@305pelusa sounds your on the breakthrough to invent the wheel and anounce your own certification, a pity that the wheel is re-invented already. But until then, countenance please. Just my opinion.
Oh I guess I missed this comment.
I should be fairly clear this exchange is mostly just joking. I absolutely do not believe I have the knowledge to make a certification myself (I haven't even reached my main goals of a Planche and Front Lever... how could I teach what I can't even do or demo/show?). And even if I did, I would just release it in some form of free ebook. This is just a fun hobby for me and I'm certainly not in it for the money. I am in it for the general advancement and community.
I will just simply add that I actually, personally, don't think the wheel has been "invented" in Calisthenics. In the Barbell field, which is the fitness field with possibly the most amount of information, there
still continues to be breakthroughs (like Reactive Training System's RPE method of this decade that has been well received). In fields with less research like Kettlebells, we see new methods come consistently. Every new Pavel book is consistently better and more effective than before. Pavel is effectively "re-inventing" the wheel with things like S&S and A&A. No doubt about that.
And now consider BW training which is an even newer and far less research-explored field. Even the KB Swing has been examined in labs, but has the Planche? The One-arm Chin-up? What Calisthenics program is as methodical as something like the Smolov? Or the soviet competitive KB routines given in the Russian KB Challenge?
It's very easy to just wave these questions off and say that those programs can be very numerical because specific weights are being used. But rough torque approximations and intensity levels can be obtained for many BW exercises with some simple physics. I've done a similar thing here when Steve was looking for how much weight he pushed in a OAPU:
Need A Pushup Math Maven
And that's just ONE untapped field. There's many other places where we can continue to come up with bigger and better things.
So I don't really agree that there's any
pity. If anything, we live in a VERY exciting time for Calisthenics expontential growth of popularity and programming. Plenty of places where the wheel can be improved, given a tire, add friction to it, and prepare it for an F1 competition haha
Just my 2 cents.