rigger-ous-rower-blog
rigger-ous-rower-blog
Rowing is an extrOARdinary sport
25 posts
15 yrs old | Canadian | Sculler | Stern | Novice rower | KWRC
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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compilation of overly dramatic and poorly acted out scenarios in a rowing safety video
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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bastilleboys.mp4
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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bastilleboys.mp4
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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new concept: we all make ourselves bastillesonas for hypothetical bastille song mvs and we all draw ourself as a main character
here’s me as a Way Beyond
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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submitted by eggsandwhich
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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Crew logic
“I looked at her and knew she was going to die, and I was going to die, but I was going to die after her so I was going to win.” -a high school teammate of mine on her last erg test
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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College Major Stereotypes:
Philosophy: 
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Art:
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Engineering:
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Chemistry:
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Psychology:
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Gender and Sexuality Studies:
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Social Work:
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Women’s Studies:
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Business:
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Linguistics:
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English:
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Computer Science and Engineering:
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Theater: 
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Physics:
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Mathematics: 
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Astronomy:
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Environmental Studies: 
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Biology:
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Anthropology:
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Sociology:
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International Studies:
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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when winter training begins and you realize your new best friends are an erg and a garbage can
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GOOD LUCK WITH WINTER TRAINING MY FELLOW ROWERS! WE WILL SURVIVE THIS HELL
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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Rocking that *looks like i took a shower but actually just came from weight room*
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 8 years ago
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Why would anyone chose to row
why would anyone chose to row
why would anyone chose to put themselves through such brutality
who would dare put themselves in a position where all their mental and physical ability
stretches its limits every single day
it takes a certain type of person to go out and face their biggest challenges every single day.
it takes a certain type of person to feel a burning in their lungs and breaking pain in their back but continue to give every last bit of themselves until the very last stroke.
it takes a certain type of person to take extreme pain and harness it into something they can use to finish out the job.
why would anyone put themselves through such torture
the heart pounds into the body like a sledgehammer
the lungs gasp at any air they can reach
the legs scorch as they are driven off the foot board
the back is lit with an invisible flame with every pull
old blisters and wounds rip open with every twist
it takes a certain type of person to have their bodies shut down and still continue on
to see their own blood drip down on the oar handles
to have pain invade every part of them and know that they don’t ever give enough
until they cannot physically move.
rowers don’t stop
stopping means ending
they’d let themselves down, the boat down, and the coaches down
all of the harsh training would equal nothing
rowers put in work most people would run away from
rowers chose to endure pain that most others would fall apart at
the ability to give up is easy
in the middle of a piece the rower can easily put down the handle
and just walk way
leaving all of the hard work, effort and time, stilly sitting on the seat of the erg
every rower knows they can quit
but most do not
so why would anyone want to row
a sport were lactic acid is man’s best friend
gouging blisters become a normality
and the constant pain is a constant reality
pain is measured only by what the body can feel
but not what it can endure.
pain will never get in the way of what the rower can accomplish
no matter how much the pain will scream that it is a roadblock to the path of victory.
a rower does not leave a piece until they have given everything they got to the erg or the boat
it’s not optional
it’s what is expected of them
and the expectations provided are only the foundation on what the rower can achieve
it is that need to dump every hour of work into one seven minute race
all the pain, the blood, sweat and tears
to achieve everything the rower has worked for.
until that bow crosses that finish line the rowers do not stop working,
stop believing and stop fighting
to receive so rightfully what they deserve
not one person knows the feel of victory
until they can see it’s brutal marks made on their hands
feel it roar through every muscle fiber
inhale it sharply by each lung
feel it trickle down all parts of their skin
and taste it’s dryness it their mouths
whether the rower set a personal record on their two kilometer test
or won the gold metal in the olympics
all victory tastes the same
harsh, brutal but rewarding
so why would anyone chose to row?
because everyday rowers get to crush their biggest fears
rowers get to hold victory’s hand everyday
and there is nothing better than that
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 9 years ago
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“Rowers do more before 8am than most people do all day.” “Real athletes row. Everyone else just plays games.” “The oars gave me power, but also taught me humility.” “Winning medals is good, racing is better, loving the sport is best!” “Glory is in the team not the individual.” – Sean Sullivan “To increase your success rate, double your failure rate.” “Leadership is doing what is right when no one is watching.” “The pain in your legs is a hell of a long way from your heart.” “Our lives are not determined by what happens to us but by how we react to what happens, not by what life brings us but by the attitude we bring to life.” “A positive attitude causes a chain reaction of positive thoughts events and outcomes. It is a catalyst, a spark that creates extraordinary results.” “For the rest of your life, you will always be able to say I was a member of a very special team whose whole was greater than the sum of its parts, and it was one of the greatest experiences of my life.” “I’ve worked too hard and too long to let anything stand in the way of my goals. I will not let my teammates down, and I will not let myself down.” “All your life you are told the things you cannot do; all your life they will say you’re not good enough or strong enough or talented enough; they will say you’re the wrong height or the wrong weight or the wrong type to play this or be this or achieve this. They will tell you no, a thousand times no, until all the no’s become meaningless. All your life they will tell you no quite firmly and very quickly. But you will tell them yes.” “There is no strength without unity.” “The greater the difficulty, the more glory in surmounting it.” “A coach is someone who always makes you do what you don’t want to do so you can be who you’ve always wanted to be.” “There may be many things we forget in the days to come, but this will not be one of them.” “If it wasn’t hard, everyone would do it. It’s the hard that makes it great.” “Adversity causes some to break - others to break records.” “If everything seems under control, you’re just not going fast enough.” “There will be fear, anger, difficulty, sadness, joy, love, even hate; but at the end there will be pride in yourself and your teammates for what you are able to accomplish.” “Fight one more round – when your arms are so tired you can hardly lift your hands to come on guard – fight one more round.” “When your nose is bleeding and your eyes are black and you are so tired you wish your opponent would crack you one in the jaw and put you to sleep, fight one more round, remembering that the man who always fights one more round is never whipped.” “The best pace is suicide pace, and today is a good day to die.” “Compete like you’re in first place, train like you’re in second.” “We’re not here for something to do – we’re here to do something.” “Pain is weakness leaving the body.” “You hear the voice whisper ‘can’ and you discover that the person you thought you were is no match for the one you really are.” “When everyone is moving forward together, success takes care of itself.” “Always remember the distinction between contribution and commitment. Take the matter of bacon and eggs: The chicken makes a contribution – the pig makes a commitment.” “No matter how well you know the course, no matter how well you may have done in a given race in the past, you never know for certain what lies ahead on the day you stand at the starting line waiting to test yourself once again. If you did know, it would not be a test, and there would be no reason for being there.” – Dan Baglione “The self-destructive way to do it is to convince yourself that ‘there’s just one more to go’ and pull out at about a 1:30. If, and only if, you can convince your body that it’s only got one stroke left, you can really empty the tank (and, immediately afterwards, your stomach).” “The window of X Factor opportunity opens up in the closing seconds of a race—you might be sprinting at the time or just hanging one, trying to get across the finish line. With a supreme act of will, you can prolong your effort, essentially fighting off the inevitable lactic acid shutdown. You’ll have little time for contemplating the options: either wholeheartedly go for it, or back off. You must train your X Factor to unequivocally respond the way you want—go for it. Once the window is closed, it’s closed forever.” – Brad Alan Lewis “I watched them carefully, as always, searching for a sign of mental weakness. But there was none. Every man was coping well with the hardship, each one of them locked into his task. But it is one thing to practice, and quite another to race. And the trouble is, you never know who, on the day, will find it within his soul to give more than he has ever given before. It takes a kind of madness to compete like that because of the willpower and the ego and his loyalty. And while some men have it, others have yet to find it. And a coach can only use his best judgment as to who those men will be.” – Dan Topolski “We can’t have a perfect world, but hopefully there is at least a balance between times when you say to yourself,“This sucks,” and times when you say,“This Rocks!” I guess as rowers we should have a bit of an edge on other people. We erg 10 and 12k on the side to get ahead, row in cold, rain, sleet, barge wakes, snow; and then to top it all off, when we go up and over heads, a torrent of water comes pouring down on our heads. But then for 20 minutes on a brisk fall day or 6 minutes on an equally brisk spring day we push to the max, feeling on the verge of dying, then we cross the line first, and the pain, the cold, wetness, blisters, and even the frost on our brows doesn’t matter, as it is all swept away in a wave of victorious jubilation and most importantly, satisfaction. As in rowing, academics and many aspects of life are hard work, and I think I’d pull a 15k over writing a paper or physics problem set any day. But when academic work gets hectic, WE REMEMBER the hundreds of thousands of meters we’ve dug out of lakes and ergs with our bare and often frostbitten hands, and we know beyond the shadow of any doubt that there is nothing that can truly resist our power. I say this not just to remind you, but also to write it out for myself so that I never forget. And when I’m racing this Sunday, I will remember every subfreezing degree, 12k, wake, and frickin’ legs-only-make-my-back-hurt workout that is fueling the burning desire to destroy boats that would resist me. With that, I now begin my physics homework, which is presenting considerable resistance… but it’s still futile.” – Vesty Black, Class of 2005 “There are none in this world who can understand the glory of crew except those who have done it. There is something unimaginable in the sport of rowing - it cannot be described, it cannot be taught, it must be explored through experience. There is something about gliding quietly across the water at five in the morning that subconsciously satisfies the very depths of the soul. Peace is found during morning practice, shared only with eight other teammates, the rising sun, and the silence. There is something about the repetition of the stroke; catch, pull through, release - that exposes the mind to a higher level of placidity found nowhere else. “There is something about pushing yourself farther than you can go, until you feel ready to collapse, and then pulling that last five hundred harder than any before. There is something cleansing to the being in all the sweat and tears and blood that pour out over the course of a season. Nowhere else can such a rollercoaster of emotions be felt; adrenaline at the start, exhilaration during the sprint, fear at the necessity of another PR, sadness at the loss of oarsmen, frustration at every obstacle that rears itself. In no other sport is such a chaotic control present. Quick hands, quick body, slow slide; all eight oars in at perfect time.” “In no other sport is the word TEAM so meaningful as in crew. Together in a shell, eight oars and eight sliding seats act as bindings - stroke to seven, seven to six, six to five… all the way to the bow. One rower’s demon haunts the entire boat; perfection in one oarsman means nothing. A set boat and solid row is achieved solely when eight minds think identically, eight bodies melt together to form one machine.” “One mistake can cost a race; one stray thought from the goal can cause a dream to die. Yet somehow, the end is always reached, the destination is always found, only to become a challenge again the next day. Never are you the best; never are you the worst. We are all floating somewhere in the middle, fighting to take the number one slot at any given time.” “You see, it’s not about winning or losing. It’s about competition with yourself - going out there to do your very best, to give it your all, to have nothing left. It’s about supporting your teammates, pulling for them when you have all but lost faith in yourself. Crew is a sport that demands all of these things. It is not a sport of fame; it is not a sport of popularity. Rowing is above all that. Rowing is a sport of purity and strength, constantly made better by you and I.”
(via pittsburgh-athlete)
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 9 years ago
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If you ever catch me staring, I am:
1) admiring your piercing/tattoo/hairstyle/outfit
2) trying to figure out if I know you
3) think you’re gorgeous and can’t help myself
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 9 years ago
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Its strange that in rowing, when you’re suffering the most, your legs are on fire and your lungs are about to explode, in that moment, when you’re about to die, is when you feel most alive.
my post double-erg-day shower thoughts (via cornonthecobb-blog)
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 9 years ago
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Reblog if you're a rower or a coxswain
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 9 years ago
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Man history majors are so great because they know all this stuff but they have The One Subject and once you find out what a given history buff’s Subject is you will never be bored again because they will tell you all about it with the enthusiasm of a child on Christmas morning
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 9 years ago
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Rowing? Its a battle of wills; a test on endurance. You train, and train, and train, until you just want to throw it all away. But then, then, you’re halfway through a race, you feel like shit, except you’ve never felt so alive.
(via thecrewblr)
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rigger-ous-rower-blog · 9 years ago
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If you voted for Trump tonight, make sure to explain to your gay, trans, female, black, Latina/o, and Muslim friends why they don’t matter to you.
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