Monday, July 19, 2010
Kanishk's Front Box Squats
Pretty good but you are not controlling the descent to the last possible second. That's ok, it's normal. But if you watch closely you see that instead of sitting straight down onto the box you slightly relax before meeting it and slide backwards onto it. We want the same mechanics as with a regular front squat.
Try getting the box a bit more between the legs so you are not worrying about missing it. And go straight down without losing tightness. Try to eliminate that slight drop onto the box and the very slight drift backwards. I don't know exactly what weights were used since I was watching the technique but lighten the weight if necessary.
Once you get better at that height lower it a bit somehow.
Friday, July 16, 2010
KISS = Best Approach = ?
But I agree with the KISS thing. As you guys know. It's not about simple versus complicated, though, it's about simple-minded and shortsighted versus well-thought and with a view to the future. I do NOT agree with the statement about "finding where you "fit" since that says pretty much nothing. You can't go the simple route but you are supposed to find THE fit and then what…stick with that even when that stops working? It's the same thing…picking a box or trying to put yourself in a box and then refusing to climb out of it in the face of continuing failure. The one rule of strength training is that nothing always keeps working. There is no fit. You always have to keep adapting.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Pistol Squat Density Training
Being that you got 25 reps on pistol squats why not see if you have better luck with density training. That is if you think you got them down well enough.
I think 20 minutes is much too long. Try 12 to 15 at the most. And simply do as many reps in that period as you can. Rest as needed. Escalating Density style I guess (I'm almost choking on the words, lol). That probably will be useful for about three workouts. And then you can go to straight sets and see where you are. But really you don't need so many reps before you can start adding weight so the idea here should also be to become more efficient and skilled at them.
I think 20 minutes is much too long. Try 12 to 15 at the most. And simply do as many reps in that period as you can. Rest as needed. Escalating Density style I guess (I'm almost choking on the words, lol). That probably will be useful for about three workouts. And then you can go to straight sets and see where you are. But really you don't need so many reps before you can start adding weight so the idea here should also be to become more efficient and skilled at them.
Friday, April 23, 2010
500 Deadlift
After this, 3 weeks of Quality Volume Training starting at 85% i.e. 425 lbs.
Eric's Message:
Work up to an intitial starting weight of around 85% of your max. After that you can do anywhere between 1 and 3 reps depending on your perception of how good the previous set went, etc…
You can go as heavy as you like and maintain quality. For this, the amount of lumbar flexion you had on the 500 is not allowed even though it was GREAT quality for such a PR. You don't have to be crazy strict about it but try to maintain the best quality you can.
Repeat weights if you feel it's heavier than it should be. Cut sets short for the same reason. Take you time and just do it by "feel". (Sleeper is my trainer now).
Do it the same way you've always done quality volume. There are not many rules. Long rests.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Another miserable fucking workout
Eric,
I am so fucking angry right now. Today's Deadlift workout was a DISASTER.
I did
455 x 1
475 x 1
495 x FAIL «— I failed at the knees. Fuck me…this should've gone up smoothly.
455 x FAIL
455 x FAIL
After that 495 attempt everything just went to shit. Fuck me. I hate this. Really.
Ashiem
ps: I am beginning the singles training 4 week cycle come next week. This workout was such a disaster I cannot count it as the first week. What a disappointing performance. This is the 3rd miserable deadlift workout in a row. How can anyone's body fail at lifting this many number of times. It must be some kind of a record to be this epically disappointing.
Ashiem you have been pushing the hell out of the deads. You probably just need some recoup time. But how many times have you ever done 495 that you should expect it to automatically go up smoothly. If you treat the singles workouts like this you will be beating your head against the wall.
I understand you being upset about the 455 failing after the 495 but it probably took more out of you than you thought. You did get 475. I've been pushing you really hard but you have to let go of "should" and "could" and all of that. You know this.
You are not an amalgem of every lift you've done in the past. You simply are what you are right now. You may have built on what came before but that does not mean what came before defines what happens now. What you are now defines that. So let what is BE. You've already forgotten when 400 pounds felt like a dream that would never happen!
Once you hit the 475 and failed at the 495 then 475 became your relative max. YOU could have went ALL THE WAY DOWN to 430 and you would have been perfectly fine and well within your goals for a singles workout. Instead you attempted to go right to ~96 percent of your relative just after a big attempt and fail. These are WORKOUTS. Not contests.
Next time go down lighter when these things happen. Take your time and build back up IF POSSIBLE. If not keep it low but just over 90%.
Friday, March 12, 2010
How many singles should I do?
Pick a range rather than exact numbers.
So like
Week 1: 6-8 Singles
Week 2: 4-6 Singles
Week 3: 7-10 Singles
Week 4: 2-3 Singles
So like
Week 1: 6-8 Singles
Week 2: 4-6 Singles
Week 3: 7-10 Singles
Week 4: 2-3 Singles
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Arguing about Deadlifts
Ok so ignoring the widowmaker thing…
It seems to me as if you were doing you're thing and his progress is fine and they stepped in and make a claim or statement about only doing 1x5 on deadlifts. If that is what happened then it is not up to YOU to prove anything. It is up to them to prove that one cannot do 1x5 regardless of circumstances. And I'm sure they are stupid enough to say regardless of circumstances.
AND they need to do it without, as Hale would say, an appeal to authority.
Just saying "deadlifts are really hard" or "they take a lot out of you" is not going to cut it. You putting the burden of proof on yourself is actually empowering them. That is nothing more than a dogmatic beleif with no basis in objective fact. I'd say it's grounded in one of these assumptions, depending on who says it:
1. Deadlifts, by virtue of the weight you lift and the amount of large muscle groups that come to play, "deplete the CNS" and thus must be kept to one set.
So, where's the proof that deadlifts do something like that? But wait, first you must DEFINE what it means to deplete the CNS or cause neural fatigue. (There are proposed definitions but nothing based on a direct observance of what it is..in other words the defintions are not really descriptive of the underlying physical process).
2. The deadlifts murder the lower back and thus you can't do more than one set.
Based on NOTHING but anecdotal evidence and circular thinking. Deadlifts seem no tougher on the lower back than squats to me, and to many others, but then again, I know how to fucking deadlift. This is a case of "speak for yourself", I think.
3. Deadlifts just "take a lot out of you".
I dont know how to argue against such and unscientific and imprecise statement except to point out that it is unscientific and imprecise.
Deadlifts are a demanding exercise but they are still part of the whole interchange with overal stress and recovery. Deadlifts have become the bad guy by people who don't even have a decent fucking deadlift (relatively speaking). There are only a handful of really big deadlifters who do that whole "no deadlift" deadlift training. Most people with big deadlifts get there by pulling their ass off.
For some reason, the deadlift is the crook even though it's programmed as part of either high volume or moderate volume with aggressive loading. Why is this?
Because the people who trumpet the one set of deadlifts bullshit think that the back squat is MAGIC and that you always must prioritize it and hit it like it's a fucking congo and that it will just give give give because it, apparently is handed down from the God's.
Logically, as long as one is not willing to program the squat, and others, any other way, deadlift may be seen as the "bad guy" in the equation, lol. Frankly, you have people obsessed with squatting, thinking it will make you super strong, super big, and super athletic ad infinitum who DON'T EVEN GIVE A SHIT ABOUT THE DEADLIFT because they believe whatever the bullshitter like Rippetoe or whoever tell them. If you're so ate up about squatting and never compromise on it what the fuck do you know about programming any ONE lift, including the deadlift? Nothing.
These people know nothing about lifting. Period. They are bodybuilders trying to ride a strength training donkey.
Of course on a 5x5 you're going to do only one or two sets of deadlifts if squats always have to be on fucking Monday.
Why the hell do we have to deal with stupid dogmatic shit like this? You want to do more deadlifts then do less of other things. Or, work up your tolerance slowly and do more of everything…to a degree of course.
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