Thursday, April 2, 2026

The Clothes I Wear Whether I'm Training Or Not




For many, many years, the clothes I would wear always had a similar pattern: T-Shirt, Shorts and Athletic Shoes. It never really changes unless it's some kind of occasion. I don't even really wear Jeans anymore because it was always frustrating to find ones that fit. My waist was ok and I could fit into them but when it came to my thighs, they always seemed like they were going to rip the fabric. 

Sure I wear sweats from time to time like anybody else and I have the two pair of pants that I wore for my wedding being Han Solo & Indiana Jones. They weren't very comfortable but I did what I could do and I can still fit into them even after losing more than 30 lbs since then. 

Basketball and regular type shorts were my thing ever since I was a kid, they made me move around better and I felt comfortable. Dressing like a Californian or someone who looks like he's dressed for summer almost all year round can give you some looks here and there especially if you live in places like Idaho where it's not always ideal to wear shorts in the winter time but with me it happened often.

The sizes of my clothes have varied over the years but these days, I usually wear XL T-Shirts (2XL depending on the elasticity of the fabric) XL shorts where ones don't compress my legs and 2XL Boxers. The boxers were always weird with me for as long as I can remember. I have to wear elastic or stretchy type Boxer Shorts because like with the Jeans, my waist would fit synergistically but not my thighs and hamstrings. Some Boxers I had to get rid of because my legs would be compressed and they feel as if they're being choked or squeezed. When I was 275, I could wear 2XL and be fine. Now, at around 230 (last I checked was just below 229) I still have to wear 2XL Boxers because of those damn Tree Trunk California Redwood Thighs I have. I went to the store recently and bought some XL with the fabric I like and tried them on. They're great in the waist and fit perfectly but my legs still feel some compression, not as bad as they would've been but Fucking A man LOL.

I did used to wear 3XL shirts at one point in my life and I hated having that big of a shirt. When the weight came down and dropping a size or two, I was happy with it. The last time I wore 3XL was maybe 7-8 years ago when I was at my heaviest but I also wore them in my late teens and around 20 cause I got up to 255-260 when I was weight training more frequent and had an idea of going into Drug Free Powerlifting. The smallest size I ever wore comfortably in the last 22-23 years has been a Large at best. At almost 42, being in the best condition and having a better physique since I turned 40, wearing a XL the majority of the time is good for me. Depending on the fabric and elasticity sometimes wearing a 2XL helps and it just makes me look like a linebacker.

When it comes to my workouts, I just wear my street clothes. I never really got into the Gym Clothes thing, I let the Guys who're gym rats have that. Most of the T-Shirts I wear (if you haven't seen my videos) are usually ones with Superheroes, Viking, Metal/Rock, Wrestling or at times just plain White or a long sleeve with a 2XL shirt over it. If I were to wear a Large shirt, those are usually the "Muscle Shirts" where some show more of my physique which my wife likes and people tell me I look like a Bouncer in them. I don't do it all the time but its fun when it's called upon. 

In the last 3 years or so I started wearing Do Rags instead of usual beanies or baseball hats. I still wear them sometimes but Do Rags I enjoy wearing. My late Step-Dad In law wore them and I got along with him good since we were both into comics and Superheroes so I wear them in his memory. Designs of Fire, Skull & Bones, Raiders, Plain Blue or Orange and others. I probably have about 20 or more of these things. They're light, comfortable and I get a kick out of many of the Designs. Wish they had one of the San Francisco Giants. That would be awesome. 

With the way fitness goes sometimes, it's not always easy to find clothes that fit but, you do what you can and find things that suit who you are. Be amazingly awesome. Shoot me a comment or use the contact form. Be respectful and looking forward to hearing from you.  

A Psychotic Twist On The Dopa Band Deck Of Cards Workout

On Tuesday, I wanted to push a bit and did my 1000 Rep Circuit of 5 Exercises....

Chest Flys

Wave Pulls

Butterfly Power Squats

Ski Jumps

Propellers

10 Reps each for 20 Rounds. Sometimes you have those days where you want to make things interesting and do what's possible in the moment. The high afterwards was indescribable. The sweat coming down like Niagara Falls and the workout itself was fun but a good challenge. Yesterday however; I thought about what I wanted to do, my goal was to get at least in 500 reps with the band. Maybe a circuit or deck of cards style.

Before I even set up the strap and the band, I was reading NO GAS, NO RUN: The Guide to Catch Wrestling Conditioning, Combat Science, and Building the Engine on my Kindle and I'm on the chapter about Karl Gotch's Bible which is also called The Deck Of Cards Protocol. I was reading through it and within maybe a couple paragraphs, that's what I wanted to do. At least from a certain point of view (as Obi-Wan Kenobi would say) with the band.

In the chapter, I will say that it refers to giving the options of picking 2 upper body and 2 lower body exercises (For Karl it was usually Push-Ups & Squats which anybody worthy of training should learn) and gave out the spreadsheet of what goes with each suit and all that. The one that had a lightbulb go off in my head was when he (or Jake at least) talked about the Jokers and do the upper and lower body exercises within that card. This is where I wanted to make it a challenge for myself.

So normally, I do the 5 exercises, numbered cards stood as is, face cards were 10 reps, Aces were 16 and Jokers were 50 reps of the Propeller Exercise. Sometimes I would do 1 Full Deck but if I'm feeling really ambitious, I'll do the deck twice in a row for 1000 Total Reps. I decided to put a twist on the script so do speak and get to do less than if I wanted to do it twice in a row but do way more than 500 for a Full Deck once. So here was my brainstorming idea (and those of you who have the Dopa Bands or thinking about getting one, this is borderline psychotic and a heel of a challenge)......

I would do the 2 upper body and 2 Lower Body exercises but like I read in the book, I doubled the reps for the lower body exercises and keep the upper body numbers as is. The Jokers however, were a bit nuts to think about and I find it gives that blend of what I would normally do and amp it up a bit. So instead of just doing the Propellers, I added the two upper body exercises as well. Here's what my protocol came out to be. 

Hearts were Chest Flys, Diamonds were Wave Pulls, Spades were Hook Under The Arms Squats, Clubs were Ski Jumps and Wild was Propellers, Chest Flys & Wave Pulls.

2-10 As Is

Face Cards Are 10

Aces Are 16

Jokers Are 50/25/25

So say you flip a 9 of hearts, you would do 9 Reps of the Chest Fly, flip a face card of the Squats, it would be 20 reps. The Jokers, do 50 Propellers, 25 Chest Flys and 25 Wave Pulls. Fairly simple once you understand the concept. The only rest is flipping the next card or possibly adjusting the band since the knots may have a tendency to slide out. 

When you count the total number of reps for a Full Deck, it comes out to 800. In this specific workout I did, I misread an Ace card and thought it was Chest Flys but it was Diamonds, sometimes that happens when your brain and body are going at a pace. Ended up doing that card twice so my total came out to 816 reps LOL. A simple mistake made the workout slightly harder which isn't a bad thing. I got a kick out of it and took it in stride. This is just an idea of what you can do with the Bands, you can pick whatever exercises you want to do that suits your current goals or conditioning for your sport. 

It has been said before and it will be said again....Doing a Deck Of Cards Workout isn't just about a few exercises chosen at random times, it's a teacher to help you learn to expect the unexpected. Not everything in life is going to go according to plan because if you're always expecting a plan to come to fruition, there can be a curveball thrown your way and it throws off the entire process. You plan the same exercises, the same order, same rest periods and same amount of time (roughly). For many, it's an order of things, using what is too comfortable even though you're getting a workout in. With the Deck, that shit goes out the motherfucking window. You can do a series of cards where it can go back and forth between upper and lower body, get more of one or the other in a series or you may find the the Wild cards in the middle or towards the end and you're already exhausted and have to do the hardest one. You never know what will come next so you must be ready at all times.

The world isn't scripted like in the movies, not everything is going to flow and have the ending that most likely is expected to happen, it gets messy, out of order and chaotic often times but it's important to be ready for when those things come about and do what you can to get through them. It's that discipline and toughness to withstand what could come out of nowhere and power through it with a fucking vengeance. 

Get your hands on some Bands and test out this workout yourself, or you could do Bodyweight, your pick, your workout. The Band is a tool like anything else, what you do with it will make the difference in how you go forward with your goals and aspirations. Go to Dopamineo.com and get one of the most premier resistance bands in the world, use the code POWERANDMIGHT at checkout. Used by Olympic Athletes, MMA Champions, Youth Programs, The Military, Law Enforcement, Seniors and many more. When you add these to your arsenal, you will discover a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural. Be amazingly awesome. 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Hindu Squats: An Ancient Conditioning Exercise Worthy Of Learning

 


How's it going everyone? Hopefully you're having a great Sunday. A couple of my 500-rep circuits with the band recently has had at least one addition to the training, after completing the exercises with the Dopa Band,  I would drop it and switch to straight Hindu Squats for sixty brutal seconds. Legs burning, heart hammering, and it made me remember that this isn’t some trendy bodyweight hack. This is pure, time-tested might straight from the akharas of old India. If you’re chasing conditioning that actually lasts, Hindu Squats deserve a permanent spot in your arsenal. They build legs like tree trunks, lungs that never quit, and a mental edge that turns pain into power. Round after round, doesn't get easier, just more interesting.

Let’s travel back in time together shall we? To a time where the Great Gama, the Lion of Punjab, wasn’t just a wrestler, he was a legend who went undefeated his entire career. How? The man hammered out up to 5,000 Hindu squats and 3,000 push-ups every single day before breakfast (As the legend goes). No fancy gym. No machines. Just dusty earth, his own bodyweight, and unbreakable discipline in those traditional wrestling pits. Pehlwans in the akharas trained the same way for generations: bethaks (their name for these deep, explosive squats) to forge the kind of lower-body endurance that let them grapple for hours without gassing. Gama stood 5’7” and weighed 260 pounds of dense, functional muscle. He didn’t look “shredded” for Instagram, nor did he look like some meathead like the Liver King, he looked like he could run through a wall and keep going. That’s the historical blueprint. Real strength isn’t trendy; it’s ancient.


From a conditioning standpoint, Hindu Squats are straight fire. Unlike regular barbell squats that lock you into a fixed path, these bad boys are dynamic. You sink deep, heels lift, arms swing back for momentum, then explode up onto your toes. Quads, calves, ankles, and hips all get hammered in one fluid motion. Do them for high reps—hundreds, not sets of ten—and your heart rate skyrockets into cardio territory without ever stepping on a treadmill. Balance, coordination, and mobility improve fast because you’re training a full ROM your body was built for. Knees stay healthy when you control the descent. No equipment, just you vs. gravity. It’s old-school volume that builds the kind of stamina modern gym rats chase with fancy apps and still never find. If you do have certain issues like with ankle flexibility or can't go all the way down to touch your heels with your glutes, go as low as you can and work with that. 

Here’s something inspirational, straight from the heart: Hindu Squats teach you that true power comes from within. You’re not just moving weight—you’re creating the same unbreakable spirit as Gama. Look into your mind's eye. You’re twenty minutes in, thighs screaming, and instead of quitting you smile because you feel the shift. That’s the moment you level up. It’s like going Super Saiyan—raw energy exploding from the inside out. Or healing like Wolverine after a beatdown: battered but coming back stronger every time. No shortcuts (though my Dopa Bands make a killer addition). Just consistent, gritty work that turns average into legendary.

So ditch the bullshit. Start with a few sets of 10-20 a day. Build up to 500 (either in a row, in sets or use a deck of cards). Feel your legs wake up, your lungs expand, your mind sharpen. Ancient warriors knew the secret. Modern conditioning proves it still works. You’ve got the blood of conquerors in your veins, now go fucking earn it.

Keep killing it. Be amazingly awesome and do your Squats.

Shoot me a comment or use the contact form and let me on your training and how you're doing. Looking forward to hearing from you. If you would also like to add me to your social media, here's my LINKTREE where it has all my socials. 


Edit......


Here's a great comment I received on Facebook that was very inspiring. Sometime after I posted it. Thank you very much to the person who said this. Well appreciated.



Saturday, March 28, 2026

Step Ups Used As A Recovery Tool???

 The last couple days, doing 100's of squats for the first time in a while with the recent addition to Hindu Squats with my band training has been an experience. Some soreness but not enough to question things and kill progress. The first day, my band circuit included 100 total squats with the 10 rounds of 1 Min Hindu Squats, next day, just did upper body mostly with the band and did the Hindu Squats for the lower body. Still intense AF.

Feeling the soreness in my thighs and low back, I wanted to see what Step Ups would do after taking time to research some things, so last night, I did 500 Step Ups before going to bed and took a cold shower afterwards. Not only did I feel great but I woke up today with hardly any soreness at all, like I recovered pretty damn fast like Wolverine or something. This got me into researching even more about Step Ups being not just a great leg workout but even a recovery tool from doing lots of squats. 

In my research, I was learning because of moving unilaterally with Step Ups, it keeps the blood flow running smoothly, even from the lactic acid build up from squats (bodyweight or weights) while improving muscle imbalances. It gives off vibes of Prehab work for the knees and hips which also doesn't overload the spine or low back. This is essential for recovery. Still targeting the quads, hamstrings and the glutes but with a gentle aspect to it. 

Squats are essential to overall training for the legs which helps with hormone balancing, strength, mobility and even flexibility but Step Ups either with Squat Training or by themselves act as a buffer or teammate you may say in order to get the full package deal for building long term health in the lower body. One shouldn't exist without the other and when you utilize what is possible to work the legs in a smart and proficient way, you're developing the body with greater emphasis beyond muscle building. This doesn't mean you go extreme and do tons of reps or weight, finding the balance of working those muscles while also using active recovery or being able to strengthen the tendons and ligaments goes a long way to gaining the health benefits.

As you have read from previous articles, I'm more for the Step Ups because of their way to hit imbalances that my legs have from those injuries all those years ago and at one time, I was considering stop doing high volume or even doing enough work to stimulate muscle growth in the legs from Squats doing variations of them. As time goes on and seeing the benefits of working the lower body in a smart and realistic way for me, I'm adapting to both using strategic entities that keeps me interested in them to do what is essential for the long run.

Usually in my workouts, I expend a great deal of energy because I don't rest much between sets/rounds or whatever and being in my 40's, having to use that energy strategically keeps me in good condition and in no pain whatsoever. I may feel stiff at times, that's expected as you get older but some good stretching and movement to get the blood flowing keeps things going and to have such energy is a blessing. Those Step Ups are even awesome to help get that excess energy out and being able to calm down. When you have such energy, you want to use it wisely. If you have restless energy that could be dire like Insomnia or the jitters, being able to exercise can help level out those things. 

Having incredible energy in your 40's and beyond is bad ass from a positive point of view because it shows that you are able to take care of yourself and your body regulates hormones and recovery well. Sometimes that energy can be more than you want it to be so we need to find a balance so we don't get that feeling of thinking we can stay up all night and party all day vibe or theory for that matter. We still need to be able to sleep and be able to function. For me, on those days where I need to get that energy out, there is Step Ups and other "fun things" but in this manner for training purposes, Step Ups and a cold shower, knocks my ass out in minutes when I get into bed after drying off, putting on clothes and letting everything sink in. 

 Take the time to incorporate Step Ups either as a stand alone on days off from your regular routine or as a finisher for your leg days, don't push it though. Leg Day for some means walking like you just fought off the Zombie Apocalypse. Get a feel for them. You don't have to do what I do, do what works for you. Start with a few reps per leg and keep the height of the step at a comfortable level because too high for too many reps can lead to tightness or even pain in the hips and knees. If you're say like 5'5, you don't want to be doing step ups that is meant for someone at 6'5, keep the level to no more of the knee going above the belly button or just around the pelvic line. If you're having issues in the hip and knee area, depending on your height but still want to try step ups, for most people an 8-10 inch step is more than enough. Don't hurt yourself and this is merely a suggestion, not a "have to" or something that is risky. 

Be amazingly awesome and go kill it it in your goals. Hope you build legs that can carry you and be used to keep yourself healthy for many years to come. With the updated comment policy I put in place, send me a note and let me know about your training, or use the contact form to send me an email. Please read the policy carefully. You can also go to my LINKTREE and check out all my socials. Add me onto your social media and let's keep in touch.  

Friday, March 27, 2026

An Addition To The 500 Rep Circuit

There was something within me that wanted to add a "small" element to my circuit training with the Dopa Band and wanted to hit a different level of my conditioning training. In my regular circuits if you're new to this Blog is to do 5 Exercises, 10 Reps each for 10-20 Rounds. Only rest is marking down the circuit. Exercises aren't always the same or in the same order cause I like having a fresh way of going and keeping certain basic exercises of the Dopamineo System.

Yesterday, I decided for this added element was Hindu Squats. Been a bit since I've done a full workout with them but I know I'm capable of doing them and pretty well after many years of doing thousands of them. Here's how it went:

5 Dopa Exercises

Step Skis where you take a step and then throw the arms up in neutral or hammer grip like fashion with the Band

Hook Pulls

Hooked Arm Position Squats

Chest Presses

Propellers

Put the band down and do 60 seconds of Hindu Squats. 

Repeat this process 10 times. Only rest was marking it down.

Doing a minute of Squats doesn't sound like much but round after round with already going through the other exercises, you're getting some build up going with the lactic acid and it becomes harder. My key to performing them proficiently was to focus on breath control and speed that was at a comfortable clip but still getting the heart rate up. I was going about the rate you see HERE (A bit faster maybe)!!!

It was a beautiful day out, a bit chilly so I had on my hoodie, sweats, shorts, t shirt and my shoes. Went to the park, found a tree I liked, hooked up the band with the Genius Strap, put on some tunes and went after it. Had my watch on me to time the Hindu Squats. Did what I could to keep form at a good level of alignment, breathe with focus & intent and everything was smooth sailing. It wasn't easy though. If you believe this is "Easy Peasy", come and train with me sometime and you'll find it's not as easy as it looks (Then again, there are those who don't even have the balls to put their money where their mouth is).

Anyway, it was a pretty damn good workout and I felt it big time especially in my legs but hey, that's to be expected you know. Sun was shining, practically had that entire place to myself and was having the time of my life. This was a great challenge and it was great to be doing those squats again. Think my inspiration came from reading the new book I mentioned a couple articles ago called NO GAS, NO RUN: The Guide to Catch Wrestling Conditioning, Combat Science, and Building the Engine. Channeling Karl Gotch man and thinking what some of this book has engraved into my brain already. 

Working a circuit like this tests limits of most men. It may not be a challenge for a wrestler since those guys are fucking animals but for someone who enjoys fitness and wants to amp their game a little bit, something like this can make you huff and puff in not time. As Billy Robinson said "There's no rest in wrestling", neither is this type of training in some capacity. Like I said, the only "rest" you get is marking it down and/or adjusting the band if needed. 

Karl Gotch has said "Conditioning is your best hold", in this case, I say "Conditioning is your best asset" in which I mean you can be as strong and fit looking as you can be, but if you start to wear down in less than a few minutes, all that strength is merely temporary. You want to last as long as you need to cause in life, having gas in the tank can have an impact on how you help others and yourself. 

Be prepared to get your ass kicked and get yourself a band at Dopamineo.com. Use the code POWERANDMIGHT to chalk down some bucks. Grab a bundle, that saves you even more. These bands are virtually indestructible and can take a beating. I know cause the Black Band I have hasn't been scratched, torn or snapped and I put that thing through the ringer with hard workouts. Have an amazingly awesome day and keep killing it. 

Want to chat me up, go to my LINKTREE where you'll find my email and all my socials. Tell me about your training and let me know if there's something I could to help you in your journey whether it's helping find resources for your goals or a few tidbits on what is possible to get you just a little stronger or durable.  

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