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Well people learn differently for sure, but I don't think just being pushed out to the lions, and nothing else, or sitting in your living room reading pickup books and watching DVD's, and nothing else, is going to help anyone.
Of course. But my point is that the material is available everywhere, most pretty cheap. But many guys struggle with actually putting themselves out. And bootcamps are pretty good for that, in fact, that's what I believe they were designed for. I think one really needs to be determined to NOT improve, if he pays a 1000 bucks and then refuses to open sets. If that's not motivating enough, then probably nothing is.
That's why I say bootcamps may be more suitable for this "read up, sit at home, and do nothing" kind of guy, then someone who's going out anyway, because the first kind of guy will experience a lot of new things he's never done before, while the second type doesn't get much out of it, except for the feedback of the instructors. And by what I see here on the forums, I can safely say that the first type is a lot more common(sadly) in the community. That's the only reasonable explenation I can come up with for the massive contrast that is in the reviews of these bootcamps. And right now I'm not speaking about Adam's bootcamps specifically, but bootcamps in general.