A personal paradigm is the way one sees the world behind his own eyes. I heard this once explained using a map by Steven Covey, author of “The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People.” If you were to attend one of my seminars in Columbus, Ohio, and I sent you a map titled, “Columbus” but it really was a map of Detroit, Michigan, the first thing that would happen is you would get lost and backtrack to see if you missed a street. After getting lost again, you may give me a call. I would tell you to try harder and reread the map. You would reply, “I have read the map and can’t find the streets.” I would tell you to take your time and look at it more thoroughly. Well, you would head back out and once again get lost. This time you may head into a bookstore and buy the best motivational book on the market. Now, you would be all fired up, and you would head back out again only to get lost once more. You see, the problem is very simple. No matter how hard you try or how motivated you get, you still have the wrong map. Until you change your current map, you will be lost. Most coaches and lifters underestimate what strength really is because they have been using the wrong map or the wrong set of definitions and standards. In the field of strength training, there really are no set definitions as to what expectable levels of strength are for individual athletes. The only definitions are the personal ones set by the lifters themselves, the trainer, or the coach. Let me explain further. Let’s assume that you decided to hire a personal trainer or coach to train you for your next competition. Your current lifts are a 700-lb squat, a 450- lb bench, and a 650-lb deadlift. Unless this trainer has processed a certain degree of strength himself, he may be impressed with your current level. How hard do you think you will be trained and on what level of knowledge is this program built? This trainer may only be able to bench 300 lbs and his best current client may only be able to bench 350 lbs. So to him your 450-lb bench is outstanding. This will make you feel great to receive all the praise from this trainer but will it help? Your current level of 450 lbs may be far under what you are really capable of doing.
Why the difference in strength? There are a few reasons I can think of, but the one that comes to mind is the comprehension level of strength. Powerlifters may think they are strong until they go to a local meet and find out they may not be as strong as they thought. So they head back to the gym and reevaluate their program and start back to work with a new definition of what strength is. Then when they build themselves up to a higher level and compete at their first national competition, they find out again that they still are not as strong as they thought and need to change their definition of what strength is. The best lifters are the ones who are always in a constant process of trying to push it up to the next level and who are always redefining themselves. If you listen to these lifters, you will almost never hear them say that they missed a lift because they were not strong enough. What you will hear them say is that the bar fell out of the groove, the equipment didn’t fit right, or they had one lagging muscle. But you will never hear them say they were not strong enough. Being stronger is a forgone conclusion and just a matter of putting it together. For a novice lifter, coach, or trainer, you will hear them say they weren’t strong enough or that they just don’t have the strength potential or genetics. There is never any new definition being made. Another reason for the strength difference is many coaches and trainers feel that a 400-lb bench press and a 500-lb squat are unnecessary for sports performance. Is not all strength based on maximal strength? If you are spending time in the weight room, should that time not be devoted to getting stronger? Why spend valuable training time just maintaining? It makes no sense to go into the weight room to work on maintaining strength when the same time could be spent on developing strength. I do understand that there are many components of fitness when it comes to the total development of the athlete and that maximum strength is only one of them. A training program for a client or athlete based solely on maximum strength development is a major mistake. You must also address flexibility, endurance, mobility, agility, speed, and many other components. I believe these components need to be trained and are all affected by the total absolute strength that you have. In other words, all things being equal, the stronger athlete will win.