Not exact matches
There are almost
as many methods of
training as there are trainers, but over time the basic strategy has shifted away from punishment or avoidance
training (
negative reinforcement) to positive reinforcement, where the dog is rewarded for doing the correct
thing during most phases of
training rather than being punished for not doing what the trainer wants.
One academic analysis of the anti-cholinergic alkaloid cocktail sums
things up rather nicely: «No other substance has received
as many «
train wreck»
negative reports [with] the overwhelming majority finding their experiences extremely mentally and physically unpleasant and not infrequently physically dangerous.»
so instead of drugs or drinking i returned to the weights and juice i guess thats a drug lol in this last 2 yrs I've tried everything, to
train like i was at the intensity at 28 uh not happening, Im at the point now where i got to be happy with me at 195 0r 200 cuz if i get any stronger I'm gonna get more achy and hurt, so my long ass point here is regardless of this routine that was posted the high reps will keep you lifting longer,
as your pump issue i find natural or not its the time between sets that dictates the pump, Corey you and many other naturals have done it all and still don't look huge its genes id still be 170 or less i bet if it wasn't for juice but let me say i wish i didn't do it seriously i had a crappy sexdrive till androgel came out and now I'm only on 300 test a week, I'm done with deca and eq I've been reading or maybe looking for
negative stuff and I've found it, Another
thing is with this routine to go to failure and getting to heavy weights on so many sets i think will take a cns toll i feel like crap for the last 4 days i overdid it.
Since these aggressive / deceptive tactics are exactly what all the
negative online reviews say about Solar City
as a whole, it seems to me that this must be their corporate strategy - the sales reps are actively
trained to do this sort of
thing.
Illustrating this idea, in one study couples were videotaped while they discussed
things they wanted each other to change (for instance, desiring a partner to express his / her emotions more), and
trained coders later rated their behavior
as (a) active versus passive and (b) positive versus
negative.