Showing posts with label steady state. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steady state. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Block 5. Cycle 4. Session A.

BW - 220

Squat -
357.5X2 @9
305X6, 6, 6 @~8

High-Bar Squat -
250X5, 5, 5 @8

Bench-Grip Deadlift w/Straps - 305X5, 5, 5 @8

Conditioning - LISS; Stationary Bike; 20 minutes

Solid sessions.  Definitely feel about 95% back from being sick the last couple of weeks.

Squats definitely felt heavy heading into the top set, but the increase in e1RM over last week is about on the average for the last 5 blocks.  I've been tracking week-to-week increases to see if I could reliably predict which weeks would have larger increases during a training block (an old Paul Carter idea).  That kind of seems to be getting blown out of the water, but we'll give it a few more blocks.

High bars felt very good.

BG Deadlift also felt very good, although I was kind of ready for the session to be over at this point.  I think I've let my conditioning work wane a bit the past couple of weeks, and it may be impacting my resistance training.  I'll try to be better about logging the conditioning, and see if that helps with accountability. 

Video is of top sets and final work sets.





Friday, March 29, 2013

LRB 365: 100 Reps. Week 5. Squat

BW - 196

Squat -
BarX10 (paused)
95X5 (paused)
135X5
155X4
175X3
195X2
205X1
235X1, 1

Cable Rows - X70, 30

Lunges - BWX50, 20, 20, 10

Ab Wheel - 4 sets of 10

Weighted Vest - 35 minutes; walking

Nice session.  Squats still strong and moving with confidence.  So much so that I started toying with my form a little.  I haven't worried about my elbow/arm alignment in a while, but this session I started trying to get in the groove of keeping them pointed down to help keep my chest out.  The mental cue that seemed to help here was thinking aobut trying to bring them down alongside my hip-joints.

Cable rows felt really good today. 

Lunges, however, were a real asshole after the first hill-sprints of the year the day before.  Really brutal.

Had some time before the bus would be along, so I threw in some ab wheel.  I expect a real unwelcome surprise on the next phase when there are lots of sit-ups in the BW ladders.  Gonna try and at least get some wheel in every week to mitigate the coming disaster.

Walking felt great.  Really kind of digging it for the zone-out aspect right now.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

LRB 365: 100 Reps. Week 5. Conditioning

Hill Sprints - 10 sprints
 First Sprint, max speed - 13.4 seconds

Good to get back out to the hill again now that the weather and my schedule have relaxed a bit.  I really enjoy the 20 minute walk to and from my hill as a combination warm-up/cool-down/empty-my-mind time, plus some days I really push the pace and it doubles as additional steady-state.

The hill is also really soft right now from the accumulated moisture of the winter, but not too muddy either.  When I started walking in the weighted vest, there was still plenty of ice and snow on the sidewalks, plus it was cold, so I was using my winter boots.  Then as the ice retreated but it was still cold I kept using them just on the concrete.  All that has combined to have my feet getting a bit achy the last week or two.  Getting out on the soft hill in running shoes almost felt therapeutic by contrast.

I went as hard as I could on my first sprint and timed it to start getting a base-line to set my progression for the next phase by.  So if I'm reading the program right, for the next phase I should be looking at:

HIIT Hills 13.4
2XWeek Reps       Speed
Week 1 10 17.9
Week 2 10 15.8
Week 3 12 15.8
Week 4 15 16.8
Week 5 15 15.8
Week 6 15 14.9 >

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Vacation Training

Conditioning:
Steady State - One 25 min. session
Running - One 15 min. session
Hills - One 20 min. session
Hiking -
One light 1 hour trip
One heavy 2 hour trip with climbing

Lifting:

Deadlift Session:

Pause Squats -
BarX6 (looooong pause to stretch)
95, 135X5
155, 185, 205, 225X1

Press -
BarX10
65, 85, 95, 105, 105X5

Deadlift -
135X5, 5
185X3
225X3
275X2
315X2, 2, 2
275X2, 2, 1

Squat Session:

Squat -
BarX10, 10 (long pauses on the first set)
95X5
135X5
155X3
185X3
205X3, 3
225X3, 3

Front Squats - 135X5, 5, 5

Chins - BW 199X5, 5, 4, 3

Dips - BW 199X10, 6, 5, 5, 5

Seated Leg Curls - 100 reps

Band Pull-Aparts - 2 sets of 50

Monday, September 17, 2012

5/3/1 Full-Body: Cycle 4. Week 2. Carries

Sunday:

LRB Diet - Week 9

BW - ???

AM:
Steady-state - 20 minutes

PM:
Wife Carries - 1/4 mileX2

When I started lifting, my wife would sometimes ask me what my goal was, and I would joke that I thought a man should be able to carry his woman for 2 miles over un-even terrain.  I even did a cycle of farmer's carries once with that in mind, but that fell away as I tried to stay focused on the basics. 

Recently, she asked me how far I thought I could carry her now, and partially inspired by a recent CNP article on Tom Hardy, I decided to try some piggy-backs.  I have a 1-mile route in my neighborhood I often use for conditioning, and I thought I would go for a 1/2 mile carry.  Luckily, the route is easily broken down into 1/4 miles, because that's all I could manage.  We then walked another 1/4 mile until I felt recovered, and I did another 1/4 mile carry.

The good news/bad news is that no one part of my body felt much more fatigued than any other.  This was a whole body effort, and pretty much everything was giving out at once rather than having one "weak link."  That both reinforces my confidence that I'm keeping my training well-balanced, and that I still have loads of room for improvement in every area.  With that said, it's now a day later, and my biceps are more sore than they've been in a long time, so this obviously provides a different type/degree of stress than all the rowing and chinning I do.

If the wife is willing, I may start alternating this with hill-sprints as regular conditioning.  It's also pretty fun and pretty funny.  There is a bar right where we stopped yesterday, and I collapsed onto a bar stool and treated myself to a giant ice-water, and a gin-and-tonic for my troubles.

Monday, September 10, 2012

5/3/1 Full-Body: Cycle 4. Week 1. Hill Sprints

LRB Diet - Day 49

AM Steady State - 25 minutes

PM Hill-Sprints - 20 minutes; sprint up, walk back

Monday, June 4, 2012

5/3/1 Log: Cycle 1. Week 2. Off-Day Training

Saturday AM:

fasted steady-state - 45 minutes

Saturday PM:

Band Pull-Aparts - 5 sets of 20

"Reverse Grip" Push-ups - 3 sets of 10

Band, One-Arm Curls - 5 sets of 15-20

Band OH Extensions - 5 sets of 12-20

Band Reverse Curls - 1 set to failure

Monday, May 28, 2012

5/3/1 Log: Cycle 1. Week 1. Off-Day Training

Saturday:

45 minutes fasted steady-state in the morning

Sunday:

Band work - pull-aparts, OH extensions, one-arm curls; 5 sets of each for 15-20 reps

Monday, May 21, 2012

UB: Reps - Review

I've finished the 6-week rep strength block from Paul Carter's Ultimate Beastdom - How to get What Constitutes Strong (WCS).

This cycle called for lifting 3 times a week (I just went every other day, or 7 times in two weeks) with 1 hard conditioning session and the option to mix in some steady-state.  After consulting with Carter, I made a change to the original programming.  Instead of doing Deadlift high-rep work, I did maintenance deadlifts, and worked on my rowing strength with high-rep T-Bar work.

Here are my results for the cycle:
Squat - Several Rep PR's, projected increase to 1RM (15 lbs.).
Deadlift - Several Rep PR's, increased 1RM (15 lbs.).  All PR's were on the last day of the cycle.
T-Bar Rows - Several Rep PR's, increased 20RM (20+lbs.)
Bench - Several Rep PR'S, projected increase to 1RM (5 lbs.).

For Conditioning, I mostly did Prowler pushing on the weekend, with one session of sledge-hammer swings.  I did fasted steady-state in the mornings at least one weekend day a week, and often both Saturday and Sunday.

It's amazing what can happen in 6 weeks.

High rep Squatting is a whole other animal from anything I've done before.  On this movement, more than any of the others, Paul's "Over Warm-Up" technique of working up to a heavy-ish single and then backing off to your repping weight seemed to pay the most dividends.  I actually set a 1 Rep PR because my max last increased on the UB Strength 5X5 cycle, so the 90%X1 on the last week was with a weight I'd never actually had on my back.  On my last week, I took my previous projected 15 RM to 20 actual Reps.  I won't say those 20 Reps were easy, but at no point in the set did I doubt I would hit them.  I probably enjoyed squatting during this cycle more than I've ever enjoyed it since I started squatting a year ago.  AND it makes me excited to go back to heavier squat work, and see what that's like now.

I really, really love Deadlifting, and have always hated T-Bar Rows, so this cycle was a bit difficult for me because I constantly had to resist the urge to pull more and/or heavier deads instead of doing bare-minimum maintenance.  It helped that I went with unsupported T-Bars rows.  I just hate the chest-supported kind because it seems really hard to breathe, and fighting for breath always interferes with my attempts to push the reps.  I already mentioned that doing rows here was a modification to the program.  I made one additional modification in that instead of working up to a waved, heavy single, I waved a top triple before backing off to my work-sets.  This just made more sense for me because it allowed me to keep my form stricter without trying to pull a heavy-ass single on a movement I am/was not very good at yet.

Because I haven't done these kind of rows a lot, I made progress VERY quickly.  I twice hit 20+reps with my work weight, and had to increase it for the following sessions.  By the end of the cycle, I'd increased my work weight by 30 lbs., and was still able to take that final work weight for 15 strict reps.  I think this process has allowed me to fall a bit in love with rowing, and I will work on some DB rows for my next cycle, and then attempt to transition into strict BB/Pendlay rows.  Basically, I've given Chin-ups a lot of attention in the past, and I now see no reason why rowing shouldn't get an equal amount of my time.  Especially because...

...my Deadlift went up on this program.  On the final session of the cycle, I felt really awesome walking into the gym.  My top deadlift the week before had a been a ridiculously easy 1 Rep PR (remember, I'd been doing 5X5 and 531 for strength previously, so almost no heavy singles).  Not only did I feel great, but I wanted to know how much the rowing had helped my Pull, and didn't see any reason to have a separate testing day or start a new program/cycle without finding out the State of my Pull.  So I was supposed to pull 315 for a single (and a 1 Rep PR).  I decided I would pull it for a double, and I easily did.  I added 10 lbs. and pulled another single.  I added another 10 lbs. and pulled a difficult single.  I added another 10 lbs. and failed at lock-out.  I took a long rest, tried it again, and failed below the knees.  Okay.  So I had to settle for a new 1 and 2 Rep PR's, and a demonstrated increase to my 1RM.  Woe is me.

Benching was a mixed bag for me on this.  I really shouldn't say that because I hit Rep PR's, and twice hit projected increases to my 1RM.  That is success.  However, the last two sessions were real grinders, and the final session was a failure.  Shit happens, and it was probably just a bad day.  Also, bench doesn't mean as much to me as Squats and Deads so I'm not tore up about it.

An additional wrinkle that probably impacted my bench (although I don't know why it didn't effect my squat) was my diet on this program.  I'm not a diet guy, but I took some direction from Carter's Shake Diet, and had a MRS for breakfast every day, and one more either after a training session, or often as my lunch on non-training week-days.  I'd have one helping of whatever I wanted for dinner, and try not to eat anything late in the evening.  I also mostly switched from beer to bourbon when having drinks.  Again, I'm not a diet guy, so I don't hop on a scale very often, and then it's usually at the gym when I've got at least one meal in me.  Thus I can't speak to weight change, but I've certainly trimmed up quite a bit around my mid-section.  A loss in weight is classically accompanied by a decrease in bench performance, so I'm not very surprised to crap out on bench at the end of the cycle. 

I learned a great deal about myself as a lifter on this cycle, and there's a lot to carry with me into future training set-ups.  I still plan on basing the majority of my training for the foreseeable future around 531 for the main lifts, however nothing I did on this program is incompatible with that.  I've mentioned this before, but as an example, to take this program and adapt it to 531, I would simply hit the target reps on a 531 movement, and then back the weight off to attempt to increase strength in a higher rep range.  Not entirely dissimilar from Wendler's own Boring But Big template. 


Friday, February 3, 2012

UB: Strong Week 3. Bench

Defranco Shoulder Mobility

Machine Neck Extension - 15X20, 20X20, 25X20

Bench -
BarX10
95X5
105X5
125X5
135X5
155X5

DB Incline - 55sX12, 7

Dips - Gym BW 204+5lb.X12, 4

Defranco-style Core Circuit X2

20 minute, brisk walk home

Back of my neck felt a little sore coming into the gym, so I backed off the weight on the extensions.  I'm pretty sure it was just my traps from heavy shrugging the day before, but no point in killing myself on neck extensions anyway.

Bench felt a little better today.  I've been focused so much on tinkering with my set-up, that everything had just felt hard.  Today I tried to just make sure and do the things I KNOW have been good, and not worry as much about other stuff.  That meant setting up high on the bench so that my shoulders end up just below the uprights, and getting into this position by setting my feet then sliding down the bench and then back up onto my upper-back.  The thing I had trouble with today was tucking-and-flaring my elbows through the movement, and pulling the bar apart.  Otherwise, I gave myself decent rests between the top sets, and things mostly felt good.  Next week the top set is my projected 5RM.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

UB: Strong Week 3. Press

Defranco Shoulder mobility

Machine Neck Flexion - 25X20X3

Press -
BarX10
55X5
65X5
75X5
85X5
95X5

Upright Rows - 95X10, 6

DB Laterals - 30sX11, 6

Hanging Leg Raise - 7, 6, 6, 6, 6

10 minute trot on treadmill and 20 minute walk home

I had a friend staying with me this weekend so everything is kind of hard because of late nights, inconsistent diet, and massive quantities of alcohol.

Neck machine felt heavy.  Great.

Pressing felt fine.  Now that I'm about at the half-way mark of the cycle, I'm starting to allow more time between top sets.