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Thursday, April 4, 2024

New Cycle, New Personal Records

The biggest piece of news this cycle is that I'm back to doing regular back squats. My left shoulder still bothers me under the bar, but it's not locking up or in agony, and I'm working on rehabbing it. Squats and deadlifts both went well, which is a rarity, and I've now officially pulled 6 plates, something I never imagined myself being capable of. Can I hit 600? Maybe that mythical "old man strength" is finally kicking in (about time, too).

After squats, I hit a four-plate front squat PR with very little strain.

Pressing went very well. This might be the first cycle in which I've met or exceeded all my partial lift goals. Usually I start missing rep goals as the weight gets closer to full range. But this time I hit them all confidently - including a stellar 380 lbs. x 6 on the bench press at the penultimate (next-to-full-range) setting.

I missed 420 lbs. on the bench press for the second time, but I think I'll get it this year. Went back and rage-pressed 405 lbs. for two reps immediately after my failure. "Ramping up" with 390 lbs. might have been a mistake - it went up smoothly, but I'm wondering if it's too much weight for what is essentially a warmup effort. I rested up a bit and set an easy new incline bench PR with 365 lbs.

Overall, this was possibly my most successful partials cycle so far. I haven't been feeling beat up or stressed out either - just smooth, solid lifts all round. Bodyweight has been steady and muscular definition is as good as it's ever been. The isometrics seem to be helping - both with strength, and to fill in small gaps in training, mostly for isolation exercises.

I've eliminated junk volume and these days just focus on a couple exercises per muscle group, a couple of really hard working sets, and call it a day. As you get stronger (and older), volume becomes extremely tough on the body. 2x10 with 225 lbs. might improve your bench press a little, but 2x10 with 325 lbs. are apt to cripple you for days. Maybe figuring out what you need is what strength is really all about. Gainz without a specific program - or on any program. Getting into "a state of mind, being persistent with being consistent", as Lamar Gant (reputedly) said.

Seated military press 295 lbs. x 1 (PR), 230 lbs. x 10 (also might be a PR)

Bench press 390 lbs. x 1, 420 lbs. x fail, 405 lbs. x 2 (new 2RM)

Incline bench press 365 lbs. x 1 (PR)

Squat 530 lbs. x 3, 560 lbs. x 1 (PR)

Front squat 405 lbs. x 1 (PR)

Deadlift 585 lbs. x 1 (PR)


Friday, February 2, 2024

Overhead Press and Deadlift PRs, Other Miscellany

Another partials cycle down, with variable results. I set a confident personal best in the seated military press with 290 lbs. x 1. Managed some excellent repetition work in the lead-up to the cycle on the overhead and incline bench press. My lats and upper back are stronger than before, so I have a better base, and I've gotten stronger and more explosive in the lockout phase. Feeling pretty good overall.

My deadlift training has felt fairly slow and grindy for the past several months. I had not maxed out since 2022 and had no idea what a heavy single would feel like. So I was extremely pleased to set a new PR this cycle. I pulled 575 lbs. with strength to spare - almost six plates.

I crapped out on my bench press attempt with 420 lbs. Then I lowered the weight to 410 lbs., but was too tired after straining against the 420. So no bench press PR this cycle. Based on how the partials were going, I wasn't really expecting one, but it's always nice to be hopeful. I might recalibrate to 410 for the next cycle and build up from there.

No PR on squats either. I hit a relatively solid single with 530 lbs., but 550 lbs. stapled me to the bars. Back squatting with straps is a good replacement for regular back squats, but I'm starting to wonder if a cambered squat bar wouldn't be a better solution for my shoulder issues. Or maybe I just need to forget about max singles in the squat. Or maybe I just need to stop being an idiot and get my shoulder looked at.

Seated military press 265 lbs. x 5, 290 lbs. x 1 (PR)

Squat with straps 530 lbs. x 3, 550 lbs. x fail

Front squat 390 lbs. x 1 (tied PR)

Bench press 340 lbs. x 5, 390 lbs. x 1, 420 lbs. x fail

Incline bench press 310 lbs. x 10, 335 lbs. x 1 

Deadlift 545 lbs. x 1, 575 lbs. x 1 (PR)

Bodyweight was a solid 220 lbs.

Thursday, January 4, 2024

End of 2023 Retrospective Post

2023 was the year of the bench press. To some extent, the year of the overhead press too.

After twerking desperately just under the 400-lb. BP mark for several years (375-390-385-395-380-etc.), I finally managed to crack it. 405-410-415 fell in quick succession. I don't know if I can ride this trend to even heavier lifts in 2024, but I'm definitely going to try.

In the seated overhead press, I saw a huge increase from an ugly 255 to a solid 285 lbs. I've never gone this heavy on any version of the overhead press. Hitting 300 lbs. would be nice (and way more than I ever dreamed of), but it's still a long ways away.

Blew through three plates on the incline press and maxed out at 335 lbs. A pretty solid improvement, which is probably due to finally getting consistent with incline work.

Partial presses have definitely helped. Some of the poundages I've handled on the short-range lifts are truly ridiculous (e.g. 500+ for flat bench press reps of 5-6), but I think the real benefit comes from mid-range work. Partial lifts still build a ton of strength across the entire range, and the judicious inclusion of stretch-position isometrics seems to have paid off.

One important takeaway was to reduce triceps exercise volume during my partial cycles. Basically do a few longer-duration isometrics, or nothing at all. Trying to maintain arm exercise volume led to some nasty triceps tendinitis which is only just starting to (hopefully) clear up. Overall, my training philosophy has been drifting away from volume and toward intensity, Stuart-McRobert-style. You simply can't do high volume once the weights get very heavy - at least not un-enhanced and well into your fifth decade of life.

Having my own home gym has also helped tremendously. I was always very consistent in working out, but now I've taken it to a whole other level. Not having to wait for equipment, or feeling like an asshole while doing partials in the rack, or just generally not being around douchebags - all massive improvements. I now have a bench, a rack, 600+ lbs. of weights, 2 x adjustable DBs that go up to 55 lbs., and a rudimentary pulley assembly. And bands. A shitload of bands of different resistance levels. More than I'll ever need.

Back squatting has become problematic due to the weird shoulder pain I've been experiencing. But back squatting (fairly heavy) with straps is still possible. Maybe I've reached my ceiling on back squats. I still have a ton of room for improvement on front squats, and I'd like to push the boundary a little further on deadlifts. Here's hoping my lower back holds up as I pursue this unnecessary and unreasonable, purely-ego-motivated goal.

My routine is fairly minimalist these days:

Monday - front squat, medium-light squat, some isolation exercises for quads and hamstrings

Tuesday - overhead press, some triceps work (or: partial OHP + partial close-grip BP)

Wednesday - back (pullups and rows) and biceps

Friday - heavy squat or heavy deadlift, shrugs, pulldowns

Saturday - bench press, incline press, triceps, biceps (or: partial BP and full-range incline press)

I'd prefer to reduce this to four training days per week, but am too lazy to do longer workouts.

A partials cycle lasts 4 weeks, and is followed up by 2-4 weeks of full-range (slightly higher-volume) training. No partial lifts are done for squats, front squats, or deadlifts.

Overall, it works very well and has helped me keep making gains at an age when common gym philosophy tells me to focus on maintaining, or to "lighten things up". I'm not delusional enough to think it will last forever, or even for much longer. But it's working right now.

To anyone still reading this nonsense, I wish a happy and productive (mostly injury-free) 2024.