As of today, I've done 11 Sessions of the Sapate HIIT Workout. Keeping things consistent and seeing some small changes but there's till some time to go before anything truly show up. Many want that quick fix and want results like some wizard can wave a fucking wand and poof LOL. Doesn't work that way.
Did a slight change to the exercise by getting my handles and did the movement with them in the vertical position to get deeper and have a better flow sequence. It was still a challenge but I was able to work the reps very efficiently and as crisp as I can. Next Workout, the handles will be in the Horizontal Position. I'll Film both versions separately in time but for now, just feel the high and enjoying the journey man.
That is one of the missing ingredients in many people's training is that its the journey. They push themselves so hard it just wrecks them and the more they put themselves through that, the more its going to bite them in the ass. There's still that mentality of "No pain, no gain" and it's pure bullshit. Punishing yourself in a workout is a recipe for disaster and going extreme too often will have you most likely needing a walker or crutches sooner rather than later. Whoever tells you to go Extreme basically on a daily basis is a fake ass charlatan that only cares about their bank account, they don't give a shit about your health and well being. It's a marketing scam and they're fake as a person in general and never do what they claim they do.
Be able to last when it counts and train to be as injury proof as possible. I'll admit, I understand the need to push yourself hard to the brink of injury; I've torn skin bending steel, My nose bled during workouts, had near concussions from falling into a bridge, had problems with my wrists and elbows when I was a shot putter in high school and wrecked my back a time or two. Now in my 40's, I like going hard some days, lighter on others but hit a certain threshold so I don't risk another injury yet also find things that are challenging or worth my time doing.
Being consistent with this specific workout has been quite fun actually. It doesn't take up a ton of time and it works many muscle groups all at once and keeps things old school. The sapate has different variations like anything else but overall, it has a better flow than the typical burpee we see today. Nothing wrong with doing Burpees in and of themselves but you also want to have them be effective and not just an exercise where you do so many reps they become sloppy as hell. One man in his 70's that does them, makes them effective for him and doesn't go so hard it's going to wreck him. His channel is PieriniFitness, here he is doing 100 Burpees on his 71st Birthday. That's impressive as shit for a man that age and is inspiring.
Conditioning is your greatest asset and this type of training will give you those qualities. It's not about how many you can do, it's about making the effort to make it a flow that seems effortless yet challenging. If you're training for a sport like wrestling, form isn't going to be the biggest priority because that's the nature of the beast in that sport, it's not going to have flawless technique so they do what's possible regardless of the situation. If you're training to be fit and have a better quality of life, form has more of a priority there. Some will blend between the two and some have pretty bad technique and either bend too far forward or swing a little too much doing a pullup. Seriously, some of their form is shit yet act like a hypocrite and say someone else is shitty and they're flawless. It's hilarious.
Keep at it, be amazingly awesome and even the smallest fraction of progress always leads to the bigger picture. You got this, kill it and have a blast. Shoot a comment or send me an email through the linktree.

