seperating the "strong" from the merely "fit"

Published: Mon, 01/30/12

I just got back from Austin, TX.  The plane ride home was cool and weird.  It
was cool because I randomly had a seat next to Craig Ballantyne of Turbulence
Training but at the same time the lady sitting next to me on the other side was
chewing her finger nails the entire flight.
 
Weird right?  Thinking of weird, there were lots of tshirts for sale in Austin that
said, "Keep Austin Weird".  I guess they're proud of doing strange things..?..
 
Which reminds me, I have some more stories for you from the trip but I'll save
those for the next email.....
 
This is just a quick heads up that I have an interview with Former Swat
Commander and Executive Bodyguard Mike Gillette ready for you.
 
Mike is the creator of the Savage Strength System which I've decided to put
on sale for 50% of this week.  It expires Friday and this is to celebrate my
wife being in a super great mood all week since the PATS are going to the 
Super Bowl.
 
If you'd like to pick up a copy of Savage Strength for half off use this link.
 
Here we go........Interview with Former Swat Commander Mike Gillette
 
Me:  In your experience are strength and size of a muscle correlated?

MikeG1
MG: Research suggests that a larger cross-section of muscle tissue will yield greater contractile potential than a smaller cross-section of muscle tissue. But if this was all there was to the strength equation, then bodybuilders would also dominate the realm of strength sports. But they don't. The chief strength variable that almost everyone overlooks is the Central Nervous System. Often-times a smaller but more neurologically-efficient athlete can outlift a larger one.

Me:  Why do you feel it's more important to train for strength than it is for looks?

MG: Because I need a body that PERFORMS. After having had so many big, impressively-muscled guys come up to me and say "What you do is amazing..." , it becomes apparent that deep down, what everyone really respects is CAPABILITY. Meaning what you can DO rather than just how you LOOK. I am 49 years old and I am still out on the road. And whether it's for bodyguard work or a presentation of mind-body feats, my body has to be able to do WHAT I want it to WHEN I want it to.

Me:  What would you say to someone that is intimidated by the Savage Strength program and claims to be too old, or has a bad back or just isn't ready for something like this yet?

MG: I would say "Just try it out..." While it's true that there are some very tough exercises taught in the program, I specifically included some easier ones too. And that's because (as long as you pay attention to the detailed instruction) this program can be for ANYBODY. You just have to work within your present level of capabilities. You have to be smart about it. The program is self-calibrating. No matter how strong you are, you can adjust the intensity level by manipulating various training parameters which are explained in detail in the program manual.

Me:  What are the advantages of becoming stronger and more functional?

MG: Simple... in a physical context  you can do what you want You learn how to become the master of your body and not the other way around. Get strong and gain the strength to live the life you want... the life you've always wanted.

Me:  Briefly differentiate between muscular endurance vs. muscular strength.

MG: Endurance refers to output capacity sustained over a period of time. The longer the time-frame, the lower the intensity level. Strength refers to MAXIMUM output capacity. In my world, endurance is a quality I associate with "wellness" or "health", strength is a quality I associate with "taking action" or "saving lives". Strength give you on-demand usefulness to the world around you.

Me:  Mike, as former SWAT Commander was there ever a time that your strength training proved to be an asset?

MG: Too many to possibly count. For every meth-lab door kicked, every street thug I ever fought with, every suicidal person I wrestled a weapon away from and for every frightened child who took my hand and needed to know that everything was going to be okay... each one of those people needed to feel all my strength... for different reasons.  And for all of them, it was my DUTY to become as strong as I could be.


Me:  Do mentally tough people get stronger than those who aren't?

MG: They absolutely do. Strength training is hard work. And strength training performed at the ragged edge of your own capabilities is even harder. It is the ability to develop mental toughness that separates the STRONG from the merely "fit". You have to be able to break barriers to achieve something meaningful. And if you aggressively seek opportunities to REALLY break through to whatever your own "next level" is, you will likely get a glimpse of your best self.

Me:  Tell us something most people don't know about Mike Gillette.

MG: Between the scary resume, the bending and the breaking and the mind-power feats I do, some people have a hard time approaching me. It's interesting that kids have no problem coming up and asking me for pictures or an autograph or just to talk. But a lot of adults seem uncomfortable making that same overture. So, while I understand that a lot of what I do strikes most people as "unusual", it's not unusual to me. This is simply who I am and what I do. And it is vitally important to me to share what I do and the things I have been so fortunate to learn... all these unconventional techniques, methods and teachings with others.

Me:  In closing, why does the world need more strong men?

MG: Strong men, by their very presence, make their little corner of the world "better". What I mean by that is they make things safer, more stable, more sensible, more... BETTER. Discipline of BODY, Discipline of MIND, Self-Control... the world is always a better place when more men possess these qualities.

Me:  Thanks for your time.

MG:  My pleasure.  Check out this article to get 4-keys to savage strength.
 
Keep training hard,
 
Mike
LeanHybridMuscle.com
 
P.S.  Click here for the 50% off link to Savage Strength (this week only)