreetBruiser

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I'm eating cottage cheese, english muffins and peanut butter. it's good. later on I'm eating jamacian food.
$

bald

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Free tip to the worlds biggest natural, True Adonis;

A triceps is the antagonist muscle to the biceps.  It, too, needs to be trained.  Some good exercises for this muscle are:  skull crushers, extesions, close grip bench, and kickbacks.

Hope this helps, and that is free advice, your welcome.
W

240 or bust

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Free tip to the worlds biggest natural, True Adonis;

A triceps is the antagonist muscle to the biceps. It, too, needs to be trained. Some good exercises for this muscle are: skull crushers, extesions, close grip bench, and kickbacks.

Hope this helps, and that is free advice, your welcome.

Bald,

You look like Gustavo's CNS got dipped in caramel.

Glass houses, playa.

bald

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Bald,

You look like Gustavo's CNS got dipped in caramel.

Glass houses, playa.




I love when you rip me ;D

Means so much coming from such a great bodybuilding specimen.
W

bald

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Bald,

You look like Gustavo's CNS got dipped in caramel.

Glass houses, playa.




Also, I don't get it. "Gustavo's CNS got dipped in caramel." 

What does that mean.  At least when you called me Titus's skeleton, it made sense, and was relatively funny.
W

McFarland

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Also, I don't get it. "Gustavo's CNS got dipped in caramel." 

What does that mean.  At least when you called me Titus's skeleton, it made sense, and was relatively funny.

Picture the fundamental neurological framework necessary for essential human function, with light brown soft tissue hanging all off it, limp as fuck and dripping...  Kinda the opposite of what you're trying to mold through weight training.  That help? 
 ;D

240 or bust

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Picture the fundamental neurological framework necessary for essential human function, with light brown soft tissue hanging all off it, limp as f**k and dripping... Kinda the opposite of what you're trying to mold through weight training. That help?
 ;D

Exactly.

Bald, you do look like Titus' skeleton, and I pointed that out in the past.

However, I like to keep it fresh.  CNS= central nervous system. Caramel = that horrible greasy skin tone you and him share.  Granted, his is protan and yours is manglaze, but next time you'd

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sarcasm

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I love when you rip me ;D

Means so much coming from such a great bodybuilding specimen.

and you are a great bb'ing specimen? at least Rob's got size.
Jaejonna rows 125!!

avesher

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I'm eating cottage cheese, english muffins and peanut butter. it's good. later on I'm eating jamacian food.

cottage cheese in the morning?? blah

BroadStreetBruiser

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cottage cheese in the morning?? blah

what do you suggest?
$

McFarland

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Exactly.

Bald, you do look like Titus' skeleton, and I pointed that out in the past.

However, I like to keep it fresh.  CNS= central nervous system. Caramel = that horrible greasy skin tone you and him share.  Granted, his is protan and yours is manglaze, but next time you'd

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Lighter
Dictionary

Holy shit...   ;D

Hey Broadstreet...here's some positivity, compliments of the new "Get Rich Or Die Tryin'" soundtrack, which I of course highly recommend.  ;D

"Nig*a, THINGS CHANGE;
They don't stay the same.
Now watch me come up...
I hustle.  I hustle even harder...
I'll put that work in to WIN--no problem."


  --50 Cent, "Things Change"

And to the guy that said Nietzsche was weak and lived with his mother and sister far too long, that may be partially correct, but Nietzsche himself never claimed to be an overman.  He said the specimen's time was yet to come.  He nonetheless managed to hang out in whore houses and kick it with 19th century rock star equivalents before "going mad," so he wasn't ALL that pitiful...

sarcasm

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what do you suggest?

cottage cheese is fine, awesome bb'ing food, loaded with glutamine.
Jaejonna rows 125!!

BroadStreetBruiser

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cottage cheese is fine, awesome bb'ing food, loaded with glutamine.

I think avesher was trying to tell me to eat cock. he pm'd me saying it was the breakfast of champions.
$

McFarland

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From Wikipedia, some really good stuff...

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (October 15, 1844 – August 25, 1900) was a German philosopher and cultural critic (and - at least in his own estimation - a 'psychologist') who was by training and academic profession a classical philologist. Largely overlooked during his short working life (which ended with a mental collapse at the age of 44) - and frequently misunderstood and misrepresented thereafter - Nietzsche emerged during the second half of the 20th century as a highly significant figure in modern philosophy, and a thinker whose unconventional and often discomfiting ideas are still hotly debated.

Among the general public, Nietzsche is probably most well known for an often-heard, but less often attributed, quote which comes from his Twilight of the Idols: "Out of life's school of war: What does not destroy me, makes me stronger."

As a philosopher, Nietzsche sought 'the transvaluation of all values' (i.e. their re-assessment in terms of their actual 'value for life'); claimed that he philosophised 'with a hammer' (to strike - and thus 'sound out' - hollow idols and empty pieties); and once declared 'I am not a man - I am dynamite. As part of his project, he would voice severe criticisms of Utilitarianism, contemporary Materialism, German Idealism, German Romanticism, many social and political aspects of contemporary modernity, and — perhaps most infamously — conventional (and especially 'Christian') morality. In fact. as Bertrand Russell points out in his History of Western Philosophy, Heraclitus may be the only philosopher Nietzsche discusses but does not criticise.

His championing of the struggle of the unique, autonomous, fully realised individual over the 'herd-values' of the allegedly anonymous, conformist and comfort-loving masses led him to the concept of the Übermensch; and his concern with the 'life-affirming' or 'life-denying' effects of the 'table of values' that 'hangs over every culture' produced the lurid - and, in its time, even shocking - declaration that 'God is dead!'. His central work is perhaps the influential as well as unclassifiable (novel? poem? treatise? religious text?) Also Sprach Zarathustra ('Thus Spoke Zarathustra'), in which philosophy is dispensed - and even preached - through the tale of a wandering sage (whose name is taken from the founder of ancient Zoroastrianism) and his encounters with various individuals and situations.

The undeniable brilliance and even virtuosity of Nietzsche's prose style (which abounds in the kind of aphorisms that have made him one of the most frequently quoted of all philosophical thinkers) has not prevented the spawning of radically incompatible, mutually contradictory interpretations of his meaning and of the conclusions that are to be drawn from it. Thus his work has been identified with Romanticism; with Nihilism; with anti-Semitism; and even with National Socialism - as well as with the vehement and specific opposition to each of these. In contemporary philosophy and literature, he is often cited, along with Søren Kierkegaard, as an inspiration for existentialism and postmodernism. His lifelong love of Michel de Montaigne and Ralph Waldo Emerson, his constant referencing of ancient Greek and Roman cultures, and his intense focus on human greatness (Grösse) have suggested to some that he can only be best and most properly understood in light of classical humanism.

In biographical terms, Nietzsche is of interest in view of his personal and ideological relationship (originally 'pro-'; later 'anti-') with the composer and activist Richard Wagner. His discussions of music are of significance in view of the fact that he was an amateur composer of some ability.





Mars

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Straight from his boyfriends tap.

McFarland

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HIS LIFE

Friedrich Nietzsche was born on October 15, 1844, in the small town of Röcken, which is not far from Lützen and Leipzig, within what was then the Prussian province of Saxony. He was born on the 49th birthday of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia and was thus named after him. His father, Karl Ludwig Nietzsche, was a Lutheran pastor, who died of encephalomalacia in 1849, when Nietzsche was four years old. In 1850, Nietzsche's mother moved the family to Naumburg, where he lived for the next eight years before heading off to boarding school, the famous and demanding Schulpforta. Nietzsche was now the only male in the house, living with his mother, his grandmother, two paternal aunts, and his sister Elisabeth. As a young man, he was particularly vigorous and energetic. In addition, his early piety for Christianity is born out by the choir Miserere which was dedicated to Schulpforta while he attended.

After graduation, in 1864, he commenced his studies in classical philology and theology at the University of Bonn. After one year, he moved to the University of Leipzig, following Professor Friedrich Ritschl who soon became aware of Nietzsche's capabilities. Meanwhile, he had become a close friend of fellow student Erwin Rohde. Both of them were also admirers of Arthur Schopenhauer and the composer Richard Wagner, whom Nietzsche first met in November, 1868. A brilliant scholar, he became special professor of classical philology at the University of Basel in 1869, at the uncommon age of 24. Ritschl recommended to the faculty board that Nietzsche be given his doctorate without the typically required dissertation.

At Basel, Nietzsche found little satisfaction in life among his philology colleagues. He established closer intellectual ties with the historian Jakob Burckhardt, whose lectures he attended, and the atheist theologian Franz Overbeck, who remained his friend throughout his life. His inaugural lecture at Basel was Über die Persönlichkeit Homers (On Homer's Personality). He made frequent visits to the Wagners at Tribschen.

When the Franco-Prussian war erupted in 1870, Nietzsche left Basel and, being disqualified for other services due to his citizenship status, volunteered as a medical orderly on active duty. His time in the military was short, but he experienced much, witnessing the traumatic effects of battle and taking close care of wounded soldiers. He soon contracted diphtheria and dysentery and subsequently experienced a painful variety of health difficulties for the remainder of his life.

Upon returning to Basel, instead of waiting to heal, he pushed headlong into a more fervent schedule of study than ever before. In 1870, he gave Cosima Wagner the manuscript of The Genesis of the Tragic Idea as a birthday gift. In 1872, he published his first book, The Birth of Tragedy in which he denied Schopenhauer's influence upon his thought and sought a "philology of the future" (Zukunftsphilologie). A biting critical reaction by the young and promising philologist Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, as well as its innovative views of the ancient Greeks, dampened the book's reception and increased its notoriety, initially. After it settled into the philological community, it found many rings of approval and exultations of Nietzsche's perspicacity. To this day, it is widely regarded as a classic piece.

In April, 1873, Wagner incited Nietzsche to take on David Friedrich Strauss. Wagner had found his book, Der alte und der neue Glaube, to be shallow. Strauss had also offended him by siding with the composer and conductor Franz Lachner, who had been dismissed on account of Wagner. In 1879, Nietzsche retired from his position at Basel. This was due either to his declining health or in order to devote himself fully toward the ramification of his philosophy which found further expression in Human, All-Too-Human. This book revealed the philosophic distance between Nietzsche and Wagner; this, together with the latter's virulent Anti-Semitism, spelled the end of their friendship.

From 1880, until his collapse in January, 1889, Nietzsche led a wandering existence as a stateless person, spending most of the summers in Sils-Maria (Engadin) and the winters in French and Italian cities like Nice, Rapallo, Genua and, finally, Turin.

After his mental breakdown, both his sister Elisabeth and mother Franziska cared for him. His fame and influence came later, despite (or due to) the interference of Elisabeth, who published selections from his notebooks with the title The Will to Power, in 1901, and maintained her authority over Nietzsche's literary estate after Franziska's death in 1897.


McFarland

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Have you tried acid?

No, nor have I done heroin.  Fucking private message me or something, dude. 

McFarland

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HIS MENTAL BREAKDOWN

Nietzsche endured periods of illness during much of his adult life. In 1889, after the completion of Ecce Homo, his health rapidly declined until he collapsed in Turin. Shortly before his collapse, according to one account, he embraced a horse in the streets of Turin because it had been flogged by its owner. Thereafter, he was brought to his room and spent several days in a state of ecstasy writing letters to various friends, signing them "Dionysus" and "The Crucified." He gradually became less and less coherent and almost entirely uncommunicative. His close friend Peter Gast, who was also an apt composer, observed that he retained the ability to improvise beautifully on the piano for some months after his breakdown, but this too eventually left him.

The initial emotional symptoms of Nietzsche's breakdown, as evidenced in the letters he sent to his friends in the few days of lucidity remaining to him, bear many similarities to the ecstatic writings of religious mystics insofar as they proclaim his identification with the godhead. These letters remain the best evidence available for Nietzsche's own opinion on the nature of his breakdown. Nietzsche's letters describe his experience as a radical breakthrough in which he rejoices, rather than laments. Most Nietzsche commentators find the issue of Nietzsche's breakdown and "insanity" irrelevant to his work as a philosopher, for the tenability of arguments and ideas are more important than the author. There are some, however, including Georges Bataille, who insist that Nietzsche's mental breakdown be considered.

Nietzsche spent the last ten years of his life insane and in the care of his sister Elisabeth. He was completely unaware of the growing success of his works. The cause of Nietzsche's condition has to be regarded as undetermined. Doctors later in his life said they were not so sure about the initial diagnosis of syphilis because he lacked the typical symptoms. While the story of syphilis indeed became generally accepted in the twentieth century, recent research in the Journal of Medical Biography shows that syphilis is not consistent with Nietzsche's symptoms and that the contention that he had the disease originated in anti-Nietzschean tracts. Brain cancer was the likely culprit, according to Dr. Leonard Sax, director of the Montgomery Centre for Research in Child Development. Another strong argument against the syphilis theory is summarized by Claudia Crawford in the book To Nietzsche: Dionysus, I Love You! Ariadne. The diagnosis of syphilis is supported, however, in Deborah Hayden's Pox: Genius, Madness, and the Mysteries of Syphilis. His handwriting in all the letters that he had written around the period of the final breakdown showed no sign of deterioration.

McFarland

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Mike Christian said that steroids were a gateway for heroin.  Once he lost his fear of injecting, heroin was fair game.

http://www.bodybuildingpro.com/mikechristian.html



I think more accurately stated, bodybuilding is a gateway to Nubain, bodybuilding's synthetic opiate of choice, which is then a gateway to heroin or actually just anything else injectible.