I just Googled this but not sure if it's right
So to get really good at something.
To properly master a skill.
You:
A) Need to do it a lot.
There’s that 10,000-hour rule we’ve all heard about.
Which, when applied to the gym.
I’m not 100% convinced.
Because I’m not even halfway there 😂
(Around 2,000 by my estimates)
If you’re training on AVERAGE twice a week.
Or even three times a week.
Over a long time (10 years)
(You might train 4-5 times a week, but taking into account seasonability, missed sessions, missed weeks with holidays etc)
You’d still be a million miles away from that ‘mastering a skill’ number.
That should be humbling.
Because I’m still a beginner when it comes to weight training.
And B)
You probably need to ENJOY doing it.
Or at least enjoy some aspects of doing it.
You might not actually enjoy doing Split Squats.
They burn like mad and it’s an unpleasant feeling.
But you probably enjoy the feeling you get afterwards.
The quad pump.
Endorphins going.
So it’s a relatively sensible trade-off.
If you didn’t enjoy ANY aspect of training.
You’d struggle to get the 10k hours in.
Unless you’re the 0.0001% that can crack on without deriving enjoyment from your activity.
Andre Agassi famously said that he hated playing tennis.
Despite becoming hugely successful.
He just did it for money.
BUT by and large.
You’ll need to enjoy your training bit at the start.
To do it for long enough.
That you start progressing along the mastery path.
Meaning you enjoy it even more.
AND see significant results from it.
Which takes more time than you think / hope for.
I.e, 12 months not 12 weeks.
Have an awesome Sunday 👊
Harry







