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Almost everyone wants to look fantastic and feel comfortable in their own skin. The idea of what “looks good” is constantly changing and evolving, which is why there are so many diet programs and weight reduction program material on television and the internet.
However, there has been a very different type of individual for the previous hundred years or so: the bodybuilder. Bodybuilders are a determined handful who transform their bodies into absolute masterpieces, studying each muscle as if it were a religious scripture.
Listed below are the bodybuilders who went a little bit too far in their quest for a perfect body and paid the price:
1. Grey Plitt
So this one has nothing to do with medications (at least not as far as we know) and nothing to do with cardiac stress (well, not directly anyway). Greg Plitt, a West Point graduate and former Ranger, began his career as a personal trainer in Los Angeles.
He even devised the MFT 28 training program, which was published on the website bodybuilding.com. Men’s Health, Muscle & Fitness, and American Health & Fitness have all featured Plitt on their covers.
He even appeared in commercials for Old Spice Body Wash, Old Navy, and Under Armour, which led to his appearance on the reality show Work Out. Plitt decided to go for a run in 2015, but as a professional bodybuilder, he couldn’t just go for any run; it had to be severe.
Plitt planned to outrun a train by running on train tracks. He was apparently trying to prove that an energy drink works, but there were no cameras present, so I’m not sure what he was up to. Yes, he was hit by the train.
2. Gary Himing
Bodybuilders push their bodies to their limits, often going beyond what the human body was built to do. A bodybuilder’s training puts stress on the heart and other organs even when no drugs or steroids are used.
Their diet is equally extreme, with a high protein and a lack of other nutrients that the body need. Gary Himing met his demise on stage, the worst possible outcome for a bodybuilder.
He passed out on stage after his set while competing in a competition in Victoria. Even more stunning was the fact that the show went on after his body was removed! In retrospect, I’m not convinced that was the wisest choice.
Imagine being the guy who had to take the stage next. I’m afraid I can’t. I’d be embarrassed and demand that the event be stopped. Nonetheless, the program continued on, and you have to wonder how relieved the audience was that another performer did not die in front of their eyes after each consecutive contestant.
3. Bertil Fox
You don’t merely take human growth hormone and become huge, nor do you take it and go nuts straight immediately. Bertil Fox is an example of the latter, which is what occurs to your state of mind over time when you take human growth hormone.
Before retiring to St. Kitts, where he planned to open a gym with his wife, Fox was known for his magnificent muscle-bound body, winning titles in both the United States and England.
Fox went insane in 1997 and committed many murders. He shot his mother-in-law and then shot and killed his wife in a shop owned by his mother-in-law. Fox was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.
Fox claimed self-defense, but most believe it was an outburst of suppressed wrath built up (and suppressed) over the years, the intensity of which was assisted by human growth hormone.
What are your thoughts and say in this?
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