This video features Egyptian bodybuilder Shehata Mabrouk, who returned to compete in the 2015 Masters World Championships at age 57 after retiring in 2010, driven by his desire to prove that he possesses unique ideas and development as a thinker in bodybuilding, while also demonstrating that he could maintain the same level of physical excellence and artistic reputation as when he was younger, ultimately achieving victory and feeling his soul soar as he saw the Egyptian flag raised above him.
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واحد من الناس - طلعت منها مرضي✌️.. الشحات مبروك وصل رسالة للعالم لما رجع ينافس تاني في 2015💪Added:
But something very strange caught my attention, Captain. In 2015, if I remember correctly, you had already retired, meaning you were maybe 57 years old at the time.
Yes, and you had retired five or six years before that, for example. You retired in 2010, the last time you did it was in 2010, so you were about 51 years old. So what message did you want to convey to the world when you came back to compete again at that moment?
Okay, this is something I haven't said yet, Doctor. This is the first time you've given me the opportunity to say why I did this. Firstly, there were Masters World Championships for Masters over 40, over 50, and over 60 that I didn't participate in.
I participated with the young people I was in back then, and the president of the International Federation was a friend of mine. I mean, before he became president of the Federation, he was a fellow player, and when he became president of the Federation, he said to me, "Hey, Shehata, what do you want?" I told him I want to continue because I work in art in Egypt and art needs the audience to feel that their hero is still playing, so they don't get jealous of me for two things: I'm working here and winning here.
He told me, "But that's very difficult. Back when I was winning, I came back in 2015 to tell the world and to tell this president of the federation that I, in terms of quality, youth, and vitality, am like the youth, but it was very difficult for me to enter the first competitions because I would destroy something that was built called Masters. I mean, all the older people wouldn't agree to enter the other side and come here. The international law would be canceled and everything would be canceled if I entered the competition that I told him about."
I told him, "Why am I losing?" He told me, "Shehat, you're 57 years old, it won't work." I told him, "Okay, I got the message."
My federation president, may God bless him, the beloved Dr. Adel Fahim, told me, "Shehat, forget the youth championships, forget the regular men's world championships, go for the Masters." I told him, "No, I'm going for something I have in mind." He said, "So what else do you want? You've already done it." I told him, "No, it's necessary." I didn't know whether to tell him or not.
The deceased was with me, and she caused problems and did things like that.
Afterwards, she said to me, "Why? Why? If you know all this, why?" I told her, "No, I want to prove something specific: that in bodybuilding, I'm a developed thinker, and I have ideas that no one else has. That's what I'm missing. Since I've had everything, I have to do incredible things, and they have to be achieved in terms of form, not just titles or numbers." Thank God, I came out of it satisfied. But the deceased, may God have mercy on her, wasn't satisfied. I didn't feel that you You went too far with yourself, meaning you once lost 8 kilos of your weight in record time in one of the championships, and I wish I had once, yes, and I wish I had once taken the sauna, I actually stayed for five hours, hours, yes, at that moment did you feel that the sport was torturing the body in exchange for the title you were getting? Honestly, at that time I didn't feel like I was being tortured in the sauna. The heat was 90 degrees, and I'd spend five hours going in to put ice on my head and then come back out, all to achieve first place, which my audience was used to. Especially since I was a movie star back then, and they wouldn't say I was ruining the thing I love, cinema, or acting. So I had to come out on top so my artistic reputation wouldn't be affected.
Also, the national anthem had to be played with me standing in the highest place, in the name of Shehata Mabrouk. So that didn't make me feel like I was going through the torture you're talking about, the physical torture. I only felt that physical torture after I finished and was crowned. I felt physically exhausted, not mentally, but my soul was flying high because I had achieved something and seen the Egyptian flag above me, and I saw the national anthem, and I saw what I was used to.
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