Built For Life: Motto for a New You
  Built for Life.â Kind of an interesting title, if you think about it, because it   has two meanings. The first is staying in attention-grabbing muscular shape for   as long as youâre alive and able to exerciseâ"you will remain âbuiltâ your entire   life, never embarrassed to peel off your shirt at the beach, lake or pool. And   as my colleague 60-plus-year-old bodybuilder Tony DiCosta so aptly put it,   âYouâll usually be the best built guy in the room.â (Talk about a conversation   piece!)
    
  The second meaning is that youâre mentally and physically tough, prepared for   whatever life throws at you. Youâre âbuiltâ to withstand the stress, pressures   and problems that come your way throughout your time on this planetâ"almost like   youâve created a bulletproof mental and physical fortress, able to deflect any   negatives, that attitude-altering artillery shot at all of us every day.
  
  Proper weight training can give you both of thoseâ"and contrary to popular   belief, it doesnât take joint-busting, spine-crushing poundages to make it   happen.
  
  In fact, training with max weights can be a negative, especially as you get   older. Sure, if youâre a young ego-driven dude looking for a monster bench   press, training heavy is where itâs at. Low reps and lots of sets will build   your strength to the extremeâ"but not necessarily lots of muscle, as Iâll explain   in future blogsâ"just be careful. Thereâs a cumulative cost. Iâm still dealing   with injuries I sustained during my powerlifting years.
  
  Iâm not saying powerlifting or power bodybuilding are bad training modelsâ"just   that throwing around mega weights is NOT necessary for you to build an   impressive bodybuilder-type physique, a body so muscular that people comment on   the size of your arms or the width of your back or the vascularity streaking   down your forearms. You can have a muscular look for a lifetime, and it doesnât   take soft-tissue damage or as much work as you thinkâ"if you train smart.
  
  Whether youâre 18 (thatâs Jonathan Lawson, my former training parter, in his 20s   in the photo above with us) and just starting the muscle-building journey or a   50-something trainee whoâs been lifting for decades (like me), lifting smart   means training in the most efficient, safest and fastest ways to build muscle   and burn fat.
  
  I promise you that Old School New Body is a no-B.S. programâ"thatâs because my   sole goal is for you to have all the ammunition you need to own a physique that   turns heads and raises eyebrows and one that supports your health and well   being. I want you to be able to keep that attention-grabbing, muscular lookâ"and   feel healthy doing itâ"for the rest of your days.
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