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Looks like he has a lot of nice gear....
Pretty good progress, mate. Just a guess, but you started lifting about 6 months ago?Did lower today, finally tried out the hack squat machine. It's harder than I'd thought!
Also, hit my record for pulling today, 155kg for 2! Not too shabby. Reckon that's about 90%ish of my 1rm, rating that around 170kg hasn't failed me yet. Backoff sets at 135kg, form was worse on those, just a bit shy of 3 plates. Suboptimal environment, the platform where I usually do deadlift was taken by a couple (bless their hearts) doing squat and rack pulls together. Can't fight love I guess. Had to fight the bar being a little crooked and not being as able to line up my position with the bar like I'm used to instead.
Oh, I meant to ask, any tips for breaking a bench plateau? I've had this dumb wrist injury, but in general, I want to improve my bench rapidly. My training partner is making rapid progress on bench, and while he's shorter than me (so he's got better leverages and whatnot I guess?), I've kept pace. But now the difference between our working weights is widening fast. We're about even on squat, I'm a little ahead on deadlift, but his bench is just blowing up.
So far my plan is just to add extra sets on my primary pressing muscles, tris and pecs, and front delts. Right now my max bench is like 100kg/220pounds, if everything goes just right. I'm very eager to push through this wall and start repping at 90kg, at 100kg, so I can really develop. Anything else I can work? Specific things I should try to work? I'm doing pause bench (about 2-3s of pause) for a few sets every week, but I tend to fail quicker on that than usual.
About 8 months of lifting seriously. The wrist injury had me fucked up for the better part of 3 months until I got a treatment that worked. Once I'd felt confident I'd hit around 1/2/3/3.5 I decided I'd give my current program a try, but ran into a pretty hard plateau on bench between the injury. Now I'm chasing down 4 plates on deadlift, and wanting to break through 2 on bench.Pretty good progress, mate. Just a guess, but you started lifting about 6 months ago?
I'm trying. It aint easy to fit into my work schedule as Im an OTR trucker, but I do my best. Now if I can just get my deadlift form right.Keep it up! The only thing that works in the end is consistency.
Do some calisthenics shit at home thenPussied out on tbe gym today because I'm still hella sore and I didn't feel like riding 5 miles in the rain to get to the gym.
I'm just going to go tonight after I bunk out. My gym has a location 4 miles away from where I'm parked.Do some calisthenics shit at home then
The line for me is when you destabilize your base, so think squatting on a bosu ball. You basically ruin 2 perfectly good exercises and get an increased risk of injury instead of gains.Got a bit of a weird question for you guys, and that is: Where do you draw the line between "functional/good" and "autistic" when it comes to instability in training?
For example, for horizontal pressing movements we might have (from most to least):
- Smith machine bench press/some other fixed track machine
- cable chest press
- standard barbell bench press
- dumbbell chest press
- one handed variations of cable/dumbbell chest presses
- earthquake bar bench press
- above but with dumbbells or something
For me it's somewhere around dumbbell chest press
Or for squats:
- leg press machine
- smith machine squat
- standard barbell squat
etc
- squat on a bosu ball
For me it's somewhere around the pistol squat (perhaps with the non-working leg for support)
On a completely separate note, in order to work on stability, I'd decided to use dumbbells for my chest work this month, also lead to me feeling the muscle working like never before
Isn't most of that a meme? As in all being unstable does is decrease your force output because your body will simply refuse to utalize the muscles to their full capacity, and therefore it's inferior for both strenght and hypertrophy, and most people who talk about "stabilizer muscles" cannot locate them on an anatomy chart. I'd also draw the line at adding in weird weird meme shit like a bosu ball. Like if you want something like that, do unilateral excercises like split squats or suitcase carries. And yeah I've also switched most of my bench to dumbbell. Working on getting it to the same weight as on barbell, so that should be 20kg x 10. On 17.5kg right now.Got a bit of a weird question for you guys, and that is: Where do you draw the line between "functional/good" and "autistic" when it comes to instability in training?
For example, for horizontal pressing movements we might have (from most to least):
- Smith machine bench press/some other fixed track machine
- cable chest press
- standard barbell bench press
- dumbbell chest press
- one handed variations of cable/dumbbell chest presses
- earthquake bar bench press
- above but with dumbbells or something
For me it's somewhere around dumbbell chest press
Or for squats:
- leg press machine
- smith machine squat
- standard barbell squat
etc
- squat on a bosu ball
For me it's somewhere around the pistol squat (perhaps with the non-working leg for support)
On a completely separate note, in order to work on stability, I'd decided to use dumbbells for my chest work this month, also lead to me feeling the muscle working like never before
Got a bit of a weird question for you guys, and that is: Where do you draw the line between "functional/good" and "autistic" when it comes to instability in training?
Stability isn’t going to help me knock out the nigger that is trying to steal my wallet, so I just go for strength. I’m just hoping my stabilizers keep up.Got a bit of a weird question for you guys, and that is: Where do you draw the line between "functional/good" and "autistic" when it comes to instability in training?
For example, for horizontal pressing movements we might have (from most to least):
- Smith machine bench press/some other fixed track machine
- cable chest press
- standard barbell bench press
- dumbbell chest press
- one handed variations of cable/dumbbell chest presses
- earthquake bar bench press
- above but with dumbbells or something
For me it's somewhere around dumbbell chest press
Or for squats:
- leg press machine
- smith machine squat
- standard barbell squat
etc
- squat on a bosu ball
For me it's somewhere around the pistol squat (perhaps with the non-working leg for support)
On a completely separate note, in order to work on stability, I'd decided to use dumbbells for my chest work this month, also lead to me feeling the muscle working like never before
I recently started the Starting Strength beginners program. Trying to put on some muscle, which aint as easy after 40. Hit the gym for the first time in weeks yesterday and my legs and ass are killing me from the squats.
Ill be honest, Im not doing three times a week. Best I can do with my schedule and job is getting to the gym twice a week, diing some dumbell exercises once a week, and maybe some jumprope once or twice a week.I generally hate dudes who complicate shit early doors - the best exercise program is the one you'll do, after all - but Starting Strength is grim as fuck if you're 35+. It's so, so, soooo grinding, you end up spending more time recuperating from injury than actually lifting.
Greyskull LP is a similar routine, but with much better fatigue management and is much less likely to turn you into a dummy thicc T-Rex via excessive squatting.