this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2023
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Fitness

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I've been weightlifting at the gym with my brother at least 2-3 days a week for the last 2 months. I recently noticed a week or so ago, after my workouts, the soreness has decreased in the days following, tremendously. No longer am I walking around with locked knees because my legs are going to give out, or with T-rex arms because my biceps are locked up solid.

I love the feeling I get after I come back, and my body feels totally relaxed and used up. I have noticed I get anxious if I go more than a couple of days without going.

Physically I've noticed my muscles have started getting harder, like they are flexing even when they are at rest. I've started losing weight, my wife has mentioned it multiple times, and when I feel parts of my body throughout the day, it feels like certain places where fat had built up are now "smaller". I also notice that just moving around has gotten easier. Getting up from seated, while squatted, climbing stairs and ladders, moving furniture etc, has all gotten a little bit easier. I haven't gotten on the scale, but I suspect I've lost maybe 10 pounds, but it might be more. I'm still probably 40 pounds overweight so there is plenty more room to improve.

Mentally, I've noticed my confidence has grown and I feel much more comfortable with my body. I have the confidence to start limiting my calories in a meaningful way now, and I'm also currently psyching myself up to start running on my off days.

I used to dread gym days, but now, I get excited to push myself and crave the broken down feeling it used to give me when I was more out of shape.

I think the drive that keeps me going back, is the fear of losing what I've gained.

Anyways, what has kept the rest of you going? How long have you been going and how long until you feel like you started hitting your goals? Any advice for someone like me in this early stage?

Much love, thanks everyone!

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[–] minnix@lemux.minnix.dev 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Discipline in the beginning. After 9 months it has become a habit.

You are right! It's ALWAYS discipline because motivation only drives you some of the time. Motivation = I want to go Discipline - I have to go even thou I don't feel motivated.

[–] dangt88@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 1 year ago

I started lifting weights before the birth of my 1st son. I wanted to be a strong fit dad and not a fat dad my son would be ashamed of. It’s worked so far. 3+ years in and I am in the best shape of my life. Workout 3 times per week between 5:30AM and 7AM, as it’s the only time slot compatible with family and work. We’re all gonna make it!

[–] orbitingcar@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It's changed over time and will probably keep changing.

When I first started off in high school, I was primarily driven to get stronger for sports I played at the time i.e. (American) football and tennis. In college, my drive was mainly for vain reasons. I liked the way weightlifting made me look and that brought confidence in myself. After college, the vanity aspect was still there but I also started really getting into Olympic weightlifting and powerlifting, so that pushed me to get stronger in cleans, snatches, squats, etc. Now that I'm a parent, my drive is mostly to push off the "dad bod" stereotype from happening and making sure I stay physically fit enough to keep up with my kid, who's relentless and won't stay still. I'd love to be able to hit the gym with him once he's a bit older.

Besides from these things that drove me, like others have said, it really just became a habit and part of my daily routine.

[–] bloodtide@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Oh brother I am living what you actively stave off. It’s no fun having your kid run laps around your tired old ass haha

Thanks for the insight friend

[–] tmsqhazdzp@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Happy for you and your gains.

I go first thing in the morning so I feel like I’ve achieved something already. It’s the simplest part of my day.

I keep going as it’s my routine and I’d like to get the changes you described.

[–] SilentJohn@kbin.social 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I didn't want to get a stereotypical dadbod. Then I got powerlifting blackpilled and ended up fat af anyways. Cutting down lately and doing more bodybuilding stuff.

[–] GreyGhost@lemmy.one 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What does 'powerlifting blackpilled' mean?

[–] ccunix@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

According to Urban Dictionary:

The Blackpill is basically the ultimative and hardest to swallow Redpill.

It is about realizing nothing matters and there is nothing you can do that will change anything, it depraves you of all positive thought and makes you want to get some sort of meaning out of this limited time we have.

Basically extreme nihilism. That's why its not a called a red pill, since beyond that. "John took the blackpill recently. He is depressed since that..." "Tell him to just take the Bluepill then" "Impossible. once you go black you'll never go back"

I reckon @SilentJohn@kbin.social realised they were not going to be Kaz, got depressed then put on (bad) weight.

[–] GreyGhost@lemmy.one 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thanks for the detailed explanation, Lem-friend. So this means some people think lifting is pointless?

[–] ccunix@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Well, clearly some people do. If not everyone would have a squat rack at home

I think that in this case it means that the person who "gets blackpilled" is getting disappointed, to the point of depression, with their perceived lack of progress. Even if that "lack of progress" is because they are not a once in a generation genetic freak.

[–] biofaust@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

The sounds and the smell. If I were the manager I would turn off that shitty music: grunts, hisses, thumping and clanking is the only soundtrack I need.

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