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Bruce Lee's Weight
Training
Bruce
Lee never bragged about his muscular body, but he was proud of
it, especially of his highly developed abdominal muscles. When
Bruce wore loose clothing, he looked like a normally built guy.
But underneath the clothing, he was a man with extraordinary
muscles.
"I've seen many muscular bodybuilders," one of his fans
said, "but never like Bruce. He is built perfectly, not
bulky. He has muscles on top of muscles, yet he moves with the
finesse of a ballet dancer. Those men with bulky muscles can't
move like that; they are too tight and clumsy."
Fred Weintraub, the producer of Enter The Dragon, gave this
description of Bruce: "...His body never had an inch of fat;
it was pure muscle, like steel."
Bruce had to work hard to develop those muscles. "l used to
have a big, soft belly," he explained. "My stomach
protruded and I looked terrible for a young guy. I decided to
streamline my waist."
From that revelation, Bruce took up weight training. He was
always a bundle of energy. He was like a small kid who would
never tire. If he had his mind set to do something, nothing could
have stopped him.
He combined weight training with his regular workout.
He spent as much as four hours in his garage, hardly taking a
break, as he worked on the equipment, built by his students to
his specifications. He designed his weight-training workout to
avoid bulky muscles that might interfere with his performance.
For instance, he did not want muscles that restricted the
movement of his elbows.
"You must tuck your elbows in quickly when a blow is
directed to your midsection," he explained. "Some
bodybuilders are so bulky that they have no way to defend the
solar plexus area with efficiency. They can't cover the area with
their elbows, so when they use another method to protect it, they
leave other parts of their body open. Weight training is supposed
to help you, not screw you.
Bruce concentrated heavily on his abdominal muscles because he
believed that the body is "the biggest target and the least
mobile. The more muscles you have around your abdomen, the more
blows it can take." Bruce's body was covered with ripples of
muscles. Broad-shouldered and narrow-waisted, he was the envy of
even bodybuilders.
To Bruce, training was a full-time job. Even while watching
television, he would be in motion. He would do his sit-ups very
slowly, his body descending slower than ascending. "You'll
get more benefit by doing them slowly," he said. "It's
not the number of repetitions, but the way it's done."
When he wasn't doing sit-ups, he would be squeezing a rubber ball
or pumping a pair of dumbbells. Desiring accolades, many times he
would ask a friend or acquaintance to place a hand on his abdomen
or leg to "feel my stomach muscles" or "feel how
hard my legs are."
Bruce wasn't particular about what he ate. He avoided cigarettes,
wine and liquor, but never refused a cup of hot tea. He would eat
anything: pork, chicken, fish, beef, vegetables. His favorite
dishes were Chinese and Japanese.
Although he was small man, 5-foot-7 and 135 pounds, he had a
voracious appetite. In a restaurant, he always ordered an
additional plate of food for himself- one serving was not enough.
He also drank a lot of water, probably because he perspired so
much.
Bruce took a daily amount of vitamin pills, apparently influenced
by the body-building magazine he subscribed to. He prided himself
on being healthy.
This material has been excerpted from the Ohara Publications
Inc. book Bruce Lee: The Incomparable Fighter, authored by M.
Uyehara, who was a close friend of the late martial artist.
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