• H&R Moderators: VerbalTruist | cdin | Lil'LinaptkSix

Healthy living through the bodybuilding lifestyle.

Roger&Me

Bluelighter
Joined
Dec 8, 2004
Messages
23,526

Whether you plan on, or have already engaged in lifting weights to improve your overall health and enhance your body composition by adding mass and/or stripping away body fat, one thing is for sure, you are, in one way or another, "bodybuilding". No matter what your fitness goals may be …quot; to compete locally, to compete nationally in hopes of obtaining a pro card, to just simply lift weights in order to build up a skinny/shapeless body and feel better about yourself, or to gain some muscle and lose some excess fat for concerning health reasons, living the bodybuilding lifestyle can help propel you towards your goals that much faster and make them a reality.

When I say "bodybuilding lifestyle", I am talking about the many big and small aspects that help to create and maintain a healthy way of living cornered around correct exercise, eating and recuperation. The quality of work you perform and the success you obtain in the gym will also reflect on the quality of your life outside of the gym, and vice versa. Each one benefits the other, and a lack of attention in one area can easily spill over and affect the outcome in the other areas of your life. Your health is your life, and bodybuilding is one of the number one ways to improve your personal health, allowing you to acquire and enjoy the most that every day has to offer.

What's Entailed In Living The Bodybuilding Lifestyle?

In order to get the most out of bodybuilding and to reach your fitness goals, certain variables, such as diet, training and recuperation must be adhered to consistently - day in and day out. The best way to make sure that you are successful in achieving the results you seek as quickly as possible, is to incorporate these variables as part of your everyday life, instead of viewing them as mere chores, which can then seem like inconveniences more than key elements to living a longer, healthier, more prosperous life. To help maintain your consistency with diet, training and recuperation, smaller variables, such as cutting down on heavy partying, not smoking, passing up on unhealthy fast-food, checking over nutrition labels of foods you buy, training with high intensity, setting goals, and giving yourself 8-10 hours of sleep nightly, should be implemented as much as possible into your lifestyle. Take a step back and look at your day-to-day lifestyle in general.

What kinds of foods make up the majority of your diet? Are you eating two or three big meals per day instead of the needed 5-7 smaller proportioned nutritious meals needed to kick your metabolism into high gear? Are you training consistently on a proper program with 100% intensity? Do you have a plan or set goals every time you workout? Do you party or consume alcohol often, and not get much sleep? Are you happy with your progress in the gym as well as the progress with your life in general? These are just some questions you can and should ask yourself from time-to-time to determine if you are making positive choices and living a lifestyle that is suitable for reaching your goals and obtaining success.

The Need For Balance

Just as it is essential to follow certain guidelines in order to reach your goals in bodybuilding, you should also strive to balance out your life by indulging in other activities and enjoyments that life itself has to offer. Bodybuilding should not consume you or your life, and just like anything else, too much of one thing can become destructive. Bodybuilding is a 24-hour sport, which requires a certain degree of dedication, sacrifice and repetitive work in order to prevail successful, but one can, however, get caught up in putting "all their eggs in one basket" and placing too much energy and focus into one thing only. Instead, use what bodybuilding has taught you both inside and outside of the gym, and apply these benefits in positive ways to other important areas of your life…. Whether it be performing your job better, being more successful in school, decreasing anxiety to better relieve daily stress, taking on new responsibilities, setting new goals, or improving your overall mood and self-esteem.

By providing balance to your bodybuilding, as well as establishing goals outside of your fitness endeavors, a more complete lifestyle can be had, and in return, your bodybuilding goals will continue to remain fresh and in a progressing state.

The Benefits Of Leading The "Bodybuilding Lifestyle"

The benefits of leading a healthy lifestyle through bodybuilding are endless, and it is through bodybuilding itself that many key ingredients for success, not only in bettering one's own health, but also enhancing one's entire way of living, are readily provided when the time is taken to realize and seek the "bodybuilding lifestyle".

Being more fit equates to being physically able to do more life activities you enjoy doing with much more energy and motivation, slowing down the aging process (living longer), increased confidence and self well-being, better overall body functioning and performance, and knowing that you can achieve the goals you set out to do, both inside the gym as well as in all other areas of your life. Allow the hard work and discipline that you put forth in your workouts to carry over into the other aspects of your daily activities, and I guarantee that you will have a more rounded and successful lifestyle. Your health and fitness should be the last thing that stops you from enjoying both the simple and finer things that life has to offer.

By combining your passion for bodybuilding/fitness and utilizing the three basic elements (training, diet, and rest) correctly, while continually making healthy choices and balancing out all other facets of your life, you can improve your lifestyle and set yourself up for optimal results both inside and outside of the gym. Living the "bodybuilding lifestyle" is an enjoyable way of life, but remember, it is not your WHOLE life. Realize what bodybuilding has to offer you, seize the benefits and apply them to your everyday life. Most importantly, have fun, stay healthy and maintain balance among all your daily life activities and goals.

And what better time to start enhancing your progress in the gym and making changes to the way you live YOUR life than NOW! New Year's is just around the corner and there is not a better resolution you can set for yourself than to start living the bodybuilding lifestyle!" to help create success in all areas of your life!

Link
 
To me, 'Bodybuilding' only refers to those who lift weights with the express goal of having larger, more defined muscles.

I lift weights, and eat certain foods more/less, but I focus on functional strength. I certainly wouldn't say I'm a bodybuilder. If anything a 'Strength Athlete' or even 'Powerlifter'

Having said that, I think anyone could benefit from lifting weights, whether it be for powerlifting, bodybuilding, sport-specific use, or whatever.

Lifting is actually one of the few things I look forward to on a regular basis...
 
I believe one of the main reason my body/mind has forgiven me my recreational drug use is due to my exercise routine. Running alot each week combined with the gym 3 times a week.

I also find that every 3 years or so I really get alot out of doing a steroid cycle. I feel "repaired" fully after a good 6 to 8 week cycle. I usually augment with growth hormone during my cycle since GH has abilities to repair organs and tendons to a level that normal exercise cannot.

There is also a meditative quality to good weight lifting. You get alot more than just the benefits of "pushing weights". It build self-confidence by self-reinforcing promises and keeping promises such as: "I'm going to bench 140lbs today". The more promises you make and keep to yourself, the more confidence you gain in your capabilities and WILLPOWER.
 
lifeisforliving said:
There is also a meditative quality to good weight lifting. You get alot more than just the benefits of "pushing weights". It build self-confidence by self-reinforcing promises and keeping promises such as: "I'm going to bench 140lbs today". The more promises you make and keep to yourself, the more confidence you gain in your capabilities and WILLPOWER.

I agree 100%. The positive mental and emotional effects of lifting are as powerful if not more than the physical effects.
 
I also agree, once you start seeing results, your confidence level shoots up :)
 
I believe one of the main reason my body/mind has forgiven me my recreational drug use is due to my exercise routine.


I know what u mean. The bodybuilding lifestyle (regular intese exercise along with a sensible diet) keeps the mind and body fresh even with a lot of recreation drug use.

There may come a time in the future that I might "grow out" of my drug habits, but I'll never ever give up bodybuilding. The feeling u get when u battle the weights in the gym and see all that positive effect carry on to other areas of your life is just great.

Oh yes, cardio is totally important too for the complete "feel good" package.
 
lifeisforliving said:
I also find that every 3 years or so I really get alot out of doing a steroid cycle. I feel "repaired" fully after a good 6 to 8 week cycle. I usually augment with growth hormone during my cycle since GH has abilities to repair organs and tendons to a level that normal exercise cannot.

I can't believe you're advocating steroids as something that will repair organs...
 
I just related my own personal experience on steroids and growth hormone. Each person makes their own decision about drug use.

Here are a few articles to read about the effects of growth hormone. No drug is without it's risks.

The Growing Impact of Growth Hormone
By Carol Kahn

On July 5, 1990, the New England Journal of Medicine published a clinical study on a drug that sent shock waves throughout the world. The drug-human growth hormone, HGH for short, or simply GH, a substance produced naturally by the pituitary gland-was hailed as a fountain of youth. Injections of synthetic human growth hormone had turned 12 men, ages 61 to 81, and with flabby, frail, fat-bulging bodies, into sleeker, stronger, younger selves.

Here is one of the source articles from the New England Journal of Medicine:
Can Growth Hormone Prevent Aging?
Mary Lee Vance, M.D.


And here is the first article that appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine back in 1990:
Effects of human growth hormone in men over 60 years old

It is quite clear the growth hormone is very capable at reversing damage and repairing organs. The unknown is what the use of GH has on normal healthy semi-young individuals.
 
^^^
Interesting.

I noticed the articles mention that it may be difficult to get a reliable source of HGH. Where do you get yours?
 
I noticed the articles mention that it may be difficult to get a reliable source of HGH. Where do you get yours?

Yes, having a reliable source of GH is difficult to maintain. I currently do not have a contact for it. The last batch I got was from the black market and *seemed* to work - but who knows? I was doing other steroids at the time also so they could have just been sugar!

The last type I had was the typical 2 vial system. The GH was in 1 vial has a lightweight white powder, the 2nd was sterile water. They needed to be added together and then injected into fatty (stomach) tissue - not fun!

(we're a little offtopic here, you can PM if you would like more info)
 
panty said:
I can't believe you're advocating steroids as something that will repair organs...

You obviously know very little about steroids and Growth Hormone.
 
^^^
Obviously.

Did you have a useful point, or are you just puffing out your chest?
 
^Because steroids, in reasonable doses, have many health BENEFITS, and you're making them out to be something that destroys the body. A stance that illustrates the fact that you don't know much about steroids, because it is false.
 
dbighead2 said:
I also agree, once you start seeing results, your confidence level shoots up :)

second that. once shoulders start becoming defined, and you can see that you do in fact have a muscle on your stomach (current stage, hope to have a six pack soon) you feel confident and good. Especially being an ex-fatty.
 
^Increased muscle mass, increased tendon strength, positive nitrogen balance within muscles, increased conditioning...to name a few. Not to mention the positive mental effects of looking and feeling great.

This is of course, only with steroid USE, not abuse. Steroids can be easily abused and be very bad for you. However, if let's say a reasonable amount of testosterone is used with proper ancillaries to prevent conversion to estrogen and dihydrotestosterone, as well as proper post-cycle therapy to restore the hypothalamus-pituitary-testes axis, there is more good than harm. The real dangerous substances in bodybuilding these days are insulin and diuretics. I've used insulin for bodybuilding purposes and literally almost died from hypoglycemia because I measured out a few more cc's than I should have when in a rush. Diuretics have killed MANY bodybuilders and do all the time. I believe that there should be more efforts made to create alternatives to them.

I'm not reccomending steroids though, as I believe that they are only for people who have sat down and thought long and hard about their commitment to the bodybuilding lifestyle, and to living healthy. They are a TOOL to help you reach your goals, not a quick fix or a miracle drug.

In addition, growth hormone has probably the most health benefits of all performance-enhancers. It's a literal fountain of youth (of course, once again, when used at a reasonable dose, in the 6-8iu range)

WOW, I rambled on about a bunch of crap, oh well, I tend to do that lol...
 
Last edited:
slyvan wanderer said:
second that. once shoulders start becoming defined, and you can see that you do in fact have a muscle on your stomach (current stage, hope to have a six pack soon) you feel confident and good. Especially being an ex-fatty.

I know the feeling, the boost in self-confidence is worth all the work.
 
I agree that body building leads to and promotes a healthy mental and physical lifestyle. One of the greatest ironies of exercise is that most people do not "feel" they have the energy to do so, yet proper exercise and nutrition actually boosts your energy levels.

As far as anabolic steroids, HGH, Test., etc., they are very harmful when not used properly. Unfortunately, most people view them as a "quick fix" and do not properly monitor their insulin and hormone levels.

Another major drawback to the use of "drugs" is the mental and emotional problems many individuals suffer when they stop roid. usage and they dramatically lose size and strength. I have personally seen these effects in friends and it is quite sad.
 
Roger&Me said:
^Because steroids, in reasonable doses, have many health BENEFITS, and you're making them out to be something that destroys the body. A stance that illustrates the fact that you don't know much about steroids, because it is false.

If you actually read my post, you'll notice I said 'organs'.

Tell me again, what good can steroids do for your organs, especially your liver and kidneys?
 
Panty,

Just to clarify:

You are asking about anabolic steroids correct? Not including growth hormone correct?

- I've already posted a bunch of articles outlining the possible benefits of GH injections.
 
Top