This is a
topic I’ve covered in the past before in my controversial “Hate your training”
post, but as time goes on I find the issue continues to get more confused, and
I feel it’s time for a re-attack.I fundamentally
do not understand how people enjoy their training.I hear it all the time that people love to
train, that training is the highlight of their day, that training makes them
happy, etc etc, and it’s all very baffling to me.I don’t understand how training can be an
enjoyable activity; in my mind, training that is enjoyable is training that is unbeneficial.And part of me wonders if perhaps I am
missing out on something here, as I interpret enjoyment in a hedonistic sense.
You know I love this photo
In
discussing hedonism, I am talking to the love of pleasure.We know the stereotypical hedonist; they lay
on their backs enjoying gluttonous foods and pleasures of the flesh while
engaging in no labor or pain.A
hedonists’ concern is on acquiring maximal pleasure and enjoying minimal
pain.In turn, I find enjoyment a form
of hedonism (a delight in pleasure), and as such, cannot understand how one
enjoys training.Training is work; it is
labor, it is exertion, and it is pain and discomfort.In my mind, training is the exact opposite of
pleasure, and finding joy in it is bizarre.So then why do I do it?
Immediately,
when people discover that I find no joy in training, they assert that I must be
a masochist.Surely someone who
regularly engages in something that they detest must be some sort of lover of
pain, no?Once again, this is a false
understanding of what is occurring.Masochism is simply another form of hedonism; not the opposite of
it.A masochist is STILL a hedonist;
they simply find joy IN pain.A
masochist regularly seeks to receive pain because it satisfies their hedonistic
desire for pleasure; it just so happens that the pleasure a masochist
experiences is also pain.Some would
consider a masochist warped; something is misfiring in their brain that makes
them interpret pain as pleasure.Others
might believe that it is something more akin to the notion that great pain
allows for a more substantial contrast with physical pleasure which, in turn,
heightens the sensation of pleasure.In
either instance though, the masochist is simply a hedonist, and in reality,
when someone tells me they love to train, I interpret THEM to be the
masochist.Once again, I don’t find joy
in training, to include finding joy in the PAIN of training.So why then do I train?
Rather telling that THIS photo exists, no?
I believe
that training should be an experience of asceticism, not hedonism or, by
extension, masochism.One need be able
to experience the pain and discomfort of training, acknowledge that the
sensation they are experiencing IS pain and discomfort, and continue to train
through the process.I am discussing the
idea of growth via overcoming; Nietzsche’s “Will to Power” shining
through.We get stronger when we endure
pain and misery and come through the other end hardened; not when we engage in
pleasures, irrespective of said pleasures are painful.When we regularly engage in those things that
we enjoy, we are spoiled hedonists who shirk away from discomfort, even if what
we enjoy IS discomfort.It is from
subjecting ourselves to these discomforts and experiencing them AS discomforts
that we become “comfortable being uncomfortable”
But why must
it be uncomfortable?Why can’t we be
hedonists, and have some sort of love for training?Why can’t we be masochists and love the pain?Because love blinds us and makes us
stupid.We aren’t dedicate to our growth
when we love the process; we become dedicated to the process irrespective of
growth.If we want to view the ascetic
in terms of hedonism, the ascetics’ pleasure is in growth through overcoming of
adversity and pain, but it is not love of the adversity and pain itself.
Make no mistake; this guy was NOT enjoying this
This is why
I implore you to quit these silly psychological tricks you have played on
yourself to get through a training session.Do not convince yourself that you love this pain.Do not convince yourself that you love this
training.Be true to yourself and
acknowledge that what you are doing DOES hurt.Acknowledge that it IS uncomfortable.And not for the sake of overly self-indulging moody Instagram black and
white photos where you talk about going to war with the weights; do it so that you
can regularly practice OVERCOMING.Do
this so that you are familiar with pain, not as a perverse form of pleasure,
but simply as a reality of existence.You are not transcending pain into some sort of nirvana state above
humanity, but instead experiencing it AS a human, and in doing so you are doing
what a human has the capacity to do; adapt and overcome.And the more you practice this, the better
you become at it, and the more in turn you are able to overcome.But when you distract yourself; when you
convince yourself that you are feeling pleasure and joy, you regress and become
soft.You become something that seeks
pleasure; not growth.
I do not
understand how you are a hedonist.I
understand, but do not share, your proclivity toward masochism.However, perhaps it is possible that you are
simply a terrified ascetic, convincing yourself that your pain is in fact
pleasure and your discomfort is in fact comforting.Let down your defenses and embrace your
existence.Feel the pain, acknowledge
that it is painful, and feel yourself overcome it.Get to know and appreciate the strength
inherent in your genetic makeup; your will to power, your ability to
overcome.
After 6 arduous
weeks, I have finished with Jim Wendler’s “5/3/1 Building the Monolith” aka “5/3/1
for Size”. This was one of those
programs I had been wanting to run for a LONG time but just couldn’t ever find
6 solid weeks to dedicate to it due to competition schedules. I had a break in action and figured now was
the time to do it. Additionally, I had
been racking up a series of little dings and injuries that were starting to get
annoying, and traditionally that correlated with my bodyweight being too low,
so it was as good a time as any to gain some weight. I wanted to document my experience with it,
as I haven’t seen enough data on this program, and in many cases people end up
changing it so much that it’s not really meaningful.
The above
having been said, I DID implement some changes to the program, and will include
them for the sake of full disclosure.
THE CHANGES
Nothing as drastic as this
-The most
significant change is that I completely altered the bench workout on workout 2
of each week. Instead of the 5x5
suggested by Jim ala 5x5/3/1, I did the original 5/3/1 plus 1 FSL widowmaker. This is how I have been training bench since
Nov of 2015, and for the first time in my life my bench is finally progressing,
so I didn’t want to change anything.
That said, after running the program, Jim’s set-up makes a lot more
sense and fits well within the parameters of the program. If I were to make a recommendation, keep it
the way Jim set it up.
-I used an
Ironmind Apollon’s Axle for all of my benching and almost all of my
pressing. For the 2 lightest press
workouts (Workout 3 of week 2 and week 4), I used a strongman log.
-On the
second press workout of each week, I took all sets from the floor. If I used the axle, it was a
continental. If I used the log, it was a
viper press.
-I used an
Ironmind Buffalo Bar for all of my squatting.
-I used a
texas deadlift bar for all deadlifts, and pulled about 99% of my sets touch and
go.
-Instead of
an airdyne workout, I did some Stone of Steel over bar training as one of my
conditioning workouts.
-I added 3
sets of standing ab wheel on workout 3 after week 1, because I found I had room
to recover.
-After week
3, I no longer did straight sets of the 5x5 for chins, and instead ramped up to
a topset of 5. This was primarily
because weighted chins always kill my elbows, and this saved them from some
pain.
-I had zero
focus on recovery between workouts. No
stretching, foam rolling, ice baths, massages, etc.
In sum, the
bench was the most significant program deviation, while the rest was more
preference stuff.
GETTING IT DONE IN AN
HOUR
For a fun way to time the workouts, order 2 of these. Good for the diet as well.
Before
approaching this program, everyone who ran it said they were spending 1.5-2
hours in the gym to get all the work done.
I frankly didn’t want to spend that much time lifting weights, and only
budgeted an hour of my day for training.
I figured putting myself in a position where I only had an hour to train
would mean I’d find a way to make it work, and I did. I took videos of the first 3 days of training
just to capture what it ended up looking like (sped up to save you from
boredom).
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
And for
those of you that don’t want to watch 3 hours of training, here is the
cheatsheat.
Day 1:
-Giant set
the squats and presses with chins. I did sets of 4 at first, and added a rep
each week, ending with 10 per set on week 6. It went
Squat-chin-press-chin-repeat. Only rest long enough to change plates.
-Once you get through the presses, things change to
squat-chin-pull apart-dip-chin-repeat. That being said, I found that doing
squats after dips SUCKED, so I ended up saving the dips until after the squats
were done, and then rest paused until I hit my rep goal for the day.
Day 2:
-Giant set
as deadlift-curl-bench. I stuck with sets of 10 on curls.
-This was the hardest nut to crack. It only had 4 movements,
but I find rows to really interfere with recovery between sets, so I had to
save them until everything else was done. Best way to include them was as part
of cleaning up my equipment (yes, even when it's your gym, you should keep it
clean.)
-Even by week 6, I still didn’t know the best way to approach
this. Some weeks, I’d do some warm-up
sets of rows before hitting warm-ups of bench and dead, some weeks I’d save it
to the end, some weeks I did Poundstone curls to save time on curls, etc. Just gotta gut this one out.
Day 3:
-Similar
giant sets as day 1. Squat-chin-press. Once you're out of chins, go to
Squat-pull apart-press. Once you're out of squats, go shrug-pull apart-press.
Once you're out of pull aparts, do shrug-press.
-I kept the weight the same on the shrugs and shot to do it
in fewer sets each week.
-Since this day eventually got up to 15x5 for presses, it would run a little
longer than 60 minutes, so I did it on Saturdays, when I had more time. Was still taking maybe 80 minutes.
Workouts
would last 50-70 minutes with this approach.
With me being me, I did zero warm-up aside from warm-up sets. No mobility, stretching, cardio, voodoo or
devil worship. Seemed to make things go
faster. Also, the final workout of the program ran about 90 minutes, because that workouts is awful.
And yeah; it
SUCKS. I was always gasping for air and
feeling miserable, but I got it done.
TRAINING MAXES
Some of you people are treating these like this
I started
with the following TMs
Press: 220
Squat: 400
Deadlift: 540
Bench: 335
The squat
and dead were a solid 85%, while the press and bench were more like a 90%. I actually took a spreadsheet, plugged in
numbers and found what looked viable before starting. You want to definitely go light on this one,
but at the same time I wanted to make sure I was really pushing myself. I stuck with increasing by the prescribed
amount.
I started
this straight off of a competition cycle training for a contest without a squat
event, so my squat was a little on the low side, but it was as good a time as
any to do a program with some squatting.
In
retrospect, the press TM was about 1 cycle too far. I was too stubborn on this one.
CONDITIONING
Thankfully nothing this bad
I stuck close to Jim’s recommendations. I don’t own a weight vest, so I just wore a
bunch of chains and clipped weight plates and loading pins to them to do
weighted vest walks.
Like so
I would do this
workout between the first and second lifting session.Between 2 and 3, I would do triples of the
Stone of Steel over a bar, every minute on the minute for 10 minutes.
I’m still a strongman, and wanted to get some strongman stuff
in. After the third lifting session, I’d
do some prowler work or a strongman medley.
In total, I missed 2 conditioning sessions on the program; both were
chain walks.
NUTRITION
Christ I am sick of these
So Jim says that the only requirement for the program is
eating 1.5lbs of ground beef and a dozen eggs a day. Prior to starting the program, I was already
eating more than 1.5lbs of some sort of meat a day, so this would just mean
eating an extra dozen eggs. I imagine Jim’s
recommendations were probably aimed towards people that tend to practice a more
moderate/balanced diet vs. a low carb/high meat person such as myself. I ended up adding a pound of meat to my
normal intake and eating anywhere between 6-12 eggs a day. I still only ate carbs close to
training. Here is a sample day for my
diet.
-0445: Wake up, eat 2 cups of wild blueberries with 3
tablespoons of raw honey
-0500-0605: Training
-0630: 2 scoops of protein, 1 cup of skim milk, 1 cup of
frosted flakes
-0800: 9 heaping teaspoons of fat free greek yogurt mixed
with protein powder
-0930: 1lb of meat (ground beef, steaks, ribs, ham, etc,
whatever I had)
-1200: 5-6 eggs and some sort of green veggie
-1300: A quest bar
-1700: 1lb of meat and some sort of veggie
-1900: 5-6 eggs
About 98% of the eggs were hard boiled. I don’t like them that way; they were just
the easiest to prep. I used an instant
pot, and could easily make 10-12 with minimal effort. What got me through it all was a sugar free
BBQ sauce.
RESULTS
I started the program weighing 194.8lbs at 5’9. In the final week, I weighed 200.2. This isn’t a significant amount of weight
gained, but when you factor in that I’ve been training for 17 years and that I’m
only 5’9, the fact I can eek out any more growth at this point in my life is
amazing. I had been stagnant for a long
time, and this is the first time in a while I managed to put on some clean
weight.
I got much better at pressing, having only managed 205 for 3
in the first week to hitting 215 for 4 in the final week. This is pressing while under a significant degree
of fatigue. My conditioning went through
the roof as well, and by the end the workouts weren’t nearly as difficult as
they were when I started. I truly gained
some mastery over the programming.
Having not tested anything yet, it’s hard to objectively say
if things got better or not. However, I
definitely feel that I became a stronger squatter and deadlifter with all the
submax work I put in. I had been hitting
1 big topset for so long that all these multi-set workouts really drove home
something special.
LESSONS LEARNED
-I absolutely CAN still gain muscle at this stage in my
life. I had convinced myself otherwise,
and that I’d only be able to eek away a pound a year or so. The potential is still there, I just have to
work my ASS off for it. I have to train
as hard as I possibly can and eat HUGE.
I know what I need to do now if I ever want to fill out a weight
class. That being said, I don’t think I
can sustain this pace as a family man.
My wife did a great job of putting up with my crap for these 6 weeks,
but I was eating like it was my job, and most of my free time was spent getting
food ready for the next day.
-It IS possible to out train a bad diet, but you have to work
so brutally hard it’s not worth it. I
was eating like it was my job and barely putting on weight. If I ate to satiate hunger, I would have
maintained or possibly even lost weight.
However, at the same time, most people who think they are able to
outtrain a bad diet aren’t actually working this hard. I’d finish the lifting sessions covered in
sweat and struggling to breathe, and did this 3 days a week on top of 2 hard
conditioning session and 1 light one. It’s not gonna happen lifting 3 times a
week for 3 sets of 5.
-The instant pot is awesome for making lots of food in a
short time; especially eggs.
-Sugar free BBQ sauce is a great condiment.
-Anyone complaining that the program doesn’t have enough
chest work is skipping the 200 dips. I
never managed to make it all the way to 200 in the program.
-You can gain weight without many carbs.
-Everyone
scoffs at the diet that Jim recommends and says “If I ate like that, I’d get SO
fat!” Not if you’re actually running the
program as it’s laid out. It totally
makes sense to me why Jim has high school kids doing this to get ready for
football. This will absolutely add some
size, as long as you eat like a monster.
-It is
entirely possible to move heavy weights while fatigued. Lots of people like to talk about how giant
sets are the devil because they impact performance on heavy work, but I was
able to hit almost every single required rep on this program using legit TMs
while incredibly fatigued. In total, I
missed 8 reps; 2 on the very first press workout and 1 on the first press
workout of the very last week, and 5 on the final workout of the final week. In the case of that final instance, I was
STILL hitting a continental before every set, so there was some potential to
overcome this, but in general, I just had my TM slightly too high. Don’t get me wrong; you need to have a solid
conditioning base, but it CAN be done.
If nothing else, it’s just another argument for why conditioning is so
important.
-Full body
workouts are still totally viable at this point in my training. I had written them off a long time ago,
thinking I was “too strong”
WHAT I WOULD DO
DIFFERENTLY/IF I DO IT AGAIN
-I’d stick
with Jim’s recommendation for bench (5x5/3/1).
It makes more sense in the program.
Granted, doing 5/3/1+FSL widowmaker made the workout shorter, which was
a blessing. However, to combat that, I’d
make this my Saturday workout, and swap out DB rows for t-bar rows, since the
rows would go faster being unilateral.
However, t-bar rows might be too taxing on the back, so if you have a
back supported row machine, that’d probably work better.
-Swap out
the weighted chins for lat pulldowns. A
lot of folks can get away with weighted chins, but they tear up my elbows
pretty bad. Ramping was a good band aid.
-More dead stop reps on deadlift. This was poor planning on my part; my wife
started working a new schedule, and her later mornings correlated with my
deadlift workout days. I didn’t want to
be slamming plates while she was trying to sleep. On the plus side; I really mastered
controlling the eccentric on the deadlifts.