Can we all appreciate that when Eddie did that deadlift, he recruited so much of his available muscle, it nearly killed him. When he went down on his knee after the lift, he was blind in both eyes and struggled to stay conscious. He then began bleeding out of his nose, eyes, and ears. When he got back stage he was barely coherant and had neurological symptoms that almost hospitalized him. He reported that it was difficult to think clearly for the 2 weeks after that lift. People are capable of great feats of strength but there is always a cost.
@TREE3-ph4sr3 ай бұрын
it was his great feat of stupidity. It would've been admirable and something to be honoured if it was done to save a meaningful person's life
@josephburger59633 ай бұрын
@@TREE3-ph4sr it produced a small quantity of wealth, which allowed him to pay for the necessities of training to win the world's strongest man comp, which he then leveraged into attaining generational wealth for his family. It might nit have been something you would do. It doesn't make it stupid. He took calculated risks to leverage his specific talents to provide the life he wanted for his family. Cost and reward. The reward (for him) was enough for the risk (for him.) Ya dig?
@soumyadipaul3 ай бұрын
@@TREE3-ph4srmatter of perspective
@franzhulk29473 ай бұрын
Because he put so much strain at his neck muscles, that his nerven and bloodvessels are compressed hard af. He basically had a selfmade stroke. So this is probably what you can call muscle activation 😅
@virtuerse3 ай бұрын
@@NUNYABIZNNAAAZZZ this man spittin bars 🔥
@admacjo3 ай бұрын
Isometric training is a pretty straight forward and effective way to train your nervous system to activate more motor units. Also great for rehabbing injuries.
@Nemanja-v2r3 ай бұрын
@@admacjo Horse stance enters the chat
@jacklauren93593 ай бұрын
Body weight iso has its limitation. There’s a reason why they have overcoming iso and yielding iso.
@PK-pp3lu3 ай бұрын
@@jacklauren9359 You can add weight do iso exercises bro
@skeleswing21312 ай бұрын
I’m interested in your comment for research work. Is that a fact? Do you have references where I find more info about?
@cristianbustosvera42662 ай бұрын
@@skeleswing2131 ask chat gpt. it knows almost all for real. it can aend you to sources as well if you ask it
@Nemanja-v2r3 ай бұрын
I have zero doubt that anyone can lift a car if someone dear to them was in danger but i also have zero doubt that 95 % of them would say goodbye to their shoulders,back or hips after such a monumental task
@spinnerboyz3 ай бұрын
That’s the sacrifice. Also goes to show how much more powerful the mind is compared to the body.
@Nemanja-v2r3 ай бұрын
@@spinnerboyz i would like to know what happened to people after they did such a gigantic task/lifting car,did that girls passed with injuries or maybe adrenallin or something that releseas after that Hulkish thing prevents bigger injuries
@thunderred52633 ай бұрын
@@Nemanja-v2rno it doesn't help with injuries it just removes the mental block and gives slightly more blood to muscles
@Nemanja-v2r3 ай бұрын
@@thunderred5263 perhaps,but remember when you fight i mean in actual street fight you dont need to warm up,adrenalin kicks in and you just start swinging. But when you sparr (i sparr reguraly) you need to warm up or you joints,shoulders will suffer.
@thunderred52633 ай бұрын
@@Nemanja-v2r as I said more blood to the muscles which makes things loose
@rigby0073 ай бұрын
Max Sick used to practice muscle control, and he was incredibly strong for his bodyweight! Even Bruce Lee used to say that there must be a fusion of the mind and body, and he is arguably the strongest martial artist pound for pound. So that means that the more your mind is connected to your body, or the more control you have over your body, the more muscle fibres you can recruit!
@AodhanBeag3 ай бұрын
Be like water
@gamesong66002 ай бұрын
All said and done, the benefits of chemicals can't be denied, the ones Bruce Lee used to take.
@rigby0073 ай бұрын
This is exactly the type of video I was looking for! Thank you Mover's Odyssey!!
@panhuragan43883 ай бұрын
@@rigby007 how to activate it? Please 🙏
@djj33573 ай бұрын
This is the most amazing, enlightening channel available!!
@VanguardZen3 ай бұрын
"Awaken, my dormant muscles!" *A Y A Y A Y A plays in the background*
@Droon_Jadhav2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@LatimusChadimus3 ай бұрын
He did not see a woman lifting a car off of her child, if you read the actual article in the newspaper she called out for help from Three Boys from the neighborhood and they were able to lift the car, all she did was lift up on the wheel well basically releasing a little bit of tension from the struts. Maybe somebody depicted her in a picture and that's where he's claiming he saw that but that did not happen. She did not lift that car on her own.
@orlanskimer3 ай бұрын
So that's what you got out of the whole video?
@LatimusChadimus3 ай бұрын
@@orlanskimer no I posted another comment which led to a brief conversation with the host. The whole story has been debunked multiple times by multiple people so yes I had to bring it up because it's just not true
@Dragonfly31113 ай бұрын
@@orlanskimermy thoughts exactly! Lol
@Dragonfly31113 ай бұрын
@@LatimusChadimus you're confusing this with a different story. I'm always confused why people get so defensive about this. It's not that hard to imagine. I personally have an experience similar when I was a kid and I was a very small kid. I saved my little cousin from getting hit by a car. Very unlikely story and the adults didn't believe me but my sister and other cousin vouched for me. It was hard to believe but our bodies can do amazing things under the right circumstances
@guillermor.r48312 ай бұрын
It's like when people say we only use 10% of our brain, and that idea actually came from a science fiction book🤦♂
@neowave7773 ай бұрын
Dude your videos are INCREDIBLE! And yes I was going to mention the Eddie Hall example but you covered it too. Can't wait to the next video
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Glad your enjoying the content! Eddie is a beast and seemed like the perfect example, though I've also heard of other powerlifters who would imagine all kinds of things to help them during the lift. One I had heard claim he imagined he was a bear standing on it's hind legs with every deadlift because he liked the tales of the old viking berzerkers.
@neowave7773 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Very cool! I might try that next time!
@medit4tive3 ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant as usual. So much great information packed so tightly. Watched the video twice in a row.
@spacetomato10202 ай бұрын
I've noticed that during negatives I am able for exceed my body's normal "safety limits". For example in jiu jitsu, if I wrap my arms around someone and try to pin their arms to their sides, the normal reaction is for them to place the hands on my hips and take a step back, arching their back and pushing me away to break my grip. If I try and resist, the pain in my biceps gets greater and greater and I have to let go before my strength fails. I believe that if I did not let go whenever this occurred, then I would end up tearing my biceps, because in this position it tricks my body into using 100% of the muscle fibers.
@KubaSzI2 ай бұрын
I have been looking for this kind of material on this subject for several years thank you for it❤
@nattydred25933 ай бұрын
I think I've personally witnessed two techniques described here, working. First, when bench pressing dumbbells, if when tired I allow the dumbbells to drop at the tail end of a controlled eccentric descent, the recruitment of extra muscle to stop the drop makes the next contraction easier/possible. Next, repetitions to exhaustion while juggling. Juggling 5 or more props quickly exhausts muscle fibers in succession, until all of the relevant fibers are depleted. If you look at the biceps of any 5 ball juggler, you realize that large biceps can be developed using just 3-4 oz balls.
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
The eccentric contraction helping to activate more fibers is very likely. I've noticed the same thing, especially when it's taken to a nearly fully elongated position. I've never juggled but I know what you mean about developing strength from light loads. I think it's a topic that many people will debate, but I've seen the same thing in people who just swing a small hammer all day or hobby martial artists who spend a lot of time training with hand held weapons. It creates a very dense and controlled type of muscle quality.
@brittlanders3513 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Agree totally. I did heavy steel construction for years, swinging a 4lb hammer and dragging welding leads around….though hard on the body, we all were so strong! Stronger than anything I’ve ever accomplished in a gym.
@ryzikx3 ай бұрын
just found the channel wow its a goldmine
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Glad your enjoying it, thanks for watching!
@rcmaniac773 ай бұрын
Chalistenic skill training helped me a ton to get mind muscle activation it feels like il learning how to move the muscle before training it to the max strength
@MarEkkertsen3 ай бұрын
Just found you today. Exceptional clarity. Thank you.
@Dragonfly31113 ай бұрын
Thank you for your unique and refreshing perspective. As always much appreciated. Love this video ❤
@zaquedavis33912 ай бұрын
So Doug Young was right when he said: "Your body is much more capable than your mind allows it to be; it's like a breaker fuse for the body"
@HoshinaStarnova3 ай бұрын
Now I know why every time I imagine a fight, dark scenarios, and how I will do the exercise, it makes me perform better.
@souvikmaiti2 ай бұрын
I really like your visual & scientific way to explain things keeping any n all BS aside … keeping n simple n content. Great work indeed
@oanasimonastef20413 ай бұрын
Mover's Odyssey keeping us shredded💪💪
@dianfairos12062 ай бұрын
Please keep continue making this content, i learn a lot from all your videos and is awesome bruh🔥
@moversodyssey2 ай бұрын
Glad the content is helping out! Thanks for the comment!
@anthonyman80083 ай бұрын
It's all about nerves
@DarinRinehart3 ай бұрын
Mover's Odyssey is team Eddie confirmed lol. I love your channel, keep it up!
@glynhannaford73323 ай бұрын
Superb work, as ever, MO. 👏
@henrikjensen87263 ай бұрын
Your ability to compress complicated movements is extremely helpfull.I wonder if you could expand on the dand and bhaitak,and the 5 tibetans,as these are complex movements.I find new aspects in these exercises such as tension,relaxation and breathing as tools to improve,daily.thanks a lot for your efforts.yours Henrik Denmark
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Great suggestion!
@boopydoopy13422 ай бұрын
would love a longer video on the topic
@StoneChild92 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your work. I thoroughly enjoy your educational material and sketches. I've used past videos to help with issues I've had. Thank you again, sir. :D
@prnicho3 ай бұрын
Excellent as usual.
@hzali66833 ай бұрын
I love that you give the sources in the explanation. It's been very helpful so far.
@AjkRL3 ай бұрын
Ayy! Excited to learn some more amazing and useful information!
@joechance773 ай бұрын
Dude these videos are amazing! Thanks for all you share!
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Glad you like them, thanks for commenting!
@zynic80083 ай бұрын
Very informative video for training
@Joe-xj2tb2 ай бұрын
Ahh this is my concept of "falling from a given heigth say upper bunk bed" str8 to pushup and my flying "clapping" pushup and dip's- This entails the survival response as in say you're in an unkown place and something jumps out at you and you must protect yourself- THE FIGHT RESPONSE
@siegfriedo3 ай бұрын
I love your work on the channel. So educative, I always learn something useful that I can incorporate in my routine. 👍
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Glad it's been helping out! Feel free to leave suggestions for future videos if there is something you would like to see as well. All the suggestions go on a list.
@upeshful2 ай бұрын
There is story in indian folks that great gama lifted 1200 kg stone in 1902. The stone is still preserved in one of the meuseum in Vadodara city. Still its not believable but yeah he used to have great strength and undefeated kushti player(wrestler) in that time.
@Hindustaniyoddha0893 ай бұрын
Really loved you mentioning gama pehalwan❤
@paulcarter96523 ай бұрын
Alexander Bromley has debunked twice, to my knowledge, the myth of “hysterical strength”, it just doesn’t happen. Of course that won’t stop me from trying these strategies, good vid.
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Yea he left a comment on this video, he was pretty unhappy with the examples. Seems it's a topic he takes very seriously. Lol
@하나-e3oАй бұрын
자막 감사합니다!
@nicholasblanchard98713 ай бұрын
the drawings blow my mind every single time!!! Your videos are amazing in every aspect
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, I'm glad you're enjoying them!
@someguyusa3 ай бұрын
Interestingly, Eddie Hall recently chose to try a carnivore diet, and as of writing this he's been on it for 7 weeks or so. He reports so far that he has experienced a reduction in GI distress, reduced inflammation, a lower bodyfat percentage without deliberately trying to do so, improved sleep quality, and claims that his strength performance has increased significantly. He has been consuming around 10,000 calories per day while on this carnivore diet experiment. Perhaps there is something to be gained from such a diet in terms of strength output and performance. Eddie Hall has to be one of the best case studies we could've asked for too.
@oinkoink6442 ай бұрын
10000 cal Carnivor??? Means he eats a cow a day???
@Triangle-pl7ob3 ай бұрын
This is the best channel
@tsutchiex3 ай бұрын
Good video! I missed overcoming isometrics being mentioned though.
@kratosbohy5293 ай бұрын
Bro Your anatomy drawing is something else
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Glad you're enjoying it!
@Tomaszeks3 ай бұрын
Great video! Thumbs up for the Ultimate Warrior drawing! 😃
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Used to be a huge ultimate warrior fan as a kid, he had such a crazy level of energy.
@Tomaszeks3 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Haha! Same here! 🤭
@TheAzraf123Ай бұрын
man i love your content so much thanks
@bentleythebear11 күн бұрын
ro you work and videos are very high quality you deserve way more subs
@moversodysseyКүн бұрын
I appreciate that! thanks for your comment!
@berner3 ай бұрын
This reminds me of when I would do my sets starting light at ten reps and continually doing ten reps with small increases in weight until I could only hit eight, then continue doing eight and adding weight until I could only do six and then keep doing six until I couldn't do the lift, all as one set (so for example I could start bench at 95 pounds and eventually go finish off at maybe 200 pounds) Just out of curiosity, how do Type 2x fibres play into Hysterical training? I ask because since they have a high explosive and strength ratio to endurance rating, you want to lift heavy and explosive but for a low number of reps per set (3 - 4) with about two minutes of rest between sets since they burn out faster. Either way, this vid was awesome. Very informative and I learned something new.
@eddiem22112 ай бұрын
paraolympians bench press strength is insane though
@buddy.spencer3 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@anon12313 ай бұрын
Love the artwork!
@Triangle-pl7ob3 ай бұрын
Bless this guy
@The_EnglishTiger2 ай бұрын
Such quality video thank you
@LangSilverBug3 ай бұрын
I'm honestly surprised that overcoming isometrics and similar techniques weren't mentioned. If I recall correctly, using those techniques is how Bruce Lee acquired his absolutely monstrous strength at such a relatively small and lean size
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
I almost put it on here, but decided to hold off and put it on it's own video. Once of the limitations of these videos is they can't be too long because the hand drawn illustrations are so labor intensive. Overcoming isometrics are very powerful though, one of my favorite training tools.
@shoaibmalik90963 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Could you mention the Mighty atom and Dennis Rogers in your isometric vid? They used allot of isos to bend steel.
@brianbachmeier343 ай бұрын
Thank you
@crasherwtf58723 ай бұрын
As always, fantastic content thank you! You left me curious about some quesitons: - Which one is the best way to gain MVC (therefore strength) plyometrics, long sets with medium weight or just lifting heavy with small number of reps? - Do you have any video deeping inside how to and benefits of long sets exercises?
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Really it just depends on your particular goals. They will all increase MVC but in different ways. If you're looking for lifting strength, then power lifting and overcoming isometrics are the best way to go. For explosive strength, plyometrics and ballistics will do well. The long sets are interesting because they don't really increase MVC but instead create a much more efficient use of motor unit recruitment, so you get more out of the MVC you have. It's great for strength-endurance, the cardiovascular system and the joints if your form is good. The high reps really bring a lot of blood flow to the joints to help nourish the tendons and ligaments. I don't have a video yet, but I'm going to do one sometime soon about hindu squats and hindu push ups and discuss it.
@shaolinmunky20122 ай бұрын
I've got questions I can't find answers to -- maybe you can help. First, at 6:00 you say that 50 reps is generally enough for most people to recruit and exhaust 100% of their muscle fibers -- is this one set of 50 or multiple sets? If it's multiple sets, what kind of rest period between sets? Second, how quickly do muscle fibers recover? Minutes? Hours? Basically, how quickly do I have to hit 50 reps to exhaust all of the fibers? Finally, should the last rep be failure or should I still have a few reps in the tank? Thanks for a wonderful video!
@moversodyssey2 ай бұрын
This video was referring to one continuous set. Though when most people start doing long set, the number of reps needed to activate all fibers is closer to 30-35. After a few months it's usually closer to 50. And in extreme cases, where this type of training is performed often and at high levels, this number can be over 100. The sets will end up taking you just about to failure. You will definitely have to feel the muscular stamina being exhausted. The motor units will recover at different rates, depending on size and muscle fiber type. But after your set you will have a good percentage recovered after just a minute or two and nearly all will be recovered within 3-5 minutes. When you get good at this type of exercise structure the muscular stamina becomes much more efficient and you will have some motor units recovering mid set while other motor units are performing work. The speed at which you perform the reps will have some effect on recovery time, largely based off the amount of extra effort it takes to go very slow or very fast. It's more difficult in these case because you are only targeting 1 type of muscle fiber, fast or slow twitch. At a more standard pace (around 3-4 seconds per full rep of something like a squat) you are using both slow and fast twitch. Once you understand the mechanics you can gamify this any way you want. Want explosive stamina, do high speed bodyweight squats until you can't maintain the same speed anymore. If you want to target both types of muscle fibers and stimulate every fiber in the target muscle, perform reps at a standard pace and continue until exhaustion. Or you could also do something like 2-3 high speed sets followed by a short rest and then follow up with 2-3 slower steady state reps, targeting each motor unit type separately. Hope this helps, I rambled a bit.
@shaolinmunky20122 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! So as I become better trained it'll take more effort to recruit all 100% AND some previously exhausted fibers could recover before I finish. Would it be advantageous to do multiple sets of 100% exercises, or is the point of multiple sets an effort to utilize every fiber at least once?
@moversodyssey2 ай бұрын
@@shaolinmunky2012 You can do multiple sets, you may have to give yourself 3-4 minutes between sets to let the muscles recover. But as your endurance and recovery get better you can shorten the recovery time. I've seen persian wrestlers who have gotten so good at hindu squats they will do a set of 400, then stretch out for 60 seconds and jump right back into another 400 and do this 4-5 times. Strength endurance is one are where the human body can be taken to extremes. As a side note, in normal strength training, when you do multiple sets you will usually stimulate maybe 50-60% of the fibers with each set. But during the recovery between sets many of those fibers will recover to some degree and be among the 50-60% used in the next set. So some fibers get worked in every set and some never get touched.
@neonhill15953 ай бұрын
Could you make a video on fascia? Thanks brother. Love your vids
@nathanaelmorrison4479Ай бұрын
So when all is said and done, what is the best way to maximize muscle fiber activation? Strength training? Plyometrics? Combining both…?
@gyzmiac4243 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot
@lolocabrologg74243 ай бұрын
you could make a video on how to maximize the strength mobility flexibility of the hips?
@DixonDeadlifts2 ай бұрын
Nothing beats holding a deep squat position for time. Dr Kelly Starrett used to preach that being able to hold this position for 10 minutes was imperative. I usually do 5 min & have seen great results in hip mobility & lower back health. Hope this helps.
@Triangle-pl7ob3 ай бұрын
He is going to make America lift again
@roninx28853 ай бұрын
I appreciate your explanation regarding a variety of strategies anyone can make use of to tap into the neural pathways to increase the motor units recruited when attempting to maximize our power output. Powerlifting, Plyometrics, High Volume Calisthenics, Embodiment/Visualization. I've usually focused on the 3rd strategy and integrated the 2nd every now and then. Thanks to your video I'm interested in a program that would make full use of all these alongside a flexibility/stretch routine!
@SiR_Revs2 ай бұрын
Very insightful
@Effortlexx3 ай бұрын
Day 2 of asking for and benefits of front and middle splits video
@neboise13773 ай бұрын
So ultimate strength boils down to Family
@yousifafndi97133 ай бұрын
A gift from god
@snubdawg13862 ай бұрын
now please make a long version of this topic
@vygwusbjsksi96492 ай бұрын
make a video about overcoming isometrics
@yummymealsss3 ай бұрын
I love your videos you doing amazing job! :)
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Glad your enjoying them, thanks for watching!
@tomvondeek3 ай бұрын
your content is always so so awesome. brilliant piece of (art)work, as always.
@milliondollarart3 ай бұрын
What do you think about Matthias Steiner in Bejing, could it be also one of the examples?
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Im sure he is using a very high percentage of muscle fibers. He's an incredibly strong individual and trains for short, explosive bursts of power.
@ulhasanzk22492 ай бұрын
I never thought i would here the great gamma in a vid like this
@moversodyssey2 ай бұрын
His workouts and his wrestling career were really impressive.
@ulhasanzk22492 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Indeed
@Lerdiee3 ай бұрын
Thats why we need to Train Every day
@daymarportt48803 ай бұрын
What really is isometric exercises and can it really make people superhuman or close to it. Can you do a video on it?
@casperkoteras2 ай бұрын
Isometrics help you train nervous system- muscle link. Exp: most people can recruit 50-60% of their muscle fibers in a movement. Someone who trains in isometrics regularly could plausibly recruit 70-90% of their muscle fibers. keep in mind that the weight lifted and recruited muscle fiber are not linearly correlated. This means that if at 40% you could deadlift 200lbs it would be plausible for you to deadlift 500lbs at 80%. Other exercises(weightlifting) can increase this nervous system-muscle connection; isometrics exercises are just particularly effective at training this faculty, isometrics are also great at training tendon strength(a common weak link in peoples movement chain). Ive found that isometrics is not good for muscle growth and should be used to compliment an intermediate level weightlifting program. An easy isometric exercise would be to push or pull on something immovable as hard as you can(like pushing a stone wall or pulling on a tree trunk). Hope this was helpful for you man.
@MrShokeSlam3 ай бұрын
best channel
@shota20873 ай бұрын
Your Videos really helped me get better at many things, Thanks!!
@Dragonfly31113 ай бұрын
Ditto
@nelly197420122 ай бұрын
Awesome video
@biscorevideocreation2 ай бұрын
Make a video for teeth extraction solution without brace
@miteshsharma38653 ай бұрын
Can you make benefits of surya namaskar please
@Bloopbloopdoomsoop3 ай бұрын
dude this video and the 3 recommended videos thank you wtf bro
@andyc8707Ай бұрын
The more I learn about the world, us, everything - the more I’m convinced we’re just some autonomous simulated program.
@moversodysseyАй бұрын
The more I learn about physics, the more the entire world looks like a matter simulation with biological interfaces.
@andyc8707Ай бұрын
@ I say some years ago while learning object orientated programmed and had a moment where I went…but, everything in the universe is a simple programming object with different variables.
@seffard2 ай бұрын
This implies it's about the power of our consciousness first and foremost. Muscles come next.
@aboutoure81002 ай бұрын
Can you make a video about why you need to train your fascia
@michaelyoung68372 ай бұрын
What do you use to make videos with these animations
@moversodyssey2 ай бұрын
They are screen recordings of me illustrating and then sped up and talked over in filmora.
@JebediahThePaladin3 ай бұрын
Can't in 1 short video? Let me get that part 2!
@Legosmotion3 ай бұрын
Can say how can I use it for arm wrestling
@frederickdebian3703 ай бұрын
Why do so many people almost die or get seriously injured benching and fail to raise the bar off their necks when it very much could mean their life?
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Usually, they are already fatigued and don't have enough motor units in reserve to call upon.
@frederickdebian3703 ай бұрын
@@moversodysseyWhat about when fresh, attempting a PR? -and thanks for responding!
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
@@frederickdebian370 I can't speak for every incident, but usually it's still the same thing. They are usually attempting a max which means the body is using nearly all of it's fast twitch motor units almost immediately, and fast twitch muscles burn out fast. So if they can't complete the max attempt within 10 seconds or so, they are already running out of motor units.
@AlexanderBromley3 ай бұрын
This is one of the most bizarre modern myths to persist so aggressively. Some things to consider: - Moving one end of a 3000lb car a few inches is not superhuman; a fraction of the total load plus the assistance of the suspension equals a few hundred pounds, maybe. - No one ever claimed to pick the car several feet off the ground (Angela Carvahlo guessed she budged it 4"), yet these illustrations show it and people believe it. - Watch the 2012 interview and tell me you can draw a diagram of how she actually got her dad out? (the car stayed levitated? she pushed it over him without crushing him more?) - Why is it always a car and not anything anywhere else? - Why do we have a million videos of bench fails with people going unconscious with a bar on their neck because they couldn't summon 1% more strength to press it? - Why don't these women suffer ANY tears or ruptures from lifting 5x what they are acclimated to? Lifters with the bone structure of a rhino would still suffer sprains doing a max effort lift cold. The easy answer is because "Hysterical Strength" is Bigfoot, the result of journalists (and unfortunately in this situation, yourself) presenting the extremely vague scenario "lifted a car" without a single critical thought so that the sensationalism can take center stage. In reality a panicked woman pushes on one end, feels the suspension, and reports to a journalist who intentionally keeps details vague to skew the story.
@Barrrt3 ай бұрын
I don't know the answer to your questions but I do know I don't consider hysterical strength the central topic of this video, but rather the concepts we actually know about and that are explained with some level of detail in the rest of the video. I consider hysterical strength just an inspiring and eye-catching start of the video to lure you into the actual informative part. Having said that, I'd rather believe hysterical strength to be real. Because believing you can do more than you think you can is a tactic that works to reach your maximum potential (unless you bring yourself into dangerous situations like the neck example you give).
@Aa.11aaa3 ай бұрын
Good point mate, I think the channel is focusing on the potential itself, no one recommending lifting bizarre weights.
@alizaka14673 ай бұрын
@@panhuragan4388 Watch videos of people doing 8000 pullups a day and 1000+ pushups. Just search on KZbin. Those people have trained their bodies to have an insane amount of endurance. I recentlly watched a guy do 1000 pushups in 30 minutes. So 4000 squats a day is very believable. What I don't understand is how the tendons of those women didn't detach from the bones? Women under very high sudden panic and adrenaline definitely have moved cars. But as the OP suggested, maybe the weight on one side or one tire is far less than the total weight of the car.
@rauqui53183 ай бұрын
Car lifting is bullshit but the point is learning to adapt your nervous system for better strength output that is legit
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
Hysterical strength is something that can't easily be studied because it's nearly impossible to ethically put someone in such a situation in a lab. So as far as I'm concerned its still a big question mark. However, it is interesting and if it's true then motor unit recruitment certainly has something to do with it. The video is about the real strength based effects of increased motor unit recruitment. Hysterical strength is just an interesting anecdote to lead into the subject. Though I will say, even though I've never experienced hysterical strength, I have experienced emergency induced flow states multiple times in my life. One in particular always fascinated me because I moved so precisely and rapidly with incredible timing and body control. And for me I didn't even feel in control, it was like I was having an out of body experience as I watched my body do it's own thing, and do it much better than I ever had. So, I don't know if hysterical strength is real, but I'm positive that traumatic situations can cause very strange and remarkable reactions in people.
@marlowwattiez14073 ай бұрын
A big thank you for your work ! The only little detail missing for me is a visual summary like a board or a sheet to screen shot at home at the end of the video 😁👌
@ramchhanarca45413 ай бұрын
Although I watched the full video can someone plz summarize how to exactly exercise..... 😅
@myGseven3 ай бұрын
I like these videos 💪 💪 💪
@sanketvaria97343 ай бұрын
Basically. workout till muscle failure.
@antareklause87793 ай бұрын
Had to tap out to watch that dunk. In fucking sane
@moversodyssey3 ай бұрын
He even said afterwards he didn't even know he jumped over him. He said all he saw was the basket and he was going to get there no matter what it took. Vince was an animal.
@wali1234513 күн бұрын
Can you make a video on how to lean the handstand please
@39416023 ай бұрын
I would like to hypothesize is this why say like Lenny from Of mice and men had strength or people that are special needs the motor and brain networks are activated differently? Whats your thoughts
@joneh94833 ай бұрын
can you cover muscle irradiation. its in the same area