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 ⬇

Sunday Sendoff #13: Rise from the Ashes

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

Brother, life will blindside you. One second everything’s normal, the next—it’s chaos. A tragedy. A moment that knocks the air out of your lungs.

We all carry scars from those days. Dates etched in memory. Faces we’ll never forget.

And yeah—we stop, we remember. That’s respect. That’s honor. But here’s the real test: what do you do after?

Do you stay buried in the rubble? Or do you rise and build again?

The Musclebuilder doesn’t stay down. He takes that pain, that loss, and he forges it into something heavier, something stronger. He stacks bricks on top of the ashes. He builds a wall that won’t fall.

This is how we honor those who came before—by living with purpose, by pushing forward when it hurts, by refusing to waste the time we’ve been given.

So remember brother. But don’t just remember—rise.

Rise for your mission. Rise for your family. Rise for the ones who no longer can.

Anchors down for reflection.

Anchors up for action.

The Week’s Post Loadout

9/8/25 | Before the Weight: Form, Tempo, Range of Motion | Foundations

Weight gets all the glory, but before weight comes form, tempo, and range of motion.

9/8/25 | Monday: Where Musclebuilders Rise | Raw Steel

Every day is important, but Monday is the start of the rise.

9/10/25 | In Frame Vol. 9: Presence and Progress | In Frame

Stay grounded, but climb.

9/11/25 | September 11th, 2001 | Brickwall’s Corner

Remembering the tragedy. How we move forward.

9/12/25 | Muscle In Motion: Cardio That Doesn’t Suck (How I Make It Fun, and How You Can Too) | Foundations

Cardio isn’t some necessary evil, it’s your birthright. Get out and move.

9/13/25 | The Greatest Hold Song You’ll Ever Hear: Opus No. 1 by Tim Carleton | The Brickpile

The Brickyard is everywhere, and can be found in the most unexpected places.

Something to Ponder

The question isn’t if life will test you. The question is: will you let the test consume you—or let it forge you?

See You In the Arena

This week is just about over. Next week is just about here. Let’s keep building.

Brick by brick.

-Brickwall

The Greatest Hold Song You’ll Ever Hear: Opus No. 1 by Tim Carleton

Picture it, brother.

You’re jumping through hoops—trapped in corporate purgatory, trying to get your issue solved. Ear to phone, precious time slipping by.

Frustrating, no doubt.

Then you hear the groove…

A synth line smoother than glass. A bass that hums like a steel chain dragging across the floor of the Brickyard. A rhythm that makes even purgatory feel like a dance floor.

That’s Opus No. 1 by Tim Carleton.

And whether you know it or not, you’ve been initiated.

The Hidden Anthem

Opus No. 1 isn’t just hold music. It’s the secret soundtrack of the grind.

  • It’s been echoing through phone lines since 1994, quietly infiltrating millions of ears.
  • It’s survived generations of customer service agents, outlasting trends, outlasting even the companies themselves.
  • It’s a song nobody asked for, yet just about every man alive has heard.

It’s the anthem of waiting warriors, brother. The track you never chose—but somehow chose you.

The Brickyard Is Everywhere

In the Brickyard, we talk about forging muscle under load. Training in the fire. Holding the line when life tries to break you.

Opus No. 1 is that lesson in music form.

It teaches patience through groove. Discipline through rhythm. A reminder that even in the most soul-sucking places—the DMV, the bank, the endless queue—you can still find flow.

It’s the Mona Lisa of Muzak.

The Chain On, Gains On of waiting.

The percent zone of patience.

Rally Call

Brother, next time you’re on hold—don’t get pissed. Get groovy.

Listen. Feel it.

That’s Opus No. 1 whispering the Brickyard truth:

You’re not just built with the weights. You’re built in the waiting, too.

Every queue. Every delay. Every grind you endure.

The groove forges you.

So when life puts you on hold?

Find the rhythm. Lock in. Build anyway.

Anchors Down. Anchors Up. Groove in the Grind.

Even hold music can be Brickyard.

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

September 11th, 2001

Never Forget: September 11th, 2001

We remember.

It was more than an attack on buildings, more than an attack on a country. It was an attack on humanity itself. Thousands gone. Millions scarred. A wound felt by all.

And yet—out of the smoke, out of the rubble, rose courage. First responders—real-life superheroes—charging into the carnage. Strangers helping strangers. A nation standing shoulder to shoulder, even if only for a moment, in unity and resolve.

That’s the fire we forge with in the Brickyard. Out of rubble comes steel. Out of pain comes strength. The Musclebuilder way is to honor the fallen—not with silence, but with action. To live better. To stand taller. To be ready when the storms of life hit.

Today, pause. Remember the lives cut short. Remember the heroes who refused to back down. Remember how fragile and precious life is.

Then reinforce the mission. Stack the bricks. Build yourself stronger. Build your world better.

Never forget. Never stop.

In Frame Vol. 9: Presence and Progress

In Frame Vol. 9: Presence and Progress

I stood on the red rock—solid, immovable, carved by time. It wasn’t going anywhere. Neither was I, not in that moment.

Behind it, Pike’s Peak towered above everything. Snow capped, unreachable in an instant, but calling me all the same.

That’s the Musclebuilder paradox.

Root yourself in the now. Presence. Discipline. Daily reps. Bricks stacked one by one. No foundation, no future.

But keep the peak in sight. Progress. Vision. The summit that pulls you higher.

Presence without progress? Standing still.

Progress without presence? Chasing shadows.

The Musclebuilder balances both. Grounded in the rock, climbing toward the peak.

Anchors down. Anchors up.

P.S. Pike’s Peak calls. The summit awaits. Don’t just look at it—climb.

Monday: Where Builders Rise

Most people groan when they think about Mondays.

Not here in the Brickyard. Not us Builders.

Monday is go time. The launch pad. The ignition. The clean slate. It’s not just the start of the week—it’s the assault that sets the tone for everything that follows.

Locked and stocked. All systems go. Anchors up.

While the world hits snooze, you’re stacking bricks. Training. Building. Advancing your mission.

So wake up. Load up. Loadout. Full fucking send.

It’s Monday, brother. Let’s ride.

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/