all posts post new thread

[THE LATEST ARTICLES] The Snatch: The Tsar of Kettlebell Lifts

In the first of these two articles, the author writes, "After almost two years of training and preparation, I successfully lifted the Dinnie Stones on July 19th, 2022 in Potarch, Scotland, becoming the 204th person to do so."

Wow!




It’s been a while since there was a good old fashioned “lift heavy a#@ weight” article and I’m here for it!

The unorthodox approach was very interesting to read, very Strongfirst style.
 
Two new articles.

First, a deep dive into the getup that will be especially interesting for those of you who are doing them with heavy weights (or who aspire to do so):



Next, an article that discusses the speed at which you move the weight in your training - some of its conclusions may surprise you!

 
An inspiring story of one man's way of bringing strength training and education together, often at exactly the same time!

 
This is "news you can use" if you squat and relates back to an earlier article about lifting speed.


(The earlier article, in case you missed it, is here: Will You Gain More Strength by Varying Your Lifting Speed? | StrongFirst)
 
This is "news you can use" if you squat and relates back to an earlier article about lifting speed.


(The earlier article, in case you missed it, is here: Will You Gain More Strength by Varying Your Lifting Speed? | StrongFirst)

Great article!
 
This is "news you can use" if you squat and relates back to an earlier article about lifting speed.


(The earlier article, in case you missed it, is here: Will You Gain More Strength by Varying Your Lifting Speed? | StrongFirst)

Great article!
 
Strategy is the plan. Tactics are the action.

Strategy is the why. Tactics are the how.

Read more at:


Join Hector, Pavel, and Fabio for Programming Demystified to dive deep into strategies and tactics.
 
Strategy is the destination, Tactics are the journey
Strategy is the duration, Tactics are the ticking and tocking of the clock

:) I love these analogies, and use simile metaphors in business when presenting Vision, Mission, Goals
 
 
The most recent article

is being discussed here for anyone interested:


-S-
 
Bearing in mind another recent thread I'd add one more thing to consider. Lifestyle -which is included in the article- should consider the effect of occupation. This is obvious for a professional athelete. Similarly, there are many people doing work with a substantial physical component, for example, construction, manufacturing, outdoors and other categories of workers. Occupational physical activity needs to be considered. For example, I recall meeting an employee who slit and poured bags into large funnel all day. This example is from more than a decade ago. Essentially, the job entailed picking up a 20-30kg bag from floor to knee level, doing a loaded bearhug or "goblet" style carry for 1-4 metres, rotating the bag sideways, resting it on a surface while slitting one end with a poorly designed tool, then grasping one end using only fingers of both hands so as to pour the contents in as quickly as possible. Then onto the next bag and pallet. I asked how many pallets a day and calculated total number bags and total volume of weight. I was impressed and a bit envious of the volume, it was thousands of kilograms daily but I would be guessing now. Avoiding injury, allowing recovery, maintaining unused ranges of movement and so on were all relevant to this concrete bag lifter.

This is the reverse situation of the sedentary, inactive worker who has limited range of movement, sarcopenia and so on. And so a different set of considerations applies.

Anyway, this seemed like a good spot to reinforce this consideration. Strongfirst previously makes it in relation to LEOs, military, emergancy personnel - understanding the precise nature of each individuals job to helps to design the most suitable and safe program(s).
 
Back
Top Bottom