
I love dense strength.
I love knowing.
That's what I did today.
Come back again.
If I beat that I’m in a new place.
I love the fact that it's five minutes of work.
Yes, you can do double blocks but at the base, it's about five minutes.
Today was 60 kilograms and the challenge was to do that for three reps, five times.
It's nothing crazy but that's the way that you build momentum on this system.
That's the way that you build confidence.
When I’m doing six by five on this, I’m going to be confidently getting 70 kilos for singles, probably for doubles, and just work away brick by brick building confidence.
After I completed this block, you get that sense of achievement.
You need to give yourself that sense of achievement.
I decided to work on slower eccentric controlling the weight-building strength at the sticking point.
So coming down more slowly, feeling all the positions, pausing in front of the eyes.
If you're able to pause the bar in front of the eyes then chances are you can really really dominate that weight.
So this is all giving me confidence for dominating.
70 kilos on these in the near future.
Once I’m getting 70 for these same threes, I know that 80 kilos is going to be comfortable and it'll be time for a new best.
It's maybe a month away.
I love knowing that it's working, knowing that I’m on track, knowing that “okay yeah these are the numbers”.
Progressing in reps I don't have any small plates at the moment so it has to be this way.
Next, I did some dead press from in front of the eyes.
These give you the similar sort of stimulus to the pores but they're teaching you to accelerate.
So if the bar does slow down at that point around the forehead, that's around where the sticking point usually will be, then I’m able to drive through that.
I’m getting comfortable pressing out of this squat stands as well, something a bit different.
Make sure I find the rack each time but I enjoy doing these.
Something a little bit different and I went to 70 kilos.
There's no momentum from the body with these.
Tried it. Took a little bit longer to rest. Pressed it.
Wasn't actually that heavy, I definitely had it, just getting used to it.
These look like nothing but it's quite a strong stretch.
You can get a decent amount of work into the muscle, a decent amount of muscle damage.
It's always getting a pretty good pump just working this behind the neck, something like a french press.
You can do it where the elbows stay higher or you can let them come down a little bit more almost like front rack.
If you have trouble with front rack mobility, this is a good exercise.
So you see this one, I’m keeping the elbows up higher.
The triceps, I’m getting stronger triceps.
Being resilient is a really key factor in being able to press more weight, especially overhead presses this is a nice assistance exercise if the overhead press is the priority.
Seated good morning then.
So I’ve done quite a bit of press work by that stage that was really enough, it was like 15 minutes but that was enough work.
I wanted to make the back feel good, I wanted to make the legs feel good and see what would happen after that if I wanted to do something else then I’m going to do some squats.
I have been squatting every day so I didn't know if I was going to squat.
I just thought let's open up a bit.
There's a nice good morning variation, chest to the Bench and then stand up from that position, these are really good for activating the glutes and I’m working on getting my back really strong.
I want my back to feel rock solid on these sorts of movements and then I have a lot less concern or risk about the weight bending me forward on a squat or on a deadlift.
I want that strength in the lower back so the good morning Louis Simmons talks about being one of the three key exercises together with sleds and wheelbarrows.
The good morning is like the next big exercise.
Now he wasn't thinking about running and jumping so much he was thinking about powerlifting but you don't want the good morning to be an exercise that you can't do or that feels really scary or risky.
So a little bit of weight on these now.
Also great for opening up the hips.
They are like an assistance exercise for the pancake depending on where your restriction is they can really help you to get the pancake if the restrictions are in the lower back or in the hips.
If it's more in the adductors then you might need some other movements but this will definitely help towards pancake stretch and it's just a really good mobility exercise to open the body up, feel good, lift well, and lift smooth.
Can never get too much press, right?
The good thing is I don't feel like there's any concern pressing behind the neck.
I can sort of do it any time.
You want that cold mobility confidence in the positions.
So box squat. Now it's been a very long time since I’ve played with this movement but since I was doing the good mornings and had me thinking a little bit more about glutes about adductors, I have had some weakness in the adductors and I’m just sort of nursing them back to feeling good and that was part of the motivation for playing around with some box squat.
Also just because I can because I like to because I’ve done a lot of movements over the years and it's not a bad thing to be able to do different movements.
You can see I haven't got any sort of significant weight on there, just feeling and letting the body get used to the bar again.
So you see with these you have almost vertical shin.
You're using the posterior chain a lot more so using the hamstrings and the glutes to stand up the back and the core are bracing but there's a lot less quad involvement.
Swimming up to like 80 kilos here and just getting confidence in the position, in the bench, and moving things around.
It's important that you know everything's going to work well for you and yeah they felt good.
I enjoyed them and I wasn't expecting to enjoy them but I did and I think it's probably still a really good idea.
Paul Anderson used to use quarter squats and half squats and he's still one of the best squatters of all time.
He was able to squat like eleven hundred pounds raw.
He's squatted phenomenal weights like he was really the first guy to kind of take the squat to another level.
You score every second day, heavyweights, no warm-up but he learned that off Bob Peoples.
These guys they knew to train top position, mid position, bottom position.
Paul Anderson set all sorts of world records and new standards for the world in strength.
Now what's changed is they train off the blocks and they train, they still train the Chinese weightlifters still train top, middle, bottom and it still has its place.
So there's no range that you want to be really weak in, there's no position that you want to be really weak in.
So this is part of me just reacquainting myself with the bar and with my body in strength training.
So 90 kilos here.
Again it's also just good for the core and for the system to realize.
Okay, 100 kilos on the bar now and it feels smooth and it feels like “okay this is no big deal, this is no big effort. I can do this”.
It takes away some of that feeling of like I’m not sure how I’m gonna go lifting this when you're going into full squats.
If you've felt that weight then it helps and that's a key principle of old-time lifting is to feel the weights and that's partly why bands and chains became popular.
It's just less messing around when you use bands and chains relative to doing a lot of quarter repetitions and half repetitions in the rack.
Now at some point, if you only care about one range, one movement then you might want to specialize more but for someone who's interested in overall strength, it makes sense to develop strength in all positions.
So you don't necessarily need to do box squats to be able to do box squats but we want strength in all positions and it was good to feel that and I went straight from that into 60 kilos where I’ve been starting with the empty bar all the time.
So that was again like another mental thing and then a good experience of like “okay I can just jump straight into 60 kilos”.
Now, where on the first day like in 20 kilos didn't feel comfortable, and 40 kilos felt heavy, so my body is accepting this.
This is only two and a bit weeks into the journey.
Singles going up. Just feeling some weight for the day.
It's upper body focus today but I went up to 120 and I want that to be a weight that I can hit any day, anytime.
They're pretty similar. I think this is the one.
You can see it challenges me a little bit more but it's not.
Not any maximal and nothing's hurting so life's good.
Then in some split squats as a stretch, I try to get myself into this position multiple times a week as I said in some of my earlier videos, I had an issue with my pubic symphysis, something weird in my pelvis that's really uncomfortable even laying on my side and walking around, coughing, all sorts of things like something wasn't right.
Osteitis pubis, I guess, is the clinical name that you would give it but it's just something that came on really quickly, flared up and then it came back a couple of times.
So I’ve just been really cautious about adductor work and shearing forces on the pelvis since then but I also want to get myself back into it.
So if it is shearing force that's causing an issue and if there is shearing force on split squat then that's good.
I just want to get just enough that my body has to adapt but not so much that it gets in the way of then doing other stuff in training.
So as you see, since it is upper body day, I want to get lots of sets of these and it just accumulates.
It might look like it's too light but it doesn't feel like that, I think because of the stretch as well.
I think there's still significant damage, and significant work being done and we'll see the proof will be in the presses.
If I’m dense pressing 70 pretty soon then it's working.
Again like confidence that these are starting to feel more solid, playing around with doing them more tight arch, keeping the whole lower back arched and switched on as assistance work for weightlifting.
The plan is still to snatch 100 kilos on consecutive days.
Since that morphed into the 200 kilos back squat goal, it should make the snatch relatively comfortable if I do some snatch practice along the way.
I was able to snatch a hundred kilos with a back squat at 150 with a belt.
So if I’m able to back squat 200 and I’ve done some snatch technique work then it shouldn't be too much of an issue.
Obviously, I’ll have to train for it specifically but I guess I’m aiming to make those old numbers obsolete and teach myself the lesson that it's all about strength.
It's not about technique, it's not about speed, it's about strength.
If I can squat 200 kilos then 100 kilos on the snatch is not going to be a big deal.
Where it was a very big deal with 150 kilos back squat.
You have to have pretty good efficiency to be snatching 66 percent of your belted, eyes bulging back squat.
Probably didn't even go to the same depth.
I do think these good mornings are doing something really good for me.
I can feel my glutes working much better, especially the right glute, the right leg, just seems to get lazy whenever I am not lifting consistently and I just focus on staying symmetrical and I can feel the right sides improved a lot and it's feeling smooth, we're building a base.
I’m happy with progress.
Progress is sacred. Progress is key.
Whenever you're making progress, respect that.
Yes, there are no world records here, there's nothing that's even close to my best but there's progress and progress is sacred, progress is key.
If you're making progress, keep going.
Because if you can keep making progress then eventually you're the best because that's the only thing that holds you back is if you're not going forward.
Eventually, you get there.
It might be by the time I’m 80 but I could have the best snatch in the world at 80.
If I’m able to maintain consistency.
I need to snatch 80 kilos at 80 years of age, that's what I’m working towards, why not?
Now it's difficult to work out.
Is this too much for today? Is it not enough?
Is my back and everything, do I need to go much lighter or is it going to adapt?
I can tell you that training every day, my body feels better, and my joints feel better for the most part than before.
I have had some real stiff muscles and some Frankenstein walks first thing in the morning but my body will start to get used to it.
I’m not always going to be pushing it to that limit.
So these are some rack pulls again.
Just feeling weight, like I need to get comfortable with feeling weight to feel like I can explosively lift weight to my chest.
Just a little bit of assistance work, feeling the glutes, feeling posture positions.
I’m not trying to break any world records but you can see I played around with more of an arched version versus a somewhat rounded version.
For weightlifting, I need more of this kind of posture.
For powerlifting type, deadlift, I can be a bit more rounded.
Just connect the abs into the ribs, into the pelvis but it's adding more weight each set there.
It felt nice. Nothing special.
I was gonna play around with some deadlifts but by this time it had been about an hour and ten minutes.
So I’ve played you almost everything just moving you can see out of that hour and ten minutes there wasn't much messing around time in this and it's nearly a 20-minute video.
So my training is fairly dense.
There's not too much sitting around time.
There are a lot of sets there.
There’s a decent amount of tonnage, that's how I like to train and build momentum, upper body day.
We're on track for the press and for the squat.
See you tomorrow.