
Hearing this from their
13-year-old son, Gustav and Aurelia
Schwarzenegger just sighed and shook their
heads. They'd always had their suspicions, but
now those suspicions had been confirmed. They
started to look for "psychiatrist"
in the Graz Yellow Pages.
But Arnold was serious. At
14, he started an intensive training program
with Kurt Marnul, the former Mr. Austria. At
15, he studied psychology with Dr. Karl Gerstl
to learn more about the power of mind over
body. At 17, he officially started his
competitive career. And at 18, he got thrown
in jail.
OK, so getting arrested
wasn't exactly part of the original plan, but
in many ways it couldn't be avoided. Here's
what happened: As a good citizen of Austria,
Arnold was required by law to serve a year in
the army. Fine, he started serving. He was
assigned to be a tank driver. Fine, he started
tanking. He was forbidden to leave the base to
compete in any stupid bodybuilding
competitions. Fine, he wouldn't leave the base
to compete in any stupid bodybuilding
competitions. But, hey, they didn't say
anything about smart bodybuilding
competitions, did they? So one day, he slipped
out of camp, hopped a train to Stuttgart, and
-- quite smartly -- won a trophy.
When
his commanding officers found out, they went
ballistic. Before he could say two words in
his defense, they threw him behind bars. His
sentence: seven long days in the big house.
But a funny thing happened during that week.
The same officers that put him in there
started looking at the trophy he won. It
wasn't just a little one. It wasn't just a big
one. It was the biggest one in all of Europe.
Arnold had won Mr. Europe Junior!
So naturally, after the
hardened criminal had served out his time, he
was ceremoniously stripped of his tank driving
duties. For his "punishment", he was
re-assigned to be an official -- well, um --
bodybuilder. Surprised, Arnold tried his best
to look sad, and proceeded to spend the rest
of his military career training for
competition.
After he left the army, it
seemed like nothing could stop him. In 1966,
he stepped up from the junior division and
started competing in the big leagues. Too
soon? Think again. That same year, he won The
Best Built Man in Europe, Mr. Europe, and the
International Powerlifting Championship. Not
bad, for a 19-year-old.
Then,
figuring he was on a roll, he flew to London
to compete in the Mr. Universe competition.
This was it for Arnold. Forget Mr. Europe.
Forget Mr. America. This was Mr. Universe! If
he could win this title, he'd definitely be
the best-built man on Earth. (And on Mars,
Venus, and Pluto, for that matter.)
Upon his arrival, he was
mobbed by other bodybuilders and fans from
around the world. They had all been reading
about the young Austrian Oak. It was a heady
experience. It was the first time he realized
that he was becoming internationally famous.
And now, here he was at the Mr. Universe
contest. He was pumped. He was ready.
He was slammed. By an
American named Chet Yorton, who not only had
muscles and moves, he also had definition.
More than just a mountain of meat, he had
chiseled his body into a work of art.
So,
the next year, Arnold worked like a sculptor.
Analyzing every part of his massive frame, he
invented new exercises to separate and define
the muscle groups. Then, in 1967, he flew to
London to compete in the Mr. Universe contest
for the second time. With his new, incredibly
buff and polished body, he knew he could beat
Yorton.
But wouldn't you know it?
Now there was a new contender on the scene.
Dennis Tinnerino, who had just won the Mr.
America competition, was in town. Everybody --
even Arnold's closest friends -- thought that
Tinnerino had him beat. But Schwarzenegger
thought otherwise. The morning of the
competition, Tinnerino casually asked him how
he felt. In response, the young Terminator
leaned forward, locked him with his eyes, and
smiled that patented crocodile smile.
"Fantastic!" he whispered,
"It's the kind of day when you know
you're going to win." (Was that a gulp,
Dennie?)
That was the day when Arnold
learned that you had to have more than just a
massive frame and totally tweaked muscles to
win. You also had to have the strongest will.
Because even though Tinnerino pulled off an
incredible performance and had a magnificent
body, Schwarzenegger blew him right off the
stage. At just 20 years old, he was the
youngest Mr. Universe in history. Arnold had
accomplished his dream.
Or
so he thought. Soon, he learned that there
were actually three Mr. Universes. Arnold had
won the National Amateur Bodybuilding
Association title in the amateur division. But
there was also a professional division. To
complicate matters further, the International
Federation of Bodybuilding had a Mr. Universe
competition of their own. He also discovered
that there was a Mr. World title and a Mr.
Olympia title. If he really wanted to
accomplish his dream of being the best-built
man in the world, he would have to win them
all!
Most other men would have
packed it in. But Arnold just packed his bags
and flew back to Munich to train some more. It
was an incredibly intense period of his life.
Besides putting in four to six hours a day in
weight training, he was also going to business
school, managing his health club, and trying
to remember what the word "sleep"
meant.
But
the hard work paid off. In 1968, he flew back
to London and easily won the other Mr.
Universe trophy. Now he had both the NABBA Mr.
Universe Amateur and Professional titles. He
also won the German Powerlifting Championship
and the IFBB Mr. International in Mexico. But
he still needed the Mr. Olympia title.
So, at 21, he moved to
California to train with some of the best
bodybuilders in the world. He was 6 feet 2
inches tall, 250 pounds, and had bigger
measurements than anyone else in the business.
He'd studied with a dancer and now moved like
a big jungle cat. He'd taken charge of his
music and lighting and had a posing
performance that was second to none. He was
pumped, he was chiseled, he was bronzed from
the sun. He looked like Michelangelo's David
with a tan. (Well, not exactly like David.
Arnold always wore posing trunks.)
Over
the next two years, he flew all over the
world, winning new titles and defending the
ones he already held. In 1969, he won the IFBB
Mr. Universe - Amateur in New York and the
NABBA Mr. Universe - Professional in London.
In 1970, he again won the NABBA Mr. Universe -
Professional in London and the Mr. World in
Columbus, Ohio. At the end of the year, he had
every title except Mr. Olympia. And Sergio
Oliva had been winning and successfully
defending that title since 1967.
So now, it was down to two
people. Everybody in bodybuilding knew it. And
it all came down to one event -- the 1970 Mr.
Olympia competition in New York. Arnold had
prepared for this moment all his life. He was
ready and he knew it. He didn't even bother to
pump up like Sergio. He just focused himself.
And with just two minutes left before he had
to go on stage, he changed and oiled up.
The atmosphere was so
supercharged that the police had to keep fans
from rushing the stage. There definitely were
two camps in the audience -- each chanting the
name of their favorite. But in the end, there
was only one winner, one trophy, and one name:
Schwarzenegger.
And
so, in 1970, at the age of 23, he had achieved
what he'd set out to accomplish just 10 years
earlier. He was, by any and every measure, the
best-built man in the world. And he would
continue to hold that crown for many years to
come. He won an unprecedented seven Mr.
Olympia titles before he retired. And the only
reason he retired was that he had begun acting
in motion pictures and now he had a new goal
-- to be the most popular film star in the
world.
Hearing this, his parents
just sighed and started flipping through the
Yellow Pages again.