This
something I wish I knew when I first started training, and though I’ve
addressed it in part through many rants, I want to get it completely out in the
open.
It seems
logical that, in the pursuit of strength, one must lift heavy things. The logical extension of this thought process
in turn develops such that, if lifting heavy things makes one strong, lifting heavier
things makes one stronger. The more you
lift, the stronger you become. However,
we must understand that amount of weight lifted is not always an indication of
pure strength, but is instead a manifestation of many facets of ability, to
include ability/skill, state of fatigue, state of emotional arousal/hype,
bodily health, etc etc. Sometimes, what
we interpret to be strength is instead something entirely different.
Sometimes, it's just sheer willpower...but most likely it's drugs
Being
unaware of this concept, many trainees attempt to max out their non-strength
variables in the hope that, in doing so and allowing themselves to move heavier
weights in training, they will get stronger than if they were to lift lighter
weights. They lift in the afternoon,
after getting plenty of sleep and eating several meals, properly stretch
out/warm-up, take a pre-workout supplement, get hyped up watching youtube
videos, crank the tunes, etc etc. They
put themselves into the most optimal and ideal state for moving heavy poundages
and pick the highest priority lift first in order to ensure that they move
maximal weight during their training. Surely THIS is how one becomes the
strongest.
But let’s
think about this for a moment. Suppose,
in the above mentioned scenario, the trainee was able to squat 500lbs for 10
reps. Now, suppose, in some alternate
universe, on the exact same day this trainee instead only got 4 hours of sleep,
trained first thing in the morning in dead silence with no protein supplements
or motivation at all and hit squats last after hammering leg press, GHRs,
reverse hypers and the ab wheel. The
alternate universe trainee only manages to squat 450 for 10 reps…yet despite
the difference in weight lifted, did either trainee actually possess different
levels of strength proper? The external
variables have all been altered, but did anything actually change on the INSIDE
of the lifter?
No, wearing this will not help find the answer
This is the
point we must understand: the strength is ALWAYS there, barring of course
autoimmune disease and other such maladies.
One’s ability to CHANNEL the strength may be altered, but the strength
itself remains a constant, and it’s this CONSTANT we are wanting to improve in
training, not the other variables. Yes,
in a competition, we strive to create the optimal environment to move the most
weight, but in training our goal is to improve the attribute of STRENGTH, not
weight moving ability.
This
understanding is vital toward one’s success, as it allows us significantly
greater freedom and lack of stress in training.
One of the constant lamentations made by the full body trainee is how,
after the first lift of the day, the remaining lifts suffer. This trainee believes that they are making
their first lift stronger at the expense of their other lifts. What this trainee must understand is that
they are still developing strength for all of the movements they train, they
are simply altering the conditions upon which they train them. Being aware of these conditions is crucial
toward tracking and monitoring progress, as is being able to keep them somewhat
constant, but the strength is still being developed regardless of the
uniformity of these constants. As long
as the effort and intensity is present, one is developing strength.
Case in point
We once
again arrive at the understanding that it is effort that dictates results. One can get stronger lifting less weight in
sub-optimal conditions if the effort they recruit is greater than the one
utilized to lift heavier weights in optimal conditions. This also allows one to re-evaluate “stalls”,
in that, if one continues to hit the same numbers for one lift in their
program, and that lift is NOT the first lift, AND the first lift continues to
increase, then one is still progressing.
Whereas before, someone managed a record of 30 reps of DB rows with
100lbs after benching 315 for 3x5, NOW this trainee has managed to hit 30 reps
with 100lbs after benching 320 for 3x5.
That is progress on both the bench AND the row, for one was able to
maintain a rep total even under more strenuous circumstances than before.
This is the
liberation new trainees need in order to continue to progress even if,
according to the logbook, something is amiss.
Understand that, even if lifts are not increasing, or in fact they are
decreasing, as long as the effort is present, progress is being made. When the stars line up, you may be able to
hit some crazy records but, if, even on your worse day, running off 2 hours of
sleep for 48 hours and only being able to eat 3 pixie sticks you’re still able
to deadlift 600lbs, you’re doing alright for yourself.
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