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Siegmund Klein

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Siegmund Klein
Klein in 1933
Born(1902-04-10)April 10, 1902
DiedMay 24, 1987(1987-05-24) (aged 85)
Known forBodybuilding
Spouse
Grace Attila
(m. 1927)
Children1 daughter
RelativesLudwig Durlacher (father-in-law)[1]

Siegmund Klein (April 10, 1902 – May 24, 1987) was a German-American strongman, bodybuilder, magazine publisher, and gymnasium owner prominent in physical culture. He was inducted into the IFBB Hall of Fame in 2006.

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  • PSYCHOTHERAPY - Sigmund Freud

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This is a thinker who helps us understand why our lives and relationships are full of so much confusion and pain. He tells us why life is hard, and how to cope. His own life incurred a lot of anxiety. Sigmund Schlomo Freud was born to a middle-class Jewish family in 1856. His professional life was not an immediate success. As a medical student, he dissected hundreds of eels in an unsuccessful attempt to locate their reproductive organs. He promoted cocaine as a medical drug, but it turned out to be a dangerous and addictive idea. A few years later he founded the discipline that would ultimately make his name. A new psychological medicine he called PSYCHOANALYSIS The landmark study was his 1900 book The Interpretation of Dreams. Many others followed. Despite his success, he was often unhappy. During some particularly strenuous research he recorded, “The chief patient I am preoccupied with is myself…” He was convinced he would die between 61 and 62 and had great phobias about those numbers. (Although he actually died much later, at age 83.) Perhaps because of his frustrations, Freud achieved a series of deep insights into the sources of human unhappiness. He proposed that we are all driven by the: Pleasure Principle which inclines us towards easy physical and emotional rewards: and away from unpleasant things like drudgery and discipline. As infants we are guided more or less solely according to the pleasure principle, Freud argued. But it will, if adhered to without constraints, lead us to dangerous reckless things: like never doing any work eating too much or, most notoriously, sleeping with members of own family. We need to adjust to what Freud called THE REALITY PRINCIPLE Though we all have to bow to this reality principle, Freud believed that there were better and worse kinds of adaptations. He called the troublesome ones NEUROSES Neuroses are the result of faulty negotiations with –or in Freud’s language, repression of–the pleasure principle. Freud described a conflict between three parts of our minds: the ID driven by the pleasure principle, and the THE SUPEREGO driven by a desire to follow the rules and do the right thing according to society. and the EGO which has to somehow accomodate the two. To understand more about these dynamics, Freud urged us to think back to the origins of our neuroses in childhood. As we grow up, we go through what Freud termed: THE ORAL PHASE where we deal with all the feelings around ingestion and eating. If our parents aren’t careful we might pick up all kinds of neuroses here: we might take pleasure in refusing food, or turn to food to calm ourselves down, or hate the idea of depending on anyone else for food. Then comes THE ANAL PHASE which is closely aligned with what we now call “potty-training”. During this period, our parents tell us what to do--and when to go. At this phase we begin to learn about testing the limits of authority. Again, if things go wrong, if we don’t feel authority is benign enough, we might, for example, choose to withhold out of defiance. Then, as adults, we might become “anally retentive”; in other words, not able to give or surrender. Next comes: THE PHALLIC PHASE which goes until about age 6. Freud shocked his contemporaries by insisting that little children have sexual feelings. Moreover, in the phallic phase children direct their sexual impulses towards their parents, the most immediately available and gratifying people around. Freud famously described what he called THE OEDIPUS COMPLEX Where we are unconsciously predisposed towards “being in love with the one parent and hating the other.” What is complex is that no matter how much our parents love us, they cannot extend this to sexual life and will always have another life with a partner. This makes our young selves feel dangerously jealous and angry – and also ashamed and guilty about this anger. The complex provides a huge amount of internalised worry for a small child. Ultimately, most of us experience some form of confusion around our parents that later ties into our ideas of love. Mum and dad may both give us love, but they often mix it in with disturbed behaviour. Yet because we love them, we remain loyal to them and also to their bizarre, destructive patterns. For example, if our mother is cold, we will be apt nevertheless to long for her. And as a result, however, we may be prone to always associate love with a certain distance. Naturally, the result is very difficult adult relationships. Often the kind of love we’ve learned from mum and dad means we can’t fuse sex and love because the people we learnt about love from are also those we were blocked from having sex with. We might find that the more in love with someone we are, the harder it becomes to make love to them. This can reach a pitch of crisis after a few years of marriage and some kids. Freud compared the issues we so often have with intimacy to hedgehogs in the winter: they need to cuddle for warmth, but they also can’t come too close because they’re prickly. There’s no easy solution. Freud says we can’t make ourselves fully rational, and we can’t change society, either. In his 1930 book Civilisation and its Discontents, Freud wrote that society provides us with many things, but it does this by imposing heavy dictates on us: insisting that we sleep with only a few (usually one) other, imposing the incest taboo, requiring us to put off our immediate desires, demanding that we follow authority and work to make money. Societies themselves are neurotic–that is how they function - and it’s why there are constant wars and other troubles. Freud attempted to invent a treatment for our many neuroses: psychoanalysis. He thought that with a little proper analysis, people could uncover what ails them and better adjust to the difficulties of reality. In his sessions he analysed a number of key things. He looked at people’s dreams, which he saw as expressions of WISH FULFILLMENTS He also looked at PARAPRAXES or slips of the tongue. We now call these revealing mistakes FREUDIAN SLIPS Like when we write ‘thigh’ when we wanted to write ‘though’. He also liked to think about jokes. He believed that jokes often help us make fun of something symbolic like death or marriage, and thus relieve some of our anxiety about these topics. There’s a temptation to say Freud just made everything up, and life isn’t quite so hard as he makes it out to be. But then one morning we find ourselves filled with inexplicable anger towards our partner, or running high with unrelenting anxiety on the train to work, and we’re reminded all over again just how elusive, difficult, and Freudian our mental workings actually are. We could still reject his work, of course. But as Freud said, “No one who disdains the key will ever be able to unlock the door.” We could all use a bit more of Freud’s ideas to help us unpick ourselves.

Early life

"Sig" Klein was born in 1902 in Toruń,[2] Germany (now within Poland), and his family moved to Cleveland, Ohio a year later. A reader of strength magazines, and admirer of his father's muscular arms, Klein began his own weight training at age 12 with an improvised use of window counterweights. By age 17, he was training with a standard set of 100-pound barbells.[3]

Gymnasiums in New York

In 1924, Klein arrived in New York City and arranged to take over operation of a gymnasium previously owned by Louis Attila, the inventor of the bent press weight training exercise and trainer of pioneering bodybuilder Eugen Sandow.[3][4][5] Klein met and later married Attila's daughter Grace.[3] In July 1926, he arranged for Tony Sansone to continue running Attila's gym, and Klein opened his own gym at 207 West 48th Street/717 Seventh Avenue.[6][7][8] At only 30 feet (9.1 m) by 40 feet (12 m), Klein's "Physical Culture Studio" became one of the most well-known gyms in the U.S. in the 1940s and 1950s, and many photo shoots for Joe Weider's magazines were conducted there.[3][9] He closed his gym for the first time in November 1968 to attend Bob Hoffman's 70th birthday party;[10] it closed permanently after 48 years of operation (circa 1974),[6] though the building was still in use as of 2016.[8]

Written work

Klein published his own magazine, Klein's Bell, from June 1931 to December 1932, when it merged with Bob Hoffman's new Strength & Health, for which Klein began writing in 1933.[3][9] In addition to Hoffman's and Weider's magazines, Klein was on the covers of Iron Man, Vim, Edmond Desbonnet's La Culture Physique, and Bernarr Macfadden's Physical Culture magazine.[4]

Regarding the regularity of working out, he held the belief that once a bodybuilder is in good shape with sensibly developed muscles, it doesn't take a lot of training to keep it. Referring to himself as an example, Klein wrote in 1969 that his last heavy lifting was at age 35 and he had continued to work out just three times a week from then on, with hour-long sessions.[11]

Later life and legacy

The organization that became the Association of Oldtime Barbell and Strongmen (AOBS) began with Vic Boff, Leo Murdock, and others putting together a surprise 80th birthday party for Klein in 1982. The strong interest by attendees at this and several followup events solidified the formation of a group that honors old time champions and preserves weightlifting history.[12]

Klein died of cancer in 1987 at age 85, survived by his wife and a daughter.[3][13] He is described in Arnold Schwarzenegger's Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding as a pioneer in giving value to physique, beyond strength alone, as a demonstration of physical health.[14]

References

  1. ^ Beckwith, Kim; Todd, Jan (July 2002). "Requiem for a Strongman: Reassessing the Career of Reassessing the Career of Professor Louis Attila" (PDF). Iron Game History. 7 (2–3): 42–55. Retrieved January 12, 2019 – via H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports.
  2. ^ Giessing, Jurgen; Todd, Jan (December 2005). "The Origins of German Bodybuilding: 1790–1970" (PDF). Iron Game History. Vol. 9, no. 2. p. 15. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Sigmund Klein". IFBB Professional League. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  4. ^ a b Mitchell, Dennis (November 4, 2009). "Siegmund Klein, A Man of Two Eras". USAWA. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  5. ^ Mitchell, Dennis (November 16, 2009). "Louis Attila, the Professor". USAWA. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  6. ^ a b Minichiello, Tom (July 1995). "Oasis in Manhattan" (PDF). Iron Game History. Vol. 4, no. 1. pp. 12–14. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  7. ^ Klein, Siegmund (March 18, 2009). "My First Quarter Century in the Iron Game, Part 8". Retrieved October 28, 2018 – via The Tight Tan Slacks of Dezso Ban.
  8. ^ a b Wood, John (December 26, 2016). "Sig Klein's Gym (Exterior)". Old Time Strong Man. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  9. ^ a b Christopher, Logan (November 24, 2014). "Strongman Profile: Siegmund Klein Teaches Us a Different Way to Squat". Breaking Muscle. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  10. ^ Roark, Joe (March 1991). "The Roark Report" (PDF). Iron Game History. Vol. 1, no. 4 & 5. p. 42. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  11. ^ Klein, Siegmund (February 1969). "It's Training Time Again!". Muscular Development. Retrieved October 28, 2018 – via USAWA.
  12. ^ "About the AOBS". Weightlifting.org. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  13. ^ "Siegmund Klein". The New York Times. May 28, 1987. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
  14. ^ Schwarzenegger, Arnold; Dobbins, Bill (1987). Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 38, 39. ISBN 978-0-6716-3381-3.

External links

This page was last edited on 14 November 2023, at 06:02
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