Bodybuilding Is for Everyone…As Long As You Bring the Fire

Musclebuilding Is for Everybody...As Long As You Bring the Fire

We don’t care about your race.

Your ethnicity.

Your religion (or lack of).

Where you’re from.

Whether you’re rich or poor.

Whether you come from the suburbs or the city.

Bodybuilding Is for Everyone

We don’t care who you are when you walk through the door.

But here’s the catch: You’ve got to bring The Fire.

The Fire to walk into the gym when your body begs you to stay home.

The Fire to grip the weight and force yourself through another rep when everything in you is screaming “stop.”

The Fire to sharpen yourself outside the gym—choosing powerful foods over junk, water over booze, sleep over scrolling.

The Fire to not just build muscle…but build your life.

That’s the price of admission. That’s the toll to enter the Brickyard.

Everyone can build.

Everyone can choose to become better.

Everyone can put in real work every day.

Let me say it again: Put in real work every day.

This path isn’t kind to half-assers, wannabes, the entitled, and the weak-willed.

Those types will get chewed up and spit out quickly.

Don’t even waste your time.

You Got The Fire?

If no, click that “x” button on your browser. I wish you the best.

If yes, welcome. You belong here.

The path is arduous, but it’s ours.

Bring the Fire. Build the muscle. Build the life.

P.S. Got the Fire? Join the email list. Get the Sunday Sendoff and other goodies just for the Builder sent directly to your email. The form is below ⬇

Muscle In Motion: Cardio That Doesn’t Suck (How I Make It Fun, and How You Can Too)

Muscle In Motion: Cardio That Doesn’t Suck (How I Make It Fun, and How You Can Too)

Let’s be honest.

Most guys hear the word “cardio” and instantly picture themselves slogging away on some treadmill, counting the seconds until it’s over.

That’s a damn shame—because cardio is one of the best things you can do for your body and your mind.

It improves cardiorespiratory health, lowers blood pressure, strengthens immunity, sharpens your brain and boosts mood, helps you sleep, and helps keep fat in check (Healthline). The CDC recommends at least 150 minutes of moderate or 75 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity per week (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention).

But here’s the good news:

Cardio doesn’t have to suck. You don’t have to suffer to reap the benefits.

The Big Mistake: Thinking Cardio = Treadmill Hell

If you like the treadmill or elliptical, great. Keep it rolling.

But if the idea of traditional cardio makes you want to gouge your eyes out, then you’ve got to find something that works for you—something that gets your heart pumping and blood flowing while actually being enjoyable.

Let me show you what I do.

What I Do for Cardio (And Why It Works)

I love running.

I have a favorite spot I hit a lot, and several other spots around town I enjoy. Sometimes I’ll even branch out and find somewhere new.

I don’t go fast. I don’t go far. I keep it enjoyable. I’m not here to win any trophies.

Sometimes, I run alongside my kids while they bike. Cardio and quality family time? A true win-win.

I’ll toss around the kettlebell for 20-30 minutes, jacking up my heart rate with swings, cleans, jerks, snatches, and squats.

Other days, I’ll longboard, do a few sprints, or hit an indoor machine if the weather’s nasty.

At the beach I’ll swim (and do water-resisted sprints!), and if a sand volleyball game breaks out, I’ll join in.

A couple times a year I can get my hands on a kayak or paddleboard, and that’s always a blast.

Cardio doesn’t have to be programmed. It just has to be lived.

Want to Make Cardio Fun? Try These

If you like what I do, do ’em yourself.

If not, here are many ways to turn cardio into something you actually enjoy. Think of them as movement-based hobbies that go hand-in-hand with musclebuilding:

  • Biking (solo or with your kids)
  • Inline skating
  • Martial arts or boxing drills
  • Surfing
  • Pick-up sports (basketball, soccer, ultimate)
  • Cardio classes at the gym

You can even blast music and shadowbox in your garage for 20 minutes. Doesn’t matter what it is—as long as you’re moving with intensity and having some fun, you’re winning.

Should You Track Your Cardio?

When it comes to cardio, I’m way more relaxed about tracking than I am with the weights.

If my body’s moving, my heart rate’s up, and I’m not overdoing it, I count it as a win. No need to get ultra-militant—unless you’re training for a specific event or serious want to dial in your conditioning.

That said, here are some times you should consider tracking:

  • If you’re cutting fat and want to dial in total calorie burn
  • If you’re trying to build endurance progressively
  • If you tend to overtrain or undertrain without data

Apps like Strava, Apple Health, or even a basic notepad can help.

But at the end of the day? I’d rather enjoy the damn movement than obsess over the numbers.

Movement Is a Birthright

Here’s the real perspective shift:

Cardio isn’t punishment. It’s your birthright.

Our ancestors didn’t “do cardio”—they lived it.

Hunting, tracking, climbing, chasing, exploring—this was natural movement built into daily life. That’s the spirit we’re reviving here.

Not treadmill drudgery.

Not 45-minute punishment sessions.

Not guilt-driven calorie burns.

Fun. Function. Freedom.

That’s what cardio should be.

Your Move, Brother

If cardio’s been a chore for you, it’s time to flip the script.

Pick one fun cardio-based activity you haven’t done in a while—or ever—and go for it.

Take your kids. Grab a buddy. Or just blast your favorite playlist and move.

Make cardio a life enhancer, not a soul-sucker.

Your body—and your mind—will thank you.

Sources

Healthline. 13 Benefits of Aerobic Exercise: Why Cardio Fitness Is Important. Healthline, Jul 2, 2018. https://www.healthline.com/health/fitness-exercise/benefits-of-aerobic-exercise

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. How Much Physical Activity Do Adults Need? CDC. https://www.cdc.gov/physical-activity-basics/guidelines/adults.html

Before the Weight: Form, Tempo, Range of Motion

Before the Weight: Form, Tempo, Range of Motion

Walk into any gym and you’ll see it—the same scene every damn day.

Some guy chasing numbers, slapping on plates, jerking, bouncing, cutting reps short, puffing his chest like he just conquered something.

But he ain’t building muscle.

He’s building injuries.

I know, because I used to be that guy. Skinny kid, hungry to stack weight, chasing the bar instead of chasing mastery. It got me sore joints, bad habits, and zero progress.

Only when I flipped the order—form first, tempo second, range third, weight last—did the physique start stacking brick by brick.

The Three Pillars of Musclebuilder Movement

1. Form

Form is the signal. Everything else? Noise.

A sloppy rep isn’t training—it’s teaching your body how to cheat. Shoulders flare, hips sway, joints scream. That’s not strength—it’s sabotage.

Form is precision. Shoulders set. Core locked. Smooth motion. No shortcuts.
The man who masters form builds the muscle he’s aiming for.
The man who doesn’t builds nothing but pain.

2. Tempo

Most lifters move like they’re in a damn speed race—up and down, no control, all momentum. But muscles don’t grow from flailing. They grow from tension.

Tempo is discipline in motion.

Think of 3-1-1-1 like a war drum: three beats to descend, one pause in the pit, one beat to rise, one beat to squeeze steel to bone.

Every second under control is a brick laid. Every rushed rep is a brick cracked.

Anyone can throw weight. Few can own it.

3. Full Range of Motion

Half reps, half results.

Life doesn’t test you at halfway. It tests you at full stretch—the squat in the hole, the press at lockout, the pull-up from full stretch.

Range is where strength is forged. Every inch worked, every fiber recruited. Skip it, and you’re only half-built.

The Musclebuilder doesn’t cheat himself. He goes the distance.

Why Weight Comes Last

Weight is the final layer—the roof, not the foundation.

Without form, tempo, and range, weight is just theater. A hollow high five. But when the foundation is locked in, every pound means something.

The ego lifter sees 225 and thinks he’s king.

The Musclebuilder sees 135—controlled, clean, full range—and knows he’s building stone.

A body built on sand collapses.

A body built on form, tempo, and range? That’s Brickwall-caliber stone. 🧱🔥

Rally Call

Here’s the order, brother:

  • Form first. Move the way you’re supposed to move.
  • Tempo second. Slow it down, own every inch.
  • Range third. Work the full battlefield, no half-reppin’.
  • Weight last. Load heavy only when the foundation is rock-solid.

Flip it, and you’ll stay stuck—or broken.

Follow it, and you’ll forge a physique that looks good, performs better, and lasts a lifetime.

Respect the order—or stay weak.

Anchors down. Do it right. Then load it heavy.

Sources

Schoenfeld, B. J. (2010). The mechanisms of muscle hypertrophy and their application to resistance training. Journal of Applied Physiology, 108(4), 1–10. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20847704/

Morton, R. W., Murphy, K. T., McKellar, S. R., et al. (2022). A systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression of the effect of protein supplementation on resistance training-induced gains in muscle mass and strength in healthy adults. Sports Medicine, 52(5), 1085–1101. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35187864/

Grgic, J., Schoenfeld, B. J., Davies, T. B., & Lazinica, B. (2019). Effects of resistance training frequency on gains in muscular strength: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Sports Medicine, 49(5), 793–807. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30558493/

Wilk, M., Golas, A., & Zajac, A. (2018). The influence of movement tempo on muscular strength and hypertrophy responses: a review. Journal of Human Kinetics, 62(1), 125–133. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34043184/

The Bodybuilder Aesthetic: What We’re Building

The Musclebuilder Aesthetic: What We’re Building

You walk into a room—and heads turn.

Not because you’re flexing.

Not because you’re oversized.

But because there’s something unmistakable about you.

Presence. Discipline. Power.

Player Presence.

That’s the Bodybuilder Aesthetic.

What It Isn’t

Let’s start with what we’re not building:

  • ❌ Bloated mass with no function
  • ❌ Skinny aesthetics with no strength
  • ❌ Fake tan, oiled up bodies, and stage lights
  • ❌ Chasing numbers to impress people that don’t even care

That’s not us.

That’s not the path.

What It Is

The Bodybuilder Aesthetic is forged—not found.

It’s a look. A vibe. A damn declaration of who you are.

We’re talking:

  • Muscular and lean – a physique that speaks.
  • Functional strength – you’re built to move, climb, carry, and fight
  • Defined, not dehydrated – you look powerful, not brittle
  • Optimized – you live in the zone (8–15% body fat), where performance and aesthetics meet
  • Earned, not bought – no shortcuts, no fluff—just reps, meals, and recovery
  • Built for life – not just the gym. You’re the guy who can hike mountains, play with his kids, and handle business.

What We’re Building (It’s Not Just Muscle)

No, we’re not just building up muscle.

We’re building:

  • Presence
  • Legacy
  • Discipline
  • Strength
  • Focus
  • Grit
  • Resilience

The body is just the billboard.

The real message? Excellence in everything.

Final Word

The Bodybuilder Aesthetic is the result of a lifestyle.

It’s what happens when you train with purpose, eat for power, and live with fire.

You want in?

Let’s build it. One rep, one plate, one disciplined day at a time.

You bring the hunger.

We’ll bring the blueprint.

What Is Junk Volume? And Why You Should Avoid It

What Is Junk Volume? And Why You Should Avoid It

You train hard.

You show up.

You grind.

But are you actually building?

Or are you just burning time and calories with junk volume?

What Is Junk Volume?

Junk volume is training that looks like work…

…but doesn’t actually stimulate muscle growth.

It’s any extra sets or reps that don’t stimulate growth.

Think:

  • Doing light sets with no purpose, intention, or focus
  • Doing compound moves that hit everything a little, but nothing well (such as thrusters and plank rows)
  • Exercises thrown in just to “feel busy” or fill time
  • Excess sets that are beyond your recovery capacity

Junk volume inflates your training log but doesn’t add bricks to your physique.

Why You Should Avoid Junk Volume

1. It Wastes Recovery

Musclebuilding is a stress–recovery–adaptation game.

If you’re spending precious recovery resources on low-quality volume, you’re robbing your body of gains.

2. It Masks Progress

You feel tired, you feel pumped—so you assume you’re progressing.

But progress isn’t about how wrecked you are.

It’s about how much quality stimulus you apply and how well you recover from it.

3. It Can Lead to Overuse and Injury

More volume = more reps = more wear and tear.

If that volume isn’t productive, you’re just speeding toward tendonitis or burnout.

4. It Slows the Mission

You’re here to build. Not to pretend.

Every set needs to have purpose—especially if you’re a busy dad, working man, and real-life Musclebuilder with limited time.

So What’s the Alternative?

👉 Spend Your Time On Productive Volume

That means:

  • Targeting the muscle(s) you want to target, not just flailing around or using a bunch of muscles just to use a bunch of muscles
  • Using optimal form, abiding by the tempo, and using a full range of motion
  • Doing hard sets taken to failure or near failure in the proper rep range (3-15)
  • Using an optimal amount of sets (3-5) to stimulate growth but not destroy yourself.

👉 Focus on Stimulus, Not Fatigue

Chase the signal, not the soreness.

If you can effectively stimulate the muscle in 4 sets, don’t do 8.

👉 Less but Better

3-5 brutal, focused sets > 10 lazy, sloppy ones.

You’re not there to fill time.

You’re there to build your damn body.

Bottom Line:

Junk volume is training without purpose. It’s moving just to move.

It kills your recovery, slows your growth, and makes your sessions longer without offering any real benefit.

Be smarter.

Train with intention.

Every set is a brick—don’t lay down garbage.

Build Muscle Now…Your Older Self Will Thank You

Build Muscle Now...Your Older Self Will Thank You

One of the worst mistakes a man can make? Waiting.

Waiting until the gut hangs over his belt.

Waiting until his joints creak.

Waiting until his testosterone is clinging by a thread.

Then he decides to “get in shape.”

That’s not training. That’s desperation. That’s sandbags after the flood.

The time to build is now—while your engine still roars, while your fire still burns.

Because future-you? He’s gonna be fighting different battles—and he’ll need the armor you forge today.

Muscle: The Time-Released Blessing

You’re not just building biceps. You’re building:

  • Bone density that keeps you walking tall into your 70s and beyond
  • Balance and coordination that keep you out of the nursing home
  • A metabolism that won’t crawl into the grave
  • Resilience when life blindsides you
  • Confidence that refuses to fade with age

Muscle isn’t just for the mirror.

It’s power stored in the vault—paying you back with compound interest for decades.

The Guys Who Wait Always Regret It

Ask any man in his 50s or 60s who skipped the grind:

“I wish I started earlier.”

“I didn’t realize how hard it gets.”

Too late.

But you? You’re here now. You’ve still got time.

Discipline Sets Like Concrete

Habits poured today harden into your foundation tomorrow.

You don’t “find time” to train—you protect it, because it’s sacred.

The longer you wait, the harder it gets.

Not impossible. But uphill, heavy, punishing.

Lay the foundation now—while the mix is still wet.

Bottom Line: Build Now. Or Pay Later.

Two paths. Two men.

One—muscular, confident, mobile, respected.

The other—fragile, bitter, weak.

The fork in the road is here, in your hands, right now.

Pick up the steel. Feed the fire. Stack the bricks.

Because if you build today, your older self will thank you.

If you don’t—he’ll curse you.

Builder Jewelry: Armor Up and Add Some Metal to the Muscle

Musclebuilder Jewelry: Armor Up and Add Some Metal to the Muscle

Before modern Builders, there were ancient warriors.

Men forged from blood, steel, and fire.

And what did they wear?

Jewelry.

Not as decoration—as declaration.

From Spartans to Vikings to Zulu fighters, men have always carried metal not to look pretty, but to signal power, presence, and purpose.

Now it’s your turn to carry that flame.

Jewelry Is Armor—Not Accessory

Real masculine jewelry isn’t about fashion. It’s about presence.

It’s the chain that sits on your chest like a medal.

The ring that reminds you what your hands are built for.

The earrings that say: “I’ve been through fire and didn’t flinch.”

You’re not accessorizing—you’re arming yourself.

How the Ancients Wore Their Metal

The ancients didn’t wear metal to “dress up.” They wore it to mark the man.

  • Spartans – Wore iron bands. Minimal. Pure meaning.
  • Vikings – Torcs, armbands, rune-carved silver. Earned, not bought.
  • African Warriors – Necklaces, bone chokers, piercings. Power, maturity, initiation.
  • Samurai – Crests on rings, cords on blades. Every detail sacred.
  • Native Warriors – Silver cuffs, turquoise pendants, bone chokers. Armor for the spirit, protection in battle.

The lesson? Jewelry is language. Real men don’t decorate—they communicate.

How the Builder Can Armor Up

You’re building your life. Time to crown your body.

Cuban or Rope Chain

Clean. Heavy. Bold.

20–24 inches. 2–9mm for the Cuban, 2–7mm for the Rope.

Worn over or under your shirt.

Wear two if you’re feeling dangerous.

Add a pendant if you want to sharpen the signal.

Tip: A lot of pendants won’t fit thicker chains. If you want a pendant, opt for a chain on the thinner end.

Symbolic of: Status. Strength. Unshakable presence.

Hoop or Stud Earrings

Air Jordan swagger. Iron Mike menace.

Stick to silver, gold, and black. Hoops or studs. Gemstones are okay, but let’s leave the big rocks back in 2005.

One ear or both? Whatever you want. One is bold. Two is straight up rebellion.

Tip: Stick to one or two lobe piercings per ear. Too many piercings and you start looking like a pin cushion.

Symbolic of: Edge. Individuality. Controlled aggression.

Rings

Thick bands. Black, tungsten, or steel. Minimal designs.

Each one should feel like a weight you’ve earned.

Symbolic of: Resolve. Grounding. Permanence.

Bracelets

Leather, rope, paracord, stone (onyx, tiger’s eye).

Raw. Primitive. Survivalist.

Not colorful. Not pretty.

Symbolic of: Grit. Brotherhood. Blood and dirt.

What NOT to Wear

  • Anything that sparkles like a mall kiosk special
  • Excessively big diamond stud earrings
  • Bedazzled garbage
  • Dainty jewelry with no weight—physically or symbolically
  • Too many pieces…you aren’t a Christmas tree

If your piece doesn’t feel like a weapon or a trophy—it doesn’t belong on you.

Brickwall’s Stack

One or two solid steel huggy hoops, depending on if I want to stand out (Vegas Pool Party Mode) or be stealth (Big Business Mode). Studs if I feel like it. Usually silver, sometimes black.

Two silver Cuban link chains: 7mm, and 2mm with cross pendant. Usually only wear one. Sometimes two (Vegas Pool Party Mode). Chain on, gains on.

Simple Casio watch.

Simple. Clean. Mean. Nothing extra, no frills, all brick.

The Brickwall Code of Jewelry

Meaning + Muscle + Metal = Message.

Every chain, every ring, every stud should amplify your edge.

Nothing ornamental. Everything intentional.

You live like a warrior.

Now wear your metal like you’ve earned every inch—because you have.

Brickwall’s Rule: Don’t Spend a Lot of Money

You don’t need to drop thousands. You don’t even need hundreds.

Forget the mall diamonds and iced out drip—that’s costume, not armor.

Grab a couple of pieces off Amazon (silver, vermeil, or stainless steel) and you’re in the fight.

The power isn’t in the price tag—it’s in how you wear it.

Make it yours. Own it. Forge it as part of you.

Final Word

Jewelry, when worn by a man of strength, becomes more than style. It becomes signal.

So whether it’s a Cuban chain or two across your chest, a steel ring gripping your calloused hand, or hoops cut from fire in your ear…armor up, brother. Carry the weight. Walk like the modern-day warrior you are.

Back on the Horse: What to Do When You Go Off the Rails

Back on the Horse: What to Do When You Go Off the Rails

Things Happen. You’re Human.

You didn’t plan to inhale a whole pizza and a pint of ice cream.

You didn’t mean to stay up till 2 a.m. watching that show that somehow turned into eight episodes deep.

You didn’t think skipping a single workout would spiral into missing the entire week.

But it happened.

That’s life in today’s world.

A world that’s not built for the Musclebuilder.

It’s built for convenience.

Comfort.

Instant gratification.

Distraction.

Weakness.

We’re fighting a war, brother. And sometimes we take a hit.

But here’s the difference between the average guy and a Musclebuilder:

We don’t stay down.

The Short Memory Principle

A Musclebuilder has a short memory when it comes to failure.

We don’t wallow.

We don’t spiral.

We don’t spend three days “starting over Monday.”

We recognize the moment for what it is—a lapse, not a lifestyle.

Then we do the only thing that matters:

We get back on the damn horse.

The Real Damage Isn’t the Mistake. It’s the Delay.

It’s not the missed training session that wrecks your gains.

It’s letting one missed session turn into a week of nothing.

It’s not the burger and fries that ruin your body.

It’s the shame spiral that follows—where you throw your hands up and eat like garbage for three more days because “you already messed up.”

The body can recover.

The mind can bounce back.

But only if you step back into the arena.

How to Bounce Back Like a Beast

1. Own It…Don’t Excuse It

You messed up. Don’t sugarcoat it. Don’t justify it.

Call it what it was: a moment of weakness.

Then let it go.

2. Hydrate, Eat Clean, and Move Today

Get water in.

Eat real, whole, Musclebuilder-approved food.

Move your body—train, walk, stretch.

This isn’t punishment. It’s a reset.

3. Set One Win for the Day

Momentum is everything. Pick one win:

A hard lift.

A clean dinner.

A full night’s sleep.

Stack the next brick.

4. Use It as Fuel

Every misstep is a lesson.

Every failure is a firestarter.

Channel the regret into rage. Rage into discipline. Discipline into momentum.

Remember Who You Are

You’re not trying to be perfect.

You’re trying to be powerful.

Disciplined.

Consistent.

That doesn’t mean never falling—it means always rising.

The Musclebuilder doesn’t just train muscles.

He trains resilience.

The Rally Cry

You went off the rails?

Good.

Now you’ve got something to fight.

The world threw a punch?

Time to punch back.

Forget the slip.

Forge the comeback.

Short memory.

Sharp focus.

Back on the horse.