Monday, 5 November 2012

Change your grip, change your life (2)


 
This is the second part of my grip focused blog. The other post: “Change Your Grip, Change Your Life (1)” explained the importance of grip training and also ways in which you could encorporate different grip methods into your current training.

One area that I skipped was “Towel Grip Training” this blog. Towel Grip Training is a great method of grip training for a number of reasons:

1)      Unlike most grip-focused work, it DOESN’T wreck your hands. This will be welcome news for any regular gym goer

2)      It doesn’t require much equipment – simple one or two small hand towels – easy to pack in your gym bag and not a huge pain to leave in there just in case

3)      It’s versitle. With a little imagination you can use towel training for lots of exercises to add an element of grip. You can even use it in outdoor training with pull ups, inverted rows and similar

Below is a video I made which will give you 5 simple but effective exercise ideas for towel training. Give them a go and pay attention to the demand it’s placing on your grip – your forearms and hands might not thank you for it!

 If that doesn't work, Click here...
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Friday, 12 October 2012

8 "Don't"'s when designing gym programmes


Despite the fact that most popular fitness publications offer "the best" gym programmes for anyone who wishes to buy their publication, following generic programmes won't work for everyone.
 
It can be tricky telling everyone to "Do exactly this". Ultimately, if there was a perfect program we'd all just do that.
 
I think it's essential to know exactly what you're going to do in a session, before you enter the gym and how this fits into a larger, periodised and specific program. Knowing this will allow you to be confident in the knowledge that each session is steering you towards becoming the person you want to be. Basically, you're not just "doing some bits."

So, if you're going to design your own programmes, you should take some of the guess work out of it and NOT do a few things. Follow these hints below and avoid some common mistakes:
 
DON'T do too much
Sometimes less is more. A long gym session is not necessarily a good one, nor "better" than a 30 minute session. If you want results, often intensity is one of the main thing that lacks in most peoples programmes. Try to restrict yourself to (roughly) an hour in the gym. If you're ACTUALLY working hard that is MORE than enough!
 
DON'T abuse your grip
Grip strength is one of the thing that lets people down in key larger exercises such as deadlifts, pull ups etc. Try to do those exercises requiring a lot of grip strength ("pull" exercises) early on in your session. Try not to involve a large number of grip-centric exercises in one session. If your grip is a weak link, read here on how to improve it in your training: click me, read me!
 
DON'T leave "technical" stuff until the end of a session
By "technical" I mean exercises that require the most coordination, concentration and muscular recruitment. Squats, cleans, deadlifts and the like all require a lot of coordination and for you to engage various areas of your body. Do this at the end when fatigued and watch your technique suffer. Best get them done first ay?.. For that matter, probably best to not put a LOAD of these exercises in one session. Personally I'd say 3 maximum. You can do more if you want, that's just my opinion.
 
DON'T do loads of isolation
Loads of people say “functional exercises” or “compound movements” are best, so this won’t be the first time you read this. Compund exercises are multi-joint movements that rmuscle groups in a single exercise. Isolation work can be boring, warrants slow results and often isn't addressing bigger issues. Sure, it needs doing, but it shouldn't be your main focus or use of time. Basically, it’s like painting the front door of a house that’s falling down.

DON'T plan sessions that need the entire gym to be empty
Unless you have your own private gym (you lucky sausage you!) then it’s likely there will be other folk in the gym when you train; especially if you’re training during peak hours. If you want to do a circuit style workout and increase the intensity of your workout as discussed above, make sure you plan properly. Use equipment that’s next to each other, move equipment closer to one another or better still, use the same equipment for more than one exercise. For example pair bench press and bent over row and use the same bar for both.

DON'T add variety for the sake of variety
There aren’t many things in life that are worth doing that you can master first time round. The gym is no different. Personally, I’ll squat, overhead squat, deadlift, pull up, bench press and overhead press in some form every week. I do it because they’re good exercises, I like them and I want to be better at them. Stop chopping and changing your gym work from week to week. I’m not saying “never change it” but try tweaking exercises or adding variations before you completely re-write your workouts.

DON'T neglect mobility
This is a lesson that I learned the hard way (one of many!)  Don’t neglect mobility! It might feel “boring” at times and is often the thing that gets neglected when time is tight but it’s essential if you don’t want your results to eventually plateaux and suffer. Try to incorporate some form of mobility work in every session... SOMETHING!

DON'T forget to de-load
You can’t just keep going and doing more and more – eventually your body will pack in. If you do lots of strength work, make sure that you schedule a de-loading week at some stage every 4 -6 weeks. Use it to recover, repair and come back stronger. Focus heavily on mobility and work on technique and practice areas you’re unhappy with; focus less on weight.

DON'T do the stuff above and you should have a good basis for a pretty trusty workout program.

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Monday, 10 September 2012

Reasons you're not getting any stronger



Question: Are you lifting heavier weights (with good form) than you did 6 months ago?

I’d estimate at LEAST 50% of people would answer "no"... or not significantly larger anyway. So why? What’s the point of going to the gym if you’re not going to get any better at it? How do you expect to look any different than 6 months ago if you’re doing pretty much the same as you were 6 months ago? Even if you’re not doing out and out “strength training” you should be making SOME improvements; male or female, young or old.

So here’s a few key reasons why you might not be getting any stronger...

No structure...
If your plan is to go to the gym and do strength training by adding a heavy weight and lifting it not many times, then the week after change the weight a bit and adjust the reps accordingly, then you’ll quickly plateaux. It’s essential that you have a structure to your program; something that’s tried and tested and may take some time but will offer results. Without that you’ll be working hard and getting nowhere.

No deloading...
One key element of that structure is a scheduled deloading period. Basically, every 4-6 weeks spend at least a week away from heavy lifting. Work on areas that will compliment your gym work such as mobility and technique make repair and recovery your main focus. It may pain you and seem non-logical to back off the weights when you’re trying to get stronger but it’s a long game – trust the process.

Too much variety...
If you perform squats one week, leg press the 2nd week, lunges the 3rd week and weighted step ups the 4th week, don’t be surprised in week 5 that your squat hasn’t improved. You’re not a child and you don’t need to be kept entertained; if you want a better squat then practice squatting.

Not ENOUGH variety...
No this is not a contradiction to the previous point... well, not exactly! What I mean is: If you want to improve deadlifts for instance, just banging out endless deadlifts might soon warrant slow progress or eventually stop progressing. It’s important to exercise complimentary muscle groups for this exercise. For instance, improved pulling and grip strength through pull ups, lat pull down and bent over row will all assist in your mission for a mighty deadlift.

Training alone...
This (in my opinion) isn’t the biggest downfall as it’s very possible to improve strength and train alone; but, if you feel nervous to lift near your limit without a spotter – train with a friend. If you lack motivation at times to aim for one last rep – train with a friend. If you might benefit and work harder with a little healthy competition – train with a friend. Simple, but it might be what you’re lacking.

Too Afraid to fail / Too Rep Sensitive...
In order to find out how strong you are, it’s important to find out how strong you AREN’T. If you’re aiming for a specific number of reps you shouldn’t ALWAYS get every last rep. It’s good to fail; you then know how strong you are and you instantly have a target for the near future. Don’t worry so much about your ego and always making each rep; your body doesn’t know what 5 reps is, your body knows what “can” and “can’t” is.

Poor technique / Mobility...
Most of us will have seen endless amounts of poorly performed exercises and some of us guilty of doing them ourselves – particularly when learning them for the first time. Learning the skill of a lift and performing it incorrectly is understandable, yet plenty of people limit their abilities and progress due to a lack of mobility. Don’t let something so relatively simple be your limiting factor. Include recovery and mobility work in each workout and even more during deloading periods.

Poor technique (2) “Train your body, not your ego”...
This goes back to the technique point in some ways. But, if you’re lifting weights with questionable form as the weight is too heavy for you to do so comfortably with your skill level then it’s time to take some weight off of the bar. Naily your technique and make bigger jumps in your progress. Shoot ahead and chuck on too much weight too soon and you’ll soon hit a wall. Do it now and reep the benefits later. I know it hurts, you’re not as strong as you thought you were, but do it right and you will be.

Laziness...
If you don’t have the discipline to train as often as you need to, try as hard as you need to or attempt all of the repetitions you need to then you won’t get the strength you seek. Simple!

Summary...
Improving strength is a long game – improving real strength is no overnight procedure and something that takes patience and dedication. While we might not all want strength to bend a horse shoe, we should all be aiming to better ourselves and gain strength in some capacity throughout the year.
 
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Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Failing to prepare...




When it comes to exercise and living a healthy lifestyle planning and preparation is absolutely key. Leave things to chance and the odds are you won’t achieve what you’d hoped for.
The phrase “Failing to prepare is preparing to fail.” Is an oldy but a goody. Here’s what you need to consider...
Meals...
This is probably the most common downfall with most people’s regime. “Picking up something when you’re out” is the number one NO-NO! There are minimal fast food/convenience food options with a high nutritional value. Plan ahead, cook ahead and prepare ahead. If time is an issue, cook on mass and keep food frozen or stored and ready for the week ahead.

Training...
Before every training session it’s essential to know what you have planned in terms of exercises, repetitions, tempo and rest. More crucially perhaps, it’s important to know how this fits into the bigger picture. Where do you want to be in 6 months time? In order to do that, how will you structure your program for each day, week and month in order to make progress in the direction you want.

Rest...
People are often surprised at how important quality rest is. Do you sleep 8 hours EVERY night? Uninterrupted quality sleep? In a dark, tranquil environment? Unlikely the answer to all of those is “yes”. Simple but crucial for recovery, repair and lowering cortisol levels.

Social Engagements...
So you don’t want to live in the gym and that’s fine. But, prioritising your training over social engagements or at least making time for training is essential to get results. There is always going to be a reason NOT to train: social engagements, family commitments etc but taking these options will inevitably limit results

End goals...
Plan from your end goals backwards. Decide what you want to achieve and then plan your meals and training to the finest details to get you there. Set yourself goals along the way, whether it’s specific strength targets, weight loss milestones or drops in body fat percentage, don’t get to your end date and realise "it didn’t happen". Leave nothing to chance.

So the message...
Don’t leave anything to chance. Plan all details and track progress at regular intervals in order to make sure that you’re on track for success.

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

10 Ways to Make Your Life Better... For FREE!!!


Do these things and have a better life - easy as that:

1) Exercise (it was always going to be number 1!)
Exercise more and increase self confidence, enjoy gains both aesthetically and through improving strength. Release endorphins and INSTANTLY improve mood, reduce the chance of injuries and lessen the strains and efforts of every day life. Whatever you choose to do, do SOMETHING!

2) Exercise Outdoors
Now you've chosen to exercise, do it outdoors! You get to see more of the world and not just a UV-lit gym. Increase your Vitamin D intake as a result, improve liver and kidney function while further improving your mood.

3) Sleep more
Easy right? Then do it! Allow your body repair time it deserves. Lower cortisol levels (that cheeky hormone that can encourage fat retention around the abdomen) and yet again, improve your mood!

4) Turn it up
Be more active. Take your ordinary day, REALLY assess it, realise where you're wasting time and then be more productive with your everyday life. Cut the stuff you don't need, be more proactive with the time you have and get more done in your day. Be ruthless

5)Turn it off
Remove yourself from regular life when you're resting. Take time without electronic devices and ways of communicating with others. Have some "me time". Whether it's at bed time or just taking a walk alone, separate yourself from everything and everyone from time to time. If you don't think this is practical, think about your lunch hour. Take a 40 minute walk all by yourself, come back and eat your lunch and just notice how much better and more productive you feel for a)being active and b) taking yourself away from everything

6) Get some structure
Phrases like "where has the time/year gone?" and "I don't have time to..." "I'm too busy for..." are regularly used. But... what if you had a little more structure. If you plan out your days, time is much less likely to run away with you. If you leave it to chance, the chances are it'll go wrong. Start simple: every Sunday look ahead and know exactly what you're going to eat over the next 5 days, when you're going to exercise and EXACTLY what you're going to do when you exercise. Then, just stick to that - no excuses!

7) Have a timeline - set goals
So now you have your week structured, it's time to think longer term. Why not set out a timeline for the next few years? Start with "C" and then figure out what "A+B" needs to be. IE: Write a list of everything you want to have achieved in 3 years time, then work backwards and set shorter, time sensitive goals along the way which will mean you can't FAIL to reach your target. Then, write it down and look at it... LOADS! Leave it somewhere you'll see it a lot!

8) Surround yourself with positive people
Take a good look at the people you spend most of your time with. Friends, colleagues etc. Are they positive and driven people? Do they have similar goals and beliefs and outlook on life to you? If the answer is "No" these aren't the people that will help you be the person you want to be.

9) Stretch 
Static stretching, foam rolling and dynamic movements such as those in some pilates classes are are great ways to stay not just strong, but mobile and injury free. You'll ache less, feel more flexible and it can also be a great way to relax and relieve stress.

10) Be nice to people
Just be nice to people! Smile at people, say "sorry", help others, give up some of your time and don't expect anything in return. Their life will be better as a result and so will yours. It's simple but true. Today's target: Smile at 5 strangers. Not in a "lets meet up" kinda way, just a polite "Hi, enjoy your day" way. Some people might not smile back instantly but even those miserable lot are LOVING it inside secretly!

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Saturday, 28 July 2012

Change your grip, change your life... (1)



OK, so the heading was a bit dramatic. Actually NO! Change your grip – Improve your grip – Improve your lifts – make gains faster and get stronger, better, faster! Genuinely, “change your grip, change your life.”

In some circles, mainly in the strength and conditioning and strongman world, “Grip” is a topic discussed and specifically practiced on a regular basis. Fat bars, fat gripz, towel training, plate pinch, the list goes on.

Yet in other, more mainstream circles, it’s an issue rarely factored into training.

The truth of the matter is, “Grip is key”!!! It impacts so many of your lifts and key exercises and a poor grip can seriously limit your progress. With that in mind, here are two variations for each body part to add into your workouts. When it comes to grip, variety is key – mix it up and test your grip under all forms of strains; often the trickier and more unnatural the better.

Back...
Back is one if the easiest areas to work and vary your grip. Most exercises revolve around pull work so try to think outside of the box, use different attachments and handles and test your grip. Here are two that you can try.

Lat Pull Rope
Drop the regular lat pull down bar or neutral grip, throw on the rope attachment, pull straight and try to flare out to the side at the bottom of the movement aiming to get the karabiner attachment clip as close to your neck as possible. Using a rope for any “pull” exercise will test your grip and also allow a varied motion rather than pulling along a fixed line.

VIDEO: (Exercise 7 in this video, 1 min 8 secs in) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DsXF3Ro8f8

Seated row – Single rope
Again, reach for the rope. Either perform in a similar way to the above exercise; or, try single handed with the same rope – a much bigger test of core strength and you may even uncover an unbalanced grip where one hand gives up sooner than the other.

VIDEO: (This... but with a rope attachment) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dL3_oLhO8y0

Chest...
A little trickier to add a grip element to “push” exercises; but you might be surprised what a bit of thickness on a bar will do to your grip. Here are two grip variations for your chest.

Bench Fat Bar
Benching with a fat bar is surprisingly different and more challenging. If your gym doesn’t have a thick bar (you won’t be alone), create your own. Using Fat Gripz or even wrapping the bar in cloth or small towel will make the bar firm enough to hold but much thicker.

Cable Fly – No Attachment
If you’re going to try cable flys as part of your chest work, why not take off all attachments and hold the cable an inch or so away from the end? This will mean that you have to grip tightly throughout the motion on a very small area – tougher than you’d think.

Shoulders...
There are a few options with adding a grip element to shoulder work. Obviously, for the bigger, more crucial core work such as military presses you might want to focus on strength instead, but for more of the “accessory” work and “bodybuilding” exercises there’s plenty of options.

Lat Raises using just plates
This is a simple grip and one that won’t heavily compromise weights being used. Simply hold a plate with your index finger through the centre hole and the rest of your fingers and thumb gripping the edge of the plate as best you can.

Upright Row – Pinch Grip
An alternative grip (which you can use for the lat raises too) is a pinch grip. Simply holding an object pinched between your thumb and fingers. Try it for upright row pinching a plate, or worse/better still two plates with the smooth sides faced outwards and perform the exercise slowly and controlled to reduce the chance of dropping the plates. Like this...


Out and Out Grip...
If you really want to focus on improving your grip strength, you can train it on its own. It's bes to do this at the end of a session for two reasons. a) Your grip will already be slightly fatigued so this will add to the dfficulty. B) Performing grip exercises earlier in a session will ruin your grip for other exercises later in the same session. Here's a few to try.

Plate Pinch Grip
The above pinch grip can be practiced as a standalone skill/exercise. Try holding two plates as described above, when your grip completely goes, put them down and change hands; as soon as that hand gives up, swap back. Keep this going until neither hand can grip anymore. If the plates you have aren’t suitable, try it with a dumbbell held long ways up with your fingers spread around the edge.

Farmers Walk
One of the oldest test of grip strength and still a staple of most strongman competitions is the “farmers walk”. Put simply, it’s walking along holding something heavy at arms length by your side. You can do it with anything! The thicker the grip, heavier the weights, more awkward the shape and more swinging involved the harder your task. Take short, rhythmic steps and try to maintain a tight and upright posture – gets the heart going to – not as easy as you might think!

Check this guy (excuse the outfit!) VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMN8ukHXtO8

To summarise...
Grip is KEY! It can be the make or break of a gym session. The reason you do or don’t make a final lift, and the reason that your results plateaux in some areas. Now you might not want a forearm that looks like you have a leg hanging out of your t-shirt sleeve, but a strong grip is something you most definitely DO want. Add some variety – it’ll change your life!

For LOADS of information on grip work, look at the work of Diesel Strength (@dieselstrength) and Joe De Franco -(@DeFrancosGym) his gym tour (VIDEO ) will show you just how much he loves grip work. Nothing in there is standard thickness!

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Thursday, 28 June 2012

A year older, a year wiser...


So it was my birthday last month and usual birthday card comments appeared like: "A year older, a year wiser". And it made me think... "Am I?.."
Well, the short answer is "Yes". Life's a lesson, and as I say to lots of people (particularly when it comes to exercise) "No one knows everything" and "Never stop learning."

Exercise is often a trial and error process and it can take years to form opinions or learn "what works". So I thought I'd be the nice, caring, sharing kinda guy I am and share some of the things I've learnt with regards to exercise which I wish I had learnt before I did. You may know some (all) of these already, but (another cheese-fuelled phrase I use) "If you learn one thing, it's been worth it!"

So give it a read, there's 20 something years of lessons learnt the hard way below!

Squat...
The importance of lower body work and in particular, squatting was never really communicated to me at a young age. Strange, given that I was pretty tall and also playing lots of rugby.. anyway.. I wish it had! Avoid the top-heavy physique that the majority of UK men sport, avoid the majority of knee issues caused by a weak lower body and build strength that will compliment other lifts and also encourage an improved metabolism. SQUAT!

2 back to every 1 chest...
Partly motivated by the "avoiding the crap physique that most gym goers posses" it's essential to focus not only on what you see in the mirror, but your back too.. more back than front if anything! There are loads of reasons why this is true on top of general aesthetic appearance. Read some of them here if you like on another blog I wrote: http://blog.myedo.co.uk/top-tip-take-it-back/

Strength alone is useless. Mobility is key...
Everyone's been there, some people have left; others are eternally stuck on an ego-trip where nothing and nobody can tell you otherwise. You want to lift the biggest weight you can, somehow.. ANY how. Just as long as it's lifted. In your mind, big weights make you big, stretching and mobility doesn't so that can be skipped. But, there comes a point where your lack of mobility will become a limiting factor on future strength gains. Without mobility, your strength becomes capped and ultimately, useless! Get mobile, spend time every session making sure you're mobile and if you have a rest day/recover day and have time, get mobile again! Foam roll, stretch, perform yoga/Pilates, swim, walk - be active! 

Don't do a whole day of arms!
This is a personal pet hate. You're not a body builder (probably) so stop behaving like it, or at least trying to. If you're getting just one session in on a day, don't waste it JUST on arms. Why not do a load more back work and work your arms at the same time? T-shirt bursting lats and big arms?.. Win, win! Isolation work in general is an over-focus for most people - get more bang for your buck: work the big muscle groups and ecorporate larger, compound movements.

"Bigger boys said"...
Don't just do what a big guy at the gym suggested. You have different genetics, diets, training schedules and training histories. Chances are, if they're big and made of good quality muscle, they've been training for years so their body requires a different training stimulus to someone relatively new to the gym. Even if you were similar, remember, "there's more than one way to skin a cat". There isn't ALWAYS a right and wrong way to do everything. If it works for you and you can justify it, stick with it.

Make a plan...
Even now, I like to scribble something down, even if it's on my phone, prior to every session. Without a plan you are MUCH more likely to drift around the gym and do "bits and pieces". Know before you enter the gym: the purpose of the session, what you want to achieve and how you're going to achieve it. When you get time to yourself, have a much longer structure: Why are you training, what do you want to achieve, by when and how will you do this. Get this in place and you're off to a good start!

It's easy to make things hard, it's harder to make someone better...
the amount of rugby training sessions I've been to as a youngster for pre-season fitness and been made to feel sick and left thinking "Wow that was hard"/ "Wow that was a great session". Don't always be fooled by quantity. Again, knowing what you want to achieve is essential for all sessions. You could sit on the floor, stand up, sit down, stand up over and over for half an hour and it would be hard but you wouldn't be getting better... unless your objective is to be good at sitting and standing loads! This leaks over into many group exercise classes. OK, I'm guna say it: Long duration intervals in badly designed circuits classes, body pump and the like do not get the thumbs up from me. Don't be fooled by the sweat!

Longer sessions doesn't always mean a better session...
How many times do I hear people brag "I've been here nearly 2/3 hours, I'm nearly done" and the chances are they're doing all isolation work like 2 hours of chest!?.. Firstly, you can't work hard for 2 hours so you're probably cruising or resting loads. Secondly, more is not always better. I've done it before, aged 16 my session plan was: 2 sets on every piece of equipment. Three hours later I was feeling dizzy and had made no real gains. Take a specific, and bespoke plan to each session and stick to it. Don't add things for the sake of it or join in with pals to be more sociable. Do what you gotta do! Quality NOT quantity!

Sleep...
Probably the easiest thing to improve your training is more sleep. Its free, you know how to do it, you already do it a bit, you can do it at home, you've been practising for years and doing it involves doing nothing. But still, we don't get enough. Sleep is KEY! More sleep = more rest, more alertness, more recovery/repair, more growth and more progress. Get early nights in your schedule with equal importance as your "Big bench day". I know, it's easier said than done and to be honest, one I'm still trying to nail. Always learning!

Technique is key...
It may seem boring or frustrating at first, but grind in your technique and movement patterns for any exercise before you start to train your ego... I mean body! I was very guilty of this. Find a new exercise give it a go, then start to lift weights that someone of my size/weight should attempt. Rather than weights that someone of my current CAPABILITY should use. Get technique nailed and watch your progress rocket. Skip the foundations and expect results to plataux and eventually regress as you ultimately reduce the weight to sort out your technique once you realise the errors of your ways!
Read, absorb, analyse, discard...
As exercising becomes more mainstream, more and more literature appears without much means of quality control. Heck, look at me spouting off on a blog. iImight just be making up nonsense (I'm not - but you get the idea). What I'm trying to say is, just because it's in print (even high street, "Top" magazines!) doesn't make it worthwhile. A quick way to demonstrate my point: 6 week, 6 pack routine. HELLO 99% of people! You will NEVER get a 6 pack in 6 weeks! Sure some people can, but these suggested plans are unrealistic for most! Just remember, they have a LOT of pages to fill every month, hence why so much crap makes it in. Always read and assess what you've read, double-check it with other online sources if you're ever sceptical or unsure., but don't just read and absord everything as gospel.
Is there anything YOU wish someone had told you at an earlier age before you had to learn the hard way with years of getting it wrong?... Share!

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