Think
of this column as a public access Atomic Dog, a place for the T-mag staff
and anyone else to get something off their chests, encourage, inspire, or just
go off on a bug-eyed, frothing-at-the-mouth rant.
In
this installment, Westside Barbell guru Dave Tate digs deep to answer the question,
"Why do we put ourselves through this?"
When you're attempting a 600-pound bench press, things can go wrong fast. I'd
just missed 600 for the second time and something was definitely going wrong.
"Screw it!" I thought. "Keep the bar loaded!" It was that third miss that really
did my shoulder in. Now I had to find out if I was hurt, injured, or fucked
up.
This
is how I define the three stages of injury. When you're hurt it's really no
big deal. For the powerlifter or any athlete who pushes the envelope with maximal
weights, you're almost always hurt somewhere. This will usually just go away.
When you're injured, it doesn't go away and may require some time off and rehabilitation
work. When things get really bad you become fucked up. This is when things just
don't get better or injuries from long ago keep creeping back in. Now I had
to find out what stage I was in.
The
next bench workout, I couldn't lower the bar without pain. It was like someone
was sticking a knife in my neck. So I trained around it for a few weeks and
it didn't get any better. I knew I was on the line between injured and fucked
up. After five months I decided to see a doctor. Five months without benching
over 315 was no good, so I knew something had to be wrong. I was told I had
four bone spurs that needed to come out and a torn terres major that needed
to be fixed. Surgery was scheduled and I was going under the knife (again) in
pursuit of a bigger bench. I wondered how long it would take to come back from
this one. After a previous surgery for a pec tear, it took over a year to break
my PR.
During
check-in at the hospital, the nurse asked how I injured myself. I told her it
was from years of abuse. Then she saw the other surgery on my record and asked
if that was also from the weights. Yes, I told her, and why do you ask? In that
cold room with nothing on but a damn open-backed gown, she asked the question
I couldn't get out of my head.
"Why
do you keep doing it?"
I just laughed it off and was wheeled to the pre-op room.
Going
in for surgery makes you feel like a convict on death row. Pre-op is the last
stop before you reach the chair. The anesthesiologist told me he was going to
stick a long needle into my neck. It was the biggest damn needle I'd ever seen
and he was going to drill it through my trap. Doctors sometimes make small talk
while they do painful things to you, so he asked me how I'd injured myself and
I told him. He finished, turned to me and asked, "Why do you keep doing this
when you're as beat up as you are?"
The
same question two times in the last half-hour. I laughed it off again, but this
time the question stuck with me. As they rolled me into the operating room,
I saw my doctor standing there. I was in la-la land by this time, but still
had the presence of mind to tell the doctor to take care of me. He had my life
in his hands, after all. He reassured me he'd done this thousands of times and
hadn't lost a patient yet. Hadn't lost anyone? Hell, I wasn't literally
talking about my life, I was talking about my ability to bench! Couldn't he
see how important this was to me?
I
was instructed to count backward from ten. Ten… nine… and as I drifted
off… eight… that question came back into my mind… seven…
Why do I do this?… six… and I was gone….
….back
into the gym, with that same question ringing in my head. As I walked in I noticed
a certain smell to the place. A special blend of sweat, chalk, silicone spray,
and liniment. This is the same smell you find in any hardcore gym. The smell
of hard work, pain, and discipline. The smell of courage. To a true lifter this
is the smell of home, the place you want to be. I thought to myself, "Could
this be it? Could this smell be what it's all about?"
While
waiting for our regular start time of 8:30AM, I began the process of applying
the liniment. During this time my training partners are also arriving. They're
joking, talking trash, making bets, catching up. During the warm-up I wonder
if this is what it's all about, if this is why I do it. Is this kinship with
my training partners the real answer?
At
8:30 the attitude of the gym changes. It goes from comedy and friendship to
aggression and war. The first movement of the session is the most important.
This is the real deal, the lift we try to break records on, the one that you
will kill or it will kill you. The music is turned from the radio to something
more hardcore. DMX, AC/DC, it really doesn't matter as long as it's loud. I
feel my heart rate begin to speed up and the aggression building. I see that
look of aggression in everyone's eyes. If you were to walk into the gym at this
point in time not knowing what was going on, it'd be best to turn the hell around
and come back later. As I looked at my surroundings I thought, "Could this be
it? Could the music and aggression be the reason why I do what I do?"
As
we start the max effort movement we begin with light weights and work up to
the "courage weight," the actual max weight. As I grip the bar I feel the cold
metal in my hands. The sharp knurling brings a little pain to my callused hands,
the hands that have spent a lifetime with the iron. The feeling of the bar brings
on the excitement of striving to get to the big weights, the weights only some
will ever achieve, the place where only those who know how to dream big will
ever get. Could this be it? Could the feel of steel be the reason why I do what
I do? Could the training under maximal strain be the reason why I do it? Is
it the shouts of encouragement as I attempt a new PR? Or do I do it for the
rage and the release that only heavy lifting can provide?
After
everyone does their lifts, it's my turn again. I tell them that I'm done for
the day, but the words come back to me like a knife in the back. What the hell
do you mean you're done? Put on a quarter and get the hell under the bar! This
time I have to dig deep inside and pull out another person to deal with this
shit. Dave is not made for this, but my alter ego is. We call him Zippy, and
Zippy gets the job done when Dave checks out.
So
I dig down inside and find that other person and he approaches the bar. The
focus on the task cancels out everything else that's going on. While getting
under the weight I feel my heart pounding in my chest and the aggression and
rage is at an all time high. As the weight is unracked there's no doubt in my
mind that I'll crush this weight. Could this be it? Could lifting a weight I
first thought would kill me be the reason why I put myself through all this?
Could the blood, sweat and tears of training be the reason why I do what I do?
Now
I'm at the IPA Nationals walking through the warm-up room. You can feel the
excitement growing. Gym bags are scattered throughout and there are lifters
everywhere. Teens, masters, amateurs, and pros all mix together. The sport of
powerlifting has a place for everyone. All of them are looking forward to their
time of judgment, their moment of truth. As I look around and see friends I've
made over the years and new friends I'll be making on this day, I wonder again,
Could this be it? Could being among all those who love the iron as much as I
do be the reason why I do this?
Now
I'm at a meet, in the hole and waiting. This is the day you train for, the moment
in time that once over, nobody can ever take from you and can never be relived.
To a lifter this is his shining moment, the moment that'll determine if the
work was done in the gym or not. If you did your work and it was the right work,
this moment will be one of the greatest of the year. If you didn't do your work,
then this will serve as a constant reminder of where you went wrong, a learning
experience that can make you better.
I'm
on deck now, one lifter out, getting wrapped and suited up for a big squat.
Am I ready for the task at hand? Is my mind in the right place? I'm surrounded
by a potent mixture of encouragement and high-octane aggression. My name is
called and it's time to turn it on. This is where I want to be. This is what
I train for. Here it's all up to you; no one can lift the weight for you. Fear
is not an option. This is the day you spit in the face of fear and drive on.
It's time to release to rage.
The
weight is laughing at me as I step under the bar, but it feels light. The game
is already over. I know already who the winner is going to be on this day. Two
seconds later, with a nose full of blood and stars in my eyes, I rack the weight
and three white lights ignite as bright as the Vegas strip. A new PR. A weight
I only dreamed of lifting ten years ago. Could this be it? Is this why…
…and
someone is saying my name again and again. The doctor. I'm in the recovery room
and doped out of my mind. Later, on the way home, the answer to the question
hits me like a ton of bricks. I do what I do because this is what I do.
It's not the smell of the gym. I've been in many gyms and loved them all. They
all didn't have the same smell. It's not my training partners. Training partners
come and go. It's not the cold steel or feel of the bar. Some bars are fatter
than others, some are thin, some have less knurling while others are sharp as
hell. I love the feel of them all.
It's
not the strain and it's not the music in the gym. Music changes with time but
my passion stays the same. It's not the old and new friends that are met and
made at competitions. Friends come and go; lifters retire and quit. It's not
the personal records that are set in the meets. If this was the case I would've
quit a long time ago. In twenty years of competing I think there may have been
only three meets were I broke a PR in every lift.
So
what is it? Why do I do what I do? It's not one thing or one moment. It's the process I have the passion for. It's all of it. I love it all and this
is why I do what I do. Twenty years ago, a thirteen year old kid picked up a Powerlifting USA magazine and dreamed of being in the top ten. On this
day the passion began and the quest started. Twenty years later this kid still
hadn't let go of his childhood dreams and posted a top ten total.
When
someone asks you why you do what you do, just grin. We do what we do because
this is what we do. Our passion has built our character, and our character
defines us. Never lose your passion.
One
of Dave's particularly vivid anesthesia-induced hallucinations. |
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