250kilos benchpress but its like max...
I can do more but I need a spotter.
250kilos benchpress but its like max...
Not really
If you mess with the difficulty settings, you can burn a lot of calories on them. I don't dare to run fast on them only because the impact might ruin the tread.
You are talking about my home with that snow and ice.shin wrote:
Not really
When there's nothing but snow and ice outside, the treadmill provides a low impact terrain with adjustable speed to keep you going at a pace faster than you would think to do on your own, plus an added incline feature for those of us who live on a flat concrete plane with stop lights and traffic at every corner.
I'm schizo.
I weight 150kilos but I have the muscle mass to not make it much of an effort to carry that weight.shin wrote:
If you mess with the difficulty settings, you can burn a lot of calories on them. I don't dare to run fast on them only because the impact might ruin the tread.
At my weight, pedometers say I burn a base amount of near 450 calories an hour just walking at a normal pace. I've been able to work it to a point where the treadmill said I burned more than a thousand calories in an hour.
I primarily use the treadmill to warm up because it raises my heart rate without much fatigue. I think my record for walking is actually a little higher than this, but it was the closest one I found in my records in short time.
Less than 2 miles of that was on a treadmill.
You are just divorced and carrying a torch for all people..
Sorry to burst your bubble, but I've had the same attitude since I was in primary school. And I don't carry a torch for anyone. I simply don't like to waste energy on fake friendships, relationships, or people. I don't have enough of it to spare.Sturm wrote: You are just divorced and carrying a torch for all people..
That happens.
I'm in my 40s, but I still push myself... just not quite as much as when I was half my current age.
Of course you still push yourself at that age.. You aint nowhere near dead..shin wrote:
I'm in my 40s, but I still push myself... just not quite as much as when I was half my current age.
I'm guessing you're considerably taller than I am. I used to work with a guy at the factory named Rufus who was built like few people I've ever seen outside of those bodybuilder magazines. He was kind of short ,though. i wouldn't want him to tackle me.
Occasionally, I get the odd person who tells me I should have been a football player. I've seen a few pro football players, and they looked like ogres in comparison.
On the converse, I've also seen a couple of "pro" wrestlers, and I was shocked at how small they looked. It was almost like the thoughts came into my mind of sizing them up like how I'd fare against them. A good wrestler can end a fight quickly with disadvantages stacked against him, though.
From an outside perspective of someone who doesn't fight or exercise, I was under the impression that wrestling was a sport, designed to showcase strength, endurance and technique. It's not actually about "fighting" as such.
As a sport, they all are designed to showcase strength, endurance and technique..Mona wrote:
From an outside perspective of someone who doesn't fight or exercise, I was under the impression that wrestling was a sport, designed to showcase strength, endurance and technique. It's not actually about "fighting" as such.
Seriously, either you are taking testosterone, or you're pretending to be the opposite of what you are. No real man has the need to assert or allude to his supposed physical dominance half as much as you do unless he's impotent to share it in his real life, and uses the internet to make himself feel strong and macho.
If you switch the fighting style then you are not able to compare the fight on strength and endurance if your'e playing by different rules.Sturm wrote: As a sport, they all are designed to showcase strength, endurance and technique..
They are originally meant for fighting.
I´m just saying that if you switch the fighting style, you can overtake the wrestler guy with ease.
I´m just saying that the wrestler might not be able to combat without being in a wrestling rink.
Then why didn't you say that? Although, it's not necessarily correct, it would depend on the abilities and experiences of each individual on a case by case basis as to whether or not that thought process actually applies to them.Sturm wrote:
I´m just saying that the wrestler might not be able to combat without being in a wrestling rink.
I implied it.