I know for sure I’ve written on this topic before, but at
almost 8 years deep and writing an entry each week, I’m bound to repeat myself
a few dozen times. Recent events have
forced most of the world into something of a “constrained” environment, where
limitations are being harshly imposed, either by self or external forces. People can’t go do the gyms they want to go
to, use the equipment they want to use, eat the same foods they want to eat,
etc etc. What is frustrating is how much
people lament this situation insofar as it relates to their ability to
accomplish their goals. Don’t get me
wrong: the situation sucks at its most basic level, but as far as training and
nutrition goes, limitations are a POSITIVE, not a negative. Through limitations, we now have MORE
freedom.
Relax: it's not that kind of blog
Relax: it's not that kind of blog
Why is that? Because
once limitations are imposed, we are no longer bound by the burden of
“optimal”. When all is well in the world
and we have unlimited freedom, many experience significant existential angst
due to a (self-imposed) drive to make full use of this freedom to only
accomplish the absolute most best and optimal plan of action to achieve our
goals. It’d be a squandering of one’s
freedom if they were to choose poorly, no?
Well hell, I already disagree with that, but supposing I didn’t, NOW
that this freedom has been removed, we no LONGER need to be optimal, which
means that the removal of one freedom opens up near UNLIMITED freedom to do
anything we want to pursue our goals now.
With limits, we are FINALLY free.
All one need do is allow themselves to employ some lateral
thinking and pursue things that AREN’T optimal.
I’m going to actually provide some actionable examples here, in the
hopes that it gets some brains moving.
So your gym is closed down and all you have are some powerblocks: how
can you possibly get in a good workout?
Now is the time to use all those bodybuilding tricks you thought either
didn’t work or were too advanced for you.
You’re just too damn strong to get in a good chest workout with a set of
50lb powerblocks? Do some pre-exhaust work first. Burnout with some light sets, or train your
isolation exercises FIRST, or do a bunch of push ups before you start benching,
or if you have an adjustable bench, set the incline as high as possible and
work you way down to flat benching while keeping the dumbbell weight the same,
or do some 21s. And that’s to say
NOTHING of if you had some resistance bands on hand, because now you have like
a jillion different ways to tweak everything I just said. Burnout with the DBs AND the band (hold an
end in each hand and have the band go around your back), then drop the band and
burnout with the DBs, then drop the DBs and burnout with the band. If you have one of those super cool slingshots
(or whatever name used by other companies), you could even work THAT in after
you’ve burned out to just keep milking reps out.
Take a page out of this dude's (absolutely insane) book
Take a page out of this dude's (absolutely insane) book
Is any of that optimal?
Who cares?! We’re limited: we
work with what we got. We find new ways
to progress. It’s a revaluation of
values! Thanks Nietzsche! And what doesn’t kill us is going to make us
stronger. Perhaps now is the time to
stop training and start working out.
Somewhere Mark Rippetoe spit out his coffee (black of course, cowboy
style), but do you REALLY think you won’t get big and strong as hell if you
spend a few months just absolutely slaughtering yourself in the weight room
with any diabolical method you can come up with just to make light weight feel
heavy? This is what dudes did BEFORE we
were all so goddamn smart. You just give
the body crazy stimulus and force it to grow and heal. Challenge yourself to come up with something
even crazier than the last time you trained.
And don’t stop there: start limiting your diet too. I recently wrote my “the nutrition post” that
detailed how I eat to gain and lose weight, but have recently started
manipulating ANOTHER variable in my diet: saturated fats. Specifically, I’ve been seeing if I can
reduce them to the point of near elimination WHILE still maintaining my very
low carb lifestyle. This has forced me
to eliminate a lot of staple foods from my diet, and has forced me to get
creative with my nutrition. The
result? I’m the leanest I’ve ever been
in my entire life, and was 185.4lbs on Monday of this week: a bodyweight I
haven’t seen since college. The one
exception to that statement is that I WAS 184.4lbs the week after my ACL
surgery, but during that time my wife asked me if I had stopped eating as I
looked completely emaciated, whereas now it’s a stark difference. People constantly stress and struggle about
how to eat, what to eat, when to eat, etc etc, but when you start REMOVING
options from the table, you can suddenly laser focus your nutrition. Some other limits I impose on myself:
whenever possible, I don’t mix fats and carbs together, and I only eat carbs
pre and post training. It doesn’t matter
if those ideas are scientifically true, accurate, proven, etc: by HAVING those
limitations, my nutrition is stupidly easy, and crazy effective. What more could I want?
For my regular readers, it's usually this photo
For my regular readers, it's usually this photo
We’ve gotten soft with too many choices: we lost our ability
to think. In the absence of choices,
people HAD to get creative to come up with solutions to problems. We need to get back to “working with what we
got”, instead of lamenting what it is that we lost. The mind has such unfathomable, nearly
unlimited potential: it just needs to be allowed to realize that potential, and
we need to allow it that freedom by giving it limits to work within. The world may give you limits, but if you’re
not so blessed to be limited, give yourself some and see what you come up
with.
This hit home. Gyms closed down and I lucked out with ordering an adjustable 200 lb sandbag. It was hella dope being able to tire myself out via unconventional means. Even with the gyms open at a limited capacity, I still use some sandbag techniques.
ReplyDeleteOutstanding dude. I'm sure you're getting incredibly strong with the sandbag as well. It's a great implement.
DeleteGreat article as always my dude. I'm making some of the best gains of my life these past few months with nothing more than 2 pairs of rings and a few weight vests.
ReplyDeleteThanks man! Glad to hear you're maximizing this opportunity.
DeleteHow could you have an article on limitations without quoting Magnum Force, “a man’s got to know his limitations “? 😁
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid I'm unfamiliar with Magnum Force.
DeleteIn permaculture there is a phrase “the problem is the solution” and I think it summarizes this post pretty well.
ReplyDeleteIn the last 4 months I've gotten proof of both this and the other point that you keep hammering on about- lockdown's kept me out of the gym, obviously. But I also hurt my shoulder badly enough in Feb that I had to go back to 'pressing' nothing heavier than my own arm, and build back up slowly. So it's been 4 months of pressing and pushups with a backpack, slowly adding books, and doing pulls/rows on rings in the basement. Upper body's never had more mass, shoulder's better, I've had to actually use the shoulder girdle properly, training is less of a mindfuck, I can't get finicky about percentages... it's worked so well that I don't want to go back to the barbell yet. All from getting injured, and having limitations imposed.
ReplyDelete