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Beyond-Brawn-2nd-Edition

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BEYOND BRAWN<br />

17.44 Shortly after the second twang I went to the chiropractor again. Now<br />

I needed an adjustment in the lower spine. I did not think the problem<br />

was serious so I only took an extra few days off training before deadlifting<br />

again—twelve days of rest instead of seven. I felt fine so off I went. On 9<br />

June I made the pre-injury poundage plus an increment of 2.5 kilos. Now I<br />

was up to 177.5 kilos (390.5 pounds).<br />

17.45 It was about at this time that I foolishly bench pressed without a spotter or<br />

any safety device. I got stuck at the bottom. Alone I had to wrestle the bar<br />

down to my midsection before being able to sit up. In the process I damaged<br />

my right shoulder. With the use of ice, and tolerating the discomfort, I persisted<br />

with bench pressing till the end of the deadlift cycle, but the damage<br />

was done and would be with me for a long time.<br />

B 66<br />

You may be wondering how I could have done some of the foolish<br />

things I did. “Didn’t you know better?” you may ask. I did know<br />

better. I knew I was taking form liberties. But I was caught up in<br />

the emotion of a cycle that was going very well in some respects,<br />

and reveling in handling large weights in the deadlift. I was apparently<br />

getting away with the liberties I was taking, so I kept on at it.<br />

My heart was ruling my brain. But eventually I came to grief, and<br />

confirmed all that I teach in my writings—that taking liberties<br />

with exercise technique is foolish.<br />

Nearing the peak<br />

17.46 I was now down to 3 continuous reps and 12 rest-pause reps, and the<br />

strain was extreme—actually, it had been very severe for some time now. I<br />

switched the workouts around so that the first exercise of the week was now<br />

the deadlift. On 16 June I did 396 pounds (180 kilos). e 396 was a very big<br />

moment because it meant that four 20-kilo plates could be put on each end<br />

of the bar. Eight 20-kilo plates on a bar for rep work, for a hard gainer who<br />

has really suffered over the years, was satisfying in the extreme.<br />

17.47 People like me are the ones conventional bodybuilding throws on the trash<br />

heap. After many years of following the popular advice I finally discovered<br />

the information that can make even a hard gainer respectable. But the<br />

“respectable” is not relative to what the top competitive bodybuilders can do.<br />

346

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