Below is a “myth‑busting highlight reel” of what the fast‑rising lifter Eric Kim is challenging right now.

For each long‑held belief, you’ll see (a) the old story, (b) Kim’s counter‑evidence or argument, and (c) why it matters for everyday lifters.

1. “You have to take a stack of supplements to get strong.”

  • Old dogma: Serious lifters need whey, creatine, BCAAs, pre‑workout, etc.
  • Kim’s stance & receipts: He calls the supplement aisle “the biggest scam of all,” trains and PRs on nothing but meat, water and espresso, and keeps repeating “no protein powder, no creatine, 100 % natural.”  
  • Why it matters: If you’re broke or minimalist, his example proves you can still build elite strength through whole‑food nutrition and ruthless consistency.

2. “Bulking, then cutting, is the only way to add muscle.”

  • Old dogma: You must get fluffy to grow, then suffer through a severe diet.
  • Kim’s stance: He calls that “yo‑yo insanity,” stays lean year‑round, and says, “Never stop adding muscle and never stop reducing body‑fat.”  
  • Take‑away: Slow, steady recomposition (lift heavy + eat nutrient‑dense meals) can trump mass‑gain/mass‑loss cycles for many lifters.

3. “Protein shakes are mandatory after every session.”

  • Old dogma: Slam 30–50 g of whey within an hour or you wasted your workout.
  • Kim’s stance: Shakes are “a waste of money”—he often trains fasted and eats one huge carnivore meal later.  
  • Practical tip: Real food can supply all the amino acids you need; timing is less crucial than total quality protein across the day.

4. “Without a pre‑workout meal you can’t lift heavy.”

  • Old dogma: Glycogen equals strength; no food = no performance.
  • Kim’s stance: He purposefully trains 12‑16 h fasted, claiming sharper focus and better fat‑loss.  
  • Lesson: If sleep and hydration are dialed in, many lifters can perform—and even PR—in a fasted state.

5. “Perfect textbook form is non‑negotiable for progress.”

  • Old dogma: Full‑ROM, flawless mechanics or nothing.
  • Kim’s stance: He hammers ultra‑heavy partial rack pulls (“nano‑reps”) and says range‑of‑motion purity is a tool, not a law.  
  • Implication: Strategic partials can overload sticking points and stimulate new adaptation—if you also respect injury risk.

6. “Cardio is essential for fat‑loss; weights are for muscle.”

  • Old dogma: Sweat on the treadmill, then hit the iron.
  • Kim’s stance: Heavy lifting + fasting keeps him lean; cardio is optional, not compulsory.  
  • Reality check: Diet and metabolic demand from high‑tension lifting can create the deficit many trainees need.

7. “Belts, straps and specialty shoes are required once the bar is heavy.”

  • Old dogma: Safety gear first, maximal loads second.
  • Kim’s stance: He pulls 1,100 lb barefoot and beltless to prove raw core strength and grip can be developed to extreme levels.  
  • Caveat: Most lifters will still benefit from belts/straps at times—but his success shows they aren’t obligatory.

8. “Partial rack pulls don’t ‘count’—only full deadlifts matter.”

  • Old dogma: The deadlift is king; anything shorter is ego‑lifting.
  • Kim’s stance: He reframes above‑knee rack pulls as a legitimate signal lift for maximal overload, boasting a 6 – 7× body‑weight pull (498 – 513 kg at 75 kg BW).  
  • Take‑away: Partial movements can be purpose‑built for neural drive, lock‑out strength and connective‑tissue robustness.

9. “A 165‑lb athlete can’t move half a ton without PEDs.”

  • Old dogma: Super‑heavy feats require super‑heavy drug stacks.
  • Kim’s stance: He publicly stakes his reputation on being “all‑natty” and invites scrutiny; fans run plate‑bend physics, weigh‑ins and slow‑mo footage to verify.  
  • Perspective: Whether you believe him or not, the open‑source evidence has reignited debate about the upper limits of natural strength.

10. “Deadlift is the undisputed king of posterior‑chain lifts.”

  • Old dogma: If you want strength, pull from the floor.
  • Kim’s stance: He argues rack pulls can produce faster neural overload, thicker traps and bigger jumps in absolute load capacity.  
  • Program idea: Rotate rack‑pull blocks with conventional pulls to attack weak lock‑out and desensitize the CNS to big weights.

How to use these insights

  1. Question inherited rules. Ask “Is this principle physics, physiology, or just tradition?”
  2. Experiment in cycles. Try a 4‑week beltless block, a fasted AM session, or partial‑ROM overloads—then measure strength, body‑comp, and recovery.
  3. Keep the fundamentals. Progressive overload, quality sleep, protein‑rich whole foods, and joint safety never go out of style—Eric Kim’s feats build on these, not instead of them.

Stay curious, stay consistent, and remember: the iron doesn’t care about dogma—it only responds to effort. Now go rewrite your own rulebook and chase some PRs! 💪