What Baseball Could Learn from a Former Skinny Kid
The baseball season is here and the game’s greatest players are in the news. They have hit the headlines not for their prowess on the field, but for alleged steroid abuse in the locker room. Baseball’s greatest stars could have taken a body building lesson from a former out-of-shape 135 pound weakling.
(PRWEB) May 4, 2005 -- Today’s kids are learning a tough lesson. They are
watching baseball heroes suffer through some of the effects of steroid abuse.
Those huge, powerful muscles Jose Canseco and other baseball greats developed to
play the game are coming at a terrific price. That price includes public
humiliation, loss of prestige and reputation, and probable financial loss.
What these kids are not seeing is the future health problems these
baseball legends will almost certainly experience because of steroid abuse.
These can include heart disease; several forms of cancers, impaired immune
systems and other problems that will likely have devastating medical
effects.
The problem is that many of these kids are themselves being
pressured to “be better” at the games – baseball, track, soccer or other sports
– they play. This is to say nothing of those kids who are simply too skinny and
underweight to be good at sports or picked for the teams.
Anthony Ellis,
a fitness consultant, was one of these skinny kids. He spent a lifetime trying
to gain weight. He couldn’t stand to look at himself in the mirror. He tried to
hide his thin physique with baggy clothes. He wouldn’t think of going to the
beach and letting his friends see how skinny he really was. He was repeatedly
rejected for sports teams because he was underweight and likely to be hurt.
Baseball was out of the question.
“The news these days, it seems, is
filled with stories about obesity and how people are overweight. I am trying to
help people gain weight. What the media doesn’t talk about is that segment of
the population, people like me, who have trouble gaining weight. This is the
group that suffers frustration and low self-esteem because they are underweight.
They read the body building magazines and watch sports heroes pack on muscle.
They turn to fad diets, unregulated diet supplements and steroids to gain
weight.”
“I went through all of the fads, the low self-esteem and the
lack of confidence that affects all areas of your life,” Ellis related. “I know
how tough it is. But, I finally learned the proper way to eat and weight
train.”
Since 1998, Ellis has gained over 60 pounds of lean muscle. His
body fat has gone from 10 percent to seven percent. He looks great and feels
great about himself.
He has taken what he has learned and put it into an
easy to understand, easy to follow program that is entirely natural and entirely
safe. It does not include so called “natural” supplements or dangerous steroids.
He has already helped thousands of “skinny guys”, guys just like he once
was, gain muscle mass with the right diet and the right exercise. More than
70,000 people worldwide have already obtained results from the Gaining Mass!
program. They have done it quickly, safely and without endangering their future
health.
The program contains pure information telling users exactly what
foods to eat and exactly which exercises will work to help them build muscle and
body mass without fat. This is real information, without the fads and without
the hype. It works. It has been proven to work again and again.
“Make no
mistake,” Ellis says. “This program is not for everyone. It is only for those of
us who have trouble gaining weight. We may not all become baseball home run
sluggers, but we can look great and feel great. We can do it without all of the
problems some of those guys are going to continue to suffer.”
The Gaining
Mass! program is the fast and safe way for skinny people to gain muscle mass,
greater confidence and heightened self-esteem. This program uses exactly the
right diet and exercise. It does not use phony diet supplements or dangerous and
illegal steroids.
For more information on this amazingly effective
muscle building program, visit the website at http://www.fastmusclegain.com today.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/5/prweb236025.htm