Showing posts with label Clubs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clubs. Show all posts
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Taking Clubbing To The Next Level
No I'm not talking about going out to a place of loud ass music or a high prestige gentlemen's club; I'm talking about real world-class strength and power. This type of clubbing comes from an Irish legend known as the Dagda (or Daghdha in Irish Folklore). Legend has it that a man of great warrior strength had two prized possessions; one was a cauldron that he used to cook meats and such to help feed the armies; the second was an extremely heavy club but this wasn't any ordinary club. This bad boy had two parts to and each side had a life and death entity. The top of the club was death because if it hit someone they instantly die but on the other end, below the handle it gave life. It's power within its handle gave strength and life like the legendary Thor's Hammer or Arthur's sword Excalibur.
As the man conquered mighty tasks with the club it taught him valuable lessons in building strength not just in a physical macho type but within deep in his soul as he would need his wits (although he was a massive fellow) and he was a man of great heart and love but also a protector. Teaching is offspring the values of real strength, not by pure masculinity but by being a good nurtured soul and protecting the love ones you have and others. When you conquer a goal, you protect it and it has a special place in your heart, don't use it to boost ego or believe that because you made it happen you're better than the next guy, not true. When Dagda swung his club, he did with intensity and power that no man can match. In the story it took nine of the strongest men in Ireland to lift the man's club. Holding onto a club that heavy and powerful takes a special man (or woman) to harness that kind of strength.
Milestones come and go in every person's life, sometimes we don't always realize what we achieve that changes the very course of your history and being. My two biggest milestones that hold a special place deep within me is surviving Meningitis and finding the strength to not only walk again but become far stronger than before. When you conquer something it doesn't matter if it's a PR in exercise or getting through a tough workout or even not in fitness, you made new headway in a sport, you got a major promotion in a company you love to work in; it applies to making yourself a better individual when you have the power to tower over what is blocking you. Hold onto those moments when something incredible happens because we don't get those moments everyday, they happen in certain points in your life that have a significance and everything happens for a reason.
Get yourself a Club and swing yourself to power in the Dagda Program, learn to conquer not just lifting a heavy object but to learn to challenge your mind, create a strategy that will have you blasting sets/reps or whatever. Power and strength is within your grasp and don't ever let go of that power because not only is it yours but it is your duty to help others learn of its power so they can conquer their own goals and also you must protect it because only you have the power to conquer goals that are suited to you. Be a mighty warrior from within and bask in the glory of your own strength.
Be awesome everyone and keep kicking ass.
Monday, September 23, 2013
Swing Away With A Mace
One of the oldest tools of the ancient warriors is the Mace or Gada of Indian Culture. It was a soldier’s prominent weapon for combat which
he also used to train sufficiently with. When he swung it, it was beautiful but
also powerful. A Mace can range in weight to well over 70 lbs. and an expert of
the Gada took no exception to master its intimidating look. It’s come into
prominence lately in the last few years even though it’s not as popular as the
clubs; it’s still an effective exercise.
In
wrestling, circular movements are the foundation of mastering the art like the
Hindu Squats & Hindu Push-ups, the Gada and the Clubs. These things build a
level of strength & endurance that works the whole body from head to toe
and give you a workout that will have you begging for mercy. In its heyday,
Indian Wrestling or Kushti was the dominant sport and nobody made it more
feared all over than the Great Gama. He used these very same exercises and
tools to become the only undefeated man in his sport with a record of 5000
matches won. Using the Gada in a circular fashion works your body like very few
can compare.
There are
many ways to use the Mace, the main one is what’s called 360’s where you put
one hand over the other, push up and let the Mace swing over the shoulders as
you keep a tight grip. I love this exercise as it works your upper body like
crazy and the heavier it is, the more balance you’re going to need to do this
with ease and that’s where great strength and coordination come into play.
Other exercises like spearing, chopping, shoveling, curling and others work the
body like I said before that very few can compare. Karl Gotch also used this
and can be do well over 100 reps with a 50 lb. Mace and did it with ease even
into his 60’s. A workout just with this can help you gain flexibility in the
shoulders, hits your obliques, strengthens the arms and works your back to give
you that muscular look but have the strength to go along with it. Never
underestimate this.
I've always
emphasized old school training because quite frankly it works but more than
that it gives you a chance to feel like you’re back in time to a place where
training was not that huge on society and fitness was more of health and
natural strength & conditioning. Take into consideration that at this point
in History, if you wanted to get in awesome shape you used basic weights, odd
objects if you were in a job that required that, trained outside climbing,
swinging clubs and a mace, plus diets back then didn't exist. To get the most
benefit, think old school training and eating because when you come to grips
with this, it gives you a perspective on why it’s so much better for you and
less confusing than the crap being thrown around today. Give it a shot and be
shocked on how simple real exercise can be without the wear and tear of
isolating every single thing in your body.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Why Learn Your History
In the world of fitness, you learn a few things here and
there but not many want to learn where certain things started or how they got
there in the first place. In just about every program there’s a historical
significance to it. Say you wanted to learn about Barbells and Dumbbells so you
can get strong and usually the first people they learn about is Arnold Schwarzenegger or a today’s Ronnie Coleman or Jay Cutler. There’s a difference
between lifting strength and bodybuilding. If you really want to learn about
those two pieces of equipment you could really learn from guys like Reg Park ,
John Davis, Doug Hepburn, Arthur Saxon and quite possibly the strongest of them
all Louis Cyr. The more you glimpse of what lifting’s history the more you’ll
want to take it up.
Strength
Training dates back thousands of years as far as ancient India with the
wrestling sport of Kushti where you learned to wrestle, run, swim, swing clubs
and the mace which were used as weapons during a period when battles required
the utmost of strength. In the golden eras of Greece
and Rome , they
had to train harder than most can fathom today and especially as soldiers
because they learned how to handle a heavy sword or shoot tough arrows so they
used a style of Isometrics in order to increase the strength and speed of the
arrows in battle. Here’s something you may not have known but in the time of
Leonardo da Vinci at a young age he was quite the athlete and even had strength
to bend horseshoes. You see, fitness and
exercise ends up in places you didn't think were possible. Some of these vary
same things are what makes training today even though mainstream training has
become a nuisance.
We've all
seen records broken right after another but there are records that most people
don’t even know exists. We've all heard at one point in sports like Basketball
where the Boston Celtics won what 8 straight titles but what about one man who
went 15 years undefeated in weightlifting in three different decades 1938-1953,
that man was the legendary John Davis. How about another record that most
likely will never be broken, The great Gama won 5000 matches in wrestling and
not lost once, you know what record is more popular than that, Rocky Marciano’s
Boxing record of being undefeated. Records come and go all the time and
whenever we see one today there’s not much of big thing about it but think
about what record breaking was like back in the 20’s, even when the 1900’s
rolled in, it was huge. How about this, did you know that back in the early 20th
century, pressing more than 350 lbs. overhead was unheard of and was the talks
of the town, now imagine that weight being pressed overhead with one arm, got
nothing to say now huh?
No matter
what you’re in whether its sports, music, weight lifting, Archeology or even
certain types of science, learn the history, educate yourself. Continue to use
your mind and you’ll soon understand why using the mind and body work together,
not just in exercising but with everything. Something always started somewhere,
learn where it came from and learn about the people that made those things
happen. I just wish they can put the history of Physical Culture as an academic
curriculum in schools such as High School and College. There’s a lot to be
learned in this world and the more educated you are with the right tools of
mind and body working together, you’re on the right path.
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Let’s Go Clubbing
And you thought I was going to tell you to hit the bars, go
dancing and have a night on the town. Wrong again. Having fun can be one thing
and there’s nothing wrong with going out and having a good time but for right
now, health is the focus point here and I’m going to share with you some
history, training, ideas and things to try on to get you up to a higher level
of strength, flexibility and super power in the joints and muscles.
The club wasn't originally known as a group of people or a fitness place to go to or
even the name of some pampas ass rich people’s venue. This club or series of
clubs was the training tool for wrestlers in the middle east for their sport
called Kushti, similar in style to our Greco-Roman but still can use the legs
for take-downs and such. Each morning a typical coach or Guru would have his
athletes get up before dawn, run a couple miles, come back and do warm up
drills, wrestle, eat/drink and get back to training until the day was over. In
the middle of these sessions, the wrestlers would often swing what’s called the
Jori or the Gada/Mace in various weights and proportions. These tools would
help the wrestlers learn to move weight in various movements mostly circular.
When the
British colonized in various Middle Eastern countries such as India learned the
skills of club swinging and other exercises and took them back to the English
colonies in Europe and eventually to the Americas most notably in Northern
America and trained with these very same tools for battle during the American
Revolution and other wars soon after. It became a hit in the late 19th
and early 20th centuries as you had Physical Culturists from one
side of the earth to the next teaching the various movements of the Clubs.
Unless you were an advanced athlete, you had to get a weight heavy enough to
work but the majority of Clubs used were very light in weight no more than
10-20 pounds and even less than that. The less weighted clubs were used to aid
and strengthen flexibility in the arms, shoulders and elbow joints of the upper
body giving you that awkward but effective range of motion if you were an
athlete or just an average guy looking to be in shape.
The most
famous Wrestler of that era in India
was The Great Gama, if you ever read my articles you would know who he is by
now. He is considered by many to be the most feared wrestler of his generation,
not even the legendary grapplers Frank Gotch & George Hackenshmidt wanted
to face this beast of a man. At 5’7 and no more than 270, Gama was at his peak
the best conditioned athlete, although his numbers are exaggerated by any
stretch he like many other students at that time wrestled, swam, did hundreds
of calisthenics such as squats and push-ups and being on a diet that the
majority was vegetarian. At times during his 5000 undefeated winning streak,
Gama would receive a basket of tropical fruits and vegetables as a championship
trophy in his honor as a vegetarian. One of the most famous pictures of the
legendary grappler is of him standing with a massive club on his shoulders.
This club wasn’t used for training but was considered a Trophy for a big time
championship. The club is said to have weighed at 80 lb.
Club
swinging when done properly takes strength training to a whole new level. You
can lift as many weights as you want but if you tried to swing a 30 or 40 lb.
club you’d getting your ass kicked in the first minute. With lighter clubs
however these can help strengthen the joints in your upper body to peak
condition. Clubs have been used by top MMA athletes, Football players, baseball
players, strongmen, gymnasts, wrestlers, war vets as far back as the Civil War.
Some Clubs are made out of natural wood but you can also get them steel made or
with very hard rubber. Two guys I can think of that have really cool versions
of the Club are Ryan Pitts at Strongergrip.com and Scott Sonnon at
Clubbells.tv. Each of them have their own style of swinging and one of them
believe it or is used in Yoga to get that extra edge from doing free-handed postures.
Like with
everything else, it takes skill and practice different movements in precise dynamic
fashion but they’re a lot of fun to do. I can’t wait to get my own set of clubs
that I can play with but for now I’m settling with what is just as fun and even
cooler than the clubs and that’s a couple Thor Hammers that I have. The Thor
Hammer is just as effective as a regular club for swinging but the extra
benefits of hitting it with a tire and the fact that the handle is much thicker
than a regular hammer or club makes it that much more effective for grip
strength, hand/eye coordination, tendon and joint building and the ability to
just hold it for a period makes it a hell of an isometric exercise. Get your
hands on your own sets of clubs or hammers and jack up your strength and
conditioning faster than ever before. Keep it interesting and have fun, that
what it’s all about.
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