Bricklayer
Don't Make Me Use The Bat
Being prepared as in being in top physical shape. That includes having a healthy diet.
The summer with the toppest physical shape I ever had my featured meal of the day was a Whooper Jr. w/cheese meal that was on sale for $1.99 cents that entire summer. I would get onion rings rather than the fries. Diet iced tea rather than a soft drink, sweeten it with sweet n low or nutrasweet. I was very poor that summer, there was a Burger King a block from my apartment, so it made sense. For dinner I had a 10lb bag of potatoes I ran through over the course of the summer, with a can of green beans and occasionaly some lunch meat if it was on sale. On a normal day I would work out for an hour and then play 3-4 hours of basketball or tennis in the afternoon. I normally alternated days, but there were fewer tennis partners around that summer then pickup games, so it was more basketball. If I could do neither, I ran. Which I hate, but I did it anyway. Took Sunday off to recover. Note that my speciality in every sport I ever played was defense and wars of attrition. I was always going to beat you up and outlast you. Was there a girl around coming back to school in the fall that I was hoping to impress? Sure, isn't there always? But that's not the point.
Point was you can be in pretty darn good shape even with some level of fast food in your diet. That doesn't mean that's ideal, but you can certainly more than meet any obligation you have. If Reke wants to now take it to another level, great. But being a pro athlete in no way encompasses drinking nothing but a spinach flavored power shakes morning noon and night so as to absolutely maximize your abilities while sleeping in a ideally reclined sleep pod designed to maximize your rest periods. They are just people. You go out drinking on New Year's Eve? You shouldn't -- kills brain cells and slows you down for your job, whatever it may be. But people do those things anyway. Young people even moreso.
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