Zwet, I wrote that before we talked on steam. I never outed or said that anyone else's sport is crap and mine is the best and it wasn't supposed to be interpreted as such. I also never stated that what I prefer to drink is better than anyone else's until Hades said cider beats beer, I disagreed. Then you...
you're all pussies thinking you're men cause you're barfing out alcoholic beverages.
a true man drinks water, milk, protein shakes & monster drinks xD
How opinionated was that?! Then you tell me that I am calling your sport shit, which I didn't. All I said was just because someone lives healthy in the sense of being sober, not eating fatty foods etc. doesn't make that a concrete definition of being a "real" man.
Just because you live healthy doesn't make you a "real" man."
Nigga plz xD just because you aren't viking and you don't understand doesn't mean what I say isn't true.
People are too afraid to push their physical capabilities.
I never said it wasn't true, but it could be elaborated on. Physical limits is not only muscle work. I am also not saying that is what you think, but that is how you wrote it.
Pushing your physical limits by diving down to the point of freezing temperatures and nitrogen-narcosis, to alway be ready or prepared for any life-threatening situation like your buddy running out of oxygen or passing out below the controlled-ascent limit, I would say that counts as pushing mental and physical boundaries.
For the people who don't know, motocross is not just jumping. That is FMX (freestyle motocross). MXR (motocross racing) and Enduro are not about freestyle tricks. Motocross racing is about, you guess it, racing and Enduro is about free-riding. Motocross is not about jumping. Ironically, jumping is when you can calm down and take a breath, because nothing can happen while in the air, only during the landing. Motocross gives me adrenaline because you are always concentrated and always have to react fast. Its not about strength, the little guy can be the best on the track. Its about not being afraid on the track, which can be hard to overcome if you are not racing regularly and not always on the same track. I am content with riding on tracks and riding Enduro, because it is never the same so you have to adapt quickly and always react differently, learning each new area. (There is your explanation.)
diving & motorcross adrenaline?
well if you are jumping like 5 meter high and do tricks like those redbull people, but i guess if you were doing this you wouldn't be here but being paid by redbull to perform stunts.
adrenaline junkie
11
Either that comment is meant to show you know better that diving and motocross don't really offer an adrenaline rush or, I hope not; You are one of those guys who doesn't accept other peoples opinion and yes, judging without doing. We went over this already, I don't have to defend that point. I bet you know a lot about motocross, but some aspects cannot be simply observed and read.
What worries me is that you of all people, ontop of being destructive about someone's opinion AND not actually EXPLAINING why you think motorcross or diving does give you an adrenaline rush. It makes you more ignorant than you think. And blinded by it, you throw shit up like "I want to push your physical and mental limits" as if in bodybuilding/strongman/whatevz that is not the case?
I didn't say bodybuilding is not. I just noticed you only wrote physical limits and did not mention mental limits.
If you wanted me to explain why it gives me an adrenaline rush, then you should have simply asked instead of thinking I only get an adrenaline rush if I jump 5 meters high and do tricks. By the way, in Motocross (not FMX) and Enduro, height isn't the factor in jumps, its distance. The longer you are in the air, the slower you are when landing, like skiing.
There is more to every sport and if you start by undermining what I wrote, why would I ever think that you wanted me to elaborate on why it gives me exactly what I want from it? Don't talk to me about communication and undermining people's opinions. I felt the same way when you commented on what I wrote.
Oh by the way, I would not have asked you advice on bodybuilding if I did not think it was worth it and that you were competent on giving it.