Thanks C, appreciated. Dont worry about Nats.. I am de trained now after a few weeks holiday. Hopefully I can qual for next years nats
yeah you re one of these guys that wont compete until ur smiting fukin everyone.Ur ready nao.Negro pls.Take some advices from an ageing kunt.Life will fuk u up the ass at some point and not even give you the courtesy of a reacharound.If i could rewind wat i did,it would of been firstly keep training with the NZ reps i met,but i thought i could do it on my own and moved away.That delayed my progress substantially.Secondly i would of competed more and started earlier,you actually dont know wat ur total is until uve done it under the pressure of competition and regulations.And thirdly i would of....no ill shut up...but ur ready nao bud.Strike while ur hot,you dont know what the future will bring,and you ll progress faster hitting comps.You re likely to win ur first novice comp.APU is just starting and the talent pool isnt deep.
you could represent Australia but better to take a leap of faith and jump nao.
Gerry is spot on.
The number of people I have met that have missed out on a milestone in their life (competing) because they think they aren't strong enough is too many to contemplate.
Let me tell you a few hard cold facts.
1: No one gives a phuk how much you lift. When you turn up to compete, everyone is helping everyone. Everyone gets a clap and a cheer. Everyone is on the same page. Everyone, include world record holders or champions, go through the same terrifying ordeal to compete.
2: No one gives a phuk how much you lift. There is always someone who is stronger than you, smarter, better looking, richer, funnier, more popular, with a better job, a hotter girl, etc. No matter if you lift a pb or not, or set a record. Someone, sooner or later will break your number.
3: No one gives a phuk how much you lift. Once the chalk dust settles, the aches and pains ease away, the emotional turmoil and physical pain recedes, within a day or four everyone will have forgotten about your comp and what you lifted. Except for you. You will remember. You will remember how you trained for it, prepared for it, packed your gear and food, turned up for weigh in, made weight, set your openers, did your warm ups, got helped by everyone in the warm up room, got encouraged, took your heart in your hands and walked out after the call "The bar is loaded!", got your setup right and made your mark.
No one else will remember but you will.
When that day comes when you get your cancer diagnosis, or you have a heart attack or turn into a half zombie from a stroke, you will remember.
The kuntz that didn't do it will be what they are now, nothing, wishing they had taken the chance and shown some courage to turn up.
But above all else, no one will give a phuk, but you will.