The Work Ethic Described — 30 Dec 2014

Backstage Prior to stage prep March 2014 Salt Lake City, Utah
Backstage Prior to stage prep March 2014 Salt Lake City, Utah

I don’t really know the meaning of the term “Work Ethic.”  I know that many people use it to describe a person who works hard and seems to be indefatigable in daily activities or the pursuit of their chosen goal or quest.  But come on!  Since when did “WORK” become an “ETHIC?”  Thus, my ignorance is manifest to all the world in the application of this phrase.

By the Pool Provo 2014 Only 175 lbs here

I’d like to take you through how I establish and carry out my daily training.  Then you can decide for yourself whether I have a “Work Ethic” or whether I am laser focused on the Prize.

Arise:
Alarm goes off at 4:45 AM. I get up use the “John” and lay out my training clothes for this morning’s workout.

4:50 AM: Weigh myself to be sure my body weight trajectory is still going UP!

4:55 AM:  Start Pounding Down my Supplements.  Liquids, Capsules, Powders, Tablets—all find their way down my throat.  I lay out supplements for my wife too.  She is my training partner who keeps me honest in my work and intense in the application of the requisite Exercise, Sets, and Reps.  She is my honesty policeman—She ensures that I do not cheat myself during my workout by becoming lazy or unfocused.  All guys should recruit their wives to this task.  She is involved up to her neck in our quest to win a National Title.  What a woman!

5:00 AM: Get Dressed and be sure all my training equipment is in my backpack that I will lug to the gym.  If there are special devices that my coach has asked me to wear or to utilize for certain exercises (Squeem, Straps, Belt etc.) then they are dropped in the bag.

5:10 AM: Fix 8-12 eggs (Fried or Poached) with 2-4 slices of toast and butter and sometimes jelly.  Other times I use peanut butter.  Often my wife makes a very dense protein shake for me that I drink in the car while driving to the gym.

5:30 AM:  Out the door with my wife to the gym.  It’s about a 5-7 minute drive.  In the mornings when it’s nice (spring, summer, fall) Christine rides her bike and I drive.  I’m driving to focus on the workout ahead (this is my story and I’m sticking to it).

My best training partner, Christine and I together.
My best training partner, Christine and I together.

5:45 AM: Begin training for that day.  I have a regimen that my coach, Justin Dees and myself have worked out for each of six days per week…..Monday – Saturday.  Justin has specifically chosen these exercises and these regimens for me to get the most out of me in a single session with sufficient rest between these workouts to allow me to recover and grow.

As I begin, I start with very light weights to get the blood moving into the selected muscle group for that day.  I quickly move up the weight to get to the poundage that allows me to get 8-12 reps for seven sets.  I repeat this with another exercise for the same muscle group and I change, repeating the task as noted above.  I pound through the workout for 1.5 hours or more and call it a day.  Sometimes I will do 10-15 minutes of cardio work on a treadmill or a stairmaster.

8:00 AM I take my wife to work and I return home to eat and do my job which I perform from home.

This regimen, as noted, is repeated daily for six days per week.  My diet is overseen by my coach who does measurements on me once per week to document that I am moving in the right direction.  Justin keeps careful records on me and guides my training and my diet.

I guess I have a “Work Habit” and maybe even a “Work Ethic”—–My personal definition or description of my effort is simple……If you want something you have to work for it. Nothing in this world is free and nobody will do it for you.  Thus, in order to win you have to work while your opponents play or while they sleep.  You/I have to develop a mindset that provides the necessary impetus to be our best.  Our “Work” must transcend the pain that is unavoidably a part of the process.  Our “Work” must allow us to disappear inside our minds to escape those who would discourage us.  During our “Work” we have to develop a mantra that drives us forward when we want to quit.  Our “Work” must lead us to that “zone” where it is surreal and where only you and the training apparatus are perceptible, palpable, and harsh.  This “Work” place is “ZEN” that no others can violate. This is the crucible where we are shaped by our “Work” to become Champions.

Yes, there is such a thing as a person possessing a “Work Habit” or “Work Ethic.”  But, I believe it only exists in a person who has decided that what they have set out to achieve is “Worth it!”

This is OUR TIME!  Develop that desire to achieve and the “Work Ethic” that is required to attain your goals.  You can have it!  Now go get it!

Until Next Time

Douglas E. Graham

Mid-Way — 8 Dec 2014

"Most Muscular" on Stage 21 June 2014, Utah Valley University, Provo, Utah
“Most Muscular” on Stage 21 June 2014, Utah Valley University, Provo, Utah

 

Well, I’m about Mid-Way to my stated (yet uncertain) goal of weighing at least 212 lbs. by the time I step onto the stage in Pittsburgh, PA for the National Bodybuilding Championships in Jul 2014.  I can officially tell all of you that this odyssey to move up 2-3 weight divisions and win this contest has been brutal.  The training and eating and heavy supplementation has taxed this little guy.  I have never eaten this amount of food over this period of time in my life.

I asked for a coach that would not pamper me and I got just the guy!  Justin Dees continually refuses to accept my complaints and my pre-existing false assumptions and beliefs.  He is slowly shaping my mind and my body into a uniform entity bent on nothing less than victory.  When I try to explain to him “how I do it” he listens carefully until I finish.  He then goes about the business of helping me understand why my previous practices have not worked.  He then inserts the proper exercise performed the correct way the optimal number of times.  Each exercise is designed to be taken to exhaustion and no further.  Justin sets the tone and the vector of my training.  He reminds me of why I came to him and what I told him I wanted to accomplish.  All of this is what Justin does to keep me on task, overcoming obstacles, —-  driving toward the prize.

The Mid-Way point is like reaching the highest and most difficult part of a journey. Once I have cleared the summit and can see the end, my heart begins to beat faster as the excitement permeates my whole being.  I am beginning to gather the energy and motivation to finish this task in a mighty way.  As I look to July 2015 each workout is becoming less burdensome.  The workouts are more focused and the desire to reach the points of exhaustion increases exponentially.  I love the sweat, the heat that spreads over the muscle group being worked that day, the pain that is deep and penetrating, and the satisfaction that I have moved the size of my muscles upward.

Mid-Way has been reached and now we begin to drive to the reward.  In our lives we are certainly beyond the Mid-Point.  Thus, for most of us, we have been pushing to finish our lives on our own terms and in some cases it is working.  Let me repeat again, “This is Our Time! Let’s not lose track of where we are and where we are going. Let’s focus on the “end game” and prepare to finish well.  Take care of yourselves such that you can attain and accomplish those things that are set before us.

Mid-Way belongs only to me right now and with Justin’s kick in the ass and the constant drum beat of his belief in me I will win.

Until next time!

Douglas E. Graham