This is
going to be a little rudimentary for my regular readers, but it’s something I’ve
been observing a lot of recently and it needs to be addressed. We once again witness the human folly of
attempting to rapidly classify a complex idea into a bite size digestible chunk
as it relates to training, and specifically training for the goals of being
bigger and stronger. People take too
quick a shortcut here and think “I want to get big, bodybuilders are big, so I
want to train bodybuilding” or “I want to be strong, powerlifters are strong,
so I want to train powerlifting”, and it ends up going in such weird directions
that a trainee who is all full of energy and enthusiasm just ends up spinning
their wheels and achieving zero goals. Once
again, I offer you a plea to not make this so complicated. The only reason you
should be training like a bodybuilder or a powerlifter is if you are competing
in bodybuilding or powerlifting.
Let's go with "nay", unless you have a powerbuilding meet coming up
Let’s clear
this up right now; bodybuilding is not the sport of getting big, and
powerlifting is not the sport of getting strong. I know I just blew some minds with that, so
allow me to clarify. Yes, you need to
get big to successfully compete in bodybuilding, but there is MORE to the sport
than that, and, in turn, MORE to the training than that. Specifically, in bodybuilding, you have to
get big in the right spots in order to create an illusion of being even BIGGER
than you actually are. This is why a
tapered waist is so valuable; it makes shoulders look even broader. A quad sweep makes the quads look
larger. These are all very fascinating
things to consider when you are going to step on a stage and do your best to
make yourself look as big as possible to win against your peers…but do you need
to care about it if you want to get big?
Hell
no! Getting big is super simple; people
have been doing it for centuries. You
just need to lift weights, eat food and sleep.
That’s it. Someone, everyone who
HASN’T read an internet article of book knows this. My dad never read anything about training,
but he knew that lifting weights got you big because he watched Pumping Iron
and had a buddy in basic training that lifted weights. My grandpa never lifted a weight, but he knew
lifting weights got you big because it was a thing you just knew. But somehow, with all of our education,
people have deluded themselves into believing that there is some sort of secret
combination of reps and sets out there that you have to pair together JUST
right with the exact perfect amount of volume and bodyparts split or else, no matter
how hard you try, you won’t get big.
Jesus man, look at all the programs John McCullum wrote about in his “Complete
Keys to Progress” series, or the Perry Radar routines, or Stuart McRobert’s
stuff, or all the crazy things guys like Sandow or the Saxon trio were
doing. It ain’t that hard; lift weights,
eat and sleep and you’ll get big.
I'm just saying; compare his strength score to his intelligence
Do you need
to be strong to compete in powerlifting?
It certainly helps, yeah. A
strong powerlifter is going to have a solid shot at winning...but that’s not
the only thing a powerlifter needs. A
powerlifter needs to also be SKILLED, both at the execution of a lift (to
include all the various powerlifting tricks regarding reducing ROM as much as
possible while aligning oneself into the best position to maximize leverages)
and at the ability to handle maximal poundages.
In addition, a powerlifter needs to know how to peak for a meet, such
that they properly manage fatigue in their training that they are able to keep
maximizing their ability to lift maximal loads while still being able to show
up on meet day not excessively fatigued to the point that it interferes with
training. Do you, as a trainee, need to
care about all that if your goal is to get strong?
Hell no
again! Wanna know how to get
stronger? The answer may shock you. Lift weights!
Once again, everyone ELSE seems to understand this, and these people don’t
even lift! It’s a cliché’ at this
point. “Man I’m weak; I need to go lift
weights.” Why can’t our super educated
masses on the internet seem to grasp this?
You don’t need a peaking phase, you don’t NEED idealized frequency, you
don’t need to monitor volume, you don’t need to hit some sort of golden ratio
between big 3, you don’t even NEED to do the big 3 itself; you just need to go
lift some weights!
It doesn't even need to be a barbell
I’ve beaten
this drum so much, but its truth; getting big and strong is NOT that
complicated. In fact, it’s the exact
opposite. The “dumb jock” stereotype is
a stereotype for a reason. You REALLY
don’t have to be smart to get big and strong; you just have to work harder than
everyone else. Hard work takes no
talent, it takes no intelligence, and it takes no skill; it just takes
drive. It takes a willingness to say to
the world “f**k you; I CAN” when others say you can’t. So many great athletes got there simply
because they were willing to do what others weren’t, and for many, it means
simply showing up, working hard, and repeating for years on end.
People make
up rules because they don’t want the answer to be effort. They come up with the craziest ideas. “I know my program has me lifting 3 days a
week, but I’m still sore from yesterday.
I heard from somewhere you shouldn’t train when you’re so, so I’m going
to rest until it goes away.” Are you
insane?! Keep training! Where did you get this rule from?! “I heard you have to train the same bodypart
2x a week for optimal growth, so I can’t follow this program that works for
everyone.” Are you nuts!? Quit making up rules and go train!
I seem to be going heavier into DnD than I anticipated for this post
And this is
why people can’t wrap their brains around effective programs designed for
getting bigger and stronger; they try to evaluate them like they’re
bodybuilding or powerlifting program. It’s
no secret I’m a fan of 5/3/1, and that’s because it’s exactly what it is
supposed to be; a simple program for getting bigger and stronger. And then people evaluate it like a
powerlifting program and say “it can’t work; you only bench once a week”. Hey chief, that’s cool if your goal is to set
a PR on a max bench single, but if you want to get strong, benching once a week
is dandy, because it means you can spend the rest of the week getting
stronger. “5/3/1 can’t get you big because
it doesn’t have the right amount of volume.”
Jesus man; how did you calculate the volume on the conditioning
work? How did you calculate it on the
jumps and throws? It’s not a
bodybuilding routine; you’re doing more than lifting weights. And the same is true for other established “get
big and strong” programs, like Juggernaut Method, Westside Barbell for Skinny
Bastards, Super Squats, etc etc. You can’t
evaluate these as bodybuilding or powerlifting programs because that’s not what
they are, but at the same time, you most likely ALSO aren’t a bodybuilder or
powerlifter, so why do you care?
You don’t
need to train like a bodybuilder or a powerlifter; you just need to go lift.
And your
conditioning sucks.
Ill re read this a few times. Im constantly looking at whats the best program instead of just followong one. I just gotta be dumb for once instead of trying to be so smart about shit because like you side Im just trying to be big and strong not a powerlifter or bodybuilder.
ReplyDeleteBelieve me man, I needed to read this too. Pretty much everything I write is just me yelling at my past self.
DeleteThis is fantastic.
ReplyDeleteOn the conditioning front- I occasionally will take a look at Alsruhe’s Neversate WOD. Plenty of terrible circuits in there. He has a few labeled “mindset” (think doing a circuit while holding water in your mouth to make breathing more difficult).
Anyway, great post.
-Will
Thanks man. I've stolen some of Brian's WODs when I'm on the road or just need a quick buttkicker. Always a solid challenge.
DeleteI'm convinced most of the people bitching about 5/3/1 don't actually realise that all the athletic work is part of the program.
ReplyDeleteSimilar deal, I guess, with Juggernaut, WS4SB and similar programs that are loosely intended as the lifting weights part of an athletes training. I guess you could throw SS and the old Starr type programs in too. Everyone's so insistent on evaluating them as something they aren't that they completely overlook what they actually are and thus what they have to coexist with.
100% agree. Once people break out the volume calculators, you know they've messed it up. How do you calculate volume on a prowler? On sprints? On tire flips? Etc. No one wants to get out and move though. They'll try to find the closest parking space they can at the gym, haha.
Deletei have an insight on 5/3/1 wich is why i think so many people get it wrong: it is not a program, its a system of progression. what really matters in 531 is the built in periodization on the 531 lifts (that change accordingly to the program suggested). in the further editions, wendler says you can apply 531 to any big lift, even straight curls.
ReplyDeletehe never held anything against making it your own as long as u respect the system's principles. if u feel the volume is low on the lifts, just push more volume!
i actually have been doin my own frankestein fullbody shit on 531, using the lifts minus bench press (dont have access to one), and 8+ assistance exercises for the whole body to a ridiculous amount of volume. working wonders so far.
Delete