I’ve written
about this several times before, but hard science and I don’t get along. I took biology and chemistry as summer school
classes in high school because it meant getting them done quicker AND the
teacher was more willing to be lenient in grading, and even then I BARELY got
by. I had to take physics as a full year
course and was riding a high D average through most of that, and legitimately
only passed through creative interpretation of the questions and assignments
(setting me up for a future with a political science degree), which allowed me
to get to college, wherein I had to take a mandatory geology course
affectionally referred to as “rocks for jocks” wherein I, once again, had a
high D average and only managed to pass the course by seeking out my professor
during office hours and demonstrating to him how much EFFORT I was putting into
my failure, which put a soft spot for me in his heart and he was VERY gracious
in granting me a C- to pass. I say all
this to explain that I just plain don’t understand REAL hard science…which is
why I much prefer alchemy. Alchemy is
science magic, and is what I use to understand the biological processes that
occur during the process of physical transformation. What follows, in turn, is my understanding of
the processes of physical adaptation which, thanks to solipsism, I don’t have
to care if it matches what “real” science says.
And props to rroo over at t-nation for suggesting I write this all down.
The body’s
primary objective is survival, and often survival takes on the form of “get the
most by doing the least”. This is to
say, the body LIKES the status quo and will try very hard to NOT try very
hard. It won’t want to change UNLESS the
consequence of NOT changing is greater than the effort needed to change. What this means for us, the owner of said
body, is that we have to impose demands upon the body that are so significant
that change is the ONLY thing the body can do in order to continue surviving. In the absence of this change, the body will
die, thus, in choosing survival, the body chooses change.
What does
all that mean? Let’s take gaining muscle
as an example. Muscle is awesome: it
makes us stronger, and being stronger is awesome…BUT, it’s also a LOT of work
to add muscle, and the body would just as soon NOT do that. When we train hard, the body is sent a signal
that says “Ya know: if you had a LITTLE more muscle, this wouldn’t be so
hard”. But, in turn, if the body is sent
that signal just ONE time, it goes “Yeah, that’s cool and all, but I’m
good.” HOWEVER, if we keep slamming the
body with that signal, eventually the body goes “ALRIGHT ALREADY, I’ll add some
muscle: just get off my case!” We’ve
effectively badgered the body into adding muscle as a means of survival,
because it recognized that this new activity we’ve engaged in has no end in
sight, so it needs to get with the program and start adding muscle so that it
can keep on surviving. The status quo
will no longer work: change needs to occur.
But, again,
the body LIKES the status quo and WANTS to keep it: so sometimes, it fights
back. One of its nastiest tools is
soreness, aka DOMS. Anyone who has run
Deep Water or my Xeno squats protocol or any other really high rep squat
protocol knows the “toy soldier” walk that happens for a few days later:
muscles are locked up and stiff from sheer pain, sitting on the toilet is more
like a free fall, stairs are daunting, etc etc.
Just like we’re trying to force the body to change, the body is trying
to force US to stop. And herein we reach
a critical decision point: how do we react?
If we rest, we give the body a clear message: “Hey, if you make me
REALLY sore, you get time off”. And the
body goes “Sweet: let’s get REALLY sore, and then we won’t have to do any of
this stupid adapting.” HOWEVER, IF,
during these periods of extreme soreness, you FORCE yourself to continue
training, the body learns that it gets no rest.
In point of
fact, during my current re-run of Deep Water, I’ve been forcing a TON of
conditioning work post squats, focusing primarily on thrusters, since they
contain a front squat element to them that force me to bend my legs a
bunch. It is AGONIZING, but after a few
reps I can move through a full ROM again and the soreness dissipates for an
hour or so, AND I’ve observed that I actually am recovered from the squat
workout about 2 days earlier than I was when I was babying my legs and resting
them the previous time. I’m doing MORE
conditioning when I’m sore vs when I feel fresh, which means my body is getting
the signal “HEY: if we get sore, we get MORE work. F**K this: let’s stop being sore!”
This, in
turn, details something I wrote in “embracing your inner Pesci-ness” along with
“Holding the body hostage”: you can threaten the body to adapt by taking its
caution signals and punishing the body for administering them. Whenever I have an injury, I make sure to
explicitly train the hell out of the injured part with whatever it is I CAN
do. When I tore my hamstring on a set of
trap bar pulls, I wrapped the hamstring in a knee wrap and did 20 doubles with
410lbs in the buffalo bar squat my next workout, demonstrating to my body that
this new injury it developed was NOT going to fly and it had better heal up
FAST. I did box squats 6 days after I
ruptured my ACL, tore my meniscus and fractured my patella. Whenever I dislocate my shoulder in my sleep
or from washing my hair in the shower (yup, it’s real), that shoulder is in for
a HELL of a workout. Steve Pulcinella
called this “paleo rehab”: the notion that paleo man couldn’t afford time off
or else they’d starve and die, so you just keep forcing the injured part to
perform until it adapts and heals. The
body wants time off, it wants to maintain status quo, it doesn’t want to adapt,
so it tries to sabotage you with soreness and injury, but YOU, the owner of the
body, can simply turn these into opportunities to FORCE adaptation to occur by
training the body to understand that SENDING these signals results in MORE
stimulus: not less. Once it learns the
consequences of these actions, it will stop taking these actions, and you will,
in turn, be able to experience adaptation on YOUR terms.
Is there
anything in science to back this up? Who
cares. Science is for nerds: this is
alchemy.
Laughed way to much at the orc mage. It just seems so wrong..! Been doing conditioning basically 5-6 days per week on DeepWater and have yet to catch on fire and die of overtraining. If anything I’m usually not sore for long after the 10x10s. Can’t really speak for the science of it but it seems to be working.
ReplyDeleteOgre Mages are so OG. Just when you think you figured them out: here comes the fireball, haha. Good to hear the conditioning is paying off. Definitely seems to help.
DeleteThis post reads like Dinosaur Training with all of the caps. Friggin love it.
ReplyDeleteThanks man. I honestly couldn't stand that book: never was able to get through it.
DeleteHaving genetic joint hypermobility/Elhers Danlos symptoms, I can confirm the effectiveness of paleo rehab haha.
ReplyDeleteShoulder partially popped out of place and inflamed = pull aparts, external rotations, and other rotator/real delt work (and often rows). It doesn't get rid of the inflammation fully, but it turns a week-long recovery into just two or three days.
Outstanding to hear dude! My right shoulder likes to slip out pretty often, and that definitely seems to be the cure.
DeleteAs someone who has a geology degree and works as one, I found the information in this article useful.
ReplyDeleteAwesome dude: glad it could be that way.
DeleteWhile people argue about science i just keep getting bigger by training hard, it's so simple i don't get why we have to keep discussing training
ReplyDeleteYup! Let other people be "right": I'll just be big and strong, haha.
Delete