Yangon: Flexing his oiled, bulging biceps and pecs, 91-year-old one-time bodybuilding champion Sein Maung admires himself in the mirror before starting to pump iron in his Myanmar gym.
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The barrel-chested nonagenarian's career has spanned some 70 years, both pre-dating and outlasting the country's half-century of junta rule.
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But he describes the late 1950s as his heyday, when he bagged a medal at the 1958 Burmese "Mr Olympic" contest before being crowned "Mr Burma" a year later.
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"All of my brothers died in their 70s, but I'm still here," he tells AFP proudly, putting his hearty longevity down to a disciplined lifestyle based around religion, diet and exercise.
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Buddhist prayers begin each workout before he greases up and starts gruelling sets of chest presses, deadlifts and bicep curls.
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Myanmar has a robust bodybuilding culture, and competitions held at malls often draw enthusiastic crowds to cheer on sculpted men in speedos - an incongruous sight in the socially conservative country.
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Before he even knew it was a bona fide sport, Sein Maung says as a teenager he would hulk heavy blocks of wood around his small village in rural Ayeyarwaddy region. A bodybuilding show he saw as a young soldier in 1950 proved to be an epiphany, and there has been no looking back.
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With his career skyrocketing in the 1960s, he even starred in two movies and became bodybuilding coach for Miss Burma beauty pageant contestants. Meanwhile in 1962 - the same year the military took over in a coup - he set up a gym in commercial hub Yangon that still runs today.
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Once there used to be around 200 members, he says somewhat wistfully, but now only a handful remain, mostly women also in their later years. He admits his fiery temperament might be to blame for his fitness centre's dwindling popularity.
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"I get so angry and tell people to get out if they don't take bodybuilding seriously. I can't control my temper." Like most in the city, the gym currently lies shuttered due to coronavirus fears. Yet Sein Maung says he is continuing with his prayers, protein-based diet and strict fitness regime at home to keep his immune system as strong as possible.
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He shrugs off concerns about the virus. "I know it's mostly elderly people who are dying. But I'm not worried just because I'm in my 90s. I'm not afraid to die."