Saturday, July 6, 2019

Contextualizing Modern Bodybuilding in Health and Fitness (Part 1) :

Bodybuilding health is a new concept that finds a very stratified society. We are bodybuilders and they are just fitness trainers. The feeling is mutual the other way round. The concept of marrying health and fitness into bodybuilding training is alien to us and even opposed at some quarters. Let us take a brief walk through the history of bodybuilding so that you may appreciate why bodybuilding health is the hybrid engagement that best fits your life.

Eugen Sandow, our honored father of the modern bodybuilding as we know it, started the art at around 1880's. His sole intent was to reconfigure his physique attractively for public display. To him muscles became the ultimate achievement of bodybuilding training. That is the heritage granted us all through the decades up to the moment Dexter Jackson lifted up the 2008 Mr. Olympia trophy, and even today. Through all these years, bodybuilding was never been meant to improve one's health and quality of life. It was all an addiction to muscle mass, muscle strength, pump and physique dimensions.


When the first-ever grand bodybuilding competition hit the America continent on January 16, 1904 at the New York's Madison Sq. Garden, Al Treloar won because he was the most masculine and not because he was healthy or because he was leading a good life.

Joe Weider and his brother Ben came into the game to facilitate a more specialized muscle-based bodybuilding training that had nothing to offer the health and fitness of an individual. Theirs was the muscle mass business. Larry Scott, the muscle legend, Sergio Oliva and Serge Nubret were the stars of the 60's muscle mass decade.
↪ Contextualizing Modern Bodybuilding in Health and Fitness (Part 2)
Contextualizing Modern Bodybuilding in Health and Fitness (Part 1)
Contextualizing Modern Bodybuilding in Health and Fitness (Part 1)
Contextualizing Modern Bodybuilding in Health and Fitness (Part 1)
Contextualizing Modern Bodybuilding in Health and Fitness (Part 1)
Contextualizing Modern Bodybuilding in Health and Fitness (Part 1)


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