Transcript

00:00:00- Well, what I love about you is that you've done things
00:00:02at the ultra elite level within bodybuilding,
00:00:06but the advice that you're giving right now
00:00:07is very practical for the everyday person.
00:00:09And I'm not a psychologist,
00:00:10but I'm gonna venture a hypothesis here,
00:00:12which is that some of that has to do with the fact
00:00:14that you grew up blue collar background from Birmingham,
00:00:17working full time while building out
00:00:19your bodybuilding career.
00:00:20You didn't come to it with a briefcase full of cash
00:00:23and have the opportunity to just say,
00:00:25well, how much training can you do?
00:00:27Well, let's figure it out.
00:00:28Like you had to be very practical.
00:00:29And my guess is that you had to be very practical
00:00:31about recovery and nutrition as well.
00:00:34You probably, I'm guessing there was a point in your life
00:00:36where you couldn't afford grass-fed meat shipped in
00:00:39from south of France and this guy.
00:00:42I'm not saying you do that now.
00:00:42- Let me tell you a story, man.
00:00:43When I was a British champion,
00:00:47that was a big thing back then, British champion, right?
00:00:503,000 people in the audience packed out.
00:00:53We had buses coming from our gym,
00:00:55all this stuff, you know, air horns.
00:00:58This great accolade, I'm British champion now.
00:01:00And I went home.
00:01:02I got no car.
00:01:04I'm living in a council estate.
00:01:08It's like projects, you know?
00:01:10Council estate.
00:01:11I got no carpet in my bedroom.
00:01:13I don't even have a proper bed, I just got a mattress.
00:01:15I got a TV that barely works and I got a trophy.
00:01:19I'm like, wow, look, I'm British champion,
00:01:23but nobody gives a really.
00:01:24Like, you know, I do and the people
00:01:25that's in the bodybuilding community,
00:01:27but this hasn't translated into anything yet.
00:01:30It took me about five years of really like, you know,
00:01:35100% dedication for me to turn pro.
00:01:39And the ironic thing is, I guess,
00:01:43like when you're starting and you've got nothing,
00:01:45nobody's very interested and nobody wants to help you.
00:01:48When you start, when you become successes,
00:01:50then successful, people want to help you
00:01:52'cause they want to help themselves,
00:01:53which is fair enough.
00:01:54It's a transaction, but until then, no.
00:01:59So I got my first car when I was 25.
00:02:04All my friends were driving 18, 19.
00:02:07But the funny thing is,
00:02:08I didn't feel like I was missing out on anything.
00:02:10I knew I was on this mission
00:02:12and this in itself was so powerful.
00:02:15Like nobody else had this mission that I was doing,
00:02:19which was to change my life, basically.
00:02:21And bodybuilding was the vehicle.
00:02:24So all the guys that I was training with,
00:02:26they were like just watching videos
00:02:28and listen to other guys in the gym.
00:02:30I was reading Mike Mensah, I was reading Arthur Jones.
00:02:33I was trying to figure it out for myself,
00:02:35which means you need a very independent kind of personality.
00:02:43And the fact that I've got all this,
00:02:45every single workout from 1983 to 1997,
00:02:49written down all the diets later on
00:02:51when I'm using anabolics, what I'm using and how long
00:02:53and all this stuff so I could analyze it,
00:02:57see what's working and what's not working.
00:03:00A lot of guys were like shooting in the dark,
00:03:03hoping they're gonna hit something, but they don't.
00:03:06And I didn't have time to waste.
00:03:08This was a mission.
00:03:11I didn't have skills, I didn't have a family, all this stuff.
00:03:14So bodybuilding was my road to change my life.
00:03:19Where it was going at first, I didn't know,
00:03:21but I knew it was going somewhere.
00:03:22I knew I could be very good at it.
00:03:24(gentle music)
00:03:44[MUSIC PLAYING]

Key Takeaway

Achieving elite-level results requires treating the craft as a systematic, data-driven mission, evidenced by fourteen years of meticulous record-keeping on training and diet.

Highlights

Winning the British bodybuilding championship provided no financial stability, as the individual continued living in a council estate without a car or proper furniture.

Transitioning to a professional bodybuilder required five years of total, 100% dedication.

Personal growth and financial success through bodybuilding remained elusive until professional status was achieved.

Every workout, diet, and chemical protocol used from 1983 to 1997 was meticulously recorded for performance analysis.

The first personal car was purchased at age 25, significantly later than peers who acquired vehicles at 18 or 19.

Bodybuilding functioned as a deliberate, singular vehicle for life transformation rather than a casual pastime.

Timeline

Initial Success and Harsh Reality

  • Elite bodybuilding success did not immediately correlate with financial stability.
  • Becoming British champion left the individual living in a council estate with minimal possessions.

The gap between competitive accolades and actual quality of life remained wide at the start. Despite winning a major title with 3,000 spectators, the individual possessed no car, no carpet, and only a mattress to sleep on. This contrast highlighted the lack of external support or financial translation for initial competitive success.

Strategy for Professional Development

  • Turning professional took five years of total dedication.
  • Systematic analysis of training and diet, including logs kept from 1983 to 1997, prevented the common practice of shooting in the dark.
  • Prioritizing the mission of life transformation enabled sustained focus despite the lack of initial external support or material goods.

Transformation required an independent approach, prioritizing reading expert materials like Mike Mentzer and Arthur Jones over listening to gym hearsay. By documenting every workout and diet protocol, the individual could isolate what worked, contrasting with others who hoped for results without data. This discipline sustained progress until success eventually arrived, validating the long-term, calculated approach.

Community Posts

No posts yet. Be the first to write about this video!

Write about this video