.::TEK talks::.

Is this the correct way to take halo preworkout? Please advise.

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LOL! I'd rather have huge abs and a 36" waist than be a 32" and be skinny fat.
I have a 33" waist so the large abs look funny. They've come a long ways but I doubt they will ever be how I imagined them. Maybe 280 (almost) has some thing to do with it:confused:
 
I have a 33" waist so the large abs look funny. They've come a long ways but I doubt they will ever be how I imagined them. Maybe 280 (almost) has some thing to do with it:confused:
For a big man like you a 33' waist is pretty frickin small. I think you should be quite happy with that.
 
With my job I cant right now, but as soon as I can I am growing the most massive ugly man beard the world has ever seen.
I grow a big nasty filthy beard and look homeless and love the look. One time my wife dropped me off at the 7 eleven soni could get a cup of coffee while she ran an errand. While I was sitting outside the store leaning on the front of the store with the empty coffee cup resting on my knee a woman dropped change into my cup.... I love it. My wife gets pissed when my appearance gets like that, she says you work so hard to make your body look good but couldn't care any less about you appearance. I love looking homeless and jacked with my arm around my hot wife.
 
Where the hell did TEK go?
I'm just killin' it...
my lifestyle is different than a lot of members here and my training/AAS use is more than unorthodox. I've gotten kinda despondent towards posting on the board lately.

Still waking up early and pounding sweet potatoes/mini wheats before hitting the big lifts early and intensity is through the roof. Then breakfast and postworkout shake. Another meal and an hour nap around noon. I've been lighter on the cardio and instead doing supplemental exercises and some isolation work about 3 days a week after lunch or outdoor manual labor. Remodeling 2 bathrooms in the old farmhouse with reclaimed materials my general contractor buddy had from old jobsites. Dug/leveled a footer and am working on a dry stack outdoor patio and retaining wall out of fieldstone we are pulling from around the property. New chicken coop, finishing a duck blind out of a steel john boat this week, trying to keep up with our fall food plots, and flyfishing when I can talk the girl into tying some knots with me. Still running that copper line, almost done with my .300 blackout build....no rest for the wicked :cool:

beard game ferocious.

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I used to stack that fieldstone for extra money in my early 20's. Stack in to pallets and tie with chicken wire and haul that shit off. Rich folks paid good $$$ for old colonial stone they would use to decorate their property. Plus it lined my pockets. Hard damn work
 
I used to stack that fieldstone for extra money in my early 20's. Stack in to pallets and tie with chicken wire and haul that shit off. Rich folks paid good $$$ for old colonial stone they would use to decorate their property. Plus it lined my pockets. Hard damn work
Did a lot of work under an old mason growing up, all drystack. Hard work but rewarding...love the look but structural integrity is heads above working with mud in the mountains here. Gravel footer and backfill with a mix of rock dust, takes a little upkeep over the years but if you place your deadman right then all the freeze/thaw and shifting still won't blow your wall out. I'm confident walls we put in when I was in my teens will ride well over 100 years. Humpin 5 gallon buckets of rock dust up and down these steep slopes prepared me for challenges I encountered in life after high school, country strength is somewhat of an intangible asset...but it's very real.

Virgina and Tennessee field stone is fetching big $$$ right now
 
Did a lot of work under an old mason growing up, all drystack. Hard work but rewarding...love the look but structural integrity is heads above working with mud in the mountains here. Gravel footer and backfill with a mix of rock dust, takes a little upkeep over the years but if you place your deadman right then all the freeze/thaw and shifting still won't blow your wall out. I'm confident walls we put in when I was in my teens will ride well over 100 years. Humpin 5 gallon buckets of rock dust up and down these steep slopes prepared me for challenges I encountered in life after high school, country strength is somewhat of an intangible asset...but it's very real.

Virgina and Tennessee field stone is fetching big $$$ right now
I trailered my old skid steer out to the trail head fashioned it with forks and filled the flatbed up with as much palletized stone as it could hold. Since it was a Ford it was more than I expected. Brought home $800 a pallet back then if I stacked the best stones on the outside. The money put clothes on my kids back and food on their plate. Allowed me to save a little. Times get tough. Just gotta be tougher
 
country strength is somewhat of an intangible asset...but it's very real.
True. I feel out of place here in the burbs. I gotta get back to my roots. Miss that shit. I'm taking a trip to TN coming the holidays. It'll give me a chance to greet the in laws in their new place and scope the area out. Potentially a place to settle down if I dig it. We'll see
 
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