Not too long ago, I wrote an extensive review about Johnny Grube and his wildman philosophy in both training and in how he views the world from the way he writes. I got some heat from it especially from him from a comment he made and doing a counter write-up by going after me which I would expect from a guy like that. I'm not going to change how I feel about his over the top, psychotic and harsh rants but I do want to talk specifically about his training system.
Granted, not everyone who grew up in a blue-collar environment views the world the way this dude does but his philosophy on training is something I do have some admiration about. The way he trains is not fancy or fluff or full of BS but doing simple things and being as basic as you can get. I got into circuit training because of him and like how he makes workouts short and to the point.
Aside from his crudeness and lack of positivity, he brings up a lot of points to the training philosophy in today's world as oppose to yesteryear. Many people believe that in order to get fit, you have to train at this gym, do bodybuilding type of exercise and follow a magazine's way of working out but not everyone is cut out for that. Going to a gym can be a great thing for somebody but if you don't do the basics and be focused on the true aspects of exercise, you're not going to get the true results you're looking for. Bodyweight Training is a vast universe of exercise that relies only on yourself and Grube magnifies that philosophy. It takes guts to do hard style bodyweight training and doing kipping pull-ups and terrible looking burpees (if you really call those) aren't going to help you in the long run cause they will get you injured if you don't take care of yourself.
Grube is a strong dude, no question about it and does things on his own terms, I don't agree with almost anything he has to say but his training style is simple enough for everyone to understand once you get passed the bad spelling and all that jazz. He's in better condition than most guys half his age and he'll gladly tell you so in the most brutal ways. Do I think he's a little off his rocker, hell yeah cause for one, the way he talks about Blue-Collar life makes it sound horrible as opposed to someone like Bud Jeffries who grew up in a similar environment but chose a different path on he views the world and how to treat people. His way of training can look tedious and boring at times but overall, it gets the job done if you want to be in shape fast and continue to do so for years to come.
On a positive note, I believe in being in the best shape regardless of age and living with as less injuries as possible because let's face it, I want to play with my kids and grandkids when I'm older and sharing a fun game or teaching them about life through aspects of training to help them grow into people that this world needs. I'm not the biggest fan of push-ups but that doesn't mean I shouldn't be able to do them later in life and if it came down to it, I want to knock off as many as I can and still stay strong. I want to be in awesome shape in my 50's and beyond. I'll be 35 next month and although for older folks that's still young, it still isn't someone like in their 20's who can do a lot of things and not feel worn down. I love having great energy and part of the Wildman Training helps provide that maybe not the same intentions Grube looks for but making the most of what you have and being successful in your own life.
Johnny Grube is a brash hard ass but his style of training can turn you into a highly conditioned machine and whether we admit it or not, being in real world shape is a must regardless of your age and not to just lose weight and look like a greek god but to have something that can be useful and inspirational for others to learn for their lives.
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Monday, June 10, 2019
Let The Hammer Fall
Every now and then, I'll get the urge to take out Big Bertha (59 lb. Sledgehammer) or the 30 lb. Thor Hammer and take down the tire with everything I've got. It's one of those workouts where you just need to get some aggression out and get in cardio that you just can't get from a treadmill or an exercise bike. Not that those aren't good but they don't have that factor where it's a combination of strength building, cardiovascular conditioning, tendon strength, muscle building and anaerobic effectiveness.
Sledgehammer Workouts have been around for quite a while and are a great addition for training used by fighters, wrestlers, strongmen and other athletes. They're a tribute to the manual laborers who bust their ass day after day hitting rock, stone and other things to break down and mold or taken out so something can be built. I admire guys like that and are in awe of the natural strength they possess. Slim The Hammer Man is a perfect example of this; worked 12-14 hours a day, 6-7 days a week at a rock quarry, breaking down stone and hauling it out and doing it for decades is a true testament to what real world strength looks like in the flesh.
For training purposes, you really don't need that heavy of a hammer to get in some serious training. I like heavy hammers and use them as a test of strength endurance but the lighter hammers (15-25) will give you a cardio workout that is out of this world and build muscle you can't get from conventional lifting. There are great ways to use the hammer but the most basic exercises the swing & thrust and just the thrust down movements, after one set of repetitions, switch hand grips and repeat the number of reps.
I did a progression system where I would take a deck of cards and use those for reps, once I completed the deck, I would add weight to the hammer. Now, not all hammers allow you to put in lead shot or steel shot and they're just a regular hammer. You can go out and buy a heavier hammer or you can use the same one and see how long it takes you to finish a workout with a deck of cards; my best time with the 30 lb. Thor Hammer is 32 minutes and over 90 minutes with Big Bertha. With a lighter hammer (under 25 lb.), a full deck can be done in less than 20-25 minutes.
Now on the topic of form since there are some Form Nazis out there, certain aspects of form changes the complexion of the exercise from a more strength based to a cardio based. So, if you did a lighter hammer and just do a more thrust down style, that gives off more of the cardio effect because you're just moving the hammer up and down at a fast pace; this is more my style and it makes the workout go by faster. For the Swing & Thrust movement, you can use a heavier hammer or a lighter hammer, either way, you're using more muscles in a rotational pull and thrusting it down which may lead to less reps but more of a strength exercise. With the 59 lber, I can't go anywhere near as fast with the Swing Style but that's not the point, the swing style is not really about speed but more technique based and focused on strength. You still breathe heavily just moving that heavy sucker but it takes more strength to swing a hammer of that size.
This isn't a fancy type of workout and isn't meant to be pretty, it is basic, straight forward and full of bad ass benefits. It can aid in fat loss, build muscle fast, tendons like steel cords, grip strength that of the charts and core strength that very few can match. You'll have endurance and stamina that is very unique and strength nobody would ever mess and more. For this type of workout, if I was serious about it, wouldn't be more than 3-4 days between sessions. If you do it for a living that's one thing but for training purposes, you need to recover efficiently otherwise you can really hurt yourself so do what's possible for you without risking major injury.
Get Your Own Sledgehammer Here.
Herb Of The Day: Spartan Formula
For Sledgehammer Workouts Check Out: Monster Conditioning- Sledgehammer By Bud Jeffries
Get pumped up for this kind of training by this kick ass band.....
Sledgehammer Workouts have been around for quite a while and are a great addition for training used by fighters, wrestlers, strongmen and other athletes. They're a tribute to the manual laborers who bust their ass day after day hitting rock, stone and other things to break down and mold or taken out so something can be built. I admire guys like that and are in awe of the natural strength they possess. Slim The Hammer Man is a perfect example of this; worked 12-14 hours a day, 6-7 days a week at a rock quarry, breaking down stone and hauling it out and doing it for decades is a true testament to what real world strength looks like in the flesh.
For training purposes, you really don't need that heavy of a hammer to get in some serious training. I like heavy hammers and use them as a test of strength endurance but the lighter hammers (15-25) will give you a cardio workout that is out of this world and build muscle you can't get from conventional lifting. There are great ways to use the hammer but the most basic exercises the swing & thrust and just the thrust down movements, after one set of repetitions, switch hand grips and repeat the number of reps.
I did a progression system where I would take a deck of cards and use those for reps, once I completed the deck, I would add weight to the hammer. Now, not all hammers allow you to put in lead shot or steel shot and they're just a regular hammer. You can go out and buy a heavier hammer or you can use the same one and see how long it takes you to finish a workout with a deck of cards; my best time with the 30 lb. Thor Hammer is 32 minutes and over 90 minutes with Big Bertha. With a lighter hammer (under 25 lb.), a full deck can be done in less than 20-25 minutes.
Now on the topic of form since there are some Form Nazis out there, certain aspects of form changes the complexion of the exercise from a more strength based to a cardio based. So, if you did a lighter hammer and just do a more thrust down style, that gives off more of the cardio effect because you're just moving the hammer up and down at a fast pace; this is more my style and it makes the workout go by faster. For the Swing & Thrust movement, you can use a heavier hammer or a lighter hammer, either way, you're using more muscles in a rotational pull and thrusting it down which may lead to less reps but more of a strength exercise. With the 59 lber, I can't go anywhere near as fast with the Swing Style but that's not the point, the swing style is not really about speed but more technique based and focused on strength. You still breathe heavily just moving that heavy sucker but it takes more strength to swing a hammer of that size.
This isn't a fancy type of workout and isn't meant to be pretty, it is basic, straight forward and full of bad ass benefits. It can aid in fat loss, build muscle fast, tendons like steel cords, grip strength that of the charts and core strength that very few can match. You'll have endurance and stamina that is very unique and strength nobody would ever mess and more. For this type of workout, if I was serious about it, wouldn't be more than 3-4 days between sessions. If you do it for a living that's one thing but for training purposes, you need to recover efficiently otherwise you can really hurt yourself so do what's possible for you without risking major injury.
Get Your Own Sledgehammer Here.
Herb Of The Day: Spartan Formula
For Sledgehammer Workouts Check Out: Monster Conditioning- Sledgehammer By Bud Jeffries
Get pumped up for this kind of training by this kick ass band.....
Monday, June 3, 2019
Getting Summer Fit In A Fun Way
It's beautiful outside, time to hit the beach, soak up some sun, go for a dip and getting fit for these warm and sunny days. Getting beach ready may not be easy but it shouldn't be boring as hell either. Although it is important to be fit all year round, maybe you'd like to show off a bit, show the hard work you put into and get some heads turning. A great way to do this is by moving like a wild animal.
Animal Movements get you fit fast and with a good nutrition plan, you can make it happen. The exercises make you use your entire body as a unit and the more muscles you use in a movement, the greater chance of unwanted fat being burned and natural muscular definition comes into play. This is awesome especially for women who struggle getting weight down and want to have that tight fit body. This isn't about getting skinny, starving yourself and especially it isn't about trying to please anybody; it's about building confidence, having fun with the work you put into and having energy that is off the chain.
For us guys, it can be a struggle too but it isn't impossible. It doesn't take hours to do and certainly doesn't take isolating the muscles. Having that strong, powerful energy and magnetism is what a lot of guys want. But remember, it's not about developing tight abs, 20 inch arms or looking like a comic book character; it's about becoming athletic, strong in the places you need, conditioned to where tiring would take a long time and building muscle that is useful instead of a waste on looking pretty. I'm sorry but if you look fit and can't do jack shit on the important stuff, you're not making the real effort.
Animal Movements focus on the muscles that you normally don't use in the gym, just because you can curl good weight, doesn't mean your arms are strong enough to hold you up when needed. Bear Crawls, Crab Walks, Duck Walks, Tiger Crawls, Frog Jumps; those are what will give you the ability to use the body in the real world. Hitting the iron can do wonders no question but a 500 lb squat won't help you sprint or swim a lap without tiring. This is a different kind of strength training & conditioning and you can take it just about anywhere. What would it feel like to you to swim for extended periods of time, have less chances of getting injured and have muscle that actually means something?
For men, it develops natural muscle mass and strengthen your core, your ligaments and have a profound impact on your joints; for women, it develops a sleek and powerful body without bulking up or putting on unwanted weight, shaves fat off your tummy and lift your butt (Duck Walks, Frog Jumps, Lunges and Donkey Kicks develop a great butt), gives you real world cardio that you can't get from a treadmill and energy that just screams badass.
Crawl, Jump, Balance and sprint your way to being in the best shape of your life and the more you get into it, the more addicting it becomes. It doesn't feel like a workout, just playing. How long do you do it for? That depends on your goals and what you want out of it. Time wise, you don't need more than 30 minutes a few times a week, 4 times a week would be only 2 hours of real training, imagine how much time you'll be saving and being around the people you love, getting tasks done in the day and having fun. For beginners, 5-10 minutes is a great start and if your body can't do that yet, start with one minute and build from there.
Get your hands on the book Animal Workouts: Animal Movement Based Bodyweight Training For Everyone and get into the exercises slowly, do too much too early, it could hurt you so go at your own pace. You can also pick up, Animal Moves: How to Move Like an Animal to Get You Leaner, Fitter, Stronger and Healthier for Life for another variety of exercises that are fun, challenging and more structured.
Lost Empire Herb Of The Day: Hercules Pre-Workout Formula
Animal Movements get you fit fast and with a good nutrition plan, you can make it happen. The exercises make you use your entire body as a unit and the more muscles you use in a movement, the greater chance of unwanted fat being burned and natural muscular definition comes into play. This is awesome especially for women who struggle getting weight down and want to have that tight fit body. This isn't about getting skinny, starving yourself and especially it isn't about trying to please anybody; it's about building confidence, having fun with the work you put into and having energy that is off the chain.
For us guys, it can be a struggle too but it isn't impossible. It doesn't take hours to do and certainly doesn't take isolating the muscles. Having that strong, powerful energy and magnetism is what a lot of guys want. But remember, it's not about developing tight abs, 20 inch arms or looking like a comic book character; it's about becoming athletic, strong in the places you need, conditioned to where tiring would take a long time and building muscle that is useful instead of a waste on looking pretty. I'm sorry but if you look fit and can't do jack shit on the important stuff, you're not making the real effort.
Animal Movements focus on the muscles that you normally don't use in the gym, just because you can curl good weight, doesn't mean your arms are strong enough to hold you up when needed. Bear Crawls, Crab Walks, Duck Walks, Tiger Crawls, Frog Jumps; those are what will give you the ability to use the body in the real world. Hitting the iron can do wonders no question but a 500 lb squat won't help you sprint or swim a lap without tiring. This is a different kind of strength training & conditioning and you can take it just about anywhere. What would it feel like to you to swim for extended periods of time, have less chances of getting injured and have muscle that actually means something?
For men, it develops natural muscle mass and strengthen your core, your ligaments and have a profound impact on your joints; for women, it develops a sleek and powerful body without bulking up or putting on unwanted weight, shaves fat off your tummy and lift your butt (Duck Walks, Frog Jumps, Lunges and Donkey Kicks develop a great butt), gives you real world cardio that you can't get from a treadmill and energy that just screams badass.
Crawl, Jump, Balance and sprint your way to being in the best shape of your life and the more you get into it, the more addicting it becomes. It doesn't feel like a workout, just playing. How long do you do it for? That depends on your goals and what you want out of it. Time wise, you don't need more than 30 minutes a few times a week, 4 times a week would be only 2 hours of real training, imagine how much time you'll be saving and being around the people you love, getting tasks done in the day and having fun. For beginners, 5-10 minutes is a great start and if your body can't do that yet, start with one minute and build from there.
Get your hands on the book Animal Workouts: Animal Movement Based Bodyweight Training For Everyone and get into the exercises slowly, do too much too early, it could hurt you so go at your own pace. You can also pick up, Animal Moves: How to Move Like an Animal to Get You Leaner, Fitter, Stronger and Healthier for Life for another variety of exercises that are fun, challenging and more structured.
Lost Empire Herb Of The Day: Hercules Pre-Workout Formula
Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Free Circuit Training Workouts
If you research hard enough, you can find places where you can get workout ideas not only for free but without any agenda behind it. Darebee is one of those places that offer free workouts, nutrition plans, 30-90 day programs that consist of workouts to keep you fit whether a beginner or an advanced athlete. Circuit Training is a style of fitness that consists of a specific number of exercises one after another with no rest until that set of exercises is complete. It takes on more of conditioning purposes but Darebee has workouts that attain attributes to specific goals whether it's strength building, developing muscular definition, flexibility, agility, cardio and more.
I use to do a lot of the workouts from this place and some of them are pretty tough once you get into more sets. I did one yesterday that wasn't too tough but didn't want to risk overloading my body by going at a fast rate so I paced myself but still got through each circuit without stopping and recovered doing their allotted time of 2 minutes between circuits. These workouts do have some cool themes that appeal to pop culture and films, cartoons, military, martial arts and athletic conditioning. This is great for people who can't afford a gym or want to save money and not buy equipment, can be done anywhere and any time. It is non-profit and only ask for donations to keep making the workouts and provide them for everyone.
All their workouts and programs don't cost you anything but if you want the workouts in book form, you can buy them at Amazon for a stupid cheap price and each book covers dozens upon dozens of workouts. For all the books, you can have a lifetime of choices to choose from and all it does is cover costs for the website, that's it. If you want to just stick to the free form, you can download the workouts on the website to your phone, ipad, laptop or whatever and take them with you anywhere you go.
The exercises are as basic as you can get but as a method to the madness, they have workouts and rep schemes that can even fear some of the best athletes and fitness enthusiasts around. They can help you get in shape for competition, they can help pass the time on a lunch break at work, they can provide a challenge for the crazy fitness nut and don't take more than 45 minutes to complete a whole workout. If you're in crazy shape, you can recover in less time and cut the workout down to 10-30 minutes. One program even has you only doing a total of 5 minutes. Each workout provides illustrations of the exercises, specific reps, choices for rest time and levels of fitness. Some workouts only have 3 sets, others have 5, many have 7 and the most murderous workouts have 10 sets. Each level of sets correspond with your way of finding out how fit you are.
These are fun, challenging and exciting workouts that just about anybody can do. However, not everyone can handle some workouts as they're so tough, if you're not there yet, it can put you at risk for injury so find workouts that are suitable to your goals. They provide warnings on which ones are suitable for anyone and ones that are for the big dogs and want a challenge.
One of my favorite workouts to do was the Batcave Friendly Workout where you do up to 10 circuits that have 9 exercises that even the Dark Knight would be proud of. My shortest time is around 30-35 minutes for the whole workout. You will sweat, you might end up cussing up a storm and it gets you in top condition fast.
Get fit at home, in your hotel room, at a park, at the beach, anywhere that has enough space to do the exercises. Don't try to do Level 3 all the time, give yourself time to recover from certain workouts, cut down levels so you don't overdo it, rest in the time you need to get the most out of the next circuit, use some workouts as a finisher to your current program, some workouts are for recovery purposes so use them on some days and challenge yourself every now and then. If you want a challenge and take your cardio to a whole other level, do 10 sets of the workout below even though it says 7. Believe me, even I'm scared to take this on but one day it'll happen. This is cardiovascular conditioning at its finest and wll challenge even world-class athletes. All together if you did 10 sets it'll be 400 Push-ups, 400 Squats, 400 Punches & 400 Lunges.
Monday, May 27, 2019
The After Effects Of Bridging Exercise
For nearly 14 years off and on, I've done bridging exercises and experienced different benefits and what it felt like afterwards. Some variations are better than others and the basic ones seem to work the best. The gymnastic bridge to me is one of the greatest isometric exercises in existence because it's much more than just a skill; it is a gateway to understanding strength & flexibility on a whole other level and learning the ideals of what a meditative exercise can really be. However, it isn't what gave me the most blissful moments after holding the exercise. That belongs to the Back Bridge or in other words Nose To Mat Bridge with Feet Flat and Hands Off The Ground.
Lately I've slowly been getting back to bridging at night before bed because when I'm done after holding the Front Bridge & Back Bridge for 3 minutes each, I experience something I don't get from any other form of exercise (Isometric or Dynamic). When I lay back down after coming out of the bridge, it feels like time has stopped, i'm in a complete relaxed state, my mind doesn't wander and I feel completely at peace. Maybe it's the effects from stretching in that position or feeling comfortable with deep breathing added in but the very moment I come out of it, that's where the meditation really begins and nothing feels forced or dragged out, but blissful and letting my entire being just be.
Bridging goes beyond just holding a position and stretching the body out, it's more than just strengthening muscles and ligaments, it's well beyond the norm for meditative practice in this day and age, it's a state of tapping into yourself that is unique and having peaceful moments where nothing else matters but being completely present. It's concentrated on the here and now without much effort and letting everything flow. I don't think, I don't feel about holding onto anything and my body feels amazing.
Now, does this have an effect on others? Well that's hard to say because not everyone can bridge, not because they don't want to but because they're not meant to but that's a small amount of the population. Most are afraid of the bridge and what they've been told what it'll do negatively. Most people who have given bridging a bad rap is mainly for two reasons; one, it didn't work for them so why should it work for anyone else and two, they never actually practiced it but seem to think what it does from an outside source and give people a reason not to do it and do something else instead. I do believe in safety and learning that if there's something going on and it doesn't feel right, you shouldn't do it. Listen to your intuition and listen to your body. Yes for some people bridging is a no go due to injuries in the spine, spurs in the neck, torn cartilage that never healed and you're disabled from the neck down but the majority can learn to bridge but it does take serious progression and it's not something to be rushed or taken lightly.
It took me weeks to get my nose down to the mat when I first started and my longest bridge hold after that was less than 3 minutes. After a period, I held a nose to mat bridge for more than 7 minutes and that was more than enough. 3 minutes is my average time and I don't go any further than that. It's not an easy exercise but it has benefits many cannot grasp. I've been told time and time again that i'll break my neck, cripple my spine and when I get older my body will feel like crap but yet I'm still here, moving around, still doing things I love and keeping an eye on staying flexible, strong and agile as ever. I have had a back injury but not from bridging, it came from doing something stupid which I still feel today but it's more just tension in specific areas of my back now than what it was when it happened. If I didn't have a strong neck and back in the first place, this injury could've been much worse and more crippling, I do feel blessed that it isn't and it has kept me from needing a brace and not being able to get out of bed.
Like I have said before, it goes beyond just an exercise, it can be a lifesaver and keep you from getting hurt worse if you weren't in shape. For more info on this form of exercise and strengthening the body in a unique manner, check out Logan Christopher's Advanced Bridging Course where you'll learn more than just holds, you'll learn to move your body in positions most can't comprehend and develop strength and flexibility that is beyond the norm. Become a master of the bridge and you'll be taking steps into a much larger world.
Lost Empire Product Of The Day: Horny Goat Weed
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