Friday, October 8, 2021

Hammer And Slam Ball Tag Team With A Kettlebell As An Enforcer

The Road Warriors, the Rock And Roll Express, Edge & Christian, the Steiner Brothers and lets not forget the Minnesota Wrecking Crew (Ole & Gene Anderson); all incredible legendary tag teams in Pro Wrestling. The strength, the agility, the athleticism, the power and whether you loved them or hated them, they got your attention when they came into the ring. A great tag team were two people who had chemistry and flowed with each other to create an impact on opponents and captivate people's imagination. 

Some tag teams had an enforcer but for the most part, the team alone were more than enough. When there was an enforcer, it was someone to keep them in check or get that extra pop with the crowd to get more out of the match and end it with great importance or as a set up for the next event. Now, what the hell does this have to do with exercise? Good question, here's your answer.....A lot of my workouts are based on conditioning and tackling areas of strength, agility, muscular endurance and cardio all at once if possible. Using Supersets to really dig into the nitty gritty of physical work (If it were 4 exercises, in pro wrestling analogy that would be a stable) and just put as much as possible into that kind of training.

I mainly like to use Sandbells, Step Ups, Bear Crawls & Cables for Superset Training but the other day, I wanted to try something different that I've never done before and that's mixing Hammer Work with a Slam Ball. What I ended with was SEVEN + MINUTES OF HELL!!!! On top of that monstrosity of a workout, I added a couple exercises with the Darth Vader Kettlebell as a god damn finisher. I must be out of my damn mind to do something like that. Am I crazy? Most likely. Shit man, I was breathing so hard it made Sprints feel easier. Micro Workouts can be very demanding if you can figure out the right intensity. 

Doing about 10-11 Rounds of the Superset & 10 Presses/10 Swings with the kettlebell, that was more than enough for me for the day and did it with practically no rest. It was brutal but that isn't a workout I want to attempt again for a while. The hammer was my 25 lb Tactical Sledge and the Ball was a 20 lb Death Star Slam Ball. The objective was to do 10 Sledge Strikes (5 each side) and slam the ball 5 times, continually repeating that as many times as you can. 

Just because a workout is super short, doesn't mean it isn't an ass kicker. You will breathe hard like crazy and it's a hell of a testosterone booster along with building natural HGH. Who needs steroids when you can train like this? For real though, there's really no need to juice up when there are better alternatives to strengthening your manhood so to speak. Train with intent to kick ass at many things and make the most of what you have even it's just you and no other form of equipment. 


 

Thursday, October 7, 2021

Relaxation Lovers Rejoice

Fall is in the air, and maybe you’re in a climate where that gentle, chilly breeze is starting to fill the air. Lost Empire Herbs has an herb known to make people feel cool and calm on the inside as well. It’s one of their most powerful tinctures for stress and it’s now back in stock

Ashwagandha, known as Indian Ginseng, has been the go-to for lowering cortisol (the stress hormone) and increasing relaxation for the people in India for thousands of years.  

Studies on the herb have shown it can reduce cortisol levels by up to 26% in humans!

Not only that, it has also been shown to......


·       Increase memory and focus so you can master skills quicker.


·       Faster reaction time to help you flow through activities without hesitation.


·       Promotes anti-aging activity for a youthful appearance.


·       An easier time falling asleep and higher sleep quality.


·       Supports testosterone and sperm health in men.


·       Can help with Thyroid issues, especially in women.


·       Shown to increase endurance, strength and muscle mass.


This Ashwagandha Tincture is anything but average. It’s biodynamically farmed which allows for the highest quality roots and most nutrients to start the process. 


It is cultivate it right on a farm in Oregon, making it the only commercially available Ashwagandha in the United States. How much Ashwagandha you consume is largely up to you, but many studies use a dose of 300-500 mg. Lost Empire recommends you experiment until you maximize its effects.



Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Hammers And Anger Management


Every now and then, we need to blow off steam and just let loose. Sometimes we get carried away because anger can consume us and take over our emotions. Anger can be a very powerful emotion that at times can blur the lines between reality and what we think we're angry about. Many times, it's just in our heads and need to get it out of our system but in a productive way. There's no need to hurt someone or hurt yourself, that's just bad ju-ju magumbo.

We would vent about our anger by going on social media and tell everyone why we're angry especially about how society is run today. Other forms of getting rid of anger is talking to someone you trust, going to therapy, get drunk, eat a bunch of food till you're in a coma, watch funny movies, read a good book and than there's exercise. Exercise is a very productive form of anger management because it gives you something to do, it channels your energy and focuses on a task that requires skill, coordination, sometimes speed and velocity and we'll work it until that emotion leaves our system.

Have you ever heard the quote by Yoda on Fear? here's a recap....."Fear is a path to the dark side, fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to suffering." When we are led to anger, it can put us down a path that would be very difficult to come back from and for some people, it has consumed them so much that anger and the path that unlocks that door closes behind them and the key is thrown out never to be seen again. Like I said before, sometimes we just need to blow off steam, so where's the true nature of anger and it's destruction to a person's path? If we let anger consume us to a breaking point, we suffer for it and others around us suffer it as well.

Exercising with Hammers can be very beneficial to a certain extent. It's not a 100% cure for anger issues just like there's no cure for the common cold but we can learn how to channel it to our advantage and not do damage to ourselves or others. No you won't be 100% immune to an injury with exercise but with the right training, you can prevent injury as much as possible and still become strong and resilient. Hammers are a great tool because when you hit a tire, it becomes more than a tire, it becomes something you are doing battle with and productively battling your own demons. In reality, a tire is just a tire to use as target practice but in your imagination it's something else.

There are workouts with hammers I have done where at the start, I would just want to go off like a loose cannon but the more I got into it, the more it became meditative and focusing on my breathing while forming as good of a technique as possible because one screw up and you can have issues for a while. That's the beauty with training, you can have all the emotions you want or feel so many things but if you can't channel an exercise to the degree that you can't pay attention to what you're doing, you can get hurt. Regardless of what I'm feeling, when I swing or thrust down a hammer, I would go until the pump in my arms or the tension becomes something I need a break from. Walk it off and breathe and than go again till I'm done.

Depending on your strength and conditioning, if you need to blow off steam and use the hammer and tire, I would recommend a light hammer (no more than 25 lbs) because if its too heavy and you can barely handle it, if you are in that angry state and trying to handle an object too great for your britches, you might end up with broken toes or horrible back and shoulder pain. With a lighter hammer, you can use it for speed and velocity as you go to town on that tire. 

Is it a boss you hate? A co-worker that rubs you the wrong way? Having a bad day? Can't stand how society is and just want to slap everyone upside the head? Channel that anger and make it productive in a positive way because being negative about it over a period of time will be less valuable to everyone. There are times where we are angry and we don't know why but we don't want to keep it in our system. Every time I go out there and smack a tire with Big Barry (my Giants Hammer), I always come out feeling better, less tense and have an overwhelming sense of calm and tranquility. What's your idea of handling Anger in a positive way? 



Friday, October 1, 2021

Bud Jeffries And Hammer Training


 When it comes to variety and testing as many things as possible, nobody takes it to such lengths as Bud Jeffries does. He's not just a machine, he's a modern barbarian that makes most fitness gurus run out of their shorts. You want to talk about ridiculous strength, that's just a compliment compared to the real amount Bud has acquired. Whether you watch him or have trained alongside him, there's no doubt on this planet that you can get stronger and more conditioned from just the vibes you pick up on him. 

It brings me back to training with him before my wedding and we did a hammer workout together using Big Bertha (who was 59 lbs. at the time) and we would rep out on the tire and just explode with velocity and power on that tire. Off and on since then, hammers have been one of the most awesome tools I've used to not just get a workout in but also use as a form of therapy or something to really test my strength and endurance. 

Every once in a blue moon, I'll do a 1000 rep workout with either hammers or step ups or whatever I'm doing using a deck of cards. It does get boring after a while if you've done enough workouts with that many reps so now when I do my deck workout, I just do as many cards as possible and try variations such as with the sledgehammers and that is inspired by Bud. Sometimes just doing one variation can be great if you want to master it but why not do other variations in order to work other muscles and work your brain in other ways? Being in pretty good shape, even with hammer workouts, I don't get as sore as much and I love that. I've also learned to recover better when I do high rep workouts with hammers because the heavier the hammer, the more you need to be aware and handling variations that won't cause an injury but with a lighter hammer, you don't want to compromise form as you speed up on the exercise and get injured that way either, there needs to be a balance.

I've never used gloves with hammer workouts and I found out the hard way which style of hammers breaks skin more than others. The ten pounder I have that use for speed and velocity along with technique practice actually tore up my hands more than the 25 lber I have or even the 73 lber because the 10 has a handle that edges almost rectangularly as opposed to the circular style handle. Depending on the variation, gloves might be more appropriate and you don't want to be tearing up skin and have to recover from it for a week or 2. With a circular handle, I literally never have to worry about any skin breaking or start to rip. 

There are plenty of people to learn from but I always found Bud to put things in not just simple terms but using analogies and references that make training sound interesting and captivating. When you listen to him, he talks as if you were there and he's being himself while at the same time showing you how to handle things without getting hurt or compromising your body's ability to withstand the blows of a workout. He's one of the few people that make training fun to do while developing strength you didn't think you had in you. His hammer style is crazy but it's explosive and shows what strength and power is all about and how it carries over to other areas of training. 

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Mimicking Blue Collar Vs Actual Blue Collar

 While I was walking to and from Hill Sprint Training this morning, I started thinking about the differences between mimicking blue collar work as opposed to actual blue collar work and where they lie in the reference of strength and conditioning. From a general stand point, blue collar people (construction, tradesmen, rock breakers ect.) are very strong and are amazing at what they do. Going sometimes 14 hours a day is grueling and just flat out nuts. I admire people who are willing to put themselves though that day in and day out.

Mimicking Blue Collar is very different but there's a reason for that. It's not necessarily to mock those who work blue collar as a profession, it's the idea or the imagery of what it's like to bust your ass and understand the meaning of functional movement. I do mimic blue collar because I prefer that over the gym and it's satisfying in some ways like the Sledgehammer Training, farmer's walk with a heavy kettlebell, carrying a heavy sandbell or whatever movements that work the muscles and tendons in a fuller adaptation versus the bench press or using machines.

Now although I do like to mimic, I also have worked on projects that were actually fun (but also tiring AF) and it gave me a chance to help out someone or work with people to get some side money. Helped out a family friend on a job that surrounded the 18th hole of Pebble Beach in Carmel, CA, dug out a walk way on a hill at my ex-uncle's house, moved furniture countless times and hauled kayaks and canoes a time or two and other stuff so I don't just mimic. For me, I train blue collar type movements so when I'm needed, I'd be there and have the strength and endurance to help. 

For the most part, I didn't grow up in a blue collar environment like others have and that isn't necessarily a bad thing, it was just different, plus dealing with things in certain times of my life where I had to learn how to balance out using both my arms or just both sides of my body instead of just using my left from the meningitis. I also had to learn things differently that would be hard to explain to someone who can pick up on things at a faster rate or understand things from a general perspective. My way of learning and working was difficult and figuring out specifics and having to learn that it isn't always a straight shot or this and that, I have to zig zag around things in order to understand them, it's just the way it is.

I've always admired Blue Collar workers, hell my friends worked blue collar jobs before they became successful in their own businesses, one was a musician. My wife's family comes from multi-generations of Blue Collar Workers (Loggers) and her grandfather once owned a Logging company. They're incredible at what they do, that's from a general point of view but on a personal level, some blue collar guys I've been around were some of the nicest and coolest guys to hang out with, shooting the breeze and arm wrestling and laughing it up while others I've talked to were and still are complete assholes and think they're hot shit when in reality they're just another human being trying to make his way in the world. 

I believe in training to be useful, that's what I learned from guys like Bud Jeffries, Erwan LeCorre, Logan Christopher, Tyler Bramlett, Zass and many others. Whether in a profession or just doing side projects, if you have the ability to help people and it gives you a chance to use your strength in ways that isn't from typical fitness, that's what makes it satisfying. There's also nothing wrong with smashing shit up like taking a sledgehammer and breaking down a wall, I love shit like that.