Quote of the Day Archives

Zen Quote of the Day: Patience

naim-suleymanoglu-chess

From the Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai by Yamamoto Tsunetomo:

The heart of a virtuous person has settled down and he does not rush about at things.  A person of little merit is not at peace but walks about making trouble and is in conflict with all.

A key to success in Olympic weightlifting is your ability to “chill out”.  I don’t mean you can’t get pumped up before a big lift.  I do mean that in most of your training, you need to be extremely methodical and analytical.  But, the trouble is that the human mind is generally incapable of being methodical and analytical when it is emotional.

In a sport like Powerlifting, shear aggression can save the day (it’s why it’s a better indicator of brute strength than Olympic lifting is).  But, in Olympic lifting that can often just mess you up.  You need to lift with a totally clear mind. 

Adrenaline is fine, and being aggressive with the amount of force you put into the bar (at the right times!) is also great.  However, you have to walk a fine line.  Too much “hype” and you will drop the very carefully crafted technique you’ve been working so hard on and the bar will fly everywhere but up!

A good weightlifter has settled down and does not rush about things.

[Note: the picture above is of Naim Suleymanoglu, one of the greatest weightlifters who’s ever lived playing chess – all that patience he learned while weightlifting is paying off!]

Zen Quote of the Day – Joe Mills

Don’t think, you’re ill-equipped.

You can get a lot more of Joe Mills’ quotes in the new issue of Strength Plus Magazine here.

Zen Quote of the Day: Ram Das


Ram Das may not be a Zen guy, but it’s a good quote none the less:

“We
believe that we are human beings having a spiritual experience;
we are spiritual beings having a human experience.” –Ram
Dass

Zen Quote of the Day: Patience


Check out this Zen-like story/joke that Roy sent me. 

A student goes to the dojo and asks how long it will take to become a master. 

The master replies “There is no answer to that, my son. First you must learn patience.” 

The student replies “Yeah, yeah, patience. How long is that going to take?”

The picture above is of Snake River Canyon in Idaho.  How long did THAT take!
Answer:  Over 14,000 years.


I was posting an ad on Craigslist this morning, and when it came time to type the “gotcha” image letters (you know the ones that help keep down spam posts), this is what I was asked to type:

Jaundiced Flatland

I don’t know what it means, but it’s very “pop” Zen.  Deep, man … deep.

Zen Quote of the Day

stream_zen

Be soft in your practice. Think of the method as a fine silvery stream, not a raging waterfall. Follow the stream, have faith in its course. It will go its own way, meandering here, trickling there. It will find the grooves, the cracks, the crevices. Just follow it. Never let it out of your sight. It will take you.

Sheng-yen

Zen Quote of the Day – Red Dwarf

I want to fly
shipwrecked and comatose
sipping on mango juice.

From the theme song to the BBC science fiction show Red Dwarf.  Now that’s what I call a Zen Koan.

Zen Quote of the Day

gary-snyder

Gary Snyder:

 

It is hard to even begin to gauge how much a complication of possessions, the notions of “my and mine,” stand between us and a true, clear, liberated way of seeing the world.  To live lightly on the earth, to be aware and alive, to be free of egotism, to be in contact with plants and animals, starts with simple concrete acts.  The inner principle is the insight that we are interdependent energy-fields of great potential wisdom and compassion – expressed in each person as a superb mind, a handsome and complex body and the almost magical capacity of language.  To these potentials and capacities, “owning things” can add nothing of authenticity.  “Clad in the sky, with the earth for a pillow.”

Zen Quote of the Day


By Ryokan

Which way
did you come from,
following dream paths at night,
while snow is still deep
in this mountain recess?


Oscar Wilde, from The Importance of Being Ernest

Everything popular is wrong

That may not sound very Zen, but it is.  It comes down to being aware of the natural human instinct to jump on bandwagons.  The more aware you are of any natural tendency the more rationally you can react to them.  And jumpin’ on bandwagons is rarely a good idea.

In fitness and strength training, it is VERY true that nearly everything that is popular is wrong … dead wrong.  For instance, if you’re shocked by any of the following statements, then you have been following bad (but popular) advice.

  1. There is no such thing as “toning” a muscle.
  2. Jogging will not make you thin.
  3. You should lift weights if you want to lose fat.
  4. Carbs are not the devil.
  5. Yoga is not enough.

Let’s go through these really fast just to help dispel any lingering disbelief you might have.

One:  There is no such thing as “toning” a muscle.

OK, sometimes I’m guilty of using the word “toning” my advertising to entice women to join my workout programs.  But, the fact is, the word is meaningless.  Muscles either get bigger or they get smaller.  They can also get stronger or weaker, but we’ll just talk about the visual stuff since that’s what “toning” refers to.

When someone says they don’t want to make their muscles bigger, they just want to tone them, they are talking nonsense.  What they MEAN (without knowing it) is that they want to keep their muscles the same size and lose the fat that is covering them up.  This way their arms will look long and lean, for instance.

Sadly what people think they mean is that they want to do specific styles of training that will cause the muscle to be lean rather than bulky.  This is silly.  Leanness is not the opposite of bulkiness.  Leanness is a function of how much fat you have.  If you have little fat, you’re lean.  If you have more fat, then you look less lean.  Bulkiness (in terms of big muscles – not just fatty tissue) is a function of how large your muscles are.  You can be both lean and bulky (think of Bodybuilders), or you can be lean and skinny (supermodels).

If what you want is to be lean and small, then say that.  Don’t walk up to a trainer and tell them you want to be toned not big and muscle-bound.  That’s a great way to make a good trainer cringe.

Two:  Jogging will not make you thin.

This fact trips people out.  The bottom line is not that jogging isn’t good exercise.  It’s that your body is far too good at adapting to it.

In order to make consistent progress, you have to do exercises that are hard for your body to do.  At first, jogging is hard.  But, after a fairly short period of time, your body adapts and becomes very efficient at doing the same workouts.  If you used to burn 800 calories on a 5 mile jog, after a few months you might only need to burn 400 for the same 5 mile jog – and you’ll feel like it’s easier to do!  (those are made up numbers, btw.)

One way to solve the problem is to up the number of miles.  But, once you get into the 8 to 10 range, we’re getting ridiculous.

Another way to up the workout is to stop jogging, and start running.  If you go faster, you will work harder and you’ll get a better training effect.  But, at some point you’ll start sprinting.  And no human being can sprint for 5 miles!

Instead, once you’ve gotten too used to slow cardio (again, it’s great at first for people who like it) then focus instead on weight training and interval training.  You’ll lose more fat faster, and your workouts will be shorter.  Win win!

Three:  Lift weights if you want to lose fat.

If you aren’t lifting weights, but your goal is fatloss, then you are missing out – big time!  Weight training not only helps you build muscle which in turn will help you lose fat.  But, weight training done in a superset style is very hard cardio much like sprinting.  You’ll burn more calories and you’ll get a more powerful EPOC effect (Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption) than cardio alone.  The EPOC effect basically raises your resting metabolism much higher than normal for up to 24 to 36 hours after exercise resulting in more fatloss.

And women, for heavens sake, no matter how hard you work at it, you will NEVER look like a man.  Read here to find out why.

Four: Carbs are not the devil. (Foosball is)

Carbs get a bad rap.   But, the fact is, you need them.  You need up to 130 grams a day just to keep your brain functioning correctly.  You need carbs before and during exercise to keep your workouts going strong, and you need them post-exercise to replenish glycogen stores.

If you drop carbs out completely, you are doing yourself a disservice.

Five:  Yoga is not enough

Yoga is VERY popular now.  For the most part, yoga is a good thing.  It’s great at getting totally sedentary people to get in some bodyweight strength work by holding themselves in tough positions.  It also does a great job of lengthening the muscles, which can aid in the prevention of injuries.

But, it doesn’t do much else.  Much like jogging, you adapt too fast to the cardio and strength components of yoga.  You need a dedicated cardio and a dedicated strength component in your fitness program.  Stretching is good, but flexibility is only one small component of overall fitness.

The points above are designed to make the simple point that you can’t just go along with what the conventional wisdom is when it comes to fitness and strength training.  You have to think a little harder, think outside the box, and search for solid information backed by science, not hearsay and inertia.

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