Production6257
Don Juan
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2006
- Messages
- 118
- Reaction score
- 1
This is something that I have been thinking a lot about lately. Personally, I tend to thrive off of the negative. For instance, this one thing that happened 3 years ago when I was in high school and still motivates me to this day: Me and a couple friends were meeting some girls at a pool. I am a naturally skinny person and at the time I was around 6 feet tall and like 135 pounds. I was insecure about my body and my one friend, Todd, knew it. Well there was one girl that we all had a crush on, and to my dismay she was all over Todd. He was giving her a piggy-back ride all around the pool and it was obvious who she wanted out of all of us. Well I stepped out of the pool and was standing there, and Todd (who can be a HUGE self-centered a$$hole) said, "Doesn't 'hamma' look like one of those starving kids from Africa that they show on the T.V ads?" I can't even begin to explain how much this has motivated me over the years. The image of the girl I desired on my friend's back and him uttering that line is forever ingrained in my head. Every time I work out and am on those last reps, I think of Todd and what he said that day. Another quick Todd story is when we were talking about girls that we liked at school and I mentioned someone that I was thinking about, and 2 days later he asked her out.
The funny thing about me is that I am so thankful for Todd and we are still friends to this day. The tides have turned though, and it ended up that I was the first one to get laid, and I am far bigger and stronger than he is (he has that "skinny-fat" physique).
I mean, don't get me wrong. Positive comments and seeing progress is definitely important to me, but all of the negative things that happened in my life (ESPECIALLY throughout high school) push me farther than I could ever go on positive comments alone.
The funny thing about me is that I am so thankful for Todd and we are still friends to this day. The tides have turned though, and it ended up that I was the first one to get laid, and I am far bigger and stronger than he is (he has that "skinny-fat" physique).
I mean, don't get me wrong. Positive comments and seeing progress is definitely important to me, but all of the negative things that happened in my life (ESPECIALLY throughout high school) push me farther than I could ever go on positive comments alone.