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Ultimate
Exercise Training with Mike Brown
Strength
Training:
A
Lifetime Learning Experience
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18 January, 2009
Welcome
to UltimateExerciseTraining.com. Mike Brown has over 40
years of
experience in strength training. Here are the highlights of his
experiences in his own words.
1964: I
ran Dean’s Gym in Honolulu while Dean Higuchi was away wrestling.
Dean’s Gym is where the professional wrestlers trained while they were
in Honolulu.
The
first person I trained, Frank Hay, did exactly what I told him to do.
He was 6' and went from 137 pounds to 170 in 4 months. He later became
a sergeant in the U.S. Marine Corps.
1966:
I trained under Mits Kawashima. Mits supervised my workouts and
gave me a diet that took me, at a height of 6' 1", from 190 pounds to
235 in 5 months. Mits Kawashima was so knowledgeable that as long ago
as 1946 he was taking men from a bodyweight of 150 pounds to 215 in 2
years. Today Mits hosts physique shows in partnership with his friend
of over 30 years, Arnold Schwarzenegger.
1968:
Another
trainee who did exactly what I told him to do (Bob Walton, 6' 2"),
increased his bodyweight from a pear-shaped 180 pounds to a muscular
255 in 9 months.
1970:
I brought the first Nautilus machine into California. It took me only a
matter of weeks to figure out that this machine would only not do what
its inventor claimed, but that its use was counter-productive. You
cannot build strength without also developing balance.
1971:
One of the men I trained, Robert Simpson, at a height of 5' 7" and a
bodyweight of 250, set the unofficial world record for a military press
from a power rack of 1 rep with 550 pounds.
1973:
I became a contributing author to IronMan magazine and authored
the first edition of
The Strength of Samson: How to Attain It.
1974:
I opened a basement gym in Berea, Kentucky. The local chiropractor sent
me many of his patients to strengthen them to the point where they
could hold adjustments. That year I also invented the Samson cable set,
the tapered wrist roller, a new method for making thick handled
dumbbells, and a power rack accessory known as "rack rebounders." That
same year I discovered the use of coconut milk as a muscle-building
agent.
One of
my first customers for the Samson cable set, with my coaching, won the
World’s Arm Wrestling Championship in the 200-pound class at
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His name was Ali Muhammad.
I
trained a softball player, Jerry Rey, to increase his grip strength.
His bodyweight went from 150 pounds to 175 in 9 months. At the end of 9
months his grip was so powerful that every time he hit a softball, it
was a home run.
I
trained a pole vault competitor, Mike Chastain, who needed to
strengthen his shoulder muscles. He had done so well that he improved
his vaults by 18 inches. Mike qualified for the Olympics but couldn’t
afford to go.
In
Berea Herschel and Betty Jones owned Peoples Restaurant. I started
training Betty the winter of 1973/74. She was really happy that other
people noticed she had increased her bust size. She was very unhappy
when the weather warmed up and she found out that she couldn’t fit into
her spring dresses because her arms had also increased in size. She
called me up and said, "Brown, I’m going to kill you!" I reminded her
that I had told her all winter that if she didn’t change her eating
habits, she would have that problem.
I
trained Mrs. Lucille Burnell, a 55-year-old woman to do deep knee bends
with 55-pound dumbbells in each hand. One day her husband called and
said, "Brown, what have you been doing to my wife?" Oops, I said,
"Excuse me?" He told me that she usually would slip on a rug, break an
ankle, and end up going to the hospital. This had happened twice
before. This time when she slipped on the rug, she just tucked her feet
under her in midair and landed on the balls of her feet like a cat.
1975:
This is the year Thomas Gaertner taught me the proper way to do forced
reps. Gaertner, at a height of 6' and a bodyweight of 240, could do 6
reps in the bench press of 550 pounds.
1978:
I helped open and design an 1890s-style gym in Berea, Kentucky. I
coached members of the Berea High School football team. Their rivals in
Richmond, Kentucky had slaughtered them every year with scores like
48-0. The year I was involved with training them, their Richmond rivals
beat them by 1 point.
1981:
I assisted a friend in converting his business from a basement gym to a
commercial establishment.
1984:
I learned how to build the Lakhovsky Multiple-Wave Oscillator from
Ralph Bergstresser, a personal friend of Nikola Tesla. The first person
I tested the device on, an electrical engineer, increased his chin-ups
from 6 to 18 in 3 months.
1985:
One day in the gym a guy (6' 8") doing bench presses was going to let
my wife (5' 5", 125 pounds) work in between his sets. He asked her what
weight she wanted to use. She told him that she would use the same
weight he was using. When she finished her set, the guy looked at her
and said, "I must not be using enough weight." I ended up training this
man in the bench press and found out that he was a pro baseball player.
A
different time I saw a man in the same gym, a radiologist, fail his
attempt at 1 rep with 220 pounds in the bench press. He asked me what
he was doing wrong and I said everything. When I got through explaining
it to him, he said, "You don’t have much of a bedside manner, do you?"
However, when I trained the baseball player, the radiologist, and 2
others, in 9 months all of them were benching 350 pounds for 1 rep.
The
irony of this is that during the 9 months of training 2 other men I
trained at the same time and who were already doing bench presses of
350, only increased their bench presses to 360. I was tearing my hair
out. I couldn’t figure out what it was I was missing until one of my
other trainees, a big Hawaian kid named Wayne, told me those 2 were
using steroids.
1986:
I trained my 15-year-old son, at a bodyweight of 150, to take his
bench press from 5 reps with 130 pounds to 5 reps with 200 pounds in
less than 6 months.
1989:
I worked with one of the strength coaches of the Cincinnati Bengals by
telephone. The deal was, if they won the Super Bowl against the San
Francisco 49ers, they were going to buy each team member one of my
Samson Cable sets. Unfortunately for me, that was the year that Joe
Montana threw a hail Mary that won the game and I saw my sales
evaporate as San Francisco pulled off the most exciting win in Super
Bowl history.
1993:
I started to train a female golf pro in West Palm Beach, Florida, who
was a national class player. She was extremely disadvantaged in her
sport because she was only 5' 1" and competing against women 5' 8"and
taller. I was unable to accomplish anything with her because a minimum
wage instructor working at one of the local gyms wanted to see how
strong she was in a test that she should never have been given in the
first place. He hurt her. Today, unfortunately, most personal trainers
don’t realize its their duty to keep their clients from hurting
themselves. Worse, most personal trainers are not trained to recognize
preexisting injuries or other problems.
1994:
In Chicago I trained a 24-year-old man, who was 6' and weighed 154
pounds and had never trained with weights before. His weight after six
months on Mits’ Protein was 194.
I also
trained a 45-year-old woman with a small frame with a weight of 128
pounds. She had never lifted weights before. By the time she was 47,
she was able to squat with 90 pounds and bench press 75 pounds. She
could do 8 reps doing alternate dumbbell presses with 35 pounds in each
hand.
1997:
A trainee whom I called "Splinters" because he was so stubborn, started
with a bodyweight of 215 and a bench press of 295. In 9 months his
bodyweight was 270 and he was benching 410. Guys would cautiously
approach him and ask, "What are you taking?" He would just point at me
and say, "See that old man? That’s all I need to take."
One day
in the gym Splinters showed a monster on chemicals, that we referred to
as "Dashboard" because his shoulders looked as wide as one, how to do a
bench press using the proper hand placement and breathing. The guy was
able to instantly increase the number of reps.
One day
I was watching a guy I had occasionally trained with. He started out an
exercise quite well but faded fast. I asked him what was wrong and he
said didn’t know. So I asked him if he ate a lot of meat and avoided
carbs. He said, "Yeah, how did you know that?" I said, "You have the
endurance of a cat. They can run at top speeds but they can only do it
a very short distance because their diet consists mainly of meat and
nothing else." After that, whenever we referred to this fellow, we
called him "the Catman." Later I watched him after he adjusted his diet
and noticed that it had solved his problem.
I
trained a man from Poland named Jack Miserowski. He was 6' 4" and
weighed 196 pounds. As an athlete from Poland and before breaking a
leg, he had beaten Bruce Jenner twice. Jack’s bench press started at
200 pounds for 4 reps. Four months later Jack weighed 216 and could
bench press 250 pounds for 4 reps.
I began
coaching Lauren Laughlin, a massage therapist and marathon runner, on
nutrition. You can read her story, Desiccated Liver & Me.
2002:
I started training Ted Roach. His experience can be read at
The low-down on lifting with
Mike by Ted Roach. My side of the story is at
Proper Training Produces
Results.
2003:
I made the video Bodybuilding
The Right Way to show those who may have hit a "sticking point" in
their training and those who keep injuring themselves how a Personal
Training Evaluation will benefit them.
This
year my trainee, Tyler Willhite, is 6' 2" and started with a bodyweight
of 183 pounds can could not do 1 rep with 180 in the bench press. After
2 months he weighs 186 and can bench press 5 reps with 185 and 3 reps
with 195. Since Tyler had hardly gained any weight, I asked him a few
questions about his lifestyle. I discovered why he wasn’t gaining any
significant amount of weight. He wasn’t going to bed until 4 am and
didn’t bother to eat any breakfast.
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