Why Modern Life Is Making Us Less Capable

Why Modern Life Is Making Us Less Capable

What Strongman Teaches Us About Building Real Strength

For most of human history, physical capability wasn't optional, It wasn't a hobby, It wasn't something people did for an hour after work. It was survival.

People had to: 

  • carry water from wells
  • move livestock
  • build homes by hand
  • walk miles every day
  • work the fields
  • chop wood
  • load wagons
  • lift awkward heavy objects

simply because life demanded it.

Nobody called it functional fitness, tracked their steps, worried about optimising their macros. They were active because they had to be.

And as a result, many people developed qualities that are becoming increasingly rare:

  • Grip strength
  • Work capacity
  • Resilience 
  • Endurance
  • Practical strength
  • Physical confidence

Today, life looks very different.

The Cost of Convenience

Modern life has become incredibly comfortable, food arrives at our front door, we drive instead of walk, take lifts instead of stairs, spend hours sitting behind desks. Machines perform many of the physical tasks previous generations did themselves.

In many ways, this is progress. But every convenience comes with a trade-off and as physical demands decrease, so has physical capability.

Many people today struggle with tasks that previous generations considered normal. Not because they are lazy, because modern life no longer requires those abilities. The average person moves less, carries less, walks less, and physically challenges themselves less than at any point in human history.

And the body adapts accordingly.

Your Grandad Didn't Need a Fitness Coach

Think about your grandfather or perhaps someone from an older generation who worked with their hands. They may never have followed a training plan, probably didn't own lifting straps. They certainly weren't tracking recovery scores on a smartwatch, yet many possessed qualities that are becoming increasingly uncommon.

They could:

  • Carry heavy loads
  • Work for hours
  • Recover quickly
  • Handle physical discomfort
  • Kee going when tired

They weren't necessarily stronger in a powerlifting sense, but they were often more capable and capability matters.

The Problem With Modern Fitness

Modern fitness often focuses on appearance before performance.

People chase:

  • Visible abs
  • Bigger arms
  • Lower body fat
  • Better photos

But very few stop to ask:

  • Can I carry something heavy for distance?
  • Can I work hard for an hour?
  • Can I recover quickly?
  • Can I move efficiently under fatigue?
  • Can I rely on my body when life becomes physically demanding?

Those are capability questions and capability is what strongman has always trained.

Why Strongman Is Different

This is one of the reasons strongman remains so relevant.

Strongman doesn't ask:

"How do you look?"

It asks:

"What can you do?"

Think about the events.

Farmers Walk

Carry heavy objects over distance - Humans have been doing that for thousands of years.

Sandbag Carries

Lift awkward weight and move with it - Again, a skill humans have relied upon throughout history.

Atlas Stones

Pick up an object that does not want to be picked up - There is nothing convenient about a stone. That is exactly why it builds useful strength.

Yoke Carries

Move a heavy load while staying balanced, composed, and efficient - A true test of posture, resilience, and work capacity.

Strongman develops qualities that modern life rarely demands but still desperately benefits from.

The CERBERUS Capability Test

Ask yourself:

Can You Carry?

Not just lift. Carry.

Because life is full of carrying:

  • Shopping
  • Children
  • Equipment
  • Furniture 
  • Supplies

Being able to move weight confidently matters.

How to improve it:

  • Farmers walk
  • Sandbag carries
  • Heavy carries at the end of training

Start with 20–40 metres then progress gradually.

Can You Recover?

Many people can produce one hard effort, but fewer can repeat it and recovery is a huge part of capability.

How to improve it:

  • Incline walking
  • Sled drags
  • Loaded carries
  • Short conditioning sessions

Aim for 2–3 conditioning sessions each week, the goal is not exhaustion, the goal is becoming harder to fatigue.

Can You Move?

Modern life encourages stillness but capability requires movement.

How to improve it:

  • Walk daily
  • Carry awkward objects
  • Use sandbags
  • Drag sleds
  • Train outdoors occasionally

Strongman teaches the body to solve movement problems under load and that transfers directly into real life.

Can You Stay Calm Under Pressure?

Physical capability is not just physical, It is psychological. Heavy weights reveal preparation and fatigue reveals character.

How to improve it:

  • Event medleys
  • Timed carries
  • Challenging conditioning work
  • Competition

Learn to stay composed when things become difficult.

The Benefits of Becoming More Capable

Training for capability improves much more than competition performance.

It develops:

Physical Resilience

A body that tolerates stress better.

Confidence

Because you've repeatedly proven what you can do.

Independence

You rely more on your own abilities and less on convenience.

Longevity

Strength, muscle, and work capacity become increasingly important as we age.

Mental Toughness

The confidence that comes from doing difficult things regularly.

Strongman Is More Relevant Than Ever

The irony is that as life becomes easier, physical capability becomes more valuable. Not because we need to survive in the wilderness, but because capability improves every aspect of life.

  • A stronger body
  • A stronger mind
  • More confidence
  • More resilience
  • Greater independence

Strongman reminds us of something modern society often forgets:

  • Humans were built to move
  • Carry
  • Work
  • Endure
  • Adapt

Not just to look strong, but to be strong.

Final Thoughts

The goal isn't to become the strongest person in the world.

The goal is to become harder to break.

  • To be stronger
  • More resilient
  • More capable

In a world becoming increasingly convenient, those qualities matter more than ever. That's why strongman remains relevant, not because it teaches people how to lift stones. But because it teaches people how to become capable again.

Because at the end of the day:

Capability beats aesthetics.

Every time.

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