This program works! I doubled my pull ups.... from 1 rep to 2.
@Mancalius5 ай бұрын
Great, if they're great form
@MRawesom1005 ай бұрын
wow
@thegreatgamers98125 ай бұрын
Genuinely impressive, considering how hard pull ups are for most people.
@justarandomboi8655 ай бұрын
Honestly, pretty good considering pullups are something most people cant do
@premlikesdogs5 ай бұрын
Awesome
@MrOrthodox136 ай бұрын
I swear this is what K Boges recommends us doing, no overtraining, keep your form tight and do them every day. Physical and physiological hygiene.
@yosacrifice82596 ай бұрын
Facts
@baller_remorse6 ай бұрын
K boges is a hidden gem of a youtube channel
@MrOrthodox136 ай бұрын
@@baller_remorse Maybe a little too hidden.
@1tubax6 ай бұрын
I feel special to know who k boges is
@m._aneeq6 ай бұрын
I don't really get his guides that much maybe because English isn't first language but I find it very confusing in some of his guides
@Indacut45456 ай бұрын
Once yours muscles are familiarized with a movement,it’s like teaching the best student you’ll ever know
@Trixxta65 ай бұрын
That's was beautiful
@vividchilling24925 ай бұрын
woah
@vividchilling24925 ай бұрын
W
@WhoThisMonkeyАй бұрын
'Your muscles are a pupil, you must first show them what to do, then they must repeat this many times.'
@harryv675224 күн бұрын
Werd. 🤘🔥🤘
@1MooseyGoosey16 ай бұрын
Most people fail because the urge to overtrain is very powerful. I used to do this will pull ups everyday and got joint problems. The amount of reps or sets you should be doing will be far less than you think it should be if you're doing it everyday.
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
Yea, I see a lot of tendonitis from this. It works best when you're really aware of your body.
@somethingandahalf6 ай бұрын
the thing about pull ups is so, so many dont get the right technique.. anyone i see is gripping the bar as if they want to bend it and then use all arms on the way up. former screws your elbow the latter your shoulder.. its one of the reasons people move on from calisthenics to free weights saying calisthenics doesnt work. on overtraining - think the methods suggested here are not for beginners its for better utilizing the muscle you've already put on.. so what you were doing is trying to put on more muscle using a method that isnt optimal
@GabrielValerio-sv7bg5 ай бұрын
You forgot the can i clean here guy @@moversodyssey
@AliCanTUNCER85 ай бұрын
@@somethingandahalfthis is so true and almost always overlooked when it comes to gtg
@vampeel33605 ай бұрын
Yeah…. I knew it was…. I go 6 days 3 days at 2 hours and 3 at 1…. Cardio first or last is alternated between my days….
@PT036 ай бұрын
This is why I hate when people discredit Bruce Lee for his size
@spencergregory80496 ай бұрын
Agreed 💯👍
@davorzdralo80006 ай бұрын
Bruce Lee was an actor on drugs. There is nothing to discredit.
@shubcrunchtime61175 ай бұрын
Look, I agree that many people discredit Bruce Lee for his size even though he is the greatest fighters this world has seen, but I think that the point of this video is that u don't need a large body to be physically strong. So this video, in my opinion doesn't disregard any of the fighters who have a greater body size.
@Amayi15 ай бұрын
@@shubcrunchtime6117 fair enough
@hajimehinata58545 ай бұрын
@@shubcrunchtime6117like imagine the people who also have this ability while being big
@tobywebb64526 ай бұрын
This is why old school labourers/builders are lean and strong compared to beefed up gym goers
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
My best friend has done manual labor jobs his whole life and though he doesn't look strong, I've seen him easily out lift guys twice his size in real world scenarios like carrying multiple bags of roofing shingles or concrete.
@motherlove83666 ай бұрын
Big part of that is also tendon and ligament strength, which takes way more time to develop. Another good example of that is how old climbers who start to see massive decrease of strength due to age, still have insane finger strength and grip strength
@joestarm19716 ай бұрын
It's mainly because training for hypertrophy is different than training for strength. So many different types of training out there for specific needs
@joestarm19716 ай бұрын
Imo bodybuilders are pageant queens it's just about looks
@Mutiny9606 ай бұрын
@@joestarm1971 And no one cares about anything but looks. Doesn't matter if you can lift 1000lbs. If you look like you got a beer gut no one gives a fuck. You're "out of shape".
@russetvelvet6 ай бұрын
This methodology has worked well for me too. The key is the consistency to do it frequently enough and the discipline to not kill yourself by overtraining.
@Noname-jy5wx5 ай бұрын
Brother can you give me somee tips
@tankjones5135 ай бұрын
@@Noname-jy5wxjust do like he says in the video and treat it like a fun game, not a serious exercise. The less fun it is, the less likely you are to be consistent with it. Every time you see something that can support your entire weight safely, do a pullup or 2 on it. Just walk around looking for spots to do pullups on and every time you walk by, do 2 or 3, and repeat it every day and log it all in a journal.
@damdibidum3 ай бұрын
Pavel Tsatsouline was one of the keys for me. He explained that lactic acid reduces strength by over 50%. Lactic acid means the muscle is overtrained and it's effects are the same as inflammation - body heals itself and therefore the main objective isn't to maximize work, but healing.. While pump (lactic acid buildup) it is a good sign of having been reaching muscle building zone, it's the enemy of strength. Being that gaining strength is neurological conditioning, we just need to lift as heavy as often, without lactic acid buildup. That is why the easiest way to gain pull up and push up strength is basically doing one set of 5 for whole day, every 20-25 minutes. I started with 5 wall pushups and created resistance with my feet. Every 15 minutes 5 pushups. Then next week doing 5 real pushups and controlled. Whole day, as I was spending whole day home by the computer anyway. At the end I did like 25 to 30 pushups as a test.
@AAC-h6p3 ай бұрын
@@damdibidumso just do one form exercise every day? How if i want to do another variant of the excercise? Pls help me, i used to do calisthenics routine with 3 days rules, push day - pull day - leg day
@ModalSoulАй бұрын
@@AAC-h6pthis method is seperate from a routine. You can continue your routine like normal, and use this method throughout the day. For example, 5 pushups every hour for a week.
@warwolf7156 ай бұрын
Yeah so I achieved this by accident. I was trying to get buff, not skinny strong
@hiltonavis37955 ай бұрын
😂
@britneybhagwansingh87415 ай бұрын
Same
@NoRockinMansLand5 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@calebadobah6415 ай бұрын
Same bro😂
@TreyPenney5 ай бұрын
Me too 😢
@RealMarshFitness5 ай бұрын
Grease the Groove is so underrated. This technique deserves more attention.
@moversodyssey5 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more, it's one of those techniques no one believes will work until they try it and then they are shocked.
@HaydenGladstonePT5 ай бұрын
Grease the Groove is very well known, there are just better ways to get insanely strong. There is a reason why this isn't the methodology utilized in the most strength based sport on the planet, powerlifting
@moversodyssey5 ай бұрын
@@HaydenGladstonePT It's highly utilized in olympic lifting, kettlebells, and calisthenics. Pretty much anything where a strength to bodyweight or power to bodyweight ratio is advantageous.
@HaydenGladstonePT5 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Yes, it may be dabbled in, but it certainly isn't a primary method many use or that it was the way many of them got to their current level of performance however.
@mujtabaalam59075 ай бұрын
@@HaydenGladstonePTThen what is?
@stephenmatson32396 ай бұрын
I discovered this method while locked up in prison. My body dramatically changed in a period of a few months. I didn't gain much muscle mass, but instead became very ripped and strong. Almost over night I had a perfect six pack and had incredible vascularity. I started out doing just one set of burpees after reading 20 pages of a book. Every 20 pages, I owed one rep. It quickly increased, easily to 10 reps, etc.
@slasher40505 ай бұрын
and this was from just the burpee method?
@stephenmatson32395 ай бұрын
@@slasher4050 incredibly, yes. Recently, I took a break from burpees in order focus more on push ups and about a week ago I noticed, while looking in the mirror that my six pack appeared to be going away and Im starting to get some belly fat under my belly button. I was surprised by this because I do high intensity sprints every night with my dog and these burn serious calories... I have become accustomed to having perfect abs and enjoy taking my shirt off in public and so I've started doing burpees again everyday. I usually do a small set of 5 to 10 reps, directly after every meal because it also helps with my blood sugar and insulin resistance.
@incorectulpolitic5 ай бұрын
so lets say every 20 minutes you did one rep of a burpee ?
@stephenmatson32395 ай бұрын
At one point, probably. I became obsessed with exercising in general and started incorporating every kind of exercise I could think of: squats, running, hand stands, etc. I wanted to see just how much I could do, per day with this method. I became a little crazy lol. I had no money and so only ate the 3 meals I received per day (usually) and so I was hungry, very hungry. So hungry that I would dream about stealing food from grocery stores at night when sleeping. Anyway, some days I did more then other days. I would record how many sets and reps I could "sneak in"
@Anton432185 ай бұрын
Where did you learn all of this?
@KarltonMeadows6 ай бұрын
I love the beautiful blend of scientific and laymen terminology and illustrations
@julianmartinez30486 ай бұрын
To bodybuilders this is anathema. Repeating endlessly movements for strenght and precission is the base of traditional martial arts training, yet many people (even modern combat sports practititoners) disregard it. Now, it seems that there's some science to back this up
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
It's the difference between size and performance. For some reason everyone forgot that performance is a legitimate goal as well. Michael Jordan definitely would not have been a better basketball player with an extra 80 pounds of muscle, otherwise bodybuilders would dominate athletics, and they certainly do not.
@HaydenGladstonePT5 ай бұрын
Remember, Bodybuilding is a sport in it's own right. It is anathema to bodybuilders because the aim of their sport is not technical proficiency nor strength displayed in a movement, it is the attainment of the greatest amount of muscular size, symmetry and leanness displayed on stage. It just so happens that their practice also greatly enhances technical proficiency of repeated movements and the strength displayed in those movements. There are many ways to skin a cat
@HaydenGladstonePT5 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Bodybuilding is a sport. Why would training for one sport make you better at another? There are very few, if any, baseball players who are good at rowing. I'm not saying that some systems of training carryover to other athletic pursuits better than others, but your example has no merit.
@moversodyssey5 ай бұрын
@@HaydenGladstonePT I used bodybuilders as an example of someone who has taken hypertrophy to it's limits but still can't perform in functional athletic activities. I use this example not because I have something against bodybuilders, but because it illustrates the difference in goals and adaptations. I'm sure the original comment that started this thread was motivated by a constant contact with the modern day bodybuilding gym culture, who often, through ignorance have not understood the difference between hypertrophy training and athletic performance training. I get people like this in my comment section all the time who are absolutely baffled that anyone would spend time training in ways that don't increase muscle size. I also get a lot of comments from people who believe bodybuilding style routines will make them better at jiu jitsu, or basketball or track and field. When I used to competitively box, it was like clockwork every week, some beefed up guy would walk in and claim he is a street fighter and he doesn't need training. Then he would spar with someone 60lbs lighter than him and get humbled so badly he would never return. I'm just rambling on the subject now, but my point is no one here has anything against sport bodybuilders, but they obviously make a good example of someone who has only trained for hypertrophy. And when you see people criticize bodybuilding its again, usually not actual bodybuilders, it's body building style gym rats with a small world view and fragile ego's. You see people like this in all walks of life, but they seem to get particularly insufferable and loud once they put a little muscle on.
@HaydenGladstonePT5 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey Thank you for expounding. It is amazing that people believe hypertrophy style training on its own will improve sport performance. It shows how ignorant so many are to the plethora of training concepts out there and how the obsession with the principles behind attaining size and aesthetics have creeped in way past where they are valid. However, we must respect and take note of training adaptations beyond size in bodybuilders. Obviously the methodology they employ grants them massive gains in strength as well. You highlighted this in your video by speaking on hypertrophy's (muscle cross sectional area) role in strength, but bodybuilders are also highly neurologically developed for their task. Modern day bodybuilding is a freakshow and there are so many confounding reasons (PEDs, excessive nutrition, lazy outside the gym) as to why they are huge, strong in a very narrow way, and by in large non-functional. This wasn't always how it was however. Silver and Golden age bodybuilder's still primarily employed hypertrophy training, but also dabbled in other forms of training. Many of them were functionally strong, fast, powerful, etc.
@postandghost93916 ай бұрын
Im 5'4", I bounce between 160-170lbs, I workout maybe 5-10 times a month, but I look to be about average with a flat muffin top. I can confirm, that people of average height and strong physique get absolutely confused when they see me lift or pull the same weight as them. They ask what I do for training and they get even more confused whe I tell them my 'routine'. But my true secrets to maintaining my health without working out all the time is labor. I was a landscaper for almost a year, enough time on the job to confidentiality develop lifelong skills, and I still use them to improve my mom and grandparents. I dig up dirt and clay, planted entire 5 year old trees, moved countless bags of soil and cement, its like doing a workout for 6-8 hours with varying rest times and exercises. Another factor that I believe plays into my strength is my mental fortitude. I spent the first 5 years of my adult life as an active duty Marine Infantryman. I was amongst one of the shortest, and aesthetically one of the smallest, so Im always putting in double effort just to keep up with the average sized Marines. Ive carried 80lbs of weight over 20 miles with overly blistered feet during battalion rucks. Whenever we did 1v1 sparring I always picked the guys twice my size just to raise the morale of my platoon and give them something entertaining to watch. I would rarely ever win, but my opponents would always become gassed out by the end of it. Ive carried average sized people over my shoulders with full gear on both myself and my partner during medevac drills. We would run 3-6 miles in stabbing, ice cold -20*F weather every winter. I essentially lived in my 30+lbs worth of gear every time we did practical training. Ive always been of the belief that strength is determined moreso by the fortitude of your mind rather than your muscles.
@AlecMoss4776 ай бұрын
That's very impressive. I wish I could do those things.
@user-go2xi7zq5q6 ай бұрын
Bro you sound superhuman. It just sucks that despite your superhuman background, you’re still only about as good as just better than the average man. If a regular sized man had your stats, he would probably be sometime of world champion. In fact, let me be the one to plant this seed in you. I think you should consider start training MMA, with your physicality and mental fortitude, all it would take is some years of learning technique and you could become one of the world’s most respected UFC fighters. Cos Alexander Volkanovski has an impressive background like you. You could probably wreak havoc in the 135lb division after u cut weight, cos Sean O’Malley is their champion. This is not a joke. Sign up for an MMA gym and give it a go. And if you’re old, you could also just look into Jiu Jitsu as that has less physical requirements.
@sherpa60716 ай бұрын
Awesome. Just, awesome! Thank you for taking the time to write that. I agree about mental fortitude, 100%. Good for you to force yourself to become mentally strong and resilient, bc you know the true benefits. Also, great stuff boosting the morale of your comrades - unsung hero move. Take care ❤
@fredherzberger46776 ай бұрын
I used to be amused back in my twenties. At 5'10"and 125 pounds I would bicep curl the entire stack on the nautilus machine. That would produce some funny looks some of the big fellows.
@somethingandahalf6 ай бұрын
well bigger muscles = bigger potential :D but as said in the video as far as strength goes its more on a neural level meaning you're right about mental fortitude
@joellittles4176 ай бұрын
The boxer you mentioned with tremendous power in a little body Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini actually killed an opponent (Kim Duk-koo) in a boxing match.
@Cuunke5 ай бұрын
that's gangsta, yet tragic.
@Slapdasho19 күн бұрын
What happened?
@Sonless_Vergil17 күн бұрын
@@Slapdashobrain damage (honestly I don't know)
@moonwalker-i8f5 ай бұрын
Lift heavy for short reps with high mecha tension for mecha strength. Move light for long/g.t.g reps with low mecha tension for neuromascular strength.
@GRILLEDCHEESE-id9wp18 күн бұрын
mecha as in mechanical?
@eddiearmenta52482 ай бұрын
This completely made my day! I’m a boxer too and skinny strong is exactly how I’m trying to be. Peace and have a blessed day!
@rccarreon80225 ай бұрын
"Can I clean here?"
@overl0ad_x7625 ай бұрын
“Why you use fake plates?”
@wyzer95 ай бұрын
"Sorry, sorry, I just move this to clean."
@Oki_wfsth5 ай бұрын
What’s this referencing? Sounds familiar but I can’t quite remember.
@AdamIsailovic5 ай бұрын
@@Oki_wfsth Anatoly powerlifter having pranks in gyms :)
@Oki_wfsth5 ай бұрын
@@AdamIsailovic Thank you!
@PineBarrens756 ай бұрын
It’s old man strength.
@tysonfromearth5 ай бұрын
I haven't found people who understand this concept irl recently, old man strength.
@EthanChaulk5 ай бұрын
to be honest, old men that are strong are usually either really skinny and strong, or extremely buff.
@Lilmanskis5 ай бұрын
@@EthanChaulk or have big forearms, calves, and bellys.
@EthanChaulk5 ай бұрын
@@Zoco157bro I don't care.
@HansensUniverseT-A5 ай бұрын
old man strength is def real, take my grandpa in his 80s, spite having been retired for over a decade he will crumble you with his grip.
@YannyKo135 ай бұрын
Being strong doesn't always equate to looking aesthetically strong. Its like the body cares more on what it can provide you at its best based on what you're demanding it to do, disregarding how you'd look aesthetically wise, as long as it fulfills your demand to lift that certain weight based on your current strength level. This is why following a structured training and training at the best form will bring carry you in the long run. Looking aesthetically comes second.
@aborigine7772 ай бұрын
@@YannyKo13 true because I am stronger than I look.
@cynicist81146 ай бұрын
I started working with kettlebells thanks to one of your videos on them, and they are now by far my most enjoyed form of exercise. Very versatile tools. Thanks for what you do.
@debashishmitra5 ай бұрын
This is pure gold. I know that the information in this video is true but the thing is that it has hardly been spoken about. This is a very underrated video (going by the number of likes and the content of the comments). Thank you so much for the video.
@HaydenGladstonePT5 ай бұрын
It's been spoken about for years. Pavel, the most popular backer of this methodology, has decade old interviews with >100k views. He talks about it in those interviews. People working in strength and conditioning and other performance based fields know about this technique. It is a great technique, but not magic, nor better (and arguably worse) than the commonly used methods in high level performance training
@robertoduarte6608Ай бұрын
When I was a soldier here in Brasil, I couldn’t do more than 3 pullups, so I decided to do 15 pullups every day, no matter how many sets it took, well, one month later I was already able to do 7 in perfect form. I believe that the most important thing is how much you want it ( for a beginer like me of course )
@DUKEHadToDoItToEm6 ай бұрын
Build muscle memory and the connections your brain has to what little muscle you have so you can utilize more of it more effectively. Makes a lot of sense really
@LordVeritas23575 ай бұрын
The art used in this video is astonishing! great job!
@austinwebb93806 ай бұрын
I've been doing this with pull ups and push ups. I can easily do 20+ strict form pull ups and 50+ slow strict form push ups at 190lbs bodyweight.
@Nickxxx855 ай бұрын
@@ashish9hyyi142 you should increase from 16 to 20 in one month maybe two at best, and if you focusing at pull ups alone then definitely within couple weeks. No matter what plan you use. Since you didn't increased reps for months answer is ONLY ONE: you stop doing pull ups BEFORE you get totally tired (muscle failure). If your max is 16 and you do 16 in your first set then there is NO WAY you wouldn't increase strenght. So you HAVE TO do 13/14 pull ups in first set and then less or simply not train at all. There is no other explanation really
@Nickxxx855 ай бұрын
Somehow I doubt you can do set of 50 pull ups no matter the form. Someone who claim such thing in the internet should have proof on his channel
@petkokinchev15935 ай бұрын
@@ashish9hyyi142 start doing weighted pull ups.
@incorectulpolitic5 ай бұрын
what was ur routine ?
@Pappawalter4 ай бұрын
And then your done?
@mohommedsoumaoro91403 ай бұрын
My experience of this: 5×5 workout Bench, Squats, deadlift, Military press. Don't go lightweight do a controlled heavy and wait 3 min between lifts
@rahulsup3 ай бұрын
I'm an undisciplined person in general, and don't really measure my progress, so I decided to start progressing at least with push ups and sit ups. I started with 10 push ups and sit ups on a Sunday and doing only one set, then increase the amount of sets each day until Saturday (where i'd do 7 sets of 10 pushups and situps). Then the next week, I'll drop back down to 1 set and increased the reps to 11. Each week, I'm resetting and plan on increasing the reps by one. This has helped me stay more consistent with the routine, and has helped avoid decreased quality of reps from being overly tired.
@isaiah93653 ай бұрын
This explains what i was always considered to have hidden strength. My size didnt make what i looked like i could do. EVERY person who saw this was surprised and i always said calisthenics, cause thats what i did, but it always do it when i felt like i could and not when i didnt. Thx for this video!
@Martyr2175 ай бұрын
Ha, I never knew I came across the 'greasing the groove' technique until now. I started working out at my warehouse and badly hurt my arm doing pullups in the racking (trying to hit 20 in 1 set), so I dropped the number I was doing in 1 set starting at 3 and building up to 5 over a couple weeks now several months later I still do between 5-7 but do this several times a day. I normally managing 25-30 reps a day for 5 days. 😅 Doing this with my 10-12K steps a day in the place, my health is doing amazing.
@SmartWatches-xu6ri6 ай бұрын
i'm glad to say that i was subscribed to this channel very early at around 1k subs. I always knew this channel would take off and now that i came back here, i see i was right which is great
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
I appreciate you stick around since the beginning! There's been a lot of development and change since then, and more to come I suspect.
@nimtoonatty6 ай бұрын
Amazing video, neuromuscular recruitment is so little talked about but so effective
@frizz75855 ай бұрын
needed this because i've trying to increase my pull up reps. I went from not being able to do any, did hella push ups for 5 weeks straight, came back and could rep out 4-5 easily. now i regressed back to 2-3 and its been playing with my mind knowing i can get 4-5. definitely perfect timing for this video to show up on my recommended
@ItssjusJ5 ай бұрын
Reps don't equal strength. Just stay consistent.
@shaquille_oatmeal207Ай бұрын
@@ItssjusJwhat r u talking about.
@CreatorOfPlaylist2 ай бұрын
I always think overtraining is best because if I can go for 30 minutes, why not 3 hours? At the end I can not go longer than 2 weeks with that in mind and after that I fall into habits that only get worse than before training. I want to find that balance and this time I am willing to go no longer than 30 minutes per day and only after 2 weeks I want to add extra 15 minutes. I don’t want my day to be about working out, I want working out to be part of my day. I love this channel so much, you guys explain everything so well!!💪
@Maximusadfectare6 ай бұрын
Have seen most of your videos and believe your instructions are some of the best, most informative, communicated succinctly and with little fuss or delay. Thank you very much. 🏆
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
Glad you've enjoyed them, thank you for the comment!
@VOIDHUMANOIDSTUDIOS5 ай бұрын
Your anatomy drawing skills are amazing. Inspires me to get better at it and get skinny strong while I’m at it too
@Atlaspower785 ай бұрын
I'd like becoming skinny for starters
@JoshVinzeDelaSerna5 ай бұрын
This is why bodybuilders are often less strong compared to Farmers, Soldiers and Laborers who use their muscles for work than for show.
@Imthedudeman825 ай бұрын
Watch the farmers vs body builder video. I'll give you a hint. The bodybuilders win.
@Imthedudeman825 ай бұрын
Watch the farmers vs bodybuilder vid. The farmers lose.
@kaywonderer5 ай бұрын
@@Imthedudeman82 Na, not fair comparison. Different lifestyles. In realworld bodybuilder can't maintain his size and therefore his strength.
@Helloyoutube7905 ай бұрын
farmer hardly do any lifting their just destroying their backs while construction worker
@Imthedudeman825 ай бұрын
@@kaywonderer Its absolutely a fair comparison cuz the dumbass above said that farmers are stronger and that's bullshit. I've done offshore oil work which is as hard and harder than any farm job, and for 16 hours a day for a month at a time, and I've done dedicated lifting. I'm stronger from lifting AND my health isn't getting destroyed. You are dismissed.
@colsenneal73055 ай бұрын
It's Anatoly
@Broski_Rizz4 ай бұрын
Eh?
@elmuratrysaliev24884 ай бұрын
@@Broski_Rizzbruh
@aquazey4 ай бұрын
As soon as I saw the video, I thought of it 😂
@pinhead20984 ай бұрын
doing bad form more than you do good form starts to create neural pathway habits that are hard to undo and bad for you. u changed my exercise life with this
@moversodyssey4 ай бұрын
This is a bit of a tangent, but it illustrates this phenomenon. I boxed for a decade and 6 years into it I started having misalignments because I was only boxing in a right handed stance and my muscles from the left to right side were becoming so imbalanced. So I started training myself to box left handed so I could spend time in both stances and even them out. What shocked me was even though it was very difficult in the beginning to get my left side to do anything. I had accumulated so much boxing knowledge by that point that I trained my left side without any of the bad beginner habits I had put into my right side. And though it still feels more natural to box on my right side, my left side boxing technique is text book perfect because I never trained any bad habits into it. Now when I switch stances I have two completely different styles. It showed me just how important form is, especially in the beginning. And training form properly in the beginning is way easier than retraining it later on. Anyway, I'm just rambling about it, but I'm glad the video helped you out. Best of luck in your training!
@brokennative209829 күн бұрын
@@moversodyssey I just found your channel and this video had me questioning whether you trained some form of MA. I've been training boxing, thai, wrestling and now kung fu on and off my whole life. Im skinny, yet Im strong. I work with a guy who is into body building and despite his muscles being twice if not three times bigger than mine its 50/50 anytime we arm wrestle.
@moversodyssey29 күн бұрын
@@brokennative2098 Martial arts is one of the best ways I've ever run across to get to know your body and optimize it's use. The neuromuscular efficiency of long time martial artists is always really impressive. I've done a lot of boxing and kick boxing and dabbled in kung fu and tai chi and my reaction time, explosiveness and speed-strength in particular always stays really high even during long breaks. Though I've never done much grappling and when I've tried to wrestle around with friends who used to do wrestling it's like encountering a bear. Their ability to manipulate another human beings mass always blows my mind. As a side note, other than martial artists, the best neuromuscular development I've seen is in acrobatic specialists. Circus arts, parkour, gymnastics have all really impressed me as well.
@harvestblades3 ай бұрын
I love Pavel's Grease the Groove methodology! It's what came to mind as I was thinking early on about the mind muscle connection being the point you were going to hit on.
@316jun6 ай бұрын
It's a nice coincidence that this came out now. I started doing pull ups after many years just last week. My pull up bar has 4 grips. So I use a different one everyday. I just do as many reps throughout the day, no schedule but at least one set an hour and I already see improvement in my posture and form. Only at 3 reps per set so far but I can feel the strength building up each day. Will start adding a few more body parts into the mix as I go along.
@amoszweig4 ай бұрын
I ve been doing this for a coupe of weeks now with kettlebell swings to improve my back problems. (I ve seen your other video on those). The results are truly great! I feel like all the physical therapy prepared me so that i knew which muscles i should use for what, but doing swings daily actually taught me to use them that way. Thanks again, great content!
@moversodyssey4 ай бұрын
Glad it helped out! Kettlebell swings have been a game changer for me as well, the benefits just keep coming.
@LCjourney_Fitness5 ай бұрын
I always look forward to your monthly videos because the quality and effort you put into them are truly remarkable. It's a pleasant surprise to get an extra video this month! Thank you for your hard work and dedication - it really shows in your content. Keep up the amazing work !
@moversodyssey5 ай бұрын
Thank you for your comment, I'm happy you're enjoying all the content!
@vids5956 ай бұрын
I've been in the building trades my entire life, starting in my early teens. I've always been "strong for my size" but I was skinny (160's). In real world application I've rarely found that another guy was stronger than me, with their grip strength often being the weak point. But in weightlifting I found that I couldn't lift all that impressive of weights. I started lifting weights many years ago and now I'm 183 at 5'11". I now realize how much of weightlifting is technique, and that most lifts focus on major movers, whereas lifting/dragging/ect awkward things outside the gym requires grip and accessory muscles.
@IamJigle6 ай бұрын
yeah you were just born with that. lucky you. everyone else has to work hard and here you are basically wagging how strong you are in front of everyones face. how cool.
@wesleybell42404 ай бұрын
Well how strong are you?
@jsmaelsartor5956 ай бұрын
This is literally what I did until now (I got operated for a problem and I have to stay at home for 1 month at least) and in only one year of gym I gained a lot of strength, I did it based on my intuition, however I also tried to follow a diet made by me (thanks to some little resources) and instead to eat more than I can normally possibly do in general (like way more carbs, proteins, etc...), I started to eat only more proteins, drink a lot of water and to take a lot of vitamin c which is extremely important to recover faster the tendons, (for the rest I eat everything without problems, I just don't eat too much confectionery) your tendons are essential for your muscles, if you have strong muscles and weak tendons, in an exercise where you have to use a lot of strength you risk an injury, your muscles are limited to the capacity of your tendons so if your tendons are weak, you'll never be able to use entirely the strength of your muscles without risking an injury But if your tendons are very strong, you can even use all the strength your muscles can generate without problems making you in fact able to become insanely strong, so yeah, this way of training your muscles is gold for the strength but even a good diet for the tendons is essential and I noticed it by myself
@thatone_dude2355 ай бұрын
I unknowingly did this technique for a few months. I did basically what your cousin did, but 5 reps at a time and I ended up going from barely doing 10 regular pullups to 15 pullups with 10kg added weight (at the time I was 70kg). I've sadly lost this ability due to taking overall training more seriously as opposed to just focusing on pullups, but speaking from experience, I can say this technique does in fact work very well if you stay committed to it.
@chdao6 ай бұрын
When I was a 22-year old kid, I used to read books at night after work. Every time I finished a chapter I would do 50 push ups and go to the bathroom. On the way into the bathroom I would do 25 pull ups and 25 on the way out. Then I would do 25 dips and go back to reading my book. 30 years later, I still love greasing the groove although I don't do as many reps. And I still fit into the same size clothes.
@debjitkanrar78956 ай бұрын
You probably can not do one pull up.. calisthenics experts also know that giving 25 pull up and again 25 jast after 1 munite is something immpossible to them also....
@artemkortsev82796 ай бұрын
@@debjitkanrar7895 probably some quarter-reps
@cykeok35256 ай бұрын
@@debjitkanrar7895 Maybe he takes 15 minutes to piss..
@TLGARMY6 ай бұрын
@chdao your workout routine is unhealthy
@lanigirognithemos6 ай бұрын
I bet you also lost all your hair and can beat anyone with 1 punch right? 🤣🤣🤣
@burtos6 ай бұрын
The illustrations in this video are amazing!!
@toptiertrivia5 ай бұрын
I have been recommending Pavel and "greasing the groove" for years because it WORKS!! Glad you mentioned it!
@moversodyssey5 ай бұрын
Been getting a lot of comments from people who don't believe it can possibly work, I just keep telling them to try it. It's surprisingly effective.
@SolironBrightwoode6 ай бұрын
Didn't know this was a real concept/strategy. Did something like this just for the hell of it during pandemic with military style push ups (I think that's the name?). Couldn't do one when I started. Went from barely doing 3 inclined against the bathroom counter to 20 on the ground over the spring/summer. The trigger was every time I had to use the washroom.
@Highlander14325 ай бұрын
Skinny strong is best for longevity
@debonairdevil15235 ай бұрын
Cope
@badpiggies49265 ай бұрын
@@debonairdevil1523Kopa?
@yeji6695 ай бұрын
@@debonairdevil1523”cope” brainless response
@toasterfighter5 ай бұрын
@@debonairdevil1523over?
@tankjones5135 ай бұрын
The best thing for longevity is intuition. Whatever makes you feel good, keep doing it! The more you keep yourself feeling good, the better you'll look and live longer.
@Rsalmond836 ай бұрын
I was 5’9”,135 lbs in high school freshman year benching 225. I was very disciplined on proper form and understanding the mechanics of my body.
@trooperex1236 ай бұрын
Nice bro
@wesleybell42404 ай бұрын
That's incredible, man. There is a 16-year-old 145lb, 6’2 kid in school that outlifts all the bigger guys at school. He's easily 2-3 times stronger than average males. Genetics and working on the farm helped him out. So humble but if you need help with lifting something or someone he can do it.
@TheSandkastenverbot3 ай бұрын
Low intensity reps are definitely underrated. It's great that such a popular channel spreads this info! I just want to add something: this type of training mainly improves the technical aspect of a movement aka intermuscular coordination. To increase maximum force production you also need to improve intRAmuscular coordination and this can only be achieved using high loads (or high acceleration). This type of training requires only little volume and frequency, meaning a few heavy or explosive sets once a week already go a long way. That leaves a lot of time for technique and hypertrophy work :-)
@ABC-R20Ай бұрын
U deserve a lot of subs cuz no one talk about this things a lot you explain is very well
@fares-uh5mbАй бұрын
### Summary: The video explains how strength and power can be achieved even by people who aren’t big or bulky, like boxers or weightlifters who are smaller in size but still very strong. It mentions two main ways to build strength: 1. **Increasing muscle size**: This is the most common way people think of when they want to get stronger. You lift weights, your muscles get bigger, and you get stronger. 2. **Neuromuscular efficiency**: This is a lesser-known method where your brain and nerves learn how to use your muscles better. It’s not about making your muscles bigger, but about making sure your body uses them in the most efficient way possible. The video focuses on a third method called **"Greasing the Groove"**, which helps improve **neuromuscular efficiency** by practicing movements repeatedly but without making yourself tired. ### What is "Greasing the Groove"? (Explaining for a 10-year-old): "Greasing the Groove" is like practicing a skill over and over again, but in a smart way so you don’t get tired. Imagine you want to be good at pull-ups (where you hang from a bar and pull yourself up). Instead of doing lots of pull-ups all at once and getting super tired, this method has you do just a few pull-ups at different times during the day. For example: - Every time you walk past a pull-up bar, you might do 2 pull-ups. - You do this throughout the day, maybe 10 or 15 times. - By the end of the day, you have done a lot of pull-ups, but you never got too tired. This helps you get better and stronger at pull-ups without wearing out your muscles or making yourself sore. ### How It Works: - Your **nervous system** (the part of your body that tells your muscles what to do) gets better at using your muscles the more you practice. - By doing a few high-quality repetitions (without getting tired), you teach your brain and muscles to work together more efficiently. - Over time, this makes you stronger at that movement, even if your muscles don’t get much bigger. ### Key Points to Remember: 1. **Small reps, many times**: Instead of doing a lot of pull-ups at once, do small sets (like 3-5 pull-ups) several times throughout the day. 2. **Don’t get tired**: Keep the effort easy to medium (like 35-70% of what you can do in one go) so you don’t get too tired. 3. **Practice often**: Do this almost every day (4-6 days a week), but don’t do it for more than two types of exercises at the same time (like pull-ups and push-ups). 4. **High-quality reps**: Make sure every pull-up (or whatever exercise you’re practicing) is done with good form so you don’t learn bad habits. ### More Examples of "Greasing the Groove": - **Push-ups**: You could do 3-5 push-ups each time you go to your room. By the end of the day, you might have done 30-50 push-ups without feeling tired. - **Squats**: Every time you take a break from homework, you could do 5 squats. This helps you practice squats without wearing out your legs. - **Handstands**: If you’re learning to hold a handstand, you could practice holding it for a few seconds multiple times a day instead of doing long handstand holds that make you tired. Over time, you’ll notice you’re able to do more push-ups, squats, or handstands without getting tired because your brain and muscles are working together more efficiently!
@lc11385 ай бұрын
I'm a skinny long thin branch guy and used to do plank every day, plus stretching and some little exercise. For a long time I did some theater and a bit of dance, which both consisted on sometimes jumping around or taking/keeping weird poses. I love lifting up my 110kg buddies with my 68kg shell. A horseshoer and former army combat instructor, with which I do medieval reenactment, told me after we wrestled that he didn't expect a leaf-like insect like me to be this strong. (Well of course he won, and he was being gentle in order to let me learn weight distribution and all) (also, not relevant to the topic, we were doing it on gravel and rock dust, and I didn't have an appropriate top piece of clothes that could be destroyed. Sooo my skin took the brunt of it, and we only did it once. Fun experience.)
@wesleybell42404 ай бұрын
Dude how did you lift up your buddies and 110kg buddies, that's a lot of weight?
@lc11384 ай бұрын
@@wesleybell4240 I might have used the wrong word here, oh. Lifted, like, hugging them and lifting them so their feet don't touch the ground.
@wesleybell42404 ай бұрын
@@lc1138 I see, still incredible to lift guys that heavy with their feet not touching the ground. I weigh 85kg pretty sure I'm lightweight for you.
@valentin-m8s5 ай бұрын
Next video should be about rotator cuff. i think its important. keep the nice videos coming man!
@oshkotosh23413 ай бұрын
Great great educational channel, selecting the real working science and not the commercial trendy one. The guy loves what he is doing.
@vallee98843 ай бұрын
Really cool to have a term for it, I've always exercise through practice rather than conditioning
@djj33576 ай бұрын
Kyle Boges is a true believer of this proven method. Implementing this approach into my training is what ironed out all of my technical form breakdowns. Henceforth, the correction in form has allowed my physique development to be symmetrical & balanced! Great content!!
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
I've never heard of him before, but his name has popped up in the comments of this video a few times. I'm going to check him out right now.
@djj33576 ай бұрын
That's great. You both are so helpful and informative. Moreover, you both are very clear & concise in your delivery. Your delivery includes artistry!!
@soomro20026 ай бұрын
can you help me what you are talking about ? please share some knowledge with me about how to get strong and lean in shape wihtout bulking and being dwarf person with no agility.. i am happy to be skinny strong with strong toned muscles, right now i am 62 kg bw with 171 cm height and been going to gym for 7 months now. i was 55kg before gym but now i hate the look of me being only chubby not shrededd
@Fckterrorism-vr2kq6 ай бұрын
@@moversodyssey How is he?
@turtleb7170Ай бұрын
I used to be 230lbs going to the gym alll the time. I started doing construction. Im 160lbs shredded and stronger than i was 70 lbs heavier
@AnandNandu-j1m6 ай бұрын
I tried this technique without knowing it's an technique. I did it with obsession to learn pullups. I got good result too. But now I knew that it's an technique.
@o_sch5 ай бұрын
Same thing. I was absolutely obsessed with trying to do a pull up but I couldnt do one, and I never looked into progressions. So every day I kept pulling up halfway on the bar numerous times. I moved it to my bedroom door and whenever I walked past I would do one. Every day, over and over, several pull ups. I eventually was able to do them and then I became obsessed with perfect form. I can do about 15-20 now with my best form and do a handful of muscle-ups in a row. My obsession with form remains to this day. The marines had their pull up bar at our school and though I only did 15 reps, everyone told me they thought I was going to get to 20 or 25. They said I looked like I was going to fly off of the bar. Ive heard that part about going up so high several times, which makes sense because I view a pull up not as chin above the bar, but chest to the bar.
@ProjectAlphaPrimetime5 ай бұрын
1. The key to pull ups is deadhangs, if you cant do even that, deadhang with assisted pull up machine, figure out a time goal you want to reach for x amount of sets and once you get there, decrease assisted weight, repeat this until using only your body (2, 3, or 5 times generally per week works) Supplement this with doing assisted pull ups (go up and down, fully, with control) and you will get there, of course, based on where you are at physically will determine how much longer than 8-16 weeks it will take if you are doing it consistently 2-3 times per week
@ViberzRL5 ай бұрын
The YT algo scares me at times. My only exercise outside of work has been a chin-bar outside my door way - where I’ll do 5 chin-ups (explosive up, controlled down) everytime I leave or enter my room. I’ve never experienced any sort of extreme soreness (unlike a gym sesh or a hard days graft) but it seems to keep me in shape since, on occasion, I’ll have a week off work yet will feel fine when I return to work the following week. I’ve kept track of it on my stream since November 2021 and I’ve currently just broke 9k (which is an average of 1.25 chin-ups a day) - some days I wouldn’t do any since I wouldn’t be home, others I’d peak at 100 depending on how long I’d been awake. What I’m tryna get at is that 2 principals from this video apply to my current situation. First being the consistent low-rep workout that I always do when I’m not away for work. Second being a workout method where I only do as many chin ups as I feel like doing - never “eeking out” a chin up that has bad form, only counting solid form chin ups and not pushing through any “muscle aches” as I wanna be in top form for every chin-up. Therefore my daily amount can vary drastically depending on my recent activity, wake up time or time awake. Yet I’ve stayed consistent with it and I whole heartedly think it’s done me wonders over the years and will keep on doing so.
@blackdragon7965 ай бұрын
As a small girl who lifts up the couch with one hand while vacuuming the floor, I see this as an absolute win😹
@kybazia6 ай бұрын
Love your videos and animations dude, your videos along with stonecircles helped me get outta my fitness funk I was in
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
Glad your enjoying them, good luck with your fitness journey!
@motherlove83666 ай бұрын
I tried greasing the groove with pullups, every day for several months. My pullup number did not increase at all, but I did get elbow tendinitis
@thomasmanning4776 ай бұрын
😂 my girlfriend did this! When she started working from home, she got a pull-up bar in her office, did a rep or 2 every break, and ended up with elbow tendinitis. I think 1 or 2 reps were too close to her max to be doing it multiple times a day..
@williamxavier847415 күн бұрын
this actually work. i did it unknowingly when i was 13 y/o doing push up. From being able to do 3 in a row to doing 50 in a row just under 30 days.
@curious_blank5 ай бұрын
This has been a topic of great confusion for me for a long time. Thanks for breaking it down!
@moversodyssey5 ай бұрын
No problem, glad you enjoyed the content!
@Damian_Ravenscroft6 ай бұрын
Simple, time under tension builds muscle mass so if you do only sets of 1-3 reps in 1-5 sets you do not accumulate enough time under tension and metabolite for more mass but you get nervous system stimulus to get stronger. For prove start doing 5 sets of 10 reps near failure instead of 5 sets of 3 reps and measure your muscles diameter before and couple of weeks after the experiment.
@David_Raab6 ай бұрын
Which Time under Tension is better? Doing 4 reps where every rep takes 4 seconds, or doing 16 reps each taking 1 second?
@gussewho27326 ай бұрын
I unknowingly used to do this during highschools year, whenever I used to play games I feel a sense of fear of missing out so I thought everytime I lose I'll do 10 curls so everytime I used to play I made it a habit and now I don't even train but my bisceps are still strong
@deepfriedthumb4835 ай бұрын
Keep em coming! love your content!
@eduardofernandes98815 ай бұрын
I bought a kettlebell because of this video and I'm enjoying a lot exercising with them since
@falcononeniner98965 ай бұрын
I've had similar results from a different training composition. I worked out 3 days a week, full body, 4-8 reps, at the highest intensity where I could maintain my form. 100% bodyweight. In less than 3 months, I was doing good form one legged squats and one armed pushups for 8 reps, 4 sets. After 6 months, I did my first one armed pullup. After 7 months I dropped to twice a week and higher intensity, with weighted one leg squats and decline one arm pushups. Before, I couldn't even control the negative on any single limbed calisthenic exercise. I don't even know my 1rm max bench press, just that lifting a sheet of 3/4" plywood at work has never been this easy and my tool belt feels lighter. Im 155lbs, with more endurance and strength than my coworkers who have 50lbs on me. I gained no weight during my training, but my body composition drastically shifted and my muscles are incredibly defined. Skinny strong is real.
@moversodyssey5 ай бұрын
Calisthenics training creates a lot of body control that is drastically underrated for it's effects on strength.
@narnia67015 ай бұрын
Wow this was always my dream goal since i was a kid, always wanted to be skinny but bang with the heavy weights
@elijahking18016 ай бұрын
Very well done video, I didnt know about the theory behind it but ive been doing tai-chi with progressively heavier dumbells for a few months and although my muscles arent much larger they are more efficient which is perfect because I dont want to lose speed
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
I've never heard of doing tai chi with weight. I'm very curious about it though, I've done a lot of internal martial arts and mindful movement in the past and I've performed some of it with a weighted club in my hand and really enjoyed it.
@elijahking18016 ай бұрын
@moversodyssey I also have not heard of people using more than a sword or weapon for weight while performing tai-chi, however I wanted to see how strong I could become with no more than a 5 minute daily commitment then this method occurred to me
@Lalita_Luna5 ай бұрын
Interesting... I guess this neuromuscular strength is exactly what happens with proper yoga training
@casey61046 ай бұрын
This approach is similar to what I’m doing to rehab my body from major disabling injuries as a kid. Just finding movements that are challenging in themselves to you, but are manageable, and doing them with full focus once (what i do) a day over time can lead to massive improvements. The trick is to find a good base exercise to do and totally master it before you move on to other things. And when i say master i mean sometimes ill spend more than a year or two doing something as simple as a specific stretch before i do anything with that movement, but will attempt it each time with the mentality of perfect form and as i improve try little variations within the movement.
@DavidLoveOfficial4 ай бұрын
I used this to get much stronger relatively quickly. I used this for pull ups and pushups. What worked for me was doing a minimum of one set of five per day (4-5 days a week)and then adding sets on days when I felt I had the strength/energy. When I got stronger I would mix in longer sets at times. Also I would occasionslly see how many I could do in a day. I hit between 200 and 300 as a PR within 2 months of using this method and perhaps a year later did 500. One caveat: be sure to prehab joints and do dead hangs etc because as the numbers increase risk of injury increases too. Also worth considering balancing push movements with pull movements to reduce imbalances. I still use GTG especially when building a new skill eg I am now learning Tyson pushups. First day I did 16 next day 25, two days after that 50. GTG really allows your body to learn a movement and creates a positive association with it so you start craving it. I literally woke up thinking about Tyson pushups because my body wanted those endorphins. If I'd trained them to failure yesterday I wouldn't have that desire or the energy to do them today.
@YeshuaDavidsonАй бұрын
I'm 39 years old I weigh 55kg and I deadlift 180kg. Was wondering how all my life until the algorithm suggested this video 😂😂😂
@Auricale6 ай бұрын
Super random, I've watched a decent amount of your vids. Just wanted to say keep up the great work, I love how informative and easy it is to digest your content.
@moversodyssey6 ай бұрын
Thank you, I'm glad your enjoying the content!
@yoelmorales2086 ай бұрын
This video is a gem
@sapperEvO6 ай бұрын
Been preaching this for years, and you’ve worded things a lot better than I have. Excellent work
@omarfuaad96445 ай бұрын
I really like this video, short, sweet and straight on point.
@Windwall95 ай бұрын
Climber here, did this exact thing by accident with pull ups. I now have a visibly well developed back, but way more strenght than youd think through pretty much doing five pull ups every now and then.
@ironheavenz5 ай бұрын
When you starter talking about how to perform it I instantly thought of Bruce's famous quote, same you put at the end of the video He was such an inconventional genius even for today's standards that we're still trying to keep up with him, amazes me everytime
@ismailabdelirada90735 ай бұрын
Grace = power + precision. Absent grace, strength is illusory. And he moves best who is least encumbered.
@austinfuller83235 ай бұрын
100 Pushups! 100 sit ups! 100 air squats! And a 10km run! Do it everyday! When you start losing your hair... Your on the way -Saitama Approves this Message
@Broski_Rizz4 ай бұрын
Wake up to reality
@austinfuller83234 ай бұрын
@@Broski_Rizz what man??? Im not joking thats what i did... No AC in the summer and no Heat in the winter... To strengthen the mind... Next thing i knew i lost all my hair ... And i was STRONG
@GEDANIGGER343 ай бұрын
@@austinfuller8323sure weeb
@Burger_catto2 ай бұрын
@@Broski_Rizz I mean it's not the most effective workout routine but still better than doing nothing
@austinfuller83232 ай бұрын
"iTs NoTt eeVen a ELitee woRkkOUtt"... But yet i can't seem to get past the first punch in a fight 🤷🏻
@themagescorner5 ай бұрын
I greased my groove and now the groove is back baby!
@CrashPadBeats3 ай бұрын
I’m trying to better myself and I found your channel. Thanks for the tips gonna give it a shot!!!
@hatschi98615 ай бұрын
hangboard is amazing if pull ups dont do it for you anymore. have one over my kitchen door and do 2 every time i go to the kitchen
@SteveToTheO5 ай бұрын
I would do 5 sets of Pull ups , push ups, and air squats every day and would start with very low reps and only gradually increase every few weeks when i felt it became way too easy, i did however, keep my weight lifting the same
@JepOy-th4so6 ай бұрын
being strong and being powerful is not the same... Being strong and being powerful are related concepts, but they have distinct meanings. Strength typically refers to the physical capacity to exert force or lift heavy objects. It is often associated with muscular power and endurance. Strength can be measured by how much weight a person can lift or how much force they can exert. Power, on the other hand, can refer to both physical and mental capabilities. In a physical sense, power is often seen as the ability to generate force quickly, resulting in explosive movements. Power involves strength, but it also includes speed and coordination. In a broader sense, power can also refer to influence, authority, or control over a situation or others. A person who is powerful may not necessarily be physically strong, but they have the ability to influence or impact others or their environment. In summary, strength is more about physical capability, while power can encompass both physical and mental attributes, including influence and control.
@LilWillieBeatz6 ай бұрын
yap yap yap ur another one of those mario rios fans arent u
@tappajaav6 ай бұрын
@@LilWillieBeatz What's wrong with you?
@qyxyp5 ай бұрын
Bro thinks he is kafka or something
@bouski67523 ай бұрын
I've given this concept alot of thought and I've given it the name "Deep strength". It comes from using your body in light to moderate intensity consistently throughout an entire day. I believe this focuses the strength gain at the level of connective tissue, which is the foundation of bodily strength. That's why some body builders appear to have a superficial strength. All the strength work they have done focuses on maximizing the dimensions the surface musculature while the deeper level of strength doesn't keep up. Reason being is Deep strength training is completely different from hypertrophy centered training. It requires lifting that is light, right, consistent, focused, and diverse.
@ugenegareth93395 ай бұрын
I answered and said, "If I have found favor in thy sight, O Lord, show this also to thy servant: whether after death, as soon as every one of us yields up his soul, we shall be kept in rest until those times come when thou wilt renew the creation, or whether we shall be tormented at once?" 76 He answered me and said, "I will show you that also, but do not be associated with those who have shown scorn, nor number yourself among those who are tormented. 77 For you have a treasure of works laid up with the Most High; but it will not be shown to you until the last times. 78 Now, concerning death, the teaching is: When the decisive decree has gone forth from the Most High that a man shall die, as the spirit leaves the body to return again to him who gave it, first of all it adores the glory of the Most High. 79 And if it is one of those who have shown scorn and have not kept the way of the Most High, and who have despised his law, and who have hated those who fear the Most High -- 80 such spirits shall not enter into habitations, but shall immediately wander about in torments, ever grieving and sad, in seven ways. 81 The first way, because they have scorned the law of the Most High. 82 The second way, because they cannot now make a good repentance that they may live. 83 The third way, they shall see the reward laid up for those who have trusted the covenants of the Most High. 84 The fourth way, they shall consider the torment laid up for themselves in the last days. 85 The fifth way, they shall see how the habitations of the others are guarded by angels in profound quiet. 86 The sixth way, they shall see how some of them will pass over into torments. 87 The seventh way, which is worse than all the ways that have been mentioned, because they shall utterly waste away in confusion and be consumed with shame, and shall wither with fear at seeing the glory of the Most High before whom they sinned while they were alive, and before whom they are to be judged in the last times. 88 "Now this is the order of those who have kept the ways of the Most High, when they shall be separated from their mortal body. 89 During the time that they lived in it, they laboriously served the Most High, and withstood danger every hour, that they might keep the law of the Lawgiver perfectly. 90 Therefore this is the teaching concerning them: 91 First of all, they shall see with great joy the glory of him who receives them, for they shall have rest in seven orders. 92 The first order, because they have striven with great effort to overcome the evil thought which was formed with them, that it might not lead them astray from life into death. 93 The second order, because they see the perplexity in which the souls of the unrighteous wander, and the punishment that awaits them. 94 The third order, they see the witness which he who formed them bears concerning them, that while they were alive they kept the law which was given them in trust. 95 The fourth order, they understand the rest which they now enjoy, being gathered into their chambers and guarded by angels in profound quiet, and the glory which awaits them in the last days. 96 The fifth order, they rejoice that they have now escaped what is corruptible, and shall inherit what is to come; and besides they see the straits and toil from which they have been delivered, and the spacious liberty which they are to receive and enjoy in immortality. 97 The sixth order, when it is shown to them how their face is to shine like the sun, and how they are to be made like the light of the stars, being incorruptible from then on. 98 The seventh order, which is greater than all that have been mentioned, because they shall rejoice with boldness, and shall be confident without confusion, and shall be glad without fear, for they hasten to behold the face of him whom they served in life and from whom they are to receive their reward when glorified. 99 This is the order of the souls of the righteous, as henceforth is announced; and the aforesaid are the ways of torment which those who would not give heed shall suffer hereafter." 100 I answered and said, "Will time therefore be given to the souls, after they have been separated from the bodies, to see what you have described to me?" 101 He said to me, "They shall have freedom for seven days, so that during these seven days they may see the things of which you have been told, and afterwards they shall be gathered in their habitations." 102 I answered and said, "If I have found favor in thy sight, show further to me, thy servant, whether on the day of judgment the righteous will be able to intercede for the unrighteous or to entreat the Most High for them, 103 fathers for sons or sons for parents, brothers for brothers, relatives for their kinsmen, or friends for those who are most dear." 104 He answered me and said, "Since you have found favor in my sight, I will show you this also. The day of judgment is decisive and displays to all the seal of truth. Just as now a father does not send his son, or a son his father, or a master his servant, or a friend his dearest friend, to be ill or sleep or eat or be healed in his stead, 105 so no one shall ever pray for another on that day, neither shall any one lay a burden on another; for then every one shall bear his own righteousness and unrighteousness." .....2 Esdras 7:75 ///////////////
@siferris96125 ай бұрын
Throughout my teens I used to practice pullups, pushups and situps untill by the time I went into the Army at age 20 yrs I would do 100 push ups, break for a minute and do another 50 I could do 20 pullups hands forward and 300 situps a day every day. My best pushup total was 52 in 30 seconds. I believe it was due to repetition every day for years. Start with for example 10 pushups and add one every day.
@bobhope49492 ай бұрын
Lol I was a fat kid and thought push ups and sit ups would solve that, did millions to no avail, end up a druggy by my twenty’s and was fuckn ripped from all the bullshit I did when I was a kid lol……. Then the inevitable effects of drugs killed me
@lostarrow861Ай бұрын
@@bobhope4949I see you’ve made a good recovery!
@klulu-kun5 ай бұрын
The Saitama Build.
@nitrofochv21855 ай бұрын
🤓
@klulu-kun5 ай бұрын
@@nitrofochv2185 Okay? 🤨
@produkcjapodlasie64685 ай бұрын
True 😆
@cbbcbb68034 ай бұрын
I think the military prefers strength and endurance over big muscles.
@richardtowels19585 ай бұрын
when i was a teen i would do pushups in the bathroom before i took a shower for years. Later, after I grew up and left my parents house I do 7 pushups in-between my sets at the gym. I eventually swapped pushups out for pullups. gradually increasing reps. Highest count was 6 perfect form pullups in-between each set. Sounds small but it adds up. If you figure you typically fo 3-4 sets of an exercise and 3 or more exercises per day you can easily rack up 54-72 pullups a day.
@marlenemorales5920Ай бұрын
I did heavy weights for many reps combined with supersets back in high school whilst I was on the track/cross country team for cardio. By accident I became the strongest person in my higschool (pound for pound). This wasn't my intention when I started working out but I still haven't encountered anyone with the same strength/speed combo as me at my weight of 200 lbs. I wish I had found out I was built different earlier in life but I didn't notice it until I took up muay thai in my late twenties.