New Year’s eve. The time for resolutions. Of course “resolutions” is a misnomer. Pretty much everyone has a resolution of the same type: lose weight, or the more extreme version “get ripped”.
Our society lauds the sculpted body, especially those that used to be obese, the “ripped again”. They star in late-night advertisements, adorn the walls of the local gym, and their selfies dominate our social media feeds. In heralding them as models of human spirit we ignore the reality: these people have a problem with exercise, which we ought discourage through “fit-shaming”.
Now, if your bizarrely toned body is in aid of a physical job or your love of sports, great. If you’re trying be a bit healthier rather than a Spartan specimen of human perfection, all the best.
However, if you want to have rock hard abs and gigantic arms, just because, you’re a weirdo.
People do not just get ripped. It requires extraordinary commitment. You have to build the muscles with regular weight lifting. Then you have to drop the fat with extreme cardio (possibly an hour a day) and a serious low calorie diet (no sugar, no beer, no fun).
Spending endless hours exercising in a world with so many amazing books to read, art to see, natural wonders to absorb, people to meet, and delicacies to try is not a sign of health but rather a sign of sickness.
This is the funniest post we’ve ever read about avoiding the gym.
About now the ripped people (if they even had time in between work outs to read this far) are objecting: but being strong is useful! This is true. Being strong can be useful. Strong quads means we can stand-up, a core means we can hold ourselves upright. But I’ve never heard any medical practitioner equate being ripped as necessary to good health.
Top Comments
The method to get to a lean body is eat less than 2100 kcal depending on your body type and hit the gym 4h a week. I hate it when people say they have binge watched the whole Sopranos or GoT in two weeks but were, according to their own statements 'too busy to work out".
Believe it or not people with lean muscle and low body fat percentages don't always go to the gym to keep their abs ripped. A shredded body is just a secondary effect of a healthy lifestyle. I hit the gym hard because it improves my overall mood almost emmidiately after finishing my workout. It's a feeling most athletes enjoy after strenuous work. My body fat is roughly 10-12% and yes my abs are visible even when I sit down. Am I gonna be ashamed of that nbecause some insecure pessimist feels threatened by my physique? Not in a million years bud.
To sit their and spread the myth that most athletic people are simply weirdos who want to get big for is just a testament to your nature. Let me guess...dare I say you're just another couch potato who's nevever been pushed past their comfort zone beyond going outside and getting the mail every morning. Most people would call you a hater. But us fit people call individuals like yourself motivation.