Tuesday, August 30, 2022

EAT THE BIG ELEPHANT FIRST: THE 10000 KETTLEBELL SWING CHALLENGE DONE IN 7 DAYS

 



 

The post that launched 10000 swings…It was Sunday, I had gotten in my typical “first thing in the morning conditioning blast” to get blood flowing and the metabolism fired up to earn my fantastic weekend breakfast the Mrs makes for me, and in the brief moment of downtime I had between when my workout ends and when my kid wakes up so we can watch cartoons in our pajamas together (if you ever want a fun challenge, try to STOP SWEATING before your kid wakes up), I was sipping my energy drink and logging the workout, and as my mind wandered, it waded into VERY stupid territory…and thus, “10000 swings in 7 days” was underway. 

 

And, of course, the relevant follow-up

 

 


 

 

Reality had dawned on me: the gears were already turning and there was no stopping this.  So later that day, I bought a 3 pack of mechanic’s gloves, because I had read enough horror stories of how this challenge shredded the hands of folks that took it on, and then did a 20 minute “proof of concept” pilot run where I got in my 22 swings per minute along with some daily work in between, and from there I knew what I was going to be doing for that next week.

 

**BACKGROUND**

 

* The week OF that Sunday, I had accomplished a major goal of mine of squatting 5x10x405lbs while running 5/3/1 BBB Beefcake, which, if you’re interested, I did a write-up of here

https://mythicalstrength.blogspot.com/2022/08/how-i-used-531-bbb-beefcake-to-squat.html

* But in the process of that, I had suffered some damage.  I documented it in that write-up, but basically, I tore a muscle somewhere in my tricep/teres minor after subluxing my left shoulder on a set of deadlifts, and my left bicep/forearm kept experiencing pops that led me to believe the tendon was on the verge of tearing/rupturing if I didn’t start being a little smarter…which I realize “10000 swings in 7 days” doesn’t sound super smart, but the swing was one of the few movements I could still do that wasn’t causing me any pain or discomfort, so it SEEMED like a good idea at the time. 

 

**THE ENTIRE PROCESS**

* I’m not solipsistic enough to imagine that people would want me to write about EVERY single workout here in the write-up, but if you DO want to view that, I start logging it here in my training log

https://forums.t-nation.com/t/more-trouble-than-i-am-worth-brute-force-and-ignorance-t3hpwnisher-log/276232/1749

 

* Instead, I’ll link all the videos here, documenting every single swing from start to finish

 





 


 









 

**THE FULL WORKOUT/GAP FILLERS**

 

* As per the post at the top: I stuck with 22 reps per round for 65 rounds for Monday through Friday.  EMOM was the original plan, and after day 1 I found myself resting about 26 seconds per round.  That was a LONG time spent NOT doing swings, so I shaved off 5 seconds per round for Tuesday, 2 seconds for Wed, 1 second for Thurs and 1 sec for Fri, resulting in 50 second rounds and over 10 minutes reduced from my starting time.  THAT was far more challenging, and turned the swings into a solid effort.  Once the weekend rolled around, I no longer had the luxury of 1 hour workouts, as I spend my weekends sleeping in and spending time with my family, so I chunked the workouts into 2 parters and tried to make them as FAST as possible…which is why I ended up doing 630, 715 and 800 unbroken swings.  There’s something to be said about the fact that, had I NOT built up over M-F with those hard, time reduced round based workouts, I would not have had it in me to really dig into those high reps.

 

* Because I am me, I can’t just take on a 20 day challenge and do it in 7 days and be satisfied with that: I had to add on to it.  Anyone that follows me knows that I make use of “daily work”: general physical activity that gets done no matter the training day.  On top of that, I tend to include 3-5 minute conditioning blasts on top of my training as just something that gets thrown in the middle of the day.  I kept up that trend through the challenge.  Don’t get me wrong: 10000 swings WILL transform your body, and the swing is an awesome movement that hits the most important muscles of your body, BUUUUUT…if you WERE to add on to it, I’m pretty satisfied with what I settled on: The Barbell “Bear Complex” run in a Tabata Protocol (20 seconds on/10 seconds off for 8 rounds) and 5 minutes of burpee chins.  You saw “TABEARTA”, as I’ve taken to calling it, in the final video, but this is a video of me getting “the rest of the workout” done after my swings

 



 

* The swing is hitting the posterior chain just fine.  What’s a Bear Complex?  It’s a clean, front squat, press overhead, bring behind the back for a squat, press it overhead and set it in front of you.  That’s ONE complex.  The way I run them is a Cluster (clean into a thruster, a thruster being a front squat into a press overhead) into a back squat thruster.  So with the swing, we have the hinge, and now we have two squats and two presses overhead added.  With the burpee chins, we have the burpee, which includes a bodyweight squat and a push up (horizontal push) and then a chin up (vertical pull).  In an ideal world, you jump up to the bar for the chin, but mine is too low to allow that.  Still, with swings, Bears and Burpee Chins, we have ALL our bases covered.  And by doing Bears as a Tabata workout and the Burpee chins for 5 minutes, that’s 9 WHOLE minutes of exercise.  We can all probably spare 9 minutes.  In turn, if I were to make this a “complete workout” or sell this whole 1 week experience, that’s what it would be: Swings-TABEARTA-Burpee chins.  Do that for 1 week and you will kickstart physical transformation.  I’d love to try pairing that with something like the Velocity Diet for a week as well, just to really see what happens when you burn the candle at both ends…and the middle…and just chuck the whole thing in the fireplace.

 

* In the most ideal of situations, this would be a whole separate workout later in the day, but, instead, because of my schedule, I’d finish my swings, down a protein shake, and then come RIGHT back into the garage and do this, at least for the M-F workouts.  On the weekends, it was chunked out a bit more.

 

* You can also see me getting in some more of that “daily work” I’m talking about.  Band work, abs, and ideally GHRs and reverse hypers too. 

 

**BEFORE AND AFTERS**

 

Here I am 2 weeks before I started

 



 

And this was me on day 6 of the Challenge


 


The change in such a short time was honestly nutty.

 

**OBSERVATIONS AND LESSONS LEARNED**

 

* There is a CLEAR quality of rep improvement between the first video and the last.  I shared these videos with members of the kettlebell community and got some great feedback on how to improve my swing, and took to that task.  A big part of it was intent: prior to the challenge, I used the swing as a deadlift builder, and so I’d take the eccentric as far back as I needed to replicate my starting position and only focused on the concentric.  The value of a more deliberate eccentric was explained, and, with enough experimentation, I found some value in it.

 

* There’s also something to be said for how physically broken I came into this challenge.  And, along with that, my typical 0400 approach of doing absolutely ZERO warm-up before I start training.  As the week went on, my body continued to heal, which allowed it to open and loosen up some, and swing quality could continue to improve.  Plus, when you do something 10000 times, you get a little better at it.

 

* As the photos show: in a span of DAYS, I had shed any fluff I had accumulated over 6 weeks of eating big.  Vascularity had returned as well.  I keep referring to this as a 7 day physical detox, more of that in the next bullet.

 

* Here’s a weird one: I noticed my body odor getting foul as time went on.  I genuinely think that getting in so much work in such a short time was having a legit “detoxing” effect on me, as my body was just trying to force out ALL the bad stuff it possibly could in order to make me a better, cleaner running machine.  My philosophy on muscle building has always been that the body adapts to the stimulus you place it under, which is why I am such a fan of throwing a bunch of chaos at the body in order to make it “ready for anything”, and I’m sure after day 3 of 1430 swings it decided “I guess this is what we are now: let’s get rid of ALL this junk that is gumming up the works”.

 

* Armor: Despite running “Armor Building Complexes” every day for 5 minutes for the past several months, I needed some REAL armor to get through this. I could tell that swinging the bell that much was going to tear up my hands, and that ANYWHERE I had touch/contact points with my body needed to be adequately covered with material to keep from tearing the skin apart and suffering skin rashes. From review I’d read of the program, skin issues were the most common one. So, that day, I sprung for a 3 pack of mechanics gloves (you can see them in the video) and ensured to wear my fight shorts (a tip I got from Brian Alsruhe) on top of my traditional strongman shorts, in order to keep my inner thighs covered and prevent my forearms from chaffing the hell out of them. I also took to wearing my strongman belt, to keep my lower back warm and give my elbows something to brace against…plus it gives me something to play with between rounds. I went with my No Bull trainers, because they were close to what I deadlift in, and I ultimately wanted this experience to build my deadlift. And I kept my headband, because it’s awesome, and keeps the sweat out of my eyes.

 

* My appetite was through the roof!  This will absolutely turn the metabolism into a furnace.

 

* I wrote about how broken I was coming into the challenge, and what’s awesome is how much better I felt as it went on.  This was a VERY tonic experience.  The swing is a super benign movement.  Almost all concentric, minimal eccentric, no load across the body, just awesome for getting blood flowing and recovered.

 

* Now that I’ve done 800 swings in one set, the fire is lit and, one of these days, I’m sure I’m going to see JUST how much I can do.

 

**CONCLUSION**

 

* I have always wanted to do the 10000 swing challenge, and I am so glad I got to do it “my way”.  I learned a lot and I grew a TON in the span of 1 week, physically, yes, but just in general.  Dan John remains the man, and we are blessed to have all he’s written.

Monday, August 22, 2022

ALLOW ME TO EXPLAIN MYSELF II: LOW BAR SQUAT PLACEMENT

In a continuation of this series, I’m going to address ANOTHER topic I frequently get asked about: my squat.  I’m not going to address the typical question of “why does it look like hot garbage”…at least, not TOO much, but more the common question of: 


“Why do you have the bar so low on your back?”


As seen here doing OTHER things that people question me on...



The answer?  BECAUSE I CAN.  Folks: you would too if you could.  Having the bar that low is awesome because it makes the weight is CLOSER to your own center of gravity and base of power.  The higher up your back it goes, the further away it gets, and that requires you to squat with a more upright torso and call in a bunch of quads to get the job done, whereas I can lean way the f**k forward and posterior chain the whole thing.


I realize I sound like the biggest Mark Rippetoe fanboy when I say that, but folks: “allow me to explain myself”.  Take a look at my body.


Here in my natural habitat: deadlifting


If you were to genetically construct someone to be a conventional deadlift puller in some sort of mad scientist lab: I’d be the outcome.  I have pretty much NO upper torso.  I legit do NOT have a solar-plexus.  My top abs run into my sternum, which makes having a six pack difficult, as my first two abs start straight below my sternum and my bottom two finish above my belly button.  And though 5’9 isn’t a towering height, to ACHIEVE that height when I have the torso of someone that is 5’2, my body had to compensate by giving my STUPIDLY long femurs and matching forearms.  This means, when I lockout a conventional deadlift, it’s just a hair above my knees, and it also means I never understood you dudes that complained about the bar running into your junk when you do shrugs.  It ALSO means that, outside of deadlifts and atlas stones, pretty much all lifting sucks for me, because I have to bench a mile to get to lockout and any attempt at weightlifting movements is going to require some sort of Cotton Hill-esque surgery, because I can’t even get into the correct starting position.


…which brings us to the squat.  In mentioning my issue with weightlifting, you can foresee the difficulties that would come with attempting an upright style squat.  I have no torso to support the load AND I have a VERY long way to travel to reach the bottom of the squat.  However, if I LOW BAR squat instead of high bar, I can reduce the ROM by sitting BACK as far as possible along with down.  Thanks Westside barbell!  BUT, let’s ALSO consider the perks that came with me being built to deadlift: it means I’ve spent a LOT of time building posterior chain/hinging strength.  What better way to make use of it than to turn the squat into more of a bent knee good morning?


See this guy gets it!



But let’s go even further: I CAN lean so far forward in a squat BECAUSE I have no upper torso to speak of.  If I had the torso that belonged to an actual 5’9 person and leaned as far forward as I did, I’m SURE I’d strain something in my back, because it’d put a fair among of torque on it.  BUT, when your torso is so short, you really don’t a lot of strain on the back when you lean so far forward.  There just isn’t enough distance to create stress.  


Let me take this moment to state, once again, I am a political science and philosophy student, and that I got a D in high school, so I’m sure I’m butchering every term here, but I’ve also been writing in a blog for almost a decade now, so I’m SURE you understand what I mean even if I’m saying it “wrong”.


Physics is no match for Solipsism!



But anyway, forward lean: there you go.  And in something of a “chicken and egg” thing, BECAUSE my torso is so short, I can put the bar further down my back…which results in more forward lean.  And it’s worth appreciating that I’ve NEVER experienced a back injury from forward lean, in the squat OR the deadlift.  I’ve hurt all sorts of stuff, sure, but not the back…despite what the internet would have you believe. 


BUT, there are a few more x-factors at play here.  I’ve dislocated my right shoulder 6 times and subluxed it a few dozen times, after also tearing the labrum.  Once again: that makes pressing suck, but it also means I can make my shoulder conform to IMPOSSIBLE angles: thing that would make M.C. Escher scratch his head.  I also, apparently, have some sort of wrist mutation where I can make them fold into angles that simply should not be, much to the frustration of every martial arts instructor I’ve ever had that tried to do a wrist lock on me.  THIS combines to allow for an even LOWER bar placement.


And I don't even have to do yoga!



But the final contributing factor, when I JUST had an “ah hah” moment about when I heard Matt Wenning talk about it: I’ve been doing band pull aparts since 2008, and have built THE most ideal shelf for a stupidly low low bar squat


Less than ideal for fitting into a suit jacket






The bar is STABLE in this position when I do this.  There’s no circus balancing act required, it’s not sliding down my back, it’s LOCKED IN.  I actually PREFER having it there because of that. 


Now, hear me out: the reason I do the majority of my squatting with a buffalo bar vs a power bar is BECAUSE the buffalo bar actually forces me to use a slightly higher bar height.  If you’ve watched any of my “monument to non-existence” videos, you’ve seen how, when I get under a barbell, the bar is silly low.  This IS awesome when I want to move as much weight as possible OR when I want to do as many reps as possible, because it puts me in the strongest position I can be in.  It’s also the bar height I use in competition, for that very reason.  But BECAUSE the Ironmind Buffalo Bar has terrible knurling and is slightly cambered, if I try to keep it that low, it WILL slide off my back.  In turn, I have to elevate it just a touch, which forces me to train just a LITTLE bit harder than if I use a barbell.  COULD I just be better disciplined with a barbell?  Yeah…but I could also not be.  The Buffalo Bar removes that choice.  Funny enough, though, the Safety Squat bar, though it forces an even HIGHER bar position, allows me to REALLY fall back on the posterior chain to move the weight, simply because you can good morning the F**K out of your squats if you’re so inclined.  So, without you even asking me: that’s why I use a buffalo bar.


Bent bars have a solid history too



But, ultimately, the answer I love to give of “why do you squat that way” is: I get bigger and stronger when I do.   Folks: I’ve played the game where I try to make my form look like someone else's…and I got REAL hurt doing so.  At one point, you find YOUR way, and it’s just your way.  But it might also benefit you to find folks BUILT like you and see how they do it too.  There HAVE been strong dudes who squat similar to me too, 


like Layne Norton




Steve Goggins




And Mark Felix





If you note: they’re built VERY similar to me.  Short torso, long limbs, great pullers, not great squatters…at least, not great the way YOU want them to squat.  But we find a way to get to yes, and it means having that bar low, leaning far forward, and laughing all the way to the bank.


Thursday, August 18, 2022

HOW I USED 5/3/1 BBB BEEFCAKE TO SQUAT 5X10X405 IN UNDER 19 MINUTES

(Hey folks, this was originally posted on a t-nation forum, which is why the formatting is a little different than usual, but it should still be readable)


Monday morning, at 0435, I achieved a goal that was a LONG time coming: I squatted 5x10x405. I did this with an Ironmind Buffalo Bar and a variety of bumper plates, by myself, in my power rack, in my garage, while a summer thunderstorm crashed around me, with Foo Fighters’ “All My Life” on a loop for the entire 18:58 time it took from start to finish (I billed it as 18:28 in my training log, because I give myself that first 30 seconds of the first set to walk up to the bar and get set up, but from that point on I’m on MY time).

I did this as part of the 5/3/1 program “5/31 Boring But Big Beefcake”. This was my third run of that particular 5/3/1 program, and each time I do it, I learn something new about training and about myself. I wanted to share what I did this time around to make BBB Beefcake fit me so that I could achieve my goal of 5x10x405.

I apologize, this is going to be long and self-aggrandizing, but I think it’s pretty awesome.

GETTING THE SPARK

  • Every time I’ve had significant success with any 5/3/1 program, it was because it came with some great “what if” sort of idea. The first time I ran Building the Monolith, it was “what if I could get the workotus done in under an hour?” I wrote about that here Building the Monolith Workouts in Under an Hour 4 . The first time I ran BBB Beefcake, it was “What if I followed this up with Building the Monolith and Deep Water to make a 26 week hypertrophy block?” The results of that got posted in the 2021 physical transformation challenge. This was no exception. I had a strongman competition coming up, the training block leading up to it was coming to an end, and I needed a new goal to chase, and 5/3/1 BBB Beefcake had become reliable, but I thought to myself “What do I want to achieve when it’s done?” And 5x10x405 squat was the answer.

  • In turn, the squat was the sole focus. This ended up being a bit of a blessing, as I sustained a torn muscle at the midpoint of the program (details to follow) that made some of the other lifts a bit trickier to work with, but through it all my squat remained strong and stable, and I could keep building on it.

  • When it comes to selecting these goals, I have a simple rule: I have to pick a goal that makes me thing “F–k me…ok let’s go” vs “F—k me that’s impossible”. 5x10x405 did just that. If I picked 5x10x495, I knew it was out of my reach.

  • Once I had the goal set, I picked a TM that would get me there within the second cycle. It’s worth noting that this TM was WAAAY too high as far as main work goes, which is what I’ll discuss next.

BEING THAT WHICH DOES

  • “Being that which does” is a concept I’ve written about on my blog, but ultimately in this case it boiled down to “If I want to squat 5x10x405, I have to be the person who squats 5x10x405”. So then you have to ask yourself: what does that person think and do?

  • That person follows @Dan_John ‘s mantra that “The goal is to keep the goal the goal”. Through this process, I physically transformed myself into a squatting for reps machine. What this entailed was a sharp nosedive of my top end strength. The first time I ran BBB Beefcake, I used 5s progression (5 reps for all main work sets). The next time I ran it, I took my TM up higher and ended up using 3s progression. My original plan for this run was to hit bare minimum reps (5 on 5s week, 3 on 3s week, 1 on 5/3/1 week), but toward the end I was only good for the second set of mainwork for a single. In a past life, I would have freaked out, abandoned the goal and lowered the TM so I could get back to hitting reps of main work, but I took Jim’s quote about the main work VERY liberally here

image

  • In truth, I feel like I really TRULY understood this through this program.

  • The other thing the person who squats 5x10x405 does is EAT LIKE A CHAMPION. That phrase actually comes from Jim’s Building the Monolith article, and it’s such a good one. I’ll post some photos of some meals


Breakfast


Dinner


Another dinner


Pre-bed meal

  • For the most part, you’re looking at a lot of pasture raised whole eggs, egg whites, grassfed piedmontese beef, bison, and a variety of lean white meats and veggies, along with lots of nut butters and sunflower butter, and some fat free greek yogurt and grassfed cottage cheese, and avocados. I’ve summed up my diet as “Deep Mountain” before: the base is Jon Andersen’s Deep Water, with deviation permitted that fit within John Meadows (RIP) Mountain Dog Diet. It works for me. I also embrace Jon Andersen’s frequent feedings approach, not even really looking at things as meals but more just “feedings”. I wrote “breakfast” for one of those meals, but it was technically the 3rd time I had eaten that morning. I had either my morning Surge workout fuel (more on that later) or a slice of keto toast with sunflower butter, then a protein shake in between my lifting and conditioning workout, and THEN came back and smashed that breakfast. And I would eat as soon as I got to work, and keep eating through the day.

  • Another gem of Jim’s from his Building the Monolith workout is that you will NOT get fat eating in such a manner IF you are actually training hard. And that’s a big thing the guy who squats 5x10x405 does. There’s NO room for fear of getting fat: only fear of UNDEReating such that he’s not able to recover and be ready to perform when the time comes.

  • On that note, it’s worth appreciating the value of conditioning work as a hunger builder. Eating when you’re not hungry sucks. 15 minutes of conditioning can create enough hunger to eat MORE than enough to “undo” the calories burned.

EVEN MORE ON CONDITIONING

  • As written above, if nothing else, conditioning helps make you hungry. But conditioning has a LOT of value here. For one, when it came time for the squats themselves, my cardiovascular system has NO issue recovering. I set my initial rest time for 90 seconds, then went 120, 150 and 180, and I was really just letting my MUSCLES recover during that time. Every time I approached the bar, my heart rate was low, my breathing was normal, and I had one less thing to worry about. Same was true as I approached those later reps within sets: zero CV issues. That’s a big win. The fewer variables you have to deal with on game day, the better. This is also what allowed me to meet Jim’s standard of sub 20 minutes for the supplemental work.

  • I did conditioning everyday, multiple times a day, while achieving this goal. The guy who squats 5x10x405 is in PHENOMENAL shape, and he does absolutely nutty conditioning to get there.

  • To start, everyday, no matter what, I do 5 minutes of @Dan_John ‘s Armor Building Complexes ( 2 cleans, 1 press, 3 front squats 3 ) w/24kg bells. I’ve been doing this for about 6+ months now. Before that, I was doing Tabata KB front squats daily. Somehow, someway, everyday, I get them in.

  • Alongside that, I would end every 5/3/1 lifting session with some manner of conditioning work. This would typically be about 10-20 minutes of a variety of approaches, to include barbell/kettlebell/bodyweight complexes, crossfit WODs, KB swings, circuits, etc etc. I’ll post a few videos of some examples

Conditioning WOD: 10 minutes AMRAP of 5 burpee log viper presses & 4 double kb front rack lunges - YouTube

  • On my non-lifting days, I had one day dedicated to prowler work (I can discuss that if need be, but this is already a huge piece I’m writing), one day dedicated to weighted vest walking (80lb vest for 2 miles, stilling getting in some sort of conditioning circuit somewhere else in the day), and my Saturdays had me doing “Monument to Non-Existence”, which I’ll post a video of a few of those below and an article explaining what the hell it is
  • Much like “train harder than you fight”, I made condition so much hell on earth that 5x10x405 would feel like a breeze

ADVERSITIES ALONG THE WAY

  • On the final week of the first cycle, during the deadlift workout, I noticed I couldn’t even get the second set of mainwork off the floor. I THOUGHT I was playing it smart by not pushing it and just moving on to the supplemental work, but what ended up happening was, on the first very rep, I subluxed my left shoulder and the resulting rapid shift in weight caused me to tear a muscle somewhere along my tricep/teres minor

  • It took about 10 days for the bruising to show up, but I immediately realized I was f—ked up based off the SOUND my shoulder made when it happened. When I ruptured my ACL, tore my meniscus and fractured my patella in a strongman competition in 2015, it made a similar noise
  • I pivoted that workout and went with SSB good mornings for 5x10 to still meet intent. I had lost the ability to suspend myself from a hanging surface for several days, but each day I would progress a little further with some band assisted chins in order to force some healing bloodflow through the affected area and get it to “relarn” how to function. Within 4-5 days, I could do a full chin up again. By the second week of the second cycle, I could deadlift heavy enough to do 50 reps axle deadlifts of 361lbs using the “Malcolm X method”
  • That tear also made it tough for me to do any sort of upper body pulling in general, so a lot of rows were out. Amazingly, I could still do cleans. My pressing was unstable for a week or 2, but sorted itself out.

  • That knee I mentioned earlier swole up something fierce the week before I was to squat my goal. Humidity had gotten bad, I had pushed it hard on a Saturday workout, and it got to the point where I needed a weighted load just to BEND the knee in the first place. It was frequently in pain as well. Amazingly, a 5 mile walk up and down some hills seemed to help heal it up.

  • In both cases, I REFUSED to let these things keep me from my goals. I willed them to heal, because I had a goal: squat 5x10x405 at the end of BBB Beefcake. You can get a LOT done if you simply refuse to accept the alternative.

  • Just as a fun aside, I showed up for my deadlift workout the week after the tear, tried to pull heavy, couldn’t, so I decided I would use that day to do 800 bodyweight dips while doing 5 high handle trap bar lifts of 225lbs every minute on the minute

PROGRAM DEVIATIONS

  • It’s already apparent from what I’ve written that I’ve mutated 5/3/1 BBB Beefcake to suit my needs. I just wanted to include some wavetops of changes.

  • For the 5s week, I took to using the “Malcolm X Method”, getting the 50 reps “by any means necessary” rather than a 5x10 approach. I detailed the success of that method in a link I’ll post below, but the bottom line is that it’s awesome and something I’ll be making use of in the future

  • For all my pressing, I took all sets from the floor. I find this has a much better metabolic response compared to pressing from the rack. The main work was typically clean once and press away, while the supplemental had me cleaning each rep whenever possible.

  • I employed pause benching for the 5s and 3s week during the supplemental. Once again, it made things harder.

  • I’ve already detailed the psychotic conditioning I did, turning the TMs up WAY too high, placing the main work on the back burner, but, as it most likely obvious, my assistance work was turned way up high as well.

SOME BEFORE AND AFTER

  • I started this program at the leanest I’d ever been, weighing in at 178lbs while fully clothed, a weigh in I had no intention of doing, but I was about to fly back home and needed to see if my luggage was underweight. Since that time, I’ve resumed not weighing myself, but do have photos of between then and now. I’ve definitely filled out


CONCLUSION/TAKEAWAYS

  • Set your goal, keep your goal, do the things that achieve that goal, and pick your battles. You can’t be great at everything all the time, but you can be awesome at something if you do what it takes to be that which does it.

  • I have even more I can write, but this is pretty goddamn wordy as it is. If people would like, I can detail an example “day in the life” regarding training and nutrition, keeping in mind I don’t track calories/macros.