There
are two types of people in the world: those who overanalyze
E.V.E.R.Y.T.H.I.N.G and those who don’t.
Think
about this
question “what’s the meaning of life?” for example. Not to
insinuate that this is a question that doesn’t
deserve
to be overanalyzed – admittedly it’s loaded and a question that’s
pretty freakin deep – but it’s surprising how much of a dichotomy
there is from person to person as to how it’s analyzed and thus
answered.
Of
course, the more introspective of us will dive into the existential
components and gravitate towards a discourse of philosophy, religion,
theology, science, the universe, as well as sub-components pertaining
to one’s happiness (what makes someone “happy?”), spirituality
(which may or may not include a God), social ties, morality, value,
purpose, and a host of other equally important factors. Like watch
the three movies of The Lord
of the Rings in
a night.
For
the more critical and analytical people the meaning of life parallels
that of Socrates where one should live a life of virtue and that
which agrees with nature.
For
someone else the meaning of life may revolve around the notion of
“oneness” and developing a well-rounded relationship with oneself
and with one’s surroundings (family, friends, environment,
community, etc).
For
the less analytical and for those people who tend to go with the
flow, the meaning of life may be to make babies, have a lot of money,
or, I don’t know, the
"2
for 1 pizza night" in
a restaurant
The point is: some people are deep thinkers (for better or worse), and some aren’t (for better or worse).
I’m
not sure if the introduction is good (if you’re still reading I
guess it did. I win!!!!), but when it comes to the topic of getting
stronger I do feel many people fall into the trap of overanalyzing
and making things more complicated than they need to be.
There
are a million and one articles and blog post out there delving into
the nuts and bolts of what it takes to get stronger – and 90% of
them say the same thing. What do they say?
Lift heavy shit, a lot. Repeat.
The
fact of the matter is this: if you want to get stronger it’s
standard procedure to focus on “the big 3″ – squat, bench
press, deadlift – and to make those lifts THE HEART of your
training approach and philosophy.
These
movements generally allow you to use the most weight and there’s a
reason why they’re the bases of most – if not all – successful
training programs .
There’s
something to know about building a relationship with the barbell and
spending time underneath it, pushing it, pulling it, and hoisting it
over your head.
I’d
argue that if more people just performed TWO barbell movements per
training session and worked on perfecting their technique, and poured
their heart and soul into those two movements that day, they’d see
tremendous results.
It’s
not a sexy approach, but it works.
So
to recap: the universal precondition to getting stronger are to focus
on compound, multi-joint movements (preferably the big 3) and to try
to lift move more weight in those lifts on a weekly, monthly, yearly
basis.
We’re
all on the same page, right? Mmmmkay. Moving on.
95.65%
of me would like to end this post now. But this is reminds me of a
funny story. Forgive me for going off-topic for a second.
One
day I was spotting a buddy of mine on the bench press. He was
gearing up to travel abroad to play some professional football
(American football) and was training pretty hard. He had something
like 152 kg on the bench press – give or take 4.5 kg – and missed
the lift.
He
racked the weight, turned around and looked at me, and asked “dude,
was my bar path off? Did my elbows flare out? Leg drive? What?” He
wanted a complicated answer. All I said was “nah, it was just too
heavy.”
Hahahahahahahahaha.
Trust
me it was funny. You had to be there.
We
probably could have made an argument for all the things he brought
up, but the simple answer was that, like it or not, gravity won.
And
it’s on that note I wanted to offer a bit more insight other than
the cliched “just lift something heavy” mantra that’s
regurgitated time and time again on the internet.
1. Aim for Small Gains
Every
Thanksgiving I go home and inevitably I’ll pile on more food than I
can handle onto my plate. It’s the epitome of having my eyes be
larger than my stomach.
In
that same vein, far too often I notice people making overly ambitious
training goals.
Don’t
get me wrong it’s great to have goals, and I wish more people would
take the time to write them down. Doing so gives people purpose in
their training ! However, saying that you’d like to squat 272 kg by
the end of the year when you can barely perform a squat now without
looking like a guy who pop his eyes of his face.
It’s
like some guy saying “I WANT TO MAKE OUT WITH JENNIFER LAWRENCE”,
when all he’s ever done is practice on his pillow.
Calm
down big guy and lets be a bit more realistic.
Squatting
272 kg is cool and all, but why not just make a goal of perfecting
your technique first ? Then we can graduate to loftier things like a
2x bodyweight squat and then some!
Think
about it this way: If you break a max by 2.2 kg a month, that’s
27.2 kg a year. If you keep doing that, you’re going to make some
fantastic progress.
As
the godfather of badassery and getting strong, Louie Simmons, states:
“Stay focused, stay strong, stay patient. You’ll get there.”
2. Restoration and Recovery Matter
It
sounds borderline counterintuitive – but you DO NOT make gains in
the weight room. Lifting weights breaks down muscle tissue – that’s
the point! – and serves as the stimulus for the body to repair
itself and come back stronger.
If
you’re not getting ample sleep, hitting up the foam roller here the
there and working on maintaining adequate tissue quality, and/or
taking precautions to RECOVER from your training ….then it’s all
for not.
As
the saying goes, fatigue will mask your true fitness.. You can’t
consistently beat your body to a pulp and expect to make continued,
long-term gains/progress.
Try
this: take an off day. And by “off day,” I don’t mean perform a
strongman circuit or head to the track and perform a bunch of 400m
tempo runs. I mean exactly what it implies.
Relax.
Chill out. Stay at home, fire up your
TV shows/Movies collection,
and watch some.
If
you’re one of those people who shits a stability ball if you’re
not in the gym on any given day, maybe try an ACTIVE RECOVERY day.
Active
recovery focuses on completing a workout at a low intensity, but just
high enough that it gets the blood moving and helps reduce residual
fatigue in the muscle.
On a recovery day, running at a low intensity for a short duration
such as less than sixty minutes or riding for less than 75 minutes
can help speed recovery. Besides running or riding, you can try out
other activities for crosstraining. For endurance athletes looking to
spice up their training, try out rock
climbing,
going for a walk in a park, cross-country skiing, or getting on the
dreaded elliptical machine.
You
don’t need to be running on all cylinders 100% of the time to make
progress.
3. Make Your Foundation Wider In Order to Gain Higher Peaks
The
idea is this: in order to hit higher peaks in strength, you HAVE to
develop a wider base.
For
beginner and intermediate trainees it makes little sense to spend
time performing lifts in the 90% + range (of one’s one-rep max) and
testing when their performance isn’t that impressive in the first
place.
Think
of things in terms of a triangle:
To
the right is someone who hasn’t spent a lot of time accumulating
VOLUME in their training. Their base is fairly narrow, and hence
their peak (I.e., strength) isn’t anything to brag about.
Conversely,
to the left, is someone who’s spent a lot of time under the bar and
has amassed more volume and frequency in their training. As a result,
their base is wider and peak is much higher.
Put
another way: how you get strong is by moving what you could
originally do for 3 reps and perform it for 5.
You
can only do this by accumulating volume and by putting in the work.
It’s not just going to happen.
4. The Best Supplement?
What
would a post on strength be without some sort of commentary on
supplements!?
I
had a high-school athlete walk up to me the other day asking me what
I felt was the best supplement to take to get strong and to add on
weight.
All
I said was……….
CALORIES.
Calories
is the best supplement.
He
looked at me all perplexed. He was expecting me to go on some
diatribe on creatine or protein powder or some Mass Gainer Extreme
Mass Series.
I’ve
said it before, and I’ll say it again: supplements are progress
ENHANCERS not progress STARTERS.
If
your current diet and training plan isn’t getting the job done,
then the “x-factor” isn’t what supplements you’re not taking.
Your
training is suspect or you’re not ingesting enough calories. Most
likely it’s both!
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