REPLY BACK TO THE FOLLOWING POST:
The sport of bodybuilding would be considered existential to many who participate in it. In fact, bodybuilding has been around for centuries. People would pick up heavy objects, in order to sculpt their bodies a certain way. Greek Gods and the like, would pick up heavy stones, not knowing what they were doing, but the sport was always there. However, as famous bodybuilders like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Joe Wider came along, and changed the sport, bodybuilding has become synonymous with essentialism. Now a days, in order to participate in bodybuilding, it seems that having weights are essential, as well as protein supplements. Living in an “enormous present” affects someone inside or outside of sport, as that individual does not really know what he wants in life. As mentioned in the video a hip “is an outlaw without a gun.” Although none of us know our future, the hip knows no future because he or she does not believe that his or her goals align with the rest of society. I like to think that bodybuilding can be a sport that can fit this hip existential lifestyle. You see, when watching movies like Generation Iron, and even meeting bodybuilders, most of these men grew up in rougher neighborhoods, being picked on by either having had lived in orphanages, or in abusive households. Bodybuilders then “lift weights to portray an image of “macho ness” so that they do not get picked on ever again. So what appears to be intimidating men on the outside, are actually big, insecure, personalities in the inside.
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