LIFT-RUN-BANG: If your supplements cost more than groceries, you've already failed: "Little girls get Barbie. She has a small waist and big boobs. Little boys get The Hulk and He-Man. Two guys that can literally lift up mountains.
So many of the dudes I know that lift and train and aspire to be jacked, have a youth that is embedded in comic book culture. And there aren't many comic book superheroes that don't make any former or current Mr. Olympia look like a Crossfit noob.
Those little boys, who spent all that time reading comics and playing with action figures that boast the same type of insane muscular development, often find their way into the gym just a few years later.
And as they say, "welcome to the gym. Where you will forever be small."
Males often establish a pecking order amongst each other. And make no mistake, in our youth the male with more strength and more muscular development is indeed more respected by his peers. He gets more attention by the young ladies, the coaches, and even other parents.
As young men, we're all aware of this.
But unlike women, we don't complain about said pecking order. We've always known it was the natural order of things, and instead of turning into social warrior crybabies we use it as the impetus to get better, bigger, stronger, faster, jacked, yoked, and awesome.
In other words, we accept this is a social norm. We aren't running around trying to change society's standards for the "ultimate male physique". We embrace that this is how things are, and work our asses off in order to garner the same amount of respect, notoriety, and affirmation from our peers that we have seen other jacked dudes get.
We want that. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying to you. Otherwise, no one would give a shit about arm measurements or bench press numbers. These things would be deemed insignificant and arbitrary. But we all know they aren't. We've made them significant because looking a certain way, or lifting a certain amount isn't JUST about impressing yourself. Deep down, you absolutely desire the admiration of others for your hard work."
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