You are currently browsing all posts tagged with 'mission'.

Rant: Push Yourself Like Your Life Depends on It

  • December 7, 2009 11:24 am

So I’m at the gym today and what do I see but three girls “working out” in the shortest shorts ever, talking and laughing like it’s the most fun they’ve had in their lives. Now, why did I just put “working out” in quotes? Because there’s a difference between actually working out and just hanging out in the gym and thinking you’re working out, and apparently a lot of people do not realize this. The gym is not a place to socialize people — be it the basement of your house, gym in your apartment or road you are going running on, go there with a purpose.

If you’re in the middle of a set and talking to the person next to you, you are not working out. If you are looking across the room and checking out some girl stretching, you’re not working out. And if you feel exactly the same at the end of a set as you did at the beginning, you damn sure are not working out.

Click to continue reading “Rant: Push Yourself Like Your Life Depends on It”

Who can you listen to?

  • November 23, 2009 7:44 pm

There are few markets that are as saturated with pseudo-knowledge and self proclaimed experts as the fitness market. Everywhere you look there is someone or something telling you how to be healthy, how to be in good fitness, or how to achieve a particular goal. It has come to the point that it is almost impossible to pick out the real information and knowledge, and so we believe whatever sounds the best, or whatever seems to be articulated in the most elegant manner. The problem is that 99% of the information available at arm’s length is intended to sell us on something and thus this massive percentage of information is likely based in non-fact. AITank’s purpose is to make sense of what we hear and read, to separate fact from fiction and inform you so that you can make better decisions in regards to what you allow to influence your fitness. We are pushing for the raw truth.

The AITank Team