Gun blarg

I know. Lots of posting about lifting things up and putting them down.

Not enough posting about shooty goodness.

Mainly, I’ve been busy and finding time to write has been difficult.

But I have been working on a deeper  and longer article about “minimum competency” regarding defensive pistol skills. That’ll be posted soon, and probably in parts to make it more consumable. So, fret not. 🙂

 

Has it been 2 years?

It’s been over 2 years since I started going to the gym, but it’s been just over 2 years since I started on strength training programs. I started with Rippetoe’s Starting Strength (well, closer to a Practical Programming Novice program), hung on that for about 2 months, then switched to Wendler 5/3/1. I just finished up my 20th cycle on 5/3/1. So how do things look?

On my first day(s) of the PP/SS program, I worked my way up to:

Squat– 105 x 5
Bench – 115 x 5
Deadlift – 135 x 5
Press – 65 x 5

About a year ago I finished cycle 10 with these numbers (some were PR’s, some not):

Squat – 250 x 4
Bench – 205 x 6
Deadlift – 315 x 6
Press – 140 x 6

At the end of cycle 20 of 5/3/1 2 years later:

Squat – 295 x 3
Bench – 230 x 2
Deadlift – 380 x 3
Press – 155 x 3 (set on cycle 19)

And all those numbers are true PR’s, the best/most I’ve ever lifted in my life. Not too bad I reckon.  If you look at some strength standards I’m pretty much in line with where I should be… tho my squat still needs work.

That’s one thing that gets me. My squat. I used to hate it, fear it, and it caused one of my worst plateaus around 230# (what caused me to move off Rippetoe and onto Wendler, and even then). Now? Well, I’m still not saying I love squatting, but I can say that the day before I hit that 295×3 I was so excited and looking forward to the gym like never before. I was looking to crush that weight, not letting it crush me. 295 for a triple is happy.

Am I meeting my goals? I think so. My primary goal is to get stronger, and it would seem I’m doing that. My larger goal along this path is to have a 1000# total. And while on paper my calculated 1RM’s are almost there, again, that doesn’t matter. I want to MOVE that weight. I’m also not worrying about 1RM’s, so if it’s the weight I used for a triple or whatever, then so be it. Yes it takes me longer to get there, but I’ll be even stronger for it. I did want to hit 1000# by the end of 2013, but I’m skeptical if I’ll make it, just doing the simple math. But that’s OK, because I’ll get close and so long as I’m progressing well… then I’ll get there eventually. What probably makes more sense is for me to not look at the calendar year but training year, which would probably be “June to May” given when I started.

I am figuring I won’t make it before the end of 2013 because I’m slowing down. I’m not knocking out the rep PR’s. I’m backing off to prescribed reps only (tho I’ll allow myself some fun on 5/3/1 days). I’m getting beat up. I do feel better by scaling back, but a reset is likely to happen sooner or later and yes, that does drop down the total, thus I am suspecting 1000 in 2013 won’t happen. But again, that’s alright so long as I continue to make good progress.

The thing is, all of this is coming to a head. Am I still on the right path? I’ve been reading more Brandon Lilly, Dan Green, and other such guys. Cube Method is very interesting to me. Even the fact I ran a 5/3/1 cycle twice with the 2nd being for rep PR’s is alright for me (Clint Darden was even recommending such things). I’m reading more about how the strongest guys like Kaz or Ed Coan did a lot more rep work, like heavy work on 6-10’s, 5’s and triples, rarely going for singles unless peaking for a meet. There’s no question I have more muscle mass than ever before, but is it enough to sustain me? Do I need to gain more?

There’s a saying that the best program is the one you’re not doing. I originally took that to mean a “your program sucks” type of thing. And while perhaps it could mean that, it can also mean that nothing works forever. That perhaps I need a change.

My programming has been centered around 5/3/1 with mostly a “Boring But Big” approach. I have been experimenting with assistance work, but I’m really not at a point of having weak points or really being able to determine what they are; thus, assistance work tends to be ‘whatever’ which is why BBB works out (just keep moving and getting bigger). But I am starting to understand a few things, like I am pretty sure I need more quad work to get my squat numbers up there. And I’m finding that some higher-rep work and a little more of it on assistance stuff is good to my body overall. So I’m not really following any particular Wendler-made template, more following principles.

But I think about how a reset could be a blessing in disguise, doing more heavy rep work, working up more.  I even see how in many respects what I do with 5/3/1 isn’t that different from Cube… but I see where there are differences and how it could benefit me. I’m not sure I want to go to the Cube Method just yet, but I am very interested in it.

I do think I need some more bodybuilding work in my assistance efforts. And while the past some whiles I’ve been trying stuff like 100-rep work, that’s been very beneficial for me, especially on the kinesthetic front.  But I want to get heavier… 12-20 reps sort of thing, 3-4 sets, no more than 60 seconds between sets, etc.. try to get 50-75 total “heavy” reps instead, build more mass, hopefully that will carry over.

I just want to be a little less beat up, but keep on the road to 1000. I really don’t want to change my plan too much. But I do find myself being less dogmatic about 5/3/1 and sticking more to principles. I guess after 2 years of it, constant reading and rereading, and learning as much as I can… yeah, you start to figure it out on  the deeper and more important levels. But there is something to be said for starting out with a very specific plan, sets, reps, percentages, templates. I think some vets forget what it was like to be a beginner and get annoyed at such questions. I can see how it gets important to move beyond that, but beginners need to start somewhere and I think Jim gets that in his presentation of his program. I think I’m moving a little beyond it, but not quite there yet. That may be part of why I’m intrigued by Cube but not ready to go there yet.

So what’s going forward?

Primary goal remains strength. Secondary, mass building. Tertiary goal, keeping my fat levels in check. I don’t want to get lean, but I don’t need to blimp out either. Because when I hit 1000#, I am going to shift to fat shedding as the primary goal. What that program will be remains to be determined when I get to that point. For now, onwards to 1000.

My workouts going forward will probably be like this:

Squat
Pause Squat
Leg Extensions
Planks

Squat because that’s what you do. Pause squats because they seem to be the best thing for fixing “out of the hole” issues for raw squatters, and I’ve only done them one cycle and would like at least a couple more to see what they do for me; I’ll continue on the same 3 sets of 3-5 reps at moderate percentages (per Paul Carter’s suggestions). Leg extensions because I want to see about building my quads up more. They will be 12-15 reps, focused on extending the knee purely by contracting the quads, squeeze at the top, etc. (not about weight, about muscle). I suspect down the road pause squats and extensions will be replaced by front squats. Based on what I see in my squats and deadlifts, I’m suspecting I need some quad work. Planks for the abs, and they are a LOT more friendly on my elbows than some other ab work I’ve been doing.

Funny thing. While I was composing this, I read a posting in the Facebook Cube group. Someone was posting the results of their mock meet and they had a rather large disparity between squat and deadlift (small squat, big deadlift). Hrm, that looks familiar. A knowledgable person posted what I’ve been suspecting: quad weakness is attributed to such a thing. Solution? Deep front squats for sets of 8-12 reps. Heh.

I think I will stick with what I’m doing a little bit more tho, just because pause squats are kinda cool and I’d like to see what they do for me.

Bench Press
Incline DB Press
DB Rows
JM Press
Face Pulls

Bench is the main movement. Incline DB’s because I’ve read enough about DB work and incline work to convince me to try these as a way to build a little more mass, have more range of motion, and just overall improve for this movement. I think my shoulders will benefit too. I’ll do them heavy-ish, like 6-10 reps. DB rows will be Kroc-style, 2×10 to warm up, then 1 last set repping out. If I can hit 25 reps, time to increase the weight. JM Press and Face Pulls appear to have been helpful to me, but whereas before I was doing 100 reps straight, I’m going to break it down now to something like 3 sets, 12-20 reps, appropriately “heavy” weight.

Deadlift
Hyperextensions
Side Bends

That’s all for this. Deadlift. Then hypers for like 12-20 reps 3-5 sets. And side bends for about the same. I’m finding that the combo of hypers and side bends really knock the crap out of my erectors. So I’ll keep this combo up for a little while and see how it goes for me.

Press
Press again
Lat Pulldowns
Side Laterals
Rope Pressdown
Hammer Curls

Press is the main movement. Then do more pressing, but like 5 sets 6-10 reps; I just can’t think of a good replacement but why? This seems to really hit my shoulders well so long as I ensure I press fully, head comes forward, etc.. Side laterals because I do want to see if I can boost my medial delts a bit. Rope pressdowns for like 3 sets 12-20 to hit my triceps (rope works well, since I can then twist the wrist a bit for more squeeze). And hammer curls are just a favorite.

Generally speaking, striving for prescribed reps tho on 5/3/1 week I can try for up to 3 more if I really feel it. Work otherwise to get some reps at heavier weights, build muscle, get stronger.

Eat well.

Sleep well.

And 1000 will eventually be mine.

2013-06-14 training log

Failed to PR, but I think I have a setup that may help me avoid the dizzy spells.

Wendler 5/3/1 program, cycle 20, week 3

  • Work Set – Press (working max: 160#)
    • 2x5x45 (warmup)
    • 1x5x65
    • 1x5x80
    • 1x3x95
    • 1x5x120 (work)
    • 1x3x140
    • 1x2x155
  • Assistance – Press
    • 5 x 10 x 85
  • Assistance – Lat Pulldowns
    • 4 x 15 x 95
  • Assistance – Lateral Raises
    • 3 x 15/12/12 x 15
  • Assistance – Rope Pressdowns
    • 3 x 20/15/12 x 30
  • Assistance – Hammer Curls
    • 3 x 15/12/12 x 20

Straight up, I failed to PR. I repeated the weight from last cycle and there I got 3 reps, here I got 2. But something cool happened.

When I started to warm up, I didn’t intend to do this but it just happened and I went with it. I am working to find better set-ups for each lift, and I’m getting pretty close to a good setup for deadlift. It was really good a couple days ago, so I guess fresh off that I was inspired to hit that today. Walk up to the bar, stand there, relax, let my weight drop. Well, I placed my hands on the bar, tightened up, deep breath and hold… and the dizzy started. But this time, I didn’t unrack the bar. I just left the bar in the rack, but stayed tight with my breath held, let the dizzy pass, kept tight, new breath, then unracked the bar and went. It wasn’t perfect, I need to still get timing on it (can’t wait too long, but gotta wait some), but I was sure a lot more stable. The downside is that I’m sitting there holding a tight isometric hold for what feels like 10-ish seconds, and I wonder if that’s taking a rep out of me? I felt on the last 2-3 sets that I just didn’t have it in me. In fact, on the final set I started and couldn’t get the bar up more than half way!! I re-shouldered it, fresh breath, retightened, and cranked out 1 rep… hated only getting 1 so I ground out a 2nd.

I think I need to work on it, finding the right time to “recover” from the ‘dizzy’ feeling, but well… if this helps me work it, then so be it. I’ll keep at it.

One interesting other thing that happened then during the assistance pressing was of course I continued to work on the exact same setup, but I would find on the last 3 sets on the last some reps, it got tough and I felt a tightening in my torso like never before to keep things going.

So you know…. I didn’t PR, but I still think I progressed.

Vetting your supplements

Do you take any sort of supplement?

Multivitamin?

Caffeine?

Coconut Oil?

Alcohol?

Creatine?

Whatever. We all like to ingest things beyond straight food in hopes it will help improve things for us. It could be our mental alertness, our physical strength, our general well-being, longevity, stave off disease, and the list goes on.

Trouble is, is the supplement you’re taking actually doing something? other than emptying your wallet, that is.

It’s hard to know. It’s hard to find useful information presented in a consumable manner (that doesn’t require you to be a scientist).

A few weeks ago I found examine.com and it’s a collection of research and information about all sorts of supplements (and nutrition). I like that they give the names, other names, how to take it, what it can mix with, what it won’t mix it, warnings, issues, what studies have actually found. I like the use of a matrix as a visual tool to help you scan for information. It’s really well-done and put together.

I also appreciate that if you go to their about page, you see pictures and bios of the people behind it. It’s not just another nameless, faceless website, but people standing behind it to try to actually make something solid and respectable.

Anyways… give it a try. It seems to be a good resource.

And yes… most of the stuff you can buy at GNC? You’re wasting your money. 🙂

2013-06-12 training log

PR… and that’s enough.

Wendler 5/3/1 program, cycle 20, week 3

  • Work Set – Deadlift (working max: 395#)
    • 1x5x160 (warmup)
    • 1x5x200
    • 1x3x240
    • 1x5x300 (work)
    • 1x3x340
    • 1x3x380 (PR)
  • Foam Rolling

I’ve been feeling so beat up, I decided it put everything into the main lift then go home. No assistance work today.

Working up to the PR was interesting.

First, I do think I’m getting a ritual down for deadlift that’s working out pretty well for me. To set up and get to the bar. Refined it a bit more today, and it’s working well. Really helping my bar path and how my body “unwinds” as I stand up.

As I warmed up, I was thinking “gosh, the weights are heavy today”. Bad sign. Don’t do that because then yes, they will be heavy. Just lift.

When I did 340, my grip was dying. That really bothered me because there’s no reason for it to. I figure it was because I was gripping much harder and more securely on all the other sets, maybe they were tiring out? I don’t know, but it really bugged me. I wondered if I would be alright for the 380 (true PR, never lifted that much weight before, ever). I thought for a moment about wrapping my wrists, but no… why? this isn’t a competition. This is training, and if I miss I miss. And to help me not miss, grip harder! Plus I figured alternating grip on the last set would help some too (I always grip double-overhand, except on the last set I alternate).

I took a light whiff of ammonia, and yeah… I am starting to see how that works. I was so in the zone, so focused… I hit the bar and the 380 flew up. Now, in my effort to keep it to prescribed reps, 1 is all I need. But I felt VERY good and just kept going. I tell myself “no more than 3” and I stuck to that. I did feel like I could have gotten 1-2 more (2 would have been a grinder). So this is all good.

I really felt good about this PR. And that was enough.

I was debating if I should go up 5 or 10 pounds on both squat and deadlift next cycle. This clinched it: 10.

13

Black Sabbath’s new album “13” is released today.

They have a proper video for the first single, “God is Dead?”

Last week they streamed the core of the album (no bonus tracks) on iTunes. My buddy “W” and I listened to it and came to a basic conclusion:

This doesn’t sound like Black Sabbath. It sounds like Ozzy Osborne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and that drummer from RATM (no offense to Brad). Or maybe “Black Sabbath, featuring Ozzy Osborne”. Something just didn’t feel right. Sure, the riffs are awesome, Tony and Geezer are legendary. But somehow the whole thing just didn’t feel together; like there was something missing. I think it’s vocals — it sounds like Ozzy singing, not John. I can’t totally fault that of course, but it’s the reality of how it feels. And while Brad Wilk is certainly a good drummer, he’s not Bill Ward. Brad is very technically sound, but Bill’s got this laid back “just behind the beat” groove and feel. They’re just different drummers and it’s not the same without Bill behind the kit.

I read that Rick Rubin had the guys listen to their first album again, an attempt to recapture that moment. Maybe that’s the problem? Trying to recapture magic from 40+ years ago — that’s difficult, because people change, life is different. I do think they did a fair job at it, because much of the album does sound “like old Sabbath” (i.e. first 3–5 albums, depending how you look at it). The song “Zeitgeist” instantly reminded me of “Planet Caravan”. But yet, the sound also comes across like a band with musicians that have been around for 40+ years, so technique and sound and interests and everything has changed. Or maybe because there’s an overt effort to make a particular sound, that it’s trying too hard? I don’t know.

Overall I do like the album, and I’m sure it’s going to go to #1 and be considered the best album of 2013… but I’m wondering how much of that is because truly it’s a good album, or because of the hype and legend around it? Sure, I pre-ordered my copy. Yes it’s freshly installed on my iDevice to listen to on endless loop while working today. But I’m just not sure it’s worthy of being hailed as their finest and best work. Maybe 3.5 out of 5 stars.

But I’m thankful for it, because it’s one more round of riffage from The Father… and that answers the question: no God (Iommi) isn’t dead.

AAR – KR Training, 2013-06-08, Basic Pistol 1

Another month, another Basic Pistol 1 @ KR Training on the books.

Oddly, enrollment was down. We’ve had nothing but sold out classes for the first half of the year. I’m guessing it’s the typical reasons: it’s hot, it was the first weekend after government schools let out for the summer so families were heading out. But I can’t help but wonder if it’s perhaps the pendulum  swinging back — so much gun rush/panic, everyone’s panicked out, so now there’s a lull to compensate for the overcompensation. *shrug*  Given previous tracks, it’s probably due to the heat.

But still, we had a good class. Two-thirds of the class were women — that’s your growing demographic.

All in all class went alright. I felt a little off in my timing of the class flow, and for that I apologize. We’re always working to improve curriculum and it just gets tougher to get more information into the same limited amount of time. I’m still working on streamlining.

Still, the students were engaged, asking questions, and that’s always a good sign. I hope to see them back, especially when we start offering the force-on-force classes again (when the weather cools down). Hard skills, like marksmanship, are important, but it’s those “soft skills” like awareness, decision-making, etc. that take you further in personal defense.

Thank you all for braving the heat and spending your Saturday with us.

 

2013-06-10 training log

PR, and that’s enough.

Wendler 5/3/1 program, cycle 20, week 3

  • Work Set – Bench Press (working max: 240#)
    • 2x5x45 (warmup)
    • 1x5x95
    • 1x5x120
    • 1x3x145
    • 1x5x180 (work)
    • 1x3x205
    • 1x2x230 (PR)
  • Assistance – DB Incline Press
    • 5 x 15/15/15/12/10 x 40
  • Assistance – DB Rows
    • 3 x 10/10/25 x 45
  • Assistance – JM Press
    • 1 x 15 x 95
  • Assistance – Face Pulls
    • 1 x 25 x 35

Set the PR and that makes me happy. I only did 2 reps tho, but they were very solid 2 reps. Last cycle’s 230×1 was a little shakey and I wasn’t sure I could get 2. Today, it was 2 solid and I felt like I could get more — at least physically. My head tho was all over the place. I tried snorting a little ammonia before the final lift (just trying it out, curious) and boy… it’s really cool. I mean, my head zoomed into focus, I was totally in the zone for the lift. But it’s a rather new, novel feeling so my head was kinda all over the place with it, trying to deal with that dizzy feeling I can get sometimes, etc.. But it felt like I was leaving a few in the tank, which is ultimately the point so, all good. 🙂

Besides, my left shoulder was really unhappy. *sigh* So just as well.

And with that, I opted to just do assistance work as I did, lighter weight, higher reps, didn’t do much after the first 2 assistance exercises… just wanted to get a little blood flowing, a little stretch and movement.

Onwards.

Sunday Metal – Flotsam and Jetsam

In the spirit of the Testament/Overkill show back in February, here’s second act, Flotsam and Jetsam with a classic bit of video goodness:

Also, the demo version of “I Live, You Die”. This was the first F&J track I heard and Eric AK’s opening scream of “You’re life passes you BY-AH-YYYYYY!” has stuck in my head ever since.

 

Saw a bumper sticker….

While driving home the other day, I saw a bumper sticker. It said something to the effect of:

Voting is like driving a car:

Put it in (R) to go backwards

Put it in (D) to go forwards.

Har har. Cute.

But it overlooks something.

You see, “R” and “D” only exist on a car with automatic transmission. You know… a mechanism that removes your need to think, to work. It alleviates you of responsibility, and takes control of your life and driving experience.

A manual transmission makes you do the work, makes you take responsibility. You have to pay more attention, but you have a closer relationship with the road, your driving, and the whole life experience. It’s far more satisfying.

But alas… these days, so few people know how to drive a manual transmission, have never experienced it, don’t know what they are missing, and are too willing to be satisfied by someone else being in control.

*sigh*

Your metaphor… it goes deeper than you think. 🙂