To truly be a lifter, lifting must get into your bones, it must live in the marrow of your being, and it must enter into the depths of your soul . I think it's safe to say that Doyle Kennedy was a real lifter. Lifting is an art—and it's this way with any artist. One can paint without being an artist, but that doesn't make the man a painter. One can write without being an artist, but that doesn't make the man a writer. One can practice religion without being an artist, but that doesn't make one a religious . And so it is with lifting. One can always lift without being an artist—many do that very thing—but those who do so will never truly be lifters. At one time, I practiced bodybuilding. I enjoyed it to no ends—I still do when it's good. I enjoyed the love, perhaps even the art, of "chasing the pump." At the time, I would have even called myself a bodybuilder. But then, it happened. I discovered lifting, real lifting, and I realized
Essays on Old-School Strength Training, Classic Bodybuilding, Traditional Martial Arts, and Budo Philosophy