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By Phil Stevens
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In part 3, I will build on the
initial mental and preparatory steps needed in gaining an
athletic mindset to your body comp goals, as cover in Part
1 and part 2. Now its time for some practical application
to the performance based approach to losing fat, getting
RIPPED, Looking good Nekid, or as athletes
put it, cutting weight", and why this positive
approach is successful.
As I ended the last installment
its Go time, I had done my thinking, done
my planning, now it was time to shut up and get to work. No
thinking, no over thinking, just Get Er Done
Disclaimer: The following is
by now means a dietary or training recommendation. The important
message to capture here is NOT the numbers, parameters, or
approaches applied but how they were applied, the mind set
and approach to them.
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Dont waver, stick to it.
Long story short. I made changes
from day 1 and stuck to it.
I went low carb, (STRICT) I read
the first chapter of the Atkins diet, the induction phase, and just
stuck to it with whole foods no supplements, no fat loss agents,
etc. I ate 20 grams of carbs a day. Day in, day out, no cheating.
I didnt count calories. I just kept carbs low and let it rip.
I swapped my beloved beer out for whiskey on the rocks. No, not
optimal, but it for damn sure worked.
I'd wake an hour early in the morning
to train three times a week. This for me meant 3 am. I had to be
on the job site by 5:30 and it was a 45 minute drive. Not to mention
I had to go to full time college as well. Id get a small snack then
hit the weights, while letting my breakfast cook.
I had bought a Weider power rack.
It came with an Olympic bar, 300 lbs in weight, a training log and
a little poster with exercises. I set those exercises up in a circuit
and Id run them NON stop until I had finished each one, then
I would rest. I'm sure if I dug deep enough I could find my log
but it was something along the lines of Bench, squat, Pulldown (later
chins), military press, leg curl, leg extension, Bent over row,
abs and obliques. Give or take.
I'd hit that circuit three-four times,
I cant recall, Then hit the shower. Dry off, dress, stuff my face
with eggs, bacon, meats and cheese, grab my lunch and tool bags
and hit the road.
Progress came, and came fast. I was
shedding fat like my dog sheds fur in the spring. Each week fed
the next. The results made me even more dedicated. Progress is what
I was concentrating on. The little positive things. I got one more
rep on those sets, I need new jeans again, I can do chins now, that
gal just grabbed my butt. In under three months I went from 300+
blubbery lbs to a pretty damn shredded 215. I stayed there Happy
as a peach living the same diet and basic training for nearly a
year.
I was not limited in what I could
achieve. I had zero doubt. I was focusing on the positive things
and accepting the steps it took to get them. There were NO negatives
I was giving up. There were simply things that did or did not fit
in my world, for my goals. I did not miss, desire, or crave things
I would not allow because I chose to not allow them. They were and
are not evil they just werent in my plan. I didnt have
one cold beer, not one piece of cake, not one potato chip for over
a year and I flat out didnt want one. I was happy as a Charles
dog eatin cat shit.
One battle at a
time
My goal was,
as they have to be, one sided with multiple steps leading toward
that singular large goal.
I wasnt looking to pack on a
ton of lean mass and lose buckets of body fat at the same time.
To tackle that one goal, and then think about the next one. A football
team doesnt start thinking about the next season during the
current one. Or an athlete the 2012 Games just prior to performing
in the 2008 games, and neither should you. The minute you do, you're
DONE. You just crapped out on your goal. You lost.
Pick your ONE battle and Take IT,
GET IT. Give one goal your all and likely youll knock
down some other goals along the way. Once you get there and relish
in your victory, then think about the next goal and the steps it
requires. Dont try to drive your car on two streets, its
the fast road to know where.
I was focused not on what I was missing
or giving up but on what I was gaining. It was a transformation
of beauty, and I sweated confidence out of every pore. I wreaked
of it. It bleed into every part of my life, and every person I met
could feel and see my mindset. Its a beautiful thing to know
your in control of you, nothing can touch you.
It was a hell of a transformation.
I lost feet not inches, my cho levels plummeted, mentally and physically
I reached a pinnacle I could prior have never dreamed of, and set
the stage for my further steps. I can and will do better. I reached
the realization it wasnt hard once I was set to a goal, and
had my steps in place. It was just action, and my first glimpse
of what the athletic mind set can achieve.
Now sit down and pick your goals,
your battle. Figure out the steps to them. Accept what your going
to have to do, not give up. Put some things on the back burner.
They arent evil, they just DONT fit your current goals.
Then put those to action.
In the next
installment, the downfall. Where, and how I fell out of graces and
lost track of this mind set, and the havoc it caused.

About The Author
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Phil, while attaining both his
Bachelors and Masters degrees in studio art found another
passion, that of training and nutrition. A constant student,
his real-world under-the-barbell and behind-the-fork approach
has led to many an opportunity, experience, and change in
his life as well as those he has worked.
Phil currently, aside from his
varied work with Team Staley, is a working and showing artist
(http://www.philstevens.com).
His current personal fitness goals are to become a competitive
force as middleweight strongman competitor, while building
upon his power lifting experience in which he has seen as
high as a top ten national ranking; with a two year goal of
obtaining an elite ranking as a 242 or 275lb weight class
RAW power lifter.
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