Why is it that the guys of my era, whether we knew about drugs, weren’t in such a hurry to get big? My theory is that we lived in a much ‘slower’ time in general. Before the internet there was no email. We had to write letters, put stamps on them, drop them in a mailbox and wait a week or weeks to get a reply. Reaching people on the phone wasn’t always easy. There were no cell phones, so you had to call people at home or their workplace, leaving messages and hoping for a call back. Photos were taken with cameras that used film, and you had to take the film somewhere to get it developed.
Don’t get me wrong. Drugs are absolutely part of the equation for the freakiest physiques — but they are just a part. Training and nutrition are more important and always will be. There I go again, trying to keep the young guys from getting huge, right? Nope. Not at all. Often when I read comments on Indian Bodybuilding Facebook page from young guys who spout the mantra that drugs are all that matter and proudly boast about their big cycles, I click on their profiles to see what they look like. Most of them don’t look as good as kids their age who compete in natural contests, and a lot of them look like typical 18-to-23-year-olds with a bit of muscle. None look remotely like pro bodybuilders, even though they are using the same drugs in the same amounts. Why? Because you can’t rush a great physique. Can a guy pack on a lot of size in a year or two of massive drug abuse? Sure, I suppose so. But most of them don’t look very good, and they certainly don’t look very healthy. I started training more than 30 years ago, in the early ’80s, never having heard the word steroid. My goal was to be much, much bigger, and I never thought for a minute it would happen fast. I knew it was going to take years. I didn’t even break 200 lbs (91 kg) until I had been training for six or seven years. Did I feel cheated that the process took so long and my gains were so slow? Not at all! I loved training, as I still do, and I saw it all as a challenge. It became my lifestyle, and it made me a stronger person in many ways that had nothing to do with the gym or muscles.
If I could sit down one-on-one with each of them, I would do my best to make them understand that bodybuilding is not a sprint. It’s a lifelong pursuit in which you can and should continue to improve for many years. There should not be such a frenzied rush to fulfill your ultimate potential as fast as possible. If you were building a house, would you expect to go from a vacant lot to a finished home in four or five days? Probably not. That house would almost certainly have issues down the line due to the rushed construction. So it would be with trying to make 10 years’ worth of progress on your physique in one year. Eventually, you’ll have problems. I urge those of you who are young or who are close to young people starting on their bodybuilding journeys to understand that Rome wasn’t built in a day — and neither is a great physique.
– Article by Ron Harris.
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