Times Roman: Marcus, thank you for taking the time to do this interview. So tell the members here a little bit about growing up.
Marcus300: I was very privileged and fortunate to not want for anything when I was a child, my parents had a successful company so things were good for our family. I never really liked school because I was dyslexic and in those days it wasn't recognised as much so I had a hard time but on a whole I was a very happy child with all the normal anxieties about growing up etc.
Times Roman: What events led up to being on the path of body building that has taken up so much of your life? Was it the typical Charles Atlas, sand kicked in your face by a bully type scenario, or was it something else?
Marcus300: My first encounter with the weights was when I was 12-13yrs old when my local shop keeper gave me a set of dumbbells and I started to do exercises in my bedroom. I had no idea what I was doing and it wasn't something I did on a regular but this was my first encounter. It wasn't until around 18-19yrs old when I first really got into training, I had a lot of older friends who worked out, they were mostly powerlifters and they looked so big towards me so I decided to start going with them to the gym. I remember my dirty old gym it was so cold and hard-core place and we would write our measurements and lifts on the wall so we had something to beat next time we went, great days.
Times Roman: For the record, what are your current stats, and stats at your prime? Additionally, please tell us about your professional record and the competitions you’ve been involved in.
Marcus300: My best stats at prime were 5ft 10" 245lbs at 6% bf, those aren't internet bullsh1t stats either and it took me a lot of hardwork and few $$'s to reach them. I have been a lot heavier but in nowhere the same condition, I reached in the region of 260lbs-270lbs but at this weight I struggled with clothes especially pants and I just didn't feel right, I was very uncomfortable and didn’t feel healthy at all. My current stats are 242lbs at 14% but my bf fluctuates between 10-15% depending on how I want to look and what diet I am running.
I've never entered a show but I've been involved in a few. I use to run and organise bodybuilding shows, they were very profitable to be honest but I've never stood on stage posing, that was never my desire or intention. I did come close once and I dieted right down and I was only a few wks away but certain issues came up and I had to pull out, this was when I had my best stats. For me it was all about the size game, I wanted to be the biggest freakiest guy around and that was my desire, it was all about being big.
Times Roman: Marcus, You have a wealth of experience and knowledge. What advice would you give our newbs just starting out? Any other advice for those that want to go down the same bodybuilding path you’ve been down? Can you describe some of the sacrifices you’ve had to make?
Marcus300: The main areas what I would preach to a newbie would be 1, Diet: This is a mine field but once you understand the rewards are outstanding, eating correctly to suit your goals and being consistent with your daily requirements will produce gains and results. I see a lot of diets and many guys simply don't eat enough, how do you expect to grow when you don't feed your body, don't be afraid to eat. 2, Training: Learn how to train intensely and correctly and above all be consistent, don't waste you time in the gym use it and do some damage. 3, Don't start taking steroids before you have built a solid base and don't shut down your natural Test until its fully matured. Sounds simple but these are the areas above were most fail.
You ask about the sacrifices what I've made!
When I was younger I was obsessed with the gym and I was like a robot day in day out governed by the clock, I truly lived the lifestyle 24/7 and for many around me I was a total nightmare. The way my physique was changing just excited me so much I was obsessed and determined to get big. Everyday consisted of the same things lifting, eating and resting nothing could stop me but when your this driven you kind of don't see what is happening to yourself or to the people close to you. I was also a young powerful successful driven guy who had his own business which gave me the time and money to focus on bodybuilding and basically do anything I wanted. The lifestyle I was in coupled with my bodybuilding obsession was the main contributing factor in my personal life breaking down. I thought I was invincible but the pain of leaving my children was an unbearable emotion what cut me to the bone and still effects me to this day. I know for a fact my bodybuilding caused my family life to be ripped apart, but in a way I was young and this was the path I chose to go down. I wouldn't say I sacrificed anything because my life was moving so fast it felt like it was something I couldn’t control but it did cause a lot of pain and damage for people around me.
Times Roman: Tell us how you got involved in AAS?
Marcus300: I first got involved in AAS through a trainer called Mick Hart. When I was young I was like a sponge trying to soak up as much information as possible so I would read all the books I could find and I once I came across a steroid book and magazines by Mick Hart,. I found his no bull approach to steroids very appealing and I liked the way he explained things so I got in touch with Mick and he decided to coach me. Mick is very old school and his AAS knowledge isn't the best to today’s standards but all those years ago I didn’t know any different and to be honest no one else did either. I can't remember how long I stayed with Mick but the next step came when a friend put me in touch with a guy called Paul Borreson who was at the time training and advising a young Dorian Yates. This is when things got complicated because Paul would tell me things I had no idea about and he was confusing the hell out of me but I would listen, read his books, magazine's and experiment with what he told me. Paul was very hard-core with his training, cycles and diet's and that suited the way I liked to operate so things just developed from there. Paul was a chemical genius and rumour had it that he had one of the biggest UGL's going in the UK. But Paul had a very wild side and some say he was crazy and to be honest his chemical advice was a little to much at times and he would cross many lines but he did transform my physique and he had some very large clients indeed lol. My knowledge in AAS just grew from then on and I wanted to try everything within reason.


