The Purposeful Primitive — Now Available!

Written on 7 June 2008 by

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From Fat and Flaccid to Lean and Powerful—Using the Primordial Laws of Fitness to Trigger Inevitable, Lasting and Dramatic Physical Change


By Marty Gallagher

Paperback 496 pages
8.5 x 11

Original drawing of The Purposeful Primitive
by Ori Hofmekler

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Popularity: 67% [?]


Two back exercises worthy of consideration and inclusion in the rotation

Written on 11 February 2008 by

I love the big sweeping compound multi-joint exercises that require groups of muscles to work together in synchronization in order to complete the muscular task at hand. When it comes to working the back muscles it is important to understand that the human back has a half dozen component parts: erectors, teres, upper and lower latisimus, trapaezius, rhomboids and rear deltoids. Big back exercises activate multiple muscles and more often then not the hips and upper thighs. The smaller back isolation exercises zero in on one or two back muscles to the purposeful exclusion of its neighbors. The important big movements include all the deadlift variations, high pulls, cleans, power cleans, power snatches, shrugs and row variations. Chins and pull-ups are great compound back exercises particularly when the trainee becomes strong enough to hang weight around the waist. Two lesser used back exercises, one for the spinal erectors and one for the lats, are wonderfully effective and are seldom used. Both have a specific technical protocol that amplify their effectiveness and make them worthy of inclusion in any trainees exercise rotation list.

On a related side note: we all have exercise preferences but need to be on guard against using the favored ones exclusively ad infinitum. Continually using the same exercises in the same fashion for the same set and rep protocol becomes an exercise in futility. The human body is the great neutralizer and when presented with the same menu of exercises done in the same way will accustom itself to the stress and negate any results.

The human body reconfigures itself in response to muscle stress and trauma and doing the same thing in the same way will not create the stress needed to flip the hypertrophy switch. Bottomline: periodically rotate out of the lineup those pet exercises that you love and do all the time. Alter those favored rep ranges and change the exercise menu on a regularly reoccurring basis otherwise you are falling asleep in a figurative snowbank, to use a Jack London To Build a Fire analogy. My approach is to structure a workout that hits two body parts. I start with a compound multi-joint exercise (CMJ) for a particular body part then finish off with an isolation exercise. For a change of pace I will use a CMJ variation of the classic; if I am deadlifting and burnt out I could roll with deadlifts done while standing on a 100-pound plate or perhaps some stiff-leg deadlifts, either off the floor or off a plate. Periodically I would drop all deadlifting totally and completely. I would rotate in some other CMJ back exercise and allow all deadlift muscle to heal, recover and FORGET (in a manner of speaking) how to deadlift. By eliminating a particular favored exercise and all its variations completely for 4-5 weeks, when I swing back to that exercise the muscles involved are shocked out of their ever-loving minds. You know how to do the exercise in a technical sense so, like riding a bike, you never forget and are able to swing back into the movement with a vengeance.

Prone hyperextensions require a device that holds the legs in place as the athlete faces downward. The upper body is allowed to drop downward until the head is near the floor. The upper body stretches downward with the legs pinioned. The hip joint is the fulcrum and the upper body stretches down to the bottom to start the exercise. The athlete lifts the torso upward as high as possible. Hold the top position for a beat before lowering. I have my trainees rise up and at the apogee look up at the ceiling. This is a fabulous spinal erector developer. Try to work up to a 20-rep set. Once you are able to perform 20-reps, try 10-reps holding a 10 or 25-pound plate in your arms as you rep. If you are doing this exercise correct youll feel a pump in erectors. (The two twin python muscles that flank the spine) I like to end a good back workout with 2-3 sets of prone hyperextensions: on the first set I likely use zero poundage for 15-20 reps and on the second set I rep out holding a 45-pound plate. The critical performance point is to hold the top position for a beat before lowering. I like to arch as high as I can, hold that position for a second - then try and rise up higher yet before lowering. In the bottom position I like to relax and allow my bodyweight and the plate to stretch my muscles and elongate the spine before commencing the rep. Purposeful Primitives rotate three specific ranges-of-motion: normal, exaggerated and shortened. Use the exaggerated ROM on this magnificent exercise.

Straight arm pullovers are the second neglected back exercise. Lie on a flat bench and grasp a light dumbbell with two hands under one end. The hands circle the handle and grabs under one of the two ends of the bell. The other end of the dumbbell hangs down over your face. Lying with your head as near the end of the bench as possible, inhale and allow the bell to drop backwards over the end of the bench keeping your arms straight. Time the inhalation so that maximum expansion occurs as your lower the dumbbell towards the floor. Lower slowly, seeking maximum stretch in the lats. Try and touch the floor with the bell (likely you wont be able) when you can lower no further raise the poundage slowly; use only the lats to raise the weight. This is the key: the straight arms make leverage difficult. The stretch is incredible and must be done carefully; dont allow the bell to free-fall or you could tear or rip muscles. Since the poundage used is light you could explode the weight out of the bottom creating momentum and throw the weight back to the start position this is exactly what we dont want. Use a slowed lowering and slowed raising as this maximizes stress on the lats. Big inhale, big stretch, slow raise using lats and lats alone to raise the weight. Done properly the stretch is felt in the lats in real time. Shoot for ten reps using the continual tension, purposefully slow rep speed. Lats are super hard to isolate and this exercise allows me to zero in on the target muscle with a precision that need be experienced to appreciate.

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Trade secret #77 The stiff-leg deadlift

Written on 28 January 2008 by

Keith jogged my brain this past week by asking about tips the other day. I thought back and what percolated to the surface of my memory was the stiff-leg deadlift. Done as an assistance exercise for regular deadlifts, I was first introduced to them by the great Hugh Cassidy, the carefree Nietzsche of powerlifting. Hugh didnt cotton to too many exercises past squat, bench and deadlift, but the stiff-leg deadlift was one he insisted on. Religiously hed have us do two sets of stiffs after completing regular deadlifts. The technique was important. The bar stayed in contact with the leg the entire time, over the total length of the rep stroke. The hips were the hinge, the fulcrum, and this is where the real action took place. We all used a narrow-stance conventional deadlift style as per Hugh, with maybe six inches between the heelswe learned how to do the bow and arrow technique using a conventional pull stance.

The stiff leg was the number 1 assistance exercise. It worked the hell out of the hinge and thats what Cassidy wanted: to turn spinal erectors into industrial cranes. One Hugh truism which always stuck with me was, The best assistance exercises are the ones that most closely resemble the lift itself. That is profound if you ponder it.ergo, narrow and wide grip flat bench presses are superior assistance exercise to say the incline barbell or dumbbell press. Narrow stance high bar squats are a superior squat assistance exercise than leg presses. Stiff-leg deadlifts are therefore better than rows or cleans.

How to perform a stiff-leg deadlift properly:

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Optimal Training Time: You’ve got about an hour…Music and cardio

Written on 16 July 2007 by

Youve got about an hour: I have a lot of folks ask how long an exercise session should last. Experience and science both converge on this one: for someone in reasonably good condition, after 45 to 60 minutes energy starts to nosedive and the point of diminishing returns set in. There are two types of resistance training; intense and effective and not so intense and not so effective. 99% of people who take up weight training fall into the later category. Not necessarily out of laziness or because theyre bad people but because they dont know any better. No one has ever taken them aside and said, Look unless you really press the limit in various exercises nothing of any real consequence is going to occur. Unfortunately going through the motions, i.e., using the same poundage in the same exercise for the same number of sets and repetitions is going to result in little if any change. Only by pushing the body to do that which is has not done before do we trigger the adaptive response. That makes sense. Just look around when you go to the gym: if simply doing what you are capable of, if simply performing the same number of reps using the same poundage in the same exercise triggered the adaptive response, the gym would be crawling with muscle monsters. The human body does not reconfigure itself in response to sameness. The body only grows muscle and becomes stronger as a result of being pushed into new territory. Those who go through the motions, staying within their respective comfort zone can train for a long time. Those who train intensely enough to trigger hypertrophy have about an hour before the sheer intensity of the effort causes them to run completely out of energy: physical energy and psychic energy. If they dont run out of gas after a solid hour of bust-ass weight training then theyre either a Lance Armstrong aerobic anomaly (doubtful since genetically gifted endurance athletes are one in 100,000) or a person thinks theyre giving 105%.

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28-Day Beach Blitz Part 5 of 5: Weight Training and Cardio

Written on 9 May 2007 by

Complimentary Weight Training: Fast & Light

Picking a weight program to compliment a diet is like picking the perfect wine for a gourmet meal. The ideal progressive resistance training approach to compliment our 28-day, all-out diet assault could be summarized as follows: quick pace, slow rep speed, lift infrequently but lift intensely. All our efforts are directed at fat burning and in reality you are not going to build much muscle while operating in continual caloric deficit. The goal is to strip away the muscle-obscuring layer of lard. To that end we limit our weight training to two or three weekly lifting sessions with rest days in between. For beginner and intermediates, we recommend a whole body training session structured as follows:

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28-Day Beach Blitz Part 4: Calories and Getting Started

Written on 7 May 2007 by

Establish a caloric starting point by multiplying your current body weight times 15. By way of example, a 200-pound individual would be allotted 3,000 calories to commence the process. Take into account the caloric expenditure associated with exercise and eat another small supplement meal to replace and replenish calories burned through lifting and cardio. Rush restorative nutrients to traumatized muscle tissue immediately after the workout. Dousing muscles with high quality protein and a slow-release carbohydrate mixture right after a workout takes advantage of a physiological window of opportunity during which nutrients are absorbed at three times the normal rate. Each successive week for four straight weeks the plan calls for lowering the overall caloric intake and subtly tinkering with the percentage ratios of protein, carbohydrate and fat. By reducing calories and manipulating nutrients we cause body fat to oxidize while simultaneously retaining muscle mass.

GETTING STARTED:

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Popularity: 98% [?]