Several years ago, I was required to read through and talk about the book Humility by CJ Mahoney.
I was upset.
Not because I felt as if I was too good to read it, but because this came in the same conversation where my supervisor at the time told me that it was visible that I lacked self-confidence. It made no sense to me that an attempt to build up my self-confidence would be to tell me to be more humble?
Now, I wince and am uncomfortable with compliments and even statements about my abilities.
I share this, possibly because what follows makes me very uncomfortable, but also to completely frame around the conversation and the realization I had through my first powerlifting meet:
Admitting your accomplishments does not lack humility. Humility means accepting the gifts given.
This past weekend, I competed in my first powerlifting meet. This had been something I had been thinking about since January. As meets in the Carolinas came and went and my squat number still wasn’t where I wanted it to be, I wondered if this would be the year or if I should just wait.
Then one night, I did it. I bought my USAPL card. Ready or not, I was committed. After looking at the calendar (there are not a lot of USAPL meets in the Carolinas), I realized I would have to go to Atlanta for Powerlifting for Pups. No big deal, since I used to live there, but still a bigger commitment than I would have liked for my first one. Turns out, it really was meant to be.
I walked in this past Saturday a little nervous. Ok, a lot nervous. I knew my original goal of 250 for squat was probably not going to happen, but I also knew my goal of 300 for deadlift probably would (I had done 295 for 2 a couple of weeks before the meet). Leading up to the meet, I studied and listened to all the first-timer advice I could find and had my perfect spreadsheet of lift attempts all lined up. Coach and I talked on Saturday ahead of time, and he thought around 240 for squat (I was thinking 243 if I was feeling ok, 248 if I felt great), 300 for deadlift (I was really having a hard time working this one out… I knew I could nail 300, but I wasn’t sure if I’d go for that for my 2nd or 3rd), and 110 for bench (I thought I could probably do more, but we hadn’t done a ton of pauses so I wasn’t confident enough to challenge him on that one).
But getting in there, all the perfect spreadsheets and discussions went out the window.
I. Was. Nervous.
The kind of nervous that happens when you suddenly realize this wasn’t going to feel “just like lifting in front of others at the gym” as you had previously thought. The kind of nervous when you get called out in line-up twice for not filling out the paperwork properly. (Oh, yes, there were several “Calling for Amy Hutchison”s called out AS I WAS IN THE BATHROOM) The kind of nervous that happens when you realize that without someone else there, your perfectly planned spreadsheet will be moot because there’s nowhere you can put it that you can get to it and make a decision in time. All that type A gone to waste!
But then there was the excitement of talking to the other ladies. The excitement of getting your rack heights and feeling the weight of the bar. The excitement of warming up and having the coach who is loading your bar for you (because his athlete was sharing your rack) say, “Wow, you must be good!”
The excitement that happens when you remember how much you really love what you do.
So it was with that excitement that I got my belt on, walked up to the bar, squatted and realized it felt so light only to realize… I got three. red. lights.
ACK.
The thoughts going on in my mind at this point were obviously along the lines of, “I thought I was at depth. How much lower did I need to go? Were BZ and Manny lying to me when they said I was hitting it?!?!?!”
Fortunately, the second squat was good and I was on the board, but it was enough to shake me off my game and make a poor decision for my 3rd-I tried for 237, which would have been easy in the gym, but much harder in your first meet with a different bar and different plates and people watching and worrying much more about depth than usual. (One of the seasoned lifters let me know that the meet weights will always feel heavier than gym weights… I had heard this was true on deadlift because of stiff bar, but I wasn’t expecting it for squat)
Now, for the lifters reading this, you’ll get what I’m about to say. I have spent the past 6 months+ with the exact same walk-out on my squat.
Put my hands in position. Pull it back against the rack. Get under it. Shimmy a little to get it comfortable on my shoulders. Take a breath. Lift it off. Walk out. 1. 2. 3 steps. Screw my feet in. Another deep breath/brace. And GO.
Every. Single. Time.
But having people watch me do this process all the sudden made me a little self-conscious. Are they judging me? Do they think my process is silly? Do they think it’s wrong? What if I look like an idiot?
And to add to it, on my third attempt, I went to pull the bar back on the rack (a practice that does absolutely nothing in competition except to make me feel better as it’s part of my routine) and the spotter held it in place to make sure it didn’t fall off. Not his fault, but it made me more self-conscious. So when I went to unrack, that was already in my head. Walked back:1-2-3… No, wait. My foot isn’t right. Move it over. No. You need to go. It doesn’t feel right. Just go with it, you’ll be fine.
Suddenly I was aware the ref hadn’t called for the squat command, yet. I had time to still fix my feet, but instead, I stared at him as if to say, “I’m ready, go ahead and call it already.” Squat and… Nope. Don’t have it.
I shook my head, but I couldn’t feel the spotters grabbing it. I wish I had video of this moment, because this is the moment I legitimately panicked. In the gym, I’ve practiced dumping it, so that was my instinct, but I knew we weren’t supposed to do that. Still, I needed it off my shoulders. By the time I got up, I was completely out of it. I stood waiting on the rack command and it didn’t come. Finally, the back spotter said to me, “I need you to walk it back” and it snapped me back into realization of where I was and why the command wasn’t being called.
Such a weird experience and feeling in that moment. I’m not blaming the walk-out completely, although I think that was part of it, but everything felt, well, off. The weight felt heavier than normal (I’ve unracked 255 before and I feel like that was easier to unrack than the 237 in that moment) and I’m sure I lost tightness in the bottom, maybe never even had it. All of this to be said, I had just started out what I feared was going to be a very disappointing day.
Just before my 3rd attempt, several of the ladies were encouraging me. One even told me about her first meet-where she went forward with the bar and actually hit the rack. Although their encouragement made me feel better, I have put much of my identity as a lifter behind the squat. I’m a squatter. It’s what I do. It’s what I’m strongest at. So if that lift went poorly, I was certain that meant the rest of the lifts would be bad as well.
And so, I reevaluated. And by reevaluated, I mean I panicked. I second guessed how much I should throw away my type-A spreadsheet, my perfectly measured out numbers not sounding so feasible anymore.
After watching some of the guys I started warming up my bench. I went ahead and warmed up to my opener. Bench had been chalked up a long time ago as my throw-away/damage control lift, so I wasn’t concerned about burning out my arms. As I was warming up with one other, she asked me if I knew about the pause. Of course I did (have I watched every Juggernaut/Powercast/132poundsofpower podcast/YouTube produced from 2015-2017 over the past month to get ready for this? Yup!), but she said it always made her nervous when she sees people warming up without one because so few people do. This made me wonder, again, if I should reevaluate my numbers. I was opening at 95, which I was pretty sure I had with pauses, but still went ahead and did it in warm up. Yep. Still good.
Still, since I was so nervous I backed off my original plan. Originally, I was going to go from 95 to 105 to 115 (something like that… cause kilos), but I decided to pull back from 95 to 100 to 110. Did I have 115? Probably. But I am glad I took this a little more conservatively so that I could then focus on deadlift.
You know how I said I have my squat walk-out completely down to routine at this point? I’m completely opposite for bench. I kinda sorta have my set-up, but as a Crossfitter, we don’t bench like powerlifters. We just kind of throw the bar up and hope it moves. So while I had watched Thompson videos, I still am not super-confident on the set-up. Sometimes my leg drive is there, sometimes my arch is, but most of the time I feel like people are probably laughing at my poor form. That day felt better, but I’m 99% sure I grabbed my third close grip. And lift off? I had only used it once during practice, so I had no clue what that was/how to utilize it. I’m pretty sure the spotters laughed at me. Legitimately, out loud, laughed at me.
So, yeah, glad I played it conservatively, but also know I’ll need to work on technique like crazy with this lift.
By the time I went to warm up deadlift, I had sufficiently put a ton of pressure on myself (no pun intended) and I was sufficiently concerned. I had made a decision in prep to warm-up with Adidas Superstars so that the weights I lifted felt lighter once I put on deadlift slippers (PS-anyone wondering about Superstars for deadlifts, that’s my answer to you… they will make deadlifts feel heavier because they’ll create a longer range of motion). This was probably the absolute best decision I made all day, and I’ll keep this as a part of my regular routine.
I warmed up to 255 for 3 (my opener was 270). It felt heavy. Nerve-wrackingly heavy. So I walked outside to put on powder and try to rest my legs. When I didn’t see anyone else outside, I got nervous that I had warmed up too early and went back in to pull 255 again. At that point, someone had gotten to the bar and had pulled off weights for their warm-up. They asked if I wanted to share, but I said no, honestly wondering if it would only make my nerves worse if 255 felt as heavy again.
Everything for deadlift happened about 2 minutes earlier than it should have on my end. I warmed up a little early. I powdered a little early. I put my belt on a little early (pro tip: I went for the prong belt so I wasn’t having to adjust with a screwdriver, but it means walking around with it tightened a little longer since it’s such a PAIN to get on…). So by that point, my nerves were flaring. To the point where I was starting to overheat and was just ready to get. it. done.
I lined up for my first deadlift, still nervous 270 was too heavy to open with, and it flew. PHEW.
Second lift, 303. I had never pulled this before, although I had done 295 for 2 with slow eccentric, so I was pretty sure this was feasible. Still, my nerves were in my throat at this point so I breathed in deep just to try and calm myself. In that moment, I was also thinking about the fact that I had played around with form too much in the weeks leading up to the meet, and that I needed to stick with what I was comfortable with. Lined up my feet, measured out hand placement, knees bent, and go.
This is one of those moments where I wish so badly someone had been videoing. Because in my mind, the bar flew. To the extent that, as I was lining up for my 3rd attempt, I wondered if it was really 303 or if I had selected the wrong kilos or if loaders had gotten it wrong. But the announcer made the comment, “Way to stick with it,” so now I wonder if it wasn’t as smooth as I thought. Either way, I backed down to 314 instead of the original 320 I was going to attempt. I wanted to end on a good note, and I felt more confident with 314, even though after all is said and done, I’m pretty sure I would have had 320. (Welcome to my competitive nature, which is never fully satisfied!)
Pulled 314 a little slow in the lock-out. Thinking about that part, it drives me a little nuts because I’ve pulled 340 off of blocks, so hip drive is something that wasn’t a matter of me not having the strength to do it, but just forgetting *to* do in the moment of it all.
That said, several of us sat down and watched the guys lifting, and the judges were NOT PLAYING on deadlifts. A couple of them were pretty easy to see, but a couple of the hitching/lockout calls we had to help each other figure out what the judges were red-lighting. Would I have gotten 320? I’m pretty sure yes. Would I have gotten it completely smoothly with zero chance of getting called for hitching? I don’t know, but I’m glad I didn’t try.
Remember how I said much of my identity as a lifter (not as a human, let’s be clear) is on squats? Well, a 314 deadlift is much better relatively than a 220 squat. On the one hand, it’s encouraging to know my leg/back strength is plenty to get a stronger squat than that, but on the other hand it means I have some form things to continue cleaning up, as well as some in-the-hole strength and tightness to work on.
I came back very excited about all of this. For my first meet, I did very well. I came in 1st in my weight class/division, with 2nd place right at my heels. This made me feel good, since 1st place wasn’t just given to me, but I had some real competition there (I went 2.5 kilos more on squat, she went 2.5 kilos more on bench). I’m grateful I didn’t know this when I was playing the numbers game (at 19, she was competing in the teen division, so I didn’t know she was competing in open as well) and could make decisions instead by feel. It’s also one thing to compete with myself, but I can get standoffish when competing against others, something that is not my best quality in competition!
When I got back, I went to my normal team to process-my counselor and my chiropractor as well as gym buddies. As I was talking to both counselor and chiropractor, they have guided me in what humility in all of this looks like.
Because for me, humility has been reminding myself that while I’m proud of my accomplishments, they still do not stand up on a national scale. That while I should be ranked top 20 in deadlift in NC, I still have a loooong way to go to be top 20 in the US.
My form of humility has been to downplay my accomplishments by comparing them to the accomplishments of others.
But when I met with my chiropractor, I told him how I had told my coach that it is as much his as it is mine. My chiropractor’s response: “Amy, he didn’t lift the weights.”
I am choosing gratitude for the team that keeps me straight. I didn’t do this alone, and I want to be clear about that. I have a meal prep service and a nutrition coach. I have a chiropractor and a massage therapist and a psychotherapist. I have a coach who did my programming and has done my programming and coaching for the past year. I have gym buddies who called me out on depth and put up with my obsessing over the numbers and the placements and the YouTube videos and the bad weeks. And for them, I am grateful, because it is a reminder that I did not do this alone.
But I also choose to admit that for whatever reason, I have a body that responds very well to strength training. I have a body that gains muscle practically just by looking at a barbell. I have a body that can be beat up for 5 or 6 days and recover quickly, even though I’m well into my 30s.
And all that has nothing to do with me or with the phenomenal team, but all of that glory goes directly to God.
As my counselor and I were talking about it, she pointed out to me that even my competitive nature was given to me by God. I don’t always love it. I know it can create frustration both in my own spirit and with those around me. But that competitive nature isn’t a problem, it’s a creation of God’s.
So while I’m back in the gym and hitting it hard hoping to one day make it to nationals (hopefully sooner rather than later), I’m also praying through why God has given me this gift. And why in the world did I discover it at 35? I know that this isn’t the end of a journey to one meet, but the start of a journey on to that discovery.
Will you pray with me?