Showing posts with label Tendon Strength. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tendon Strength. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Isometric Experimentation


 I like coming up with stuff to train differently or put them in a different perspective. That's the beauty of fitness, you learn various things and experiment while setting goals and getting the most out of what's possible. In this case of experimentation, I've been working on a Isometric Style program that blends TUT (Time Under Tension) and 7-12 Second Intense Contractions with the 1 Minute Push-Up.

Have done a few so far and it really has me going through a routine that switches up some muscle groups and working the Core & Legs consistently. I'd start it by doing the 1 Minute Push-up (On my fists) for 30 Seconds at the top, 30 seconds at mid point (doing my best to not have the chest touch the floor) and then go into a 7-12 second intense isometric exercise in three positions (Like the Curl or Deadlift for example), rest a bit, do another 1 minute push-up, another Iso exercise and so on until I've completed whatever exercises and the push-up. I'll do up to say 5 1 minute push-ups and many 7-12 second contraction exercises at 70-85% max. Here's a sample workout I've done....

1 Minute Push-up

Wall Sit (Feet Flat. Heels Up, Toes Up)

1 Minute Push-Up

Core (Hollow Body, Dead Bug, Arch Body, Side Bends (Feet Wide, Feet Shoulder Width, Feet Together))

1 Minute Push-Up

Overhead Press

1 Minute Push-Up

Curl

1 Minute Push-Up

Total: 5 1 Minute Push-Ups & 15 7-12 Second Contractions

This is a hell of a workout and gives off some crazy vibes at the end. Not easy by any stretch and it adds an element to ancient techniques mixed with modern strength training. 

Last night, I tried another experiment where I did a Superset of the 1 Minute Push-Up and a 1 Minute Wall Sit. Did 3x with little to no rest. This is a different look at keeping TUT instead of just doing reps of squats and push-ups. Nothing wrong with doing them dynamically, those are essential but this builds a different level of strength and conditioning. This is more in tuned for joint health and working the little muscles, toughening up the tendons and lessening the chances of having knee pain, elbow and shoulder issues. As a Superset, it becomes a battle of the lactic acid that builds up as you do more sets. I only did 3 but I plan on doing more and seeing what's possible. If rest is needed at first, do so but the objective is to test your mental fortitude and physical endurance. These can also harden the muscles to where they'll feel like solid oak lol. Shaolin Monks would do something similar but they would go for long ass periods of time and they're pound for pound strong motherfuckers. 

This is where Isometrics becomes something that is needed in the realm of health and fitness, it's not always about ego and seeing if you're better than anyone else, it's about what you can do that becomes better and better as time goes on. You can go long, you can shorten it to a micro workout, whatever you want to do but remember to find what works best for you. Isometrics have been getting a bit more traction as of late because of studies being done but it's still a very underrated style of training because it's not shiny or always some exciting blend of crazy moves that seem almost acrobatic or speeded up; it's tough, hard yet so simple, can seem boring cause you're just holding positions but in the end, some of the strongest and athletic people on the planet do Isometric Training. From Dan Gable to the Great Gama, Baseball Legends like Mickey Mantle & Hank Aaron did them, fighters such as high ranking Boxers and BJJ Legend Royce Gracie did them, they're part of a puzzle that we don't normally see under the surface.

Isometric Training has benefits that can be not only Game-Changing but Life Changing As well. What would it be like to go through your golden years with little to no pain in your joints, your muscles are as strong as ever and you can still do things with the grandkids, be active without being hurt, get up off the floor without being in agony and even feel like you're light on your feet. That's the true goal in life, to have strength that lasts, powerful ligaments that lessen the chance of hip/shoulder/knee replacements and have the stamina to keep up with the little ones. See what I'm saying? Give them a go. Books & Courses such as Overcoming Isometrics cand give you plenty to keep you on your toes and be able to Strength Train without wrecking yourself. 

Be amazingly awesome and stay strong.  

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.   

Get your 10% OFF Discount at Dopamineo by entering POWERANDMIGHT at checkout.  

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Rugged Cardiovascular Conditioning

 I'm always finding ways to test myself and what I'm capable of in terms of Strength, Endurance, Conditioning, Toughness & Durability. Yesterday was one of those crazy tests. It's not just to be strong but to keep that strength for a solid period of time and still have something left in the tank. It's putting yourself into that mindset of having a kickass workout that means something you can use later on.

Since my recovery, I wanted to see how far I can push myself without killing myself. One workout I normally do is a Superset for sometimes up to 30 minutes or more doing carries (either with a kettlebell or the sandbell) and doing Step Ups for building leg strength & conditioning. This time I took a step further by strapping 50 lbs to my body (2-5 lb Ankle Weights & 40 lb Weight Vest) and did a Farmer's carry of my 70 lb Kettlebell 2x and than 20 Step Ups. Did this back and forth for 20 minutes non stop. 

Essentially with the added weight on me, walking with 70 lbs was the equivalent to working with 120 lbs total or 240 lbs all together (Walking the bell in the left and then right hand) in one set. It's tough as hell and really tests your grip, stability and shoulder/core strength. With the Step Ups it was 10 each leg with just the Vest & Ankle Weights. This was to feel as if gravity was really pulling you down or if you were walking in a Gravity Chamber. I think even Goku might've been impressed.

This isn't typical cardio training, you're taking things to another level and seeing how you fair with utilizing strength tools along with not being able to stop as you take on endurance work as well. Combining these two elements at the same time can make someone dangerous and rugged. I'm not saying I'm intimidating or some scary bastard with maniacal tendencies but I do train hard to the point where it might scare off gym rats and the machine loving mirror posers. I train with simplicity and intent which is what training is all about. It's not complicated and it doesn't take long before you feel something. In most of my workouts, I don't ever stop to smell the roses or play little games on my phone as I rest, I keep going and sure I may slow down a bit as time goes on but I always feel there's something left in me at the end. 

This isn't meant to build a beautiful and shredded physique, it's meant to build tough as nails tendons, thick rugged muscle and a strong lung capacity. The workload is not something to take lightly and although basic, it's never easy even without the added weight on you. It's real world strength and conditioning. It's having that Labor Strength and working in awkward positions. I'm not a Blue Collar type of guy and never claimed to be but I do respect those who are (when it comes to work ethic, personality wise, some are just plain assholes while others are badass and amazing to hang out with) and I train that way out of respect and to maintain a level of strength for when I work on yards, hauling furniture, chopping wood and/or moving logs around. 

Train to be useful, not to look pretty. Some women on Tik Tok have videos where there's a voiceover that says "I don't want to strong, like man who look pretty. I want to be strong like bitch that fight bears in the forest" in a thick Russian accent. For guys, we can change the narrative to "I don't want to strong like man who look pretty. I want to be strong like motherfucker that fight lions in the Serengeti." Workouts like these jack up a man's testosterone big time and builds incredible mental toughness. 

Build real strength and muscle, it goes a long way to seeing what you're truly capable of. Keep being amazingly awesome everyone.   

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