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THE IRON BIBLE

Toward the attainment of greater strength and power

resistance training

Resistance Training Facts-of-Life

February 21, 2014 By Marty Gallagher 7 Comments

How to Operate a Barbell

The optimal transformation tool is misused and misunderstood by the uninformed

Marty Gallagher coached Ed Coan
Marty Gallagher coached the great Ed Coan, pictured above

The lowly, barbaric barbell is the most neglected, misused, and abused tool in nearly every fitness facility.  But used properly, it is also the most effective transformational tool available. No other device comes close to delivering the same transformative results as correct barbell technique combined with old school hardcore progressive resistance training strategies.

The purpose of resistance training is to acquire indisputable physiological results.  These results are specifically defined as new muscle mass and significant increases in strength levels and power capacities.

A barbell can and will transform a human body dramatically, radically, and quickly if the right exercises are performed using the proper techniques and protocols.

The four biggest mistakes amateurs make when attempting to operate a barbell:

  • Picking the wrong exercises. There is an exercise hierarchy in hardcore resistance training.  Generally speaking, all resistance exercises break down into two generalized categories: compound and isolation. An isolation exercise targets a specific muscle while excluding neighboring muscles. A compound exercise requires groups of muscles to work together in a synchronized fashion.  Compound exercises trump isolation exercises and should be given the lion’s share of your available training time.  Resistance machines are usually designed for isolation exercises, which is another reason to avoid working with machines.
  • Shortening the rep stroke on purpose. If a man can move 100 pounds in a given exercise using a full and complete rep stroke, he can move 200 pounds if he cuts the rep stroke in half, and 300 pounds if he only uses a third of the potential stroke length. Men love to shorten the rep stroke in difficult exercises so they can move more weight than they’re actually capable of lifting.  But partial reps deliver partial results. The iron elite champion full range of motion exercises and so should you.
  • Lack of sheer physical effort. In fitness, “intensity” refers to the level of  exertion during resistance training.  The average trainee usually doesn’t train hard enough to trigger hypertrophy and other adaptive responses.  The elite know that sheer physical effort is the key to strength training success. We need to consistently equal or exceed our current limits and capacities in some way during every workout.
  • Believing machines and free-weights give equal results. Wrong! Resistance training exercise machines are inferior to free-weights when it comes to results. Machines are alluring because they are comfortable and easy to use. But, a chest press on a machine is not as effective at building muscle and strength as a free-weight barbell or dumbbell flat bench.  The machine eliminates the 3rd dimension of tension, which activates stabilizing muscles as the trainee fights to control side-to-side movement.

By recognizing and correcting these fatal flaws we can stop wasting time with sub-maximal effort on exercise machines. Make the most productive use of your training time with these four productive changes:

  • Reduce the number of exercises you perform. Concentrate your resistance training efforts on mastering the “four core” exercises—the squat, bench press, deadlift, and overhead press. Dedicate the majority of your training to these lifts, and practice them almost exclusively. Perform fewer exercises, but do them with far greater precision, focus and effort.
  • Refine exercise techniques. Each of the “core four” exercises has a specific technique.  Seek technical mastery in each lift—each lift has subtle variations used for different physiological effects. Technique should be honed and refined over time.  We worship at the altar of technique and perform perfect lifts with incredible effort.
  • Have a plan. Elite iron men always have a resistance training goal and they use the strategy of periodization to build strength incrementally.  Progress continues each successive week for 8-16 weeks.  Reps, sets and poundage are tweaked to ensure progress.
  • Embrace struggle. The hardest lesson for the novice is to accept that effective resistance training must include real struggle and effort.  Struggle and effort trigger the adaptive response which brings all the positive benefits of effective resistance training.  Any resistance program that avoids intense effort is a waste of time at best—at worst, it’s pure fraud.

Optimal barbell use involves learning how to properly perform the “core four” exercises with the preferred motor-pathways and full range-of-motion techniques. We must also concentrate on a limited number of compound multi-joint exercises. With a limited menu of exercises, the trainee gets very good at those few select exercises quickly.  The hardcore strength athlete’s philosophy involves “doing fewer things better.”

Elite athletes and Tier I spec ops types understand and embrace our purposefully primitive, streamlined strength-training approach.  They understand the system’s profound simplicity and obtain dramatic results from diligent practice. The elite athlete who uses our system with precision, respect, and reverence will obtain outstanding results every single time.

Meanwhile, the general public doesn’t understand or want our ancient approach with the barbell and its “mini-me” cousins, dumbbells.  Our system delivers what all fitness adherents seek—tangible physical results on a consistent and ongoing basis.  Yet, the general public will not give our simple muscle and strength strategy even a casual test drive.

John Q. and Mary J. Public prefer to be seduced by fitness pied pipers who say that a magical elixir, system, tool or fitness product will enable them—for a price—to bypass the effort, sweat and discomfort associated with a profound physical transformation.  Here is a “chocolate flavored factoid” (as Norman Mailer once called bon mots) for you to ponder—why would the human body radically adapt to modest exertion?  Why would the body undergo a profound adaptation in response to anything less than a profound degree of sustained physical effort?

Modern man is cursed with too many choices. He desperately wants to believe that an easy, effective alternative exists instead of facing the gruesome reality of a purposefully primitive free-weight regimen rooted in disciplined adherence and egoless effort.  Perhaps the delusional seeker simply thinks it’s impossible to find the golden needle of progress hidden so deeply in the fitness haystack.

People want fitness equipment manufacturers to make resistance training easier and more user-friendly. People want to emasculate resistance training even though doing so will negate any possible physiological benefits.  Watered down resistance training might be fun, but it is so ineffective that playing golf or going bowling would be a better use of your time.  An exercise session performed at 60% of max exertion using a dozen different exercises on smooth-as-glass machines, is neutered, emasculated resistance training.  But, this sub-maximal strategy is widely practiced and taught at modern commercial fitness facilities.

Less is known about using a barbell correctly as compared to any other fitness tool in a commercial gym. Gym staff “experts” may claim to know about effective barbell training, but 99.9% of the time they don’t know jack squat.  In today’s fitness landscape, the training possibilities and potential protocols to choose from are vast and daunting unless you are lucky enough to be instructed by a rare iron expert.  A normal person knows as much about using a barbell properly as much as they know how to fly an F-15 fighter jet.

The Bottom Line: If you want to reap the rewards from an effective resistance program, base your thinking on the strategies we’ve discussed.  Understand the exercise hierarchy and realize that all resistance exercises are not created equal.  Resistance training is ineffective without effort and struggle. For results, we need a periodized game plan, the right exercises (performed correctly), and enough effort required to trigger hypertrophy.  Exert profound physical effort and reap dramatic physical results.

***

Marty Gallagher, author of The Purposeful Primitive, is an underground legend.  Mentored by a Hall-of-Fame strength athlete as a teenager, Marty set his first national record in 1967 as a 17-year old Olympic weightlifter; he set his most recent national record in 2013 as a 63-year old powerlifter. He is a former world powerlifting champion who turned his attention to coaching athletes and devising individualized training templates for the finest strength athletes in the world.  Read more about Marty here.

Filed Under: Tutorials Tagged With: barbell, bench press, deadlift, effective training, overhead press, periodization, physique transformation, resistance training, squat, strategy, strength, technique, transformation

10 Tactical Training Tips to Exponentially Increase Your Transformational Fitness Results

November 30, 2013 By Marty Gallagher 10 Comments

“My job is to take the best in the world – and make them better.”

Mr. Marty,

Hope you had fun ripping us “earnest fitness types” to shreds in your recent rant against anyone and everyone that uses a commercial training facility.  I will admit that I am a “result-free” early morning trainee. Your article was dead on, and pointed out everyone’s flaws. Except for criticizing the glowering gruesome person—you— standing in the corner taking it all in like an East German Stasi secret police agent. But, your article didn’t have any positive advice for anyone.   I won’t be doing any ass-on-heels squatting with 365 pounds for 5 reps in the near future, and I won’t be turning myself into a human steamed lobster afterwards.  Are you simply the world’s best critic or are you capable of any constructive thoughts or advice?

—A ticked-off result-free cardio gerbil from parts unknown looking for training tips

Greetings! You must have recognized your result-free training approach in the article several times. Theoretically you could be a female oldster cardio gerbil treadmill user and manic resistance machine user and cleaner. Theoretically I could have insulted you a half dozen times within the same article.  Indeed, I am that glowering, gruesome, person taking it all in.

I am also a world-class strength coach having coached for five national team powerlifting championships, and I took Team USA to the IPF world championship in 1991.  I’ve regularly turned out regional, national and international level lifters.  And I work with active duty Tier 1 military spec ops—so to answer to your question, I have plenty of advice and it’s all freaking excellent.

The only question is this, are you ready, willing, and able to use the result-producing advice I’m offering?

The men I work with are the best of the best—modern samurai warriors and the finest strength athletes on the planet.  My job is to take the best in the world and make them better.  Here are ten tactical training tips that I use on a regularly reoccurring basis with the uber-elite. Put some or all of these ten tips into play and you will rock your gerbil-wheel fitness world to its core—assuming you’re in a position to actually incorporate these battle-tested tips. These concepts are broad and within each, there’s a subtle maze requiring intricate maneuvering.  We will delve into the subtleties within subtleties of each tip in future posts…

  1. Forget everything you think you know about fitness. They say that too much knowledge is a dangerous thing and nowhere is this cliché truer than the world of athletic training. Preconceptions are problematic and should be eradicated. Our mature strength philosophy was handed down through four generations since WWII. Frankly we aren’t interested in your little thoughts and insights about power and strength. Misinformation about strength training abounds. Now, every trainee has a strength theory, a guru, and an opinion. Give me an aggressive, wrong-side-of-the-tracks, empty-headed 12-year old alpha male any day of the week over an opinionated fitness-type.  Here’s a news flash—you don’t know jack about physical transformation or how to attain it, if you did, you would have already transformed. We can save time if we don’t have to deprogram you.Our system is an integrated philosophy that needs be implemented in its totality. It’s not an ideological cafeteria where trainees can embrace or reject aspects of our holistic approach based on their likes and dislikes. The component parts of the system amplify each other. The system in a nutshell: combine power training with gourmet power eating and perform cardio to keep the metabolism amped up.
  2. Not one, or the other—both.  The name of the game is utter and complete, radical physical transformation. Our template is pure non-dualistic Zen—we weave together three disparate disciplines: resistance training, cardiovascular training, and nutrition. The skillful blending of these three disciplines builds muscle and strength while melting off body fat.  Cardio needs to be manly, sweaty, old-school and mostly outside. We choose old school, real world cardio combined with old school hardcore power free-weight training.  Intense cardio and intense resistance exercise are supported by nutrient-dense gourmet peasant food, eaten in ample amounts. This food nourishes and heals.We empower our athletes by teaching them balance. It’s better to have a little of the three core disciplines than a whole lot of one or two, at the expense of the other(s).  When all three parts are in place and executed in a balanced holistic fashion, physical synergy takes place and results exceed all realistic expectations.
  3. Divide available training time between resistance and cardio.  We seek a balanced blending of two distinctly different types of exercise.  Combining resistance and cardio far exceeds the potential of performing one type to the exclusion of the other.  Combining the two triggers transformation—if the training is sufficiently intense, periodized, and synchronized with a nutrient-dense diet strategy. Lifting and cardio are two sides of the same fitness and strength coin.One discipline does not trump the other; we need to practice both. Power training maximizes brute strength and builds functional athletic muscle; cardio burns off body fat and keeps the metabolism revved-up while ensuring internal organ health. We need to strengthen and improve the functionality of our internal organs as much as we need to strengthen our skeletal muscles. To ignite a radical physical transformation, we need to practice “Not one, or the other—both!
  4. Simplify resistance training. Clear the table of every resistance exercise you’re currently doing and begin anew.  Practice a purposefully limited menu of compound multi-joint exercise movements.  The irreducible “core four” resistance exercises are squat, bench press, deadlift, and overhead press. A second small tier of assistance exercises complements the core four. Our philosophy is to do fewer things better.  Sessions are short, intense, infrequent, and body shattering.We worship at the altar of exercise technique, continually striving to hone and refine our lifting. Unlike bodybuilding, pure strength training values intensity over volume. A bodybuilder will train long and often with moderate weight, while a strength athlete will train in short infrequent sessions with maximum intensity. A strength athlete uses heavy weight for low reps with a full range-of-motion. Pristine exercise technique results in maximum muscle fiber stimulation.
  5. Sweat during cardio. You’d think this was a given. It’s mind-blowing to see how many cardio machine riders never sweat. Coincidentally, their physiques also never change. When physical exertion generates sweat, progress occurs. We need to breathe hard and continually bump up against our oxygen-debt threshold.  Use cardio to burn calories, stimulate the metabolism, and improve internal organ health and functionality.The goal is to trigger an adaptive response to cardio. 90% of the gym goers tool along at 60% of their capacity—a comfortable pace on a comfortable, familiar machine.  Why would the body burn fat in response to 60% exertion? Why would we reap outstanding results from easy workouts? Unless we work at and past our capacities, the body will stubbornly stay the same.
  6. Work at or past your (shifting) limits in every workout.  Limits and capacities shift day to day and workout to workout.  On a peak day, we might be capable of a 102% effort, while on an off day our 100% capacity might only be 77% of our actual capability. However—and this is critical—we can have a hypertrophy-inducing, strength-increasing, productive workout on an off day if we still work up to or past that day’s actual capacity.In resistance training we record our best weight and rep performances in all our lifts. We know our one-rep max best in a particular lift, and we also record rep/weight records for double rep sets, triples, 5-rep set max, and 8 and 10-rep sets. We know our all-time best lifts in each rep range so we know the capacities to equal or exceed. The elite lifter will also have different rep records at different bodyweights.
  7. Have a periodized battle plan. Elite athletes think in three-month chunks. Time and experience have shown that the optimal length for a transformational program is 12-weeks. Within the 12-week, three-month timeframe, sets and reps (along with cardio and nutrition) are tweaked every four weeks to drive poundage ever upward. The first step is to establish realistic but motivating strength and muscle goals. The goal in strength training is to continue increasing the amount of weight lifted in the core four lifts. By becoming significantly stronger in the core four lifts, all our athletic attributes are improved.  We gain significant muscle as we push and pull our way through the 12-weeks.The main idea is to reverse-engineer small, weekly, mini-goals. We start off light and easy, but three months later we’ve often made it past our goal threshold. Typically, our 12-week power cycle will start at 10% below capacity, with the goal set at 2%- 5% past current lifting capacity. Simultaneously, we’ll experience a proportional increase in functional muscle mass.
  8. Replenish post-workout. After a body-crushing progressive resistance workout—the only kind worth a damn—a ‘window of opportunity’ opens. During that time, any nutrients ingested are distributed and assimilated at a dramatically accelerated (some say 300% faster) rate. Science and experience dictates that the right nutrients in the right amounts after a high-intensity workout will improve workout results.  And workout results are greater if the athlete consumes these nutrients while the window is open.The window of opportunity opens at the end of the workout and remains open for one to three hours.   The ideal post-workout meal or drink should consist of 50% high-value protein and 50% non-insulin spiking carbs. Most of the iron elite prefers to drink a fast-acting shake containing 30 to 50 grams of protein and carbs at the conclusion of the workout.
  9. Invoke workout contrast. Don’t perform the same favorite training routine over and over and expect continual results. Periodically revamp your training to keep your progress on track.  After the completion of a full-bore, 12-week power cycle, shift to a contrasting training template.  If you’ve just completed a period of three-times-a-week power training, concentrated on back squat, barbell bench, conventional deadlift and barbell overhead press, then why not shift to a volume approach? Try something radically different like performing multiple top static sets (2-5) using higher rep sets (8 to 12 reps per set).After the explosive lifting of the power cycle, why not slash the poundage and shift to grind speed?  Why not change up the exercises? How about multiple high-rep top sets for front squats, dumbbell bench presses, sumo deadlifts (or drop deads in favor of power cleans) and seated presses behind the neck.  Or you could accelerate the workout pace, or add arm work twice a week. Sync up the new higher volume, less intensity approach with more cardio, and longer more frequent sessions. During this time, cut back the calories and lean out maximally. This will create the lean-out antithesis to the power & muscle 12-week program you just completed.
  10. Synchronize seasonally appropriate eating with training. Training heavy? Why not eat heavy? Why not look to add power, strength and size in the cold winter months? The 12-weeks of winter is the same length of time as a power cycle. Winter is the perfect time to consume rich foods, delicious soups and thick stews. Heavy cuts of meat taste delicious in cold weather and root vegetables are winter vegetables. Think of fall and winter as optimal times for adding power, strength and muscle mass.  Looking to get maximally lean? What better time than during the high heat of summer!Coordinate the heat and added activity of the summer months with a reduction in calories. Cut back on the rich foods, increase cardio frequency and duration, and shift to a high-volume/moderate-intensity weight training strategy. Optimally, nutrition and training are synchronized with each other and are coordinated seasonally. It’s logical, sensible and primal to create a plan appropriate for the season. Train like a berserker and support your savage training with seasonally-appropriate organic peasant food.  Sleep like the dead.  Hold this course for 90 short days and transform. Details to follow.

How’s that for some expert advice?

 ***

Marty Gallagher, author of The Purposeful Primitive, is an underground legend.  Mentored by a Hall-of-Fame strength athlete as a teenager, Marty set his first national record in 1967 as a 17-year old Olympic weightlifter; he set his most recent national record in 2013 as a 63-year old powerlifter. He is a former world powerlifting champion who turned his attention to coaching athletes and devising individualized training templates for the finest strength athletes in the world.  Read more about Marty here.

Filed Under: Tutorials Tagged With: cardiovascular training, Dear Marty, fitness strategy, gym tips, Marty Gallagher, resistance training, Tactical Training Tips, Transformational Fitness

Failure Minus One

October 31, 2013 By Marty Gallagher 9 Comments

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Marty photographs Karwoski in 1993 just prior to his winning the world championship in the 242-pound class; Kirk squatted 904 to shatter the 110 kilo class world squat record by forty pounds. Kirk deadlifted 770 to eclipse John Kuc’s immortal 2,204 world record total, only to have the barbell pop out of his hands as the head referee was giving Kirk the “Down!” command to signify a good lift.

Note how his thumbs are purposely not wrapped around the bar. This makes shrugging much harder and places all the stress on keeping his fingers wrapped around the barbell. This is a grip exercise and not a back exercise. Kirk would perform one set of thumbless shrugs to failure at the conclusion of his once-a-week deadlift/back training routine.  After working up to 750 + for reps in the deadlift, Kirk would hit some biceps and shrugs.

He would usually load the shrug barbell to 405 and repped to utter and complete failure. The barbell literally unbent his fighting fingers until it came loose from his grip and fell on the pins. He would get up to about 25 reps before failure. Ed Coan gave us this savage grip exercise.  Note the degree of pure physical effort displayed in his face.  I saw this look a lot while watching him—year after year—in weekly training sessions. When Kirk trained it was not casual or friendly—it was the holy sacred training session where 105% was given. We sought ways to demand this level of effort from ourselves, and didn’t reserve this degree of effort for competition. We tried to exert this degree of pure physical effort in every training session.

We sought ways to make progressive resistance training harder. This countered prevailing strength trends towards ideas, tools and devices to make strength training easier.  Kirk’s face shows his degree of effort.  We forcibly morphed our bodies with intense, all out effort.

Defining Resistance Training Possibilities and Impossibilities

At the highest levels of progressive resistance training, we seek to skillfully stress muscles or a group of muscles enough to trigger muscle hypertrophy.  Hypertrophy creates muscle growth.  We want to induce the adaptive response, the self-inflicted physiological stress required for reactions within the body on a cellular level. Elite physical trainers seek two fundamental benefits from their training efforts—a dramatic increase in raw power and strength, with an increase in lean muscle mass. Both benefits invariably result in improved athletic performance.  Here are ten guidelines to help define our approach:

  • Purposefully limit the exercise menu. Devote 80% of the total training time to the Core Four lifts—variations of squats, bench presses, deadlifts and overhead presses.
  • Compound multi-joint exercises receive priority, Isolation exercises are used 20% of the time to “fill in the gaps” for muscles such as hamstrings, biceps and triceps.
  • Limit the number of training sessions to 2-3 per week. Session length should range from 15 to 60 minutes, depending on the trainee’s strength.
  • Use a full range-of-motion on all exercises. Experiment with pauses, slow reps, explosive reps, drop sets, and intensity-amping techniques.
  • Always give goals timeframes. Reverse-engineer results and establish weekly mini-goals.  Small weekly gains will compound over 10-12 weeks.
  • We train each lift once a week—we have one opportunity per week to hit our periodized goal.
  • Continually refer back to the core goals of adding power, strength and size. To create hypertrophy, we train powerfully and establish anabolism with nutrition and rest.
  • If all the preconditions for muscle growth have been met, all that’s needed for anabolism is a savage, limit-exceeding workout.
  • To trigger hypertrophy, resistance efforts must happen in an anabolic environment.
  • Capacity is a shifting target. The only way to trigger the adaptive response—hypertrophy—is to exceed capacity.

This is everything to know about our particular progressive resistance training system. Lifetimes of accumulated experience, knowledge and wisdom are contained in these ten points of power.

The Subtle Concept of “Failure Minus One.”
“To fail or not to fail, that is the question…”

Having trained under and alongside some of the greatest lifters in the world, it’s often difficult to describe how hard they train.  How do you communicate a degree of effort? You could say an 855lb squat was so heavy that on the 3rd rep of 5, Karwoski’s right nostril shot a spray of blood all down his white t-shirt. The nasal explosion occurred as he was maximally exerting himself, pushing his guts—and apparently his nasal membranes—out. He went on to make all five reps, turning a realistic triple into a five rep set through the strength of his iron will. He did this week in, week out—calling upon his warrior-Samurai psyche to consistently exceed realistic capacity.

Just looking at the numbers on paper does not tell the intensity story. When I tell people that men like Karwoski, Furnas, Kaz and Coan could go through an entire 12-16 week training cycle without missing a single planned training poundage or rep target, people assume that powerlifters train sub-maximally.  How could they be training maximally and not miss a rep?  Brother, all I can say is you had to be there.  Anyone who’s trained with a national or world champion strength athlete will attest to their sheer amount of physical effort.  The hardcore strength elite are not training sub-maximally or leaving ‘reps in the tank.’ They are consistently calling on higher mental powers to up their efforts. Kirk Karwoski felt a proper competitive training mentality added a full 5% to his performance.

Most of the willpower generated for high-level resistance training is used to increase the pain tolerance threshold of the athlete. It’s actually not pain, but intense discomfort. Continuing to push or pull past physical discomfort is a learn skill.  Pain tolerance increases with experience. At the highest levels, the brain improves performance within the workout, taking the training session to the next level.

In 1970, Hugh “Huge” Cassidy was three reps into a five rep limit squat set with 685 pounds when his legs felt like jelly and he sensed real danger of collapse. His coping strategy was to stand erect with 685 pounds on his shoulders while locking his knees and taking huff breaths. He took five giant breaths between reps 3 & 4 and seven between reps 4 & 5.  The forced breathing allowed his legs and back to recover from the first three reps, somewhat revitalized, he barely made rep four. After standing erect once again and chugging breaths, he finally dunked with rep 5 and made it.  How do you convey that level of effort in a workout?

One time before the national championships, during a critical top set of squats in a critical workout, Huge announced in his stentorian voice that everyone needed to leave the room. The boys were incredulous and asked him why. Hugh replied, “Because I want to die or get seriously injured if I miss this.” Leaving the room was not up for debate, it was a command.  They left the room and Huge made the required reps, emerging uninjured and unscathed.  On paper, only the date, poundage, and reps would have been recorded—the psychological depths he plumbed wouldn’t have been noted. Cassidy employed a ritualistic mindset—he sucked in three rapid “cooling breaths” and the hairs on the back of his arms stood erect as his pores opened. He was a Zen psych master demonstrating the physical manifestations of an aroused and elevated mental state.

My friend of forty years, Kirk Karwoski, was a psych master of the first order. He routinely morphed himself into an insane maniac before a big lift. It was a grand sight to see this Viking mound of muscle psych himself up before storming onstage to shatter yet another world record.  Karwoski psyched himself up to increase his ability in both training and competition, not for show. Why would men like Karwoski need the ability to psych up to high degrees if they never attempted to exceed their capacity? Do we ever need to get psyched up over a sub-maximal attempt?  Yes, for the following reasons:

  • To learn how to focus in training
  • Focused training leads to concentration, resulting in more reps
  • Focus and concentration are necessary to hone technique
  • The little man inside our head falls silent as we are absorbed by the training
  • At the highest level, the entire workout is performed with a concentrated focus
  • We psych up to increase the quality and productivity of the workout
  • Alternate intensity-based training with volume-based training is useful for the required contrasting effects

The amount of sheer physical effort required to trigger hypertrophy—and acquire new levels of strength and power—is a hotly debated topic.  Many believe that low volume/moderate intensity will get the job done as well or better than a classical “hardcore power” approach (high intensity/low volume).  The safe and sane orthodox approach to resistance training advises to ‘always leave a rep or two in reserve.’ With a high volume/moderate intensity approach, the trainee would work up to 5 sets of 5 reps, and if the trainee was capable of performing 6-8 reps, he’ll squat 5×5 with power in reserve.

I came up in the world of hardcore low volume/high intensity strength training. Our approach was decidedly different—we trained together only once or twice a week. The classical pre-competition power session workouts were:

Saturday:    squat and bench press
Wednesday:    deadlift and overhead press

“They did not build that muscle with sub-maximal effort.”

The giants of yesteryear displayed incredible muscle mass that made it easy to see why and how they could achieve world records. They bore the weight, not the equipment. They didn’t build their incredible muscle mass with sub-maximal effort. They built thick, functional muscle by exerting incredible physical effort in every training session.  This effort was of such magnitude and intensity that it threw the hypertrophic switch.  When a muscle is taxed up to or past its capacity, the muscle is forced to adapt. With self-inflicted stress of a certain magnitude, adaptation and growth must occur.  We strategically utilized only a few exercises to repeatedly stress specific muscles or muscle groups.

During the workout, something sufficiently stressful—the cellular equivalent of a nuclear detonation—must occur to trigger hypertrophy. This will not happen with casual, contained, sensible effort. Something as profound as the creation of new muscle fiber only occurs with a great magnitude of effort. The resulting cellular fission and creation brings concurrent increases in power and strength.  Dramatic increases in power, strength and muscle size can only occur as a result of profound, self-inflicted muscular stress. How else could it happen?

Muscular stress must occur in the fertile fields of anabolism.  The eternal prescription for building power is to satisfy the anabolic prerequisites, then engage in a hardcore power training session. The anabolic prerequisites include consuming plenty of potent, nutrient-dense food, while staying rested and stress-free. This kind of training and lifestyle, followed diligently will forcibly transform a man. One crucial secret is the ability to approach or exceed limits without injury. The old pros knew how to miss a rep safely and they also know that 90% of resistance training injuries occur when a lifter strays outside the technical boundaries of a lift. We never contort, twist, bend, or jerk during a lift.

***

Marty Gallagher, author of The Purposeful Primitive, is an underground legend.  Mentored by a Hall-of-Fame strength athlete as a teenager, Marty set his first national record in 1967 as a 17-year old Olympic weightlifter; he set his most recent national record in 2013 as a 63-year old powerlifter. He is a former world powerlifting champion who turned his attention to coaching athletes and devising individualized training templates for the finest strength athletes in the world.  Read more about Marty here.

Filed Under: Mental Training, Tutorials Tagged With: anabolism, Hugh Cassidy, Kirk Karwoski, Marty Gallagher, mental state, muscular stress, powerlifting, resistance training, willpower

The Iron Guild

October 3, 2013 By Marty Gallagher 4 Comments

An off-the-grid consortium of transformational experts—who we are and why you should listen to us

 

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Unknown to you, there exists an underground Guild of like-minded strength athletes, coaches and sports medicine doctors. In the Dark Ages, trade guilds emerged with the goal of sharing any and all information they had learned in their trade. Within the guild they shared trade secrets instead of jealousy guarding them like family heirlooms or privileged information. Sharing information was also the price of entry.  A Strength Guild—a consortium or loose confederation of men—exists and shares information on an ongoing basis. The goal is profound—to dramatically improve the form and function of the human body.

This modern Iron Guild is strictly unofficial and ad hoc; yet, we stay in contact and share information on how to best create progress.  How do we transform the human body—how do we best improve its performance and function across every definable benchmark?  We want it all—to be lean and more muscular, with superior performance in every athletic category. You can’t join our Iron Guild unless you are a national and world champion athlete, a national or preferably international level coach, a member of an elite military spec ops unit, a governmental counter terrorism operative, or a cutting-edge sports medicine human-performance doctor.

You haven’t heard of us because we are off the commercial fitness grid, and we are not included in the mainstream fitness world.  We hone our strength kraftwerk in private—some would say in secret. We keep to ourselves and network with each other.  The Strength Guild’s raison d’être is to cross-compare techniques, tactics, modes, and methods to up our collective game and improve our collective results. A rising tide lifts all boats.

Guild members accumulate empirical training data on an ongoing basis by observing the results—or lack thereof—as it relates to our own training efforts.  Virtually all Guild power-players are at the apex of a pyramid of local athletes.  These athletes take their training and transformative cues from the Guild participant.  To aid our own efforts, we share ideas and strategies with our strength collaborators.  The Guild has members all across the United States, and in every geographic region including members throughout Europe, Australia, New Zealand and the Far East.

Membership is based on accomplishment and is not formalized—there is no secret initiation, no secret handshake, and no fee. The coin of our realm is information—information about strength training, human performance, and methods of altering body composition. The inner circle shares technical and tactical ways to up our own respective games.

I bring 50 years of immersion in the world of progressive resistance training to the table.  I set my first national weightlifting records in 1967, and my most recent national powerlifting records in 2013.  I was mentored by a hall of fame strength athlete, and now I mentor hall of fame strength athletes.  Our strength System— passed along to me by my mentors—is a full-blown, fully realized progressive resistance training system.  It’s ancient yet pliable, an inch wide and a mile deep, with limitless variations and possibilities within the System’s self-imposed boundaries.

The Way of Power is both subtle and overt, hard and soft. It’s sophisticated in its simplicity, yet complex in its totality—the individual component parts are easily understood, but the complexity springs from the layers of various disciplines, which create a logical (and potentially confusing) transformational matrix.

Our resistance training strategy is second to none—we do not need your approval or praise.  Now it’s time to break our self-imposed silence and create a manifesto—a summation of our collective knowledge and conclusions to date.  The Strength Guild has had an unwritten Iron Bible for generations.  Until now, no one has taken the trouble to make the System public.

Being a longtime inner circle Strength Guild member and professional writer, I was the logical choice to compose this Iron Bible, The Tao of Power. This book, to be published next year by Dragon Door, will be a manual of techniques and tactics that define and differentiate our approach from all the others.  There is no doubt that our approach works— we hold too many current world records for there to be any lingering questions about its effectiveness. The athletic and military elite has passed judgment; their continual use of our combined services is testament to the effectiveness of the System and the tangible results we obtain.

The only real question is this: do you have the guts, gumption, the situation and favorable circumstance, the drive, desire, motivation, and the burning primal urge to transform? Believing that a transformation is actually doable creates sustainable, renewable motivation.  A vision of the finished physical product—and a sincere belief in the system—will overcome the force of habit.  When vision trumps habit, success is assured.  We’ve found a sizable, identifiable segment of the fitness public, which intuitively embraces and senses the truth of our counter-intuitive, unorthodox, and heretical approach when exposed to it.  We seek this radical fringe of men and women who sense the truth, logic, and positivity of our approach—and immediately embrace it totally.

We’re really big on totality. Our System is not a progressive resistance cafeteria where the reader peruses the contents, embracing one aspect or tactic while rejecting another. Our System is an integrated strength system.  We represent a style—a strength art—and have a specific arsenal of techniques and tactics that define who and what we are.

***

Marty Gallagher, author of The Purposeful Primitive, is an underground legend.  Mentored by a Hall-of-Fame strength athlete as a teenager, Marty set his first national record in 1967 as a 17-year old Olympic weightlifter; he set his most recent national record in 2013 as a 63-year old powerlifter. He is a former world powerlifting champion who turned his attention to coaching athletes and devising individualized training templates for the finest strength athletes in the world. Gallagher was the personal coach for national and world champion Mark Chaillet.  Gallagher is best known for guiding the career of strength legend and six-time world champion, hall-of-fame powerlifter Kirk Karwoski for a decade. Marty was the competition coach for the greatest strength athlete in modern history: Ed Coan.

Marty coached the United States powerlifting team to the world team title and has six national team coaching titles to his credit.  His writings, musings, speculations and observations on “physical transformation” and all things strength and power related since 1978 when he penned his first article. Since then he has had over 1,000 articles published. He has mainstream journalism credentials, having written 230 fitness columns for the Washington Post.com.

For the past decade Gallagher has worked officially and individually with Tier 1 Spec Ops commando both in this country and abroad. His work with spec ops has flourished because of the measurable results he obtains from men already at 95% of their genetic potential.

For hands-on instruction in the Strength Guild’s methods, check out The Purposefully Primitive Strength Training Seminar.

Marty Gallagher is currently completing a new title for Dragon Door Publications, to be released in the Spring of 2014, The Iron Bible: The Tao of Power.

Filed Under: Iron Guild Tagged With: Marty Gallagher, resistance training, strength athletes, strength training, The Iron Bible: The Tao of Power, training strategy, weightlifting

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