Hail once again nerds: it’s time for another DnD post. I originally had a far less nerdy but equally
cringe-inducing title for this post of “strategic strength/chaos conditioning”,
but realized that Dungeons and Dragons provided me a far more fantastic
framework to operate within, so I got to kill 2 birds here. Once again, for my uncultured reader, allow
me a quick explanation. When determining
the nature of your character, there are two axes (that is, no joke, the plural
of “axis”, which is just awesome) taken into consideration: are they good, evil
or neutral, and are they lawful, chaotic or neutral (insofar as law abidance is
concerned)? This allows for the
exploration of many interesting questions and concepts of morality: one can
absolutely be good while being completely unlawful (a Robin Hood type), one can
be totally law abiding while being morally neutral (honestly, most average
humans are this way: obeying the law more out of fear of consequences vs a
desire to better society), but, for today’s purposes, we explore the reality of
being absolutely evil yet existing in either a lawfully evil state or a
chaotically evil state. From here, I
introduce “The Blood War”: a war between devils and demons.
I wanna be on whatever side THAT guy is on
Devils represent those that are lawfully evil, hence the
notion of a “deal with the Devil”. This
trope has been played up historically for millennia, from masters like Faust to
B-Movie slock like Wishmaster, but the premise remains the same: you make a
pact with the/a devil and it’s completely and totally binding, the devil will
not break it, yet, often, the wording is such that it ends up spiting to
individual that made said pact. Point
remains: devils are lawful, well organized, structured and measured in their
approach. In the planes of hell where
devils reside, there is a clear ranking structure and, in turn, in the Blood
War, the devils are formed into a well organized military style unit with
officers and foot soldiers where everyone knows their role. Since they’re all evil bastards, discipline
tends to be enforced via cruelty, and obedience tends to be the result of fear
of repercussion, but the point remains: the devils are the epitome of both evil
AND lawfulness/structure.
Contrast this with the demons of the Abyss. The demons represent evil AND chaos. Don’t make a deal with a demon: they have no qualms about breaking pacts, and will most certainly promise you whatever it is you desire simply to gain an advantage and betray you at the time most opportune to them. In turn, the demons are less an army and more a horde: a loosely organized (if at all) banding of terrifying, powerful creatures, charging headlong into battle with horrifying screeches and all manner of loosely compiled weaponry and tactics. The Abyss, in turn, is very much Hobbes’ state of nature: a constant state of war, where life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short, and might ultimately makes right, in contrast to Hell, which would be where a social contract is in order and just so happens to be tyrannical. It is worth appreciating that, due to this structure, when comparing individual demons to individual devils, the former tend to be more powerful, yet the latter are able to compensate by means of actually working together in a cohesive unit. Going further down the DnD rabbithole: demons are barbarians and devils are fighters.
Although it really seems more like this
All this nerdery just for me to explain how it is that I
visualize my own training: for strength, I err toward the devils, but for
conditioning, I side with the demons. When
it comes to being stronger, I’ve found little success in just showing up to the
gym, doing what I want and seeing what sticks.
Sure: after 21 years of lifting weights, I’m able to rely on intuition
to help guide a training session and understand what needs improving and what
can slide, but I STILL need at least some framework or structure to lay down
the foundation of the work. I’ll know
before I start that it’s a press day or a deadlift day, I’ll know what lifts
I’m aiming to hit based on either previously calculated percentages or the numbers
I hit in a previous session, my supplemental and assistance work tends to be
decided upon: I have a plan. I’m being
lawful. And just like that deal with the
devil, the most effective programs I’ve followed are the ones where “the plan”
is effectively planned out suffering: percentages and reps that are beyond my
CURRENT grasp that I need to eat big and train hard in order to be able to
reach them when the time comes. I sign
on that dotted line on week 1, and at week 6 I get my wish…but at what cost?
Contrast this with conditioning though, and it’s where the
demon comes out. I frequently figure out
what I’m going to do for conditioning upon arriving in my garage/gym. Sometimes it’s based off what’s currently on
the floor if I was too lazy to put stuff away, or I’ll figure it out based off
how much freetime I have to get in a session, or I’ll base it off of what
muscle group feels sore and needs some bloodflow in it. These days, I’m a big fan of the wodwell
website, and will actually scroll through WODs in the middle of my lifting in
order to figure out what I’m going to do for conditioning when the lifting is
over. Whereas my lifting is planned out
in 3, 6, 12, or even 26 week chunks, my conditioning just happens, with no
rhyme, reason, structure or thought.
What happens when you try to strength train like a demon
And allow me to say: I am quite the demon when it comes to
conditioning. Because I just do stuff,
I’m REALLY quite decent at “just doing stuff”.
For sure: those that specialize are far more accomplished than I at the
things they specialize in, but it’s rare that I need to take on a physical
challenge and find myself struggling due to the conditioning aspect of it. I’m constantly doing new and different stuff
in my conditioning, which means I’m never adapting, which is a GOOD thing as
far as conditioning is concerned, because once you get GOOD at something, you
become efficient, which means you actually expend LESS energy when performing
the act…which means it has less of a training effect on your conditioning. One wants to be demonic: poorly organized,
slapped together, thrashing, gnawing, struggling and surviving purely off of
brute force.
In turn, I grow frustrated when I encounter the devils of
conditioning. I’ll frequently share a
conditioning workout I came up with, only to encounter some devilsh
questions. “Hey guys, I just did this:
do a burpee, then a KB snatch per side, then 2 burpees and 2 snatches, etc,
while wearing a weighted vest. Once you
hit 5 reps, start over. Do as many as
you can”, “How heavy of a kettle bell should I use? How heavy is the vest? Do I take any rests between movements? How long should I do the workout? Are these six count burpees?” *Cue demonic rage* F**k dude: just go do some conditioning! You’ll know it’s working when your lungs
explode. I legit just looked at what
equipment I had and thought until I came up with an idea that sounded awful
that I hated and, at that point, I KNEW I found something that was going to
work. Much like how I look for lifting
programs that make me go “oh f—k” when I see them, I try to come up with conditioning
ideas that make me think the same thing.
It’s simply a difference of that feeling happening over weeks vs within
the span of a workout, but herein we see the common trend: one may be lawful,
one may be chaotic, but they’re both evil.
This was fun to read. Sometimes all it takes is a light kettlebell, Bodyweight etc to absolutely slay yourself with. No planning all action.
ReplyDeleteThanks dude. Absolutely. Often, those limits force us to be more creative and come up with something better than if we had a bunch of options.
DeleteEverytime I see the barbarian brothers mentioned, I always wonder how they actually approached training. Did they care about planning their workouts, or did they just pick something fun and go hard and heavy.
ReplyDeleteBy all accounts they were total lunatics. They were fans of the phrase "there is no overtraining: only undereating"
DeleteAmazing blog mate, long time reader, but first time commenter. You are part of the inspiration for me to write weekly in a similar format. Thanks mate, here's to being big and strong.
ReplyDeleteReally appreciate you taking the time to comment dude! Thanks for being a reader, and happy to hear you're writing as well.
DeleteI've been lifting for 17 years and like you I still need some structure, as much as I'd like to be the do what I feel like lifter. This article surprisingly hit home, because I never thought to do it with conditioning. I have so many different things I can do, now I'm really pumped for it. (Still not going to sell my airdyne haha)
ReplyDeleteNo reason to sell the airdyne dude: It's a great piece of equipment. I had to part with mine because of space issues, but I wish I still had it. Glad you got something out of this: it's amazing how many options are out there.
DeleteI read this post years ago and it kind of floated into the back of my head. My current training cycle iterated back to this concept and hot damn it is an easy and logical way to implement training.
ReplyDeleteInstead of overanalyzing every facet of training, the devil portion of lifts is a few big box movements done balls out a few times a week (2x in my case). Literally every other day the demons take over. It's really been great man. Can't thank you enough.
Hey thanks so much for writing that dude. Me being able to have a positive impact on you really gives me genuine delight, so I'm so glad to hear this was beneficial for you. This sort of thinking is definitely liberating.
Delete