Friday, May 20, 2022

Getting The Most Out Of Push-Ups Without Wearing Out Over Time

I have written before that I'm not the biggest fan of Push-Ups but I do know their value for those who want to do them. I don't particularly hate them, I just have no patience or will to do them in high reps anymore plus my shoulders aren't meant for certain variations so I do them mainly now for demo purposes which you'll see below with a few videos.

For decades and even over a century for that matter; Push-Ups have been the cornerstone of training the body anywhere and anytime. They've been used all over the military, law enforcement, fire fighting and in Martial Arts. In reality, they're a highly valuable strength & conditioning tool of training. The problem however is that most mainstream fitness maniacs treat it as a joke without realizing it. There are variations not meant for some people yet some trainers will force it upon them because "they're good for you." Not necessarily the case. 

Some teach to do a certain number in a row or do a certain amount in a day to describe or assess how fit you are. You can progress to higher numbers because at some point, they can become too easy to do but that can also be dangerous. Over time, you can put wear and tear on your body from doing ridiculous amount of reps like 500-1000 a day or more. If you want to continue making progress into your older years, you could do less reps with harder variations or keep a basic principle of sticking to variations that work for you and do them either slower or faster. The most I've ever done in a workout was 600 and that took an hour and a half and never hit that number since. It becomes boring after a while.

There's always going to be some arbitrary number that tells you how fit a general consensus says you are but where is the real logic in it? There's a huge difference in doing 50 perfect pushups than doing 500-1000 sloppy ones over the course of a workout or entire day. You see some guys either going halfway down or use "tension" style push-ups and it looks like their body is going up and down in places where they're not in sync. Ever see those crossfitters doing push-ups? Most of them look like they're flopping like a fish out of water and put themselves in the hospital for shoulder breaks, elbows twisted and joint manipulation in the wrists and hands. I've seen their handstand push-ups and those guys need psychiatric help just to understand the technique. Horrible.

The best push-ups are the ones you can control and be connected with the rest of your body. Bad wrists? Make it a point to adjust the fingers or do them on your knuckles, do them with handles that keep your wrists neutral. Is your back slouching or putting your ass higher in the air on variations that are meant for keeping your body aligned? Fix your posture so you don't cause an injury otherwise good luck getting those hospital bills paid. 

Some people can get away with being weird looking in their push-ups because of either their arms are structured differently or have shoulder alignments that work with variations others can't but don't try to compare yourself to someone who's either been doing them long enough or haven't done them at all. Recovery is important as in all aspects of training, some will tell you overtraining is a myth but it isn't. If you do too much with very little recovery, you're setting yourself up to be hurt and don't fall for that "I can get you to 500 Push-ups a day in less than 6 weeks" bullshit; not everyone is meant to do that neither that number is needed to be fit and conditioned. 

You can make a variation harder not by speed but by tension. Even with less reps, slower and controlled push-ups tackle the muscles differently and gives you amazing benefits of muscle building and being connected to the mind and muscle format. Let me give you example: For the military push-up variation; if you could do 500 reps at a pace that allows you to do that, could you do the same amount of reps if you each rep was 5-10 seconds long? Most likely not and the strength ratios are completely different as well so who's stronger? The truth is, you can't really compare the two, it's just different. 

When you're young you can get away with (almost) being a little sloppy and recover easier but as we get older, we can't be doing stupid shit unnecessarily and learn to be in greater control. The more you can control how you train, the better you'll be in the long run. 

Have fun doing push-ups but also be safe so you can enjoy them without putting yourself in harms way doing variations that can tarnish your success.







4 comments:

Jon said...

Ben, what is your height and weight?
Which do you consider your best feats?
Favourite lift/movement?

Ben Bergman said...

I'm 5'10 and 260+ lbs.

Best feats? Don't really know but I did like being able to fall into a bridge and kick over & back. Another would be twisting steel into shapes.Dont have a particular favorite lift, maybe overhead Presses but my favorite movements are animal exercises.

Rahul Mookerjee said...

Awesome article, Ben! I love your stuff - but you've got it spot on about pushups - exactly what I keep telling people (as you've read in my newsletters) about FORM etc. I can make 10 pushups harder than a 100 is not just an axoim, it's nigh TRUE.

Crossfitters, kipping pull-ups - ugh. Kipping does have a place in the Army etc where you "get your body over the bar by any means possible" - but for pure strength and health (or the other way around, it should be) purposes - FORM!

Well written!

Jon said...

OH presses are too a fave of mine.

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