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How do you console a loser of a bodybuilding contest?
AbrahamG:
I'd tell them to up the anabolics.
Add GH.
Add peptides.
Add sarms.
Add diuretics.
Finally, and this is just the finishing touch, I'd tell them to routinely suck off the most muscular man in whatever gym he trains at.
oldtimer1:
--- Quote from: AbrahamG on November 12, 2020, 06:49:53 PM ---I'd tell them to up the anabolics.
Add GH.
Add peptides.
Add sarms.
Add diuretics.
Finally, and this is just the finishing touch, I'd tell them to routinely suck off the most muscular man in whatever gym he trains at.
--- End quote ---
Anabolic steroids
Androgen steroids like testosterone
HCG
Insulin
Growth hormone
anti estrogens
clomid
speed
diuretics
site oil injections
cattle hormones like tren that causes lung cancer and a limp dick.
After taking all of this to get a third place $100 trophy when you paid $200 dollar entry fee. All for the admiration of the clueless who think you actually looked that jacked without the assist.
ThisisOverload:
--- Quote from: oldtimer1 on November 13, 2020, 08:00:07 PM ---Anabolic steroids
Androgen steroids like testosterone
HCG
Insulin
Growth hormone
anti estrogens
clomid
speed
diuretics
site oil injections
cattle hormones like tren that causes lung cancer and a limp dick.
After taking all of this to get a third place $100 trophy when you paid $200 dollar entry fee. All for the admiration of the clueless who think you actually looked that jacked without the assist.
--- End quote ---
The list is longer than that. ;)
Most bodybuilders i know do it for personal achievement. The trophy means little to them. Sure there are egotistical people who do it for attention, but all sports have that.
To be fair, i used to race my Corvette in amateur racing leagues all over the country. I'd spend $10-15k a year easily just to have a chance to race for $1500 and a set of racing slicks at the final race of the year. We all put our money, health and lifestyle on the line to do what makes us happy, no matter how shallow it is. It used to scare my GF and parents to death when i'd race; it's driving on the razors edge 100% of the time. 600hp car that weighed 2900 pounds. Sure i have a cage and fire suppression system, but that doesn't always work. Lots of people get trapped in burning cars every year.
I competed in Power lifting for 11 years, have a few dozen plastic trophies. At the time it felt fantastic, but today it's just meh.
That's just the nature of humans. I could have died in a fiery car crash many times, but it never crossed my mind. Going through high speed off camber turns at 120+ MPH with a concrete barrier only 30 feet offset. Seen many bad wrecks, but lucky for me i only spun out a few times and tagged a rubber tire wall in the rain.
Look at all these kids that train their entire life to try and become a pro athlete; baseball, football, basketball. Their parents spend tens of thousands of dollars a year. Are they doing it for their child's chance at becoming wealthy or personal achievement? My best friend spends 20k a YEAR on batting/fielding lessons for his teenage boy. He's a great player, but i doubt he will go pro.
Rmj11:
Lol at them.
Bestia:
--- Quote from: Davidtheman100 on September 16, 2015, 04:01:32 AM ---I can't tell if you're joking or not but i would always usually have another show coming up soon when i was competing so i accepted that i wasn't gonna win every show i was competing in so it didn't matter to me...I was just happy to be on stage with some of the people that i was....The food helps ;) lots of times on stage i would just be thinking of food...This is what prep does to you sometimes...It's not really till the week after or so when you're in a more "healthy-state" that you can really reflect accurately on the loss/win i found...
--- End quote ---
If this is real - the answer is simple. If a particular competitor wants it bad enough, then be better. Go back in the cellar, forget about social media and pics and vids and being comfortable and getting a pump and start doing some serious work. Be strict and diligent with the diet and put in the time. Work your abs and your calves and your forearms as hard as you work the other muscles. Practice your mandatories until you can do them on demand and hold for 30 seconds without flinching. Get sleep. Work on stretching and flexibility and injury prevention. Return to basics every 5 to 6 wéeks for a workout cycle or two. Get a chip on your shoulder the size of the rock of Gibraltor. That is what "be better" means.
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