Posts Tagged ‘deadlift’

STAGE III WRAP UP REPORT ~ New Rules of Lifting For Women

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

As always I am only showing some of the movements from Stage III so as not to give the program away.

Stage III was short and sweet like Stage II. Two workouts, each done 4 times for a total of 8. Train 3 times a week and you are done Stage III in just 2 1/2 weeks!

I really enjoyed this stage even though I am GREATLY missing the Deadlifts and Squats from Stage I. My two faves from this stage were YTWL (more about it below) and the Dumbbell Single Leg Romanian Deadlift because I felt them the most. I talked about Quad Dominance in my Stage II wrap up. This is the Stage where I really, finally!!!, felt things in my glutes and hammies (posterior chain). I am really looking forward to doing Deadlifts and Squats again, though it’s 8 weeks away in Stage 7, to see if I will now feel them in my entire lower body and not just my quads. I might have to sneak some in before that.

The funnest was the One-Armed Dumbbell Snatch. I so wanted to try heavier weight but kept imagining the horror of a more than 30lb dumbbell flying through the air should I fail! Somehow failure with a barbell does scare me as much?!

STAGE III WRAP UP






WO 1 WO 2 WO 3 WO 4






All 3 sets of 6 with 105 sec rest







Barbell Romanian Deadlift / Bent-Over Row
50 60 60 60
Dumbbell Incline Bench Press
2×25=50 55 60 60
Dumbbell Single-Arm Overhead Squat
12 ~ 15 15 ~ 27.5 15 ~ 30 15 ~ 30
First # is DB held above and 2nd # is DB held below (between legs)
Dumbbell Single-Leg Romanian Deadlift (2 DB’s)
2×25=50 55 60 60
This version is with a DB in each hand. I’ve seen others using just 1.
One-Armed Dumbell Snatch
25 27.5 30 30
Wide Grip Lat Pulldown
75 75 80 80
YTWL
2×5lb=10 10 10 10
It took 3 times doing it to be able to do the full range
of motion, especially the T which is the hardest for me.

R E S T P E R I O D S

These long rest periods were a challenge. Not because the workout wasn’t hard. The recovery was needed and the rests were generally spent feeling the sweat bead up on my head and then run downwards. It’s just hard to wait almost 2 whole minutes. Knowing why helps AND I just keep reminding myself that if I want top notch results I will follow the program written by the top notch coach as closely as I possibly can!

These longer rest periods mean the goal is strength improvement and they allow for fuller recovery of the central nervous system (among other things). In other words, the longer rest period allows more recovery which then allows you to go heavier each time and therefore gain more strength.

Coach Christian Thibaudeau has written a series of articles that are about understanding how to put together a program. Reps, frequency, rest periods, etc. are all covered. The one I’m linking to is the one that covers rest periods (on page 2).
TESTOSTERONE NATION – The Thib System: Training Frequency and Rest Periods

Y T W L

Thanks to another article on T-Nation by a guy name Chris Bartyl who got to train with Alwyn for a day, I learned a little more about YTWL than what was in the book. Below is a link to the article and here is what Alwyn said in the discussion afterwards about YTWL. The pictures in the article are not of YTWL which is done prone (face down) on an incline bench. If Alwyn gives a man 7.5 and 5 lb dumbbells for these then I feel pretty good that I could do 5lbs.

Alwyn Cosgrove said:

It’s a PRE-hab exercise. So you don’t need a lot of volume.

The line of thinking with this stuff is : “how many people do you know that have ever had a shoulder injury?”

Whenever I ask that at seminars, 90% of the room raise their hands. (The other 10% usually have shoulder injuries so bad that they can’t raise their hands )

So let’s start addressing that from the beginning by adding some of these exercises.

————————end quote

Pain & Pleasure: 1 Hour with Alwyn

Kudos to Courtney (from the article) for surviving (finishing) Alwyn’s EVIL LEG MATRIX!!!! In NROL4W you do it once. Rest for double the time it took you to complete it. Then do it again. He told Courtney she had 120 seconds to complete it and she did! He said the gym record was twice through in under 3 minutes.

Here is a link to Alwyn’s Blog which describes the Leg Matrix. It also links to a video a very determined man doing the Leg Matrix. Pretty much what I looked like the first time I tried it. Got half way through, did the first jump lunge and my legs turned to mush. Laughed and went home. : ) He kept going.

STAGE II WRAP UP REPORT ~ New Rules of Lifting For Women

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

As before I am only showing some of the movements from Stage II so as not to give the program away.

Stage II was much shorter than stage one. 2 workouts, each done 4 times for a total of 8. Train 3 times a week and you are done Stage II in just 2 1/2 weeks!

WO 1 WO 2 WO 3 WO 4




All 2 sets of 10 with 70 sec rest
Bulgarian Split Squat (I used dumbbells)
2×12.5=25 25 30 40
Dumbbell 1 Point (balanced on 1 leg) Row
2×20=40 45 45 50
Dumbbell Prone Cuban Snatch
2×10=20 25 25 30
Front Squat Push Press (aka Thrusters)
45 55 55 65
Static Lunge (elevated rear foot)
2×20=40 45 45 50
Underhand Grip Lat Pulldown
70 75 75 80
Wide Grip Deadlift on Box
115 115 115 125





Widening the grip and increasing range of motion on the Deadlift of course meant having to reduce the weight. Could barely maintain my grip for the whole set the first time I did it. I refused to go down in weight anymore. Was already bummed that I was doing 20lbs less than with the conventional deadlift. Logically I knew it would be this way but my ego (I guess that’s what it is) didn’t like it!

The book discusses the fact that most women are quad dominant. This means that we will generally use the muscles in the front of our legs/thighs more than the back leg (hamstring) and butt (glutes) muscles. The movements in Alwyn’s program address this by focusing on and engaging the glutes and hammies more. This is very important otherwise we end up with even more muscle imbalance than when we started. Our bodies will naturally do whatever is easiest for it. It takes the path of least resistance so to speak. It will use the muscles that are already strongest. So weak muscles get weaker and strong muscles get stronger. This leads to muscle imbalance and injuries. But, like I said, this program addresses that. With each stage you feel it more and more in your glutes and hammies. In the first stage not once did I have any soreness or feel it in my glutes or hammies. This stage I started to feel it a little. It helps to be aware of the issue and really focus your attention on those muscles, trying to use them and feel them working. In Stage II you REALLY get to feel them! Hehehehe.

If you want to learn more about this google or go to t-nation and search for “quad dominance” and “posterior chain” (2 separate searches).

STAGE 1 WRAP UP REPORT part II ~ New Rules of Lifting For Women

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

I had wanted to do this a long time ago (6 weeks!) when I actually finished Stage I. I was procrastinating because I thought it was going to be a pain to make readable. Now I know I can just copy and paste tables into here!

These are only some of the “movements” used in Stage 1 and they are in alphabetical order. There was also more than one workout used and you alternate between them. So when I am talking about workout numbers below it is in sequential order for workouts in which that move is included, not overall workouts. I did 3 workouts per week for 8 weeks. If you have the book you understand. If you don’t have the book, sorry, I can’t make it any clearer without “giving away” the workouts which would be no no.

Each set/rep scheme was done for 3 separate workouts so the the 3 numbers that follow are for the weight used for that workout. For example the Deadlift 1st line means workouts 1, 2 and 3 I did 2 sets 15 using 75lbs the first workout, 75lbs the 2nd workout and 85lbs the 3rd workout. Then I move to the next set/rep scheme for workouts 4, 5 and 6 and did 2 sets of 12 reps with 95lbs for workout 4, 95lbs for workout 5 and 105lbs for workout 6.

Sets Reps
weight used each
of 3 workouts
Deadlift (1 rep max at start 115 lbs end 185 lbs)
2 x 15
75 85 85
2 x 12
95 95 105
3 x 10
105 105 105
3 x 8
115 125 135
I stayed at 105 so long because I was using 6 x 10 lbs to
keep the bar low and the lift harder and because
3 sets of 10 is harder than 2 sets of 12
Dumbbell Shoulder Press
2 x 15
25 25 30
2 x 12
35 35 40
3 x 10
40 40 40
3 x 8
45 45 50
Lunge
2 x 15
BW 20 30
2 x 12
30 30 35
3 x 10
40 40 40
3 x 8
45 45 50
Seated Row
2 x 15
50 50 55
2 x 12
55 60 60
3 x 10
65 65 65
3 x 8
70 70 75
Step Up
2 x 15
BW BW 20
2 x 12
30 30 35
3 x 10
35 40 40
3 x 8
45 45 50
Bench came to the bottom of my kneecap approx. 14 inches
Squat (1 rep max at start 105lbs end 165lbs)
2 15
65 65 65
2 12
75 85 85
3 10
85 95 95
3 8
105 115 125
Wide Grip Lat Pulldown
2 x 15
50 55 55
2 x 12
60 60 60
3 x 10
60 65 65
3 x 8
70 70 75






For step-up, lunge, shoulder press with dumbbells:
25 = 2 x 12.5 lb dumbbells or 50 = 2 x 25lb dumbbells.

Stage 1 is referred to as the “break-in”. Before getting the book I had read stuff that Alwyn had written about the importance of building a strong foundation when you first start lifting weights by developing the body as a whole. Doing compound movements like the 2 biggest and best (in my opinion) which are squats and deadlifts does this. These movements develop and effect everything! Muscles, the Central Nervous System, the Cardiovascular system, bones, ligaments and other support stuff I don’t know the name of. In fact, most of the gains seen below are due to improvements in all of those things rather than just an increase in muscle strength. This is why those new to weightlifting can see such big and fast gains in the weight they can move. Later, the foundation is built and all you are mainly developing muscle strength at the point so of course, because only a fraction of the system (your body) is continuing to develop you will see only a fraction of the gains (improvements). Like I said, this is just my understanding of it. I could be wrong! If you really want to learn about this stuff and end up being able to design your own program you should read a fantastic series of articles by my fave coach and fellow Canadian, Christian Thibaudeau over at T-Nation, called The Thib System. Here (below) is a link to the first in the series. Note the chart a little down the page that, in row 2, describes Stage I of this program exactly!

The Thib System — Fatigue and Best Exercises
Basic Principles Behind My Updated Training Philosophy
by Christian Thibaudeau

1 REP MAXIMUMs – June 2008

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

DEADLIFT

April 115 lbs ~ May 155 lbs ~ June 185 lbs

SQUAT

April 105 lbs ~ May 135 lbs ~ June 165 lbs

BENCH PRESS

April 85 lbs ~ June 115 lbs

There is no bench pressing in my training to date but have been push-ups. Guess they help ’cause my bench has improved! : )

Stage II has wide grip deadlifts so I will continue to test 1RM for that. Undecided about Squat as it’s not a Stage II exercise. Front Squat with Push Press (crossfit calls them thrusters) is but i can only push press 55lbs so far so not getting much benefit squat wise.

WHAT’S NEW? TRAINING

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Well! Just 2 more workouts and I’m done Stage 1!!!! This first stage, also know as the “break in” period, is normally 16 workouts and about 6 weeks long. I added extra workouts so it was 24 total and 8 weeks long. Because I am new to lifting I thought it would be beneficial to extend it and they suggest it as an option in the book. At the end you do something called AMRAP, which stands for As Many Reps as Possible. I will use the very first weight used in my first workout and do as many reps as possible for each exercise. The idea is to see the improvements you have made. I, fortunately, also determined my 1RM before starting so I will also have that to re-test and show my improvements. Can’t tell you how excited I am about that. It seems I’m like a guy when it comes to lifting and I like to brag about my numbers. : )

Here’s what a week looks like right now:

Monday 50 to 60 minute walk (outside)(good for recovery)

Tuesday HIIT

Wednesday Lifting, HIIT and 20 minutes on treadmill

Thursday 50 to 60 minute walk (outside)(good for recovery)

Friday Lifting, HIIT and 20 minutes on treadmill

Saturday 50 to 60 minute walk (outside)(good for recovery)

Sunday Lifting, HIIT and 20 minutes on treadmill

H.I.I.T. (High Intensity Interval Training)

I alternate between the bike and the elliptical. Someday, when I have less “chest” I’ll try it on the treadmill.

My max heart rate is 180 and on the high intensity bits I get it up to between 170 and 175bpm.

After the HIIT I wait 5 minutes, just sit around (as instructed to in the book), and then do 20 minutes on the treadmill to burn off some fat : ) and further cool down. I’m beat red and sweating profusely after the HIIT. Plus, Stage 1 workouts are well under and an hour so I had the time.

5 minute warm up

1 minute hard, 2 minutes light

1 minute hard, 2 minutes light

1 minute hard, 2 minutes light

1 minute hard, 2 minutes light

1 minute hard

5 minute cool down

Going through a bit of mind f#&!k right now. Working my ass off as you can see and eating right yet the scale has not moved in 2 months and no change in measurements either. I know that someone new to lifting can experience a phenomenon where muscle is gained and fat is lost and there is no change on the scale. I think there is usually a change in measurements though. If I were getting my bodyfat professionally tested I would have had that to help me gauge the changes but I didn’t. I can see a difference. I’m smoother (less jiggly and fewer rolls) and I can see the shapes of muscles under the fat. My muscles are also rock hard now. I may get fired shortly ’cause I’m running around asking my co-workers to feel my rock hard quads and poke my ass! : 0 There is absolutely a difference in my strength! Thank god!

My 1RM for Squats when I started was 105 and for my last workout I did 3 sets of 8 with 115lbs. In the beginning it was 3 sets of 15 with 65lbs.

For the Deadlift my 1RM to start was 115 and today I did 3 sets of 8 with 125lbs. In the beginning it was 3 sets of 15 with 75lbs.

I’m using two 25lb Dumbells when doing lunges (started with body weight), step-ups (started with body weight) and the shoulder press (started with two 12.5lb dumbells).

Started with 50lbs for Wide Grip Lat Pulldown and Seated Row. Now using 75lbs. Mind you the workouts started with 2 sets of 15 and now do only 3 sets of 8. Still an improvement even taking that into account.

Weight Loss/Nutrition

I’m still trying to get the scale to move by adjusting my calories. I’ve gone as low as I’m willing to go so now I’m going to try up again. I’m continuing to eat protein and veggies 5x day. I drink Surge Recovery after a workout. Still need to kick my coffee habit. Maybe it’s the tiny little piece of the puzzle. Only one way to find out! In addition, I’ve ordered Precision Nutrition. I believe I am already eating “with plan” but i still think it will be of benefit to me. I cannot tell you how sick I am of chicken, broccoli and cucumber! I’m hoping that the recipes and such will help. The support of the PN online community will certainly be of benefit. I just keep reminding myself, this IS about body RECOMPOSITION, not just weight loss!

I think that about covers it. I will be back in about 2 weeks to provide a wrap up of Stage 1 including my AMRAP results and my new 1RM for the Deadlift and Squats! The end of the month is only a week away so next weekend I’ll be updating the Weight and Measurements chart. Woohoo! : ( Ok, I’ll shut up now : )

Happiness and Health to you and yours!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 REP MAXIMUMs – May 2008

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

May

Deadlift 155 ~ Squat 135 ~ Bench didn’t do ~ Press (dumbbell shoulder) will do in 3 weeks when they are added. Deadlift up 40 lbs in 4 weeks and Squat up 30. I’m happy with that! : ) I made a video but can’t post it as it’s 10X too big for this site’s file size limits. I’m working on that.

April 1st
Deadlift 115 ~ Squat 105 ~ Bench 85 ~ Press (barbell shoulder) didn’t test, will next month.

1 REP MAXIMUMs – April 2008

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

Once a month I will post my 1RM in this thread for the following movements:
Deadlift, Squat, Bench and Press.

April 1st

Deadlift 115 ~ Squat 105 ~ Bench 85 ~ Press (dumbbell shoulder) didn’t test, will next month.