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5 days into my "cut". Posting to try to really keep myself accountable this time. If I have an end date and goal I'm more likely to stick to a plan, so here goes nothin. It's not much, but it's a start đđťđđŞđđťđđť

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It finally felt good to squat again. Didn't hit that heavy of weight, and boy am I sore. But damn it felt good.Â
ZHU X LONDON GRAMMAR - Strong(er).
Perseverance
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Habits of Strong Lifters
- Jim Wendler, Sept. 17, 2012
Consistency
Without a doubt, the strongest and best lifters in the world have consistently busted their ass in the weight room. For decades. Not weeks,  not a year, but decades. There are genetic freaks out there that achieve a high level of strength quickly, but comparing yourself to them is unfair and will probably drive you out of the sport and into a 10-year Pop Tarts & Vicodin bender. Now, consistency doesnât  always mean theyâre going balls out, every day. It means they chip away slowly, but surely.
Drive/Perseverance
Even with injuries, plateaus, loss of training partners, gyms, etc., the great lifters will find a way to adapt and overcome. If   that means training alone in a barbaric gym in their garage, they do it. If that means having to train in a commercial gym by themselves, they get it done. If that means they have to train around an injury, they research and find a way.Nothing will stand in their way and when an obstacle appears, they donât get frustrated; they simply find a different route around it. Itâs easy to be motivated and excited to train when everything is going your way. Itâs another thing to hit a wall, scramble, kick, and scratch until you look back and see the marks of blood and sweat you leave behind.
Open Mind (with Filter)
You have to be open to new ideas, but you have to also be wary of what you read. Usually an older, more experienced lifter can filter through some of the bullshit, but sometimes desperation can lead to some poor decisions. A lifter MUST have a core, a philosophy that he adheres to. He has to STAND for something. Yet he also has to learn to open himself up to new ideas and be smart enough to place them into his training without upsetting his core beliefs.
Now those are the âmind mustsâ of being involved with lifting for a long time. Here are the âbody musts.â
Stretching and mobility should be a priority.
Maintain decent conditioning levels â you donât need to be a marathon runner but donât turn into a heavy breathing slob either.
Use a full range of motion.
Understand the difference between muscles and movements.
You didnât start lifting weights to become smaller. (Some of you really need to let that one sink in.)
Train around injuries, not through them.
Write a Training Manifesto â I have a âTrain to be Awesomeâ   list that I refer to when I feel like Iâm losing track of where Iâm going/where Iâve been. Refer to this when youâre âlost.â Everyone   needs to have their own Training Manifesto and itâs all based on what you need   and want from training. You donât have to share this with anyone â just hold yourself accountable.
Donât be afraid to do what you want, not what others want you to do.   Donât hold yourself to othersâ standards â especially when your standards should be higher.
Training should be fun; thereâs joy in the pain of the process. When it becomes tiresome or becomes a âjobâ remember why you began training in the first place. Itâs not supposed to appease anyone but you.
Fads come and go, but the barbell remains the same. Respect it accordingly.
Photo courtesy: EliteFTS.