Author Topic: Oil in Walker’s shoulders  (Read 5596 times)

bhank

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #25 on: September 26, 2021, 09:39:40 PM »
EVERYONE has oil in their arms and delts these days. Sometimes I think this place is bodybuilding.com with these noob responses.

No everyone doesn't

TheAnimal

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #26 on: September 26, 2021, 09:57:21 PM »
No everyone doesn't
I agree, as not all bodybuilders have shoulders as a weak point for example. Or they wouldn't want to add to overdeveloped shoulders as another example. However strategic oil placement whether benign SEO or as part of AAS oil distribution is definitely a thing in modern bodybuilding. 10-20mLs of AAS oil(or whatever is used in the top tier) a week going into just the glutes isn't going to work well, so the oil goes elsewhere, arms, shoulders etc. are used. Site injections are nothing new.

Bevo

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #27 on: September 26, 2021, 10:00:27 PM »
Great, just what bbing needs

More sub 5’6 guys winning shows

Van_Bilderass

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #28 on: September 26, 2021, 10:36:44 PM »
I agree, as not all bodybuilders have shoulders as a weak point for example. Or they wouldn't want to add to overdeveloped shoulders as another example. However strategic oil placement whether benign SEO or as part of AAS oil distribution is definitely a thing in modern bodybuilding. 10-20mLs of AAS oil(or whatever is used in the top tier) a week going into just the glutes isn't going to work well, so the oil goes elsewhere, arms, shoulders etc. are used. Site injections are nothing new.

Almost every pro bodybuilder has oil in their delts. All you have to do is observe the complete lack of striations compared to decades past. And the oil doesn't go into weak bodyparts a lot of the time. It works best in strong bodyparts.

Of course most use a ton in their ass alone. Look at the bumps on Roelly's ass or most anyone. If you have experience you can tell that is 10cc single shots at the least, the lumps are so big.

pellius

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #29 on: September 26, 2021, 10:44:42 PM »
I don't think Ronnie ever use Synthol. Just pure, hard, dense muscle. Besides, I don't think he'd use it on principle alone. Dorian as well. I can't say the same for Jay and Phil.

Van_Bilderass

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #30 on: September 26, 2021, 11:06:35 PM »
I don't think Ronnie ever use Synthol. Just pure, hard, dense muscle. Besides, I don't think he'd use it on principle alone. Dorian as well. I can't say the same for Jay and Phil.

Ronnie's calves were heavily shot up. He had no calves genetically so of course he did.

Dorian used Esiclene on his pecs according to himself.

Phil's use was expert. Hardly a hint of it but it was because he had such good bellies he could hide it well. We can't find any pics where we can exactly point and say "look, there it is" but we can infer he did for other reasons.

TheAnimal

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #31 on: September 26, 2021, 11:15:46 PM »
Almost every pro bodybuilder has oil in their delts. All you have to do is observe the complete lack of striations compared to decades past. And the oil doesn't go into weak bodyparts a lot of the time. It works best in strong bodyparts.

Of course most use a ton in their ass alone. Look at the bumps on Roelly's ass or most anyone. If you have experience you can tell that is 10cc single shots at the least, the lumps are so big.
Agreed, it varies for the bodybuilder though. Shoulder oil shots are undoubtedly popular.
High doses of hgh also seems to contribute to the 3D capped delts without striation look too.
10cc shots! wow, that's impressive. Must be a challenge to self administer a bolus of that size. I suppose that is part of the work involved in pro bodybuilding. The PEDs don't administer themselves and are not acquired out of thin air.

Van_Bilderass

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #32 on: September 26, 2021, 11:27:05 PM »
Agreed, it varies for the bodybuilder though. Shoulder oil shots are undoubtedly popular.
High doses of hgh also seems to contribute to the 3D capped delts without striation look too.
10cc shots! wow, that's impressive. Must be a challenge to self administer a bolus of that size. I suppose that is part of the work involved in pro bodybuilding. The PEDs don't administer themselves and are not acquired out of thin air.

According to some, at Oxygen gym they have some assistant come in and give the guys shots while they play video games Lol.

Most I've put in my glute is 6.5cc I think. No pain, no swelling. So when I see these grapefruit size lumps on say Roelly or Ronnie I can tell there is some volume there. You can sometimes see the lumps from the front! Lol. Look at Clarida's ass. Clarida probably has the most oil in his body out of all, the total weekly volume must be pretty high from both gear and Synthol.


TheAnimal

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #33 on: September 26, 2021, 11:40:24 PM »
You can see clear separation and definition in Walker's delts in the rear double bicep shot. No funky looking scar tissue or bulges. Walker's front delt is absolutely insane from the side shots. Overall Walker has surpassed anything I would have expected to see from him already.

Kuclo, on the other hand, whom I massively respect, had enormous balls of delt in his most muscular and look like they are full of oil. So I am not sure why Walker has been pointed out here as somebody with noticable oil in the shoulders.

Akim Williams had a funky looking rear/side delt though.

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #34 on: September 27, 2021, 12:16:38 AM »
No everyone doesn't

Oil free delts. Notice the striations


pellius

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #35 on: September 27, 2021, 02:02:08 AM »
Ronnie's calves were heavily shot up. He had no calves genetically so of course he did.

Dorian used Esiclene on his pecs according to himself.

Phil's use was expert. Hardly a hint of it but it was because he had such good bellies he could hide it well. We can't find any pics where we can exactly point and say "look, there it is" but we can infer he did for other reasons.

I never considered the calves part. Any link to verify where Dorian said he used Esiclene. I remember reading about Kevin doing so.

Van_Bilderass

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #36 on: September 27, 2021, 07:31:36 AM »
I never considered the calves part. Any link to verify where Dorian said he used Esiclene. I remember reading about Kevin doing so.

I can't find it now for whatever reason but as I recall it was published in MD. It was his typical Mr O prep cycles and he said Esiclene specifically in the upper chest. I never saw any swelling in Dorian's chest though and Esiclene isn't Synthol, just a short acting inflammatory agent. Only thing it shows is that he wasn't above doing site enhancements.

Kevin never said anything about using Esiclene. I think it was Wheeler who said Kevin bought all the Esiclene on the market Lol. I remember once George Farah saying, when Kevin tore his tricep a bit, that that is what happens when you stick so much shit in your muscles Lol.

As I was looking for the Dorian stack I saw an old article in MD where Kevin said he did insulin once only, 2iu twice daily. And claimed to have done GH twice only in his career for 4 weeks before a show. Complete fucking bullshit Lol. Some of these guys are such retards. At least Dorian's claims were internally consistent and not totally unbelievable. Dorian said he did 8iu of GH all through his career.

Even that amount of GH and insulin destroyed Kevin's physique he said Lol.

Best part was Shawn interviewed for the same articles. He simply would not name a single compound he took Lol.

Hypertrophy

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #37 on: September 27, 2021, 07:46:22 AM »
EVERYONE has oil in their arms and delts these days. Sometimes I think this place is bodybuilding.com with these noob responses.


Boy I feel better knowing that, lol. It reminds me when the use of EPO hit bicycle racing and the same morons kept saying "everybody uses it" so it must be OK. Well it isn't. It's fucking stupid for a sport founded on improving your body.


I know, I know, that horse bolted the barn a long time ago with steroids. But taking it to the idiotic extreme isn't smarter.

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #38 on: September 27, 2021, 08:27:07 AM »
Why call out Walker, if everyone is doing it. He beat the hell out of the old guard. Why not complain that a guy with no calves and a centopani chest cam in second.

Van_Bilderass

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #39 on: September 27, 2021, 08:32:56 AM »

Boy I feel better knowing that, lol. It reminds me when the use of EPO hit bicycle racing and the same morons kept saying "everybody uses it" so it must be OK. Well it isn't. It's fucking stupid for a sport founded on improving your body.


I know, I know, that horse bolted the barn a long time ago with steroids. But taking it to the idiotic extreme isn't smarter.

I wish I could get EPO at a reasonable price. A goddamn antioxidant health drug with many benefits beyond boosting red blood cells. :D


Humble Narcissist

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #40 on: September 27, 2021, 08:35:06 AM »

Boy I feel better knowing that, lol. It reminds me when the use of EPO hit bicycle racing and the same morons kept saying "everybody uses it" so it must be OK. Well it isn't. It's fucking stupid for a sport founded on improving your body.


I know, I know, that horse bolted the barn a long time ago with steroids. But taking it to the idiotic extreme isn't smarter.
Just think of what they'll be taking in 20 years.

Van_Bilderass

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #41 on: September 27, 2021, 09:00:43 AM »
Just think of what they'll be taking in 20 years.

Athletes like cyclists are hugely limited on what they can take nowadays. They can hardly take anything, they will focus on switching out samples etc because passing a test on drugs is hard as hell.

These aren't days like when Pot Belg was popular:

 
Quote
The term is commonly used to describe a mixture of drugs, variously constituted from cocaine, heroin, caffeine, amphetamines, and other analgesics. N.B. the use of the French word pot is not a reference to cannabis, and this drug is not normally associated with pot belge.[3] A French reference also lists morphine in the mix, and notes that it can also be called "insane person mix",[4] though it's unclear whether this refers to the potential results of its use, or the suggestion that "you have to be crazy to take it."]

This mix had cyclists crashing and their legs keep pedaling as they lay in a ditch lol.

Humble Narcissist

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #42 on: September 27, 2021, 09:10:16 AM »
Athletes like cyclists are hugely limited on what they can take nowadays. They can hardly take anything, they will focus on switching out samples etc because passing a test on drugs is hard as hell.

These aren't days like when Pot Belg was popular:

 
This mix had cyclists crashing and their legs keep pedaling as they lay in a ditch lol.
Yeah, but cyclists get drug tested.  Bodybuilders are untested and will use everything up until death.  Look for gene therapy and artificial muscles surgically put in for the future.  We will eventually see mutant cyborgs on stage.

bhank

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #43 on: September 27, 2021, 09:18:39 AM »
Yeah, but cyclists get drug tested.  Bodybuilders are untested and will use everything up until death.  Look for gene therapy and artificial muscles surgically put in for the future.  We will eventually see mutant cyborgs on stage.

Hell yes

You use your shoulder a lot and there is a lot of tendons and different heads in there and they are visible. It is really not a great place to be shooting oil. I do not put any oil in my delts last place you want a hematoma as everything will hurt.

wes

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #44 on: September 27, 2021, 09:25:22 AM »
According to some, at Oxygen gym they have some assistant come in and give the guys shots while they play video games Lol.

Most I've put in my glute is 6.5cc I think. No pain, no swelling. So when I see these grapefruit size lumps on say Roelly or Ronnie I can tell there is some volume there. You can sometimes see the lumps from the front! Lol. Look at Clarida's ass. Clarida probably has the most oil in his body out of all, the total weekly volume must be pretty high from both gear and Synthol.


I used to get huge egg shaped knots with a lot of pain from a 2cc glute shot of Sustanon.

I asked IFBB pro Dave Marinelli why this occured and he said it was more than likely due to the Test Propionate in the Sustanon.

Who knows,but I couldn`t lay on a fucking bench to do crunches and had to pad a bench with a towel on chest day until the pain finally wore off.

Humble Narcissist

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #45 on: September 27, 2021, 10:07:34 AM »
I used to get huge egg shaped knots with a lot of pain from a 2cc glute shot of Sustanon.

I asked IFBB pro Dave Marinelli why this occured and he said it was more than likely due to the Test Propionate in the Sustanon.

Who knows,but I couldn`t lay on a fucking bench to do crunches and had to pad a bench with a towel on chest day until the pain finally wore off.
Sustanon is the only steroid I ever used and every injection hurt like hell.

wes

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #46 on: September 27, 2021, 10:10:22 AM »
Sustanon is the only steroid I ever used and every injection hurt like hell.
Yup,you make good gains on it though, and like the old adage says,"no pain,no gain" applies when it come to Sustanon.    ;D

BB

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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #47 on: September 27, 2021, 10:10:34 AM »

As I was looking for the Dorian stack I saw an old article in MD where Kevin said he did insulin once only, 2iu twice daily. And claimed to have done GH twice only in his career for 4 weeks before a show. Complete fucking bullshit Lol. Some of these guys are such retards. At least Dorian's claims were internally consistent and not totally unbelievable. Dorian said he did 8iu of GH all through his career.

Even that amount of GH and insulin destroyed Kevin's physique he said Lol.

Best part was Shawn interviewed for the same articles. He simply would not name a single compound he took Lol.

Just so it's here (from 2015) -

The Lowdown On Drugs Part 1 - 4
Kevin Levrone, Shawn Ray & Dorian Yates Speak Out





There have always been plenty of lies and misinformation about steroids and other PEDs (performance-enhancing drugs). Things took a turn for the worse as the Internet made it possible to disseminate bad information at a rate and scale previously unimagined. In recent years, we’ve seen a flood of self-proclaimed drug experts, many of whom post anonymously, hold court on which drugs to use, how to use them and in what amounts. More than a few gain credibility with their target audience by claiming to be current or former pro bodybuilders, or to be advisers to them, even going so far as to list in detail the drug regimens of top bodybuilders, past and present. Understandably, their ulterior motives typically entail soliciting their own consulting services as drug gurus, or in some cases actually selling drugs.

Getting the pros to talk about drug use, and particularly their own, is a tricky situation at best. First you have the legal ramifications of admitting to illegal drug use, as well as the damage to your public image (even though all of us who have been around the sport for any length of time are fully aware that drugs are part of the game). That’s why we went to these living legends of the sport, all of whom are long since retired, to get the real scoop on drugs: their opinions on them, their experience as users and more. Nothing was off limits, and the frankness of some answers will surprise you. Remember, this is not secondhand or thirdhand information— for once it’s directly from the champion’s mouths. (Originally published in the February 2015 edition of MD Magazine.)

How old were you when you did your first cycle of steroids? Do you feel you were old enough? What was the cycle, and what type of results did you experience?

SR: I had just turned 20 and was coming off my overall victory in the NPC Teenage National Championship in Atlanta, Georgia. It was a time of trepidation for me. I knew this chemical aspect was present, however I just never wanted it to be a part of my economy as an athlete. Yet I also knew there were beneficial aspects to help growth, recovery and condition, and that these drugs were designed to aid and assist bodybuilders in their progress and competitive edge. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t scared, but like the majority of bodybuilders with any credible measure of success, I too would have to cross this bridge to get to the other side. I was on the verge of becoming my own person, making adult decisions, and this would for sure be one of them. I did a very light cycle of Anavar and Winstrol V for six weeks for that contest, and found myself in the victory circle again, a mere five months after becoming the best teenage bodybuilder in America. I was now the best junior champion in the world, at 20 years old.

What was strange to me about the introduction of steroids into my training regimen was that I had already believed in my “genetic potential” by winning all those teenage competitions over the past three years, but I came to doubt myself as I grew out of that division because I would be competing against older guys who were bigger and more mature than I was. I felt drugs would be a necessary addition at the next level of competition, based on the information I was constantly receiving from those who were more experienced in the game than I was. I felt like I trained a bit harder, with more purpose and hunger while using the drugs because I was told, “Steroids don’t just work because you take them, you have to make them work for you by training harder than ever before and dieting harder than everyone else!” It seemed like a psychological mindfuck of sorts, but I also knew that I was desperately trying to dot the I’s and cross the T’s to be the best in the world, not simply be pretty good!

The bar was raised very high for me with each victory, and my purpose in the sport was constantly being put to the test in the form of my mentor, John Brown. He wouldn’t allow me to become complacent, and took my training to another level once I introduced steroids. We trained longer and harder than ever before, took naps necessary for complete recovery, and also increased calories for growth and recovery. These were things that were not a part of my teenage contest preps, because victory came easy to me in those years. Now that I had moved on to the next level of competition, victory would have to be earned because the landscape and playing field would be quite different! These were no longer other kids I would be up against, but grown men with many years more training than I had.


DY: It was 1985. I was 23 years old and had decided to enter my first competition after a year and a half of training, in which I had made excellent progress. I knew the others who would be competing would be using gear, and I wanted to even the playing field. It was a very deliberate decision that I didn’t take lightly, and I did as much reading as I could first. At 23, I feel I was old enough. At that age, you are fully matured physically, you’ve reached your full adult height, and so on. Even though I hadn’t been training terribly long, I had already managed to develop my physique to a decent level. Looking back, I may have been able to win that contest without using anything. I did one six-week “building” cycle of 20 milligrams of Dianabol a day, which took me from 215 at 5’11” to 235. Those were the most dramatic results I ever saw from steroids. I took six weeks off the gear, then at eight weeks out from my contest I began using 15 milligrams of Anavar per day, as well as one shot of Primobolan a week, which was 200 milligrams. I competed at around 210-215 and won that contest. EFBB [Britain’s equivalent of the NPC] officials were there and convinced me to represent the United Kingdom the following weekend as our heavyweight at the IFBB World Games. I placed seventh, and competed with men like Berry de Mey and Matt Mendenhall, both of whom were the top amateur heavyweights in their respective nations at that time.

KL: Like I said, I did my first cycle of steroids when I was 24 years old, almost 25, at six weeks out from my first contest. By then, I was a grown man and making all my own decisions in all aspects of life, since both of my parents had passed away. My cousin Chico came over to my house with a bottle of testosterone cypionate and a syringe, and said, “Here you go.” But I had no idea how to load the syringe and do the shot, so I asked him to please do that for me. I don’t even know how much he gave me, but I had one shot a week for six weeks. That was it. The first week, nothing happened. Another week went by, still nothing. I was starting to think steroids didn’t do anything, but in the third week I started getting stronger all of a sudden, and looking fuller. I was training at a little health club called National Fitness, but at that point I decided to join a Powerhouse near me in Linthicum, Maryland, where a lot of serious bodybuilders and powerlifters went. There were a lot of guys using gear in there … and a few guys there sold it, too. I didn’t know I was supposed to diet for the show. I was working in construction all day back then, so that burned up a lot of calories. My dinners would be a Double Whopper with cheese from Burger King, and ice cream from McDonald’s. Before that six-week cycle, I was 198 pounds. By the end, I was 206 and much harder looking. I won the heavyweight and overall. A year later, I did the same thing at the NPC Junior Nationals and then turned pro at the Nationals in the fall of ‘91 at 236 pounds.

Did you believe in taking time completely off drugs for portions of the year, or did you always “cruise” on a low dose?

SR: As soon as the Mr. Olympia concluded every September, I remained drug free until the new year, every year.

DY: As I said, I would intersperse two four-week periods between my three eight-week cycles in the off-season. Aside from that, I was consistently on, but my doses were moderate.


KL: About halfway through my pro career, I had become famous for how much time I took off gear. It would be a full six months out of the year that I didn’t use anything. People thought I was crazy or lazy for doing it that way, and not trying to be huge all the time. But once I saw how well I responded to the juice, I realized I didn’t need much of it, and I sure didn’t need to be on it all the time. I could start up at 12 weeks out from a contest, and put all my muscle back on and get ripped by the time the show came around.

We see steroid cycles of top pros, both past and present, posted online— always from an anonymous source that claims to have coached the athlete in question, trained with them or known someone who did one of those. Have you ever seen one that seemed accurate, or do you think they are all completely fabricated because most people will accept them as being legit?

SR: I have never seriously cared nor have I ever been interested in what other athletes take or do regarding drug use. I personally believe what they do is personal to them and of no concern to me. I liken this attitude to another person’s sex life. I mean, really … what business is it of ours anyway, and to whose benefit? It’s their life and their journey— let them live it as they please and do what they want, so long as it doesn’t hurt anyone.

DY: I can’t speak for all of them, though I have seen a few attributed to me that were absolutely fake. I saw one site that had the supposed cycles of everyone from Steve Reeves, Arnold to 50 Cent. Obviously most or all of them are made up. I talked in MD about what I used 20 years ago; I’m sure things have changed since then. But look, I’m retired now and I have the freedom to say what I want and be honest. Current athletes have pressure from sponsors and officials not to discuss their usage.

But back to the cycles I have seen posted that I supposedly did— they were all bullshit. Who knows what I used? Even my wife at the time didn’t. The only guys who did were my training partners at the time. Leroy Davis was my longtime training partner, and he typically used the same things I did. I can assure you he isn’t posting our cycles on the Internet.

KL: Unless the cycle came directly from the pro himself, like we are doing in this article, it’s almost certainly bullshit. People try to pass off so much crap as facts online, when it’s either something they came up with or just their opinion. I can’t imagine any top pro taking huge amounts of drugs for years without suffering serious health problems. It’s just satisfying for a lot of guys out there to see these crazy cycles that the champions supposedly do and say, “OK, that’s why he looks like that and won all those shows, he did tons and tons of drugs— that’s why I don’t look like him.”

In bodybuilding there’s no more contentious issue than drug use exacerbated by the variety of conflicting advice being spread through the Internet. That’s why we went to these living legends of the sport, all of whom are long since retired, to get the real scoop on drugs: their opinions on them, their experience as users and more. Nothing was off limits, and the frankness of some answers will surprise you. Remember, this is not secondhand or thirdhand information— for once it’s directly from the champion’s mouths.

There is a lot of arguing about the amount of steroids the “average” pro uses these days. Some claim the total milligrams for gear each week ranges from 3,000 to 10,000. Do you believe some pros and top amateurs are using outrageous amounts? And if so, do they actually need that much or are they using far more than they need to?

SR: I defer to the previous answer I just gave you. Many of these pros take large doses of anabolics, HGH, insulin, alcohol, tobacco, food, supplements and so on. At the end of the day, as an individual with my own career, issues, personal life, family and business, do you really think I’d spend five minutes of my life wondering about what another bodybuilder is putting in his body? I can’t stop him, I more than likely don’t even know him …. so what’s the point of or the use of me having knowledge of what he is taking? I can’t use any information on drug use another person is doing and apply it to myself, as if we will achieve the exact same end result with two entirely different DNAs. I am Shawn Ray Productions, meaning my focus and energy goes into me and mine, and what works for me is a result of knowing my body— end of story. Yet there does seem to be a mistaken belief out there in the trenches that duplicating a specific person’s specific drug cycle will yield the exact same results in anyone, essentially giving you that person’s exact physique! That’s so off base it’s not even worth debating with anyone.

KL: I never knew what people used back in the day, and I don’t know what they use now either. I only know what I used and what worked for me. At some point, the receptors have to shut down. There has to be a point where only some of what is being taken is actually having an effect. You talk about guys allegedly using 10 grams of gear a week. Come on! That’s enough drugs for a 2,000-pound horse, not a 250-pound human. I don’t buy it. And if anyone really is using doses like that, they’re either not too bright, don’t care about their health one bit, or both.



Hold off on answering, Dorian, I want to add to that. One reason some have speculated that today’s bodybuilders use so much more is that the drugs now are often fake or terribly underdosed, whereas in the old days, gear was typically far more legitimate and potent. Do you agree or disagree?

DY: I do hear about very heavy doses being used nowadays. People come to me in the U.K. and Spain to be trained, and often they are on 5,000 milligrams a week or more of gear. That’s totally unnecessary. And I do believe the lower quality and potency of what’s around these days is part of it. In the ‘90s, everything we used was pharmaceutical grade. 250 milligrams of test was always 250 milligrams, and you didn’t have to worry that it was 200 or 100 milligrams. There was no black-market, underground gear yet. Now, it’s the total opposite. There is very little pharma-grade gear about; it’s almost all underground stuff made God-knows-where by God-knows-who. So how can you know what you’re really getting? Is it the drug it’s supposed to be? Is it the dose it claims to be on the label? I sincerely doubt it. There is far more profit to be made in substituting cheaper drugs and by underdosing products. I hear guys tell me they are on three of four grams of test a week. Bollocks! If you were really using that much test, your blood pressure would be through the roof and you would be retaining so much water you’d look like a blowfish.

SR: I personally think there is a lot of fake gear on the market, and the athletes fail to exercise their due diligence to test what they take to ensure the quality is accurate. However, I also know that the vast majority of bodybuilders today, both pro and amateur, start their careers using anabolic steroids without ever building a foundation or a firm base from which to build upon. Hence, if you start your bodybuilding off with the introduction of steroids, after the first phase of initial gains, you have nowhere to go as far as building upon “quality muscle” because it was all built synthetically. This leaves guys with bloat and swelling, but no real hardcore foundation of muscle that was built by the sweat of the brow! When we talk about the lack of muscle quality these days versus in days gone by, this factors in heavily.

KL: Steroids back then were higher quality. Fewer companies made them, and nearly all of them were major pharmaceutical companies. Syntex used to make Anadrol 2902 tabs that were 50 milligrams each and very strong. The stuff out there now can’t compare to it. The GH being used then was Humatrope by Eli Lilly, and it was the best. Now, people get it only from AIDS patients. Most guys use cheap Chinese crap that’s much weaker. The Winstrol V we used to use came in amps and would crystallize in the syringe. Now there are tons and tons of different drugs from so many underground labs I’ve never heard of. Guys try to ask me what I think of this or that drug, and rarely do I have any idea what they’re talking about. But I am sure the gear out there now is junk compared to what we had 20 years ago.




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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #48 on: September 27, 2021, 10:11:18 AM »
The prevailing attitude still seems to be that “more is better” when it comes to drugs among many of today’s bodybuilders. How much do you think an athlete actually needs, or is that a very individual, case-by-case issue? Do some guys require far less than others, while others legitimately need to use very large doses to make the same gains or hold the same size that others do?

SR: There is no question the old adage of “more is better” is applicable in today’s bodybuilding mentality, based on the size of the athletes. But make no mistake— in my era of the ‘90s, the bodybuilders were at an average all-time high as it relates to size and mass! There was no bigger era in the sport than the ‘90s, and I can honestly say I bet they were using a fraction of what today’s athletes are using overall. The proof is in the “muscle quality.” Just look at the detail and condition of the pros in the ‘90s by comparison, including the biggest guys, and you will see much more clarity, separation and density based on the hardcore foundation the guys built for themselves back then, and the longevity of their careers too. They knew it would be a marathon and not a sprint. How many of the guys today are here one year and gone the next?

DY: Speaking for myself, I took as little as possible to get the desired effects. If results were not satisfactory, I would increase only as needed, which is the logical way to go about it. If you can get good results on 1,000 milligrams, for example, why take 2,000? I knew powerlifters who would use as much as two grams of test cypionate a week in the ‘90s. That was crazy to us. I can’t comment on what the average amounts used or needed are. I only know what I did and what worked for me. Up until my first pro win at the 1991 Night of Champions, I always kept my total amount under 1,000 milligrams a week. Taking large amounts of test simply was not done in the ‘90s, from what conversations I did have with other guys. We would stack a moderate amount of test with either EQ [Equipoise] or Deca, and use orals with that. Now, with all the access to underground gear, it’s very common apparently for guys to use three to five grams of test alone before adding in other compounds. I really can’t tell you a whole lot about what my peers used, because I was isolated in Birmingham and not privy to what the boys over in the States were doing. Regardless, it wouldn’t have affected me. I did things my own way and could care less what others did.

KL: I think how much a person needs is probably a case-by-case basis. I mean, if you look at doses for many different prescription medications, the doses will vary for different people. One thing I never agreed with was the idea that as you went on, you needed to continue increasing your doses to keep seeing the same results. I never increased my amounts, though I did make small changes. My cycles went from six weeks to eight, and I added in Nolvadex as an anti-estrogen. Putting on size was never that hard for me. My off-season weight was about 278. At my first Mr. Olympia, I was 227 pounds, shredded to the bone. That was probably my best condition ever. I had been 233 winning the Night of Champions a few months before that. I competed many other times between 240 and 250, with my highest stage weight of 257. All that really changed was my training and my diet.

It’s hard to find a top amateur, much less a pro these days, who does not use growth hormone and insulin along with AAS (anabolic-androgenic steroids). Was it the same way when you competed? Do you feel they are both necessary for the look we see today at the highest levels?

SR: The sad thing is that so few of the upcoming generation even want to discuss or read about training and nutrition. They are obsessed with drugs, probably because that meshes with the “instant gratification” mentality of the world today.

DY: I used GH during my contest phases. The first times I used it were for the 1991 Night of Champions and Mr. Olympia shows. I used four IU a day while I was dieting, and I can’t say I noticed much difference adding it in. For my off-season in 1992, I doubled that to eight IU per day consistently, and saw better results. I had hit a plateau, and it helped kickstart me to the next level. I made very substantial gains that year, but unfortunately I overdieted for my first Mr. Olympia win (1992), so they were never seen. I knew I would be the biggest guy up there anyway since Haney was retired, so my concern was to be as shredded as possible.

For 1993, I did everything the same as I had the year before, including the gear and the GH, but wasn’t so overzealous with my prep. As a result, it appeared as if I had made a tremendous leap in size from the previous year. What you really saw were the gains I had made over two off-seasons.

As for insulin, I only used it in 1997 for the off-season leading up to my sixth and final Mr. Olympia win. I got bigger than ever, but it wasn’t quality muscle, and my midsection was distended. Some do believe you need to use all the things out there at your disposal. For me, insulin had a negative overall impact on my physique. It kept me from getting into my usual condition that I prided myself on. Raw mass is not the same thing as quality muscle tissue.I got a bit bigger, but at the expense of my separation, crispness and clear muscle separations. I see that same lack of separation constantly today with the guys, as well as the distended abs. I’m not sure what mechanisms are responsible. You could theorize the guts come from internal organ growth, but if that were the case, my belly would still be big.


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Re: Oil in Walker’s shoulders
« Reply #49 on: September 27, 2021, 10:12:22 AM »
KL: GH was still fairly new on the scene when I started competing as a pro. People made a big deal about it, and there was a lot of hype surrounding it. Now I need to clarify what I said about not changing anything about what I used, because I did try GH twice. When I won the Arnold Classic in 1996 at 257 pounds, I used it twice a day every day for the last four weeks right up to the show. I also used insulin for that show, two IU of Humulin R after my workout with a meal, and with one more meal later on. Out of convenience, that’s when I took my GH too. Those did help me add over 15 pounds of bodyweight, but it wasn’t quality muscle, just like what Dorian experienced. To me, I looked a little soft and watery even though I won. I used both again the next year for the Arnold, and that time it threw my condition off so badly that I placed eighth. That was the lowest I ever placed in any contest, and the only time I was ever out of the top six as a pro. So I said screw this stuff. I did the Mr. Olympia that year looking sharp as usual, and then hit seven Grand Prix shows in Europe. I won all of those except the one in Russia that Ronnie came out for. All of this told me that GH and insulin were detrimental to my physique. They blew out my midsection and blurred out my clear cuts. They will get you bigger, but not better. To me, better is better than bigger!



What was a typical drug cycle for you in your competitive prime— let’s say pre-contest and off-season?

SR: There was never anything “typical” about my approach to competition. It was different every year, as I like change and variety. There was never a specific time or drug that interested me to the point where I had to watch the calendar as if it were a guide for contest training and preparation. I trained year-round for the Mr. Olympia, sometimes more intent than others. I had my rest periods and so on, but I never “charted” the time for which a cycle was going to take place as if it dictated my journey. I never counted calories, weighed my food, took measurements of my body parts or let the scale guide my progress. Nor did a cycle of drugs dictate when it was time for me to get ready for a show. I never had a “switch” that I had to click to get ready— I was always getting ready year-round.

The introduction of steroids would only come into play when I was in a process of trimming the fat while trying to retain the muscle. Different drugs were made for very different purposes, therefore there was never a “typical” drug cycle because I never needed or used the exact same drug for every aspect of my body-sculpting phase. A “car” analogy is useful here. A car is used to get from point A to point B. However, the individual buying the car has vastly different reasons for buying a “specific” car, i.e., size, looks, make, model, speed, interior space, etc. There are thousands of cars made to help give each individual who is interested in buying a car an option for the one that is suitable for him.

DY: Let me stress this is not a recommendation to anyone, only what I used. This would be the course I followed circa 1993 in the final 12 weeks before the Mr. O contest:


WEEKLY
test propionate – 300 milligrams
Parabolan (French trenbolone, came in 76 mg/ml ampoules) – 152 milligrams
Primobolan – 500 milligrams


DAILY
anavar – 50 milligrams
growth hormone – 8 IU

I typically also did three eight-week cycles in the off-season, and those would be made up of basics like Deca and D-bol. I would do four weeks at peak dosage, then taper down over the next four weeks before taking four weeks off and repeating. Here is the typical four-week peak off-season cycle:

WEEKLY
testosterone – 750 milligrams
Deca – 500 milligrams


DAILY
Dianabol – 50 milligrams

As I stated a couple of years back when I put those in my column, I’m sorry if these doses disappoint those of you who were expecting something more extreme.

KL: It was a simple progression. My very first cycle was just test cyp, one shot a week. I am guessing I was doing 400 milligrams per week. After I won my state show and decided I wanted to turn pro, which I did the following year, I bumped things up a bit. I took the test up to 600 milligrams a week, and added in 400 milligrams of Deca and two Anadrols a day, which is 100 milligrams per day or 700 milligrams per week. That was my off-season cycle where I put on 30 pounds between the 1990 and 1991 amateur shows. For my prep, I would add in two amps of Winstrol V, which came in 50-milligram amps, twice a week, so that’s 200 milligrams a week of Winny. At four weeks out from the show, I dropped the test, the Deca and the Anadrol. The test and Deca were long-acting, so they kept working for another couple of weeks I’m sure. At two weeks out from the show, I started taking 20 milligrams per day of Halotestin tabs. So I would go into the shows on Winstrol and Halo. The longest my cycles ever were was 12 weeks, and that was later on. They were usually eight weeks in the early years.



Dorian, you are well aware of the reaction that column got. People outright called you a liar and say you downplayed your doses to appear as if you didn’t rely on large amounts to look the way you did.

DY: Well look, that cycle I listed above for prep was from 1993, and it was roughly 1,500 milligrams total. I never said I didn’t increase it at times over the years that followed. I was very meticulous, and kept records of all my workouts, meals and drug regimens. At one point, I did use as much as 2,500 milligrams per week in my off-season, but I didn’t see any further benefits than I had with 1,500. Again, everything I had was real and potent. Parabolan came in 76-milligram ampoules, and it was very strong. Nobody I ever talked to used more than three of those a week. I hear about guys now using 1,000 milligrams a week of tren, which is outrageous. If you have gifted genetics, you really won’t need mega doses. I honestly believe Ronnie Coleman was truly natural when he turned pro in 1991 at 215 pounds.

The guys who come to me taking the highest dosages are typically frustrated amateurs who lack the genetics to become pros. They try to make up for it by using tons and tons of gear, but it doesn’t work that way. Drug dealers want you to believe anyone can be a pro bodybuilder, even compete in the Mr. Olympia, if only you are willing to take more and more drugs. It’s not true, and the guys who need to hear that are in denial and refuse to listen. It’s like you’re crushing their dreams, but meanwhile they are playing havoc with their health for what?



What were your favorite compounds for the off-season and pre-contest? Were there any drugs you personally never cared for?

SR: I won’t answer that, and here’s why. As a bodybuilder who loved the “purity” of bodybuilding, i.e., training, competition, posing, preparation and camaraderie, using and taking steroids was never an enjoyable aspect for me— either taking them or discussing them. I had a personal disdain for all forms of drugs in our sport, as I saw them as a necessary evil that coexisted with my first love. The last thing I want to do is rattle off things I used, as I feel that would only be seen as an endorsement for them and steroid use in general, and would encourage certain individuals out there to seek out various compounds because “that’s what Shawn Ray used. If it’s good enough for him, it’s good enough for me too!” No, I won’t play into that.

DY: I’ll answer. Equipoise or EQ was something I liked for any part of the training year. Good old D-bol was the first drug I ever used, and it’s still my sentimental favorite. All the guys in the USA loved Winstrol. I thought it sucked! The injection sites were always very painful for a while, and I just didn’t think it was anything special.

KL: Test cyp, Deca and Anadrol always worked well for me. Those were the basics, just like basic lifts— you couldn’t really go wrong with them. I can’t say I ever tried anything that I didn’t respond to or reacted badly to, for the simple fact that I didn’t try a whole lot of things.

What precautions did you take to minimize any negative consequences of using gear? Did you work with a doctor who knew what you were doing to monitor your health?

SR: The number one precaution I took was always ensuring the pharmacology I used came from a pharmacy, which is not an option for most these days. I had my blood work checked and monitored throughout my career, and of course my doctor knew I was a professional bodybuilder seeking extra attention to details, as my personal health was always more important to me than my personal wealth and success as a world-class athlete. I always knew that my time as a pro athlete would be relatively short in the big picture of my life as a whole.

DY: I approached my family doctor and told him I was using gear to compete at a high level in my chosen sport. Thankfully he was not judgmental. He agreed to monitor me to make sure I was healthy. There are health risks involved in using AAS, and they increase the longer you use them. I accepted that risk, and my health was as good as could be expected. My blood panels did reveal the usual stressors, with increases in liver enzymes and lowered HDL levels from using orals. At my heaviest, usually when I was 280-290 pounds, my blood pressure was borderline high. But here I am at 54 years old, retired from bodybuilding for over 17 years now. I continue to get health screenings. I have no organ growth except for a slightly enlarged “athlete’s heart,” which is very common. My prostate is normal. Maybe I am just lucky, but I also believe keeping my use moderate had something to do with it.

KL: I started working with my doctor in 1991, as soon as I set the goal of winning the Nationals. I told him what I was doing, and he agreed to do what he could to make sure I was as healthy as possible.



What side effects did you experience, and did they usually go away once you ended your cycles?

SR: The only side effect I ever felt, and I felt it every time I used, was the sense of completeness! I had to turn up the volume on everything I did physically in the gym. Again, I had to make the drugs work for me by working harder! Simply used alone, drugs are not enough “stimulus” for them to work they way I needed them to work going into competition against guys who outweighed me by 50 pounds and stood six inches taller! I consciously trained at a higher level and was acutely aware of my diet to ensure the focus was on the desired end result of the consumption of the drug being used.

DY: Like I said, I saw increases in my blood pressure and liver enzymes, and a reduction in my good cholesterol. The lower HDL was the most concerning to me, as it is a risk factor for heart problems. But that came back up to normal. I live my life differently now. When I was a competitive bodybuilder, I never had even one glass of alcohol all those years. I never wanted to stress my body any more than I already was with the gear.

KL: Call me lucky, but I never had any side effects. I never had gyno, never lost my hair, didn’t even get zits. I suppose I had a little water retention when I was heavy, and my liver enzymes went up when I was using orals like anyone else, but those all went away once I ceased the cycles.



One frightening drug that does seem a bit newer on the scene is the fat-burner DNP, which has supposedly been responsible for several deaths. When did you first hear about it, and did you ever have any experience with it yourself?

SR: DNP, to my knowledge, was not around during my time. If it was, I can’t tell you what it did or who used it.

DY: It’s actually nothing new. It’s been around for something like 100 years. No one I knew used it, nor did I. It’s basically a poison that elevates your body temperature. I used clenbuterol in my prep to burn body fat, and that was more than enough. I never used thyroid meds. I didn’t need them. I was always naturally lean and never had trouble dropping weight. Sometimes I would lose fat so fast it was annoying!

KL: I never heard of it until maybe a year ago, if that.



SEOs like Synthol are supposedly very widely used now to enhance the fullness of areas like the shoulders and arms. At times it’s easy to spot, while there must be many others who did it in such a way where it isn’t so obvious. Do you feel that in a sport where in terms of drugs, “anything goes,” synthol is acceptable? Or would you consider it on par with pec or calf implants, and thus unacceptable?

SR: This is a “grown man’s sport.” If guys want to use synthol, by all means the can. However, there are consequences and a lot of unknowns about the long-term effects of its use, whereas steroid use is temporary and the human body does eventually restore itself back to normal once use has ceased. I personally feel bad for the synthol users that they feel the need to take such risks. However, use of this product is symptomatic of bigger issues with the user than the desire to be recognized as one of the world’s best bodybuilders.

DY: I saw guys starting to use that in the late ‘90s. I never used it. That’s not bodybuilding anymore. You’re not building muscle with any of your own effort— you’re just fluffing it up with oil. It doesn’t ever look right to me, which is why I don’t even consider it an unfair advantage.

KL: I used to beat guys who used it, like Nasser. I believe Flex has gone on record saying he used it too. All I know is, nothing beats hard work and genetics. Synthol makes body parts look distorted and it washes out the fine details you should be able to see. I’m just really old school. I say let the muscle speak for itself. I see it as more of a disadvantage when guys use it, because they look stupid and everybody sees how fake it is.



We have seen a rash of deaths in recent years among current and past bodybuilders, usually involving heart attacks. What do you think is to blame, and are you personally concerned that you might not live as long and healthy a life as you would like due to your own past steroid use?

SR: It goes without saying that many of these guys would still be alive if not for the consumption or preoccupation with steroids. Enlarged hearts, obesity and so on are all factors in some of these premature deaths. It should serve as a cautionary tale as to getting health checkups, maintaining good health post-competition as well as a warning about the abuse of anabolic steroids. We can point fingers at a lot of things when it comes to the death of a bodybuilder. If one died in a car accident, the press would focus on the size of the athlete killed in the crash as a reason he didn’t survive!

Clearly, there are way too many athletes dying too soon, and the only thing we can do as athletes is pay attention to the warning signs, get checkups on and off-season, monitor our health with blood work and EKGs and if using, use in moderation.

Athletes need to have a strong identity and clear comprehension of the following: Why am I taking steroids? How long will I take them? What will I do after I am done? Know the line between use and abuse. Strong issues face the user if he is not properly aligned with “real life” and life after competition.

DY: Like I said several times already, as high-level bodybuilders, we took a calculated risk. I live healthy now, and that’s all I can do. I do feel for all those who passed before my time. They were all my brothers in sport. Saying it’s all heart attacks isn’t fair or accurate. My good friend Sonny Schmidt had cancer, Paul DeMayo overdosed on recreational drugs, and I believe prescription drugs were responsible for Mike Mentzer’s passing too. Momo Benaziza died from diuretics, which are different from steroids in that they can kill you immediately. I’m not sure if it was ever known what killed Andreas Münzer, but it wasn’t a long-term chronic thing like heart disease. He died shortly after a contest like Momo did. Diuretics were used quite a bit in the ‘90s and still are, which is very rough on the kidneys. There is no denying that using large amounts of gear for years and years is dangerous, especially to the heart. But it’s been shown that for men in need of it, TRT has positive applications and can reduce the risk of certain chronic conditions.

KL: I’m not personally concerned, because I was moderate in my use and took more time off drugs than most if not all my peers. Only medical examiners could really tell you what killed all these guys. The one thing that’s used that’s more dangerous than anything else, like Dorian said, is diuretics. Steroids and GH might lead to problems and could kill you eventually, but diuretics can kill you in a matter of a couple of hours. I was there in Holland and saw Momo Benaziza die. But you know what? We have yet to see one Mr. Olympia champion die prematurely. Why is that? I tend to think they weren’t as extreme in their use as some people want to think they were. It’s the guys who don’t have the best genetics that go overboard and take the bigger risks in an attempt to compensate and catch up to the more gifted guys. It’s tough for some guys to accept that some of us have better genetics and just respond a lot better to gear than the average person.



Speaking of which, I am assuming you are all on HRT. What is your current prescribed dosage that you use to maintain healthy test levels, and do you also use GH?

SR: I haven’t touched or taken a drug since I left the contest stage in 2001; it was part of why I retired in the first place. Drugs became the least likeable aspect of competing and I simply could not see myself competing another year knowing that using them would be a part of the next year in my life. I walked away and never looked back.

DY: I am prescribed 200 milligrams of testosterone enanthate per week. This is not by choice. Once I retired, I was very much looking forward to never using steroids again, as well as dropping a good amount of bodyweight so I could finally wear some stylish clothes! Bodybuilding was something I did for myself, not for anyone else, and I wanted to be the best at that sport which I showed a talent for. Once I was no longer competing, I saw no reason to ever use gear again. I was also trying to start a family with my wife at the time. Of course, my test levels and sperm count were both low right after I retired in the fall of 1997. After 18 months, we were finally able to conceive a child. But after two years off gear, my T levels were still in the very low-normal range. I spoke with my doctor, and he put me on a TRT regimen to take me to the higher end of normal. This actually reduces the chance of heart disease compared to having lower T. I don’t use GH. The only reason guys my age use it is to stay leaner, and I am able to do that with no problems anyway.

KL: I use the testosterone pellets for my TRT. Those are implanted a few inches into my glutes, and release very slowly over a period of months. They are designed to give you an even TRT dose of about 200 milligrams a week. I haven’t touched GH since 1997.



So many retired bodybuilders feel the need to continue cycling heavy doses of gear and stay huge long after they stop competing. Why do you think they do that? None of you three have. What made you choose to not bother with that?

SR: I believe I was given a gift: A gift of health and fitness, a sound mind and body. The older I got, the more aware I became of that gift. I didn’t want to take it for granted and felt very fortunate to not have any health-related issues upon retiring. To be honest, I felt very fortunate to have been able to walk away on my own terms the way I made a conscious decision to undertake the crazy idea that I could one day be considered among the sport’s best-built bodybuilders ever. As for the others, again, I never considered the “others.” They simply happened to share the same passion for the sport of bodybuilding I did, but I always felt that was where our similarities ended— as I was always knew I was much more than simply a bodybuilder, and that I was meant to do other things with my life as well.

DY: With most if not all of those guys, they feel the need to stay larger than life for psychological reasons. They are so invested in being a particular size and weight that it becomes their identity and they are terrified to give that up. And obviously, you can’t maintain that extreme mass without gear, and I mean beyond TRT doses. They are addicted not so much to using gear as they are to the huge physique and the attention and acceptance they get from it. Me, I don’t really give a shit. I see guys posting comments like, “Dorian is only 250 pounds now! He’s so small!” Whatever. I did what I did. I was the best bodybuilder in the world for six years, and that part of my life is over now. If I had tried to maintain all that mass this whole time, I bet I would have had a heart attack and might very well be dead by now. But I’ve been living my life well, and plan on being around a lot longer.

KL: I think it’s just too hard for some of these guys to walk away from being that character of the huge bodybuilder that people are amazed by. It takes a strong man to put the syringe down for good and stop playing that role. So they hold on to the past, and keep living in the past, because a future where they don’t get that attention and respect for their body is just too scary. I don’t want to be that 60-year-old guy you see at shows wearing a tank top, a weight belt and carrying his gallon jug of water around with him. That’s just sad. Let it go! I created my character out of pain and suffering. I lost my father when I was 7, and my mom when I was still young too. I had nothing else to hold on to, so bodybuilding became my escape and my world for a long time. But I was able to walk away from it. I like who I am now as a man, and as a father to my son. My legacy as that bodybuilding champion lives on in photos, videos and in the memories of the fans from those years. So I didn’t need to cling to it anymore.