Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Motivation Monday: The Power of a Game Worth Playing
Episode Date: September 11, 2017This episode is part of a weekly series that I have dubbed “Motivation Monday.” (Yes, I know, very creative of me. What can I say, I’m a genius…) Seriously though, the idea here is simple: E...very Monday morning, I’m going to post a short and punchy episode that I hope gets you fired up to tackle the workouts, work, and everything else that you have planned for the week ahead. As we all know, it’s one thing to know what you want to do, but it’s something else altogether to actually make yourself do it, and I hope that this series gives you a jolt of inspiration, energy, and encouragement to get at it. So, if you like what you hear, then make sure to check back every Monday morning for the latest and greatest installment. Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
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Hey, this is Mike from Muscle for Life and welcome to another episode of my podcast.
This episode is part of a weekly series that I have dubbed Motivation Monday. Yes, I know,
so creative of me. What can I say? I'm just a genius.
Seriously though, the idea here is simple. Every Monday morning, I am going to post a short and
punchy episode that I hope gets you fired up to tackle the workouts, work, and everything else
that you have planned for the week ahead. Because it's one thing to know what you want to do, but it's something else altogether
to actually make yourself do it. And I hope that this series gives you a jolt of energy
and encouragement to go ahead and do all of those things that you want to do. So if you
like what you hear, then make sure to check back every Monday morning for the latest and greatest installment.
Let's start this week's episode with a quote. This one comes from Aristotle, and it is,
we are what we repeatedly do. Greatness then is not an act, but a habit. Something important
is missing from many people's lives. Something that explains why they're so stressed,
anxious, and depressed.
Something that they try to brush aside
with entertaining distractions,
grandiosity, and things to do, see, and wear.
A gnawing undercurrent that leaves them feeling empty,
adrift, and defeated.
What is it you're wondering?
It's purpose, values, standards against which they can
measure their lives. In short, it's a game worth playing. This is what people aren't getting from
their jobs, their friends, families, governments, or more importantly, from themselves. And without it, without a game worth playing, nothing else
really matters. Life just becomes a sea of random events that only serve to further alienate us from
who we really are and who we really want to be. And so it goes for most people. Their lives just
happen to them, accidentally rather than intentionally, without rhyme or reason, direction or meaning. It doesn't have to be like this
though. Sure, fate has dealt us a hand, but we all get to choose how we play it. And
this is one of the reasons why I love fitness. I think that it's a game worth
playing. It has purpose, order, significance. It's an outlet for integrity, for intention,
and excellence. It fosters community, commitment, and a clear focus on worthwhile results.
The type of results that you can't buy, borrow, steal, or inherit. The type of results that
symbolize discipline, patience, work ethic, self-respect, and passion. The type of
results that speak louder than any words or posturing ever can. I think the fitness game
goes even a bit deeper as well. I think that it's a meta game, so to speak, because if you have what
it takes to conquer your psychology and physiology, then you might just have what it takes to reach
out into the world and conquer a whole lot more as well. In short, the better you get at the fitness
game, the better prepared you're going to be for every other game that you could want to play.
And if you want an archetypal example of this, a story that exemplifies it, let's talk about Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Born in Austria in 1947 to an alcoholic ex-Nazi who beat him as a child, forced him to do sit-ups
for breakfast, and ridiculed his boyhood dreams of becoming a bodybuilder, Arnold's rise to fame
and fortune was a master class in self-determination. As a kid, Arnie was determined to leave Austria and make something
more of his life. And he found inspiration in the most unlikely of places. And that was a magazine
article on the iconic bodybuilder turned movie star, Reg Park. It was at that moment that Arnold
saw the whole plan. He envisioned himself becoming the most muscular man in the world and then making
blockbuster movies and million-dollar paydays. That's exactly what he would do, he told himself,
and he immediately began training his body. His friends were amused. Come on, they would say,
you're dreaming. Give it up. His father was harsher. He told Arnold that his fantasies
were an embarrassment and arranged for him to be shipped off to the military at 18, where there would be no time or equipment for bodybuilding.
Or so he thought.
Arnold refused to be denied his destiny, and he resolved to do whatever it would take to
make it a reality.
So after long, grueling days of running, crawling, marching, shooting, and just general soldiering,
when everyone else
was literally collapsing from exhaustion, Arnold worked out, sometimes for hours, using chairs,
benches, bars, and whatever else was at hand to do dips, rows, and other exercises.
As usual, Arnold's peers lampooned his antics. He was a useless fool living in a dream world, they told him, but he wasn't phased.
He was determined to break through no matter what it takes. His singular focus in life became
reaching that goal, that vision he had of being a world champion. Arnold's first chance to make
a splash in the bodybuilding scene came when he was invited to compete in the Junior Mr. Europe competition in Stuttgart, Germany. There was a problem, though. It would
require that he abandon basic training and face severe consequences upon his return.
Night after night, Arnold turned it over in his mind. Was he really ready to go to jail to compete
in a bodybuilding show? Was all this really just a crazy fantasy? No, he told himself,
Reg Park did it and he can do it too. Again, he saw himself standing on the stage, triumphant,
just like his idol, and he knew he had to go. So he snuck out of the base. He stowed away on
a freight train and rode for 26 hours, borrowed another competitor's trunks because he didn't own any,
shuffled onto stage, and awkwardly presented his physique to the judges and crowd.
And he won first place. As you can imagine, this was a watershed moment for Arnold. It meant that
it wasn't just a dream. He had something to show for all of his work. Maybe he was unique. Maybe he really could do it.
But there was reality. He also was still enlisted in the Austrian army. And after unsuccessfully
trying to sneak back into his barracks, he was castigated by his superiors and thrown into
solitary confinement. After cooling down though, the officers wanted to know if it was true. Did
he actually go through all of that and
then win the show? Indeed he did, and it was all thanks to the rigors of basic training, he said,
playing up to his seniors. As men who value discipline above all, they accepted this
invitation to share in the victory and even started holding Arnold up as a model recruit.
From here, Arnold continued to build his physique while completing his stint in the army,
and ultimately worked his way to the highest pedestal in professional bodybuilding.
Hey, quickly, before we carry on, if you are liking my podcast,
would you please help spread the word about it?
Because no amount of marketing
or advertising gimmicks can match the power of word of mouth. So if you are enjoying this episode
and you think of someone else who might enjoy it as well, please do tell them about it. It really
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You can find me on Instagram at MuscleForLifeFitness, Twitter at MuscleForLife, and Facebook
at MuscleForLifeFitness. Becoming the best bodybuilder in the world was only a stepping
stone in his journey though. The next domain to conquer was the silver screen and so he went west,
only to be met with scorn. The awkward accent, the bulging muscles, the weird name.
None of it worked, he was told. Be realistic. It's not going anywhere. As usual, Arnold paid
them no mind and just got to work. He landed his first acting gig in 1970 to play, as fate would have it, Hercules in
a low-budget comedy called Hercules in New York, and then burst into the limelight in the 1982
box office hit Conan the Barbarian. This was the breakthrough that he needed, and from here his
popularity and success snowballed thanks to his performances in now iconic films like Total
Recall, Predator, Terminator, and Terminator 2. To date, Arnold's films have grossed over a billion
dollars, making him one of the most successful action movie stars of all time. We don't have to
go into all the details, but his run for the California governorship was just more of the same. No way, no how,
impossible, wins handily. Not bad for a starry-eyed Austrian kid whom nobody believed would or even
should amount to anything, right? So that was Arnold. Let's talk about you. What game do you
most want to play? Who do you most want to become? Most people sell themselves short when
they reflect on these types of questions. The second they try to visualize what they might be
or do, they have to contend with all the things they believe are wrong with them and all the
reasons why they should just downsize their dreams. For many, the desolate reality of who they currently are swallows any thoughts of who they
could be, and so they skid through life in a state of quiet desperation, ignoring the music that
remains trapped inside them. Moreover, even if you're willing to see yourself not as you are,
but as you want to be, how do you translate that optimistic abstraction into something
concrete and practical? How do you develop the courage of your convictions? Well, consider this.
What do you think might happen in your life if, starting tomorrow, today even, you began doing
all of the things that you know you should do and stopped doing all of the things that you know
you shouldn't. How do you think your life might change? How do you think you might change? Now
imagine if you were to live like that for the next 10 years. What do you think you might accomplish?
To what heights might you be able to rise? Well, the truth of the matter is none of us can really answer these questions accurately
because none of us really know what we are truly capable of.
For my part, when I self-published a little book called Bigger, Leaner, Stronger in 2012,
I had no idea that it would or even could go on to sell over 400,000 copies and counting,
making it the number one best-selling self-published fitness book of all time,
and then that I would go on to assemble a team of people capable of building a multi-million
dollar conglomerate of products and services, including traditional and digital publishing,
supplements, personal coaching, software, and more.
All I knew is writing that first book felt like something I should do and so I did it.
And then each successive development in my career has been guided by that same philosophy and intuition.
I spend as much time as I can doing the things that I feel I should be doing
and as little time as possible doing the things that I feel I should be doing and as little time as
possible doing the things that I feel I shouldn't be doing. And I really do think that there's no
telling where this journey will ultimately take me. So that's me. Again, what about you? What if
you were to start your journey today? Now, who might you become? What might you do?
Hey there, it is Mike again. And I just wanted to say that I hope you enjoyed this episode Who might you become? What might you do? and legionathletics.com because I've published over a million words of free articles on the
blogs on those websites on all types of things related to building muscle, losing fat, and
getting healthy. New articles go up every week on both sites as well, so if you like what you read,
then definitely hop on my mailing list and you
will be notified when new stuff goes live. My email subscribers also get exclusive deals on
my products and services and other goodies. So there's that too. Thanks again for listening to
this episode and I will see you in the next one. Oh, and before you leave, let me quickly tell you about one other product of mine that I think you might like. Specifically, my workout app, Stacked. It has tens of thousands
of users and close to 400 reviews on the Apple Store with a four-star average, and it helps you
get more out of your training in several ways. It helps you quickly and easily plan out your workout routines. It gives you
quick access to useful tools like plate math and one rep max calculation. It allows you to
visually track your progression in your workouts, as well as your body measurements and much,
much more. It's free to download too. So if you want to check it out, then head over to www.getstackedapp.com or just hit the iOS app store
and search for Stacked Workout and you will find it.