Monday, July 26, 2021

Why I Prefer 6-12 Seconds Of Isometrics

 Learning certain aspects of training over time, you become accustomed to what works for you and what doesn't. You experiment and find out through trial and error what benefits you the most and how you develop yourself through mind and body. There are certain things many people preach in fitness I just can't stand and there are some that I take and mold it for myself that really hits the spot. The animal dice game is one of them, it helps me learn what to expect from the unexpected and keeps me on my toes. Isometrics however is a totally different ball game and a key form of my experimentation.

Isometrics have various ideas on what contributes to muscle building, strength training, the timing of certain holds and what benefits the idea of training anytime and anywhere. I'm just obsessed with the 6-12 second protocol of Isometrics because for one, I can exert as much force as possible and two, I can immediately change from one exercise to the next and keep my heart rate up. I love the cardio aspect of this and it's congruent with the awareness of my mind and body. With other protocols, it does become somewhat complicated for me to understand.

There are many aspects of Isometrics that do work such as holding a contraction at half the intensity for a longer period of time, the 30/30/30 format that is a core idea that Steve Maxwell & Drew Baye use and others but the way my brain is set up and where it goes can have frustrating directions. Unless I'm holding a wall sit or some kind of push-up or pull-up, longer holds effect my ADD and I at times will get bored after not even a minute, it just doesn't work for me a good portion of time, it has to be specific exercises that I understand and are enthusiastic about. 

The 30/30/30 protocol which effects the percentage each 30 second stage for 90 seconds throws me off and frustrates the hell out of me. First off, it's not as simple for me as does for others and when I'm supposed to exert the amount of force for each stage puts my mind in a whirlwind because as you exert force each stage, you're supposed to know if it's the actual percentage which IMO doesn't. The 50% the 1st 30, 70 in the second and 100 in the last makes no sense to me whatsoever. I just never figured out how that works and to be honest if you're trying to contract 100% at 30 seconds, that's practically and logically impossible, even sprinters can't go their maximum speed for 30 seconds, maximum force at best is right around 3-4 seconds if not only 2. The mechanics are not fluid with me on that. 

I look at longer holds as more of a meditative practice than a strength practice because if I only focus on the strength aspect, I immediately want to exert more because that's my thought process. Holding a handstand, a horse stance, warrior style poses, deep squat, wall sit and dead hang are all great for a meditative practice of isometrics. You don't have to exert as much force and yet it's still effective. If it's arm wrestling, deadlift, wall push, bow and arrow pulls, curls or mid fist plank, I exert as much force as possible for those 6-12 seconds because those to me are strength formats of Isometrics and I get far more out of that.

When it came to results and the way I can time a workout, shorter contractions with 70-80% of max strength is where I thrive at. It gives me a greater format of cardio as well. When I use my Isometric Power Belt or strap, I don't do the double loops very much because it's difficult for me to know if I'm exerting the same amount of force in both arms which in most cases I don't believe I do because my right arm isn't as strong as my left and focusing on both throws me off. Focusing on one arm at a time works much better for me and notice a significant strength increase with my right arm. Calisthenics wise, I don't do single limb training unless it's animal movements and when I do pull-ups my awareness in both arms is decent, it's hard to explain when it comes to certain exercises.

Do what works best for you, use your intuition and utilize the benefits. When things don't work very well but you keep forcing it or feel obligated, it's like mixing oil with water, many people don't thrive in what doesn't work. If doing the 90 second protocol of Isometrics works for you, continue doing it and be successful with it, if 6-12 works better that's awesome too. Don't settle for something that's a constant frustration and no matter how hard you try, you just won't get it and you won't be as successful. There's no one way to do something and sometimes it takes a while for someone to get use to it and become successful but for others, they get it right away or get it in a short amount of time and have a higher rate of success.

Keep at what you love, learn something new and experiment. The more you learn, the more you understand what comes out of it. 

2 comments:

Angelo said...

I really relate to the boredom aspect. Question: are you a lefty? I only ask because I’m not a lefty and yet my left has always been mysteriously stronger than my right.

Ben Bergman said...

Yes Angelo I'm a lefty. Been one since I was a toddler.

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