In the realm of physical transformation, the notion of “do the stuff you’re bad at” isn’t novel at all. In fact, that extends beyond physical transformation: that applies to pretty much all physical activity, and beyond that, activity in general: at least so much those activities that we seek TO become better at. We, as humans, have a tendency to shy away from our weak areas and attempt to emphasize our strengths instead, as no one LIKES to feel weak, clumsy and incapable, and we enjoy having the ability to peacock and strut our stuff when it comes to those things that come naturally to us…which, in turn, is a surefire recipe to never actually BECOME better at our chosen activity. Paul Kelso highlights this brilliantly in “Powerlifting Basics Texas Style” when he discusses the club hardhead that has a decent enough bench press but refuses to ever train in a submaximal way to ever actually BUILD the bench even stronger; instead wanting to always be maxing so he can show off his strength in the training hall. However, what I hope to discuss today is a PRACTICAL means that we can apply this mantra, and, specifically, just HOW we would still train those things we’re good at WHILE also focusing on the things we are bad at.
Always playing to our strengths can often result in some imbalances...
Stealing
from the greats once again, I’ll default to Dan John’s 4 quadrants notion. He describes the 4 quadrants of movement:
pushing, pulling, squatting and hinging, and, from there, goes on to describe
that one is typically strong on 2 of those quadrats and weak on the other
2. Pushing and pulling refers to the
upper body, while the squat and the hinge are in the realm of the lower
body. From here, we observe that there
are 4 combinations of humans that can exist with these quadrants: push/hingers,
pull/squatters, push/squatters, pull/hingers.
Quite often, one can identify where someone falls on these quadrants
without even observing them train: simple body construction will tell the
story. Someone with a long torso and
short/stubby legs is going to be quite gifted at squatting, while finding the
hinge to be rather unenjoyable, whereas a short torsoed/long limbed fellow will
hinge masterfully and then…hinge their squats, because squatting is so
unnatural to them. But, if NOT readily
apparent, simply analyzing performance metrics or even mere preference in the
gym will be enough for us to determine amongst ourselves what we are. I, myself, am a push/hinger: I got my first
300lb bench press before my first 300lb squat and am nowhere close to being
able to row that amount, and managed a 540lb beltless deadlift with a technique
that best resembled a terrified cat pooping in a litterbox before I ever really
learned HOW to deadlift.
So now that
I know what I’m good at and what I’m bad at…so what? Well now we go back to the basics. How do we grow? Through toil: through struggle, through
placing a DEMAND on the body that says “you NEED to adapt to this new
stimulus”. Well, in turn, HOW do we
struggle? Do we struggle when we do the
things we are naturally gifted at? Do we
struggle when we shine? NO! The opposite, of course: struggle is brutal
and ugly and, quite often, NOT how we want to be seen, captured and
documented. Unless we’re shooting some
sort of broody noir piece for a commercial, no one LIKES to be observed
struggling, because it’s an admission of weakness in face of a challenge or
obstacle. We want to effortlessly
overcome that which is placed in front of us…but, in doing so, we never
actually generate the necessary demand or stimulus TO get bigger and
stronger. In the absence of struggle,
the body remains stagnant, but when SUBJECTED to struggle, the body overcomes.
Somehow we all understand this when it comes to fiction but NOT reality
Again: so
what? So now we know: when our goal is
to grow, we must struggle, which means that we must pick from our WEAKER
quadrants. Historically, this completely
checks out for me: the best gaining programs I’ve ever undertaken were HEAVILY
focused around the squat. Super Squats,
Mass Made Simple, 5/3/1 Building the Monolith (2 squat workouts per 1
deadlift), Deep Water (equal parts squatting and deadlifting, to be fair,
BUT…it’s a lotta damn squatting), DoggCrapp, Jamie Lewis’ protocols (a
self-described non-fan of the deadlift), etc.
In addition, I saw my greatest upper body physical developments WHEN I
focused quite exclusively on improving my pulling ability, which my long time
youtube followers will recognize with my 3 part series on how to pull with the
elbows alongside my various forays into the world of obtaining mandatory
amounts of daily pull ups. And, looking
at Building the Monoliths 100 chins and 25 weighted chins, the pull day of Deep
Water, Jamie Lewis’ appreciation for the pull up in his protocols, etc, we
observe this proclivity continuing.
Whenever I have needed to grow, I’ve always gravitated toward those
programs that force me to do those things I’m bad at and to do a LOT of them.
I admit I’ve
already pretty much written this post previously, but here is something of a
recent revelation while walking down this path: since we’re doing MORE of what
we’re bad at, we must, necessarily, do less of what we are good at. HOWEVER, recall from previous postings my
philosophy about what happens when volume drops: intensity will naturally
rise! Intensity and volume are on
opposite sides of the scale, and the increase of one results in the decrease of
the other. The consequence of this is
that, while we’re hammering the volume on the hard stuff, we’re lifting heavy
on the stuff we’re good at. But the
one-two punch is this: BECAUSE we are good at these lifts, we are ALSO good at
INTENSIFICATION of these lifts.
Intensification is about increasing our ABILITY to maximally express the
strength we built during accumulation: it’s a phase where we focus on getting
BETTER at BEING stronger, rather than actually GETTING stronger. Coordination and proficiency are key there,
which, when we take something we are naturally predisposed to, we have an
advantage.
But to go
even FURTHER into the implications here, consider this: we frequently advise
junior trainees to train with much volume and, as one becomes more seasoned,
the volume tends to become reduced. Why
is this? Because a more experienced
trainee is better able to recruit their body (motor
units/neurons/muscles/whatever term you wanna use here) toward the task of
training, which, in turn, means they can dig deeper into the “recovery well” by
being able to better maximally exert themselves compared to a junior
trainee. A junior trainee may only be
able to squat 20lbs above their 10 rep maximum, simply because they’re not good
at squatting, so when they do 3x5@80% of 1rm, it may be tough but still well
within the realm of recovery. An
advanced trainee with an 800lb 1rm squat will effectively die somewhere in that
second set. In turn, this is why Dante
Trudel advises people NOT follow his DoggCrapp protocol UNTIL they have about 3
years of basic bodybuilding under their belts: his single set work approach isn’t
going to be effectively utilized by a junior trainee who simply does not
possess the ABILITY to maximally recruit themselves into one single set of
all-out effort. Similarly, minimalist
training protocols are intended to be employed only AFTER a trainee has engaged
in a prolonged period of maximally volume training in the pursuit of maximal
gains, and HIT AND abbreviated training tended to find success amongst those
trainees who had “tried EVERYTHING” before finally settling on 1-2 sets of all
out effort.
What’s the
point of all that? We treat our BAD
lifts like junior trainees, and our GOOD lifts like advanced trainees. So we maximize the volume of the bad BECAUSE
we’re not able to squeeze out our maximal effort on them, but for the
good? THAT is the time to employ a
single set of maximal effort in order to make the most of our abilities. This is the EXACT revelation I’ve had with my
current training protocol, wherein I’ve simply taken a grab bag of things that
have worked for me and slapped them all together. Key of which being this: I only do single set
deadlift work, with one of those being a max rep set of low handle trap bar
pulls once a week, and the other being my well documented ROM progression mat
pull protocol for deadlifts, and on BOTH of those I am seeing continued
perpetual progress week to week.
Meanwhile, I am squatting in SOME manner 3x a week, giving me lots of
volume, and one of those squat protocols is my infamous “Zeno Squat” protocol,
which is RIFE with training volume.
Because, historically, whenever I try to do high volume deadlift
training, I burn the hell out because I can dig WAY too deep into myself, and
whenever I try to go with infrequent heavy squatting, I regress because I can’t
train hard enough to make that work.
Some dudes CAN work hard enough to train that infrequently
As a bit of
an aside, I’ll add that, for those lifts we are bad at, it’s a sound idea to
ensure we implement some manner of movement rotation in order to prevent
overuse injuries. BECAUSE we are not
good at these movements, they are an unnatural fit for our anatomy, which, in
turn, means the constant and frequent grinding of the same motor pattern is
going to wear the hell out of us. This
is why my elbows scream at me when I do too many kettlebell cleans for too
long, or don’t change up the angle of my chins frequently, or my well
documented hip and hamstring issues I was running into at the end of Super
Squats. With my current training
protocol, I rotate between 3 different styles of squats each week, and the
first day in particular has me rotate between 2 squatting variants each week as
well (so Monday is either SSB front squat or SSB squat, Wed is Axle zercher
squat from floor, Friday is Zeno squats with the Buffalo Bar). And really, movement variety is a GOOD thing
in the pursuit of accumulation anyway: we get to get stronger from multiple
different angles while still emphasizing the same general movement
pattern. That’s the premise behind the
assistance work in 5/3/1: just build some muscle. And really, it was the same for the accessory
work in Westside Barbell: build some muscle that will support the
powerlifts. I am finding this work of
caution need not apply for those lifts we ARE good at, primarily because the
volume is naturally lower.
This already
got really long and rambly, but to make it actionable, here is how I am saying
one would construct their own training protocol if their goal was to abide by
what I’ve laid out here.
* High
volume on the bad quadrant lifts, achieved via high frequency (for frequent
exposure) and high volume in the session itself.
* Low volume
via frequency and low volume within the workout with high intensity on the good
lifts. Intensity could be via percentage
of 1rm OR via intensification modifiers (rest pause, dropsets, beyond failure
training, etc)
As always, take caution when designing something yourself
If you
didn’t want to think too hard about this: remember when I combined Easy
Strength with Mass Made Simple? That had
me doing Easy Strength lifts 5x a week, and squats 1-2x a week for limited
amounts of VERY intense sets. That would
be a simple avenue to approach this. One
could even take another Dan John program, the “one lift a day” program, and run
that on top of Easy Strength: using Easy Strength for the bad lifts and running
the “one lift a day” program 1-2 times a week for the good lifts. And, of course, Dan isn’t the only one out
there with high frequency programs: Pavel made a ton of those as well, with
“Power to the People” being one of the most well known, and you even have Steve
Justa’s (RIP) “Barrel Lifting Program” from “Rock, Iron, Steel” to play around
with. And, of course, you can always
just gran one of Jim Wendler’s millions of 5/3/1 variants and play around with
frequency as needed. We learn from
playing around and experimenting, so take these thoughts and observations and
see what you can do with them.
I really like this. Having just reread Dan John's Easy Strength Omnibook, I love his idea of using your better quadrant exercises to get stronger, whilst doing bodybuilding training with your worse quadrant exercises, to get the best balance of strength, muscle and body composition.
ReplyDeleteI'm curious as to what the best way to determine quadrant preference is for oneself, especially as I'm pretty middle of the road as far as limb and torso lengths. It's hard for me to judge via my training history as well, cause it's a bit all over the place and about as equally unimpressive.
I'm tempted to run an intensification block on every movement quadrant at the same time. See which one or two I get the farthest in, and which of the other two stagnate the quickest. I'd need to take a bit of a break from training before running this to make sure I don't have any built up fatigue or nagging injuries interfering with this self experiment
Glad you dug the post dude! And thanks for the comment: last few posts didn't get any. Regarding the quadrants: you could simply go by which movements come more naturally to you. Which ones require extensive cues vs just grip and rip.
DeleteI dread Deadlifting and Squatting, but I kinda like (I certainly don't "love" it though) Benching and Pressing. Yet, my deadlifts and squats are FAR stronger than my bench.
ReplyDeleteMy greatest achievement thus far in Benching is 160 lbs for 8 reps, 200 lbs for 1RM. Bench is the only lift I've purposely gone for a 1 RM for. I don't care to do the same for Squats/Deads. I don't know if that means I'm missing out on anything though...
You've talked before about how, the more suffering there is in training, the greater the effectiveness of the training. I wonder if this here is a manifestation of what you speak of. Maybe when my Bench and Press gets heavy enough, I'm not gonna like them very much anymore either. haha.
At the very least, I suppose I have my excuse to prioritize upper body training until my upper body strength catches up. A consolation prize of having lived on the fat side and my legs having had to drag the extra weight around all its life. lol.
Benching and pressing are always preferable to squatting and deadlift. Those latter two SUCK: it's a LOT of loading on the body. I don't imagine you'll change those preferences much, haha.
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