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Albert Ciampa
Health Promotions Director
Dyess AFB, TX
Preface
This work was originally intended for Military student-instructors who attended a 10-week course that I conducted with the purpose of creating competent leaders of physical training (PT) at the unit level. Force multipliers train-the-trainer whatever you wish call it this course was designed to empower others with our
trade: physical training. The most effective way that one person can have great affect on a larger population is
by teaching others to teach.
After the course, some students still had many questions, and there was some confusion as wellthe individuals in a group do not progress in the same fashion or at the same rate. This manual was born both as a supplement, and to provide a source of continuing education for the graduates of that course. It should not be used
as a standalone source of instruction for a novice student of movement, or recreational trainee. One should
always get expert instruction when first learning how to move, especially when under load, and the early part
of this manual explains why.
As this piece progressed, it slowly grew in a different direction than I originally intended. I put together this
manual to answer the daily questions that I was fielding, and began to hand it out to folks other than my students. It was well received. So, while the language contained within still speaks to Military student-instructors,
the material applies to anyone who is interested in physical training, from the novice just starting out to the
intermediate or advanced trainee who is willing to go back and ensure that his or her foundation is solid.
This information in this manual is a detailed overview of my notions pertaining to what should be the foundation of movement, the basic exercises to practice and train, examples of effective programming routines, and
applied nutritional science & lifestyle. It is applicable to the entry-level student, the rehabilitated patient, and
the elite alike. From the rank of Private to Special Operator, teenage strength athlete to Professional, and
from young to old healthy and unhealthy individuals and recreational athletes, some portion of the generalpreparedness recommendations from within these pages will improve your function and/or performance. I invite you to glean what you can.
This material is a synthesis of my own experiences and observations as an athlete, Soldier, instructor, academic, and student; the insights and teachings of Pavel Tsatsouline, Dan John, Gray Cook, Tim Anderson, Geoff
Neupert, Thomas Meyers, Gary Taubes, as well as every other forgotten name that has donated some piece of
the puzzlethrough the stimulation of critical thought to the flat out burning the hand on the stove method
of acquiring knowledge; every student, athlete, and Soldier that I have had the privilege to train or work with;
and the support of friends and familyespecially my brother, for without his never ending stream of query, the
dots would not have been so comprehensively connected.
Special thanks to: Lt Col John Fox, J. Mike Park, TSgt Jason Washington, Lt Col Winnie Lok-Park, TSgt Aaron
Gaddis, SSgt Anna Lee, MSgt Frank King, SSgt Jacob Savoie, SSgt Andrew Dailey, Ms. Terri Jordan, Maj Gen
Leonard Patrick, Brig Gen Partick Higby, Brig Gen Bradley Spacy, CMSgt Farrel Thomas, CMSgt Angelica Johnson, Col Paul Nelson, Col Rene Romero, Chris Isernio, & Jay Johansen and to anyone else whom I may have
overlookedyou were all important in your own way.
Exercise is not without its risks and this or any other exercise program may result in injury. Any person
who undertakes these exercises does so at their own risk. To reduce the risk of injury you should consult your doctor before beginning this or any other exercise program. As with any exercise program, if
at any point during your workout you believe conditions to be unsafe or begin to feel faint or dizzy,
have physical discomfort, or pain, you should stop immediately and consult a physician.
And please, get a qualified instructor. No novice should learn how to exercise from a static photo
manual. Find an instructor near you: http://www.strongfirst.com/instructors/
Introduction
With respect to strength and conditioning methods, there is much misinformation being passed along that can
lead to injury, little improvement, and/or disinterest in physical activity. The Internet is a fantastic tool, but it
can also be most troublesome. The intent of this manual is to help decipher those proper and effective notions that actually do improve physical performance, and to prescribe them as safely as possible. Tried and
true methods have existed for hundreds years: getting strong is easylift weights. Increased conditioning is
even easierspeed up the movement and shorten the rest periods. Its the details and application of these
two ideas that cause the lack of comprehension.
Being fit for the military means having to train a bit differently from Olympians and professional athletes. Military members are athletes, but athletes of another kind. We cant specialize in our training; our programs
have to be general in nature, but based on a foundation of strength. It is increased strength and short duration
power levels that have the greatest effect on ones capacity to do workthe ultimate goal of physical fitness.
Strength is relative, howeverthe retiree with whom I work will be put through repetition after repetition of
getting up and down off the floor while the strength athlete with whom I work might need a 650+lb deadlift in
order to be competitive in his weight class. The average military member needs just enough strength.
Unlike most other coaches and trainers, I have the luxury of already knowing your goals. You raised your right
hand vowing to meet a set of standards that must be met, regardless of your personal wishes and desires.
Since standards are just thatmetrics to be achievedprograms can be designed to that end.
For example, Military members must participate in a bi-annual / annual physical fitness assessment, but regulations require satisfactory performance at any time. This particular specificity of training must be worked into
the fitness program even better, choose those basic exercises that have the greatest carry over to other
tasks and movements.
The work of our Military men and women also requires the successful accomplishment of missions of a physical nature. Engaging in workout sessions that drain your energy, cause lethargy, and deep muscle soreness can
compromise mission readinessthe very thing that physical fitness training should support.
This cannot be
overstated.
The Service also demands that individuals maintain relatively low body weightsand this includes both lean and
fat mass. Extra muscle that is not putting any power to the ground still needs to be carried around. You may
find it difficult to hoist your battle-buddy off the field of combat if your beach muscles are unnecessarily
weighing you down. The goal is to be strong but lean, and not overly muscled. Being big and bulky might be
your personal goal, but it will make you less effective at your job.
A point often overlooked, many missions must be accomplished while in a state of sleep and nutrition deprivation. It is beneficial at times to train tired and hungry, not always attempting to maximize nutrition and rest.
As with all physical training, safety should be built into the program. Quality should always precede quantity,
too much too soon must be avoided, restorative weeks (lower intensity) allowed, and those exercises which
are more likely to produce injury should be avoided.
What is needed is a minimalist free-style program that is very general in nature but carries over to most every
other task thinkable. The exercises chosen, and time spent performing them must give one the most bang for
the buck.
Part 1: Movement
This section is essentially about how to move properlyto position, and re-position using proper biomechanics. Strength and conditioning is based on movement, so movement needs to be of high-quality first. Moving
properly increases efficiency, and so improves physical performance. And it reduces the risk of injuryoutside
of the collision sports, musculoskeletal injury is usually the result of improper posturing, and/or too much,
too soon. Proper movement applied to lifes tasks is a high-dose of preventive medicine.
Pain too, can lead to poor movement patterns. The brain does the best it can to avoid moving into pain. You
ask your body to complete a physical task, such as walking, or shoveling snow, and your brain will automatically
position the body in such a way as to minimize any sensations of pain.
These compensations become habitual over time, and can lead to a new set point for that particular movementeven if the pain has been relieved.
Lastly, it is very possible that you were not given the chance to develop good movement as a young child. Perhaps your caretakers carried you everywhere. Perhaps you spent a lot of time in a walker or stroller, or some
other set of training wheels that prevented your ability to develop proper movement. The forces of nature are
the ultimate teacher, and if this part of your life has been surpassed, you may have ended up with movement
dysfunction as an adult. 1
High-quality movement takes time to create, and only grows in a garden of quality practice. Movement is
founded on a properly working computer control program: the brain and nervous system. Neural control of
the myofascialskeletal system (bones and soft tissues) continues to fine-tune as one practices movement. Precise control of the muscles and soft tissue leads to increases in strength and coordination, resulting in better
movement quality. Neural control and the resultant movement patterns are also known as motor skills, and
motor programming.
A motor skill is a skill for which the primary determinant of success is the quality of movement that the performer produces.
movement. Viewed in our context, motor programs may be faulty and lead to injury. Focusing on the task
running, and the not the performancefoot strike, forward lean from the ankles, head up, etc., is relying on a
potentially erroneous motor program.
Over time, the body adapts to what it is exposed toso keep practicing with a focus on your position: stay
with the process. No matter how poorly you move right now, you will move better and better each day.
Remember: move well first. The, focus on tasks.
But what is good movement?
The Chassis
The chassis is where we begin: the structure that provides the ability to move. The bodys support structure is
the chassis, i.e., the bones, muscles, and other soft tissues.
Good movement is holding ones chassis properly (good posture), and repositioning properly (good posture
under dynamic conditions) without compensations. There is no objective measure for high-quality movement,
but it is something that you recognize when you see itits extremely graceful.
Posture
Posture describes how a mover holds his or her body in both static and dynamic positions, e.g., standing still,
or running. When we speak of posture, it is description of the pelvis and spine, but inevitably includes the
limbs as well. There is a correct way to posture and position that will minimize injury due to inferior biomechanical leverages, and, maximize efficiency. Maintaining the spines natural arches with the pelvis neutral to
the lumbar arch is, essentially, proper posture.
Teaching one how to form and maintain this posture is difficult, but there are many coaching cues that help.
Although we keep providing the same postural cues, many of my students admit that they didnt hear those
corrections many months ago. It requires tenacious effort and exacting instruction, placed on top of the physiological adaptations seen in training that leads to improved positioning.
Crawling, one of our initial training tools, is absolutely the best way to both teach and improve posture, and it
does so in a self-correcting way.
This is an example of chassis restrictions changing posture, resulting in altered movement and dysfunctional
motor programs. Movement can identify limitations of the chassisthis is exactly what movement screens are
designed to do. These limitations, however, can be corrected over time by practicing movement with a focus
on quality.
the best way to train this is to challenge this ability. If limitations in soft tissue or the four knots cause your
spine to flex, extend, and torque unwillingly, clear this up first. This is a big part of chassis rebuilding.
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Sometime soon after we earned, what Grey Cook would call, unconscious competency in our movement,
society stuck us in a desk for school, a sofa for video games, or otherwise began the degradation of neural control and local mobility / stability. 1 Fast forward to high-school, when we get thrown into a sports program and
suffer our first injuries due to moving a less than capable chassis in a relative Indianapolis 500.
But perhaps you survived high school and even collegiate sports participation (and its requisite strength training) without harm. If you have been moving with compensations, it is likely that the tissue damage is there,
waiting to accumulate enough microtrauma to present as pain and/or injury. So what to do?
Go back, and recreate the training program. Taking cues from the developmental patterns of children, we
practice moving to improve neural control, increase stabilization and mobility about the joints, and put the
body back together as one piecewe start from the beginning to rebuild the chassis.
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Quality movement is earned by children tenaciously competing against gravity and other natural forces (such as
older siblings) out in three-dimensional space, without support or stability. Getting up off the ground without
assistance is a task challenged in three-dimensional space; sitting in a chair while you work on your computer is
a task that is assisted and stabilized. We need to engage in a lot more of the former and a lot less of the latter.
cally incorrect manner under load will lead to tissue trauma, pain, and injury. It is imperative to regain range of motion in the shoulders and remove the compensation before
loading up overhead.
Given enough time, the habits formed by these compensatory movements become the default movement patterns
by rewiring software in the brainthe motor programs.
The runner who lacks symmetrical hip stability has had the motor program for locomotion rewired to work
around the lack of stability in that hip. That is, when placed in a single-legged stance, one hip sticks the pose
nicely while the other hip causes a lot of dancingasymmetric hip function. Being a series of single-legged
stances, running with this compensation is literally tearing this body apart.
Worse yet, too much time spent in exercise machines, isolating muscle groups and body segments, or otherwise training the body in segments rather than a whole (as many training programs do), further degrades the
chassis. This too contributes to poor movement patterns and compensations.
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De-stabilize the environment of exercise, dont fortify it with external stabilization. Requiring your body do
the stabilizing is much of how movement quality improves. The body adapts to what it is exposed to, in either
direction as all things in nature, it seeks maximum efficiency.
There is a place for isolating segments and muscles, such as during a physical rehabilitation program, working
with the elderly, and making adjustments for those permanently injured. They just dont belong in an effective
performance program, except maybe during an off-load week.
Take the time to rest, regroup, and rebuild the movement quality that you once had. It doesnt take very long,
but it must be done. Remember: you should not train for strength and conditioning on a foundation
of poor movement. Lets rebuild and reinforce the chassis before we enter the race.
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As I deal with so many people who are in chronic pain, who believe that they cannot move, or cannot complete this or that task, this section is for them. But this may obviously apply to any reader.
Pain is a sensation emitted by the brain and felt by the individual. We used to believe that there was a causal
relationship between injury and paintear up tissue, and feel the subsequent pain. Research has led to new
theories that turn on the notion of pain being a result of inputs from a number of different sources. Pain is
simply the brains way of talking to usa response to perceived danger.
The nociceptors are a collection of sensors throughout the body that send
Pain really is
signals back to the brain and spinal cord about tissue damage, or a danger of
damage, e.g., an overstretched muscle. Nociception, if stimulated, had been
in the mind!
thought to be the sense of pain, but it is only one of many inputs now understood to activate the sensation of pain.
limb phenomenon among amputees: sensations of pain where no tissue even exists.
It has been reported that 40% of the population is walking around with disc herniations, bulging discs, and/or
degenerated spinal joints while feeling no pain whatsoever. Moreover, they dont feel pain in the follow up visits years later.
These findings have led to the guidance that physicians should not order imaging diagnostics
for non-specific low-back pain. The disrupted structures seem to only be associated with painful symptoms.
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The contemporary understanding of pain is that it is an output of the brain. You feel pain because of ______.
Whats the because? As we learned, it used to be thought that tissue damage communicated through nociception caused pain. It is now believed that there is a bio-psycho-socio cause of pain. The brain receives inputs
about the bodys tissues (bio), the individuals thoughts, fears, and beliefs (psycho), and the individuals
knowledge and culture (socio), and decides to signal pain.
The power of ones attitude and thoughts can change ones perception of pain, without changing anything at
the tissue level. Dr. Sarno did a lot of work to support this notion in his book, Healing back pain, the mindbody connection.
If youre suffering from chronic pain, look into other areas of your life with honesty and
The take home in our context is that if youre managing your pain, you need to continue to move. Movement
is life. Change your attitude about what you can physically accomplish, and you might just surprise yourself.
When I work with people with nonspecific low-back pain, they usually guard against certain positions and especially against loads. They move slow, with a half-winced expressions on their facessome even with a look of
sorrow.
In many cases, people can change their condition just by believing to be strong and capablebecause they are!
I am still surprised at the outcomes of those people who had originally been referred to me in states of desperationfacing surgery and a lifetime of nursing a structural dysfunction. There are many cases on the records
across many fields of work reporting reduced or removed sensations of pain through movement therapy.
My suspicion is that in many of those cases, the confidence built by moving led to a knowledge that changed
the brains perception of danger, and so, it turned off the pain signal.
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Tension
Tension is how muscles hold up and move bones. Tension is strength. There are two types of tension: reflexive and feed-forward. Reflexive tension is an unconscious tightening of musculature prior to limb impact, as
occurs in the locomotion patterns. Crawling and walking require reflexive tension. One may think of reflexive
tension as the brain automatically sequencing muscle firing and stabilizing the structure prior to motion. This
seems to be lost to sedentary lifestyles and improper movement patterning, the latter, whether due to pain or
restrictions.
If you want to reach for that glass of water from the seated position in which you now find yourself, your brain
must reflexively fire your core and rotator cuff muscles in order to stabilize your spine and shoulder joint before your primary movers fire. Just nanoseconds before you move your arm, your chassis and limbs must be
stabilized, and this occurs unconsciously. This ability is lost through prolonged idleness. Properly engaging in
the locomotion movement patterns, however, rectifies issues with reflexive tension; and floor work is a great
start point.
Feed-forward tension is a conscious decision to
tighten up before movement. Feed-forward, full
body tension requires a lot of motor control
and neural pressure, or neural forcelike the
voltage running through electrical wires. Posturing up tightly against a load builds requires
feed-forward tension and occurs at the conscious level.
Crawling and loaded carries can increase movement quality and reflexive tension without thought, just
through practice it is also a great
way to practice proper breathing.
Stand tall, neutral neck, pack the shoulders, open the chest, brace the abdomen, squeeze the buttocks (glutes),
pull up the knee caps, and grab the ground with the feet, clench two tight fists and spread the floor between
your feet create a lot of tension. It takes a lot of practice to create high-levels of full body feed-forward
tension. The brain must relearn how to fire the entire muscular system at once.
This posturing should be drilled often. Feed-forward tension in this manner holds posture against load; and
higher tension levels create a structure that can withstand high loading, safely. Higher tension levels also allow
for more force to be produced by the structure, or, more weight lifted; and, more weight lifted = stronger.
The skeletal system is not a compressive structure, as many understand it, but a tensegrity structure. As
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Get Tight!
Practice building
tension.
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Thomas Myers explains, tensegrity structures find their strength through tension, like a suspension bridge.
While the bones do articulate with other bones, it is not unreal to imagine the skeleton as a pile of bones floating in a pool of soft tissuethey gain their ability to support load through the tension of the soft tissue. Without the tensile force of the soft tissues, the skeleton would be nothing but a pile to bones on the floor. Pavel
Tsatsouline calls this phenomenon, irradiation.
The more forcefully you can contract your shoulder, the more
weight you can lift overhead. But if the rest of the system is
relaxed or less tense, less force is applied to the weight
some other area of the structure is leaking force. See it this
way: the primary movers pull against the bonein this case,
the deltoids and triceps pull against the humerus. This causes
movement, and works pretty well to grab a pint of beer.
But imagine now a heavy dumbbell in that hand.
Pushing
Your power and strength come from the ground, and a strong chassis can channel this force to movement.
Practicing and creating maximum tension will lead to higher forces applied to objects, like kettlebells, or bags of
groceries, or the carrying of children, or heavy furniture. This is strength trainingthe practice of moving under maximum tension. The practice of adequate tension is for competition.
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Breathing
Breathing also takes a lot of practice. Proper breathing occurs in the belly: as the diaphragm pushes down into
the abdominal cavity, the belly should distend. Breathing through the chest and shoulder girdle requires much
more energy than belly breathing and stimulates the sympathetic nervous system (SNS)fight or flight. Once
the SNS is turned on through improper breathing, much more energy is wasted, being fueled by adrenaline.
The crocodile breathing drill is great for teaching belly breathing. Letting the ground be the teacher, lie prone
on the floor and relax: no tension anywhere. Breathe in slow by distending the belly against the floorpush
the floor away. Let the shoulders and chest remain relaxed and unmoved. For additional cuing, have your
partner press their index fingers into your sides just above your hips. Push out their fingers with your inhalation.
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You should practice this breathing style as often as possible, until it becomes the default. Whenever you can
remember throughout the day, be aware of your breathing and try to slow it down5-8 seconds in, 5-8 seconds outbreathing very deep into the pelvic floor.
When moving in a ballistic manner (explosively: accelerating objects), biomechanical breathing is preferred: a
sharp inhale through the nose before or during the coil of the spring, followed by a sharp exhale through the
mouth during the snap of the spring. When moving slower under constant loads, you must learn to breathe
behind the shield: a solidly tightened core. More on this later.
Under these conditionsbreathing, tension, and posturewe practice movement. We practice movement
until we have attained a high quality with lots of control, that is, until we own the movement pattern. Tasks
will take care of themselves if we concentrate on movingposture, tension, and breathing are not to be partitioned off, but seen as one entity. They are that closely intertwined: the body is one piece.
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Chassis Reconstruction
Movement Algorithm
We begin chassis reconstruction with the following algorithm: crawling, get ups, and swings. Anyone we introduce to movement training learns and practices crawling, get ups, and swingsfloater swings, in that order.
One doesnt have to crawl perfectly under full control before starting to practice get ups and swings, but they
should spend more time on it.
Crawling fixes many hip and shoulder mobility & stability issues, coordination problems, and core weakness.
As we learned from Thomas Myers, it isnt accurate to try and identify imbalances and weaknesses in the chassis, then isolate them into problems to address. Its quicker and more effective to challenge the body with
something like crawling, and let the brains attempt to control movement address any issues in the chassis. I
dont know which of the core muscles is weak or not firing in the right sequence, but I do know that if you
cant control your pelvis while you crawl, you have core issues and as you improve crawl performance, these
issues clear up.
Get ups take the coordination, hip & shoulder improvements, and the integrity of the core gained from crawling and challenge them against an external load. Get ups require much more neural force and finer motor
control than crawling, and this is the next echelon up on the movement scale. A strong chassis will be forged
by your eventual ability to reposition gracefully while controlling a very heavy weight throughout this movements entirety. This movement is the gateway into heavy pressing and other overhead work, as well as any
heavy full-body strength work that you might choose to do (or have to do).
Kettlebell swings are next up the chain on our movement hierarchy. Ballistic loading on the body is very bad
idea if you havent first strengthened and primed your chassis. This is like placing a high-performance drag engine in a stock Pinto. Running and sprinting places high-ballistic loading on the body which may explain the high
injury rates. Once you have converted muscle to cable, and flesh to steel from the effects of ballistic loading
on the body, you are clear to do anything else. Youre chassis is tuned once you own heavy, crisp, and snappy
swings.
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Crawling
The two basic crawls that we use are baby crawling, on the hands and knees; and what Tim and Geoff call Spiderman crawling, up on the hands and feet. 9 The names are unimportant, in fact, we just direct to either crawl
on the hands and knees, or up on the feet. Baby crawling is important to rebuild contralateral control of the
opposite limbs. The right leg moves with the left arm, and so forth.
This contralateral locomotion pattern is also seen in walking and running. Since most of us walk around with
our hands in our pockets, and run using little or no arm power, its no wonder why our locomotive pattern is
dysfunctional. Crawling will reestablish locomotion, improve posture (including helping to reduce a turtle
humpthoracic kyphosis), strengthen and mobilize the shoulders and hips, tighten up the core, and force you
to practice breathing from the bellyit is difficult if not impossible to breathe from the chest and shoulders
while they are loaded up in this fashion.
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Posture is the key here: imagine a beach ball laying on your backattempt to wrap the spine around this ball.
Pinch the back of the head to the tailbone, keep the chin and chest high, and pelvis as low as possible. Move
the opposite limbs together. Work on moving the legs independent of the pelvis. If you get confused, go back
to quadruped and start over. Dont focus on the distance, focus on the movement. Dont rush the crawls,
slow down and control your bodylet the process workno matter how difficult it is at first, keep at it and
you will reap the gains.
Crawling on your hands and knees develops coordination and a basic level of strength. Get down in quadrupedhands beneath the shoulders / knees beneath the hips. Posture up: chin and chest hightry to look at
the ceiling (it wont happen) and pinch the back of the head to the tailbone. Maintain a tight posture as you
crawl forward by moving the opposite hand and knee together.
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Crawl forward. Crawl in reverse. Crawl laterally. Have fun with it. Practice moving your legs under control
and independent of the pelvis and spineif your butt is bounding side to side and/or up and down, you have
issues with your chassiskeep crawling until they work themselves out. Once youve gained your coordination back, post up on your hands and feet.
While the book, Original Strength, differentiates between different types of crawls performed on the hands
and feet, we strive for what they call the Spiderman crawl: get down into quadruped and then up on your
hands and feet.
Chin and chest highand this is important: keep your butt down. Wrap your spine around
the beach ball and move the opposite hand and foot together. Crawling up on your hands and feet requires a
lot more strength on top of coordination. It is not yet important if the knees track inside or outside of the
elbows while crawling, but try to eventually track them outside. Pull the knee as high as you can to unlock hip
mobility.
one piece.
Crawling in reverse will prep your shoulders for anything you can throw at them, as well as being rehabilitative
in nature. A total of 100 feet in each direction is great. Go for as long as you can, downgrading back your
hands and knees as neededyou will gain strength over time, and will still reap the benefits of crawling..
We use rocks, bobs (mentioned later), and crawling as part of our regular warm-up and mobility portion of the
session. When using crawling for this, we like to see you crawl slower, with longer strides, and with a lot of
controltry not to Frankenstein your steps; and control the lateral and vertical bounding of your pelvis.
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Another aspect to challenge you is crawling for distance. Try to crawl a lap (or laps) around a track, or span a
football field, for example. When crawling for distance, you can be softer on the mechanicsthe butt will lift
up a little higher, and your strides will be shorter, but it will still be fun. Enjoy.
While crawling, fight the urge to simply get to the finish line, whether during a warm-up or for a longer distance effort. It is important to move properly than to just move, so take as many breaks as you need if you
feel fatigued or suffocated. You have to wait for the requisite strength to develop, including your breathingmuscle strength, and this will only occur if you practice properly. Trying to crawl past the point of fatigue will
lead to improper technique, robbing you of the benefits of the training. Be patient, and give your body time to
adapt.
Later edit: starting this work, I couldnt believe all the improvements from crawlingfor everyone, and right in
front of my eyes. After more than a year into using crawling as a tool, I want to make a point here that although I often mention the benefits of crawling, it is just a tool. The shiny-ness has worn off but not the results,
so I left in the great emphasis that I once had about crawling.
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The Get Up
The get up, on the other hand, is a slow grinding-type movement that begins in the supine position and slowly
progresses from position to position until the individual is standing erect with the kettlebell overhead. Mastering the get up takes a lot of practice and time, and is quite exhausting due to fine-tune control required of the
entire body under tension for a relatively long amount of time.
The get up is performed by staging a kettlebell (or other tool) on the ground to one side. Lying on your back
next to the kettlebell, face the bell in a fetal-like position, drive the joined and extended fingers of the working
side hand, palm up, deep into the handle.
Note the deep hand placement.
The low arm is the working side.
Grab the kettlebell handle off center toward the horn on the thumb side of the hand. Place the other hand over
the handle and roll the kettlebell up onto your belly using your bodyweight.
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Using two hands, push the kettlebell out to full arm extension. You should looking down your thumb,
as in aiming a firearm. Lock the kettlebell into this position by contracting the big lat muscle on your
back. Extend the opposite arm about 45 off midline with the palm facing the ground. Same side leg is
bent 90, opposite side leg is straightthe legs make a nice wide base. Look at the kettlebell.
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This
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Own this
position.
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Reverse the process until you are lying supine again. From the standing position: opposite leg rear lunge, slowly lowering yourself to a kneedont jam your knee into the ground. As you reach for the ground off your
knee, shift your gaze back to the bell, and rotate your torso, hinging back on the hip above the posted foot.
Open the gap and stabilize the 3-point stance.
Lift the hips, and sweep the leg through to the tall sit. Press the shoulders down and away from your ears.
Lower yourself under control to the elbow, press the shoulders away from the ears, and lower yourself to
your back. Two hands, on the kettlebell, lower it to your belly, and roll it off to the side. That is one-half of
one repetitionwork the other side nowcongratulations.
A word of caution here: as this is a movement that requires a lot of control, moves through all three planes,
and always has a load over head, lets practice safety when first starting out: always act as if the bell is very
heavy. Use two hands when applicable and respect the load. Practice properly with light weights, and you will
execute properly with heavy weights too. Its not uncommon for males to get up with 70, 90, and 100lbs; and
for females to use 50, 60, and even 70lbs, so lets train properly while its still light.
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The Swing
The swing is a bilateral and ballistic hip extension movement that belongs to the hinge movement pattern. It is
one of only two externally loaded lifts that one needs in a minimalist program, giving lots of return for the time
and energy invested. The swing comes in many variations and takes considerable time and practice to master.
The default two-hand swing that I teach is also called an overspeed eccentric or shadow swing; but I think that
I originally learned how to do them wrong, so it developed into my own version. This version of the two-hand
swing will provide not only a conditioning and power benefit, but it will guarantee that you never have to train
sit-ups or do ab work again.
To perform a swing, take a wider than shoulder-width stance with toes cantered out, standing about a foot
behind the kettlebell. Sit back into the hinge while unlocking your knees, grab the kettlebell by the handle, and
lean it toward you.
Tense uppack the shoulders, brace the abs, squeeze the glutes, grab the ground with the feet and get ready.
Use the drills described in the previous section of this manual: make yourself tight. You should be looking at a
spot on the floor about 20 feet ahead of you.
Shift your weight back onto your heels as you hike the kettlebell up and back between your legs, then snap
the hips into extension from this hinged position, literally throwing the kettlebell from in between the legs outward to about midsection / chest height. The height of the bell is unimportant: explosive hip snap is what
were after. Keep your body weight back on your heels.
Project the kettlebell forward and make a tight plank. Using the latissimus dorsi muscles (your lats - those
large back muscles that make wings) and arms, the kettlebells vertical movement is arrested, and forced back
into the hinge positionand the spring is again loaded. Return the kettlebell to the ground after a final back
swing by gently parking it as you originally found it.
The most articulate author cannot describe this movement in a manner which will allow for even a decent performanceplease find a qualified instructor.
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A properly performed kettlebell swing is a violent but graceful display of power. This movement is an explosive hip extension that, when trained properly, improves every other aspect of physical performance, reduces
body fat quickly, and turns flesh into steel.
A proper swing is a tug-of-war between the opposing body lines: posterior v. anterior. The glutes, hamstrings,
and quads forcefully catapult the bell forward, while the lats, abdominals, and hip flexors catch it and throw it
backcompress the spring, trigger the spring, and compress it again. Both the hinge and plank positions are
maximally tightmaximum feed-forward tensionfor the time the bell spends flying out, one is relaxedtight. There is no rest during a set of swings.
The details of what is going on in the body during a swing is worth exploring. Practice your tension drills without a load. Stand with a shoulder-width stance, neutral neck, pack the shoulders, brace the abs, squeeze the
glutes, pull up the knee caps, and grab the ground with your feet. Now, make two tight fists and spread the
ground between your feettight,
tight
tight!
Standing with all this tension, pull your butt back, unlock
your knees and hit the hingechin and chest up. Pause, and snap back to a tight planknow relax. Do it
again. Do it in between sets of swings.
Now we add the kettlebell. Throw the bell forward into the tight plankstay connected to the bell; arrest
its ascent; catch itand throw it back down. Hit the hinge and violently throw it back, do not pause. Repeat for a set of 10. Check your heart rate. Wow.
Most people have a lot of trouble with they first start swingingjust get the basic pattern down and be patient.
Use an appropriate load. My progression to this violent overspeed swing is to train a floater hardstyle swing
firstthe default swing of the StrongFirst community. Floater swings consist of driving the hips explosively,
throwing the bell into a tight plank, however, the bells ascent is not arrested and is allowed to float momentarily at the top of the arch. The bell should then be guided back down into the hinge under the force of gravity. These swings concentrate on hip extension power only.
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It is important to train this initial version of the swing before beginning to overspeed themtrain them until
youve forged the motor program into your brain, about 3-6 months. Hear this: if you include overspeed
swings into your training too early, that is, before you can float swings crisp and powerful without much
thought, you will degrade the mechanics of both swing types and get no where at best, injury at worst.
A point to be aware of is hinging too early leaving the plank before the bell has met you. Pavel calls this,
playing chicken with the kettlebell. This is true for any version of the swing, but when first overpseeding
your swings, you may see this happen. Dont sit back, out of your plank until your arms have met your ribcage, then hinge and snap.
Overspeed swing
Float swing
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Be patient, put your hours in on the floaters, then, work on sets where you begin to speed the floaters down.
So, hinge, throw, plank & float, now, use the arms to begin to power the bell back to the hinge. These are the
SFG overspeed eccentric swings. After you get the timing right in this version, start to include a few reps
where you begin to arrest the ascent, and throw it back. Use all three versions in your training.
A word on sit-ups here: I dont advocate training sit-ups regularly, in fact, you should only perform them on test day. If
folks performed sit-ups properly, then there is a possibility that they wouldnt cause problems. However, most do not
perform them correctly, especially under testing situations, and so even a short stint in the Military can lead to life-long
low-back pain, due to practicing sit-ups. Sit-ups place the lumbar spine against the ground to be used as a fulcrum to
fold the body in half oversomething it did not evolve to support. If you do sit-ups properlythat is, keep the midline
open and lead the action from the chest, only flexing only at the hipthen the most youll probably get is a sore tailbone. But this technique costs a lot of energy and requires a lot of strength, so most members I monitor perform them
in trunk flexion followed by hip flexionand thats where the problem exists. Do your heavy swings to improve your situp numbers.
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These three movements, the crawl, the get up, and the swing are practiced and trained until the body is again
resilient, but there are other drills to practice as well in the meantime:
Floor Work
We continue the chassis rebuilding program with floor work: mobility get ups, rolling, rocks, bobs, goblet
squats and halos. Along with crawling, these movements comprise our warm-upmuch more in the beginning,
then less and less as the body begins to rebuild itself. It requires a lot of effort, but offers benefits very quickly,
and you have to do them frequently. Remember the goal at this point: to re-teach the brain to control the
body as one piece; to re-teach the brain reflexive tensionthe correct sequencing of muscle group activation;
strengthening the core; stabilizing the joints; and reducing restrictions in the joints.
Running and crawling share the same contralateral locomotive movement pattern but during running, all of the
ground reaction forces are transferred through the legs, as the spine resists compressive forces. While crawling, less net forces are transmitted through two limbs, and the spine acts as a suspension bridgebeing supported by the pelvis and the shoulder girdle. For me, crawling is the absolute foundation of movement. We
have seen crawling improve both healthy and unhealthy individuals. I have come to believe that everyone must
own good crawling performance. It really doesnt take very long, and it provides a solid basis for the higher
movement patterns.
Practice deep belly breathing and feed-forward tension where applicable. Do this everyday. Improvements in
these drills will carry over to seemingly disconnected areas of your fitness and movement. Our warm-up progresses as such:
100ft crawl: hands and knees, forward and reverse. As coordination is gained, crawl up on the hands
and feet, degrading down to the knees as you fatigue. You will progressively get stronger and go
farther.
5 x Rocks, belly breathe, 5 x more rocks. 10 x bobs. Do this drill over a light bell. Then, pop to a squat
and:
10 x goblet squat-to-halo drills, changing direction each time. Begin and end in the bottom of the squat.
Last: mobility get ups. More at first, then, one long and slow: each side. Now youre ready.
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Rolling
Rolling is a great partner to the movement algorithm, especially in the beginning. Segmental rolling is the act of
getting from the prone to supine, or vice-versa, by using the weight of the head and only one arm, or, only one
leg. Segmental rolling resets posture, strengthens the core, and returns authentic movement by teaching proper muscle activation sequencing.
For a left-arm roll to the right, begin by lying on your back. Look to the right, push your head over your right
arm as you bring your left arm over in the direction of the roll. Keep pushing the head and arm to the right
until you roll, using no other limb for assistancedont push with your legs or other arm. The core must fire
hard in order to move the head and arm and drag the lower body along. Reverse this process from the supine.
The weight of the head is criticalkeep pushing the head in the direction of the roll until complete. Use each
legs weight in the same manner. If youre using additional limbs to finish the task, youre only fooling yourselfdo these rolls correctly for the benefits that they offer.
Are the right and left sides symmetrical? Are they just as
hard, or as easy? What about the back-to-front and front-to
-back rolls? If one side is more difficult, seek out that challenge and build symmetrythis goes a long way to restoring
movement quality.
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Rocking
Rocking is performed from the quadruped position: the hands and knees are directly beneath the shoulders and
hips. Imagine your spine wrapped around a large beach ballpinch the back of your head and tailbone together.
With chin high, try to look up at the ceiling and rock back and forth. Load the shoulders and actively push the
hips to the heelspush yourself into a squat. Hold this posture strong while rocking forward and backward.
Keep a pretty quick cadence as were trying to stimulate the vestibular system and reset posture through increased neural sensitivity.
Quadruped position
Rocking
At times, pause in the squat and practice belly
breathing. Ten is a nice even number of repetitions. I like to use both a narrow knees and a
wide knees positionthe latter patterns the
squat without any of the typical restrictions
when performed on the feet, and this contributes to owning a good squat.
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Bobbing
Bobbing is nothing more than holding the squat position of the last rock and looking up and down. Posture is
key herelook to the sky and wrap the spine around that beach ball. Holding that posture and actively push
into the squat ... drop the head until the chin is in the chest. Then raise it back toward the sky. Repeat. 10-20
rocks and bobs are adequate. Use the wider knee stance to further simulate an actual squat position.
I like the scared cat position to stretch out: from the quadruped position, push the mid back skyward and
suck in the abdomen. Stand up slow and enjoy the postural reset. These two movements can and should be
done every day, and throughout the daywhenever the chair makes you feel roundedget down and reset
with rocks and bobs.
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The rock & bob drill is simplyand I owe this to Tim and Geoffthis: have your trainee mentally scan their
posture while standing normally. Dont let them adjust, just tell them to take note of how the weight of their
head is being loaded, the position of their shoulders, the loading on their hips, etc.
Now, get them down to do ten good rocks and bobs, ensuring that theyre doing it correctly. Instruct them to
slowly stand up and ask, how do you feel? You will objectively notice that their head is further back and
their chest is more open; shoulders pulled back. You now have buy-in. Go train them properly.
I have never experienced a failure in this drills ability to instantly change posture; and if you can give someone
instant gratification, they will listen to everything thereafter with an open mind.
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Goblet Squat-to-Halo
I like this drill because it begins and ends in the squat from the bottomthe same place you originally discovered it as a toddler. It is also a version of the deep-knee bend that is a fantastic trainer: if you cant squat well,
the goblet squat will allow you work out your limitations.
The best way to perform this drill is to do your rocks and bobs over a light kettlebell, then load the hands with
your bodyweight and jump the feet into a squat stance. This will be approximately heels just outside your hips
with the toes turned out off center by about 15-30. If you have restrictions or old, beat-up knees, you may
need to rotate the feet out further.
Grab the kettlebell from the ground and curl it up so that it is in front of the chest and bottoms-up. Place the
elbows inside the thighs just short of the knees and pry the legs open: push your hands against the kettlebell.
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Before you stand tall out of the squat (after your prying) tighten upsit tall, brace the abs, grab the ground
with your feet, and push the air down into your pelvic floor as you stand up,
When fully erect, and preparing for the halo, grab the ground with your feet, squeeze the glutes, brace the abs,
and stay tight. When lowering yourself back into a squat, imagine that youre hanging upside-down from the
ceiling and you need to pull your hips up to your heels. Pull yourself down into the squat, do not just lower
yourself. This way, you will stay tight and balanced, and better maintain your posture.
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To perform a Halo, tip the kettlebell over to one side by rotating it about a horizontal axis that
is pointing at you.
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When the bell is around front again, pull yourself back down
into the squat and pry.
Repeat this process until you feel nice and loosemaybe 5-10
total. Or break it up into half and do another iteration of rocks
and bobs first.
To recap, get down in quadruped over a light kettlebell which will allow you to squat from the bottom up.
Perform ten rocks, holding a pause in the start at number five to practice some belly breathing. When done,
perform ten bobs holding yourself in the squat position (hips to heels).
From here, pop into a squat by loading the hands and jumping your feet up. Get comfortable here, and try to
accurately hit your squat stance. Sit tall, curl the bell up, and pry the hips. Stand up, halo left, pull yourself
down, stand up, and halo right. Repeat 4-6 times, and start the whole drill over. Take your time and own the
movements.
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What youll notice is that the bell has to stay centered over your shoulder, so the bigger the bell, wider
the arc of your handtry using competition bells if you can.
Now, look left, then right, letting the ground hold the weight of your head take the tension out of
your neck.
Then drive your elbow and opposite heel into the ground, rolling up onto your elbow:
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Slowly lower yourself back down to the hips, then the elbow, then the back.
Now, same start position but the unloaded arm is straight overhead:
Slow and controlled: bring the bent leg over and try
to get your hips square to the ground. Keep your
shoulders stacked and packed. Control the bell with
the lat.
Breathe through the belly for a 5count. And return to the start under
control, as in segmental rolling..
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10
terize a pattern, e.g., a goblet squat is a member of the deep-knee bend pattern; the swing falls in the hinge
pattern; and the push-up lies in the push pattern. Categorizing of exercises into movement patterns grew out
of a need to quickly identify what is missing from the training programs of higher level athletes who hit training
plateaus. The classification is not important to the average person but is simply a tool for coaches and athletes.
The takeaway here is that to keep motor control and inter-muscular coordination levels high, we must train
the movement patterns and not isolated body parts or muscles: the body must be trained as one piece! Exercises are chosen to train the movement patterns and because the body can only move so many ways, there
are relatively few effective exercises, unlike conventional wisdom would have you believe.
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The Squat
The squat belongs to the deep-knee bend movement pattern. A proper squat is performed by sitting down in
between the legs, not folding in half.
With your heels just outside of hip width, point the toes about 20-30 out, keep the chest up, build tension
pack the shoulders, brace the abs, squeeze the glutes, grab the ground with your feetand pull yourself down
in between your legs, tracking the knees out over the toes. Keep your weight back on your heels, sit tall in the
bottom and stay tight. Use the built up abdominal pressure to force yourself out of the bottom and stand up to
full extension. Its really this simplethere are some individual differences to account for, but this is a good
blanket start point.
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Goblet Squat
Youre already familiar the goblet squat from the drill, but progressing into a proper squat actually begins with
the goblet squat, or a heavy piece of furniture. The creation of Coach Dan John, the goblet squat allows someone with limitations to sit into a full squat, developing the pattern by gradually reducing their restrictions.
Grab a lighter kettlebell or dumbbell (or heavy piece of furniture) and hold it in front of the chest. Pull yourself down, placing the elbows inside of the thighs. Sit in bottom, and pry the hips open. Shift around, see what
feels comfortable. Discover your tight areas and work into them. Play with the foot and toe position to see if
the hips can get lower. Sit tall. Once you own a good goblet squat, you may use the other squat movements if
you desire.
Squats do not need to be loaded heavy. There is little to no evidence that heavy squats translate into better
performances on the field, on the track, or at the job. If you like squatting, or if you are competing in a sport
that requires heavy squatting, then go ahead and load up. Otherwise, for a general purpose program and
broad applicability, just own a good deep-knee bend.
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Loaded squats include heavier goblet squats, back squats, front squats, and overhead squats, with a range of
tools. The difference is where the load is placed on the bodythe performance is only slightly different.
I think Im stealing this from Grey Cook, but look at the photo below. Prior to the Korean War, Soldiers
came to basic training with the ability to squat, so this was a rehearsed shooting position, which made it very
easy to fire from cover and concealment, then break into a run. While serving in South Korea decades after
the War, my NCO had researched why the US ground forces were relatively ineffective during the initial push
in that campaignwe didnt have the fitness to fight the enemy in the hilly terrain. As a result, my unit ran and
foot marched LOTS of hills. Losing the ability to squat and lacking high work capacity led to a lot of Soldier
casualties. Clearly, as a society, we had lost some function in the years following WWII. Get your squat back.
Being bipedal animals, once mobility allows for squats, we are pretty good with squatsunlike upper body calisthenics, were able to string together large sets of deep-knee bends pretty quickly.
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The Push-Up
The push up belongs to the push movement pattern and is little more than a moving plank. Get into the front
leaning rest with your hands roughly under the position of the shoulders, feet together, and build tension.
Squeeze the glutes, brace the abs, grab the ground with your hands, corkscrew the shoulders, and pull yourself
down as one rigid piece. Pause and return to full arm extension. Your chest should touch the ground but your
hips should notbut dont pike up, keep your body in a tight, straight line. Keep your neck neutral so that
your chin about touches the ground with your chest. The elbows should track less than 45 off of midline, and
not flare out.
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Training push-ups for both the physical fitness test and for general strength is simple, but you have to do it
right. Look at the photos on page 56this is the correct way to train push-ups. Dropping your head, piking
up your hips, only pushing your upper body up, having your feet too far apart, and doing half push ups, is not
correct training.
Have the discipline to perform proper push-ups in training, and your test push-ups will be easy. Use a narrow
hand spacing and keep the elbows tucked; lower the chest all the way to the ground, and keep the body in rigid, straight linethis should keep your hips off the ground at the bottom. Train like this and build actual pressing strength. Your numbers wont be as high as your test-style push-ups, but do not worry ...
When you begin to prepare for the testsay a week or two outthen adjust your hand spacing wider and
flare your elbows out a bit. Make sure that you lower yourself almost to the ground, but dont touch it.
When you get to the test, you will be leveraging off of greater the joint angles and be required to lower yourself to only half or the range of motion that you have been training for. Dont make yourself into a rigid and
tight plankjust be tight enough. Meet the standard of the test, and no more. This is competition, not
training. See the difference? Your numbers will soar.
If you cant perform proper, neutral neck, rigid-body push ups, then youll need to increase your leverage. Going down to your knees is one way to increase the leverage, and great when youre in a pinch, but there is a
more effective method to increase the leverage: elevate your hands higher than your feet to the point that you
can get five good push ups and practice sets of five. Try to use something that allows you to adjust the height,
such as a staircase, a table and chair, or stacks of barbell plates. Be creative here.
As you get stronger, lower the height of
your hands and practice some more.
Eventually, you will be on the ground.
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One-arm Push-ups
Once you have 25 good push-ups in the bank, with a momentary pause at the bottom and top, then its time to
work on one-arm push-ups. Never trade range of motion for repetitions in calisthenics. Wishing it does not
make it happen. Begin push-ups from a wall, table, chair, or off your vehicles fender. Get creative and reduce
the height when you own 5 good push-ups at a specific height. Eventually, you will be on the floor. This same
process works for one-arm push-ups except that your feet are now wide. Five per side is a nice goal. Pavels
Naked Warrior can help with one-arm push-ups as well. Go to work.
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The Pull-Up
We evolved from brachiators, yet most of us cant do pull-ups. We need to take this back. Pull-ups belong to
the pull movement pattern and by engaging the rhomboid muscles, they help offset the protracted scapulae
posture (rounded shoulders) that can result from daily life. In our wrist-elbow-shoulder-centric style of living
coupled with too much pressing, we all need pulling movements to help pull the shoulders back and open the
chest.
Hang from the bar with the hands just outside the shoulders, create tensionyour tension practice works to
even increase pull-up strengthand pull the elbows down and back until the throat or chest touches the bar.
Pack the shoulders and hollow out to engage the lats harderthat is, close the line between your pelvis and
sternum in the front. Your legs should be straight with your feet slightly in front of the body.
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The standard grip is palms facing away and just outside of shoulders. Make sure you keep your shoulders
packed throughout this movementpacked shoulders protect the weaker soft tissues of the rotator cuff.
I believe it is important here to discuss kipping pull-ups, because they are so popular. Kipping pull-ups are
performed by driving the hips forward, creating momentum which you can then pull off of. This kipping act is
purposeful and not in desperation to get your chin over the bar.
When programmed into a session, kipping pull-ups are used for a conditioning effect, not strength. Large numbers of pull-ups can be threaded together using the kip. However, if you only perform kipping pull-ups, your
dead hang pull-ups will not improve because you havent created much of, if any, strength gains.
Moreover, if you havent forged stability at the shoulders and strengthened your rotator cuffs, you will very
likely injure yourself by solely doing kipping pull-ups, as they have a tendency to separate the humeral head
from the glenoid fossa in the bottom of the pull-upalong with creating bodyweight-plus ballistic loading on
the shoulder joints. Bad stuff for shoulders that havent been primed.
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My advice is: if you want to use kipping pull-ups for conditioning, I think it is a great tool and can be done safely, but please harden your shoulders and build actual strength into your pulling muscles by owning genuine
dead hangs first.
When you get 10 + high-quality dead-hang pull ups, begin to load this pattern up. Continue to do sets of 5
with additional weightthis is a fantastic strength exercise when performed in this fashion. There are belts
available from which you can hang a barbell plate or a kettlebell from, or you can also go austere and jam
something heavy between your kneesheck, wear a backpack full of cans of microwavable macaroni and
cheese that you dont need to be eating.
You can also begin to work on one-arm pull-ups. Pull yourself up leaning toward one hand at first, then work
into negatives by pulling up with both hands and lowering with one. One-handed flexed-arm hangs are next.
Keep trying until you succeed with a one-arm pull-upa very challenging display of strength.
If you dont have pull-ups yet, the progression into pull-ups is a bit fuzzy, but it works. Youll need to stimulate
vertical pulling strength by using alternate methods:
work on flexed-arm hangsjump your chin over the
bar and hold that position for as long as possible.
Partner pull-ups is another version of assistance: have a buddy push on your upper back providing only enough
force to keep you moving; lower yourself down (never hook the feet or ankles to assist someone doing pullups).
A parallel grip is strongest, a chin up grip (palms facing you) is next strongest, and a pull-up grip (palms facing
away) is least strong. Use whichever grip allows you to work, but try to progress toward a regular pull-up
gripthey dont make fences and walls with alternate grips attachments.
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Along with these assistance techniques, you should also be working towards a plank row for a full range of motion pull. Plank rows use your bodys weight in the plank position for resistance in a horizontal pulllike a
reverse push-up.
Perform these by elevating the feet and hanging by the arms underneath a fixed bara sturdy table and chair
work for this as well, as do gymnastic rings or the TRX set-up. Range of motion should be set so that the
body is horizontal towards the end of the movement. Pull the chest to bar (or rings), squeeze the shoulder
blades together, and pause for a moment.
Progression toward plank rows begins with your feet on the ground and bar or ring height set so that the body
passes a 45 angle with the floor midway during the range of motionrings or TRX works great for this. Reduce bar height while walking the feet in to varying intervals and work towards 5 quality reps. Elevate the feet
as your strength grows.
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If you do not have pull-ups, youll need to work both the plank row progressions for a full range of motion
pulling movement and the pull-up assistance techniques mentioned above until you gain the required strength
for a vertical pull.
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I see folks using jump stretch bands (and I used to teach this also) to increase leverage on pull-ups. The problem with using jump stretch bands is that they help you where you dont need much helpthe beginning of the
pull, and offer no help where you need it mostthe middle to end of the pull. Completing the pull-up requires
you pull the elbows behind you so that your throat or chest touches the bar. Training with a band will, at best,
stagnate your progress to pull-ups and, at worst, retire you to the band forever. Use the above recommendations to take your brachiation back.
Now, using jump stretch bands to leverage inverted push-ups I agree with, for the same reasons but in reversethey help you where you need it (at the bottom of the press), and help you less where you dont (at
the top of the press).
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Locomotion: Running
Crawling, walking, and running are all forms of locomotion. Crawling restores lost coordination and reflexive
strength which can then be applied to sprints and runs. Sprinting and running are both contralateral movements that take the power from the ground and send it up the chain to meet the force generated by the momentum of the driving and opposite arm.
Sprinting is top speed stuff; running is somewhere faster than jogging and slower than sprinting. Think of
running as slow sprinting. Jogging and other Long, Slow, Distance (LSD) stuff, is something else all together.
The drills are the same, sprinting is just faster. You run as hard as you can punch your arms back and forth,
and as much of that force that your core can transmit back to the ground.
Proper running technique, for some, must be practiced. Keep your body in a straight linehips under the
headand lean forward slightly at the ankles. From here, running is series of falling and catching yourselflet gravity do some of the work for you. Land with a mid-foot strike: at slower speeds the heel will be
slightly off the ground at impact, or, it will contact the ground with the mid-foot. The important thing is that
you are loading the soft tissue of the lower leg (calves) and not the skeleton (heel).
At faster speeds, the heel will naturally elevate more
automatically.
The torso should resist rotation (this is core strength) and stay relatively straight; the limbs should make sagittal plane movements only (fore and aft) and not move laterally (side to side). Have someone watch you and fix
any issues.
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It cant be stressed enough that if you have trouble crawling, you need to work on that before you hit high
speed running. Build the coordination and strength of the contralateral locomotive pattern in a safe manner
before you hit the track and open it up.
Running, however, has a great debate occurring with respect to foot strike. On the one side, we have the
barefoot, natural running club; and on the other, we have the traditional full cushioned shoe runners. The research seems to back both sides of the debate, so lets try to use a little common sense.
Your foot has evolved, like every other animal on the planet, to be used unshod, i.e., without shoes. Something to consider after that statement, however, is the unnatural terrain that we have in our human zoos: the
concrete jungle may not be good for the naked human foot. One thing is clear: as with the body, externally
stabilizing the environment of the foot (wearing shoes) will degrade foot function. The more often you can get
out of your shoes and walk or run, the healthier your feet and lower legs will be.
The minimal shoe is trying to replicate a barefoot environment. This type of shoe should only protect the
foots sole from damage, not cushion or support the foot at all. Now, here is what I see as a clinician: 99 out
of 100 people who come in for a gait analysis (presenting with pain or not and/or injury) convert from a heel
strike to a mid-foot strike when taken out of their shoesno coaching, they just do it. Whats going on?
I suspect that the brain now knows that there is not several inches of rubberized cushion underneath the heel
so converts to a more natural foot strike. This occurs even on a relatively soft treadmill. Or, when the foot is
taken out of its stabilized environment, it wakes up. Prescribing drills to change the foot strike in the shoe
from a rear foot to mid-strike (in these cases) and strengthening exercises for the foot leads to pain reduction
and better running performance.
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Research on primitive tribes who live unshod have revealed both heel and mid-foot striking while jogging, however, one thing is consistent: the heel elevates further off the ground as the speed increases, or, more and
more of a mid-foot strike appears as we close in on running.
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hough their heels strike first at slow speeds, they are not loading the skeleton at foot impact as much as the
soft tissue. Good observations but poor conclusions on the part of some researchers.
You see, heel striking loads the skeleton with the ground reaction forces of the foot impact, which can be 210x that of body weight when running. So other joints have to compensate for (probably) what the ankle and
soft tissue of the lower leg should be doing. Mid-foot striking loads the calf musculature making it a natural
shock absorber. Moreover, the Achilles tendon, when properly loaded during mid-foot striking, can store energy upon the foot contacting the ground, and release this energy during push offmaking every step less costly to the runner. In and of itself, this fact can help runners decrease their run times.
There is another aspect to this issue: stride length, specifically, to the front. When you post your foot too far
to the front, you literally brake yourself with each step, slowing your pace and wasting energy. Heel striking
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lends to too long a stride length to the front. By pulling the stride short to the front, you get some assistance
from gravitykeep your wheels behind you, like a castor.
My thinking is that these primitive folks are heel striking, but are loading the soft tissue by getting the mid- and
fore-foot to contact the ground at the same time, or close to it. A naturally short stride to the front would
allow for this technique.
So, generally, less shoe is better; cut the stride short to the front; and load the calves during the foot strike.
Seek some professional help if need be. The negative results of poor running technique dont usually show up
until enough miles are logged, so lets be preventive.
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One-Hand Swings
One-hand swings are performed exactly as the two-hand swings except that the kettlebell is floated at the
crest of its flight, and only one hand is grabbing the bell.
Youll notice that this version is much harder on your grip, and the rotational challenge in the trunk is surprising. Keep the free arm away from your body or legdont let it support the trunk at alllet your core do the
work. Maintain square shoulders throughout the lift.
Floating the bell means that you do not attempt to arrest the ascent of the belllet it stop and fall under gravitys influence, then speed it towards the hinge. In the float, you should still be in a very tight plank and stay
connected to the bell. A floating swing should peak at a higher level than the two-hand swing, as you are not
trying to stop its ascent, however, this should still not be higher than chest level.
One subtle difference in the one-hand swing is hand pronation: on the backswing into the hinge, point your
thumb backwards ... as your hips drive the bell forward and your arm begins to arc up, face your palm to the
ground.
There should be little difference in the appearance of the one and two-hand swing. If youre rotating too
much, the bell is too heavy. Dont hinge back to one side, and attempt to balance the hip drive between both
feet, try not to use the opposite leg more than the same side legbut the bell is trying to get you to do just
that.
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The Deadlift
The deadlift performed with a heavy kettlebell is a training tool on the path to the swing; the deadlift performed with a barbell is the entry point to real strength gains, and the metric by which strength may be measured. The barbell has no ceiling for loading up the lift, so it can challenge your structure to a far greater extent
than any other movement discussed. The deadlift places your body in a position that can produce the most
force of which you are capable ofmore than any squat or press. The world record deadlift at the time of
this writing was performed by Benedikt Magnusson: 1015 pounds! You have a long way to go.
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Use your feed-forward tension: stay tight, brace the abs hard,
maintain a straight back, and pull with the hips, not the arms.
Squeezing the glutes so hard that they feel like cramping will
protect your lower back here. Do NOT lean back at the top
of the pull. This will lead to surgical intervention.
This is the basic movementtighten the body, push the hips forward and heels into the ground. Now is
where it gets fun. Everybody has different anatomical proportions, such the ratio between femur and torso
length. As well, some of us have our mobility restrictions. It is because of these nuances that you want to find
a qualified instructor to work with you for a few sessionsthe deadlift done correctly will probably never hurt
you, no matter how much you lift; the deadlift done incorrectly can send you to the ER in the blink of an eye.
Youtube University does not count as qualified instruction. You were warned.
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This is NOT!
Dont laugh at my stick figures: they illustrate a critical point. Ive competed in, judged, and spectated at plenty
of powerlifting meets over the years, and I have seen the spine in the bottom illustration above complete some
heavy lifts. Short powerlifting careers are common. Usually, leg strength is far greater than glute and trunk
strength, so beginner deadlifters lifting too heavy tend to round their backs. You need to have the discipline to
trainto engage in the process of building session upon session with lighter weights and allow your whole system to adapt and overcome. Instant gratification in the weight room is detrimental to your health. Let the
process work.
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Ok, there are two general deadlift stances: narrow feet, hands outside the legs (conventional style); and wide
feet, hands inside the legs (sumo style). No stance is better than the other, but there is one that is better for
you, based on your structure. How do you find out? Trial and error. Again, get a qualified instructor.
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I start people in the conventional style and adjust as necessary. Jump up and down and reach for the sky without thinkingthe third landing is your starting foot stance. Your feet should be pretty much under the hips.
Address the bar, shins just off of it, sit back, tighten up, reverse grip, and rip.
If you cant hit these positionsmeaning your spine is roundingwe can do one of two things: raise the bar up
to your range of motion, or try the sumo style. If you cant hit the positions in the sumo style, you need to
work on those restrictionsget crawling, goblet squatting and do your plank rows.
For general purpose fitness, however, I like to start people in their kettlebell stance, just to keep the thread
running neatly through the program. This should be a narrow sumo stance. Address the bar with the your
shins just off the bar, take a wider stance and point the toes out slightly to facilitate the knees tracking out. Sit
back, tighten up, reach down inside your legs and grab the bar with a reverse grip. Drive the hips forward and
the heels into the groundrip it.
In both variations, the arms only need to give the legs room to work, so grab the bar where comfortable. The
only way to discover which stance works better for you (assuming that your positioning is solid in both) is to
train both for about 3 months each and see which one grants you a heavier load.
Now, as the training effect takes place you may eventually be stronger in the stance in which you used to be
weaker. Training changes things over timenot just movement quality or weight lifted, but also in your leveraging and joint anglesa lot of people fail to understand this important concept.. When soft tissue is untrained
and weaker, the brain uses joint angles for leveraging loads. After training, the leverages can change as larger
tissues get stronger than others. Some great lifters use both stances during training, and compete with the one
that serves them better. Others stick to one, because the other doesnt feel right.
Dont be afraid of the deadlift and heavy weightsif you pull correctly (and are not untrained / detrained), you
can literally pull on an immovable object in complete safety. Females are pound for pound stronger than their
male counterparts in this liftso be proud, and rip away!
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The Press
The press, or military press, begins in the rack position and ends in the locked-out position. Before you press,
make sure that you get tight. Any softness will leak force from your structure. The press is your least strongest lift, so do not help the kettlebell win this fight by being loose.
But first we need to get the kettlebell up in the rack position (at the shoulders) and there is a specific lift for
doing just that, but at this stage in your strength and conditioning career, lets go a different route in order to
concentrate on the press: the two-handed clean.
The clean lift is the act of pulling something from the ground and using your legs and hips to jump it up, then
catch it across your shouldersbaling hay comes to mind. Cleaning a kettlebell is a bit different than but very
much resembles a swing, in that force is directed forward, then pulled short and up to be caught in the rack
position.
Well start with a kettlebell on the ground similar to the beginning of the swing. Grab the handle with the working hand and
cup over it with the other hand:
at a different angle:
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From here, hike it back, drive the hips, and, by pulling the elbows back, cut the arc short, and guide it up to the
rack. This takes some practice, and I dont want you concentrating on cleans just yet. So this is a way to get
the bell in the rack for press practice. Also, for some beginners, and those who would rather not go through
the pain and bruising that regular cleans can cause on the forearm, the two-hand clean is a great substitute and
can always be used to get a kettlebell in the rack position for other training.
Now that we have it in the rack, lets press! To press, tighten up and press the bell off of a strong platform
created by your latthat large piece of flesh on your back. Push yourself away from the bell as if you were
standing in a narrow cylinder. The forearm should stay vertical and the bell should not get too far from your
head.
It is imperative that you get and stay tight. Leaking force here will result in a missed lift. Dont lean back, dont
lean away from the bell, and dont use any leg drive to help. Wedge yourself between the load and the ground.
If you cant complete a press, re-clean it, get yourself tight, and try again. Chances are, that you just were not
tight enough.
The one-armed military press is a great test of overall body strength. Working up to a 1/2 body weight singlearm military press is very doable, but will take hard work and persistence. The get up works hand in hand with
the pressas your get up bell gets heavy, it seems to pave the way for a heavier press as well. So, work the
loading with heavy get ups, and work the tension and shoulder range of motion with moderately loaded presses, and enjoy the strength gains.
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Front Squat
The front squat is performed as any other squat but with the kettlebell locked in a tight rack. Keep the
elbow covering the ribs tightly and pull yourself down between the legs. Youll find that your mobility
and hip flexor strength has to be satisfactory to perform this movement properly. If you have excessive torso lean forward as you descent, you'll find yourself compensating by driving your elbow out and
up. In this case, go back to the goblet squat for a few months to work the kinks out.
Front squats are fantastic core and leg strength builders, as well as providing a flexibility challenge. One
-handed front squats also challenge the body to stabilize itself against an off-center load. Remember,
there is no need to load squats heavy, but single (one bell/one hand) and double (two bells/two hands)
front squats do provide some variety, and a valuable challenge.
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The Snatch
The snatch is a hinge movement that throws the kettlebell from the hinge position of the swing to the lockedout position of the get up. I like to introduce this ballistic movement only after the individual has a crisp, snappy one-hand swing, and a solid finish position in the get up.
Similar to the one-hand swing, begin about a foot behind a parked bell, hinge back, grab the handle with one
hand and lean it toward you. Hike it between the legs, and quickly drive the hips forward. Now, instead of
projecting the bell forward, you are going to project it up, as in the two-hand cleanafter an explosive hip extension, guide the bell up by pulling the elbow to the rear. This action will cause the bell to fly a bit forward,
but mostly up. When the bell gets near head height and feels weightless, punch underneath the bell and lock it
out overhead.
The snatch naturally proceeds from the swing, but there is a learning curve. At first, the bell will tend to beat
up the back of the forearm as the exerciser practices snatching. This is caused by grabbing the handle too tight
at the wrong timewhen the bell is trying to turn over near the top. You should be practicing punching up
underneath the bell, and lightly catching it on the forearm. Some folks do not like this pain and resultant bruisingthis is fine, like the one-hand clean, there is no reason that one has to snatch.
But if one enjoys a bit of pain and/or bruising during the learning curve, the snatch makes for a conditioning
session equal to no other.
The skin on the palms will also be challenged with the snatch. Swinging will harden the palms but once you
begin to snatch, you will understand the meaning of callous. The additional distance and velocity that the bell
descends in the snatch causes lots of friction during the catch in the hinge. The best way to navigate this is
to attack the hingereally drive the bell back deep so the arm ends up high near the crotch. Also, take care of
your hands use a pumice stone to keep the callouses flat and even with the rest of the palm. That said,
youre just going to have to build volume and load slowly and let your hands adapt. During any session, dont
let your hands tear during snatches. Once you feel the skin burn and stretch, end the session and live to fight
another day. The palms heal very quickly.
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Loaded Carries
Loaded carries are movements that have you walk with weight. Simple but very effective. The
most basic is the farmers carry, which has you holding a load in each hand at your side. First, lets
make sure you pull the weight off the ground safely, in this case two heavy kettlebells. Perform a
deadlift:
Next, bring the weights to your side and walk. Be sure to keep good posture: shoulders back and down,
hips under the head and squeeze the handles tight. Walk on your glutes, meaning you should really feel the
hip extend through by glute contraction. Take short quick steps. Dont drop your head.
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Loaded carries also include heavy pushes or drags, as in the use of prowlers, sleds and wheelbarrows. Buddy
carries fit in here too. Pushing your vehicle to the gas station is great exercise as well. Use your imagination,
but move for a varied distance under a heavy load. You ll be surprised what two weeks of heavy farmers carries can do for your strength, conditioning, and physiqueespecially if you have never performed them before.
Just make sure your load up: your body can manage quite a bit of load in this movement, and it improves posture as a nice side-effect. Dont be fearful of loading your structure up. Once youve adapted to resistance
training for a few months, push the challenge, just dont let your ego do the directing.
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Foot Marching
Foot marching, ruck marching, hiking, or, as I say, walking is a special kind of loaded carry. Its special as
compared to the carries performed for short distances with heavy loads. Foot marching is a brisk walk performed while wearing a loaded pack on your back. One can walk in this fashion for hours at a time, and for
days on end. If your load and pace is right, your heart rate, and subsequent conditioning benefit will rival that
of LSD running, but be a lot more fun and enjoyable and easier on the joints.
Foot marching can be done several times per week, but once per week will work too, provided that the distance / duration is long enough. When first beginning foot march training, start out short and with lighter loads
to give the joints and bones a chance to adapt. Read that last sentence again. No matter how great your
strength is coming in to foot marching, the adaptation of the tendons, ligaments, and joints, cannot be rushed.
As little as 30min with 15-20lb can be enough for some beginners. Slowly increase the load and distance progressively as the weeks go by: a 50% increase in duration each week, OR a ~25% increase in load is enough of a
jump. Work up to a 50lb load for a male, and 35lb load for a female at distances up to 10mi (2.5-3hrs).
Heed this warning: increase the load and distance slowly over time. The best conditioned athlete can suffer
joint, ligament, bone, and muscle damage when jumping into too much too soon with foot marching. This may
be an important point if I am repeating it.
Dont fold over underneath the straps of your packyou should still be practicing good posture while walking.
Try to stand as upright as possible, and keep the chest proud. The weight of pack will lean you forward slightly, but this should happen at the knee and ankle joints, and less so in the hip (unless going up in elevation), and
never the waist. Keep your hips under your head and your head high. Use the walk to help improve your posture. You will be pleasantly surprised at what rucking under proper posture will do for your core and stabilizer
strength you will be unfortunately surprised at what rucking under improper posture will do to your dysfunction and pain levels.
Walk with short and frequent strides, contacting the ground with your heel first and then following through to
the toe. Use longer strides uphill, and much shorter ones downhill. Walk with a powerful arm swing, pivoting
the arms about the shoulders. As in all locomotion movement, powerful arm swing drives the movement
forward AND backwarddeliberately swing your arms. Youll notice that in foot marching, the backswing of
the arm seems to do more to propel you forward.
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If youre walking for exercise as part of your training program, wear any comfortable shoes, though I like
minimal shoes for this. Make sure they fit well, and lace them snug but not tightyour feet are going to
swell.
If you need to walk as part of your job, youll have to wear your combat boots. Again, make sure that you
have a pair which fit comfortably, but there is a way to lace them which leads to more comfort. Lace the
boot as normal from the toe up to below the beginning of the instep. Cut off excess lace and tie as normal. Skip a set of eyelets and lace the rest of the boot up, but tie very loose. Lacing in this fashion will allow your calf and ankle to swell, yet keep the boot snug on the foot.
Too much too soon, will cause the bottom of your feet to hurt, and possibly lead to blistering. To some
extent, you have to wait until your feet harden, but you can also take care of your feet before and after
your walks. Make sure toenails are properly trimmed, and your socks and boots fit well. Stockings, worn
under the socks can help with the friction. Spraying antiperspirant on the bottom of the feet can help with
moisture, both of which can lead to blisters. When getting blisters, I used to wash and dry the foot, pierce
the blister with a sharp and sanitized needle from the side, then push out the fluid, wash again, and apply
bandage. Dont remove the skin from the blister.
Make sure you take care of things like walking the route first, staying hydrated the night before and during
the walk, and carrying salt and extra water in hotter climates. You dont need anything unexpected to happen. A cell phone too, will help in case of emergency.
Remember to keep your stride short and frequentdont try to step it out. Drive your arms to increase
the pace.
Changing up the route often helps with the longer walks, and trying to route through natural woodlands on
trails is probably a very healthy thing for us.
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Programming
Programming is the how in putting these movements together in a training session, or schedule of sessions.
One thing is clearly understood about weight training and conditioning: everything works for a little while
even longer, if youre a beginnerso dont assume efficacy at first glance. Remember this: its training that
were after, not exercise.
Training is an intelligent, well thought out program consisting of weeks and months of PT sessions which lead
to a net improvement in performance. Show up and put work in during each session; these sessions build on
each other to stimulate the body to adapt in a manner that improves athleticismi.e., get stronger, faster, etc.
You can not judge a training program by only one session you can only judge a training program by the effects of the whole. You may not sweat hard or feel sore the next day after a training session, but you can be
certain that a training effect has taken place in the body.
Exercise, conversely, is a session that has no goal in mindother than working up a sweat, getting fatigued, and
feeling sore in the aftermath. Exercise sessions make you feel like you worked out hard, but may not lead to
performance improvement over time. Most Military members and recreational athletes alike whom I come
into contact with are trying to improve performance by exercisingand failing at this goal. If your PT program
is a series of exercise sessions, containing lots of exercise variety, cardio, high-intensity training, chest &
back day, and/or leg day with the goal of hitting a target heart rate, breathing heavy, and being sore the next
day, you are providing a grave disservice to you and your members. Lets get you on a proper training program.
Training takes patience and time lots of time, and you have to put the work in. Most days, you will feel like
you dont want to be there, or that youre not firing on all cylindersthats fine, just do the work, as the goal
is weeks, months, and, in some cases, even years away. Training can be akin to building a railroad, or the type
of work that a lumberjack has to do to clear a forestheavy but submaximal work performed day after day,
and your body magically adapts. So, to stimulate adaptation, just do the work. Enjoy those sessions when you
feel like you can successfully wrestle bears, because they dont come around too often.
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Strength v. Conditioning
Strength is the result of consistent exposure to loaded quality movement. As discussed, strength is not just
the adaptation of the muscles; it is also greater motor control, greater neural force, and greater inter-muscular
coordination, to name a few contributors. Loading too heavy and too often, however, will lead to a decrease in
strength, not an increase.
One-rep maxes (1RM) are a display of your accumulated strength; strength is built upon submaximal loads, either grinding them out (deadlift), or by accelerating them (swings). Moreover, training to failure is a bodybuilding method of training for hypertrophy (increased muscle size), and appropriate in a strength gaining program. For strength training, make sure that you are completing your reps, and staying away from failure in a
setremember the lumberjack and the railroad worker just come in and do the submaximal work.
Conditioning is the result of improved system function: the efficiency of fuel delivery and usage by cells, the
improvement of the cardiovascular system in circulating blood, and the improvement of the respiratory system
in providing oxygen and removing waste gasses. These elements result in improving the tissues ability to work
at submaximal intensities for extended durations. Conditioning can be understood as strength over time.
There is a continuum of strength v. conditioningnot one that is a precise fit to reality, but close enough to be
used as an analogy for discussion. On the one side of the continuum we have pure strengththe most force
one can produce, requiring very little conditioningsuch as a heavy deadlift; on the other we have sustained
effort at very low intensitiesa strength requirement, but lots of system supportsuch a long, slow, distance
jog or walk. Across this continuum, other tasks can be defined based upon the metabolic requirement to support the task.
To train predominantly for strength, the loads will be higher, and the rests will be longer; to train predominantly for conditioning, the loads will be lighter, and the rests will be shorter, if you rest at all. The volume of work
(total work completed) will vary relative to your current adaptation. Increasing both strength and conditioning
increases something called work capacity and this is the focus of physical traininghaving no holes or gaps
in the program.
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Push-up / Sit-up
timed tests
KB swings /
Giveroy sport
Max Deadlift
Work Capacity
Work capacity can be defined by your power output, or, the amount of work you can do in a given timeframe.
This is best exemplified by the task of moving a pile of heavy rocks from one side of a field to the other. How
much weight did you move (total load of the rock), how far (the length of the field), and how long did take
(duration)? This task requires strength and conditioningthe heavier the rocks, the slower they move; the
lighter the rocks, the quicker you can complete the task.
Fitness IS being able to produce a high power output, recover, and do it again if necessary. If you can move the
rocks across the field in record time but need three days in bed to recover from this task, then you are out of
shapeyou have low work capacity (regardless of your unrepeatable performance)and you are a liability to
the mission. This is what your training needs to produce.
Before I expand on work capacity, I need to discuss bioenergetics, or, fuel usage at the cellular level
biochemistry. You may skip this next session if pure science doesnt excite you, it is here only for a deeper
understanding of why I make these recommendations.
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Bioenergetics:The Engine 12
Though conditioning is an orchestrated affair of moving substrates and gases to and from working muscle
cells (cardiovascular and respiratory systems), you may view this engines heart as fuel usage. A substrate is a
molecule or substance that may be acted on by a enzyme, as in the case of these chemical reactions. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is the substrate currency of the cell. ATP is the substrate that the cell actually uses for
energy, and all types of food may be converted into ATP: amino acids from protein, glucose from carbohydrates, and fatty acids from fats. There are three pathways of chemical reactions that create ATP from other
molecules, and they are known as the ATP-PCr (or alactic) system, the glycolytic system, and the oxidative system.
The ATP-PCr system (alactic metabolism) works to replenish ATP in the 0-15 second range at higher intensities. Trained athletes may eke out 30 seconds from this system. This fuel system supplies fuel for a very hot
but short burnthink 100m sprint at top speedand then is exhausted. This language, burns hotter for
shorter, makes it easier to understand, but is not accurate. It is more accurate to say that it supplies fuel,
very quickly. The figure below describes a summary of the chemical conversions.
This fuel system has the smallest tank, so it empties out quickly. This reaction occurs without oxygen so it is
termed as anaerobic metabolism.
The second pathway, the glycolytic system, produces ATP through the chemical breakdown of glucose (a sugar). Where the ATP-PCr system is simple, consisting of stored substrates already present in the cell, and a
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Above: the development of ATP from glycogen / glucose using anaerobic metabolism
Below: the oxidation of fatty acids, sugars, and amino acids creates lots of ATP for
energyaerobic metabolism.
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single chemical reaction, this system is more complex and requires cellular machinery. The glycolytic system
supplies fuel slower than the ATP-PCr system, but lasts longer. It is understood that this system can supply the
fuel for work out to about 2 minutesso we are getting beyond the 500m sprint range for most athletes. Unlike alactic metabolism, using glucose for fuel accumulates a waste product that can lead to performance decreaseslactic acid. This set of reactions is also anaerobic, occurring without the need for oxygen
The final system uses oxygen and is aptly named, the oxidative system (aerobic metabolism). This system supplies fuel at the slowest rate but provides huge amounts of fuel for much longer durations. The slower the fuel
supply, the lower that the intensity of the work performed has to be. This fuel system is what enabled humans
to migrate across the planetlong but slow periods of walking.
This third system can use amino acids derived from protein sources, fatty acids derived from fat sources, or
glucose derived from carbohydrate sources as inputs for conversion to ATP, however, amino acids only consist
of about 5-10% of total energy requirements, as the body spares protein for tissue building and repair. One of
the substrates which result from glycolytic metabolism is pyruvate. If oxygen is present in the cell, this py-
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ruvate molecule gets converted into a substrate called acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl CoA) and enters the oxidative system as seen in the figure on the bottom of page 91.
However, much of the substrate used to supply the oxidative system is fatty acids. Triglycerides, either from
adipose tissue or circulating free in the bloodstream, are broken down into fatty acids, and then converted into
acetyl CoA, feeding the oxidative system.
Now, all three energy systems are always on, some are simply supplying more ATP than the others. The
dominant system is determined by the intensity of the movement and the duration of that intensity.
The alactic pathway is replenished through stored substrate, and thus is limited in duration. Anaerobic glycolytic metabolism uses glucose which is stored at about 2500 calories of energy in muscle tissue and the liver.
The body can make more glucose, but it is too slow of a process to keep up with exercise, so glucose lasts for
about 2 hours of work (much less if the intensity is too high). Fatty acids are stored at a rate of about 75,000
calories of energy in even a very lean person. So, the average person probably has about a weeks worth of
low-intensity movement without re-feeding.
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Power Development
Power must be developed in all three metabolic pathwaysthat is, the amount of work done at different durations must be maximized. There are three ways to accomplish this: increase load, increase distance, and/or
decrease time.
100m sprints (with recovery in between), and 15 second sets of powerful swings will train the alactic system to
last longer and replenish quickerthese are your very short duration and explosive movements. Training the
glycolytic system to supply fuel longer and quicker requires pushing the duration of work from 30 seconds out
to several minuteshere we have the longer sprints and resistance circuits performed at intervals. Oxidative
system training requires low-intensities and long duration workyour LSD runs and rides, and foot marches.
However, draining the anaerobic systems (alactic and glycolytic) with high-intensity work causes a deficit which
the aerobic system needs to pay for. So, from a conditioning standpointthat is fuel and substrate delivery
and removalit may be advantageous to train your high-intensity conditioning work with a 3-5 minute cap.
Go as hard as you can 2-3 times per week with this duration in mind.
This method has been shown to improve all three energy systemsthe two anaerobic systems during the actual high-intensity training session, and the aerobic system for hours following the training session. So, for some
very short training sessions, you get a large return on your conditioning. However, some research indicates
that the benefit of aerobic metabolism from high-intensity work is limited in improving the oxidative systems
cellular machinery.
13, 14, 15
So, there seems to be no replacement for actual oxidative system training, possibly
My experience shows that LSD work at least once per week for 90 minutes or so seems beneficial in rounding
things out. Keep your heart rate very low and just do the workenjoy nature. Use nasal breathing to guide
your pace; you should be just about able to keep a conversation going. This low intensity work is great for
recovery as well as the aerobic benefit.
Experience has shown us that training the alactic metabolism seems to improve endurance and conditioning
across the board. As well, other experience has shown us that training in the glycolytic metabolism range pref-
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erentially can lead to burnout, exhaustion, and inferior performance. My own speculation is that adding oxidative work to alactic work is advantageous in achieving high conditioning levels, and without burnout. Use the
glycolytic burn-zone sparingly.
His style was based on long, slow distance runsmuch slower than we would thinkseveral times per week
at very low heart rates (45-55%). This offseason training lasted very long and he allowed his runners years to
get into condition. Preseason training worked out to be 8-10 weeks of higher intensity interval runs, peaking
an athlete for the season. The largest difficulty with this program is the time investment: at least 45min per
day, with several 90-180min runs per week. If you absolutely love running, biking, or swimming, and have the
time, give it a try. He certainly has a track record.
Lydiard went on to be a successful track coach, medaling in many different countries, and in many different
track eventsall using this same system. It was characterized by lots and lots of aerobic, or LSD workyears
in some caseswith a peaking cycle of 8-10 weeks prior to a season, or event. So, he had his athletes spend
most of their time at low heart rates, with a once or twice a year glycolytic / alactic peaking cycle. This is very
much the opposite of how we do training today in America.
Everything about exercise today is harder and fasterthe popular programs available are recommending
more speed and loading and no rest. This brand of conditioning usually consists of circuits or sprints that athletes push through at very hard efforts. As we learned in hindsight, this style left endurance athletes falling on
their face if used preferentially. What we also see is that too much of this glycolytic training for too long,
leaves folks with burnout. Ive witnessed this far too much in the last 10-15 years: the attrition rates of these
popular programs will likely never be reported. This high-intensity training movement will take a toll on your
healththe dose makes the poison.
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For beginners, and those who need corrective work and movement practice, the program should first rebuild
the chassis (see the movement algorithm). Then, training should be based in strength development which allows for lots of tension practice; short sets of ballistic work with recovery in between; and a long slow day as
often as twice per week.
My suspicion is, however, that ideally, spending most of the time alactic system training and oxidative system
training is the way to go most of the year. If youd like, add in a few cycles of strength training but the power
produced during a set of heavy swings or sprints would likely take care of most of your strength needs, generally speaking.
During minicycles when you were facing deployments or some other planned rotation, it might be advantageous to train the glycolytic system. But for all purpose use, 1-2 short sessions per week, and one long infrequent session of glycolytic training will probably work well, as long as you watch your recovery.
You see, alactic training improves the intensity and duration for which you can be explosive, and this has carryover to other durations and intensities of workthis is strength and conditioning training at once. Training in
the oxidative zone sets a conditioning baseline by improving mitochondrial, the cellular fuel engines machinery.
By contrast, too much glycolytic training seems to gradually degrade performance. You should feel refreshed
and energized after your training session, not fatigued and exhausted.
So, a wave-loaded strength program coupled with lots of alactic power work, 2-12min infrequent finishers, and
one LSD session at least bimonthly is likely the route to maximizing both strength and conditioning for general
purpose. This is the most effective method that is supported by both scientific and anecdotal evidence.
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The beauty of this minimalist program is that once youve acquired authentic movementthe highest quality of
movementthe plan also acts as a comprehensive strength and conditioning program. Crawl slower and really
own the pattern, and for some distance for males, attain several 1/2-bodyweight get ups both sides, no
asymmetries; females, lets say 1/3-bodyweight. After you have mastered heavy 2-hand swings, perform 100 of
them in 5 min then do it with heavy 1-hand swings.
Once your movement issues have been cleared up: LSD locomotion once or twice per week up to 90 min per
sessionget your ruck on. For applications with standardized PT test batteries, add occasional sprints of 50400m, totaling no more than 1000-2000m; and do some push-ups and pull-ups as testing requires these. Thats
it simple and very effective. You now have the keys to your success, what you do with them is your decision.
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When you get competent at the three basic movements, begin to add a few finishers per week. Some of our
favorites include doing your swings followed by some type of loaded carry followed by push ups, for example.
Keep the total work time to 10-12 min or less, and really work the loads. This is not a competition, however,
work to your capacity, and you will gain conditioning over time.
On days when you have more time and/or equipment, add deadlifts into the mix but not too often. If you want
to deadlift more often, wave the loads up for 3 weeks at a time, and drop the swings to only 2-3 times per
week. Include presses when you feel it, but substitute them for the get ups and keep the volume very high:
~50-75 reps. Sub out the swings for snatches once in a while and practice that lift for 5-10 min. Sprint repeats
from 100-300m in distance can also be worked in here and there as an alternative to your swings.
These lifts complement each other, so they can be trended up: swings push up your deadlift numbers; get ups
push up your press loads; sprints work to apply the bilateral hip extension power built off of swings onto a unilateral locomotive movement pattern; and snatches take your swings power and challenge your capacity in
novel ways. Stick mostly to your swings and get ups, and youll see lots of progression for a long time. Follow
your strength and increase your loading as you own your current weights.
This is an easy program to work into almost any lifestyle, and will support all brands of fitness needs. Crawls,
swings, and get ups will surprisingly maintain your push-up, sit-up, and run numbers, for those with required PT
tests. The only downside is the also the positive: just a few exercises some may get bored tough. Just
do it.
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Warm-up:
100ft crawlsforward and reverse
10 x rocks and bobs
Goblet squat-to-halo drill
Mobility get up
Individual corrective exercises
Practice / Strength:
Swings
Get ups
Presses
Deadlifts
Finisher (infrequently):
2-12min of high-intensity conditioning work:
Cool down:
Few minutes of low-intensity work
Some stretching
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The notion of wave-loading your strength lifts (deadlift / press) looks like this:
Week 1:
Week 5:
Week 2:
Week 6:
Week 3:
Week 7:
Week 4:
Week 8:
After another deload week, you can run through this program again, recalculating based on your new max. In
this example, you are inching the loads up for a number of weeks, but waving the volume up and down during
each week, then deloading (to spare the nervous system) for a week. When the loads are higher the volume
is lower, and vice-versa. As you get stronger, the weights should feel lighter. Do not do too much alactic
power training during this cycleyoull spin your wheels.
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Thur:
Warm up
Warm up
Strength:
Strength:
Deadlift 5 x 5
Finisher:
Finisher:
Tabata rowing:
Stretch
Stretch
Fri:
Tue:
Warm up
Warm up
Strength:
Strength:
Stretch
Pull-ups: 5 x 5
Stretch
Sat:
Long slow distance run or foot march
Wed:
Warm up
Sun:
Finisher:
Off
8 x 100m sprints
Farmers carry
Stretch
The loads should be as heavy as you can gracefully move with good posture for the
day. A beginner could continue to make progress on a program like this for many
months. Keep the deadlifts lighter than you would imagine, keep the get ups heavier,
and make sure the swings move quick and crispwith lots of snap in those hips.
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Week 1, day 1:
Pull ups 5 x 5
KB Press 8 x 2
Pull ups 5 x 5
KB Press 10 x 3
Week 3, day 1:
Deadlift 3 x 5 @ moderate weight (50%)
Pull ups 5 x 5
KB Press 8 x 2
Pull ups 5 x 5
KB Press 10 x 3
Week 2, day 1:
Pull ups 5 x 5
KB Press 8 x 2
Pull ups 5 x 5
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Week 4, day 1:
KB Press 8 x 2
KB Press 10 x 3
Week 6, day 1:
KB Press 8 x 2
KB Press 10 x 3
Week 5, day 1:
KB Press 8 x 2
KB Press 10 x 3
Week 7, Deload:
Day 1:
Deadlift 3 x 8 @ 40%
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Pull ups 5 x 5
Deadlift 3 x 8 @ 40%
Plank rows 3 x 8 squeeze at the top
Max Get up
Two-hand swings: 100-200 in sets of 10-15
Week 8, day 1:
The focus is the deadlift and pressmake sure that youre completing your reps. Use a load for the get ups
that is challenging but doable. Front squats may be done with a daily maxwhatever you feel like you can do
for 2 x 5 on that day goes, but most of the time should be performed with a comfortable load. You could start
this program over and recalculate for your new maxes if you wish.
There are all types of programs out there which are effective, its just that nothing remains effective forever, so
things have to switched up periodicallysometimes just a variant, other times, a complete refocus alactic
power training as opposed to pure strength training.
23
10, 20, 21
22
written. Choose your training program, show up, do the work, and let the process work.
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Another schedule is to alternate 3 weeks of predominantly strength training with 2 weeks of predominantly
power training:
Week 1, day 1:
Two-hand swings: 10 x 10
Two-hand swings: 10 x 10
Two-hand swings: 10 x 10
Week 3, day 1:
Two-hand swings: 10 x 10
Week 2, day 1:
Two-hand swings: 10 x 10
Two-hand swings: 10 x 10
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Day 4
Week 5, day 1
5 get ups per side, then
Week 4, day 1:
10 x swings
5 push-ups
Day 2
100m sprint
10 rounds
15 x push-ups
4 rounds
Day 2
5 get ups per side, then
Day 3
5 rounds of:
4 x 400m sprints
Day 4
10 x left-hand swings
10 x right-hand swings
10 x push ups
10 x left-hand swings
Day 3
5 x pull-ups
10 x swings
10 rounds
5 x pull ups
10 push-ups
5 x goblet squats
5 rounds
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