Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Are You Thinking 4th Dimensionally When It Comes To Training?

More like in 3D but hey, Doc Brown was onto something LOL. Anyway, one of the things Bud Jeffries taught me was to think outside of the box and expand your imagination to how you can train without always relying on conventional wisdom. Let's face it, the man was a genius when it came to training and the way he thought about things was part of his unique personality and been tested by world class people. For this post today, I blame him for putting this concept into my brain (in a good way of course).


For a few days, I was digging into my thoughts on what could be different in terms of what we can do to train the brain and learn multi-task exercise or in this case, training Multi-Dimensionally. Yesterday, I put this to the test and although it's a work in progress (isn't any training style?), I let out a side of me that took the inspirations of Matt Schifferle, Bud Jeffries and the guys at DopamineO and molded them into a very different and somewhat of a mind-fuck way of exercising. 

Let's start with why I wholeheartedly blame my mentor and brother in strength for this. Bud was a major advocate for Isometrics and came up with some crazy ideas on how to apply them in terms of using not just little implements but using rocks, chains, kettlebells, bodyweight, tires and things you don't look at from a normal point of view. In one of his Seminar DVDs on Isometrics, he applied what he calls 3D Isometrics or 3D Training where he takes weights and other things and go for Isometric Holds on one end while moving dynamically with the other. An example would be, taking a chain and hold it in a mid overhead press or use a strap to create a stopping point with one hand and as he applies the pressure, takes a kettlebell in the other hand and does overhead presses with it. 

This challenges your muscles to fire in that mind/muscle connection to the next level while applying control to two or more things at the same time. I remembered this and was thinking "what if I applied something similar but with the band and Isometric strap?" When we trained together, he always had something cooked up even when he was just shooting the breeze, he had thoughts going on about what he could do differently while applying the basic styles whether it was with hammers, kettlebells or even the steel bending. The way his brain worked was just mind blowing.

So, I applied Bud's Isometric IQ into working with Schifferle's Hybrid style of Isometrics and utilized the Dopamineo band's dynamic moves of rows and waves to create one powerful element. I made a demo of this and still working on some of the kinks in it, not to mention this was post workout of 5x5 Sprints with the Band. 


The strap I'm using here isn't available anymore but the WorldFit Iso-loop would work just as good if not better for some. In the demo, I start out with going into a Hybrid Squat where I would apply isometric pressure trying to stand up and open up the legs at the same time while doing a row with the band in either hand. What does this do? It forces you to work the legs creating strength and stimulus in the legs and back while dynamically rowing to apply the muscles from the upper body at the same time. This challenges the brain to fire the nerves creating a Super Exercise.

The next one was interesting because of doing two different elements of pushing and pulling at the same time. This was doing an Overhead Press Isometrically and creating a Wave and Pull at the same time. The unique thing about this is that while you're creating a wave that takes a certain level of coordination to do, you're also pressing and holding onto the strap as hard as possible without letting go of the press itself. This type of multi-tasking is way harder than it seems because the focus is chaotic yet stabilizing and controlling two very different aspects. It's one thing to do both pushing styles but to do pushing and pulling at the same time is on another level of insanity. 

The final one wasn't as difficult as the Hybrid Squat and Overhead Press. This was more of just trying to stand up in an isometric squat while using both hands to do the wave and pull move, It still isn't easy to coordinate because you're trying hard to straighten the legs but you're also finding the flow in a complete different move while in it. It's that unique element that makes you appreciate what is possible and what can be beneficial. 

In a normal training circumstance, we are taught to move singularly, up and down and focus on things that work the body from angles at a specific level of straight forward focus. Things like Push-ups, Curling a dumbbell, pressing a kettlebell overhead, bodyweight squats with foot patterns going up and down. The coordination is different but you can teach certain things easily with simplistic moves and holds. This however, goes out the fucking window because it forces you to move and hold while in a chaotic state yet be in control. Coordination is on another planet but also you have to think in different aspects than just what is normally understood. 

It is an advanced form of exercise. It's still using basic things, it's easier to learn an isometric exercise and dynamic moves individually but to challenge the construct of fitness intelligence by putting those elements together is a whole other sport in and of itself. Like I said earlier, it's a work in progress but it gives off a whole new vibe of what you thought of as exercise. It's not meant to be some kind of circus act or anything, not like me or someone else teaching and showing how to perform as if you're doing a barbell squat on a stability ball, that's just stupid and dangerous. What I'm showing here, is a different level of Fitness Intelligence to enhance your ability to create exercises that have more to give and offer in terms of function and strength than just conventional styles that most have already seen. You don't see stuff like this almost at all. 

It's not reinventing the wheel, it's opening up and expanding knowledge to where we learn what our capabilities are beyond just typical exercise and routines. What are you willing to give a go that's a little out there but has real benefit? Let me know in the comments or go to my linktree and find me on social media. Be amazingly awesome and keep at it. 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Dopamineo Deck Of Cards Training: Developing Conditioning And A Mind That Doesn't Break


Holy crap that's a mouthful isn't it? Well, regardless, if you want to become a machine (not the kind that looks bad ass but can't last more than a few minutes) then you got to make things happen so when shit gets ugly, you keep grinding. The type of training that gets hit with chaos but you never waiver. It's one of the reasons why I love the Deck Of Cards Workouts with the Dopamineo Bands. It isn't just about conditioning, that's just part of the package deal. It's a lesson in expecting the unexpected and executing with a vengeance.

The deck itself is simple enough yet brutally honest and effective. Here's a breakdown of the Protocol I use.....


Shuffle a full deck. Flip a card one at a time and have that card tell you what reps and exercises to do. Again, simple yet will have you kicking your ass.


Aces are 16 Reps: Your wake up call to show up and have these cards demand work and respect from you.

Face Cards are 10 Reps: Royalty that taxes your arms, legs and whatever it holds dear to you. Jack, Queen, King, they all will make you humble.

2-10 are as is: Nothing cute and just take what you can get.

Jokers are 50-100 Reps: The two wild cards of the deck that will hit you hard and doesn't care whether you're tired or not. Do 1-3 exercises that round it out and get the most out of you.

Black Cards will have you seeing double. Literally, because in this deck, you'll be doing twice as many reps to really showcase your mental and physical toughness. 

When it comes to the three exercises, I do 25 of the Chest Flys or Chest Presses, 25 Wave Pulls and 50 Propellers to round out to 100. If you got both jokers towards the beginning of the deck, they'll test you but you get the highest amount of reps out of the way. Towards the end or even around the middle? Be prepared to find out what it's like to be taken down but getting back up and keep battling. It's punishment with hardcore tendencies.


Conditioning That Doesn't Care About Your Fucking Plan

Many workouts can be predictable. The 5x5 system, 3 sets of 10, knowing the clock with EMOM. The body can adapt to the structure before it stresses it. The deck spits acid in the face of your structure. You might flip 2 Black aces in a row, that's 64 reps before you can attempt to catch your breath. You may even cruise through red 2's, 3's or even 4's and think you're safe but that Joker will pop out of nowhere and makes you bust your ass for 100 reps while your heart rate is already in your throat.

This is what's called Stochastic Conditioning. The load, the rest, the order, it's all random. Your energy systems never truly settle. Aerobic Base and Anaerobic Power, all working. Lactic Clearance? Your ass is learning whether you want to or not. The body stops pacing and gets to solving problems.


Expect The Unexpected

Things in life don't always come in sets and reps. They come in bursts. They will double up when you're tired. It can throw a Joker at you when you thought you were done. The Deck is a powerful teacher. Flip a black King of Spades when you're gassed and still need to breathe and move anyway. You can't negotiate with the card. You learn to shut things up and put in the work. 

That's the machine aspect of it. The cards don't care about your feelings and whatever you have left. It has you executing the next rep until the task is done. 


Get a good deck in 2-3x a week for a little bit and find out happens. That "quit" reflex becomes a blur, your recovery becomes faster between efforts and you stop fearing volume. In the beginning, do what you can to get through as many cards as you can. Add one or 2 more cards each session until you get through that deck. 

A deck of 54 cards is 54 opportunities to quit but it can also have 54 opportunities to prove you won't. Which one are you choosing? Shuffle up, flip that first card and you are on your way to becoming the machine you were meant to be. Be amazingly awesome and get cracking. I believe in you. Don't forget to use my code POWERANDMIGHT at checkout when you order from dopamineo.com

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Two Powerhouses For Isometric Training That Fit In A Bag

When it comes down to Isometric Training, it often times can fly under the radar because the method isn't flashy or the most exciting to look at. As an industry, shiny machines and heavy lifting (or even ego lifting for that matter) gets more attention while certain aspects are pushed to the side and can be forgotten in order to sell pricey objects. Don't get wrong, machines and barbells have their place and have made many athletes and everyday people successful but there's still things missing.

In reality, aspects of strength training hide in the most simplistic of tools that can work the muscles, tendons and ligaments from all sorts of directions. Tools that you can carry in a bag that have exercises where the only limits are of your imagination. That's what today's session is about, tools like the WorldFit Iso Trainer & Iso-Loop. 

These two powerhouses may not look like much, they're not shiny but they deliver results that can be fucking mind blowing. They're portable yet bulletproof weapons for building raw strength that transfers to many aspects of sports and in life such as that pinning power or locking in a submission to picking up your kids without getting that tweak in your back. They show what old school power can do without overhyping and punishing your joints.

The Trainer works in conjunction to doing Overcoming Isometrics which contract the muscles against an immoveable object. No joint movement, just pure in your face tension. The Loop can be used to combine the aspects of Overcoming & Yielding Isometrics to form the superpower of Hybrid Isometrics which has you fighting gravity but at a stopping point at the same time. Both force your nervous system to recruit those muscle fibers at that max level right when you need it the most. From a research point of view, if you look deep into it, consistent Isometric Training packs in 30-40% gains in strength within weeks with less recovery time than if you were to do heavy lifting. 

Let's take a gander at what these beasts are so you can get more of an idea of what they're about.....

-The Iso-Trainer



It's a versatile bad ass of the pair. The compact and adjustable straps (With handles) turns any spot into your own personal gym. You can wrap it around a pole or use a door anchor and you've got some dynamic exercises as well like Pull-ups, Push-ups, Lunges, Curls, Tricep Extensions and even Zercher Style Squatting. You can literally turn any of these and more into an Isometric session that will have feeling like a boss within minutes, not hours like many spend in a gym. Throw it in a carry-on and get in a quick workout at an airport, in your hotel room, at the park, hell even while you camp. It builds insane stabilizer strength, endurance and power while keeping the joints safe. This is great for those over 40 and still want to train like an animal  but also wake up without sounding like a rusty gate. Even if you're healthy and springy at any age, Isometrics will continue to keep that journey alive.

-The Iso-Loop



At only 11 ounces, this champion lightweight is 10 feet of military grade webbing with a cam buckle so you can adjust it on the fly. Put it under your foot in a split squat for example and drive that shit upwards while pulling it apart with your hands. A Hybrid hold that works like magic. Gravity keeps you humble on the yielding aspect but also demands that max intent with the overcoming part at the same time. Remember that Fusion analogy in Dragon Ball Z I wrote in the last article on Hybrids? This is it. It's affordable yet nearly indestructible while being stupid effective for the legs, core and presses/pulls you can do virtually anywhere.


What makes these two powerhouses so fucking great? The simplicity. You don't need a membership, no complex setup. Grab it by the horns, adjust and crush it with max holds for 7-12 seconds or less intensity for longer time. A few sessions a week and you're toughening up those little muscles, building that mind/muscle connection and developing real world athleticism that many programs can't even fathom. They may not be great look great and won't always get Social Media attention but they hold secrets that even the Old Time Strongmen knew and that's that Isometrics forge dense and useable power that lasts with a vengeance.

In my own training, Isometrics have been a go to for many years and have learned many things just from this method in and of itself. The key thing to remember is that you don't need complicated routines that don't give you the results you're looking for. Look for things that can make you dangerous and these two beasts can give you that without spending a ton of time on them. 

Come and grab the Trainer and Loop at Worldfit.com. Keep it simple, train with intent and keep being amazingly awesome. If you want more info and exercises you can learn, grab the book Overcoming Isometrics either in Kindle Form or a Physical Copy, both are affordable and have great quality info and pictures that show you which areas to hit the most. With a 4.6 Star Rating over hundreds of reviews, you might want to give it your attention. You got this and I believe in you. 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Hybrid Isometric Training: Two Worlds Linked Together To Create Insane Strength

How's it going everyone? Hope you're well and ready to get into one of my favorite subjects/methods in the world of Physical Culture: Isometrics.


In most cases, people often think isometrics means one thing: freeze in place and hold. That’s only half the story. If it’s the only half you train, you’re leaving strength on the table that can benefit you beyond what you were taught.

Matt Schifferle of the Red Delta Project breaks down a style of isometrics into two camps in Overcoming Isometrics: Yielding and Overcoming. You’ve done both or one or the other at one point in time, even if you didn’t call them that. Here's a lesson in what these two super powers are.....


-Yielding isometrics are the ones many would know. You hold your position against gravity. Pause at the top of a pull-up or sitting in a horse stance and fight to keep from dropping. The resistance is quantifiable but it’s static.


There is a small problem though. 

Your muscles adapt to the load fast. Neural drive stagnates. You build endurance in that exact angle, but your mind-to-muscle connection doesn’t have to work very hard. You’re just... holding. And holding alone can compromise neural synergy — the skill of firing everything together under chaos. 

-Overcoming isometrics flip the script. Now you’re the one creating resistance. Think pushing against a doorframe or trying to curl an immovable bar. No gravity, no weight. The load is only as hard as your intent. 


That can also have some issues.

If your focus slips for half a second, the resistance vanishes. You can trick yourself into thinking you’re working hard when you’re really just leaning on the wall. Without gravity or an external load, it’s tough to know if you’re actually forcing adaptation. Intensity becomes a mental game, not always a physical certainty.

(He talks more about Neural Drive, Strength, Endurance in other chapters so it gives you more ideas of where they come from)

So on one side of the coin, you’ve got one method that’s quantifiable but static and on the other, one that’s dynamic but not unmeasurable. 


What if you didn’t have to choose?


-Enter hybrid isometrics.


This is Schifferle’s bridge between the two worlds. You combine these 2 beasts together. Gravity gives you a real, measurable load to fight. Then you add a second source of resistance you have to overcome — a strap, a yoga band, an Iso-Loop — and now you’re pushing or pulling against something that won’t move. 


Think of it this way: If you're a Dragon Ball Z fan and you've seen Goten & Trunks use Fusion, they form the hybrid being Gotenks. 


Go into your mind and see this from a training perspective: You’re in a split squat. Your bodyweight is the yielding component. Gravity is pulling you down, and you’re resisting it. Now loop a nylon strap under your front foot and drive up into it with your hands like you’re trying to rip it apart. That’s the overcoming component. You’ve got gravity keeping you honest, plus an immovable force demanding max intent. 

The benefit? You’re not just holding anymore. You’re fighting while you hold. That combination hammers your muscles harder than either method alone. It forces your nervous system to recruit more fibers, to coordinate under load, to create tension in multiple directions at once. It's quite difficult to hold most of these for more than a minute at best.

Matt points out that these are more advanced than basic holds. You’re putting your body against gravity and against a prop. That double demand pushes you past the sticking points you hit with yielding or overcoming on their own.

Why does that matter for real-world strength? Because life isn’t a paused rep. Picking up a couch, holding a door while you shove a box through, wrestling a dog into the tub — you’re yielding to one force while overcoming another. Hybrid isometrics trains that exact quality.

You don’t need a gym full of gear. A $10 yoga strap turns just about any bodyweight hold into a hybrid. Plank while trying to pull the strap apart. Wall sit while driving your knees out into a loop. Hold the bottom of a push-up while trying to screw your hands into the floor. The load is real. The intent is max. And your nervous system has nowhere to hide.

Yielding teaches you to survive. 

Overcoming teaches you to attack. 

Hybrid teaches you to do both at the same time. That’s where real fucking strength you can actually use gets built.

Be amazingly awesome and get strong as hell that is functional and powerful. It isn't some new trend or fad, this is time tested and proven that although it's a different style of Strength Training, it carries over to other areas of life outside of workouts and fitness training in general. 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

The Journey Of Being In Your 40's

Before we get into this, I just want to say that I hope everyone will get a chance to see the new and updated design of the blog. New logo, bio, comment policy and a few other tweaks. A friend of mine got in contact with me and wanted to help me out with rebranding or even giving the blog a makeover. The things he has shown and helped me with, I'm very grateful to him. He takes the credit for the designs and background. He knows who he is and just want to say thank you for all you've put into giving this platform a bad ass look. A great friend indeed.



Now that we've got that out of the way (I'm still getting chills with the new logo), let's have a little fun with aging shall we? For real though, 41 isn't old, it's only old if you make it out to be. I haven't felt like I peaked yet and still have far more left in me. Now you may have more experience and know you're not in you're not in your 20's or 30's anymore but that doesn't mean things go down hill after 40. 

It is a journey that teaches us new things, finding what's possibly beyond the horizon. You learn to adapt, improvise and find out what some of your true strengths are. We learn how to work around our weaknesses the best we can and even turn those into strengths we didn't think were possible before. From a training point of view, some have been around the game for decades while others are just starting out or getting back into it after being away from it for so long. It doesn't matter how much experience you have or if you're a complete Probe (If you've ever watched NCIS, you know what this means), the journey is where you're at right now and what you can do moving forward.

Not all of us are the strongest or the fastest but that doesn't mean we can't improve who we can become and get stronger and faster for ourselves. You don't need to look like anybody else, they're already taken. We can admire them, learn from them and even try to emulate them but in the end, all we can do is be a little better than yesterday even down to the smallest fraction that nobody else will notice. 

There are those who are 40+ and had more injuries in their life than the average person can count on one hand. Sometimes, there are things we can never come back from because of the severity but in most cases, we can do our damndest to make ourselves better so our lives can have a better quality. I've seen guys in wheelchairs do things that are fucking incredible, seen guys who look more like spiderman than the hulk catch/flip heavy ass kettlebells and even rack pulled 1000+ lbs. Seen guys over 40 carry a yoke while its on fire and then shoot arrows. There are many things we can do that people tell us couldn't happen after we reach 40. 

We all have our own routes to take, sometimes we hit forks in the road, sometimes we need to change course to get to where we're going because some routes aren't always the same. The road maps, GPS, personality and other things are part of where we go in life. Some just want to maintain and even find new ways to train so they can be able to keep going, some will train harder than they ever did in their life because they didn't want to be the youngest in a nursing home while others are just trying to get out of bed in the morning and battle their mental demons so they can function. 

In a fitness aspect, 40 and beyond is a new or even continuous path to where you can become the best version of yourself. You may stumble, you may even have a setback or two but you keep fighting so what you're able to do becomes effortless. Being better than everybody else isn't the flex some think it is, there's always going to be someone better, stronger, faster and durable than you so why fight to be better than 8+ billion people. Seriously, what kind of life is that? Be the best version of you, be the first that changes what was and what will be so you can thrive in your own life. Train for a competition, do things that maintain your strength, work on your attitude towards certain methods and learn what it means to discover your own powers, your own obstacles to overcome and kick ass beyond what you've done before or haven't been able to do yet. 


I'm in my early 40's and still have things to learn, methods that may become a part of my vocabulary and training routines that can turn me more into a machine than I could ever be in my 20's and 30's. I'm not going down without a fight. I'm still young but also experienced many things that people don't know about and on a journey that hasn't faded. I have stumbled but always got back up, I do have certain regrets but those also taught me how to be a better man through hard lessons and soul searching. I want to be a little better, even if its microscopic, there is still something I can do to keep myself going. That's my fight, my way of overcoming things in life and how I continue to fucking roll through the bullshit. 

What's your fight? What have you overcome to get to where you are now? How has your journey gone that gives you purpose to keep going? You have more in you than you realize and I believe you can do great things when you make those demons your bitch. Keep fighting and don't let those who tear you down get to you because if you let it, you'll be in a black hole that's infinite. Get out and do what's possible for you. You got this.

Be amazingly awesome and don't think of your 40's as the end, but as a beginning to what you can do as time goes on. 

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