Don’t get me wrong, you need to set realistic goals and expectations, but also set yourself deadlines to achieve these challenging goals. You shouldn’t expect to be a top level pro bodybuilder the first year of competing. That’s like saying you expect to be drafted into the NBA after trying out for your high school basketball team and never playing in a game. Get your feet wet by competing in the NPC and then you can better understand in which direction you need to go and what improvements you need to make.
The last push, or the follow through, is the most important step in any process. Whether it’s in bodybuilding, closing a sales deal, catching a fish, or sinking a putt, it only matters when the task is complete. No fish in the boat? Well, I don’t care how close it was, you didn’t catch it. Had someone interested in your business but couldn’t close the deal? Looks like you’re not getting paid. You can keep it together for the first 16 weeks of a bodybuilding prep, but you can’t mentally handle the last four? I guess you aren’t earning your pro card. I always say you have to be a pro before you become a pro. Either you are a champion or you have a second-place mentality.
The last push in every set of every exercise is when it counts. As you’re struggling under the bar to gain control of the last few reps of your set, don't quit. What will separate the champion from the second-place guy are the last few reps that someone else isn’t willing to do but you are. The last push in prep, the last 4 weeks into a show—this is where the men and the boys get separated. The person who gives the most effort in the last 4 weeks, after 16 weeks of dieting, is the person who can walk away proud knowing they gave everything they had. Win, lose, or draw at the show, the one who gave the most effort has my respect. If you start a sprint and it ends up a marathon, you better have the balls to keep the same pace at the end as you did when you started. That is the time that really counts.