国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

  Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Bodybuilding is serious business for Lin Peiqu
(That's Beijing)
Updated: 2004-04-02 14:31

Think bodybuilding is the exclusive domain of narcissistic meatheads who are all brawn and no brain? Think again. Lin Peiqu, nicknamed 'Mr China' by the media, is single-handedly breaking the muscleman mould - no small feat in a country that's just beginning to get pumped.


Lin Peiqu, a 27-year-old Guangdong native is nicknamed "Mr China" [file photo] 
The 27-year-old Guangdong native has already amassed a myriad of achievements in a sport he only got into 7 years ago - in 2002 he was crowned National Fitness Champion and won best performance across all categories at the national championships in Sichuan province. In October of the same year he placed 5th in the 70kg category at the Busan Games in South Korea - the first time that a Chinese from the mainland has placed so high.

Lin has been a sports nut from the start. As a student at the Guangzhou Sports Academy in 1997, he was working towards a promising career as a middle distance runner until a knee injury brought his hopes to a crashing halt. His coach suggested he switch to bodybuilding. "In fact, my teacher always wanted me to body build because they thought I had a suitable body shape, but I wanted to run." He is now one of the academy's biggest stars and found adapting to what seems a very different sport straightforward. "Progress was very rapid because I had already progressed very far. I found it easy to change from one to another because I was already used to a serious training schedule."

Lin credits his buff bod to sheer dedication and will. "Being healthy is my life and I work incredibly hard to achieve my body," he explains. His training regimen is intense and time-consuming. Everyday he goes for two 50-minute runs and has two 1 1/2 hour sessions at Nirvana where, on an ordinary day, he lifts up to 500 pounds. For every event, he trains for three full months, but manages his time so that it doesn't interfere with his normal life. "I still get to spend time with my friends and family."

Not surprisingly, building up all that muscle requires food - lots of it. To get that well-honed look, he eats six low fat meals a day and handfuls of nutritional supplements, but Vegans beware: his diet requires ample portions of beef, fish, vegetables and especially chicken. If the chicken flu wiped out China's avian population, Lin would be in serious trouble. Bodybuilders exist on a diet of protein to develop muscle, and have a skinny supermodel's aversion to fat.

Armed with chiselled good looks and a thoughtful nature, Lin's mainstay is his job as one of Nirvana Fitness Centre's most popular personal trainers. For RMB 200 an hour, gym members can buff up with China's best. "As a trainer, I'm proud that I can share my knowledge. That is just as important as winning competitions," he explains.

Whether he's oiled up for competition or fully-clothed on the street, Lin always draws attention, especially from women - groupies flock to his competitions and even as we were queuing up for a coffee, a couple of Beijing beauties alternated between giving him admiring glances and yours truly evil 'who-does-she-think-she-is' glares. Lin remains unperturbed, however, explaining that he is unconcerned with his celebrity status and doesn't treat the interest from the ladies as a perk of the job. "I don't do bodybuilding for the attention. I see myself as setting an example to others as to what they can achieve through fitness."

Lin prefers the time he spends training rather than the actual performances. He shyly smiles when explaining that he has a fiancee, an Asian-American currently studying in the States. "She's also obsessed with health and fitness so we have a lot in common," he says, adding that she too remains unfazed by the hordes of female fans. "Of course, women scream at the performances, but I'm in the sport for the training, not for the attention."

For now his eyes are firmly focused on 2006, which will be a crucial year. "I want to represent China at the 2006 Asian Games in Qatar and, equally importantly, get married soon after." Central to his life is his religion. His Christian beliefs carry him through stressful competitions and arduous training. "God gives people different jobs and I believe that my job is to educate others about health and fitness." Lin also emphasises his aim to further develop the sport of bodybuilding in China, which is still in its early stages due in part to the expense of dedicating yourself to the training and the equipment involved. "Although it is popular in big cities like Shanghai and Beijing, bodybuilding is not as well known in less urban areas. I hope that I will be able to change that."

 
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Nation indignant over US arms sale to Taiwan

 

   
 

Taiwan court to hear recount lawsuit

 

   
 

China to US: Stop spying in border areas

 

   
 

2008 Games to bring US$16b business

 

   
 

Flight insurance dispute soars

 

   
 

Bullfights cancelled over animal welfare

 

   
  Bodybuilding is serious business for Lin Peiqu
   
  Like master, like dog: study
   
  'Girlfriend' photos upset Prince William
   
  Springtime sex in spotlight
   
  Glad to be gay?
   
  Beijing writers face a dilemma
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Eric Clapton plays the devil's music  
Advertisement
         
安顺市| 博爱县| 普安县| 左贡县| 塔城市| 府谷县| 黔西县| 昭觉县| 雷波县| 泸水县| 南阳市| 密山市| 温宿县| 临武县| 昆山市| 东丽区| 琼海市| 庆元县| 镇宁| 柳州市| 东至县| 南开区| 双桥区| 灵璧县| 通渭县| 横峰县| 忻州市| 西林县| 黑山县| 江北区| 东台市| 云南省| 阿尔山市| 玉树县| 商水县| 府谷县| 明溪县| 遵义县| 客服| 南陵县| 梅州市|