Oh look I have a blog…

Yeahhh…. I’ve been neglecting this a bit.

Frankly i’m not sure who reads this, nor what they would want to see on here. Which is odd as there are bloody thousands of you reading now! A comment or two would be great 😉

My other use for the blog was venting, or planning, but recently things are all going well and i’m on top of everything…for once. So venting also isn’t really needed.

If there is something you want to know, read, see, whatever, comment below and i’ll get on it!

Aspire to Inspire.

Just a little update

Any of you familiar with this blog or my other sites, or even just with me, will know I’ve got a fair amount to keep running and that I can track, so here is where we are at:

Social Media:

Blog – Hundreds of followers who I adore and thousands of views.

Instagram – recently passed 500 followers and now receiving offers for both rep work and modelling work.

Sports person page – Near 100 followers, limited growth.

My training:

6 day hypertrophy/strength training.

PR’s – Squat 150kg (soon to be 160), Bench 110kg, Deadlift 220kg

Prepping for british nationals and possibly tough mudder.

Training others for free, still.

Daily cardio (45minutes, LISS and HIIT)

Weighing 73kg, BF: 12-14%

3000 cals

Progress to be made all round.

Aspire to Inspire.

You gotta want it.

I’ve been lifting weights for over 2 years, but it’s also a hobby that’s made me next to no money while costing thousands in man-hours. So while it would look all hardcore for me to put on my tightest T-shirt and sneer, “I do this shit because it’s hard!” the truth is that there are many times my own motivational fire needs a little stoking.

So how does a hard-training guy or girl like you stay motivated to hit the gym day after day, year after year? Truthfully, for motivational techniques to work, they must be both intrinsic (from within) and sustainable. You need concrete, no-nonsense ways to set you on the path toward a lifetime of hard, focused training.

So while having the gym staff call you Mr. Olympia may fire you right up for the upcoming leg workout, it probably loses its edge once the novelty wears off.

See, for a goal to be effective, it must be specific, and more important, have a deadline.

I regret not setting more goals early on. Of course, I always had “aspirations” a look I wanted to achieve, strength levels I wanted to reach but they were too loose and were seldom accompanied by a hard deadline.

Goals are important, but at the same time it’s crucial not to become goal-obsessed. You simply will not reach every goal you set for yourself. I don’t care how much of a machine you are; at some point, you’ll fall short. The trick is to not get too down on yourself when it happens. Remember that every failure also presents an opportunity to learn. Dust yourself off, reassess, and start anew.

Think of how many goals are made in a drunken haze every December. Now think how many of these goals are abandoned by January. I get it, life is busy. Goals get swept aside.

Break the cycle: Make reviewing your goals a priority. Just spend five minutes every morning reminding yourself how important your goal is to you, and how you’ll eventually reach it, no matter what trivial challenges life might throw your way. Personally I go through this during morning cardio sessions. I remind myself why I am on the bike, why I train, what I am working for and that it’s all about progress.

On the surface, working out is shallow.

A fitness lifestyle seems all about you and your goals, not to mention the requisite social media updates and pre- and post-workout selfies. These all eventually ring a little hollow.

At a certain point, you need to find your own motivation. Certain mind games and articles like this can help reset your focus and maybe offer a little perspective, but at the end of the day you have gotta want it.

Aspire to Inspire.

Day 2 – Get shit done.

Another morning post as, well let’s face it, I have shit to do.

Monday mornings tend to be when the world whine, go through the motions and just try and make it through the day, I’m not one of those people. Nor am I one of those who eagerly await a Monday morning for a fresh start …  No I hate that too. Frankly if you are waiting for Monday to start a fresh, you’ve wasted too many hours.

I’m a different breed, I don’t usually know the day, very rarely in fact. I go at each day with the – What has to get done today. So what’s today for me? Today for me is cardio, study, heavy bitching deadlifts (so excited) and then more study. The list is more specific than that as every morning I write up my to do list for the day, mostly because there is rarely anything left from the day before unless it’s a larger project.

I think this is a methodology more people should apply to their lives. Living by calender days is a mistake and constructs your efforts for you. Waiting for a Monday can waste 6/7th’s of your life. I saw a concept in a film once (In time) where they talked about a life lesson, the idea was not to live each day like it was your last, its reckless and idiotic, we all want a future. No instead, live each and every day as if you had come back in time just to relive that one day, enjoy it, marvel at every little detail of joy and wonder, love it and don’t waste a damn second.

Aspire to Inspire.

Day 1 beginning again.

I seem to have forgotten the purpose of this blog. I end up babbling and then turning to easier topics (like the articles I’ve been writing).

The thing is I’m not here to teach you, at least not through the blog. Anyone who wants teaching, message me, that’s a different story altogether. This blog however is to inspire, to show you the ins and outs of my lifestyle, my ambitions, the suffering, the success and all the bits in-between.

So from now on – NO MORE RANDOMNESS. Just me, lil old me and my life. If you liked the knowledge…well…sorry (unless I just explain how I train as that is pretty insightful – Yeah maybe i’ll do that).

So this is essentially Day 1 …. version 2.

As I consider myself an athlete of fitness (weird to say that but hell that’s what I am now i guess), my training lifestyle is pretty versatile. Training for strength, health- both cardiovascular and in terms of nutrition, aesthetics, power and basically everything else.

This means I have a fair amount to work on, therefore every morning, as I have literally just finished doing, I get up, weigh in and then get my ass on my spin bike. This consists of 15 minutes warm up where I plan my day, check all my social mediums, update and so on. After that I move into sprints, AKA HIIT training, usually between 15 and 20 minutes (bring on the sweat). That bit flies by. After that 10 – 15 minutes cool down and that’s me done.. well for now at least.

Next – Shower, prep work for the day (uni readings and so on) and either blog/ study/ program or all of them. After about 2 hours of work its time for meal #1 – Mostly veg and chicken (NOT ‘CLEAN EATING’ – I track macros, but nutrient dense foods make up most of my diet…that’s for another time) – food and 20 minutes of youtube fitness whilst I eat (usually to get my head ready for training). Get changed and then time to train!

Today will be a push day (shoulders, chest and triceps) which takes about an hour and a half, easy. On the way home – food shopping. Home by 2-3pm and time to eat again. the rest of the day (till about 8pm) is work, study, reading and youtube for training videos).

This is the short version of my day. I love this shit. Day in and day out (yes it changes a little, I have a life outside this).

Anyway, this is the fresh version of my blog – Hope it works for you, if not – Give a damn.

Aspire to inspire.

Okay .. now what.

I’ve reached a point that has me …befuddled (what a word).

It is in my nature to pick up new things, like a child in a toy store, explore it, learn about it, throw the damned thing away and move on.

So when it comes to ambitions I have spent a life prior to who I am today, unable to build any due to the fact I could not sustain interest in…well anything. I now have ambitions, a commitment to a lifestyle, skill set and life goals that give me great joy. However, in beginning an endeavour there are simplistic drives. the drive to become somewhat capable in the new field, to develop an understanding and grasp. Then we try to stand out in that field, once we either achieve or fail at that, it is often the end of the endeavour. No longer is this the case.

In my field of fitness I currently am experienced. I am in better physical condition than 80% ish of the population, I am stronger than more than that, more knowledgeable than more than that still. So now, well now I have to just add percentiles to my uniqueness. This is somewhat new to me. Though I consistently aim to learn about every damned thing in this world (and become somewhat capable), I am now dedicated to this one area (broad as it might be), it is required of me if I want to move forward, to work for the inches, the single efforts, the ‘by a hair’ victories.

This new mindset is something harder than most will experience. When sticking to a particular area, over time people lose interest, its no longer new, interesting, you’ve been at it for a while and support fades away. That is where I find myself. I stand with a life ahead of me, but all that stands behind me holding me up is my back foot.

By no means do I undervalue the support I have. For instance, my unequivocally perfect girlfriend – Holly. I am unquestionably in love with this girl and she is consistently there for me, whether it be listening to my ramblings about fitness plans, cheering me up when training goes to shit or any of the other endless reasons I fell for her. However, as I’m sure she will not mind me saying, she isn’t exactly striving for the same goals, therefore her ability to aid me in training advice, nutrition factors and alike does lack somewhat. As for those I know within the industry, they to lack knowledge as I am only aware of a lower level of ‘gym goers’ or at least those I am aware of who are more elite, are not available to me.

In essence, I am doing this off my own back. No trainer, no partners, no advice, guidance, help, understanding. It’s me, chasing down the hardest part of success. I guess that is what it takes.

Aspire to Inspire.

Well this took a damn while.

Most experienced gym rats align themselves with one of two training modalities: powerlifting or bodybuilding. The goal is either strength or size. While a dichotomy exists between the training styles, there also exists a middle ground in which they’re complementary. Here, strength is used to build size.

Once a lifter has passed the beginner stage, his or her body needs greater amounts of stress to continue growing. There are numerous advanced hypertrophy techniques to choose from, but when approached from a strength standpoint instead the size equation remains simple: Lift the most weight possible while employing the greatest volume possible. What’s possible, in this instance, is governed by recovery.

Increased strength can be a catalyst for increased muscle mass. How, then, do you use strength to build size? By using these training-tested techniques approved by powerlifters and bodybuilders all over the globe!

1 CLUSTER SETS

Cluster sets utilize rest between reps to help you accrue a total amount of reps with a heavier weight than is normally possible in a straight set.

To perform a cluster set of, say, 5 reps, you employ 5 single reps with 20 seconds between each rep until 5 total reps are achieved. In other words, do one rep, rest 20 seconds, do another rep, rest 20, and continue in this fashion until you’ve completed all your reps. Clustering reps like this allows you to achieve more volume per set with weights you normally couldn’t use for that many reps.

This, of course, isn’t the only way to arrange your cluster set; clusters of 2 and 3 reps are also useful depending on the application.

Cluster sets can be arranged in two ways: to load the day’s main lift, or to extend the day’s main lift. Let’s explain using examples.

LOADING THE MAIN LIFT

Exercise Total Sets Total Reps Per Set Clusters @ % 1RM Rest Between Clusters Rest Between Sets
Squat 3 8 4 x 2 @ 85% 20 seconds 2 minutes

You wouldn’t normally be able to do 8 straight reps with 85 percent of your 1-rep max (1RM), especially for 3 sets. But here your 8 reps are broken down into four 2-rep clusters per set, so you squat 85 percent of your 1RM for 8 reps. This allows you to achieve greater volume with heavier weight and build more muscle!

EXTENDING THE MAIN LIFT

Exercise Total Cluster Sets Total Reps Per Set Clusters @ % 1RM Rest Between Clusters Rest Between Sets
Squat 2 5 2×2, 1×1 @ 85% 20 seconds 2 minutes

Clusters are also great for extending your main lift, which would first be done with straight sets. To put this into practice, let’s say you complete 4 straight sets of 3 reps on the squat, but you want to continue to build volume with that lift. Extend your main lift by adding cluster sets after your straight sets. This cluster application works well during heavy, absolute-strength-training phases. The weight is kept heavy to build strength while also engaging size-building volume.

When using clusters to extend your main lift, use the same weight you did for your straight sets. (In some cases, slightly more.) This ensures you achieve more hypertrophy by amassing volume with heavier loads.

In the example above, your cluster set would consist of 2 sets of 2 reps and a set of 1 rep, each set separated by 20 seconds rest. After you complete all 5 reps, rest two minutes before completing a second time (two total cluster sets).

2 HEAVY ECCENTRICS (NEGATIVES)

Hypertrophy fanatics often espouse time-under-tension’s muscle-building virtues. Their enthusiasm isn’t unwarranted—increasing a muscle’s time under tension promotes growth. What’s key, however, is keeping the intensity high while maintaining the tension. Heavy eccentrics, sometimes called negatives, tap into your strength and provide that key.

Eccentric muscle contractions—lowering a weight rather than lifting it—are the most damaging. As a result, eccentrics trigger the most inflammation and have an increased propensity to restructure muscle. If you create a lot of muscle damage, your body will adapt by adding more muscle so the same stimulus isn’t as damaging the next time around.

But the process requires heavy weight. Light eccentrics teach control, but creating a disruption that will build muscle requires intensity to the tune of 75-85 percent of 1RM. (Unless you have a trained and dedicated spotter, I wouldn’t recommend using 90 percent or more of your 1RM for extended eccentrics.)

You’ll lower these heavy loads during eccentric phases for as long as 4-6 seconds while completing 3-6 reps in this manner per set. As the load increases, you’ll extend the length of the eccentrics and decrease the reps per set.

You must choose exercises that have a pronounced eccentric phase. Squat variations, bench-press variations, rowing variations, and Romanian deadlifts work best.

Heavy eccentrics are well-suited for loading main and assistance lifts. Here’s a programming snapshot of each.

HEAVY ECCENTRIC MAIN LIFT

Exercise Total Sets Total Reps Per Set Length of Eccentric Percent of 1RM Rest Between Sets
Bench Press 5 3 5 seconds 80% 2 minutes

The reps per set are kept low and the eccentric contraction is kept in the mid-range timeframe because the load is at 80 percent of one-rep max. The eccentric could stay at five seconds as the load is increased to 85 percent, but it’s often advantageous to decrease the length to four seconds to maintain quality reps. Doing 5 sets supplies a total volume that spurs adaptation.

HEAVY ECCENTRIC ASSISTANCE LIFT

Exercise Total Sets Total Reps Per Set Length of Eccentric Percent of 1RM Rest Between Sets
Dumbbell Bench Press 3 5 6 seconds 75% 90 seconds

Assistance eccentrics require a few programming alterations. Total volume remains, but we’re dropping the load and increasing the length of the eccentric phase. These alterations maintain muscle-building stress while preserving the nervous system. If you keep the load high, it’s likely that your nervous system would receive more input than it could handle. The result is overtraining accompanied by minimal gains.

Heavy eccentrics are a great loading choice to apply early in your training season. They build muscle and soft-tissue resiliency while setting the neurological stage for big strength gains. This takes place, of course, as you pack mass on your frame.

BUILD STRENGTH, GET BIG

In the end, size and strength training aren’t always mutually exclusive; hypertrophy is often the result of strength-building strategies. If you’ve surpassed the basics, it’s time to employ these lifter-tested techniques to gain new levels of mass and strength.

Aspire to inspire.

TONED IS NOT A THING- Edited

It’s damn-near impossible to search for anything related to women’s fitness without coming across the word “toned.” Magazines, television advertisements, group fitness classes, and diet books all claim to help women get those “toned arms.” I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard a friend say, “I wish my arms were more toned.”

It’s utter shite.

Although I understand what my friends want and what advertisers are selling, it bothers me that women feel uncomfortable using the word “muscular” to describe their goals. I wonder when and why the word “toned” took the place of “bigger muscles” and “less body fat.”

“What’s the big deal?” you may ask. “It’s just a word, after all.” Well, words have significance, and I think the word “toned” conveys misinformation and supports stereotypes. It’s become shorthand for something that doesn’t exist, and replaced more accurate adjectives.

So, here are four reasons the word needs to burn.

1 IT’S AN ACTUAL THING YOUR MUSCLES DO

Despite its mainstream definition as “something ladies want their arms to look like,” the actual meaning of muscle tone has biomechanical significance. Muscle tone, or tonus, is what exercise scientists and fitness experts use to describe the continuous contraction of the muscles. In other words, your muscles are always slightly tense. So, technically, the more “toned” your muscles are, the more contracted they are.

This continuous contraction is necessary. First, tonus helps keep you upright and balanced. It also helps your muscles stay prepared for any reactive tension they might need to perform. For example, if you’re walking down the sidewalk and trip on a crack, your muscles will tense and your body will work to keep you upright without you consciously having to tell it to. That’s much better than face-planting on the pavement.

Tonus also helps keep your muscles warm, firm, and healthy.

2 IT’S LIMITING

Using the word “toned” instead of “muscular” to describe a goal or a woman’s body reinforces the notion that if a woman picks up more than an 8-pound dumbbell, she’ll somehow look like the Hulk.

Women don’t have the testosterone levels to build the amount of muscle that a male bodybuilder has. One of the few exceptions is the female professional bodybuilder, but she spends years building and carving her physique, and also uses hormonal aid.

Using the word “toned” also reinforces the concept that there is a specific way women should look. Heaven forbid that ladies are actually strong and muscular. I’m not sure I’ve ever heard a man use the word “toned” to describe his body or his goal physique. Why are men allowed to be “buff,” “muscular,” or “jacked,” and women are only allowed to be “toned?” There’s no legit reason women should be limited in their goals or the language they use to describe those goals.

3 IT’S A MARKETING PLOY

Lady-focused group exercise programs like pole dancing and zumba offer “all-over tone.” These classes have gotten popular because they play off the notion that women can’t do the same workouts that men do. They’re marketed toward women who are uncomfortable lifting weights and think that the only way to get lean is to do massive amounts of cardio.

In reality, if you want arms that have shape—i.e., you can see your biceps and shoulder caps—sitting on a stationary bike isn’t going to get you there.

Now, I’m not saying that group exercise class can’t be effective. But it might be unwise to assume they will work as effectively as weight-training will. Classes like Zumba are basically cardio. Don’t get me wrong: Cardio can be great for fat loss, but if you don’t have any muscle on your arms, leaning them down won’t help you show off that “tone.”

I know what you’re thinking: “But my Zumba instructor ishot. She looks exactly how I want to look. She’s got great arms and a flat belly.” I have no doubt there are some group-exercise instructors who look amazing. However, it’s important to remember that your Zumba instructor probably lifts in addition to doing cardio, and pays really close attention to what she eats.

Cardio is an essential part of a healthy exercise program—your heart is a muscle, after all,—but don’t make the mistake of thinking your cardio-only workouts will give you those shapely shoulders.

4 CONVENTIONAL “HOW TO GET TONED” WISDOM IS FLAWED

People who want to learn about training either hire a trainer or look to media sources to help them out. Nobody knows everything about everything, and beginners don’t know anything—we’ve all been there—so we have no choice but to look elsewhere for knowledge and expertise.

Articles are the reason that, because women don’t want to be muscular, they shouldn’t use heavy weights. Instead, the authors suggest that women use super-light weight for at least 15 reps, or train using only their body weight. It sounds good in theory, but in reality couldn’t be more wrong.

Muscle mass is what makes your arms, shoulders, and butt look firm and shapely. But, in order to see muscle shape on your body, you first have to build muscle. Putting on muscle is no easy task; it takes a lot of hard work and significant resistance.

Sure there are lifts, like the lateral raise, that can be difficult with even tiny dumbbells. And if you’ve ever done a yoga class, you know how heavy your body weight can feel. You don’t always have to grab the heaviest weight possible, but your lifting sessions need to be hard. If you’re curling weight so light it feels like you’re holding a remote control, you won’t see results.

It takes some time to grow accustomed to the pain and tightness that happen in your muscles when you’re lifting, but, keep going. It’ll work.

Putting more muscle on your body will also help you lean down. Having more muscle mass increases your metabolic activity level. It takes a lot of extra energy to keep those muscles working, so you’ll actually burn more calories throughout the day. When your body burns more calories, you get leaner. It’s a trifecta of awesome.

GET JACKED, LADIES

I don’t know if there’s anything more liberating or more empowering than being strong and letting go of any preconceived notions about how you are “supposed” to look. Your body is yours to mold into whatever shape you want and make perform however you want it to perform.

Aspire to Inspire.

SIZE AND STRENGTH

When you first walked into the gym, your goal was most likely to get big and strong, as if the two objectives were interchangeable. You read about how weight training builds size and strength, so naturally you followed a program that delivered both. Well, at least it did in the beginning.

But to keep making significant progress—especially as you become more advanced—you may need to specialize your training to the point where you either train for size like a bodybuilder or strength like a powerlifter. While some programs can have elements of both, there are important distinctions in how each kind of athlete trains.

Even an onlooker with an untrained eye can notice the difference in the training methods of powerlifters and bodybuilders. While they share the common ground of barbells and dumbbells, the utilization of these implements is often drastically different.

What are those differences, why do they exist, and how do you optimize your training to gain either size or strength?

THE ADAPTATION PROCESS

Your body has a single, uniform purpose: to survive. To do that, it communicates with your environment via adaptation. The environment starts the conversation by imposing stress on your body, and your body responds by selectively adapting in a way that best suits its survival chances.

Training, then, is a conscious communication with your body—imposing self-selected stress to mold your frame into a desired shape, or increasing your capabilities beyond their current state. It’s a powerful farce. You convince your body that, if it doesn’t meet your demands, it will perish. This, of course, isn’t true, but it’s the true power of training.

Growing or getting stronger is the outcome of effective physical communication. Be sure you’re telling your body exactly the things you want it to hear.

SIZE AND STRENGTH THE DIFFERENCE

Let’s start by stripping the difference between size and strength training down to the barest essential. The simplest difference between building size and boosting strength is training volume. Hypertrophy requires more total training volume than strength-building does. (In programs such as my own it is possible to combine these, but for the sake of the rest of you i’ll write as if you won’t be).

Training volume is the number of sets and reps you do in a given workout. The more exercises you do for a body part, and the more sets you do of a given exercise, the greater your training volume.

Of course, there are other variables that impact how your body will adapt to the training stress you impose on it.

GOAL 1 BUILDING MUSCLE SIZE (HYPERTROPHY)

So, what makes muscles bigger? Stress—another way to refer to the amount of weight you lift—is the primary answer.

You already know that hypertrophy requires more total training volume than building absolute strength, but that doesn’t mean you get to eliminate load (weight) from the discussion. You’re still going to use the heaviest weight possible, but the need for more training volume—your body needs reps, too—dictates that the weights are lighter than those used for building absolute strength. Blending the right amount of volume with the right amount of load creates stress that translates into growth.

When performing your main lifts—full range-of-motion barbell bench presses, squats, deadlifts, and rowing variations—do 20-36 total reps (all reps of all working sets of that move) with a load around 70-85 percent of your one-rep max (1RM).

There are a variety of volume breakdowns—4 sets of 5, 4 sets of 6, 5 sets of 5, and 6 sets of 6— commonly prescribed. Progressing from 4 sets of 5 with heavier loads to 6 sets of 6 with slightly lighter loads is a simple and effective strategy.

Rest between sets is also an important consideration. With hypertrophy training, there’s an accumulation of stress that coerces muscle cell growth. There’s a rest-time sweet spot that accumulates stress while allowing enough recovery to keep loads in your desired percentage range (70-85). That sweet spot hovers around the two-minute mark, depending on the lifter’s condition and experience.

Assistance exercises, or the exercises that follow your heavy barbell lifts, should be done with more volume and shorter rest periods. Here, the total number of reps per exercise should fall between 30 and 50. Rest periods range from nonexistent to 90 seconds, depending on the load and set-and-rep scheme.

Doing 3-5 sets of 10 with 60-90 seconds rest is common in first-level assistance exercises in hypertrophy programs. Nothing fancy here, but it gets the job done.

On assistance exercises, choose exercises that improve upon your weaknesses—aesthetic or otherwise. For example, if the flat bench press was your main lift, the incline or decline bench press is a solid choice for your first assistance exercise. Dumbbell variations also work as assistance exercises, but it’s best to use them after completing a few barbell lifts. You want to accumulate a lot of barbell stress before employing less stressful dumbbell work.

Program structure usually depends on the individual, but typically it’s 3-5 multijoint assistance lifts following the main heavier barbell exercise.

GOAL 2 BUILDING STRENGTH

To build absolute strength, the stress communication changes in a few ways. For one, as stated earlier, you’ll use less training volume. You’ll also include heavier weight and fewer reps per set.

Strength programs are structured similarly to hypertrophy programs—a main lift followed by assistance lifts—but here you’re drastically cutting the number of reps per set because you’re significantly increasing the weight.

Main lifts fall in a percentage range of between 80-90 percent of your 1RM. The total number of reps for main lifts also drops to 10-20 total. At certain times, however, strength programs increase load above 90 percent of your 1RM; at those times, the total reps are significantly cut further. Here, no more than 10 are completed during a training session.

To accumulate the total volume, you’ll use sets of 2-4 reps in the range of 80-90 percent of 1RM. If you climb above 90 percent, cut the reps per set to 1-2.

Rest periods between sets are an eternity compared to those of a hypertrophy program, but they’re necessary since heavier loads are more neurologically demanding than lighter ones. The nervous system requires considerably more rest than does muscle tissue. Rest 3-5 minutes between sets of the day’s main lift.

Assistance training for absolute strength is much different than what’s programmed for hypertrophy. Most new lifters botch this process and overload their nervous system. Commonly, beginners treat absolute strength assistance as if it were hypertrophy assistance—lots of sets, lots of volume. That dog just won’t hunt. Attempting to maintain the same volume while increasing intensity is a plan destined to fail.

Absolute strength assistance training exists in the 15-25 total rep range, with loads between 70-80 percent of your 1RM. You’ll also use fewer total assistance exercises, roughly 2-4 instead of 3-5. Without this reduction, it’s difficult to recover, and overtraining eventually becomes reality because you’ve giving your body more stress than it can accommodate.

In this assistance-training realm, exercises are chosen specifically to abolish weak points in your main lifts. Let’s demonstrate with the deadlift. Say you have a hard time breaking the plates from the floor, but once you get the bar moving, you finish the lift without difficulty. After your main deadlifting sets, your first assistance exercise should be one that attacks your weak point. Snatch-grip deadlifts and deficit deadlifts are two great options.

Choose the rest of your assistance exercises in much the same way, ensuring that you build a complete, strong main lift. Check out this example strength routine.

START WITH STRENGTH

These points are meant as general guidelines to get you started. Reality, of course, is situational—it all depends on your starting point.

If you’re a newbie, any program is a strengthand size program. Simply stressing your frame via any load and volume combination is enough to build muscle and develop force. The same is often true for those who have been on gym hiatus.

Hypertrophy and strength training begin to dovetail only when a trainee has accomplished a reputable degree of strength. It’s at this point that your stress communication must specifically dictate the desired adaptation.

Hypertrophy now requires different stress and more volume than it did as you trained yourself from beginner to intermediate. For best results, follow the principles discussed earlier in this article.

I like to start by setting—and accomplishing—respectable strength goals. Do this, and it’s easier for you to amass your ultimate hypertrophy goals.

Aspire to Inspire.

Rack Em Up — Rack Pull Variations by Dr. Nikhil Rao – Edited

I have made recent adaptions to my own programming bringing in Rack Pulls. A big movement I have neglected and so am making use of now. Having pulled a 230kg pull yesterday (feeling it today) at under 75kg bodyweight, I can say I love it. So here is a little more information on the lift from a pro.

The rack pull is one of the most poorly understood exercises out there.

Ask three random lifters in the gym tonight about rack pulls and you’ll likely receive three different opinions. Some say it’s great for mass building, others say it’s a fantastic way to improve the deadlift. And then there are plenty of naysayers to both opinions.

The confusion stems from the fact that rack pulls are not one exercise. Rather, they’re a kind of an overarching category to which a number of similar exercises belong. You’ve got to use the right form to hit the right target, be it isolation of certain muscle groups, hoisting the heaviest load, or improving your full deadlift.

A Simple Lift?

Some exercises are relatively simple in their execution. Look at the bench press. Touch chest, press to lockout. Easy. Sure there are technical points to learn and practice if you want to excel at it, but even a newb can learn the basics of bench pressing in just a few minutes. It ain’t rocket science.

But then there’s the squat. Olympic-style ass to grass? Powerlifting-style to parallel? Somewhere in between? To a box? Front squat? There’s a lot more variation. Variation that is both understood and respected.

The rack pull is an exercise of equal diversity, emanating from subtle but significant differences in bar height, stance, and set-up. One variation isn’t necessarily “better” than the other, but rather like the squat, each form emphasizes different muscle groups. A better understanding of anatomy and technique variations will allow you to use rack pulls effectively to reach whatever goal you have in mind.

It Begins With The Deadlift

Let’s start by discussing the conventional deadlift. Whether you’re a bodybuilder, a powerlifter, or an athlete trying to find an edge in the gym, you’re going to do them the same way. Feet relatively narrow. Hands about shoulder-width apart. Grab bar. Stand. Wait for applause.

That said, there’s a lot going on during that process. At the start of the lift, , with plenty of work being done by the quads, hamstrings, and erectors. By the middle of the lift, the shins are perpendicular to the ground, your quads have mostly checked out, and as the bar rises above your knees, the glutes start to fire as your upper back screams for mercy.

Hard to believe that the simple act of standing up is so complex! That complexity is what makes the deadlift so universally useful, but also what makes the proper setup and individual maximization of the rack pull so tricky.

The Three Types of Rack Pull

The All Out Hoist

There’s something to be said for just hoisting as much weight as you can by using as many muscles as possible. For one thing, it’s a huge kick in the CNS, and it’s a great way to overload most of the muscles you use in a traditional deadlift as well.

An unsung benefit of this form of rack pull (provided the bar is set low enough to provide some carryover) is the fact that it’s a good way to train the separation phase (the part of the deadlift where you transition from pushing the floor away to pulling with your back) of the traditional form of the lift. That’s important, because you can waste quite a bit of energy just building the force to get the plates off the ground — hardly ideal.

The partial deadlift is also an actual contested event in strongman, using truck tires or the bar set 18″ off the ground. So training this way could help one prepare for that event.

But if you’re looking to use this lift to help blast up your regular deadlift, keep shopping. You’re not really going to get a ton of carryover to your conventional deadlift.

The Isolation Rack Pull

The isolation rack pull is a bit of a misnomer. It’d be better to call it the ‘second phase’ rack pull, as in second phase of the deadlift. While you can break the full deadlift down into any number of different phases, I find two phases to be the most functionally and conceptually useful.

During the first phase of a full-blown deadlift, there’s angulation at the ankle, knee, and hip. The hips and shoulders are rising at about the same rate, and the weight is mostly over the middle of your foot.

The second phase of the deadlift starts somewhere around the knee, depending on your levers, but I prefer to define it in terms of the angle of the leg joints. This phase starts when the shins are perpendicular to the ground and the hips start to move forward more than they travel upward. During this phase, the quads have essentially exited from the picture and the weight has moved backward to over your heels, with the work being done by the hamstrings, glutes, erectors, and increasingly, the mid and upper back.

Eliminating the first phase by doing an isolation rack pull is a fantastic way of really focusing as much energy as possible on the back and ‘wasting’ less gas getting the bar up to this point. As such, it’s great for a bodybuilder to use for back specialization and overall mass building, as it’s probably the closest you can get to a full-back compound movement that includes the hamstrings and glutes.

Like the good morning, this is also a great ‘chaos training’ lift that can pay big dividends in salvaging either a deadlift or a squat gone wrong on competition day. And, it’s also a good way of developing work capacity in these often overlooked muscles as important stabilizers for heavy squats.

For a crude illustration of the preceding two variations, see the sticks drawings on the right:

Sticking Point Training

Finally, there’s sticking point training. Rack pulls start from a typical sticking point in conventional deadlifts, so improving rack pull performance can help mitigate this problem. But this article is already long enough, so I’m going to assume that I don’t have to explain that one.

Ready, Set, Grow! — How to Set Up for the 3 Different Types of Rack Pulls

Set Up for the All Out Hoist

The set-up for a max effort rack pull is all about alignment. It’s about setting your body as similarly as possible to a full deadlift, as you’re essentially compressing the two phases of the deadlift into a much shorter stroke. As such, you have to maintain a similar position of the shoulder blades, knees, and feet.

This means the bar is over the middle of your foot, not toward the heel, your ankles are bent (and thus shins are not perfectly vertical), and that your shoulder blades are directly above the bar.

Another important consideration is knee angle. If your knees aren’t bent enough, you’re not going to get the quadriceps activation to make this a meaningful movement with regard to the recruitment of all the muscles involved in a full deadlift.

To figure out bar height, I did a little digging into EMG studies of quadriceps recruitment and figured out that past about 150 degrees, you’re simply not going to get enough quadriceps recruitment to make this variation worth the effort. Sure, you might be able to hoist more weight with a higher bar position, but it’s not going to translate into anything terribly meaningful. (Again, please refer to the stick drawing to the right.)

The sweet spot in this exercise for most people tends to have the bar within a couple inches of the knees in either direction. I said most because again, depending on your levers, you’re going to find that you need to set the bar higher or lower relative to your knees.

But based on the aforementioned EMG studies and an understanding of simple physics, a good range to shoot for is a knee angle of between 110 and 150 degrees. And, just to emphasize my point, keep your shoulder blades over the bar at the start.

Set Up for the Isolation or Second Phase Rack Pull

The key to setting up for a true partial deadlift is the discipline to keep from cheating by using your quads. As I implied earlier, the second phase of the deadlift is defined as the point where your hips start to travel forward more than they rise (which happens at a knee angle of 135 degrees).

At this point, your shoulders begin to rise faster than your hips, your glutes and hamstrings start to do proportionally more work in hip extension, and the quadriceps have basically been taken out of the movement.

Start with the bar over the heels of your feet, keep your shins perpendicular to the ground, and sit back until you can grab the bar. Your glenohumeral joints (not scapulae) should be approximately over the bar. Now lift.

Bar height for this exercise is easy: knee angle of 135 degrees, ankle angle of 90 degrees. Set the bar at the point where this happens in your lift.

Set Up for Sticking Point Training

If you thought I wasn’t being nerdy enough, prepare to be thoroughly disgusted. The biggest mistake I see in attempts to train past a sticking point…is starting at the sticking point. A sticking point is merely where the bar comes to a stop. While you’re self-evidently weak at that point, the weakness actually comes further down, where the bar starts to decelerate.

Allow me to illustrate. If you watch a conventional deadlift hit the sticking point, you can see that the bar doesn’t just come to an abrupt stop. Rather, it slows down over a distance before coming to a halt. Where it starts to slow down is where you stop being strong enough to resist gravity. Weakness sucks. You should really be trying to get rid of all of it.

You should really be setting the bar height where you start to slow down, not where your lift comes to a halt. But if you can analyze a deadlift while you’re doing one, you’re probably not lifting hard enough. Digital cameras are dirt cheap. Buy one. Record yourself. And use at least 85-90% of your max.

Unfortunately, there are no simple cues I can give you to set up for this as it’s going to be different for everybody. The best advice I can give you is to just be as diligent as possible in replicating joint angles and positions as you can. That digital camera can be helpful here as well.

Other Considerations

I hope you noticed that I didn’t spend a ton of time talking about bar height, but instead talked about joint angles. A truly precise approach to the deadlift requires this, as when it comes to body mechanics, bar height relative to shin is a pretty arbitrary thing.

Work is done by your muscles, which vary their contribution based on joint angles and lever lengths. For different people, these joint angles are going to be different at different bar heights; a longer-limbed individual is going to tend to have shallower knee and steeper ankle angles at any given bar height than a shorter-limbed individual. As such, they’ll both have to set up differently to target the same muscles and motions.

Another thing to consider is how to perform sets. Should you do cluster reps alaChristian Thibaudeau, or just do straight reps? That again, requires some individualized thought as to why you’re doing it.

Being an aspiring strength athlete, I tend to cluster on all-out hoist rack pulling as I want to get the benefit of separation phase work. On the other hand, a bodybuilder may not want to waste the energy on that aspect of the lift and choose to just touch and go.

For second phase isolation work, there’s no reason to cluster, at least that I can see. But with sticking point work, there are advantages to both. At higher percentages of max, I’m more likely to cluster, and at lower percentages, I’m more likely to do doubles and triples with a slow descent (to avoid bouncing), but no true stop and go.

Conclusion

If you want to get the most out of rack pulling, the message is simple: Pick your goal. Nail your setup. Reap the benefits.

Aspire to Inspire.