Sunday Metal – Exodus

Been trying Apple Music (so far enjoying it). A playlist “Best of Thrash/Speed Metal” came up, and I thought it’d make for a good Sunday Metal series.

Exodus – Bonded By Blood

 

2015-10-02 training log

I will have to change some things up.

My shoulders were fairly happy through this session and all things were running well… until the JM Presses.

Everything hated life.

Before I give up on them, I think instead of getting right into them I need to ease/warm into them. You’d think with so much preceding work things would be fine to just jump in, but no. So next week I’m going to try that: bar, very light weight, then work up to my working weight/sets. If that works, great. If that doesn’t, I’ll probably have to scrap JM Presses until my shoulders feel better.

I also tried doing the pressdowns as 100’s. Didn’t work well enough. I opted to use a bar instead of the ropes, but forgot to compensate for the weight, because that bar on that pulley mechanism basically ends up acting like a counter-weight, so the weight on the stack isn’t quite the same resistence. It’s hard to judge how much weight would be ideal for 100 reps, and I probably should have put an additional 10# on there. Oh well, live and learn. I will say my lats got really sore from having to hold my body rigid for 100 reps — just one long isometric hold. 🙂

Ah well. A reasonable session overall. Learned something; can’t complain.

  • Press Behind the Neck
    • bar x 5
    • bar x 5
    • 65 x 5
    • 85 x 3
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
  • Wide-grip Upright Rows
    • 90 x 10
    • 90 x 10
    • 90 x 10
    • 90 x 7
  • Lateral Raises
    • 20e x 10
    • 20e x 10
    • 20e x 8
  • Reverse Machine Flies
    • 30 x 12
    • 30 x 12
    • 30 x 12
    • 30 x 10
  • JM Press
    • 115 x 8
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
  • Triceps Pressdowns
    • 25 x 100

2015-10-01 training log

That went well, but I did have a funny thought.

Overall today went well. My knees and shoulder weren’t feeling great, but after a good warm-up things were fine. For sure I’m keeping up with my shoulder/rotator warm-ups. Never should have stopped, but here we are.

Deadlifts were fine. I am thinking about bumping up 10#. Rows, fine.

Shrugs are something I’m going to work on before I go up more. Using dumbbells is helpful due to posture, but I’ve had poor form/posture during shrugs for so long that I’m used to it. So I’m trying to get in position, then really stand up straight, let my arms be not just at my side but a little behind the lateral midline — not really, but it’s a mental cue to help ensure my shoulders stay back and thus my posture upright (instead of everything rolling forward). Then as well, when I shrug I often bend my head back, which isn’t the best spine position, so I’m trying to basically keep my chin tucked in and “sucked in”. I’ll keep the weight here as it’s a reasonable weight while I work on fixing my form issues. I’ll say tho… these Meadows Shrugs give me a trap pump like crazy.

And on the bb curls, for a change instead of 100 reps I did 21’s (7 start to mid-way, 7 mid-way to top, 7 full reps) and did 3 sets of those. Why? Just for a change.

See, my funny thought is direction after I finish Defattening. My intention was always to get back on the strength train and work up to a 3/4/5 bench/squat/deadlift — that could be 300/400/500 or 3 wheels (315) / 4 wheels (405) / 5 wheels (495) — probably the wheels, just because. I’d still like to do that.

But I’m finding myself thinking more about mass building. On the one hand, the heavy loads are beating me up. On another hand, having lost all this weight isn’t just fat loss but it’s also size loss — and I feel small (“The day you started lifting is the day you became forever small” – Dom Mazzetti). Yeah, I’d like to put on some more size. So I don’t know.

I actually think it may play more into Paul Carter’s year-round thinking, where you cycle through phases of mass building, base building, and peaking. Or part of me thinks to just spend a few months going back to 5/3/1 Boring But Big.

Don’t know. Thinking aloud.

In other news… weighed in at 214 this morning. That’s the sort of progress I expect to be seeing.

Here’s the trick: I’m pretty much perpetually hungry.

“Hunger is just fat leaving the body” (if not a quote, a paraphrase from Dr. Mike Israetel)

  • Deadlift (Base Building model 1)
    • 185 x 5
    • 210 x 4
    • 250 x 3
    • 275 x 2
    • 290 x 3
    • 290 x 3
    • 290 x 3
    • 290 x 3
    • 290 x 3
  • BB Rows
    • 135 x 8
    • 135 x 8
    • 135 x 8
  • DB Meadows Shrugs
    • 80e x 10
    • 80e x 10
  • V-Bar Pulldowns
    • 100 x 12
    • 100 x 12
    • 100 x 12
    • 100 x 10
  • Hammer Curls
    • 35e x 8
    • 35e x 6
    • 35e x 6
  • BB Curls (21’s)
    • 30 x 21
    • 30 x 21
    • 30 x 21

Givensy Goodness

This morning I was able to listen to Ballistic Radio episode 129 (Sep. 13, 2015), with guest Tom Givens of Rangemaster. Any chance I can hear (and learn) from Tom, I always take because there’s always something to learn. This episode was no different, and I encourage you to listen to it.

The episode hit home on a personal level, but that’s not what I want to talk about.

Tom mentioned the phrase “unintended hits”. I’m not sure if Tom was referring to my phrase “unacceptable hits“, but I came up with that phrase shortly after taking Tom’s Combative Pistol 2 class about 5 years ago.

After that class I wrote a lot of things, and I revisited them this morning. So, take a few minutes and walk down memory lane. Learn from my learnings.

In re-reading them this morning, most things remain true and unchanged. In fact, having 5 more years of experience since I wrote those things, I’d say those things were reinforced more now than ever.

A few comments.

First, I forgot about the way to get more “unexpected” reload practice:

Do you have magazines that hold a lot of ammo? Instead of loading your mags all the way full, load them somewhere less than full and to random amounts. You do that, you’ll get a lot more practice on your reloads.

Second, I’d make a larger point about “averages vs. typical“. Tom makes a constant point about “typical” (not “average”) and while it seems like a nit-picky point, it’s a crucial differentiation, and I should have expanded further on the notion of “typical”. Averages are useful, but remember that “mean” is only one type of “average” (there’s also median and mode, range matters too); averages tell a part of the story. Thus it’s really more important to look at what is “typical”. Check out the podcast.

The articles are short, but informative. Read them. Again.

2015-09-29 training log

Hrm. That may not have been the best idea.

I opted to move my bench to model 2. I ran into this in the past, where model 1 just doesn’t work as well for me on bench (tho perhaps if I was eating like a horse it would), but model 2 worked out ok. So last night I opted to do it. All in all it went well, but my shoulder isn’t too happy with me.

It is because of model 2? No, I don’t think so. But I don’t think the heavier weight helped.

At this point I’m starting to think I may need to totally change my upper body work. Jim Wendler posted this to his website just yesterday:

Question: I have a bad shoulder. How can I work around or through this?

Answer: This is something most veteran lifters have gone through. Rest is the obvious answer (as is an MRI and a good doctor, and I’ll assume these steps have already been taken). Here are a few more tips:

  • Start squatting with a buffalo bar or a safety squat bar.
  • Eliminate any kind of pressing from your training other than the main lifts. Keep all assistance to pulling movements.
  • Pause all your reps at the bottom.
  • Make sure you warm-up thoroughly.
  • If you’ve had shoulder issues in the past, don’t stop the rehab. It should always be done as part of your training program. You don’t stop fucking once you get married, and you shouldn’t stop shoulder love once it’s healed.
  • Make band pull-aparts a steady part of your training. Do 100 reps every day. Another great “rehab” movements is the full-range plate raise. This has helped my shoulders immensely and has actually allowed me to press again.

It makes me wonder if I should also “start over” with bench pressing. Drop the weight WAY down, never fewer than 8 reps, work on adjusting technique to be more aware of shoulder (e.g. I even noticed this morning after I unracked my shoulders had come out of position; I re-retracted them), add in more stuff like Jim mentions. In fact, that full-range plate raise is something that’s come up in some other contexts and I’ve been thinking about doing.

So… not sure, but it’s rolling around in my head.

  • Bench Press (Base Building model 2)
    • bar x 5
    • bar x 5
    • 115 x 5
    • 135 x 4
    • 155 x 3
    • 185 x 2
    • 206 x 1
    • 195 x 5
    • 195 x 5
    • 195 x 5
    • 170 x 5
    • 170 x 5
    • 170 x 5
    • 140 x 15
  • Dips
    • BW x 8
    • BW x 5
    • BW x 5
  • Incline DB Press (350 Method)
    • 35e x 21
    • 35e x 17
    • 35e x 14
  • Machine Flies
    • 70 x 10
    • 70 x 10
    • 70 x 10

2015-09-28 training log

All in all, a good “80%” session. Walking lunges are evil things. 🙂

Squats went well. I worked up to my EDM because I was feeling good. The 5×5 work sets continue to just slam along. So at this point, I think I need to change up. But… what? More weight? Different model? I’m going to go with different model and bump up to model 2. Main reason is the primary goal is Defattening Project, and model 2 will give me “more work” while also upping the intensity a bit. Plus if you look at model 3, that’s a LOT of work/volume, and if I want to go model 3 I better do model 2 first to work up to it. Not saying I will go model 3, but again given my goal and the path I ought to take to get there, it’s somewhat about more work not necessarily more weight (on the bar). So, I’ll start model 2 next week.

The other reason is the 60% doesn’t feel like it’s translating over. When I did the 285 I had a little stick about 2/3 of the way up, which is the transition point. I would like a little more weight on the bar to see if I can get some work to carry over into helping at that point. We’ll see if model 2 will do that.

I also realized I’ve been calculating my numbers wrong. Model 1 is supposed to work up to 75%, but I’ve been working up to 85%. Oh well. It’s been working fine for me, so I’m not going to sweat it.

Anyways, model 2, next week.

Oh, and on the Defattening. FINALLY — 215 yesterday, and 214 today. Carbs have been reduced, and I’m just constantly hungry, even after I finish eating. Ah well… the journey to 200.

  • Squat (Base Building model 1)
    • bar x 5
    • bar x 5
    • 140 x 5
    • 165 x 4
    • 195 x 3
    • 215 x 2
    • 240 x 1
    • 285 x 1
    • 170 x 5
    • 170 x 5
    • 170 x 5
    • 170 x 5
    • 170 x 5
  • Leg Press
    • 345 x 10
    • 345 x 10
    • 345 x 10
    • 345 x 7
  • Walking Lunges
    • BW x 12
    • BW x 12
    • BW x 12
    • BW x 10
  • Leg Curls
    • 40 x 12
    • 40 x 12
    • 40 x 8

Sunday Metal – Helloween

Been trying Apple Music (so far enjoying it). A playlist “Best of Thrash/Speed Metal” came up, and I thought it’d make for a good Sunday Metal series.

Helloween – Walls of Jericho / Ride the Sky

This one weird trick to save you some money (I always wanted to use a clickbait headline)

Yesterday I went down an unexpected road, but I’m so glad I did. You should consider doing it too, as it won’t take you long but will probably save you a lot of money.

Oldest has to be added to my auto-insurance policy. I called my current carrier, answered the questions, and found out that adding him would more than double my premium! I expected some increase because 1. additional person, 2. that demographic is one of the worst from an insurance perspective. So the rate increase was expected, but I didn’t expect double.

Naturally, I was motivated to shop around.

Long story short, after about an hour on websites and telephone, I now have my auto AND homeowners insurance with a different company (both the old and new are reputable, national companies). Both new policies have increased coverages. My homeowners premium went down almost $100/year. My auto premium went up only about $250/year, which IMHO is quite reasonable.

Drastic savings, better coverages, and only took about 1-2 hours of my time.

That’s not atypical. Companies are changing pricing and service plans all the time. We just get in the habit of paying the bill, and who knows how much money we’re throwing away. About a year ago my cable modem got fried in a thunderstorm, and when I went down to the service office to get a replacement, the lady there switched me to a service plan that gave me the exact same Internet service plus basic cable for less than the price of just the Internet service. Granted I still don’t use the cable TV part, but I’ll take the lower price (saved me about $120/year).

Next time you’re doing bills, before you pay the bill get on the phone with their customer service. See what can be done with your rate. It’s possible nothing can be done (not sure of any electric/water/gas companies that do this), but if there is competition (cable/satellite TV, phone, Internet, etc.), see if there are better rate plans. Sometimes their “customer retention” people will do things like drop your rates for 6 months — better to get less of your money than none of your money.

All sorts of things, and for just a little bit of time on the phone.

 

2015-09-25 training log

A little good. A little bad.

Overall, the session went well. Still adjusting and feeling things out on this new program, but all in all good.

Feels good to be pressing again. It’s the hardest thing for me to progress on, but I do like doing it. But I had to call numerous audibles today because — shoulder.

No question the Advil and back-sleeping are helping, because I just don’t feel the pains as much any more. Plus I’m doing some good shoulder stretching, rotator cuff help, and so on, and those can’t be hurting. But with the pain gone, I feel everything more, and things don’t always feel good. 🙂 Still, I hope with inflammation going down that the body can focus on healing up and not just battling the inflammation.

But it was odd and painful at a few points. The upright rows didn’t feel exactly comfortable on my right shoulder. Then the JM Presses — as soon as I unracked, my left shoulder complained loudly. I actually thought about not doing any more JM’s but stuck with it so I could try to diagnose what went wrong. Thankfully no more issues, but still…. But because of it I didn’t do the extensions, instead going for rope-pushdowns. But those even caused some weird shoulder binding at the bottom of the movement (as I’d try to squeeze-hold at the end).

So… I suspect I’ll keep this groove but perhaps update the weights a bit. Like on the pressdowns I bet I could go lighter but really work the movement more, like maybe a 2-1-4-0 type of tempo, ensuring that hard squeeze/hold at the peak of the contraction. Basically I want to ensure the shoulder HEALS, so if adjustments to lighter weights, more reps, and other intensity-increasing techniques is what I have to do, then so be it.

That said, one thing I also did was remove the face pulls. Instead I did something I hadn’t tried before: the reverse flies on the pec fly machine. The other day when doing the rotator cuff work I had just put my arms out to the side, parallel to the ground, and was “open and closing” my chest. Man, that felt awesome and really moved some things that needed it, shoulder-wise. So I thought why not try doing those sorts of machine flies? Bent-over lat raises always irritated me, so if these hit the rear delts and also maybe help on the shoulder, why not? Man, that was good — I was able to forget about other muscles (e.g. I didn’t grab the handles — just braced my hands against them so the movement was all generated from contracting my delts and upper back), and it seemed good.

So really, apart from the shoulder weirdness — which I need to keep an eye on — I feel good about how today went. Some adjustments will be made, but overall, good.

  • Press Behind the Neck
    • bar x 5
    • bar x 5
    • 65 x 5
    • 85 x 5
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
    • 95 x 8
  • Wide-grip Upright Rows
    • 90 x 10
    • 90 x 10
    • 90 x 9
    • 90 x 7
  • Lateral Raises
    • 20e x 10
    • 20e x 10
    • 20e x 8
  • Machine Reverse Flies
    • 30 x 12
    • 30 x 12
    • 30 x 10
    • 30 x 10
  • JM Press
    • 115 x 8
    • 115 x 8
    • 115 x 8
  • Rope Pressdowns
    • 35 x 20
    • 35 x 15
    • 35 x 14
    • 35 x 13

KR Training September 2015 Newsletter – and specials!

KR Training’s September 2015 newsletter is online.

There’s no excuse to not come out and train with us. Weather this month and next is shaping up to be excellent — not too hot, not too cold.

As well, KR Training is running some specials. Some cool classes (Chuck Rives, Dynamic First Aid, Shooting with X-Ray Vision), and some deals too (like tuition discounts and combo pricing).

Click through to read the newsletter to get all the details.