All Out Heavy Training

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There is no way around it, to get stronger, you must lift heavy.

You can't do this all the time, but at least twice a week, I believe in having a heavy day.

Myself, I like doing this with a sandbag as opposed to a barbell or dumbbells for the irregularity of the bag brings more muscles into play stabilising the load (especially "The Core" which remains the trendy and key element of any fitness program)

Tonight was a heavy sandbag night; 50kg heavy. The program was three rounds of:
  • Shoulder the load, 5 left, 5 right
  • 1min grab walk
  • 10 x grip and bent over row
  • 1 min grab walk
  • 10 x clean and press (THE BEST STRENGTH BUILDER THERE IS!)
  • 1 min grab walk
  • 10 x zercher squats
  • 1 min grab walk

I have done four rounds of this before, but have never managed my target five rounds as I am just knackered at the end of this fabulous session.

This is real functional strength training at its best. You won't look like a bodybuilder with this (been there done that about 15 years ago - more some other time) but you will be able to do any real life activity better.

If you are new to this type of training, don't go in at 50kg, start at about 10-15kg range and work upwards; get the technique right and leave your ego at the door - you'll soon build up.

And if you don't know how to do the exercises - or make a sandbag - let me know and I can put out something to help.

PS: Be careful what you wear when you are doing this type of training, my favourite jeans looked like this when I was finished tonight!

Bulgarian Training Bags

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A really great training video with a homemade sandbag type training tool. I am a very big fan of sandbags and use them a lot in my own training.

Workout of the day

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  • 2x5 mins skipping
  • Turkish get up left side. When up do 20 walking lunges.
  • Turkish get up right side. When up do 20 walking lunges.
  • 20 Swings left hand only
  • 5 overhead squats left hand
  • 20 Swings right hand only
  • 5 overhead squats right hand
  • Turkish get up left side. When up do 20 walking lunges.
  • Turkish get up right side. When up do 20 walking lunges.
  • 20 x roman chair on gymnastic rings
  • 100m alligator walk

Functional fitness

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To be truly fit, it is important to develop muscle that will endure and work under resistance and not just develop a good looking muscle.

This type of training is not “bodybuilding” designed to get you “ripped”.

Yes, you will get stronger and more muscular. Your body will also get leaner. But the primary purpose of your conditioning training program is the development of functional fitness.

This means strength, endurance and flexibility development.

Most bodybuilders do not have functional, athletic muscles. Their muscles are tight, stiff and cramped developed to protrude. Most bodybuilders do not have much for endurance either nor are they very strong when it comes to a functional muscle.

Muscles are made up of fibres. Each muscle works by contracting its individual fibres; this shortens the muscle and moves the joint on which it acts.

Muscles are made up of two types of fibre known as fast and slow twitch fibres. The faster twitch fibres you have the better your ability for explosive bursts of activity, the slower twitch fibres you have the better your capacity for endurance exercise.

There is no way of telling which type predominates without removing muscle tissue.

Developing a functional muscle will include training with resistance i.e. against an opponent fighting back and isometric resistance training which is the best way to build strength and develop stamina, increase your fitness levels taking your endurance levels to new heights. Resistance/conditioning exercises are for people who are healthy. They can be done by men and women. Children can do them too as well as people in their 40’s, 50’s and over as long as their health is good and they have no orthopedic problems.

Beginners start with very light resistance and will progressively add more resistance over time as their bodies and skills develop. The duration of a training session is an average of 60–90 minutes long. The training is divided so that the training session commences with some warm-up and stretching exercises together with conditioning exercises such as “Hindu Squats”, “Hindu Push-ups” and Bridges.

Warming up and cooling down should be an integral part of your fitness training routine. A few minutes of skipping is highly recommended.

Use an exercise routine to warm up your joints. Joints are vulnerable because muscles, tendons and ligaments attach there. Along with the slow warm-up movements, add movements that will ease and lubricate the joints into action.

Cold muscles are much more likely to be injured, to warm up use the swing through, body twists, body circles, etc which put the big muscle groups through a variety of motions.

The following is the types of training you will expose your body to during a fitness routine:

1. Aerobic/Cardio Training The purpose of aerobic/cardio training is to improve the efficiency of the oxygen delivery system and the efficiency with which the muscles produce energy. The benefits gained from aerobic/cardio training are enormous and include weight loss, increased life expectancy and an enhanced feeling of well-being. To improve your level of aerobic/cardio fitness you should gradually exercise for longer periods of time and maintain a steady increase in the intensity of exercise. (Progressive Resistance) The best way to make exercise more intense is to cover a given distance over shorter periods of time or to “handicap” yourself by wearing wrist or ankle weights while you perform the exercise.

2. Anaerobic Exertion This exercise is of high intensity and usually brief duration, as in sprinting. It tends to foster mere muscle development.

3. Isometric Exertion Muscles are made to work against a static resistance so that they expend energy but do not produce movement. An example is pressing your hands palm-to-palm. This builds up muscle strength.

4. Isotonic Exertion Working muscles in a particular part of the body contract at varying speeds against a constant resistance. Lifting weights and sit-ups are both examples of this.

5. Isokinetic Exertion Exercise in which muscles contract at constant speed against varying degrees of resistance. The time required to achieve functional fitness depends on the amount of training time you put in every week.

Inspiration

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To get things going, I thought I would put up one of my favourite motivational videos. It comes from Rocky (of course) and features Sly talking to his (screen) son about life.

Hello

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Well, this is is the first post of the real world fitness blog. Happy bithday!

Hard Work On Basic Exercises - by Bradley J. Steiner- 1971

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I happen to believe that Reg Park is the best example and single representative of what proper training with weights can do for a man. He's got everything: huge, almost superhuman muscles, the strength of the most powerful competitive lifter, and the perfect, well-balanced physique that one sees on Greek statues in museums. Whether or not you agree that Park is the Greatest -- if you've seen him, then you've GOT to admit that he's good, to say the very least. OK. so who cares about my opinion anyway, and what in heck does this have to do with how you can get the Herculean build you're after?


The best physiques (and Park's is one of 'em), were all built by hard work on the basic, heavy duty exercises. There are NO exceptions to this statement. Even easy-gainers who (like Park) build up very easily, never get to the Hercules stage without the ultimate in effort. Park worked up to squats with 600 pounds, behind the neck presses with 300 pounds, and bench presses with 500 pounds! Hereditary advantages or not, Park sweated blood to earn the massive excellent physique that he has. And so did every other human Superman whose muscles aren't merely bloated, pumped-up tissue. The problem of WHAT these basic exercisers are, and HOW HARD one must work on them for satisfactory, or even startling results, is one that every bodybuilder, at one time or another during his career, is confronted with. This month we're going to solve the problem.

To begin, let's sift through the thousands of possible exercises, and variations of exercises that confront every barbell man, and set down a principle by which the trainee can determine the BEST among them; those upon which he should be concentrating his best efforts. Here's the principle: An exercise is worthwhile if it allows you to use very heavy weights -- brings into play the BIG muscle groups -- and causes lots of puffing and panting.

From the simple formula stated above, it is quite easy to see that fully eighty or ninety percent of the exercises followed by most barbell trainees do not come up to the standards required for maximum physical development. Concentration curls, Hack squats, lateral raises, thigh extensions, triceps "kickback" movements, etc., all followed slavishly by thousands of misinformed bodybuilders, are a waste of time. My very bitter apologies to the high-pressure ad-men, and the authors of all the super Space-age courses, but their stuff is strictly form hunger. If you've been sucked into following any such routines, drop 'em! In all honesty, fellows, that garbage won't do a thing for you, aside from bringing discouragement and disillusionment. Save your time and money, and put your effort into THESE exercises:

The Squat - Regular, parallel, breathing style, or front style

The Press - Military or behind neck, seated or standing, barbell or heavy dumbbells

Rowing - Bent over, barbell or dumbbells, one or two arm

Power cleans and High pulls

Bench pressing - barbell or heavy dumbbells, Incline or flat bench style

Stiff-legged dead lifting and heavy barbell bendovers

In essence, those are the exercises that you ought to be killing yourself on. We're concerned with the development of SIZE, POWER and SHAPELY BULK, so we've eliminated all supplementary abdominal and calf work. This you can do at your leisure, or you can omit it entirely, with no consequences to your overall development. The stuff we've enumerated above is what you need in order to turn yourself into a Human Hercules. And, lest you believe that this writer has a vested interest in this, let me say that he HAS. I derive personal, private, selfish satisfaction pushing the truth about sensible barbell training, and seeing those guys who are willing to work for their goals, achieving the builds they desire. The muscle heads, the "muscle-spinners," the drug-takers, etc, are no concern of mine. They can go their own way; I'm concerned about the rest of you.

Honest muscles, like honest men, are rare. But they can be attained, and the only way to do it is through HARD, HARD work, and an honest approach to training programs. So if you're willing, you can get the physique you're after; if you train as I have discussed on the Basic Movements.

There are reasons why these basic exercises are best. Let's talk about them.

It isn't generally understood, but the easiest way to build the small muscle groups is by exercise on the big ones! For example, it's impossible to build a broad, powerful back, and thick pectorals, along with terrific shoulders via the heavy cleaning, pressing, rowing and bench work that I advocate, without building enormous arm size and strength. You couldn't do it if you wanted to! Yet, aside from weight-gaining, building big arms is a giant headache for most barbell men. How simple a matter it would become if only they would forget about the ridiculous pumping, cramping and spinning-type isolation exercises, and just train hard on the basics! The big arms would come naturally.

John Grimek once had arms that taped close to 19". They were so big and powerful that they didn't look real! Grimek at the time was an Olympic weight-lifting contender, and he had trained for a long period without doing a single curl or triceps "pumper." His big arms got the way they did from the Heavy Lifting Training. You can do the same by working hard and heavy. And you don't have to enter Olympic competition!

The trapezius and neck muscles are impressive and too often neglected by many weight-trainees. But your traps will grow like crazy if you push your cleans hard, and if you get your presses up to really impressive standards.

Ditto for your neck muscles. The huffing, puffing, and muscular work and exertion caused by ALL heavy work will make your neck muscles grow.

Forearms - "stubborn forearms" will respond like obedient, trained seals to heavy rowing, cleaning and pressing. And just try to keep your grip on a super heavy barbell while doing a set of stiff-leg deadlifts, without forcing the forearm muscles to ache and grow beyond belief!

Heavy squatting will build heavier calves. Sounds impossible? Well, just try working your squats like you're supposed to, and you'll see your calves begin to grow no matter how they've refused to respond to toe raises.

Power cleans are fine for the calf muscles too. Incredible as this statement may sound, it's absolutely true. The coordinated effort of leg and back movement in heavy cleaning DOES work the calves! Try it for a few months and find out for yourself.

Nobody wants to be fat around the middle. Yet, unless you're drastically overweight, you don't need more than one set of one abdominal exercise (done in high reps, with resistance) to keep a rock-hard, muscular mid-section. The hard work on squatting, cleaning, and ALL heavy exercises will inevitably keep you trim and hard. And make no mistake about this: you are far, far better off with a thick, powerful waist than you are with a "wasp-waist pretty body." A man should be BIG. He should be strong and powerful. And he can't be if he tries to blow his biceps up to 20" and keep his waist down to 30". Use your head! If there are any real supermen around who have waistlines below 33" or 34", then they've got 'em only because they're SHORT, and, the small waist is proportionate tot he rest of their husky muscles.

Training on the big exercises builds HEALTH and LASTING muscle size. These two factors are very important. Today, men like John Grimek, Reg Park, Bill Pearl, and another lesser-known Hercules, Maurice HOnes of Canada, all possess builds and physical power comparable to that which they had during their prime. The reason? They built REAL MUSCLE, Sig Klein must be around seventy, yet he's got the build of a twenty-five year old athlete. The reason? He built REAL MUSCLE. The same holds for scores of others in the weight game who got their physical development by hard, hard work with heavy weights on the best exercises.

If you're a young man now, then you're probably more interested in what you can look like on a posing platform, and in how fast you can get piles of muscle - but don't, no matter how great the temptation for an "easy way out" via pumping routines or muscle drugs, follow any system of training except the good, heavy, teeth-gritting type routines that build pure, strong, big muscles. I say this as a sincere warning against charlatans who would rob you of your money and your health - and do it gladly - to sell you on their own private "miracle systems' or methods'. Keep clear of them, and remember, please, that you've got a long life ahead of you after any physique competitions you might enter or win within the next few years. You want health, well-being AND big muscles that will stay with you for the rest of your life. You will only get them if you train HARD and HEAVY!

Here's a sample program that you can follow. It will give you every desirable physical quality. IF you work to your limit on it.

Warm up with one set of twenty prone hyperextensions.

Do two progressively heavier warm up sets in the squat, using five reps in each set. Then load on weight until the bar bends, and do three sets of five reps each with this limit poundage. Push! Fight! Drive! the SQUAT is THE builder of SUPERMEN!

Go to your flat bench and do two warm up sets, as you did for your squats, of five reps each in the bench press. Then do a final 3 sets with all the weight you can properly handle. In this, and in every other exercise in the program, REST WELL BETWEEN SETS!

Now do power cleans, stiff--legged dead lifts, or barbell bendovers. Same sets., same reps and the same forced poundage attempts as in the preceding exercises. Your lower back is a vital body area. Turn it into a SUPER POWER ZONE by intensive back work!

Do heavy, bent-over barbell rowing. Two warm up sets - then three limit sets - five reps in each set you do. Reg Park (I always seem to come back to mentioning him, don't I!) used this exercise along with the power clean in order to build the unbelievable back that he possesses. He considers this bent-over rowing exercise the best single upper back movement a man can do.

Do some form of HEAVY pressing, If you read my stuff then you already know that I practically sneer at any shoulder exercise but the press behind the neck! But of course you can old military barbell presses, dumbbell presses, or any form of heavy seated pressing with excellent results sure to follow - IF YOU WORK HARD. Same set-rep scheme for your pressing as for the other exercises, and a tip: May guys have complained to me that I don't understand (a-hem!) their difficulties when it comes to heavy pressing behind the neck. It seems that the effort of cleaning the bar up and behind their necks before each set tires their poor little bodies out. What to do? Do your presses right off the squat racks! Load the bar up. Get set comfortably under it. Get a good, solid grip on the bar and set your feet firmly. Now go to it. Press the weight right off the racks. Then, after each set, return the bar to the squat racks. Simple? you'll get wonderful results this way - since you'll be saving your energy and concentration exclusively for the pressing action, and all of the work will be thrown directly on your deltoids...so, better and bigger muscles!

End your workout with an abdominal exercise. Do any one that you happen to like. I prefer leg raises off the end of a flat bench, with iron boots on my feet, but it's really only a personal preference, and you can work your midsection with any 'ab" exercise that you happen to like. Just do one set, and run the reps at around twenty or thirty.

Here's the routine written out:

Warm-up - 1 x 20

Squat - 5 x 5

Bench press - 5 x 5

Stiff-leg dead lift - 5 x 5

Bent-over rowing - 5 x 5

Press behind neck - 5 x 5

Leg raises 1 x 25

Do that routine - or a similar one - as described in this article, and your muscles will bulge through your clothing after a year or so of training!

The watchwords are BASIC EXERCISES and HARD WORK. Remember them when you walk into the gym next time. You'll be grateful for the rest of your life that you did!

The purpose of this blog

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Robert Newman's blog about food bodyweight training physical culture strength training martial arts cats outdoor pursuits yoga living polar and life

Robert's blog about cooking, strength training and physical culture, martial arts (sometimes!) cats, yoga, living polar and life (March 2011)