We just finished Thanksgiving and are heading full steam ahead into Christmas. Memes are in our favor as it's big boy season, so we get a little love, but let's look at some things.

Fat Is Not Big  

Powerlifting seems to have this general acceptance of bigger is stronger, but bigger isn't always better. In our cases (the bigs) we feel accepted when we hear "damn you're huge" — and yes a 600-pound squat is bad ass, and a 400-pound bench is fantastic.

Puting on or even keeping a significant amount of "bad weight" is detrimental to getting stronger. I see it so much, fat guys getting stronger in the main three posting videos, and following them up with pics and social media statuses about pizza and buffets.

The one thing I very rarely see is any GPP (General Physical Preparedness) incorporating functional exercises that work: flexibility, endurance, speed, and strength. These not only improve your overall training capacity they also aid in recovery. Now we all know I'm no scholar I'm not going to be offering seminars or even back my claim with science, but I can tell you this, I've been on both ends of the spectrum.

417

I was 417 at my biggest. Fuck it, I'll say it at my fattest. And boy was I ill-informed about my strength. Daily I was coached to get bigger, eat more, take more, more more more. Being hungry in more ways than one, I did more. Walking a flight of stairs felt like a mile, putting my socks and shoes on felt like a fist fight.  All were justified via pounds on my total, and to this day (sadly), I'd do it again. I was new, and I wanted to be great.

There are always two sides to a coin, and my best total at 417 was 2143. I had an 881 squat, a 556 bench, and a 705 pull. Flash forward three years later, I'm sitting at 365 and have competed as low as 325 in which I achieved my first 2200 lb total.  I've had my best total thus far at 370lbs, with 2281.

What I Changed

Naturally, my first steps were to get my body at a weight I felt "comfortable." Going from 417 to 325 was a pretty easy task for me. I didn't crash diet, and I didn't cut carbs. I feel anything that you isolate entirely leads to binging and quickly burning out, at least for me anyway.

  • Accessories: I started treating accessories with the same dedication as the main movement. It meant long nights at the gym but was needed. Although hitting a couple of heavy singles and going home to stuff my face and sleep, seemed to be what powerlifters do, it wasn't working for me, at all!
  • Diet: I found that eating balanced meals, fats, carbs, and protein regularly actually helped me lean out. I was eating more than ever and could physically feel my metabolism working via the furnace I became upon consuming a meal.
  • Volume: Sticking in the 70-80% range, I would hit around anywhere from 15 to 25 reps. Quick math time: I used to squat 900  pounds for a single. Now, 70% of 900 is 630. I'd do four sets of triples, and an AMRAP  let's say I got seven. That puts me at 19 reps with 630 for a total of 11,970 lbs of volume, sparing my CNS and incorporating some level of GPP in my working sets. 11,000 pounds! The return from this approach was my body started growing muscle (good weight).
  • Supplements: Not test and tren, you know the stuff everyone talks about cause it's cool.  Sorry, chicks run that shit now. It's not as hardcore as some of you like to make it out to be. I'm talking simple legal supps — Vitamin C, D3, citrus bergamot, k2, and a multi V. I try my best to consume a gallon of water daily as well with all of the above, especially during meet preps when the body is taking a beating.
  • C-pap: I swear to you on all that I love, nothing changed my body and mind more than my c-pap. It is a legal steroid everyone should check out. It's a fucking game changer, and if you complain about sleeping with a mask on, but jab oil from someone's bathtub in your ass you're an idiot.
  • GPP: I'm sure not everyone is a weirdo and loves pushing a prowler as I do, shout out to my linemen who love pushing shit still, but the list of GPP is endless — pushes, sled drags, weighted vest work, sprints, and carries. GPP doesn't have to be torture. Go hike,  bike, push yourself, have fun, and make it work. When you find things you like you will see yourself wanting to do them. They become lovely habits that benefit you in so many ways and will improve your training. Doing this is also a great time to make up lost time with loved ones. We spend endless hours away chasing a total, so take the old lady hiking or the kids on a bike ride. Challenge a race the last two blocks. To me, that's a win-win. You're bettering yourself and teaching the importance of exercise to your family and friends.

Take Away

I always end with a "moral of the story" so here it goes: train your ass off on your main movements, hit your accessories like it's a top set of squats, eat right and move briskly. Now I'm not saying go home, dump out the pantry and fridge and go all organic. If you want pizza, have pizza but make your next 10-15 meals clean. Live life. I'll never step on stage, but I like knowing two things,  A, If shit ever went sideways I'd be able to handle my own, and B, If I'm going to be playing the fat man's ace card of lifting, I'm going to look like I lift. If someone sees me and they say he has been in the gym, I like that.

I never want to tell someone I squat 900 lbs and have them look at me with that sideways dog look, thinking to themselves I'd never known. Take control. You will be surprised how much stronger you can get when you push yourself just that much harder and build a base that can support the goals you dream of. Only you can make it happen. Hard work pays off.