When I was in high school, I used to count the days until the next issue of Peary Rader's IronMan magazine arrived in the mail. |
Hail to the Dinosaurs!
A lot of people say they have trouble
getting motivated to train.
Or to keep training.
They get started, and then something
comes up, and they miss a workout -
and then they miss another workout -
and before you know it, they've more
or less stopped training.
In the old days, the Founding Fathers
of physical culture had a simple solution
for this problem.
They published monthly magazines and
urged everyone who trained to read the
magazine every single month.
The monthly magazine was a great way
to stay motivated.
I can remember counting the days until
the next issue of Strength and Health,
Muscular Development or IronMan
came in the mail.
Bradley J. Steiner - my favorite Iron Game
author back then - once said that the most
important job of a strength training and
muscle building magazine was to motivate
its readers.
Yes, it was important to teach them how to
train and to give them good workouts and
training schedules to try.
But the single most important thing was to
MOTIVATE readers to keep on training -
and to get them back in the training habit
if they were slacking off.
I think Steiner was absolutely right - and
that's why I publish a monthly strength
training magazine in addition to everything
else we do here at Dino Headquarters.
It's called The Dinosaur Files - and it's
available in a downloadable PDF format
with instant delivery - and it's printable -
so you can buy it, print it and save it in
your collection.
Each issue is 8 to 12 pages - and each
issue is chock full of workouts, training
tips, Iron Game history, and - above all
else - gives you a goldmine of motivation.
We just released the February issue -
and you can grab it right here:
http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaur-files-february2018pdf.html
It might be just the thing to keep you
training hard, heavy, serious and as
effectively as possible.
Give it a try - I know you'll like it.
Yours in strength,
Brooks Kubik
P.S. If you'd like a one-year, 12-issue
subscription to The Dinosaur Files,
just shoot me an email - we can make
it happen!