Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Umm, really, shame connected to powerlifting??

I’ve been reading a book – I Thought It Was Just Me (But It Isn’t); Making the Journey from “What Will People Think?” to “I am Enough” by Brene Brown. I am reading it as part of a professional development book club at work. I knew going in that I am already very comfortable speaking about shame in a professional manner, with my clients. You don’t do child abuse and child trauma work for over 10 years without getting comfortable with the concept of other people’s shame. I did hope that this book would help me learn new strategies and skills for advancing my conversations with my clients. What I didn’t expect was that I would begin to alter my personal life and I definitely did not expect that I would be writing a blog about shame and how it relates to powerlifting.
Brown talks a lot about the concept of “speaking shame” in this book. She is a long time shame researcher and what she has uncovered in her years is that shame is universal and it strives to disconnect us from others. When we “speak shame”, we connect and we make ourselves vulnerable but we disallow shame’s power. I have a quote that I keep up by Mother Theresa that says “Honesty and transparency make you vulnerable. Be honest and transparent anyway.” Loved this for my clients. Hid behind it as a clinician. I mean, I am transparent with my clients in a clinical sense. Again, you don’t get skilled at working with high risk families because you keep secrets from them or act in ways that are anything but totally honest and transparent. But, personally, I’m guarded and people see only what I allow. That’s okay, overall, as you don’t want to constantly be experiencing the “shame hangover” (the regret that comes after sharing too much too fast with someone you don’t know or trust), but I think it allows me to be a bit too fake sometimes, under the guise of professionalism. This blog is about speaking shame. Brown introduced an idea about shame being the thing that sends us into a strong reaction. Things like blaming others, being mean or attacking others, withdrawing – either shutting down or acting out. She introduces the idea of a shame trap and how we don’t always see ourselves in it until we reflect later. I don’t want to go on and on about the book – you can and probably should read it.
Now on to what I’m trying to say, I’m starting to notice more and more that powerlifting is connected to a huge part of my shame. Not that powerlifting causes my shame, but I’m discovering that my lack of growth and success in the sport is something I feel shamed about. I find myself wanting to scream “but but but” and lash out and react. Instead, what I am going to do is write about why and how shame has become a part of this (and is intertwined with some of the most shameful parts of my life). This is my connecting and reaching out. Some of it is directly connected to shame and some of it is my attempt at saying “please just understand”.
1) I started lifting in 2007 after years of obsessive dieting and undereating. I had figured out how to trick Weight Watchers into letting me be a leader while I was proceeding with being under their required weight range. I learned the very basics in person and then my brother wrote me a program. He warned me I would put on some weight right away. After a few months I promptly increased my intake to 1500 calories a day (yes, increased). While I’ve always resisted labeling this or having any formal diagnosis, to say that miraculously I overcame this would be a lie. I am not quite ready to share publicly the extent to which my maladaptive eating has impacted me, but I need to acknowledge that chronic, obsessive undereating has seriously impacted my ability to put on more strength. These patterns and thoughts don’t just disappear one day and this continues to be a work in progress.
2) My first week in the gym I had a guy come up to me and tell me that if those “kind of deadlifts” (conventional) were “too hard” for me, he would give me an alternative that would be even better for my ass. When I started lifting, women were scarce in the sport. Women who were in the gym were predominantly cardio bunnies and if they were lifting weights it was for aesthetic reasons. I’ve always had enormous shame related to my body image. I was an overweight kid and young adult until I found extreme dieting. Extreme dieting didn’t fix anything, but at least now when people commented on my body it wasn’t totally negative. I have overcome how my body image impacts my strength, but it took quite awhile. While I still have shame related to body image, for the last several years I can say, it doesn’t stop me from wanting to get stronger. But, this stole a lot of years of strength from me.
3) Sleep! Anyone who knows anything about strength training knows how important sleep is. Here’s the thing, when I started training I had a 5 year old and an 18 month old. I was commuting 2.5 hours a day, training over my lunches near where I worked. My days looked like – up early, kids up, I left the house by 7:15. Drove, worked, trained, worked, drove. Home by 6pm usually, unless the roads were bad and in Central Alberta in the winter, they often were. Try and be a mom and a common law wife – cook, clean, get kids to bed. I often didn’t go to bed until after 10pm because otherwise I heard that I didn’t spend any time with my common law. My 18 month old still wasn’t sleeping through the night either, so I’d be up at least once or twice. Oh, this doesn’t include the one evening a week I worked as well. This switched when I got a new job – only 90 min a day of commuting, but no gym at lunch. I started going to the gym at 5am. Now, going to bed after 10pm was really tough, but to keep the peace I did it. I was chronically sleep deprived... did I mention I was still undereating?! When I stopped going to the gym at 5am, I went at 8:30pm. I was a mom, after all and I worked full time. I wasn’t prepared to miss seeing my kids in the few hours I had with them. I continued to be chronically sleep deprived to try and be exactly what everyone wanted and needed.
4) I was unhappy in my relationship and this spread in my life like wildfire. I would stay at the gym later and later to avoid him. This impacted my sleep in worse and worse ways. It also meant I was avoiding him when I could and would try and see my friends. This made me feel like a terrible mother, which only served to throw fire on my shame related to motherhood. This buried me in sadness I didn’t know how to get out of.
5) Add these up and toss in a bit more – STRESS! I’m a bit of a high strung kind of person (my friends and family will laugh, because I said “a bit”). I started training right around when I also needed to start getting licensed. So, my first several years of training were riddled with young children, commuting, working full time just to survive, financial stress, an unhappy relationship, and licensing (which included several applications, supervision hours, a couple big ol’ exams) and a fairly big move. This has been followed by a major move to Moose Jaw, a divorce, single parenting in a city where “dad” doesn’t live, and so on. I also work a somewhat high stress kind of job (though it’s quite a bit lower stress than my job in Red Deer, which I loved). I’m currently in a much happier relationship but now I travel once a month to see him, which introduces a different kind of stress. My kids are older, so the same kind of parenting stress I had when they were little isn’t there, but brings new stuff.
6) Bowling was a really important part of my life for about 30 years. Now, I am proud of what I have accomplished in this sport and someday I might go back. But, bowling did impact my ability to get better in the gym. Bowling is not exactly an overly athletic endeavour, but it can be pretty good for chronic overuse injuries – like my right shoulder that would often flare up and cause problems in the gym. After I quit bowling a couple years ago, my shoulder got really bad, funny enough. Bowling is also a bit of a party sport. So, when I was bowling I was partying and partying isn’t exactly conducive to recovery from training. The partying also made my relationship worse and made me feel like a crappier mom, all spinning back on itself.
7) I was a lazy kid! This is going way back, but it has some relevance. My youngest would be a better lifter if she decided to start, even if she started at my same age (I was 27 when I started, so I was already behind a few years) because she has been a gymnast for several years. The strength and muscle base you build as a child can never be adjusted for when you start training at my age. I was a lazy, overweight kid who bowled. I can never make up for those years.
8) For the first 4 years of my time in this sport, I trained mostly alone. I had these homemade pink boards perched on my chest tacked there with duct tape on board press days haha!! I sent my brother videos a few times a month (nothing like what he does with online clients these days). I developed bad habits and then I’d come to MJ every few months and one bad habit would be “fixed” while I’d go home and something else would fall apart. I learned gear in MJ, but came home to train mostly alone. This is a sport where you might lift independently, but you do require a team. Even when I acquired a few training partners after several years, it was sporadic and somewhat unreliable if we trained together, but at least I didn’t have to duct tape boards to my chest every day LOL When I moved to MJ almost 5 years ago, I made some quick progress actually, because some of those bad habits got fixed right away. But, some of them have been more stubborn 
I am sure there are more reasons I’m not where I “should” be in lifting. I can’t compete with the young women in this sport today and most new lifters surpass me very quickly. Some of them are friends  I can be okay with this when I stop finding myself in the shame trap. I’m closer to being an M1 now than most of the Open lifters who are new to the sport and maybe it’s time to start shifting my comparison group. Or maybe it’ simply about what attracted me to the sport in the first place – being better and stronger than I was before. In that sense, I’m making gains and I’m doing okay. I have a lifestyle and a history that I cannot and would not change. It doesn’t need to shame me, but rather, I can simply use it as my understanding and explanation.

Monday, July 11, 2016

The ongoing battle between women in powerlifting

Probably not what you think I'm going to write about from that title, but it is a battle, and it is between women and it is in powerlifting. It does not seem to be in all strength sport as I have not seen the same things happening in strongwoman, though as that sport continues to gain popularity it still might. What battle am I talking about? The battle between "it's what my body can do" vs "my body looks so good". It's how some newer women into powerlifting are trying to pull it down from where it has been to a place where it's not about what you can do but how you look.
Let me get this out of the way - I'll be the first to acknowledge the importance of appearance. How we look every day matters because the world treats us differently based on how we appear. There's a reason my coworkers and I don't wear jeans and sweatshirts every day. There's a reason I colour my hair (I love fun colours but also hides the grey because growing old is not considered okay socially) and a reason I wear make up. I'm all about trying to meet basic social standards of attractiveness. That is not what I'm talking here. I will even acknowledge that once, after a fierce weight cut (the worst and something I never intend to do again), when I looked ragged having been in a hot bath for hours with my hair in 77 directions, I did my hair and basic make up in the bathroom after weigh ins. I wear make up to meets because I wear make up. I do my hair when it's too short for a ponytail because that's how I tame the chaos. Again, I'm not talking about the basics of looking decent. I'm talking about something bigger... I'm talking about the culture of this sport I love.
Culture is defined as the beliefs, customs, way of life of a certain group. Workplaces have cultures. Sports have cultures. It's not just about a nation or an ethnic group. In powerlifting, there is an attempt to shift the culture in some ways. We see this in the equipped vs raw debate a bit, where the culture used to be one of simply "lift more", it's now shifting to accommodate a new culture where it's not just purely "lift more". That's okay. Cultures shift and change. When it's for the good of the group, then it's great. When a workplace shifts the culture of being cutthroat with coworkers to one of more respect, that's a great shift. But, when the cultural shift seems to be negative in the eyes of many, then it's not so welcome. Again, let's imagine a workplace where there was a culture of teamwork and then a bunch of new people get hired and they try and bring in this new culture of being independent and competitive with each other, that will not go over smoothly with the existing team. One of the things that is fantastic about the culture in powerlifting is that despite it being an individual sport, the lifters are by and large there and cheering for each other. It's not uncommon at all to see two lifters, in the same weight class, going head to head, both wanting to win but both legitimately cheering each other on. When new lifters come to the sport, they see this and so far there is little issue with people assuming this and becoming a part of the existing culture related to this.
Where we are seeing some upheaval is in the sexualization and appearance based importance of the sport in women. Now, one of the things I have said since I got into this sport almost a decade ago was that it took me from a place where I was consumed by how I looked related to fitness and it shot me into a sport with a culture where no one cared how I looked, it was all about what I could do on that platform. No one cares what you weigh because weight has no intrinsic value. It simply categorizes you into a class for matched competition. This was one of the biggest draws to the sport for me. It's quite funny when I go back to a regular gym now, because even my "nice" gym clothes make me stand out like a sore thumb. A sports bra is a bra... and a bra is made to be worn under a shirt... which I wear when I am in public and the gym is public ;) I joke, but there is a little truth in that for me, at least. Although I joked with some of the ladies around the time of nationals about their fingernails getting done, there was a little truth in that jest as well. My sister paints her toenails ridiculous colours for her major crazy runs... but that's a superstition not because she needs her nails to be super "fleek". I commented on a post about ladies getting these beautiful gel nails and said I was going to nationals to lift and as a result of tearing my natural nail off on my quad the week prior, I would actually be trimming my nails because beautiful nails are not worth losing a deadlift. BECAUSE THAT IS THE CULTURE!!! It does not matter how I LOOK, it's what I can DO!
Ultimately this isn't about fingernails or a sports bra. Heck, if you can pull heavy deadlifts with gorgeous nails, sweet! Here's what it comes down to. There are a lot of "us"... by us I mean women who've been around this game for awhile now. Y'know, powerlifting since before it was cool. And most of us have a strong attachment to this sport and the culture in it. The culture of it being more important what we do on the platform than how we look, how nice our butt is or whether we have abs. Y'know, that culture that allows every one of us to say to new lifters "no one cares how you look in that singlet... trust me!" What this means is that we are going to kick up a bit of a stink when we see new lifters coming in and trying to make it about something else. Figure gets to be about looks. Leave that there. I have nothing against figure, because that's what their sport is about. Powerlifting is about what you put up on a platform. Whether powerlifting "built that body" or gave you a "squat booty" really doesn't matter because you might have a wonderfully round butt, but if you can't out total the other people in your weight class, no one cares. Let me say that again - at the end of the day, NO ONE CARES! I have watched beautiful women over and over win and lose on the platform, and not once did a watch a World Record squat and think "but her ass is so flat" or a World Record bench and think "she should've done her hair differently"... or a World Record deadlift and think "but her nails are not fleek". And I definitely never watched someone lose and thought "if only she'd looked better". Those of us who have been around for a decade or more, we are not just going to let this culture we love be steam rolled. You can do what you want to do, but we will continue to strive to maintain the culture in our sport, because culture is THAT important to groups of people. Culture is our common understanding. I'm not "judging" you. I'd be remiss to think I'm somehow holier than thou and should be in a position of judgement. If I were judging, I'd be spending my time figuring out what about this bugs me. I've done that already - what bugs me is an attempt to shift the culture. A culture that I love and has become an integral part of me and my self image.
It makes women in the sport a "joke" when everything we do on the platform comes down to how much your butt sticks out of your shorts or whether your latest IG photo of "side boob" got 4x more likes than your squat video, and you happened to hashtag #powerlifting and #girlswhopowerlift in both the picture and the video. Although those new to the sport might not know this, but a few years ago the IPF tried to have a "ballgown" competition between the women at the banquet. Now, I think they were trying to say "powerlifters can be beautiful... don't stereotype us" but what happened is that many of the women who had qualified for Worlds kicked up a fuss and said "our sport isn't about beauty, judge us on the platform." Plus, have you ever thought, man, it might be nice to be respected for what I can DO and maybe not have the bulk of my self worth based on how compliant I am with the current social standards of beauty?? Huh... Give that some thought...

Thursday, May 26, 2016

When food tracking goes wrong

This post is near and dear to my heart and something that I’ve resisted writing. With the fitness and nutrition industry the way it currently is, everyone seems to be tracking food in some way. Maybe you are on Carb Nite and only track your carbs (it doesn’t take much to track less than 30g carbs a day, but still). Maybe you just pay attention to hitting a certain number of grams of each macro per meal for a certain number of meals per day. Maybe you only eat from a certain list of foods. Maybe you have custom macros from any number of the programs out there that offer this (both qualified and not so qualified folks unfortunately) and you eat what “fits”. What I have discovered though, is this can be great for people who need increased awareness of food quality, quantity and how to eat based on goals. This can be bad when is goes wrong. When it goes wrong it can lead to the realm of the eating disorders. If you believe you have an eating disorder, contact your local Mental Health service or talk to your doctor. This is not psychological or medical advice that can take the place of a true assessment from a qualified practitioner. In this current fitness atmosphere, I need to emphasize the qualified part of that. Please, your health and wellbeing is that important. Now I got that out of the way...
Tracking food and having a structured plan is actually a method of treatment for eating disorders in some centres. It’s a fantastic place to start for many people to help “quiet the noise” as Dr. Laura Hill states. It allows folks to eat without spiking anxiety and when we keep anxiety from spiking, we can keep people from spiraling back into extreme restriction. The Center for Balanced Living http://www.centerforbalancedliving.org/ has some information on this I’ll just refer to here, because I’m not really talking about those folks who have a diagnosed eating disorder and are working with a qualified practitioner on wellness. I am talking about the people that are walking the fine line on the slippery slope of maladaptive eating. Instead of referring to this as eating disorders, I will refer to this as maladaptive eating. Just because you don’t meet the criteria for a diagnosis, does not mean you don’t have problems with eating. It just means that given our current diagnostic manual you do not have “enough” symptoms or they are not severe enough. It’s well acknowledged that there are a huge number of people that walk this line between healthy eating and full on meet the criteria. While I haven’t read anything on statistics about this lately, I suspect it is only growing. I understand the idea of flexible dieting is that it should reduce the tendency to restrict and fear certain foods (I definitely think it is miles ahead of something like carb nite where almost all carbs are restricted) but what happens for people that become inflexible with “flexible dieting”.
Things I have actually heard from people – “I forgot to track the 15 grapes I ate and when I log them I’m over my carbs”, “you can buy a scale to put in your purse and take it to the restaurant to weigh your food when it comes”, “I went over my macros today, should I restrict tomorrow?” Most of these seem pretty harmless, but they are all subtle warning signs that something is not right with food. Can you pick out what might be wrong here?
Tracking your food is a tool. It should not dictate your life. You should not avoid social situations on a regular basis out of fear you cannot track something (keeping in mind, I understand when people have a deadline that is different – when I need to make weight soon, I’m not going out for supper with the rest of you!). You should not be panicked if you forget your purse scale at home, or alternately, refuse to eat. You should not fear one day of going over a certain macro (or even all your macros!!) You should not believe that this is the ultimate in truth and you base everything about your day on it. As Dr. John Berardi once said “it’s all estimates” and he’s right. The science behind this isn’t perfect anyway, so don’t treat it as such.

Friday, April 22, 2016

A brief look at the psychology of doping in sport

On the heels of the recent positive drug test in the Canadian Powerlifting Union, I wanted to appease my own interest on the subject and figured, what better opportunity to explore the psychology behind the use of performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) and write about it. I really want to be clear right from the start. If you are someone that is using PEDs and you are lifting in a federation or sport that permits, allows, condones, etc doping, I am not and will never cast some form of judgment on you. I respect and honour everyone’s right to choose and I hope everyone gives me the same back, even if we choose different things. As well, please forgive me in advance for not writing this as a journal article, but rather as a blog. I have referenced everyone, but mostly with hyperlinks for internet ease.
Of course, the first thing that comes to mind when someone asks “why?” is the response “to win”, but when considering the factors involved, it is unlikely that simple. In fact, the first article I clicked on stated the exact same thing (https://www.psychology.org.au/inpsych/ped/). In discussing winning as a factor, this article highlights that even this concept is larger and more complicated than it might initially seem. Consider in some countries where athletes are financially rewarded for success or international medals. Or perhaps, what if an athlete is not permitted to continue to participate in said sport when s/he returns from international competition without some hardware to show for it? This highlights that in some instances, “winning” is bigger than just winning. From the article, “Donovan, Egger, Kapernick and Mendoza (2002) used principles from social cognition to conceptualise a model for an athlete's decision to use PED. The model explores the effect appraisals of threat, benefit, morality and legitimacy have on attitudes and intentions and subsequent compliance with the World Anti-Doping Code....other influences such as reference groups (e.g., coaches), athlete personality, and the affordability and availability of PED are explicitly addressed” (as referenced in https://www.psychology.org.au/inpsych/ped/).
Strelan and Boeckmann (2003) use a model of deterrence theory. Deterrence theory is a theoretical approach to understand compliance with the law (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/261177997_A_New_Model_for_Understanding_Performance-Enhancing_Drug_Use_by_Elite_Athletes). The model is as it sounds – athletes make decisions to use PEDs with an analysis of deterrents (consequences) vs. benefits (gains), but importantly, moderated by situational factors (such as the type of drug, the culture of use, acceptance from others).
Wiefferink et al (2008) indicated that nonusers held more restrictive norms and has less optimistic views of the outcomes, whereas, people who tended to use viewed others as more likely to also participate in the use of PEDs and overlooked the negative side and risk of use (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/6504509_Social_psychological_determinants_of_the_use_of_performance_enhancing_drugs).
Ehrnborg and Rosen (2009) highlight these main factors as the major contributors to athletes deciding to use PEDs “improving and maintaining physical functioning, coping with the social/psychological pressures and striving for social and psychological goals, including economic benefits. Factors such as, “doping dilemma”, “win at all costs”, cost versus benefit, and the specificity of some specific doping agents, also play major roles.” (The Psychology Behind Doping in Sport http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1096637409000458)
What is clear across these articles is that it’s not a simple answer. It’s not easy to determine who will decide to venture down the road of PEDs and why they make that choice. What is common across all references is there is an attitude of PED acceptance, a risk vs. benefit analysis that underemphasizes risk and/or overemphasizes benefit, and a social group or setting that permits or condones the use.
But what about morals? Don’t these people care they are cheating? How many people have, for one brief moment, snuck a peak at a fellow classmates test? What about in a board game, in a moment of bitterness at being beaten, gave yourself an extra point or 2? What happens when someone starts cheating and then doesn’t get caught, but maybe even passes that test or wins that board game? Humans are simple in that we keep doing what works and we stop doing what doesn’t. When cheating works to meet our needs, it becomes sustained. Go back to previous where I talk about the cost vs. benefit analysis and think about how the benefits here start to really outweigh the costs, since we aren’t getting caught. Heck, recently I got a speeding ticket because for years and years I was speeding and didn’t get a ticket and slowly my speed crept up. I was maintaining my behaviour because it worked to get me where I was going faster and I wasn’t being consequenced for it. I can assure you I slowed down immediately after that ticket and have not pushed it since.
I believe in a previous blog I wrote about the theory of cognitive dissonance. A state of psychological distress that occurs when our behaviour does not match our beliefs. In this state, one of 2 things alter (this is a very simplified version of the theory) – beliefs change to match behaviour or behaviour changes to match beliefs. If the benefits of doping increase so that the pros far outweigh the cons, even in a case where the person initially did not believe in what s/he was doing, but the behaviour persisted, well, that person’s belief system will come in line with whatever rationalization required to calm the psychological distress. People may start telling themselves that “other people are doing it”, “it’s not really that bad”, “it’s not helping that much anyway”, “I’m sure my competition is also doping”, “quitting is worse for whatever reason than continuing” or anything else you might think of. The mind is powerful and it really wants to be in psychological peace. Now, I’m not condoning doping! On a near daily basis I say to someone that an explanation is NOT an excuse... we can explain behaviour without excusing it.
I could probably pull at a bunch of other broad psychological theories to understand doping in sport (particularly referring to doping in sports and federations where it is not permitted), but I also wanted to talk about how any one person can have an impact on this. TrueSport Canada is an organization that helps to promote fair and honest sport across the country. You can find information and their guiding principles at http://truesportpur.ca/true-sport-principles When I spoke with a woman from the organization she talked about the TrueSport ambassadors being people who went around and simply embraced and embedded a culture of fair play, including anti-doping culture. We can talk about this in powerlifting in terms of anti-doping, using only approved equipment (not putting knee wraps under knee sleeves, not using supportive briefs under a suit or singlet), not having a referee agree to give special considerations, and any other way you can think of engaging in the sport that would not be honest and fair.
So, back to WHAT DO WE DO ABOUT IT? We create a culture in our spaces of anti-doping. We go to our gyms, meets, groups every day and we don’t ever condone or glamorize doping. We encourage our teammates to check their supplements – all of them! We help them find resources and choose things that are in line with anti-doping. We support supplement companies that are willing to put the stamp of approval on their products. We educate others on the risks associated with doping and if we don’t know, we encourage them to find out. We don’t agree to turn a blind eye to it or to rationalize it with them. We don’t judge harshly or meanly, we simply don’t agree with doping in sport. We encourage fairness. We allow our teammates to lose gracefully rather than pressuring them to win at all costs. We encourage the idea that living with integrity is always more important than winning. We continue to support anti-doping initiatives. And then we pass this down to our youth in our lives and in our sports. We allow our children to grow up believing in these things. While this will not stop every instance of doping, for every young athlete who chooses the road of integrity over the road of doping, we have placed one more brick in the path.

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

The power of our people (it's what makes Unparalleled Performance so great)

We have all seen the quote:
Most people accept it as true even though it can seem quite simplistic in nature. It's so wonderfully and devastatingly true though. I see it in my work all the time. When we are trying to help folks break out of some negative, harmful cycles they are entrenched in, often we talk about changing the peer group... because of the various levels of influence those people have on us. I want to talk about this in a more lighthearted way though.. related to training.
People often say they don't expect Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan to somehow be this unusual "hub" of excellent powerlifting. I think any of us that have been interviewed by radio, tv, newspaper get asked some variation of the question "what makes this happen?" The gym... the people in the gym... the passion in the people! We make each other better. We push each other, support each other... tease each other ;) It's more than just being there to spot for one another. It's the energy in the place and the fact that every single person there loves the sport and wants to be better.
Last night this was so apparent I felt the need to write about it! Not only do I get to train in this facility, but I get to train with the best lifters in Canada and I'm lucky enough to call some of them family (the rest I call my powerlifting family anyway!). Rhaea was in her suit at first, and Pam and I were doing our belted work sets of squats and then moved on to our belt and wrap singles. Or, so we thought it would be singles. As Pam finished her first one in her wraps, Rhaea said "do another", so Pam did. Rhaea went over, and did a wrapped set of 5 (with enough weight it makes new lifters' heads spin... still mine sometimes!). My turn... I'd already done my first single with wraps, I went up, just a bit over my target weight... and when I did the first, it felt good, so I did a second. I joked that I couldn't be a slacker when these 2 were working so hard. But, it's true! If I'd been there with 2 other people who were just doing the basics, I probably would have too! Now, one squat doesn't make the difference. But, take that one squat, multiply it by 6 days a week, 52 weeks a year and all the meets we hit up as a group and now you're talking about a huge impact.
When we surround ourselves with people who push us to be better, we can rise to the occasion. This is about process and work, not numbers. We all can't squat what Rhaea squats, but we can use her drive to improve as the example by which we set our own standard to work harder and drive ourselves to be better. This is what makes Unparalleled Performance Training Centre and Moose Jaw the "hub" of powerlifting in Saskatchewan... heck, one of the best in Western Canada. We have the best because we create an environment where we brew the best. While I'm not one of the "original founders" of Unparalleled (proud to brag I'm the sister of the "owner" though), I'm so incredibly grateful to be a part of this place!