Barbell squat
- 165# / 5 / 3
Press
- 95# / 5 / 3
Power clean
- 95# / 5
- 115# / 5
- 95# / 5
Dips
- 8
- 8
- 8
Barbell squat
Press
Power clean
Dips
Barbell Squat
Bench Press
Pull-ups
Barbell Squat
Press
Deadlift
Barbell Squat
Bench Press
Chin-ups
I’ve been strength training consistently for about three months now more or less. In order to get myself back into the habit of posting something on here I’m going to reach back in my lifting logs and start posting them on here daily. Since I only lift three times a week it won’t take me long to catch up.
My intent is that this will serve a multitude of functions. 1) As stated earlier it will get me back in the habit of posting on here. Don’t know why I care if I do but I do, so I’m going to give it a shot. 2) It will allow (force?) me to review my logs and my progress as well as my mistakes and missed workouts. Will anything interesting or useful come from that? Don’t know. We’ll see. 3) It will give me the chance to post some thoughts and insights that I have had during this process thus far. 4) It will help me to think through my decisions regarding my future training plans.
Here we go.
I restarted my weightlifting program exactly 30-days ago and during that time I’ve performed 14-sessions. While I was inputting my squat data into my phone at the gym today I noticed something interesting/awesome. I had re-achieved the previous 5RM PR that was in my recording app from the last time that I was lifting weights. For those of you who don’t know a “5RM” is a “five repetition maximum” (generally shortened to “five rep max”) which is the heaviest weight that you can do for five consecutive repetitions.
(Note: Technically I suppose that a 5RM would be the most weight you could do for five repetitions in a single set, but for a variety of reasons that I won’t go into here I don’t do maximum rep testing – for the time being. Therefore in this particular instance the 5RM we are talking about is the weight that I use for my work sets, of which I do three across. Which is a long way of saying that today I squatted as much in my workout as I did the last time I squatted before the last time I quit. Um . . . let’s just move on.)
That is pretty awesome because I remember when I achieved this level of strength the first time I was quite pleased with my performance. Another reason this got my dopamine flowing is because I feel like I got back to this level quickly without hurting myself or rushing my progress by making too large increases. Did I really get back in form faster than I first achieved it? Or was my mind memory playing tricks on me. My curiosity was aroused so I went into my weight lifting app and pulled out the data that it had in it for my back squat. Coincidentally, the data went back to 24 September 2013, almost exactly a year ago! So of course I made a chart. Here it is:
I like this chart because it shows the last time I got to this level and this time, with the gap in between. Now I’m not excited that the gap is there, but it’s nice to quantify before, “not during” and after. Just seeing this chart and the start-overedness of it reinforces how much I want and need to maintain a workout program over the long term. And my performance potential if I did so.
Now let’s look at the two actual training periods and compare them:
The biggest takeaway for me from these two charts is consistency. I don’t depict it well here because the Excel formatting is just too hard but the chart on the left which shows the first period of weight training represents a number of missed workouts. You can also see during that period I repeated at the same weight several times. Also, the increases in weight are inconsistent. I jump by 30# and then 20# and then 5# and then 10# and so on. All told it took me 72-days to advance from 3 sets of 5 across at 135# to 3 sets of 5 across at 255#.
In the chart on the right – which shows the current progression – it only took me 27-days to get from 135# to 255#! There were no missed workouts and with one exception I was very patient, consistent and conservative in my weight increases. I definitely feel that this gave my body a better chance to recover, adapt and prepare for the next weight increase than the herky-jerky increases in the first instance. Finally though, I think that I was much better prepared mentally this time around. As with so many things in life it is the unknown that messes with our heads. The second time through anything is easier just from knowing what to expect and knowing what you can do.
The big question now is what does the chart look like from here through the next thirty days?
Weightlifting. I like weightlifting. I enjoy it while I’m doing it. I like the way it makes me feel both during and after the training sessions and I like the outcomes of it (increased strength and muscle mass). And yet until about a month ago I had not done a single weight training session in calendar year 2014.
Why, or more accurately, why not? For the same reasons we all don’t do something or anything. Laziness, inertia, rationalization. But for weightlifting there was another deterrent: not wanting to start over. You see, at one point in my on-again, off-again training regimen I had gotten my strength in the core lifts up to a fairly respectable level, but after six months (more really) of detraining effect I suspected – reasonably enough – that most of that strength had atrophied.
Now a lot folks, particularly testosterone driven manly-men like myself would go back into the gym, pull out their workout log (you do have a workout log right?) and try to throw up the last weight they lifted, notwithstanding that they did that weight over six months ago. And most of those guys would have hurt themselves, either acutely or by generating enough post workout soreness to derail whatever routine they planned to initiate.
But I’m smarter than that. At least occasionally. In this case I needed a multi-faceted solution. Facet the first: I needed to overcome my general inertia and just get myself back in the gym. Facet the second: I needed to do so without tempting myself to overreach, hurting myself and derailing my comeback. Facet the third: I needed to establish a pattern that supported the eventual transition to my desired training frequency and pattern.
The problem with having a multi-faceted requirement is that admits of lots of excuses and overthinking which of course is the procrastinators bette noir. So I approached it thusly: first, I committed to what the workouts would look like. This eliminated concerns that I would try to do too much (i.e. too heavy on free weight barbell exercises) and also made my plan concrete (which makes it more tangible and more likely to be executed). I decided that I would start going back to the gym by doing a very mild machine-based workout.
This is something that I’ve done before and this is what it looked like:
– Chest press machine supersetted with lat pull downs
– Leg press machine supersetted with the shoulder press machine
– Optional: sit-ups or other abdominal work between sets
– All exercises done for 3 sets of 10 reps each
Pretty simple right? Exactly. Short, boring, simple, clear and yet, more strength training that I had been doing for the entire year. This is one of the big mental hurdles I face: if I can’t or am not planning to do the “real deal” or the whole enchilada I tend to mentally scoff and say to myself “whatever, that’s not even worth doing”. In other words I’m an optimizer and a completionist. Which is another way of saying that I’ll take any excuse to pontificate on what right looks like but won’t go out and actually do a workout that would benefit me but isn’t optimal. I would be that this is one of the most pervasive rationalizations used by people to NOT workout, especially those who “used to be in great shape”.
So how did my plan work out? It got me back in the gym doing SOMETHING/ANYTHING which was better than the NOTHING I had been doing. And I have to admit, it worked well. As I’ve talked about here before it had the tremendously powerful effect of lowering the bar. Instead of facing this tremendous wall of obstructions (inertia, indecision about what workout to do, frustration about how low I was going to have to restart on my lifts in my “real” lifting program) I had a very low barrier and no uncertainty/excuses. I committed to going to the gym and executing a perfectly doable, reasonable program. The fact that the workout was machine-based and low intensity didn’t matter. All I was doing was going back to the gym and sweating. Something/anything is better than nothing.
My goal with this program was to workout M-W-F (which is my normal routine when I’m doing a “real” program). I never got to that level. Doesn’t matter. I did two workouts a week for three weeks (never on the same two days of the week in any of those weeks) and then went on a pre-planned two week vacation during which I didn’t lift once. And then when I got home I didn’t go to the gym at all for a week. But during those three weeks of working out I got back into the habit of going to the gym. I got a “fix” of the enjoyment I get from working out and I began to transition back into a normal routine. I never tried to use heavy weights but gradually as I worked out I began to replace the machine exercises with their barbell based equivalents; not all at once or even in a regular progression. As I got comfortable or bored with the machine I would swap in the barbell exercise – always using a very light weight. Presses for the shoulder press machine, bench press for the chest press and so on. In this way, after my vacation and after the one week without working out I eased myself back into doing the old Starting Strength exercise program.
And so far I’m in my fifth straight week of it without missing a day. And I feel great.
Squat
Bench
Chin-up