Greetings
once again internet.I am continuing in
my voracious quest to read things on lifting again, and when Labor Day sales
were abound I decided to pick up a paperback copy of Juggernaut Training (JTS)’s
“A Thoughtful Pursuit of Strength”.At
$40, it was right around the cost of 5/3/1 Forever, and considering how much I
enjoyed the latter, I figured there was a shot of this being a similarly
worthwhile purchase.
The book absolutely looks pretty
BOTTOM LINE
UP FRONT:
This book
left a bad taste in my mouth.It’s not a
book: it’s a collection of articles Chad had already written before and crammed
together into a book.This is similar to
the Elitefts Basic Training Manual, which I ALSO spent $40 on back in the day,
and ALSO felt pretty unhappy with as a result.It’s especially unnerving to call it “A THOUGHTFUL pursuit”, because
there was no added thought in compiling previous authored articles
together.With this being marketed as
the magnum opus of Chad’s career in coaching, I really expected it to be a book
that was intended to BE a book from the start.
THE BAD:
Not very thoughtful...
It’s
primarily stylistic issues this approach runs into: throughout the book, Chad
refers to what he’s writing as “in this article”, which gives away the game
that he took his old articles and mashed them together.In addition, Chad is a fan of relaying a
select few anecdotes about training which, when it’s done in articles released
over a span of several years, makes sense to remind a reader about what he’s
talking about, but when you JUST read an anecdote 2 pages ago and Chad
re-introduces it in a new article like you’ve never heard it before, it removes
you from the immersion.There are also
several formatting errors, instances of paragraphs getting cut off, and ALSO
instances of Chad taking a previously written paragraph and inserting it into a
new article.Since I read the whole
thing over the span of 2 days, it become pretty obvious, so maybe if you read
it slower it’ll be ok.
THE GOOD:
There is something to be said about credentials....
Chad wrote
great articles for his website, so having them all complied in one spot is
helpful.I also REALLY dig Chad’s
philosophy.We’re very much
aligned.He’s big on not getting psyched
up in training, saving PRs for competition, training in phases, etc etc.I also REALLY dig that Chad emphasizes the
importance of hypertrophy and variety for a new lifter.I recently re-read the second edition of
Practical Programming for Strength Training (I may review that too), and the
two books could not be further from each other in approaches.Consequently, it shows that CWS is a world
class shotputter, powerlifter and pro-strongman who has trained many successful
athletes and Mark Rippetoe is…Mark Rippetoe.I think this book would be a fantastic manual for a newer athlete to
have a grasp of what training should look like on the quest to get bigger and
stronger.
On top of
that, in the back of the book, there’s a ton of Chad’s programs laid out, which
percentages and movements.Incredibly
valuable.I honestly really like the
look of the strongman/powerlifting program.
Chad does a
good job breaking down the 3 powerlifts as well, and gives tips on how to
maximize performance and select that appropriate supplemental work to improve
it.
THE…OK:
Yup: that's vanilla alright
There’s a
big section in the book on back re-hab written by a chiropractor that worked on
Chad for a herniated disk.I genuinely
didn’t care for/about it, but I’m sure it’s helpful for people that care about
that sorta stuff.
FINAL
VERDICT (SHOULD YOU GET IT?)
…it
depends.I will flat out say that this
is NOT as valuable as 5/3/1 Forever, and so, with it being the same cost, I
would not buy it.HOWEVER, it IS offered
as an e-book at a significantly reduced price, at which point I think it’d be
worth having.If you’re an experienced
lifter (counting training time by decades), I don’t think you’ll learn anything
from it, but can at least read it and appreciate what is shared.If you’re a newer lifter, this book is a MUCH
better influence on your training compared to a LOT of garbage that’s out
there.CWS is legit: it’s why I bought
the book in the first place, and ALSO why I was a bit disappointed in it.I expected more FROM Chad as a result.However, Chad is ALSO so legit that, when he
fails to deliver to the standard expected, his “substandard delivery” is still
leaps and bounds over other folks that EXCEED expectations…if that makes
sense.It’s like Michael Jordon playing
only with his left hand: it’s still going to be pretty good.Or like the old joke about how there’s no
such thing as bad pizza.
That got
super rambly.Don’t buy the paperback
unless you REALLY hate e-books.If you’re
a newer trainee, get this book and read it before you contaminate yourself with
other junk.Otherwise, I’m definitely
going to re-read Powerlifting Basics Texas Style and 5/3/1 Forever before I
come back to this one, but I’ll definitely steal from the programming in the
back.
Hey folks,
for one, I wanna say that including the word “overhead” in the title of this
post kills me on the inside, as any trainee worth his salt should know that
“the press” refers to pressing the bar overhead, but I see the question asked
so much and I wanted to make this topic helpful to a wider range of trainees
that I threw it in there to make sure we’re all on the same page at the start.
Here’s a
little background on me: I’ve pressed 265lbs over my head with an axle in the
same workout that I pressed 241lbs for 5 reps and very nearly finished a 276lb
press soon afterwards (caution: NSFW language at the end of the video)
I did this
during a normal workout, no peaking, no psyche up, no tricks with
chemistry.
In addition,
it’s worth noting that I have dislocated my right shoulder 6 times, subluxed it
several dozen times, and torn the labrum in it.The labrum tear happened on the first shoulder dislocation at age 16
during a wrestling match, at which time I had the shoulder repaired surgically,
went through physical therapy, and went on to pop it out 5 more times through a
combination of more combat sports, 1 botched press, and rolling over funny in
my sleep.
I bring all
that up because I constantly hear people say “I wish I could press overhead,
but I have bad shoulders”, sometimes even saying this to ME, to which I just
gotta scratch my head (with the hand attached to the good shoulder of course)
and wonder just how broken their shoulders can possibly be.Let me share with you what I’ve done to build
up a strong press.This will be lengthy,
but hopefully useful.
THE FOUNDATION
A strong press has always been worth celebrating
I legit
never even considered pressing a barbell over my head until I had been lifting
for 4 years already.The majority of my
pressing efforts were bench pressing and push-ups.In turn, when I first went to press, I had a
335lb touch and go bench press, had done 400 push ups in one set (reference my
post on “The Richest Man in Babylon), and could barbell strict press 135 for
5x5 on my opening workout.
What’s the
lesson there?Building strong pressing
muscles carries over to pressing.Now,
that said, some dudes can bench monstrous weights and can’t press overhead to
save their lives (I’ve actually beaten a lift set by Kroc on strict pressing an
axle overhead, despite the fact Kroc can raw bench for reps weights I can’t
even touch), but there’s still going to be SOME carryover between pressing in
various planes of movements.Hell, the
bench press was originally DESIGNED as an assistance exercise for the Olympic
press anyway.
The
programming I was following at this point was Pavel’s 3-5.This was abbreviated training, double
progression/linear progression.I’d go
for 5x5 with a set weight.With a new
weight, I might get 3x5, 1x4 and 1x3.The next week, I’d try to beat that rep total and go for like 4x5 and
1x3.Once I hit 5x5, I’d up the weight
again.Since I already had a foundation
of pressing strength from all the previous training, weights moved pretty
quickly, and I eventually got to 185 for 5x5 before transitioning to Westside
Barbell style training, rotating between pressing and benching.
For those of
you starting out your training with the press, you won’t have this foundation,
and will be most likely struggling with the bar or slightly more than
that.Progression is going to seem slow
compared to the other lifts, but it’s more a product of the fact that you
simply can’t load the bar in a meaningful way to realize the strength you’re
building in the press.Going from 45lbs
to 50lbs is adding almost 10% of your workset weight to the bar: that’s like
going from a 500lb deadlift in one workout to a 550lb deadlift in another.That takes time.Recognize the strength of the press growing
in other ways: faster bar speed, smoother reps, shorter time between sets, etc
etc.Keep building up the pressing
muscles with other pressing exercises.
ROUNDING OUT THE
PRESS
To press like Kaz, you need a back like Kaz
I touched on
this in my previous post about using the press as a goal to achieve a solid
physique, but a key point in having a strong press is you need to train both
the front AND the back.The latter,
honestly, even moreso than the former.When you bench, you have something physical you can brace against in
order to ensure you can give maximal pressing output.When you press: YOU are what you brace
against.You need to build a thick,
wide, STRONG back in order to be able to have a strong press.Everything from the glutes up needs
attention, as they all play a role in stabilizing and expressing strength in
the press.And if you’ve got bad
shoulders, you need to build the hell out of your rear delts so that they can
lock your shoulders into place when you press and keep things rigid.I know everyone thinks mobility is super
neato, but when your shoulder is so mobile it falls out of the socket, it’s
less than cool.
I’ve been
doing band pull aparts in between sets of stuff since 2008.I’ve gone through periods of doing 100 a day
on top of other things.They are a
staple in all of my programming.You
cannot do enough band pull aparts.Minibands
are stupidly cheap: there is ZERO reason for you to not own and use one.
Otherwise,
on top of the pull aparts, ensure you are doing an absurd amount of rowing and
chins.Pulldowns are fine too: I just
rarely have a good rig for them.I train
my lower back with a reverse hyper, and if you have one, you should use
it.If you don’t, I can’t vouch for
anything else, but find a way to get your back big and strong.
“Strong”
doesn’t mean going for maxes on rows and turning it into a circus act.I stay away from low reps on back work and
instead train it “like a bodybuilder”: focusing on feeling the muscle while I
do the movement and ensuring that I’m developing what I want to develop.Reps in the range of 6-20 with plenty of
sets.I like putting back work in
between sets of other stuff in my workouts, and also like daily chins as a
means to accumulate volume.If you do
daily chins, keep it submax: going for a rep max each day always makes my
elbows bad.
MY MOST EFFECTIVE
PRESS TRAINING CYCLE
I imagine it shocks absolutely no one that this lunatic was involved in the process
I want to
preface it by saying this isn’t a 6 week plan or a 12 week plan: this is a
multi-YEAR approach, but it got me out of a multi-year plateau, so it fits.
For years,
I’d been stalled at a 240lb strict press.I’d try 245 several times with several programs (primarily Westside
Barbell style and various 5/3/1s) and just not be able to get it.This was at a bodyweight of around 195-200lbs
at 5’9.I finally beat that with the
following approach.
DEEP WATER
It starts
with Jon Andersen’s Deep Water Program.I’ve written extensively about this program and my experience with it,
but to lay down the basics of the pressing work: The beginner program
alternates weekly between 10x10 for strict press and 10x10 for push press.4 minutes rest the first time you do the
workout, 3 minutes the second, 2 minutes for the final workout (6 week program).The weight used is 70% of your 10rm (find
your 10rm by taking .77 of your 1rm, so this is also just 54% of your 1rm for
easy math).This is on top of some other
assistance stuff, a full on back day workout, etc.It’s a fully fleshed program: that’s just the
pressing part.
The intermediate
program follows.This starts with 10x10
and keeps the alternating weeks.You’re
supposed to use 80% of your 10rm now, but I went for 75%.Weeks 3 and 4 has you get those 100 reps in 9
sets, and weeks 5 and 6 has you get the reps in 8 sets.
The advanced
program follows.This one is less
predictable in terms of what happens on what week, but through it there will be
days that you hit a strict press ramping 5x5 workout followed by 2 backoff
AMRAP sets using percentages of that weight hit at the topset of 5 (reps in the
range of 20+ can often occur here).
It behooves
you to actually read Jon’s book and see the program in full to appreciate the
effort that went into this.Along with
it, I ate according to the diet (minimal carbs, high protein and fat) but
afforded myself a weekly cheat meal the night before I did the lower body
workouts (most often it was Panda Express, so rice and sugary food, but
occasionally Taco Bell).I went from a
bodyweight of around 192 to 207lbs, the highest I had been in a while, and put
on a fair amount of muscle in doing so.
BENEFITS OF THAT
APPROACH
I had
grooved the absolute hell out of my press by doing so many reps of it.In addition, I got good at training under
fatigue.The push pressing helped with overload
as well.And, of course, the muscular
weight gain ensured I was set up for some big numbers.Lots of reps and lots of food=lots of
shoulders.
5/3/1-ISH
Hey, more strong dudes pressing
After Deep
Water was done, I went back to what I usually did for pressing: first edition
5/3/1 with a First Set Last backoff set.So basically hitting a PR set for the topset and then going for another
PR set using the weights employed on the first set.Because I had kept training weights so light
in Deep Water and had put on so much muscle, I was observing something really
cool: I was actually hitting MORE reps on my PR sets each cycle rather than
less.Typically, I’d use the “5
forward/3 back” style of Training Max management with 5/3/1 because, as I went
on in cycles, PR set reps would drop until I was hitting 5-6 reps on my 1s week
and I had to reset the training max, but each week I’d end up hitting a BETTER
PR set than the previous cycle which was done at a lighter weight.And this was while losing some bodyfat.I was primed for growth after Deep Water, and
5/3/1 allowed me to express it.
In addition,
I made the supplemental work my own, and unique.Here is where I want you to really pay
attention.
SUPPLEMENTAL WORK
STRATEGY
As a
strongman, I wanted to maintain proficiency on a variety of implements.Specifically, the axle and log.I always did my mainwork with the axle, but I
also liked doing my supplemental work with it too, as the log can sometimes
make things a bit too easy with its short ROM.I ALSO wanted to start including some behind the neck pressing in my
training, as I felt it was a portion of press work I had neglected for a LONG
time and something I could see some growth in.
The
solution?6 sets of supplemental
work.2 sets of axle pressing, 2 sets of
log pressing, 2 sets of behind the neck pressing.I’d run it in a circuit too: do the axle on
sets 1 and 4, behind the neck on 2 and 5, log on 3 and 6.I even got to the point where I’d switch up
the order each week, just to alter the stimulus a touch.Always aiming for sets of 10.No fixed percentage: just typical double
progression style approach.At one
point, I dropped the BtN pressing and went with the trap bar, simply because I
got a rackable trap bar to play it and trap bar pressing is also awesome.
On top of
this, I took to including dips in the supplemental work, because they’re an
awesome exercise too.How did I fit it
in?Immediately after the press supplemental
work, I’d hit up the dip station and dip until failure.I took to thinking of this as a “filler
movement”: after you burnout on pressing something heavy, there’s still some
life left in the pressing muscles, and bodyweight work allows you to really
squeeze the last bit out.I’m sure this
could be done with push ups too, but dips are awesomer.
I mean, they just plain are
I took to
running this as a giant set, starting with a press for 10-ish reps, immediately
burnout on dips, then lateral raises for 10-15 reps and finally a set of 12-20
band pull aparts, then rest 90-120 seconds and do it all over again with a new
implement to start.This blew up my
shoulders something fierce and got me strong from all sorts of pressing angles.
During this
time frame, I went from having dropped down to a bodyweight of 192lbs to moving
to a bodyweight of 210lbs, a very recent all time high.While losing the fat, I focused on those rep
PRs in the main work, and while the bodyweight climbed, I watched my
supplemental lifts get incredibly strong.
During this
time I also competed in 1 and trained for a second strongman competition (that
was eventually canceled due to COVID) that had me make 1 small change to the
mainwork: instead of a FSL backoff set with the axle, I did a PR set of push
pressing with the same weight as the topset for about 6 weeks leading up to one
comp, and for the other, I swapped out the axle for a loadable keg and used FSL
sets of that for a few months.I imagine
that keg work went a long way to making me “chaotically strong”: able to exert
maximal strength at odd angles.It was
during that period with the keg I ended up hitting the 266lb press on the axle.
TAKEAWAYS
Yeah, that will probably help too
Deep Water
set me up to express strength, and 5/3/1 let me express it.Without that foundation laid down, I woulda
run into my traditional stall at 240lbs, but now I blew WAY past it.
In addition,
the supplemental work was the smartest thing I had done as a “bad shoulder”
lifter in a while.I always press only
once a week, as more frequent pressing than that can mash up my shoulder and
make it achy.However, by rotating
between a bunch of different exercises WITHIN the workout, I was able to really
push volume without beating the hell out of my shoulder from one angle over and
over again.It allowed my shoulder to
maintain resiliency while still getting incredibly strong.I’ve kept that approach since that time,
because it’s the most effective approach I’ve used.
I’ve kept
the filler exercise too.I stick with
bodyweight dips when it comes to pressing exercises, and now that I’m using
weighted dips as part of my supplemental work, I chase it with light weight
dumbbell pressing to fill in the gaps.I
think it’s a very solid approach if you’re looking to add volume and muscle.
Giant sets
remain a great way to get in a lot of work in short time, and this specific
approach continues to strengthen the shoulders from various angles and help
lock it into place.
IN SUMMARY
· * Build
a strong foundation of general pressing strength (push ups, dips, benching,
etc)
· *
Build
the absolute hell out of the BACKside of your body (get in those pull aparts)
· * Set
up with a LONG and purposeful accumulation phase (Deep Water) with a focus on
gaining muscular bodyweight
· * Follow
up your accumulation phase with an intensification phase (5/3/1) to realize the
strength built
· * Vary
the movements in your supplemental work WITHIN the workout to allow for great
volume without mashing up the shoulder
· * “Filler”
exercises and giant sets
· * Bodyweight
gain
And there
you have it!For building a big press
with bad shoulders, this has worked the best for me.Hopefully there are some lessons from there
that you can use in your own training.
I have
spoken to this concept a bunch of times, but it’s worth just writing about
specifically.Belief is key when it
comes to success, and I’m of course writing on the topic of getting bigger and
stronger, but it’s true across all domains.The only people who don’t accept this fact are, consequently enough, the
people in MOST need of accepting this fact.The “forever skeptics” hamstring themselves by refusing to ever belief
in anything, as they refuse to allow themselves the ability to have stupid,
unyielding, illogical, reality defying faith in something, which is basically
playing life on hard mode.If one is
willing to allow themselves to believe in something despite the fact that all
logic and reason dictates that it can’t possibly be the case, they are able to
transcend MANY limitations and achieve, in turn, unbelievable results.Let’s discuss…
I mean, if you're going to believe in nothing, believe in it with everything you have
The big one
to hone in on, as far as getting bigger and stronger goes, is belief in the
program you are running.I encounter a
LOT of faithless when it comes to programs, and it doesn’t matter WHAT the
program is.People contact me directly
about programs I have run, had success with, and wrote full reviews on and ask
“Is there enough benching in Building The Monolith?” “Can you really get big
and strong using 70% of your 10rm in Deep Water?” “Is 1 set of squats in Super
Squats really enough to grow?”Dude, I
DID it.It clearly works.How are you still doubting it?Because you’ve convinced yourself, through
something you read or heard somewhere, that the program can’t work.And guess what: you’re right.That program isn’t going to work: for
YOU.Because you have no faith in it.And a program you have no faith in is a
program you will not invest yourself in, which, in turn, means it will NOT
WORK.Meanwhile, one you’re willing to
actually believe in will surpass all those “superior programs”, because, for
you, you’ll actually do the things necessary to make yourself grow.
A great
personal example is my experience with “Westside Barbell training”, which I put
in quotes because, of course, I wasn’t training AT Westside, and also because I
was doing things so completely wrong that it was Westside in name only.I was using the competition lifts in my max
effort work, my dynamic effort work was too light, I couldn’t figure out the
difference between supplemental and accessory work, my GPP work was haphazard,
etc etc.And I got the biggest and
strongest I’d ever gotten in my life following it.In 9 months, I went from a 405 deadlift to
540 (without a belt), not being able to hit depth on a 405 squat to a 475
squat, benching 335 to 365, and hit a 235lb strict press.I also upped my bodyweight from 190 to
217.And it’s because, in my mind, I was
“doing Westside Barbell training”, and at that time (the mid 2000s), that was
THE way to train if you wanted to get strong.And I believed it, because everything I read said as such.And hey, wanna know why I got to 217lbs?Because at 5’9, I saw fellow 5’9 lifter Kroc
was jacked as hell as a 220lb competitor, so I believed that, if I got to 220,
I’d be jacked as hell.I was wrong, of
course, because I didn’t have near the years of training under my belt to turn
all that weight into muscle, but eating in such a way to support growing that
big was getting me strong as hell.Once
again: the power of belief.
Much like how I believed I could eat like Tate to look like Kroc...
Here's
another story: Super Squats.I already
wrote my “Ode to Super Squats”, and I encourage reading it if you haven’t, but
as a quick summary, I ran the program in college, drank a gallon of milk a day
and ate everything I could in our dinning hall.I put on 12lbs in 6 weeks running the program.Why?Because I believed I could gain THIRTY pounds in 6 weeks.Because it’s what the book said and, if you
read the book, you know that Randall Strossen employs all the tricks his PhD in
psychology allowed to convince the reader that this was true.And as long as you didn’t approach this as a
“too smart for the world” skeptic, you bought into it, ran the program, and
grew.“But you can’t gain muscle that
fast!It was all fat!”Hey: look at you with your big brain.Shame that’s the only thing that’s big.Because yeah, I didn’t get 12lbs of muscle in
6 weeks, and I’m sure most of it was water, foodmass and glycogen, but know
what I got from the experience?THE EXPERIENCE!I learned how to train harder than I ever
thought possible and eat more than I knew I could ever eat.I got a 6 week brutal/intense crash course in
training AND recovery intensity, and I got to take those lessons with me on all
programs I ran in the future, which was huge for my success.And I even got a little bit of muscle on top
of it, because after I ran the program I set a 10lb PR on my bench.WITHOUT benching for the entire 6 weeks I
ran the program.
And THIS is
the critical element to look for when evaluating programs: is it something you
can believe in?Does something about the
program grab you and assure you that it’s going to work?That it HAS to work?Absent that, it WILL not work.As long as a seed of doubt exists in your mind,
you will not be able to succeed on a program, no matter how well it is laid
out.Your mind will work against your
body, and the perfect rep and set scheme will fail you.Lack of belief is just as powerful as belief,
and you sabotage yourself by your unwillingness to have faith in
SOMETHING.Which is why, when you go
down the exercise science rabbit hole and keep finding studies that contradict
other studies, the conclusion you NEED to draw is that EVERYTHING works: not
that nothing works.With the former, you
give yourself permission to go find the program you like the most that you are
willing to believe in and let the power of that belief carry you to
success.With the latter, you doom
yourself to simply questioning everything and making no progress, because
you’re unwilling to take the chance in believing in something, no matter how
stupid it may be.
Some more “back
in my day” video game nerdery for my fans of such things, but allow me to once
again express that I grew up in the 90s and had access to some of the most
amazing and most revolutionary RPGs of the era to cut my teeth on.The original Fallouts, Final Fantasy 6 and 7,
Chrono Trigger, etc etc: I got to play these games when they came out, rather
than as part of a retro release package (which, don’t get me wrong, I buy all
of those and play them all over again).In turn, I remember one of the key features of these games: getting
absolutely, totally and hopelessly lost for days (real time), if not WEEKS,
having NO idea what you’re supposed to do next.And during that time, there was very little one could do to resolve that
situation.Sometimes, games had strategy
guides (for my younger audience, these were PRINTED guides for the game either
written by a team authorized by the game’s publisher or an unauthorized guide
written by a third party) that you could consult to get unstuck, but often, as
a matter of pride, gamers wouldn’t use these on the first playthrough.These guides were meant to be used the SECOND
time around, so ensure you really got everything that time.And, if you were SUPER desperate, you could
call a helpline, where, for $1 a minute, some teenager would walk you through
what you needed to do to beat the game.These days, these ideas are absurd: just type your question into a
google search, and either a youtube video will give you step by step
instructions on what to do, or you’ll find an old forum post that explains your
exact situation and gives you the exact path to follow.And THIS is the issue: no one is getting lost
anymore!
I still have this. Bought it from an EB Games, to continue dating myself here. This was the "SuperTraining" of Final Fantasy 3 (6)
Yup, I’m
saying it: getting lost was the point.You were SUPPOSED to not know what to do and try to come up with a bunch
of different strategies to see if you could somehow find a way to get unstuck.You talked to every townsperson, tried new
weapons and armor, put in weird passwords, etc etc.These games were about discovery and problem
solving.Now, new players are incredibly
spoiled (god I DO sound old) because the instant they hit a snag, they race to
reddit for a solution.Hell, some don’t
even wait that long: before they even START the game, they want to know the
best character to build, where to go, and what to do.Folks: at that point, just watch a “let’s
play” and be done with it.
Man, halfway
through and I haven’t even talked about lifting, but I bet you can already tell
where I’m going with this: this phenomenon is not a video game thing at all but
a generational thing.With so much
information readily available, new trainees don’t understand the value of “getting
stuck” and want to set out on the absolute most correct path possible before
they even START training.And should
they run into a snag, they immediately seek outside assistance to tell them
exactly what to do to get out of snags.Hell, I’ve observed trainees ask for the party approved “unsticking
procedure” so that they know what to do WHEN they get stuck before it even
happens.“What do I do once I stall?”Jesus man, I don’t know: how did you GET to
the stall in the first place?That’s
going to decide how you get out of it!
I don't get it. I was just following the program.
Going back
to RPGs, remember what happened when you tried all those other strategies to
get unstuck?You experienced a bunch of
random encounters along the way and leveled up a bunch, got a ton of gold,
found some new equipment, etc etc.And
now that you finally found what to do, you’re TEARING through the game because
you’re so ridiculously overpowered.Do
you not realize that the same thing happens in lifting?Let’s say your triceps are what are holding
you back on the bench, but you just don’t realize that.So you build up your shoulders, then your
pecs, then your lats, then you refined your technique a bunch, improve speed,
etc etc.When you FINALLY fix your
triceps, you end up BLASTING through bench PRs because everything else got
built up during your period of “being stuck”.Conditioning is holding you back, but you can’t figure it out?Well after a bunch of hypertrophy and
strength cycles, when you finally come around to conditioning, you’re now
jacked, strong and conditioned.There’s
SO much value in beating your head against the wall trying to figure out what’s
wrong.
And this isn’t to say that there’s anything wrong with
seeking outside assistance: coaching is grand.Get a GOOD coach, rather than crowd sourcing your success though.If it’s important enough to ask someone for
help, it’s important enough to ask someone QUALIFIED for help.But absent asking that question, there’s a
ton of value to be had in taking the time to figure this out on your own.Time training and eating well is NEVER time
wasted, even if it appears that progress is not occurring.Often, it’s simply that you’re missing the
ONE piece that allows you to REALIZE the progress that you’ve been accumulating
this whole time, but once you find that piece and put it all together, you’re
in for a new rash of gains…up until you hit the next snag and it all starts
over again.That’s just how the game is
played, because good games are CHALLENGING, and there is reward in overcoming
those challenges through strategy, skill, wit, and just plain old fashioned
brute force.
Maybe even a LOT of brute force
If actually playing the game doesn’t suit you, you can always
watch a “Let’s Play”.Watch everyone
else get big and strong instead, because this isn’t for everyone.