Showing posts with label Healthy Joints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Healthy Joints. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Is It Truly Necessary Doing Hundreds Or Thousands Of Reps Daily?


 I believe it depends on individual goals. From a perspective it is impressive when you do something outside the norm like doing 1000 Squats or 500 Push-ups or even at times doing 2000 or more total reps of a circuit, but is it necessary from a general outlook? Are you required by law to do an extraordinary amount of reps in an exercise in order to be perceived as fit? No, in reality you are not.

As we get older, the numbers game becomes a blur or even dust in the wind to the general population. Some folks who continue to do an inflated number of reps in whatever exercise do it cause it's a thing that keeps them going. Does it continue to work? Absolutely, but not everyone is needed to keep up with certain numbers. You're not going to find too many men in advanced ages saying "I need to keep up doing 500 squats and push-ups everyday cause it's good for me", in reality, they're most likely going to be happier being able to get up without being in pain or be able to do things that's not going to make them want to stop in the middle of something like gardening, going up a flight of stairs or walk without a cane. 

Don't get me wrong, I love doing hundreds of step ups and do hundreds of squats from time to time and hell get a couple hundred strikes in with hammers but it's not like I have to do them. I'm not going to be able to do that forever and probably won't even care. I'll even do 500-1000+ total reps of training with the Dopa Band but it's not going to kill me if I find myself not doing it anymore one day. I still want to able to chop wood, carry rocks and sandbags, throwdown a slam ball, climb stairs without getting out of breath or be in knee pain for as long as I can. The older we get, the more we want to do simpler things.

Isometrics is still however; one of the most important aspects of fitness that should be a continuation later in life because having strength from various angles can do a lot of good for the things outside of working out. Seriously, 10-15 minutes of doing holds and I'd be happy as a fish to water. It also keeps the joints healthy and durable so we don't have those "I've fallen and I can't get up" days or have brittle bones. 

When it comes down to it, if you're an athlete where it's required to do certain things like repetition for the sport you're in or train a certain way in order to be at a certain level of competition, that's a whole other ball game, we all can't keep up with someone world class or even the average pro athlete because why would you want to? Ego? To say you can be just as good if not better? What's really the point of it? The  truth is, trying to keep up with someone like Lebron or even Chris Hemsworth for that matter is only going to lead to heart ache and disappointment. Many of us don't have the luxury of hiring coaches and doing things that take up more time than we don't have in the daily lives we have. The best thing we can do is to maintain what we can, be able to adapt when we need to and build strength and other attributes that matter outside of the gym or the fitness world in general. Some go to the gym a couple times a week because it works for them and they don't need to be some big shot benching 600 or deadlifting like The Mountain, just being able to train for your health is what makes the real differences, not numbers or ego lifting.

A guy I've written about before named Johnny Grube has some attitude towards specific people or whatever "get off my lawn" bullshit he believes, despite of that, I do respect what he does when it comes to training and being able to go as long as he has as a laborer despite beating himself up over many decades. He's done some crazy shit but he also knows what works for him and knows when things aren't needed anymore. Isometrics is probably the only thing at this point I agree with him on. Below he sent a reply to a guy on youtube about why he doesn't do that crazy stuff anymore. As a person, well let's just say he complains a lot and could use a few lessons in humility.


Any way....Is it true you need to do hundreds or thousands of reps of anything to be fit? No, it's not, matter of fact, it can bite you in the ass later in life if you aren't smart about what you do. You can if you want to, if you even can that's great but it's not a HAVE or NEED, it's a free choice. I might still do some stuff but not out of ego, but for enjoyment. The carrying, the hammer strikes, the step ups, Isometrics, bands and lifting sandbags might be the only things I'll end up doing for "exercise" but still love to swim, chop for firewood, get down and get up without hurting and still be able to stand without needing assistance. That's really my true goal. Train accordingly and be amazingly awesome. 

Thursday, October 19, 2023

Keeping The Body Loose

 As we get older, the numbers game when it comes to high rep isn't so much a priority as to what keeps the body flowing and being able to move with ease. Not everyone at 70 or 80 is going to be doing 500 push-ups or jacking up weights like they did in their 20's and 30's but they can learn to do things that lessens the injuries and gains certain aspects of energy. It's called mobility work.

We all at one point want to prove ourselves that we can keep up with others and fill our egos with such pride that we forget to do what keeps our bodies going even after all those "glory days." You do what you can but at some point, there's nothing left to prove unless it's to yourself and understanding that the numbers game was just part of the process and not so much the resolution or the true answer to what happens once we can't always do those things anymore.

Mobility Training and/or Joint Loosening Workouts have a much greater impact than we give them credit for, hell I've taken them for granted at times and learned some hard lessons that the less you do them, the harder things might get but if you consistently do them with intention, the more you find out that keeping the joints healthy bares greater merit than seeing how many push-ups and squats you can do. If you're consistent with certain numbers and sticking to the basics, that could be a totally different story but don't mistake what keeps the body loose yet powerful as some side piece for training. 

My style of Mobility Work consists of utilizing Joint Loosening, Flexibility and Flowing exercises that give my body the juice it needs to stay healthy. The Joint Loosening is more doing movements to relax the ankles, knees, shoulders, elbows, neck and hips, the Flexibility can be something like static or isometric stretches, DDP Yoga, Stretches from the book Stretching and other things, the flowing movements are more animal combinations and mix and matching things that go together to create a workout that can be intense but feels great at the same time. Sort of like Movement 20XX.

You don't have to turn yourself into a contortionist to have a flexible and mobile body but it is important to make sure the body is healthy for the long haul. Injuries come and go, some have been more severe than others and it is apparent that we keep our joints strong more than how big our muscles get or have some type of physique that looks like a million bucks but buckles quick after a bum knee. Our body is a tool that should last as long as possible and not go through such extremes to make it look or act like it only has a short time and the rest is just waiting for death. 

When it comes to Strength Training, you can lift weights, do bodyweight or whatever that keeps the body strong and durable but when it comes down to it, the most versatile form of Strength Training IMO is Isometrics. I've said it before and I'll say it again, Isometrics are the Game Genie Of Fitness meaning they're the cheat code to youthful strength that keeps on going and makes the joints so damn powerful that it may seem like you have an adamantium skeletal structure. If you ever heard of Wolverine from the X-Men you'll know what I'm getting at. I've had my own share of injuries but if it wasn't for Isometrics, I'd have tons more and may even be completely crippled but I do my best to not think or dwell on that kind of thing. There are many ways to do Isometrics but my favorite style is Overcoming & Hybrid. Some days, my workouts are exclusively Isometrics, others are in combination to what else I do. 

Another way to keep the body strong and loose is doing Dopa Band Workouts. You may not be as explosive, fast or even technically sound as a wrestler or MMA fighter but you can adjust things that strengthen the muscles in a variety of ways that reduces injuries and have an automatic coach that shows you what you may be doing wrong and helping you correct mistakes so you can be better at your other endeavors. I've done enough workouts now with this thing that I know what it can do in terms of keeping the body strong and healthy without needing to go full bore all the time. It stretches you, it makes you learn new ways to move effectively and you can adjust the resistance by just a few steps. 

Keep up with maintenance even when you're young, it goes a long way because the less you do mobility type training, the more it might bite you in the ass later in life and end up like a lot of injured people that do things like hardcore Crossfit, Powerlifting and other things. Be amazingly awesome.   

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