**INTRO**
As part of
my participation in my own 6 month training block for hypertrophy comprised of
5/3/1 BBB Beefcake, 5/3/1 Building the Monolith and Deep Water Beginner and
Intermediate, I found myself once again accomplishing one of the most brutal
programs I’d ever run: Building the Monolith.
I’ve done an extensive write up of my experience the first time I ran
this, but for summary: it’s the first program that ever made me want to
quit. On day 1 of the first week, after
it was all said and done, and I spent about 15 minutes in the shower staring at
my feet wondering what I had gotten myself in to. This time, I came in prepared, having a much
better idea of what was in store for me, and, in turn, how I wanted to do
things this time around. I am going to
detail the various modifications I’ve made along with my experiences and the
outcome.
**NUTRITION**
Not as much of this this time around
When I
originally ran the program, I did my best to abide by the rules of “a dozen
eggs and 1.5lbs of ground beef a day”. I
ended up more along the lines of 8-12 eggs a day and 2-2.5lbs of meat a day (not
necessarily ground beef, but sometimes steak, ribs, chops, roast, etc). Eating that way, I put on 4.5lbs in 6 weeks,
didn’t accumulate any noticeable bodyfat, and was well recovered for every
workout. I knew it worked…and, in turn,
had no real need to prove it again.
Instead, I stuck with what I had been doing for BBB Beefcake and what I
intend to do for Deep Water: my “Deep Mountain” approach to eating. Effectively using Jon Andersen’s Deep Water
as the frame work, but also abiding by John Meadows “Mountain Dog Diet”
principles regarding nutrition sources.
In addition, I’d allow myself some things that weren’t Deep Water
approved but WERE Mountain Dog approved (specifically organic wild blueberries
and dark chocolate).
As a shift
worker, my nutrition could get a little wild.
This is what a day of working the early shift looked like the morning
that I pushed the prowler for training.
* 0315: Wake
up, eat 2 whole organic free range eggs/1 egg white (eyeballed) mixed with
2.25oz of grassfed organic New York strip steak, half an avocado, some grassfed
butter and grassfed organic sour cream and fat free cheese, along with a keto
waffle slathered with a heaping serving of organic sunbutter (no sugar added)
and sugar free apricot preserves. 1 cup
of cashew milk.
* 0330-0430
Training
* 0430: 8oz
drinkable egg whites mixed with 1 scoop of protein powder and a serving of
"amazing grass" greens supplement
* 0500: 3/4
cup fat free greek yogurt mixed with a protein scoop of Naked PB powder and 1/3
cup of wild blueberries (sadly, these seem to be tearing up my guts, so I’ll be
dropping them soon) with a small amount of fat free whipped cream, cinnamon and
salt.
* 0600: 1
lite n fit yogurt and 1 oikos triple zero yogurt with an energy drink
* 0630: 1
mini reese's dark chocolate peanut butter cup
* 0700: 1 quest
bar
* 0730: 1
lilly's sugar free dark chocolate peanut butter cup
* 0800:
Organic deli turkey and sliced ham sandwich on keto bread w/lettuce, tomato,
pickle, mustard and walden's zero cal mayo
* 0900: 5
small mushrooms, 2 mini peppers and a slice of organic deli turkey
* 1000:
Costco brand "healthy noodles" mixed with organic ground turkey and
no sugar added tomato pasta sauce (11oz of total product)
* 1100: 110
calorie/26g protein Ahi tuna packet
* 1200: 5
small mushrooms, 2 mini peppers and a slice of ham
* 1300: 6
walnuts, 6 macadamia nuts, and a square of 92% dark chocolate
* 1400:
8.5oz of organic ground turkey breast fajitas w/ 1/4 avocado (no shell, cooked
without oil)
* 1500: 1
archer country grass-fed mini beef stick
* 1530: 1
more of those beef sticks
* 1600:
8.5oz of those fajitas w/ 1/4 avocado
* 1930 1/3
cup of grassfed organic cottage cheese mixed with 2 organic free range whole
eggs, 1.75oz of grassfed beef, 3 celery stalks w/nuts n more spread, a slice of
keto bread with organic almond or peanut butter with some more apricot spread,
and a keto brownie made with olive oil, along with a cup of cashew milk.
This is
exhausting just to write out, let alone eat.
I’m effectively eating something every half hour, primarily because
training like this makes me hungry as hell and I’m eating to recover from
training. It’s a lot of quality
nutrients, and I’m proud of myself for not relying on “dirt” to get me
through. I started allotting myself a
weekly cheat meal, typically on Friday nights, but these were not the eating
binges I used to engage in, and instead just a time to enjoy a yummy meal with
my family. Frequently it was an 8” keto
pizza at a local place along with some curly fries. I saw pronounced benefits in my physique and
performance by including this.
**CONDITIONING**
Being in good shape helps make this suck a little less...but only a little
Conditioning
is where people tend to screw up BtM.
Primarily because they don’t do it.
Jim says point blank “Conditioning or cardio is mandatory – 3-4
times/week” in the article where BtM originates, but I find many trainees never
actually read the article and just opt for spreadsheets, apps, and other lazy
approaches. Laziness begets inferior
results, and it’s also why people balk at the diet: yeah, if all you do is lift
weights 3x a week, that diet is too much.
If you’re lifting weights 3x a week AND doing conditioning 3-4x a week,
you are TRAINING, and you need calories.
Consequently, this was something I discovered about BtM the first time
that I subsequently forgot about and re-discovered: you’re pretty much LIVING
training for 6 weeks on this program.
You train every single day of the week.
You miss a day? Now you’re
playing catch up. It can really grind on
your mind.
All that
said, I went hardcore on conditioning this time around. My rule was to do what Jim recommended as the
minimum, and then, after that, I could do what I wanted. An “eat your vegetables first” approach. So yes: I DID push the prowler with 90% of my
bodyweight on it for 10 trips of 40 yards with 60 seconds rest between
sets….and built up to 14 trips with 45 seconds rest. I DID go on a 2 mile weighted vest walk with
80lbs…and built up to an incline treadmill walk starting at a 9 incline and
working up to a 10.5 for 2.5 miles. I
sold my Airdyne before that was cool to do, so instead of that I did my Juarez
Valley front squat workout detailed during BBB Beefcake (to review: front squat
a weight for 8-10 reps, do 5 six count burpees, then do 1 rep of front squats,
5 burpees, now do 1 fewer front squat rep than the topset, 5 burpees, 2 front
squats, 5 burpees, continue the trend until you meet in the middle), as I found
it had a similar effect to cycling regarding helping my legs heal. I’d chase that particular workout with a belt
squat stripset.
But on top
of all of this, I did a lot of WOD style workouts. I’d always do Crossfit’s “Grace” workout with
an axle the day I did Workout 1 for the week, and ended up setting a lifetime
PR of 2:46, along with SEVERAL sub-3 minute times while on the program. I had Fran regularly included in the rotation,
using strict chins vs kipping ones, but also found myself researching other
crazy WODs that could be done with just a barbell, bodyweight, dumbbells and a
kettlebell and just running it. I did
some sort of conditioning EVERY day, and often multiple conditioning workouts a
day on top of the lifting. Once again,
COVID has made it that there really isn’t much else for me to do, and I have a
solid home gym set-up, so I’m making the most of it.
**THE LIFTING**
To start
with, I used the following equipment.
* On weeks
1, 3, 4 and 6, I pressed with the Ironmind Apollon’s axle for all
workouts. On weeks 2 and 5, I used the
Titan 12” log for the third workout of the week.
* On weeks
1, 3, 4 and 6, I used a Texas deadlift bar for deadlifting. On weeks 2 and 5, I used a Texas Power Bar.
* For all
bench workouts, I used the Apollon’s axle.
* For all
squatting, I used the Ironmind Buffalo Bar.
* For
shrugs, I used the Ironmind Apollon’s axle and set it up against bands
* Used the
same axle for curls
* For chins,
I used a multi-grip station that attached to my Titan rack, and used an
Ironmind belt and loading pin to add weight
And I
executed the program with the following modifications.
* Once
again, I made extensive use of giant and supersets to make the workouts
faster. I’m not going to go into the
full on details, but big movements were paired with one others (squats, chins
and presses, deadlifts and benching, etc).
I was able to knock out everything in week 1 in under an hour again, so
I didn’t feel a need to keep timing myself after that.
* I took the
widowmaker set on the 3rd lifting day beyond 20 reps, getting very
near failure on many of them. The
initially had me in the 30+ range, and as weight went up, reps went down, but
it was still a total ballbuster. I
contemplated turning it into a set of breathing squats instead, but with Deep
Water on the horizon, I wanted to train my ability to execute high rep squats.
Second
week’s widowmaker
Final week’s
widowmaker
* I took all
presses from the floor with only 2 exceptions: the topset of presses on weeks 3
and 6, workout 1 were taken out of the rack.
For the first workout of the week, I’d take the weight off the floor and
press away. For the 3rd
workout of the week, I’d take all REPS off the floor, and use a “touch and go”
clean approach to REALLY keep the back under tension. And on those weeks I used the log, I viper
pressed each rep. The intent on this was
the make pressing VERY full body and increase the intensity of the training
with the goal of making it even more hypertrophic (holy hell that’s a real
word).
* All
deadlifts were touch and go. I’ve
written about this several times, but if your goal is to build muscle, you
wanna pull touch and go. Your body
stays under load for MUCH longer that way.
* Curls were
done as Poundstone curls (1 single set), with an unloaded axle getting to 160
reps and an axle loaded with 2.5lbs per side taken to 103 reps.
* I paused
benches when possible. Pretty much any
time I could make things harder, I would.
* Shrugs
were done against bands. It’s how I like
to do them, because it’s a lot easier than loading up a few million plates.
* After the
day 1 workout was done, I’d do a stripset of lateral raises for a total of 80 reps.
* After the
day 2 workout was done, on days I had time, I’d do an incline DB bench
stripset.
* On top of
all of this, I was still doing my daily work of 50 dips, 50 chins, 50 band pull
aparts, 40 bodyweight reverse hypers, 30 GHRs, 25 band pull aparts, 20 standing
ab wheels, and 11 neck bridges in 4 directions (forward, backward, left and
right). If a workout included any of the
daily work, I wouldn’t double up on it, but otherwise I made sure to hit these
numbers minimum each day.
**MY EXPERIENCE/RESULTS**
Once again,
my intent in running this program was to have training that was hard enough to
force me to eat to recover, and this did exactly that. Picking the right TM goes a long way, because
week 3 and 6’s numbers are both so daunting that you spend 2 weeks going “Oh
f**k” while you eat and train as hard as you can to ensure that you’ll be able
to meet the mark when the time comes.
What I found
interesting about this time around was that BtM felt more like an
intensification phase vs an accumulation phase after running BBB Beefcake
first. Beefcake had lots of reps while
the intensity was on the lower end, whereas BtM had high intensity sets across
and had me moving much heavier loads.
Sure: the assistance work was heartier, but the main/supplemental work
stayed heavy while the volume was on the low side. I actually think this makes the two programs
pair VERY well together, and, under the “leader/anchor” construct, I think this
is a solid way to about training the two.
Prior to BBB Beefcake, I was running SVR II, and I think that might
actually be a sound way to structure some long training blocks, and may even be
what I end up doing once this whole phase is over.
The
modifications really drove home some hypertrophy demands, specifically taking
the widowmaker sets far and cleaning each rep on the 10+ sets of cleans. This put some heavily metabolic demands on my
body, and made all that nutrition valuable.
The heavy emphasis on conditioning continued that.
Once again,
I did not weigh myself throughout this process, but my lifts went up and my
body grew as a result of eating the get through the program, and that’s
ultimately what matters. I am primed and
ready for Deep Water.
Some photos
Start of
program
End of
program
Haha the fact that there's a Monolith Juggernaut is too perfect.
ReplyDeleteTrust me: if I can find an appropriate Juggernaut, I will find it, haha.
DeletePhew, I wish I had your training capacity. Running BTM along with you on the Gainit subreddit and I had to drop a lot of the more intensive conditioning work after BBBB and just doing a lot of LISS cardio.
ReplyDeleteIt's definitely been an interesting experience running BTM though. Before this I thought I was training like a madman (doing FSL Widowmaker). After doing BTM... I was barely trying. Really puts things into perspective.
Hell yeah dude: those paradigm breaking moments are huge. Good to see you going through it, and great to have you alongside.
DeleteI'm glad to see you re ran this in modern times. I ran it back when you did initially, and I'm planning on re running it now. One question maybe you can help with. Any suggestions for more hamstring/deadlift work. I'm thinking of making the deadlift a 5x5, and maybe adding some GHR. That deadlift/bench workout goes pretty fast if memory serves. Especially since I copied you when I ran it and supersetted many things. The programs about perfect for getting jacked, but always thought it lacked deadlift progress. Also, I like what you did with the easier Widowmaker that come early in the program. They are too easy, do adding extra reps is the way to go here. Glad I found this write up
ReplyDeleteI did 30 GHRs every day while I was on the program. The prowler can get you some solid hamstring work too. Hope that helps!
DeleteThanks, it really does. I have a rogue dog sled I push, forgot about the added training volume from those as well. Great info and great site as always
Delete