| In
a Shed Outback
Ben
Callcott once said “Ambition can be found at the source of
all progress.” You’ve never heard of him, I realise
that, but if you have ever skipped a workout, take a moment to analyse
that statement. If you lift weight, you are striving for progress
and you need to be clear about your ambition. What is it that you
are working on here? No ambition is less worthy than any other and
knowing exactly what you want from your training is the only way
that you will get it.
For
anyone that hasn’t yet guessed, I’m Ben Callcott and
this is the story of how I discovered the importance of an obscure
goal that had been driving me for years.
Every
second afternoon about 5:30 or so, I stop whatever I’m doing
and make my way to the gym. Not so unusual, I admit, except for
the fact that the nearest commercial gym is roughly 400 kilometres
away in Townsville. My gym is in a shed on the cattle station where
I live.

There
are no distractions like the boppy aerobics music that usually accompanies
the 5:30 class in a normal gym and, somewhat more importantly, there
is no-one available to spot a couple of forced reps; I live alone.
The equipment has been either selected or built with this fact in
mind. Plenty of dumbbells, and the barbell sits in a hybrid power
rack that should stop me from damaging myself when I fail.
No,
I didn’t just wake up one morning and decide to set about
improving my physique in the bush. I had trained for 11 years while
living and working in Townsville. The original purpose of moving
to town was to forge myself a career in finance, which did happen,
but I stumbled on a passion in the process. I joined a gym on arrival
and quickly learned that bodybuilders, in general, enjoy sharing
their knowledge. I asked many questions of relative strangers and
was never disappointed. With their assistance and a lot of hard
work, I managed to maintain steady progress and had just cracked
the 100 kilogram barrier when an injury to a family member prompted
me to move back into the bush permanently at the beginning of 2002.
I
spent a full year trying to maintain my hard won size but still
lost about 15 kilograms of it. It was almost impossible to find
the will to train after a day of mustering or feeding droughted
stock. I had never realised just how integral my goals had been
to my motivation. My ambition had been to win natural bodybuilding
titles and I had trained single-mindedly for over seven years on
the strength of that one aim. My last competition had been in 1994
and having come home without a trophy I resolved to add the necessary
size and return. At the end of 2001, I had gained about 20 kilograms
of muscle and was almost ready. All hope of a competitive future
appeared to evaporate when I moved back into the bush and my training
suffered as a result.
I
soon found that I was unable to desert the “life of iron”
(thanks Ian) that I had become accustomed to in town. In March 2003
I discovered that an independent natural competition was to be held
in Townsville in October and the fire was rekindled. I had about
six months to regain some size and prepare to compete. It wasn’t
ideal but that thought did not even enter my head. I had been thrown
a lifeline and I intended to make the most of it My preparation,
though unconventional, went well and I was happy with my condition
on the day. There were only two competitors in the medium/tall division
and I won but I had already begun to look to the future. Suddenly
heavy squats and deadlifts are a joy again. I am lifting back to
within a few kilograms of my previous best and the mass is coming
back slowly. My ambition is clearer than ever and I intend to compete
in Brisbane in 2004.
If
there is something from my experience that you can adapt to your
own training it is this: Find your ambition and scratch it into
your brain so that it appears before your eyes even when they are
closed. Do this and progress will never again be a problem.
Ben Callcott
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