Brian? wrote: » You should have a steak on your person at all times for eventualities like this. I have an 12oz ribeye(medium rare) in my wallet at all times.
cloudatlas wrote: » Was I the mofo? just started back lifting was using a 20kg bar with the supplementary weights, I just finished my squats and moved on to doing lunges and pause squats and a lad came over and asked me if I would swap my 20kg for his 15kg bar as I was not lifting significant weight. I felt patronised and said no that I paid for the gym like everybody else and I wanted to use this bar.
cloudatlas wrote: » No mention of a competition, he was front squatting, significant weight was 65 from what I could see before I left, plus he got a 20kg bar 8 minutes later. No, the approach was very arrogant, 'I deserve this'. I'm more than willing to give people weights I'm not using and let them work in but felt that he was asking for something fundamental to my work out. Anyway I'm still a bit at sea when it comes to gym etiquette so thanks for the feedback.
Alf Veedersane wrote: » If they were preparing for a comp or had a good reason for wanting the bar (eg using a stiff bar for deads) AND if they weren't a dick about it, I'd swap bars. Otherwise gtfo.
brownej wrote: » I can kinda see his point for wanting the 20kg bar as the 15kg bars are usually a narrower diameter bar, however asking to swap a bar when someone is using one is a bit much!
Brian? wrote: » You should have a steak on your person at all times for eventualities like this.
Cake Man wrote: » Finally coming to the end of a fairly slow bulk, just looked back over numbers from the last few months. In early Sept '16, I weighed 74.5kg and as of today I'm up to 82.9kg which equates to a weight gain of 8.4kg over ~7 months. Average of about 0.3kg or 0.64lbs per week. Does this seem a bit too little? I've always been conscious of piling on too much, of which most of it would just be fat and I know the body can only build at most something like 1-2kg of lean muscle per month. I plan on cutting for a few weeks to get rid of a small bit of excess fat before starting the loop again.
Mellor wrote: » Oh man, today I fk'd up big time. Changing up my workout order this week, had a bodyweight workout with a mate from work planned today. Around 11 he sends me an email saying he can't make it, lets do tomorrow. No problem I think, I'll just do Bench/Deadlift instead... ...just about to walk to the gym and it hits me. I had oats for breakfast, disastershop.
hooplah wrote: » No, that dude is the mofo. He should put an extra plate on each end and live with it. Unless he is putting so many plates on it that he just can't fit an extra 2.5 kg plate on each end.
DylanJM wrote: » I'm not really arguing for or against socks in a gym. All I'm saying is that from a gyms POV they are they likely reasons why they don't allow it. I'd imagine their insurance policies have something in them relating to people having to wear some form of footwear while on the gym floor.
bluewolf wrote: » I do too but that doesn't cut it at a comp
DylanJM wrote: » I imagine gyms enforce it due to hygiene and safety.
Brian? wrote: » They may well. But I can't see any safety or hygiene issues.
Mellor wrote: I deadlift in my socks. Am I the weirdo minority??
Mellor wrote: » I deadlift in my socks. Am I the weirdo minority?? And not deadlift slippers/socks, my normal sicks. I just take off my shoes and go. I've enough specific gym-footwear already.
VW 1 wrote: » I went from squatting to deadlifting while still wearing my adipowers last week, without noticing until after. They were relatively comfortable for deadlifting in. Anyone else take that approach?