And yet another SERPA fail

Owner of a local gun store (Crosshairs Texas, in Bastrop — just east of Austin) put a round into his leg. Why? SERPA holster.

Here’s the video he posted from the ER.

It’s not news that SERPA holsters (and those styled similarly) are bad news, and thus have been banned on many ranges and by many trainers. But some people continue to cling to them for whatever reason. Hopefully the above video adds yet another to the pile of examples of why the SERPA (and similar such holsters) is bad and should be avoided.

Thank you to Crosshairs Texas for posting that – learning point for everyone.

2016-09-12 training log

I was out of town on business last week, and (rightly) figuring the most equipment I’d have access too would be the “fitness center” at the hotel (read: cardio machines and maybe some light dumbbbells), I figured to just take the week off. It was a good choice, just getting rest, some walking, keeping food intake moderate, etc..

Question was: how to resume upon my return? Start the cycle over? Repeat the last week (3-week)? Keep going? I wasn’t sure what I would do, and my initial plan was since the week I did before the trip was the “3” week, to just repeat it. But last night I was feeling good, so while entering my sessions for the week into RepCount, I figured why not — the week I missed was to be 5/3/1 week, I really didn’t feel like setting myself back 2 weeks (especially since I’m about to change up), so why not just go for it. If something isn’t going to pan out, it’ll become evident. And besides, it’s common enough in a peaking cycle to have that last week of work, then take the meet-week off (or very light) — you won’t get weaker. But it’s a new thing to me so a little uncertainty, but why not learn.

Glad I did. 🙂

Today was really good. In fact, almost too good.

The squat workup went well. Nothing felt creaky or stiff (hooray for rest!). As I hit my work sets I wasn’t sure how well the top set would go, but figured to just do what I’ve been doing: one rep at a time. I figured I’d get more than the prescribed reps, but maybe 4 or 5. Well, I went down, I came up — that felt good, I can do another. Down, up, yeah I can do another. Down up, yeah another. And so on. I got to 6 and felt I was starting to slow down a bit. 7 felt good, but I thought “yeah, if I go for 8 I will make it, but I’m sure I’ll start to grind at the sticking point”. So I went ahead and racked it. That’s the 1-2 to leave in the tank. Thing is, 2 weeks ago (on the 3 week), I hit 265 for 8, so for sure I thought it’d be great to hit 280 for 8! Same reps, 15 lb. more! Plus I knew my technique here was better than the prior session. But why do that? It would just be ego feeding, not the long-picture.

As well, after I racked it, I had feelings of continuing to work up. I had entered my numbers into RepCount and saw the calculated 1RM at 345#. First, I could tell I’m doing what I should be doing — making progress. But it also made me feel like yeah, I could work up to 315 at least. I mean, my all-time best 1RM squat is 325#, and I feel like I could break that right now (maybe not this session, given the fatigue, but I bet I could do it). But no, I reminded myself not to. First, this would just be satisfying ego, so no. Second, there’s nothing I set in this cycle of the program to allow for this. I didn’t allow myself Joker sets. I also have told myself I don’t really want to test my 1RM until the end of the year. So I felt really good, and today would have been a good Joker day, but no… not part of the program, not going to do it. Stay to the program, because it’s evident I’m making progress, so let’s not derail it.

Everything else, fine.

What I’m starting to think towards now is what’s next. As I’ve said, I’m getting fluffy, so I need to do a cut cycle and drop some flab. My thinking right now is based upon some stuff Jim wrote, plus some thinking from my past experiences with Paul Carter’s work:

  • keep with the basic “Simplest Strength Template”, because I like it
  • main movement will work up to prescribed reps, maybe a few more, but for sure no pushing it (e.g. today I’d have stopped around 6 reps, if not sooner).
  • then drop weight and do an AMRAP set. Thinking about making it a first-set-last, tho I MIGHT actually make it a straight 65% each week and go for rep-PR here.
  • the “big assistance” movement becomes a straight 5×10 for more volume
  • then keep the rest of the assistance work generally the same, tho I might bump up to 4 sets.
  • add more cardio. As it is, I’m only doing cardio on my gym days; I will have to add in some sort of cardio on my off days too (i.e. cardio 7x week).

I think that will be good. It ups the volume, but not a huge change over what I’m doing now. I expect to follow this for at least 1 3-week cycle, then I’ll adjust. The goal is to support the defluffening, which will be volume, mass-building (well, retaining), but still trying to keep the strength component in but accepting it may drop off a little. See how much fluff I can shed in 6-7 weeks, and probably push it to 12-14 weeks. If I can drop 15#, I’ll be happy.

5/3/1 Simplest Strength Template

  • Squats
    • bar x whatever
    • 120 x 5
    • 150 x 5
    • 175 x 3
    • 220 x 5
    • 250 x 3
    • 280 x 7 (7RM PR)
  • Straight-leg Deadlift
    • 205 x 5
    • 235 x 5
    • 270 x 5
  • Leg Curls
    • 30 x 20
    • 30 x 20
    • 30 x 20
  • Hyperextensions (superset with crunches)
    • BW x 20
    • BW x 18
    • BW x 15
  • Crunches
    • BW x 20
    • BW x 17
    • BW x 12
  • Standing Calf Raises
    • 50 x 20
    • 50 x 16
    • 50 x 13

Sunday Metal – Hatebreed

When I first heard “Something’s Off” I thought for sure… something is off – Jamey’s vocals! What’s this? Singing? Has Hatebreed gone all nü-metal? But it’s a good song, a little more accessible, which hopefully might lead to more airplay for the band. And I know Jamey cannot scream forever.

Discipline, not motivation

If you follow my blog, you probably noticed I go to the gym and lift weights on a regular basis. I’ve been doing that for the past 5.5 years. Some people marvel at the fact I do this, on a regular basis, for so long (5 years isn’t long, but when the New Years gym joke is everyone signs up in January and by Valentine’s Day the gym is empty again, 5 years is an eternity). Sometimes I wonder about this “long regularity” as well, because I’ve lifted weights on and off since I was a teenager, but it never “took” as strongly as it has this time around.

An old friend recently asked me how I motivate myself to exercise.

I said I don’t motivate myself. It’s discipline.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m no model of (self-)discipline, and I know there’s much I need to improve about myself in this area. But to me, this is what it is. I don’t need gym memes and coffee to drag myself to the gym, whining and hating it all the way. Yes, there are days when I don’t want to go, when I have to force myself to drag-ass to the gym and do it anyways. But I do it, because that’s what you do. Why?

Because I want results.

I started lifting weights as a teenager, because I hated being the skinny weakling geek (and, you know, chicks did big pecs and biceps, right?). I enjoyed lifting, I enjoyed devouring every bit of information I could find, which generally meant asking the school bus driver to drop me off at the 7-11 instead of the proper bus stop near my home, so I could get this month’s edition of Muscle & Fitness or Flex off the newsstand. I worshiped at the altar of Joe Weider, and made my workouts like I read in the magazines. And while that was OK, I never really got where I wanted to go. Eventually things would wane. Looking back now, I can see it would wane because I wasn’t getting what I wanted out of it, then other things would take my interest.

As I got older, married, kids, and took a desk job, I felt my body going to crap. Time to exercise. I tried all manner of things, and even found myself gravitating back to lifting a few times. But again, the lifting didn’t stick because ultimately I wasn’t getting out of it what I was wanting to get out of it.

But almost 6 years ago I found myself in the same “need to exercise” boat and did something different: I joined a local gym figuring access to all that equipment might “motivate” me in a new way. I started out doing the same old things I knew from my teenage education, then I got sick (flu). But I was also bitten by the lifting bug again, but this time I had The Internet! I started to search for all I could, and in the end learned about things like Jim Wendler’s 5/3/1 and Mark Rippetoe’s Starting Strength. Life wouldn’t be the same.

What changed?

I got results.

I saw my body improving. I saw my strength increasing.

Every time I went to the gym, I saw things getting better. I was finally getting out of it what I was wanting to get out of it.

Progress might have been slow, but you come to accept this particular game is a slow game, a long-term game, a “it takes years” game. But what helps? You see progress on a micro-level. That you see this week you got one more rep than last week. That this session you added 5# to the bar. It may be small progress, but it’s progress! Or when I spent 16 months and dropped 66 lbs of flab – 2# lost this week, another 1# the week after, 1.5# that week, and over time it added up. And every step you take, it gets you closer to your goal. Every so often when you think you haven’t come far, stop and look back and see how much distance there is between here and the starting line. You should smile. 🙂

When you see those past results, you start to grow faith for future results. I saw how my squat increased 10# every 4 weeks, so I knew if I squatted right for the next 4 weeks it’d go up another 10#, and if I kept it up for a year I could go up 100#. Or when I was defattening, that if I kept my calorie restriction going, I’d lose another 2# this week  and could be 100# down in a year (so just put up with being hungry). Of course it’s not as simple nor linear as that, but the point is knowing that if you are doing the work – and doing smart work (I give much credit to Jim Wendler here) – and seeing the desired progress – that if you continue doing the work, you will continue to see the desired progress. That in time, you will achieve your goals.

Sometimes the work isn’t fun. There are exercises I hate doing, like lunges and split-legged sqauts, but I have found my knees are happier because I do them, so I keep doing them (hating every set and rep). The work sucks, but the results outweigh.

And so, it’s the results – the desire, the quest for results – that “motivate” me.

But again, it’s not really motivation. It’s the discipline. That if I want to achieve my goals, I have to keep working. It’s the consistent work over time that will allow me to achieve. So if I want to achieve, I have to go to the gym. And if I go to the gym, I will take another step closer to my desired results.

This works for me, because I like achieving goals. I like having larger goals, and then milestones and “smaller goals” along the way. That helps keep me going, when I can tangibly see the progress: big results, and mini-results. Not everyone is goal-oriented, but I do think we all like to see results.

And so, I guess that’s what enables me to keep drag-assing myself to the gym. I know what I want, so I have to put in the work to get it. I do love to lift, but I often hate the work I have to do. But, I do the work, because I know the payoff is really what i’m after. And when I achieve that, it’ll be awesome.

In good company

I made Grant Cunningham’s “Hump Day” reading list for September 7, 2016.

The ubiquity of video today means that we can look at fights and attacks in a way that we couldn’t before — and, in this case, you can see what it’s like when a fight breaks out in a restaurant. On the Stuff From Hsoi blog, John Daub does a superb job of analyzing what you should do to keep from being a casualty of a fight you had nothing to do with. (My favorite: don’t worry about WHY it’s happening, instead think about HOW you’re going to respond to keep yourself safe.)

Grant, thank you for the link AND the kind words.

And I feel honored to be in good company. Not just making Grant’s list, but this particular list contains articles from: Jim Wilson, Greg Ellifritz, Caleb Causey, Tiger McKee, Wim Demeere, and Darryl Bolke. If you’re curious about people worth paying attention to, there’s a good list to start with.

Head over to Grant’s reading list and get your learn on.

No Fear

Politicians know that the gangs are reason for the deaths. Calling it “gun violence” is much safer, especially in wards where gangs often provide political muscle.

“Have you ever heard a Chicago alderman call out a street gang by name?” O’Connor asked. “No? Me neither.”

Statistics, data, numbers — they’re nice, but without context you can’t properly interpret them. As well, you can certainly twist numbers to suit whatever end you wish to satisfy. It’s important to look deeper (or at least take raw numbers for what they are).

The Chicago Tribune takes a deeper look at “gun violence” in its own city.

“The shooter was typically a male black between the ages of 17 and 23,” O’Connor said. “And the victim was typically a male black between the ages of 17 and 23. So what’s changed since the ’90s? Not much, the same social pathology, and the police are expected to clean it up.”

Some call it “gun violence,” a definition greatly appreciated by Democratic politicians like those at City Hall. They can point to guns and take that voter anger over homicide numbers and channel it into a safe space.

But there are plenty of guns in the suburbs, and suburbanites aren’t slaughtering each other.

It’s the gang wars.

So where is the real problem? Is it merely “gun ownership”? Will “gun control”, “gun bans”, and the like solve this problem? Or are we identifying the wrong problem – perhaps for political reasons – and thus chasing the wrong, and thus ineffective, solution?

Making it worse:

Police were investigating reports of a shooting in bloody Englewood when about 10 young men confronted them, harassed them, mocked them on the street, hurling epithets, angry, defiant.

“Every cop saw that video,” O’Connor said. “One big difference is that now, on the street, there is no fear. Even in the ’90s, with all the killing, the gangs feared the police. When we’d show up, they’d run. But now? Now they don’t run. Now, there is no fear.”

Make of it what you will.

But at least when searching for Truth, dig deeper. It may uncover uncomfortable or ugly truths, but it’s how we will find real solutions.

Justified vs. Helping

Of course your behavior is justifiable.

That’s not the question.

The question is, “is it helping?”

It’s easy to justify our mood or our actions based on how we’ve been treated by the outside world. Justification isn’t the goal, though. It’s effectiveness that matters.

We get to pick how we act, and it seems as though choosing what works, choosing what makes us happy, choosing what makes the world the place we want to make it–these choices are more useful than any justification we can dream up.

From Seth Godin, Sep. 1, 2016

Look around. You probably see a lot of this going on these days. Doesn’t matter the realm or context. I straddle different contexts in life and see this in all of them. Hell, just scroll through your social media feeds, watch the news. Everyone wants to be justified. Everyone believes their cause is Right and Just. Then everyone pushes their agenda based upon their justification. Many times the end result makes the situation worse, because it was more about being right than actually helping.

It’s a good point for self-reflection. Are you wanting to be right? Or are you wanting to help? Will your actions just make you feel justified? Or will it actually help make things better? You have to be brutally honest, and really step back and look at the facts. Because it’s easy to say “of course it’s helping! of course it will make things better!”. But often we’re just blinded by our cause, by our justifications. To ultimately be “right” we may have to first admit we were wrong, then we can fix ourselves and continue to strive to be right, and to actually help.

It’s perhaps also a good filter for things you see and potentially engage with. Is this person, is this group, is this company, is this cause just wanting to be right? Or is it actually helping?

And in doing so, remember your empathy.

 

I write this not to preach to you, but to give myself something to step back and think about. But I do share it in hopes it might give others something to think about as well.

2016-09-02 training log

Sometimes you just clear you mind and the day goes well.

Things have been clearing up for me in life, a little less stress, and so I didn’t have tons of things weighing on my head going into the gym. So I just…. lifted.

A little Amon Amarth doesn’t hurt either. 😉

Pressing went well. I am still working to fine-tune my setup, but it’s getting there. For sure, reduction in “pressure” as I set up and press upwards is helping. It’s still a matter tho of finding the right balance so I can maintain tightness and balance and keep things moving. But so far so good. What seemed to help today was, as I said, just having a clear mind and doing it.

I was supposed to try those rack pull-ups today as a way to mitigate some issues. But given Tuesday’s experiment with doing pulldowns to warm up then pull-ups for work, I wanted to explore that a little more today. During the Press work sets I did slightly heavier pulldowns in a reverse pyramid: weights go up, reps go down. I did NOT push the reps hard, stopping well short of really feeling worked, because it’s just about warming up. Interesting is as I started I felt the same discomfort in the teres major insertion area, but no where near the same issues because I was moving half as much weight. Imagine that. 🙂 The discomfort went away quickly as things warmed up, then doing pull-ups during the close-grips felt just fine (tho I did lose a couple reps, but meh).

I’m actually digging this.

It got me to thinking… not just this, but a few other things, and then blending them all together.

I do need to do some sort of a cut. Even if it’s just 6 weeks (tho I may go 10-12), I got too free some months back and I need to remedy that. I won’t switch off 5/3/1, but the program will need to be modified slightly. Jim talks about it in the “5/3/1 for Powerlifting” eBook: do the main lifts with no extra reps, push assistance work with lower rest periods and higher volume, and push conditioning work. Pretty simple. So I’ll have to modify the assistance work, but otherwise I plan to just stay on the basic track about things. So, for all my other talks, this is where I really need to go for the next some weeks. No question. If I can drop at least 10 lb, I’ll be good.

5/3/1 Simplest Strength Template

  • Press
    • bar x whatever
    • 65 x 5 (warmup sets superset with band pull-aparts)
    • 80 x 5
    • 100 x 3
    • 115 x 3 (work sets superset with pull-downs)
    • 130 x 3
    • 150 x 8
  • Close-Grip Bench Press
    • 130 x 8 (sets superset with pull-ups)
    • 155 x 8
    • 175 x 6
  • V-Bar Pulldowns
    • 110 x 20
    • 110 x 18
    • 110 x 14
  • Face Pulls
    • 90 x 20
    • 90 x 20
    • 90 x 16
  • Lying Triceps Extensions (superset with curls)
    • 60 x 20
    • 60 x 18
    • 60 x 13
  • Close-grip EZ-bar Curls
    • 55 x 20
    • 55 x 18
    • 55 x 13

2016-09-01 training log

Yesterday I sat in an odd chair all day, it messed with my posture, and my upper back was really feeling it this morning. I didn’t want to go to the gym because I wasn’t sure if it would help or hurt to do so. I foam rolled some, laid down, stretched a bit, and felt a little better. I figured go to the gym, deadlift at least (jack shit), and see how it goes.

So I deadlifted, it felt really good. But after that I bailed. This posture-induced issue isn’t unfamiliar to me, and the way it messes with my upper back, the way front squats stress the upper back, I just felt like being conservative here.

I did 30 minutes on the elliptical, which helped a little too. Just more movement. But even now as I type this my upper back still need some love. I’ll continue to foam roll it, stretch, and focus on my posture more.

Aside from that tho, the deadlifting itself was good. Felt very in the groove.

But I realize, it’s not uncommon for me to peed out on deadlift days. It kinda makes me wonder, given deadlifts do take a lot out, if I might want to adjust templates so that on my squat day I squat (including doing front squats as the big assistance), and on deadlift day I JUST deadlift. Just do the normal work, maybe add in something like a first-set-last, then leave it at that. i.e. try to do more with less, y’know? Something to think about.

5/3/1 Simplest Strength Template

  • Deadlift
    • 140 x 5
    • 175 x 5
    • 210 x 3
    • 245 x 3
    • 280 x 3
    • 315 x 10