This seems like a solid fitness system for the long term. I'm on board with a lot of the info he presents and will be doing the Basic Class workout for a while. Right now I'm doing pushups and squats and working on pullups - well, working on doing ONE pullup, really. I recently added burpees to the mix. I like that no gym is needed for this, although amping up exercises seems challenging without the weights at the gym. However, for my purposes, I'll likely never need those weights because my bodyweight will be intense enough.
“Bodyweight exercises also use motions that keep you safe from the many chronic injuries, like joint problems, that come over time with weightlifting and other unnatural exercises which have little functional value in our daily lives. For an exercise or workout to be functional, it must resemble the event being trained for as closely as possible. The performance demands of the average person consists mainly of manipulating their own bodyweight throughout the day. So what could be more functional for developing better strength in day-to-day actives than bodyweight movements?” pg. 9
“Here are the four simple ways of changing the difficulty of an exercise without adding weight:
- Increase or decrease the amount of leverage.
- Perform an exercise on an unstable platform.
- Use pauses at the beginning, end, and/or middle of a movement.
- Turn an exercise into a single limb movement.” pg. 11
“So, my program develops the entire spectrum of physical skills: Muscular Strength, Muscular Endurance, Cardiovascular Endurance, Power, Speed, Coordination, Balance, and Flexibility. The degree to which you possess these eight physical qualities defines your level of fitness.
It is only by focusing on these seven skills, rather than appearance, that you will make your best gains, in ability, well-being, and in appearance.” pg. 16
“Again, building and maintaining muscle, alone, is the most effective way to burn fat and calories.” pg. 36
“Your real home is not your apartment or your house or your city or even your country, but your body. It is the only thing you, your soul and your mind, will always live inside of so long as you walk the earth. It is the single most important physical thing in this world you can take care of.
We have a choice: The take care of ourselves, or to simply let time make us worse. And it is right now, at this moment, not later, that we must make this decision.” pg. 39
“Your goals should answer at least these two questions:
How much of something do you want to gain, lose, or do?
What is your timeline?” pg. 43
“Whatever you do in life reinforces patterns and habits. Quitting or coasting, when it’s time to drive on, reinforces that behavior and makes it more likely that you’ll do it again the next time. Likewise, every time you push through discomfort and put your goals before your comfort, your resolve is strengthened. Your behavior now directly affects your behavior in the future.” pg. 45
“Each muscle group only needs to be worked once a week. While the program splits them into four sections: Push, Pull, Core, and Legs, you can also replicate a standard gym training regimen. Break your muscles up into:
- Shoulders (8 to 12 sets)
- Triceps (6 to 9 sets)
- Chest (8 to 12 sets)
- Lats (8 to 12 sets)
- Biceps and forearms (6 to 9 sets)
- Core (6 to 9 sets)
- Thighs (8 to 12 sets)
- Calves (8 to 12 sets)
If you tackle two muscle groups a day, you’re only working out 4 days a week.” pg. 50
“Variety, regularity, specificity, progression, overload, and recovery—the 6 necessary training principles—are affected by periodically switching from high-volume, low-intensity training to low-volume, high-intensity training. Simply put, a program should transition from a lot of relatively easy work to a smaller amount of more difficult work. This increases athletic performance while avoiding common pitfalls such as overtraining and injury. Myriad studies have demonstrated that periodized programs yield greater changes in strength and body composition than non-periodized programs that consist of little or no fluctuation in volume and intensity, like those of so many other books.
In a periodized program, particular skills—muscular, endurance, strength, and power—are emphasized for set periods of time called ‘blocks.’” pg. 169
Book: borrowed from SSF Main Library.