Steroids have been with us for a long time now and are used best under careful medical supervision.
The cult of superman was always absurd, but then it does not go away either. What we do know is that muscle bulk was possible in the past through extended hard physical labor along with ample food and youth as well. That was a pretty high price to pay for something that disappeared almost instantly when you let up.
A far superior body model was shown us by Bruce Lee and this is actually sustainable as well without using Steroids. The focus there is for speed. This matters as the difference in deliverable energy varies as the square of the velocity. Bruce Lee achieved fist velocities of over 40 miles per hour which was unusual to say the least.
Steroids are clearly used by everyone who becomes a serious athlete, not least because it becomes simply impossible to keep up with your training. What they do is allow rapid recovery from the necessary heavy training. What ordinarily demands days of recovery is done in hours. Of course, you would be using them.
Living Life Like a Steroid Superman!
By Eugene S. Robinson
Because those rages aren’t going to ’roid themselves!
UFC Light Heavyweight champion Jon “Bones” Jones got them via “tainted” supplements, was suspended and had his life upended for a period of time. Sylvester Stallone
got busted for trying to sneak them into Australia a few years ago. And
there are lists of baseball and football players getting popped on the
regular for performance-enhancing drug use. Which brings us to an
important question.
WHEN WILL THIS MADNESS END?!?!
Specifically, when will people back the hell up and leave we who have actually used steroids
the hell alone. Alone to imagine that we could stop speeding cars and
subway trains. Alone enough to dream that being 300 pounds is still too small.
I mean, we all have our dreams, and mine for a period of time was
benching 405 pounds, squatting 495 and dead-lifting over 700. And to
dream like that, to dream big, you also have to be in the full animal
grip of steroid abuse both wild and wilder. Don’t believe me? Then
listen well to Episode 2 of OZY Confidential, where I, without
pause or hesitation, make it clear why I’m the last truly free voice in
America: I’m going to tell you the hard, cold truths about the demon
beast of steroid usage.
Won’t you join me?
Eugene S. Robinson
This is not at all a story about compensation. Or overcompensation.
It’s
a story about steroids, but it has nothing to do with prevailing ideas
of steroid users’ sense of inadequacy. I’ve always felt beyond adequate.
Super-adequate, if there’s such a thing.
Since the first moment
cameras and I existed in the same place and space, photos of me flexing
my biceps were committed to film. Extra-masculine ideas about the
pecking order and my place in it were caught on camera as I stood in the
bathtub. And in front of the TV. And in the kitchen. I was 3 years old,
and my mother and father had no idea that this wouldn’t just be a
phase.
For lifelong lifters like me, did it matter if I used or not?
My cartoon choices told the tale: Hercules, Gigantor, the Green Hornet, Speed Racer. The tag line for Gigantor
was “bigger than big, stronger than strong,” and I was as addicted to
this Japanese import as any kid could be. Then there were the comic
books and, more important, the ads in the back of the comic books
touting the genius of Count Dante, the “world’s most dangerous man,”
along with Charles Atlas and the insult that made a man out of Mac — my
first gander at bodybuilders. While other kids gathered around and went
“ewww…,” there was nothing I wanted to do more.
Which explains the martial arts, the bodybuilding, the street fights, all embraced to greater or lesser degrees of success. I was — and there’s no better way to put this — power mad.
But I had refused the always-ready access to performance-enhancing drugs.
See, I was a fanatical purist and believed the oft-told tale in Joe Weider’s Muscle
mag: All of what I saw within its pages was achievable through
“conventional” means. Meaning the steadfast pumping of iron with a heavy
complement of multiminerals, multivitamins, B-complex, brewer’s yeast,
niacin, protein powders, pituitary and adrenal gland extracts — a bleary
bevy of over-the-counter lunacy.
My bodyweight entering my last
bodybuilding show was a lean 190 pounds, 6′1″. And the show? The
California Naturals in San Diego. Naturally. And my attempt at doing it
the right way was rewarded with a last place finish. Naturally. Because
no one else on the stage with me was natural, by any definition. The
competition strictures were clear: steroid-free for at least a year. So,
of course it was “legit.” Quote marks intact. And the polygraphs they
gave us before made sure of that. Sarcasm, also intact.
The
organizers didn’t even see a glimmer of guilt when they asked if I had
ever taken steroids and I answered “no” while wearing a backpack full of
them, bought legally in Tijuana for friends. And I had not. Yet.
But last place. Against guys who were 6′3″, 230 pounds and “natural.”
The
drive back home was long and quiet, and the ceaseless thinking went
thusly: For the occasional lifter, steroids made little to no sense. But
for lifelong lifters like me, did it matter if I used or not? And did I
need to justify it by claiming I needed steroids to be competitive? A
fraction of the hundreds of dollars spent on bogus supplements would be
spent paying my friends back for the deca-durobolin, maxibolin and human
chorionic gonadotropin in my backpack.
I was about to become a steroid user.
Three days after the initial injection and the pills (known inside the fence as “orals”), I had forgotten I took them.
Until day 3.
Then:
freight train. I no longer needed recuperation time between reps,
between sets or between workouts. I was stronger, faster, hungry like a
stevedore, and even more than that? My mind was like a laser,
and over the coming eight weeks of what I learned was called a “cycle,” I
was super-refreshed on only about four or five hours of sleep.
Sure,
there were the warnings fired up by friends and associates. Shrunken
testes, acne, roid rages. There were others I knew who were claimed by
steroid use: Gary Aprahamian,
a 380-pound teenager who could curl the back end of a Toyota and
bench-press 605 pounds (not at the same time), dead from liver ailments;
Gordon Kimbrough, in jail for roid-rage-fueled murder.
The
scientific community tried saying there were “no scientific studies
proving the effectiveness of steroids in muscle building,” but people of
the sauce didn’t need a study to prove what they could see: In my case,
about 15 extra pounds. And not a rage in sight.
But
these things have to be reconciled. And they were, facing an empty
medicine cabinet and all of the horrors that the previously mocked
scientists claimed would come: mood swings, depression and sleep
problems. It’s where I imagine all the press conference crying comes
from when pro athletes get caught and called to account. I mean, this is
what you do when everything good has gone, right?
There’s a catch when
you deal with the devil. The drugs encourage you to do the opposite of
what you most need to do. You need to taper off — but who wants the
party to end?
It had been the best of times and became, officially, the worst of times. Weird worst times.
Like watching Scrooged and bursting into tears when Bill Murray delivered a homily
about the need to put a little love in your heart. I played it for
laughs, but close to the end of a two-week post-cycle misery, I had to
acknowledge that this was a dangerous drug, not to be tampered with
without research, planning and the able assistance of a medical
professional who didn’t work out of his car.
While it’d be nice to
say that I learned a lesson here, it was no more than learning there’s a
wrong way to do them and a right way to do them. The next time, and
there was a next time, I did them much more sparingly and with a much
better result. To wit: I hit 265 pounds of muscled geniality (still
never a glimmer of a rage). A weight I kept until realizing in a moment
of clarity, while watching a friend haul a garbage bag of used syringes
to a needle exchange, that this was not a sustainable lifestyle. And
besides which: What was the point?
But there are strange realities
that go along with being 206 pounds, which is what I am now. A wider
variety of fashion choices, for one. More frequent street challenges
from strangers, true, but also: better cardio, martial arts competitions
in a lighter weight class, happy knees, increased mobility and a
decreased likelihood of sobbing at Scrooged.
But I’d be
lying if I said that passing by the muscle mags at 7-11 doesn’t make me
pause a beat longer and long for the days of the barge-like berth the
world cleared for me when I was a stone’s throw from 300 pounds.
Lo, how the mighty have fallen. And a damned good thing, too.
This
is the ninth installment in a series of True Takes from the
eclectically and electrically lived life of OZY’s own Eugene S.
Robinson.
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