Thursday, December 31, 2015

Banish Pain Permanently: Correct Your Alignment

After being in a wheelchair for almost a year, I realized my problem was a simple alignment issue. Once this was corrected, my pain was gone.

In the twelve years I have worked in the fitness industry, I have observed a lack of effectiveness in the techniques used by most athletes to combat chronic pain. Today I am on a mission to set some things straight with regard to what it takes to address pain issues effectively.

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Hip Flexion vs Spinal Flexion

In the deadlift, maintaining a rigid back is important both on the way up and when putting the bar down. Sometimes a brand new lifter will have difficulty understanding how to do this correctly because they haven’t ever needed to discern the difference between spinal flexion and hip flexion. Holding the back in rigid extension as the appendages move through full ranges of motion is key to pulling, squatting, and pressing heavy barbells. In this video, Rip corrects back flexion in a new lifter’s deadlift finish. Read more var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; In the deadlift, maintaining a rigid back is important both on the way up and when putting the bar down. Sometimes a brand new lifter will have difficulty understanding how to do this correctly because they haven’t ever needed to discern the difference between spinal flexion and hip flexion. Holding the back in rigid extension as the appendages move through full ranges of motion is key to pulling, squatting, and pressing heavy barbells. In this video, Rip corrects back flexion in a new lifter’s deadlift finish.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

The First Three Questions

by Mark Rippetoe “I get asked about this a lot: what do I do when I get stuck? Go to an intermediate program? I’d rather ask this question: Why are you stuck when you shouldn’t be? And then I always ask these 3 very important questions, in this order…” Read More var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; “I get asked about this a lot: what do I do when I get stuck? Go to an intermediate program? I’d rather ask this question: Why are you stuck when you shouldn’t be? And then I always ask these 3 very important questions, in this order…” By now, lots of people have done “the program,” and lots of people have gotten stuck – their progress has stalled at some point, having done what they thought was “the program” discussed in Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training and Practical Programming for Strength Training to the letter. Let’s examine the problem more closely, and find a way to keep this from happening.Strength is simply the production of force against an external resistance – in this case, the loaded barbell. If the load on the barbell you’re lifting increases over time, you’ve gotten stronger. The simple idea is that, for untrained people, strength accumulates rather quickly if you ask it to, and the stronger you get/the longer you’ve trained, the slower your strength increases. We force the process to occur by adding a little weight every time you train, until that stops working. At that point it becomes more complicated.But not until then. You just do the program and use every means at your disposal to keep from getting stuck. By “the program”, I mean the novice progression detailed in both books. For a young novice training 3 days a week, the squat and deadlift will increase a little each workout for a while – 5 pound jumps work well for several months. Sets of 5 reps have proven their value over decades of experimentation, to the extent that the experiment is over. Likewise, 3 sets of 5 have proven to work for everything except the deadlift, which gets only one set of 5. Press and bench press alternate, each increasing a little every time they’re trained, albeit with smaller increments – perhaps 1.5 to 2 pounds – because the limiting muscle groups are smaller and fewer in number. Shortly after you start, the power clean is introduced and alternates with the deadlift; it goes up a little every time too, 5 pounds at first and then slowing to resemble the press and bench press increments. Since the deadlift is always stronger than the squat at first, its head start keeps it ahead of the squat even though it gets trained half as often after the clean is introduced.By “stuck”, I mean that the trainee becomes incapable of making workout-to-workout increases in weight on the basic exercises. No program in the world works forever. A human obviously cannot add 5 pounds to his squat 3 times per week for 15 years. He can for several months, the number of which depends on his ability to correctly execute the spirit and the details of the program. It is better to remain unstuck and making slow progress than it is to have to figure out how to get unstuck.Most people have problems with the spirit and the details, and getting prematurely stuck is quite common. By “prematurely”, I mean within the first 3 months, surely, and probably the first 4 months, which can almost always be sustained by just paying attention. So I get asked about this a lot: what do I do when I get stuck? Go to an intermediate program?I’d rather ask this question: Why are you stuck when you shouldn’t be? And then I always ask these 3 very important questions, in this order.Question 1How long are you resting between sets? This is usually the reason a kid is stuck, because he’ll usually say, “Oh, at least 2 or 3 minutes.” Strength training is not conditioning, and if you do not recover from the fatigue induced by the previous set, then accumulating fatigue limits your ability to complete the sets and reps required by the program. In a novice program, fatigue is not a variable we wish to introduce, because force production is the adaptation we want, not conditioning.

3 Mind Hacks to Streamline Your Training

Whenever your training feels a bit wayward, these resets in your mindset will enable you to make more effective training decisions.
Charles is here on a weekly basis to help you cut through the B.S. and get some real perspective regarding health and training. Please post feedback or questions to Charles directly in the comments below this article.
I’m always considering new ideas to help me get the most from my training. This week, I thought I’d share a few of them with you. I hope these ideas stimulate your thinking, generate some discussion, and help you make the best possible decisions.

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I Am Ivan

Meet Ivan Garcia. The 26-year-old waiter and bouncer aspires to be a police officer, but one thing stands in his way: his weight.

The restaurant where Garcia works is located in Scotts Valley, California, near CrossFit Headquarters. When Garcia’s mother approached CrossFit HQ trainer Jenny Lau about training her son, Lau was ready to help Ivan reclaim his body.

“My shoulder hurt really bad, my knees hurt really bad, my back hurt really bad,” Garcia says. “Yeah, I felt strong, but day to day I was very weak.”

Lau faced challenges of her own.

“He just didn’t seem really into it,” she says. “And I was like, ‘Hey, this is optional. You either want to be here or you don’t want to be here.’”

When Garcia decided gastric-bypass surgery was the solution, Lau questioned him.

“If you’re putting 100 percent good food in your body 100 percent of the time and you’re in here giving me 100 percent effort, why aren’t you losing weight?” she asked.

“I figured I was doing CrossFit so I could keep eating junk food and choose bad habits,” Garcia admits.

Lau enlisted the help of friend and registered dietitian Logan Vanderpool, and the two asked Garcia to reconsider invasive surgery at his young age.

“I decided I wanted to eat clean, I wanted to be a healthier version of myself … . I didn’t want to do (the surgery) anymore,” Garcia says. “I wanted to do it on my own with the help of Jenny.”

At the time this video was filmed, Garcia had lost 102 lb.

Video by Jay Vera and Irvin Anfoso.

9min 59sec

Additional audio: “CrossFit Radio Episode 264” by Justin Judkins, published Feb. 25, 2013.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

How Effective Is Your Internship Curriculum?

Take the time to develop your internship curriculum and watch every aspect of your facility develop and grow.

Interns are not just extra workers who clean the facility and do the things you don’t want to do. One day, they could be your employees. You must create an educational experience they will value and grow from. Remember, this is an opportunity for you to grow as a business owner, trainer, and mentor.

coach teaching interns at CF box

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Starting Strength Podcast | Losing weight and getting strong with Leah Lutz

Leah Lutz joins us on the Starting Strength Podcast. Leah discusses the mental and physical challenge of becoming a competitive powerlifter in the USAPL while dropping over 100 lbs of bodyweight. Audio version: Starting Strength Podcast 15-12-29 Subscribe: RSS | iTunes var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true};

Monday, December 28, 2015

A Simple Cue to Immediately Improve Your Deadlift

A faster and more biomechanically efficient pull awaits.

What does your deadlift look like when it gets heavy? More than likely, your hips shoot up, your chest collapses forward, and you lose the maximal force you are trying to apply.

When the hips rise too fast, you lose the opportunity to move big weights. Regardless of your preference on starting hip height, a straight leg reduces the involvement of your glutes, hamstrings, quads, and adductors. The more you are able to use these significant muscle groups, the more chance you have of producing a higher strength output.

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SS Weekly Report December 28, 2015

The Starting Strength Weekly Report 2015-12-28: Topics from the Forums: “Are there any real physical therapists left? Now we have RedCord” and “Dr Strangestrength: Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love the Silly Bullshit” This week Under the Bar: Year’s End View report in browser View report archive var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; News Announcements Anna Marie Oakes-Joudy is this month’s winner of the Under the Bar prize drawing. Submit your images to enter this month’s Under the Bar prize contest. Articles Rip on Making Money, Getting Strong: Two Grown-up Responsibilities. Dr Austin Baraki reminds us to be skeptical with his article on Diagnosing Silly Bullshit. From the Archives: Shaun Jafarian shares his journey as he looks for a good gym in No Chalk Allowed! Podcast On Manliness with Brett McKay. Rip and Brett of Art of Manliness discuss discuss manliness through history, strength training for the modern male, and how Brett became an expert in The Art of Manliness. Videos In this week’s Training Log, Jayson Ball shows us how he progressively regained strength after a bout with Lyme disease. Conversations on Strength with Mark Rippetoe in this round up from the Art of Manliness – Society & Strength, GOMAD, Golfer’s elbow, Bumper plates. Under the Bar Chase Lindley power snatches at WFAC as he ramps up off-season training for football. At 17 years old, Chase continues to make linear progress on his lifts while he grows, finishing last year’s preseason training with a 420x5x3 squat, 455x5 deadlift, and 195x5 press. [photo courtesy of Nick Delgadillo] Clay Greathouse grinds out the last rep of his volume presses. Clay trains at WFAC and makes gains despite constant sabotage by his high school “strength coach”. Clay will play football at the University of Tulsa next year. [photo courtesy of Nick Delgadillo] Kristine N. hits a PR of 135x3x5 at Horn Strength & Conditioning in Los Angeles. [photo courtesy of Paul Horn] Click images to view slideshow. Submit your images to report@startingstrength.com Submission guidelines to enter this month’s Under the Bar prize drawing. Best of the Week Are there any real physical therapists left? Now we have RedCord. Doug90000 Working my way back from shattering my calcaneus and was given instructions by my doc for PT to help get as much movement back as possible. The place was your standard PT place, plastic dumbbells, pilates machines and a couple treadmills…then I notice this table in the back with all these red ropes hanging above it.It was excitedly explained to me that this is Red Cord and it was developed in Norway!! All I had to do to be evaluated was walk and maybe a couple one legged squats and then I could hop on the table to get suspended by this contraption and it will give me a deep muscle workout that would fix all my muscle imbalances. The only thing I know about Norway is that they love heroin there, and it probably snows a lot, which could lead to issues with critical thinking. In short, I left. I’m back on the Starting Strength program and my strength is growing by leaps and bounds, but still dealing with lack of mobility and joint pain. The question-How on earth do we find reputable PTs anymore? I’m in the greater Los Angeles area if someone can give me a referral. Mark Rippetoe Has there ever been an abundance of “real” Physical Therapists? I certainly don’t remember hordes of them. But this is a brilliant new way for the clinic to make money after the patient runs out of insurance. Standard TRX-type bullshit. jeb455 I am an “insurance defense” lawyer. This means I represent people who get sued in personal injury cases. I am awash in PT records on a regular basis. I am convinced that one of the major reasons the PT industry is what it is – i.e., filled with garbage “exercises” – is that many, many, many people who get PT are fat, lazy, and not interested in any kind of difficult work to actually get strong. I know athletes get PT too, after an injury or whatnot. I’m fairly certain, however, that if someone did a study listing age and body-weight of every person who receives services from a PT in the United States in a given year – the results would show “middle age” to elderly, and overweight to morbidly obese as the majority of patients. Would someone like this benefit from a program like Starting Strength? Of course. But if they don’t want to do it, they aren’t going to do it, and they will flock to providers who provide nonsense and sell it as being effective at, e.g., “return range of motion to normal levels,” etc. Also, PT is firmly established in the treatment plans of virtually every orthopedic surgeon, and internist, who treat people for any kind musculoskeletal issue. A lot of PI lawyers will send their clients to chiropractors. The reasons are varied. But lack of insurance and the willingness of some chiropractors to enable malingering are the most prevalent. Virtually no MD – and I’ve deposed over 100 in my 9.5 yr career – will say that a chiropractor is better than PT. In many instances, however – assuming an ethical practitioner – a chiropractor is a much better, and cheaper, option than going through 6 weeks of physical therapy. If you live in LA, I guarantee you can find a good chiropractor. You should only hire a chiropractor who is in shape. I’m not suggesting s/he needs a “six pack” – but you should pick someone who lifts weights on a regular basis. You could probably get a referral from Cross Fit “box.” You should try to find someone that works with people who work out with weights—as opposed to someone who just runs a litigation mill. These people exist in decent numbers – especially in an area like LA. AEsg81 I work as a physical therapist assistant at the Ohio State University, a local hospital, and have worked in nursing homes and home health. I do get frustrated at my profession and people bashing it. How a job that originally was about helping those with war injuries, polio, cerebral palsy, and other life debilitating afflictions has made its way into strength and conditioning/fitness is upsetting. I feel it has a lot to do with the decline of physical education in this country. Now we are stuck with a situation where those who are in rehabilitation are teaching fitness/strength and setting standards. This should have never come to be. I know Rip and the other SS coaches are doing their best to reverse this. Don’t even acknowledge that convoluted contraption. There are incompetent people in every profession and sadly the world of rehab has many charlatans. This is not to throw them all into the same group. There are some good ones and if it’s a chiro or PT there are people who can help. It does seem those who are skilled at ART can make legit structural changes that can get your ankle moving but you have to do your research. I do want to set the expectation to those visiting this site and those in physical therapy. If you have general aches and pains or want to be strong DON’T GO TO A PT. Just get stronger through full range of motion and things will be good. If you have true structural deformity or neurological disease then maybe PT can help. Best of the Forum Dr Strangestrength:Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love the Silly Bullshit. Hawkpeter Many people on this board are survivors of the realm of silly bullshit and sometimes looking back it is therapeutic to understand why. It has always been troubling to me, and I am not alone, that so many apparently very smart people believe in so much unproven quackery. Judges, Doctors and Physicists who read horoscopes, believe in UFO abductions, holocaust denial and invest time and money in psychic phenomena. The reason seems to be that smart people believe in weird things is because they are very good at defending dumb ideas they arrive at for non-smart reasons. For social, cultural and emotional reasons they surrender to one pseudoscience after another and go on to defend it. When someone finds out that the S & C coach of his favorite team is having them all do one leg balancing tricks, blind folded with a chop stick in between their toes and a spinning porcelain plates on the chopstick, it does help, I find, to think that; yes, he is a pretty smart guy, smarter than me probably, but he got caught up with this ridiculous BS because of a self perpetuating con job by marketeers and pseudoscience and instead of critical analysis he’s using his intelligence to defend it. Rip, do you think that this goes part of the way to explain why those who are objectively very intelligent, end up surrendering to fanciful concepts like “core fitness training”, Nautilus, Rubber-band-everything (fill the rest in for yourself)? I think its very important that everyone understand how very smart people can be so utterly and breathtakingly wrong on strength. Mark Rippetoe This is really two questions: why do they not choose an appropriate level of training progression for their athletes based on an evaluation of their previous training history, and why instead to they so easily go with the current flow of convention? They don’t know any better. Most of them, the vast majority, have never worked with a broad enough population demographic to realize the nature of long-term training adaptation. They work with athletic populations who are naturally talented and strong, and anything they do gets interpreted as effective. And they use programming that is irrespective of novice/intermediate/advanced levels of adaptation because they have no experience with the differences, not because they are not present in their teams, but because they are unaware of their existence. They use the latest training fads because they get paid to appear “cutting-edge” in their training, there is a lot of peer pressure to do so, and they want to advance their careers among a group of people who regard this type of shit as the professional norm.

Drunk on Sugar?

Study results suggest guzzling a beer after a workout might actually be more productive than chugging a sugar-laced sports drink.

I just finished Grace, and I’m old, tired, sweaty and thirsty. What should I drink when I separate myself from this sweat angel? The media and academic exercise organizations favor Gatorade or some other sports drink to help people rehydrate and recover after exercise, and we are led to believe a body of sports science says high-fructose-laden drinks with some salt are optimal for those purposes. But are sports drinks really optimal or is the belief based on exceptional marketing?

Well, we know water is best for rehydration—adding carbohydrate and salts can reduce water uptake in the gut—and there is your answer. But is there something that rehydrates as well as water but tastes good and doesn’t contain mainly sugar water and salt?

There might be good news: A new study by David Jiménez-Pavón and company indicates beer can be an effective rehydration fluid. But beer is a mild diuretic and central-nervous-system depressant. It can’t be a recovery drink—or perhaps it’s actually more effective than sports drinks loaded with sugar.

So am I recommending everyone start keeping a six in their gym bag for easy access post-workout? No. But by detailing the superiority of a real but likely untenable alternative, it should be obvious that sports drinks are not the high-tech answer for rehydration and performance.

Sunday, December 27, 2015

5 of the Very Best: This Month's Top Articles, December

These pieces have caught your attention throughout the month of December. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Welcome to a special monthly edition of our roundup, Five of the Very Best! Today, we're posting up Breaking Muscle's top five articles of the month. These pieces have caught your attention throughout December. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Ben Smith Snatch Catch

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Nick’s Zone: Fajita Pie

In this video, Nick Massie of PaleoNick.com takes a brief break from rowing to share his recipe for fajita pie. Unfamiliar with fajita pie? Just think shepherd’s pie with a twist.

Massie’s fajita pie—made up of a special blend of meat and spices and a layer of caramelized sweet-potato mash—brings together the simplicity of Midwestern comfort food and the vibrant flavors of the Southwest. Seasonings, three different types of peppers and fresh garlic really “bring it to life,” he says.

Start by preheating the oven and getting the water ready to boil the potatoes. Once you’ve sautéed the spices, peppers and garlic and browned the ground turkey, you’ll be ready to drain and mash the sweets. Then it’s time to assemble the casserole.

Spread the turkey in the bottom of a casserole pan, smooth the mash over the top, bake or freeze and voilà—a delicious meal in the Zone!

To download the recipe for fajita pie, click here.

Video by Nick Massie.

6min 39sec

Additional reading: “Zone Meal Plans” by Greg Glassman, published June 23, 2015.

Saturday, December 26, 2015

2015 Working Wounded Games

The 2015 Working Wounded Games were held Nov. 7-8 at CrossFit Lorton in Lorton, Virginia. An annual fitness competition, the event brings together wounded veterans, permanently injured people and adaptive athletes. This year, 63 competitors from the U.S., Canada, Chile and Brazil came to CrossFit Lorton to test their mettle.

Amanda Kloo, an athlete from CrossFit 77, has cerebral palsy and competed for the first time this year.

“I started all this because I wanted to learn to walk barefoot in the sand for my kids,” she says. “This is miles beyond that.”

When asked if facing new challenges in the competition is sometimes discouraging, Kloo displays the attitude that characterizes athletes who refuse to accept limitations.

“It is—but it’s also super motivating.”

“We all come from the same place,” says David “Chef” Wallach, founder of CrossFit Rubicon and creator of the Working Wounded Games. “Our configuration, how we were born, if we were injured—they affect who we become, but they don’t predetermine success or failure.”

Video by Mike Koslap.

5min 54sec

Additional reading: “Warriors on the Waves” by Andréa Maria Cecil, Dave Re and Naveen Hattis, published April 19, 2014.

Friday, December 25, 2015

From the Archives: No Chalk Allowed!

Touring a few American Fitness Chains in Search of a Strength Training Gym by Shaun N Jafarian “Recently I’ve faced the challenge of finding a gym suitable for working toward my strength goals after spending over a year as a member of the Wichita Falls Athletic Club. To say my perspective on what constitutes a “gym,” particularly in regards to strength training, had been transformed by my time in Wichita Falls would be a gross understatement… “ Read More var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true};

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Carbo-Load of Crap

T.J. Murphy explains how he ditched his traditional running diet, lost weight, didn’t bonk and felt better.

On Aug. 9 The New York Times published “Coca-Cola Funds Scientists Who Shift Blame for Obesity Away from Bad Diets.” The report focused on Coca-Cola’s financial support of a group of scientists pledging to fight the obesity crisis by calling for more exercise rather than intake of fewer calories.

The article created a backlash that set Coca-Cola in full retreat, and chairman and CEO Muhtar Kent wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece that stated the company would be more transparent about its funding of research. Kent’s piece created an additional wave of criticism.

Dr. Tim Noakes, best known in some circles for his research on hydration, is one of those who has in recent years publicly reversed his position and openly attacked soft-drink companies for their support of high-carbohydrate diets. In a January 2015 Primal Blueprint podcast, Noakes blamed high-carb diets for race fields crowded with “fat runners.”

“We have a half-marathon in Cape Town, and we did a study on the field. We found that 30 percent of the runners in the field were insulin resistant and obese,” Noakes said.

In a November 2014 Australian Broadcast Corporation interview, Noakes talked about his role in the overconsumption of sugar.

“I spent 33 years of my life telling athletes that they must carbohydrate load ... . And I was the first in the world to produce these GUs that people lived their races on. ... I apologize because that was completely wrong,” he said.

“GUs” are small packages of semi-solid energy paste, some with caffeine, that an endurance athlete can consume for an approximately 100-calorie infusion of carbohydrate. Noakes was referring specifically to Leppin FRN Squeezies, which he helped develop in the early 1980s. “FRN” was an initialism representing the inventors: F for Bruce Fordyce and R for Bernard Rose.

The N stood for Noakes.

Regaining Strength after Lyme Disease

What does a Starting Strength Linear Progression look like? If you have read the book, you know that small increases in weight for sets of five are the engine of the program. This slow, gradual, and effective increase in weight on the bar and the lifter may be a bore to watch on a day-to-day basis, but when these small jumps in load play out over months, their effects become apparent. Here, an initial 10 weeks of progress have been condensed into 2 minutes of video… Read More var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; by Jayson Ball What does a Starting Strength Linear Progression look like? If you have read the book, you know that small increases in weight for sets of five are the engine of the program. This slow, gradual, and effective increase in weight on the bar and the lifter may be a bore to watch on a day-to-day basis, but when these small jumps in load play out over months, their effects become apparent. Here, an initial 10 weeks of progress have been condensed into 2 minutes of video. This video takes place after a training setback from Lyme disease, a particularly nasty bacterial infection. When I got sick I was in the middle of my linear progression following an 8-month gymnastic training cycle, which required a finite cap on lower body mass. Thanks to the wonders of modern medicine, after weeks of weight loss, fever, and joint inflammation, I felt good enough to lift 7 days into the standard antibiotic regimen. I also felt much weaker, and would need a significant reset of my training. A linear progressive program was the right choice under these circumstances. Though I had completed my linear phase before, all adaptations are ephemeral. I was sufficiently de-trained to be amenable, once again, to novice rate of progression. In effect, my body had been dropped down along the sliding parabola of my genetic envelope. As a renewed novice, I approached my first day back under the bar as any other novice trainee would; by warming up to a challenging weight and performing three sets of five reps, adding weight in 5-10# increments every 48-72 hours. I kept a caloric surplus (around 5000 calories per day), and got lots of sleep (8-10 hours per night). In this period, my squat went from 200# to 315# and my body weight from 171# to 188#. My goal is to hit a 350# squat and 200# of body weight, both lifetime PRs.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

The Sweet Spot: Balance Variety With Routine

If you always do everything, you will often hit plateaus. The trick is to regulate your variation with phases.
Charles is here on a weekly basis to help you cut through the B.S. and get some real perspective regarding health and training. Please post feedback or questions to Charles directly in the comments below this article.

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Diagnosing Silly Bullshit

by Austin Baraki, MD, SSC “A charismatic speaker who can draw in your attention and trust…Prolific and confident use of highly technical, “pseudo-profound” jargon…All of this topped with a fine garnish of vaguely familiar-sounding buzzwords.” Read More var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; “Bullshit is everywhere.” – George Carlin It’s true. Bullshit really is everywhere, whether you realize it or not, and people have been working out new ways to pass it off since the beginning of time. Politicians, businessmen, academics, lawyers, artists, mechanics, salespeople, journalists, marketers, and pretty much every other occupation has its own unique flavor of bullshit to offer. Consider, for example, all the things you routinely “filter out” when going about your day. You might hear a story on the news about the latest political scandal, see a commercial advertisement for a new magical fat-burning supplement, or quickly scan across the tabloid magazine headlines at the grocery store checkout line. You’ll smirk, scoff, or roll your eyes and think to yourself, “What a load of bullshit.” You probably don’t even notice how frequently this happens, because it’s a learned behavior that develops over time with accumulated experience. That said, age alone obviously does not guarantee a highly sensitive bullshit detector - it also requires vigilance, analytical thinking, and skepticism, because Bullshitology is a constantly evolving field. Today, I’m here to help fine-tune your personal bullshit detector specifically in the context of the Fitness industry, where the prevalence of Silly Bullshit is reaching epidemic proportions because of just how much money is at stake.I don’t claim to be an expert bullshitologist myself, and I know I’ve fallen for my own fair share. But I’ve always learned from it, and my tendency to think critically, logically, and scientifically whenever possible has helped open my eyes to the veritable cornucopia of bullshit the world has to offer. Some of the most prolific bullshitters tend to come from “alternative medicine” fields like naturopathy, chiropractic, and acupuncture, but equally impressive feats of bullshittery have been known to come from physical therapists, massage therapists, nutritionists, athletic trainers, “functional fitness” gurus, and yes, I’ll admit it, sometimes even physicians (see: Deepak Chopra & Dr. Oz). Since I can already sense some readers bristling at the implications here, allow me to explain. Note that I’m not arguing that these fields have absolutely no merit at all (that topic would involve a whole article series itself); today I’m simply arguing against the way they’re “sold” to us. Let’s start by examining how these folks craft steaming piles of bullshit that you’ll be tempted to happily accept, and then we’ll discuss what to do about it.The most common strategy that I’ll focus on today has a few basic components: A charismatic speaker who can draw in your attention and trust, Prolific and confident use of highly technical, “pseudo-profound” jargon, All of this topped with a fine garnish of vaguely familiar-sounding buzzwords. And when you think about it, these three components classically make up the standard arsenal in most sales or service-related fields. Recall the way a mechanic describes all the complicated-sounding components of your car that you thought were working just fine, but definitely need service for a number of vaguely plausible reasons. Or how about the salesman listing all the impressive-sounding, high-tech features of the new car, computer, gadget, appliance, or Turbo Encabulator that you never knew you needed? They’ll find ways to babble endlessly while actually saying very little of substance. Many practitioners in the list of fields I described above use the same strategy, and it’s critically important to recognize it before you get swindled. Of course, the “buzzword” repertoire will vary depending on the Bullshitter’s specific field of expertise, but the overall effect is to “anchor” the listener’s confidence. So let’s sharpen your senses by learning a few classic buzzwords (all of which I’ve listed in bold) that should serve as screening tools for Fitness Bullshitters out in the wild.Fitness Buzzwords: A Primer”Activation” and “Firing” of specific muscles, most commonly the Gluteus maximus, Spinal erectors, or Latissimus dorsi, which people believe can have “amnesia,” become “sleepy,” or otherwise “not fire” during basic movements. This then necessitates specialized “activation work” done regularly to “remind” them how to perform their anatomical function, and to ensure that you consciously contract each muscle in the “proper sequence” during complex movements. Of course, there’s no evidence supporting that any of this “not firing” actually occurs in the absence of neurological injury (e.g. nerve transection or other neuropathy, stroke, or spinal cord injury), muscle infarction, rare myopathies and metabolic disorders, or general anesthesia (i.e., pharmacologic paralysis). (As for “activation work”: there is some mixed evidence behind the idea of “post-activation potentiation” as it relates to subsequent muscular performance, but not as a “corrective” exercise. These movements can also be used as part of a warmup or to cue a desired effect. However, in the setting of effective coaching these are typically unnecessary and waste valuable training time, especially when recommended on a regular basis.)» Bottom line: These are bullshit diagnoses, so watch out for people throwing these words around. If you are able to stand up from a chair or walk up a flight of stairs without lurching or falling, your glutes are “activating”, and any failure to properly utilize them in a squat likely represents a failure of your coach, not of your neuromuscular system.”Fascia,” the tough sheets of connective tissue in and around your muscles and organs that are often claimed to have far-reaching physiologic functions, affecting so many bodily systems that they must be the root cause of all of your problems. Detailing all of this bullshit will require its own article in the future; for now, suffice to say that none of this has ever been demonstrated to be remotely true. Practitioners often inexplicably (and inconsistently) diagnose fascial “distortions,” “restrictions,” or “adhesions” (more buzzwords) that have no reliable, objective clinical findings, and probably have no basis in reality either. These problems, of course, are causing whatever symptom you’re complaining of (or aren’t complaining of), and therefore need to be “released” using manual/massage therapy or other “soft tissue work”. Now, I won’t deny that getting a massage or other such modalities makes us transiently feel better - although this could easily be placebo effect as suggested by comparisons with “sham” treatment, and by the “central model” of fatigue. I’m arguing against the preposterous evidence-free theorizing that these “specialists” confidently use to sell you on their treatments. » Bottom line: Watch out for people who talk about your fascia. There is no reliable evidence supporting these bizarre claims about 1) the physiologic significance of fascia beyond its structural function, 2) that any of these supposed pathologies actually occur and have clinical manifestations, or 3) that manual/massage therapy can meaningfully affect fascial tissue structure at all.”Functional,” a classically meaningless word that is used to justify a lack of strength. You’ll hear the description of “functional strength” as some nebulous variety of strength that is somehow more useful than the “brute strength” derived from squats, presses, and pulls. Somehow the strength represented by a 700 lb deadlift becomes useless in any other context, but the ability to perform an overhead pistol squat with 65 lbs is truly “functional” (...for what task, exactly?). These “functional movements” are often complex and attempt to integrate as many “domains of fitness” as possible into a few movements, diluting the overall stimulus and therefore diluting any resultant adaptations.» Bottom line: There is no such thing as “functional strength.” Strength is the ability to produce force against an external resistance, and producing more force is more “functional” compared producing less force. Period. {pagebreak} ”Core Strength / Stability,” an obsession since the explosion of the fitness industry, specifically describing the function of the trunk musculature. Yes, it is a real thing, and it is important in bracing the torso to allow for safe, efficient force transmission. This bracing occurs mainly by the relevant muscles contracting (i.e. producing force) to hold a rigid torso. Many practitioners will confidently diagnose a “weak core” based on a number of nonspecific symptoms and silly, unreliable clinical tests (1). This is often a “cop-out” diagnosis unsupported by objective and reliable clinical findings, so you should be suspicious of anyone who definitively diagnoses this as your problem. They might then prescribe dedicated “core strengthening exercises,” typically consisting of bodyweight calisthenic-type movements (e.g. yoga, pilates, etc.) or silly exercises on unstable surfaces that are often not linearly scalable or trainable, and are not an ideal use of most people’s training time. Even if you do have a “weak core,” just increasing the time spent in a particular position beyond a certain point fails to demand further increases in force production, and therefore is limited in its ability to keep getting you stronger. » Bottom line: Save your time by training your squats, presses, and deadlifts with appropriate weights that require your core musculature to exert the amount of force necessary to hold a rigid torso, then incrementally increase these weights (and therefore the force demands) over time. This results in objective, quantifiable increases in the strength of your “core” muscles as well as many others that yoga stretches simply can’t provide.”Mobility” is perhaps the biggest fad term of the past 10 years and still doesn’t even have a particularly clear or established definition, especially when compared to the term flexibility. It seems to represent having uninhibited range of motion about a joint, particularly when under load (though I’m sure there are hundreds of even more ridiculous definitions out there). I like to poke fun by calling it “Functional Stretching!” But people now seem to think that everyone should routinely “do mobility work” all the time as “self-maintenance,” regardless of symptoms or of actual needs based on a particular sport or activity. Some of these folks spend hours each week “mobilizing” themselves using a whole gym bag full of balls, bands, rollers, and other self-torture devices instead of actually getting strong. Furthermore, lots of practitioners will prescribe “mobility work” as another catch-all treatment for whatever ails you, similar to the “fascia” crowd or the “core” people (seeing a pattern here?). Back pain? You obviously need more thoracic mobility. Shoulder pain? Probably need more shoulder mobility, bro. Hip pain? Gotta open up those hip capsules, man. Look folks, this is not how things work. Pain is way more complicated than this, and much of the time it doesn’t even correlate with structural abnormalities (more on this in the future)! I can’t deny that an early morning stretch feels nice after waking up, and you’re welcome to stretch to your heart’s content if it makes you happy (although it’s not helping you warm up, produce more force, prevent injuries, soreness, or recover any faster (2-4)), but this obsession with getting “Supple” is downright delusional. » Bottom Line: Are you able to correctly hit the positions required in your training? Then you have adequate mobility. Are you unable to correctly hit the positions required in your training, despite competent coaching? Then you might need some “mobility work,” to be determined on an individual basis.”Flossing” basically involves wrapping a rubber band around a muscle or joint, but apparently there are now ways you can “floss” your nerves too [citation desperately needed]! This is one of my absolute favorite buzzword terms because it has perplexed me since the very first time I heard it, and I’m still not exactly sure just what the hell it means. Of course, I’ve seen countless impressively confident explanations of what it does and how it works, so I’ll let a few internet pseudo-experts babble for themselves (I’ve bolded the parts representing completely made-up, Grade A Gobbledygook): [Flossing] “helps break up intramuscular junk to allow for greater mobility and blood supply to an area. By squeezing the muscle in a tight wrap, then forcing it through a full range of motion (ROM), friction between muscle fibers helps break up fuzz, scar tissue, lactic acid and other junk in those tiny places that foam rolling and lacrosse ball techniques can’t address.” “Flossing allows you to move into the position that is restricted and encourage it to open up, receive more blood-flow, and break down lines of tension in those movements through performing the problem-actions while being compressed at the joint. It can restore sliding-surface function to the underlying matted-down tissues, resolve joint pain, and improve muscle contraction incredibly.” “With voodoo flossing the compression forces tissue adhessions [sic] to forcefully slide against each other with minimal tissue displacement. This forced glide not only resolves myofascial dysfunction due to aberrant tissue formation, but also indirectly (or very directly depending of the therapist’s intent) acts as an effective neurodynamic tensioner technique. The increase of ROM is not only driven by inhibition of tonus, but also by increased neural drive. Functional movement assessments and HEP are key to maintaining changes.” Really? Can anyone really know if that’s how all this stuff actually works? Not a single word of any of these claims is in any way supported to the extent suggested by the speakers’ confidence in their claims and pseudo-technical jargon. It is abundantly clear that these folks have absolutely no idea how the neuromuscular or circulatory systems actually work, but they sure sound like experts! Take note here that I’m not even suggesting that “flossing” is completely ineffective (although there’s probably a degree of placebo at play). Rather, I’m arguing that we have absolutely no clue whether or how it might work. But you’d never be able to guess that from this bullshit, which is far more likely to part you from your money than saying “...Eh, it might do something…? We dunno.” » Bottom Line: Carefully evaluate the claims of anyone telling you to floss anything other than your teeth.Any specifically named, usually smaller muscle (e.g. Quadratus lumborum, Psoas, Piriformis, Transversus abdominis, Gluteus medius, etc.), usually representing the “pet muscle” of a particular therapist or guru. They’ll always find a way to diagnose some vague “dysfunction,” “tightness,” “weakness,” or “imbalance” (more fun buzzwords) of their pet muscle in just about every person who walks in the door, because it’s been criminally underappreciated by the “mainstream” (thereby contrasting themselves as more “educated” and “holistic”). And of course, since they’re the self-proclaimed guru for that particular muscle, who else should be the one to waste your next six months of time with corrective exercise “progressions” and “mobility work”? » Bottom line: Perhaps instead of focusing on “activating” one tiny muscle with corrective exercises or obsessing over your Psoas, all you need is a coach who actually knows how to get you to lift symmetrically, how to valsalva effectively, or how to set your back properly in the context of the lift itself. You know, coaching. Radical idea, isn’t it?This is fun, isn’t it? I could go on with other abused buzzwords like “Torque,” “CNS,” “Dysfunction,” “Hip Hinge,” “Centration,” “Dynamic,” “Alignment,” “Dyskinesia,” “Maltracking,” and so forth, but perhaps I’ll save them up for a future piece. For now it’s time to move on. It should be noted that these buzzwords do have perfectly legitimate uses in the English language, so they don’t automatically imply that they’re swimming in a context of bullshit. Instead, they just grab my attention and make me think extra carefully about the words that follow, particularly when used in the contexts I described.{pagebreak}How it worksOnce the fitness guru or therapist has captured your interest with some familiar buzzwords, they’ll veer off into uncharted territory full of wild, unsupported theories that, to a layperson, sound just plausible enough to be true - in part because of how confidently they’re delivered.They speak with such certainty that you can’t help but nod your head in a mesmerized daze, and they’re often able to speak this confidently because they don’t actually realize how much they don’t know. (This relates to why certain professions are more prone to this phenomenon than others). They’ll fixate on the anchoring buzzword of choice, then transition into an eloquent explanation of why you’re obviously broken, why the “mainstream” fails to recognize this problem, and why you therefore need their unique expertise to get fixed. They prey on the types of people who need to find something wrong with themselves, and who are easily convinced by these fanciful explanations.Suddenly, your pain is obviously explained by vertebral “subluxations” (which don’t actually occur) requiring lifelong chiropractic adjustments, or by interruptions in your “qi life force” requiring acupuncture needling along specific “meridians” (which don’t actually exist) (5-7). Or, if you visit a different practitioner, your problems are diagnosed as “mobility restrictions,” “soft tissue dysfunction” or “fascial distortions” that need to be worked out with regular corrective exercise, manual therapy, or daily flossing. Whoops, looks like I accidentally let loose some of my opinions about those fields there. Sorry! (I’m not sorry.) One of my biggest problems here is that, because there is no objective evidence for these supposed pathologies, there is essentially zero inter-rater reliability among bullshitters. What I mean by this is that if you take the same exact complaint to a handful of different bullshitters, each one could potentially give you a different diagnosis (likely one that falls within their field of “expertise”) requiring their services to treat. That’s the luxury of being able to completely make shit up. This is analogous to going to the Emergency Department complaining of chest pain and, purely depending on who you happen to see, having a Cardiologist diagnose you with a heart attack, a Pulmonologist diagnose you with a collapsed lung, a Gastroenterologist diagnose you with acid reflux, or an Orthopedist diagnose you with a Rib fracture. See the problem here?On SkepticismSo now that we’ve seen some examples of how Silly Bullshit works, how do we deal with it? Analytical thinking and maintaining a healthy basal level of skepticism are quite valuable when coming face-to-face with a real bullshitter out in the wild. A decent definition of skepticism is “any questioning attitude towards unempirical knowledge or opinions/beliefs stated as facts, or doubt regarding claims that are taken for granted elsewhere” (8). The first part makes intuitive sense: if someone claims a belief as absolute fact, it should definitely smell a little funny to you, and you should ask some probing questions to dig a little deeper. Next, claims that are simply taken for granted without convincing reasoning or evidence tend to have that same familiar odor and also deserve questioning. At this point you’re almost guaranteed to hear the phrase “Yeah, well you don’t have any evidence that this doesn’t work!” Always remember that the burden of proof lies on the person making the claim, and until that occurs, it always pays to stick with the “Null Hypothesis.”Now, I’d take the above definition a step further and suggest that there is room for skepticism in the realm of “empirical” knowledge too (i.e., that which can be observed or experienced). Our senses are far from infallible, and we’ve all had instances where our senses deceived us, or where we “saw” what we wanted to see and brushed off any conflicting observations. This latter phenomenon is known as confirmation bias, and it leaves just enough room for an expert bullshitter to get his foot in the door. In addition, research studies often claim to provide “empirical data” on a topic. These are prime targets for bullshitters with an agenda. The internet has millions of comment threads full of “PubMed wars,” where people do battle using links to research Abstracts that fit their preconceived notions and conclusions. Folks, just because it’s “science” doesn’t mean it’s not a hot, moist, steaming pile of bullshit. Study methods, data gathering, and analysis are all heavily prone to bias, manipulation, and misinterpretation. There is an entire industry of “predatory journals” out there that will literally publish anything as long as you pay them their damn publication fee. So we must remain skeptical when it comes to scientific literature too; always consider the source and examine the validity of what the researchers actually did. And if you’re not qualified or comfortable making these assessments, find people who are. In short, to effectively sift through the bullshit one must take an approach best described by our own Dr. Sullivan, who said of one particular study “Right off the bat, I’m skeptical of this study. Why? Because I like its conclusion.”The approach to a suspected BullshitterMy preferred approach when dealing with a potential Bullshitter involves deliberately and systematically stripping away all the bullshit. Repeatedly ask “Why?” and “How?” Force them to define their terms clearly and to speak in simple English rather than in ambiguous, pseudo-profound run-on sentences. Break down the argument slowly, or physically transcribe it into its component pieces (particularly if the suspected Bullshitter is a fast talker). Then, you’ll find that one of two things happens. Either you catch them and expose their bullshit (at which point many of these folks might stubbornly double down, use logical fallacies and ad hominem attacks, accuse you of being “closed minded,” “brainwashed by the mainstream,” or some other such attempt at evading the question), OR you eventually dig down to a foundation where you can agree, then work your way back up through the argument piece by piece using clear language and logical reasoning. The former situation is obviously the more common with Silly Bullshitters, whereas the latter is more common with folks who actually know what they’re talking about, but have difficulty communicating it clearly the first time around. This latter situation is actually a “false positive” that smells a little like bullshit, until you work through it more methodically.So today we’ve laid a solid foundation on how to screen for, identify, and deal with Silly Bullshit and those who espouse it. Starting with this article, we will begin running more regular pieces on StartingStrength.com that will examine and debunk specific real-world examples using the ideas we’ve laid out today, so look out for those coming up soon. You’ll find these concepts will come in handy in every area of life, so stay vigilant, stay skeptical, and always keep the switch of your Bullshit detector firmly in the “on” position. It’ll end up saving you time, money, and frustration for the rest of your life. Austin Baraki, M.D., Starting Strength Coach is a resident physician in Internal Medicine at the UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, Texas. He received his doctorate in Medicine from Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk, Virginia and his B.S. in Chemistry from The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. He became interested in strength training after completing a 15-year competitive swimming career through the Division I collegiate level, and is now a competitive powerlifter and strength coach for clients of all ages. As of 2015 he had achieved personal best lifts of a 530 lb squat, a 405 lb bench press, a 600 lb deadlift, and a 1505-lb raw competition total at a bodyweight of 192 lbs. He can be reached directly by email at DrAustin@barbellmedicine.com.References(1) Weir A, Darby J, Inklaar H, Koes B, Bakker E, Tol JL. Core stability: inter- and intraobserver reliability of 6 clinical tests.(2) Kay AD, Blazevich AJ. Effect of Acute Static Stretch on Maximal Muscle Performance: A Systematic Review. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2011 Jun 8.(3) Herbert RD, de Noronha M, Kamper SJ. Stretching to prevent or reduce muscle soreness after exercise. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011;(7):CD004577.(4) Hart L. Effect of stretching on sport injury risk: a review. Clin J Sport Med. 2005 Mar;15(2):113-113.(5) Ernst E. Chiropractic: a critical evaluation. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2008 May;35(5):544-62.(6) Madsen MV, Gotzsche PC, Hrobjartsson A. Acupuncture treatment for pain: systematic review of randomised clinical trials with acupuncture, placebo acupuncture, and no acupuncture groups. BMJ. 2009;338:a3115.(7) Ernst E, Lee MS, Choi TY. Acupuncture: Does it alleviate pain and are there serious risks? A review of reviews. Pain. 2011 Apr;152(4):755-64.(8) Skepticism. (2015, November 17). Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Starting Strength Podcast | Manliness with Brett McKay

Rippetoe talks with Brett McKay from The Art of Manliness. Rip and Brett discuss manliness through history, strength training for the modern male, and how Brett became an expert in The Art of Manliness. Audio version: Starting Strength Podcast 15-12-22 Subscribe: RSS | iTunes var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true};

Scoping out Your Practice

Personal trainers are encouraged to define and take ownership of their profession.

In the fitness industry, scopes of practice appear to overlap and create identity crises. How does a personal trainer’s practice differ from that of a fitness trainer, an exercise instructor or any other practitioner in the realm of exercise and fitness? Does each of group of practitioners have an associated scope of practice describing the duties and limits of the work associated with that group?

The term “scope of practice” describes the procedures, actions and processes that a worker within a particular occupation is normally permitted to undertake. It is also a legal term that largely refers to occupations that require government-issued licenses in order to work within the field; for example, a physician’s scope of practice allows prescription of drugs but a nurse’s scope of practice does not.

As personal training is not a government-regulated occupation, it is up to its certifying organizations, not legislative bodies, to establish and adopt scope-of-practice statements for their credentialed members. If an organization is truly the authority and represents the occupational rank and file, it will have a well-considered, applicable and accessible scope-of-practice statement. Failure to have such a statement invites confusion and lack of occupational identity, and it increases the risk of legal exposure to members, who have no guidelines on the limits of their occupational activities.

A No-Fuss, Versatile Frittata Recipe

Quick, nutritious, one-pan recipes are key for any athlete when cooking. This classic Italian dish meets all three criteria.

Eggs are one of the healthiest proteins on the planet. They are easy to make and super portable when cooked. If you are an athlete following a paleo lifestyle, eggs are probably a huge part of your diet. It’s not uncommon for paleo athletes to average three dozen eggs per week per household of two adults.

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Monday, December 21, 2015

A Day With the Seminar Staff in China

The first CrossFit Level 1 seminars in China took place in June 2014 in Shanghai. Since then, CrossFit has exploded in the country, with the most recent seminars held in the capital city of Beijing. Watch as Seminar Staff members Stacey Harris, Leah Polaski and Kevin Lim teach CrossFit in a nation with about 50 affiliates.

Polaski says she does a lot of seminars outside the United States, so she’s prepared to skirt the language barrier by foregoing the verbal cues most trainers commonly use.

“We revert a lot to visual (cues) … and showing the difference between what they are doing and what I would like to see,” Polaski says.

Working with a translator, the staff delivers successful seminars and furthers the reach of CrossFit in China, a country with more than 1.3 billion inhabitants.

“To be at the forefront of CrossFit in a new country … , it means a lot to me to be a part of that process,” Harris says.

Lim echoes Harris’ sentiment.

“This is a dream job,” he says. “To be able to impact lives weekend after weekend at this level, where we share our passion, no filter, uncovered, unedited … that’s how we dominate the world, baby.”

Video by Michael Dalton.

4min 51sec

Additional reading: “CrossFit Trainer Education and Certification: New Programs and a New Structure” by Nicole Carroll, published July 7, 2014.

SS Weekly Report December 21, 2015

The Starting Strength Weekly Report 2015-12-21: Topics from the Forums: “Is the press an unneeded accessory in the training program?” and “Question on rack pull/halting/deadlift cycle.” This week Under the Bar: Holiday prep. View report in browser View report archive var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; News Announcements Submit your images to enter this month’s Under the Bar prize drawing. Articles & Videos Brian Jones’ takes us through his journey of Recovery via Barbell Training. This is a video that everyone should watch and share. Rip discusses how physical strength translates to societal strength with Brett McKay of Art of Manliness. Starting Strength Channel | On Coaching with Tom Campitelli. Rip and Tom discuss Starting Strength Seminars, what it takes to be a staff coach, and upcoming events in Australia. In this this week’s Training Log, Cody Miller gives a simple, progressive approach to Gaining Bodyweight without GOMAD. From the archives this week: Nicholas Soleyn’s article A Theoretical Approach to the Coach’s Cue takes a detailed look at how coaches and lifters interact and cues are developed. From the Coaches Chris Kurisko on the growth of Spencer Irvin, 4 years and 40 pounds Under the Bar Eric Pogue locks out his final deadlift attempt of 465 lbs. An 8 week strength cycle at Crossfit Solace with SSC Michael Wolf put 90 lbs on Eric’s squat and 60 on his deadlift. [photo courtesy of Michael Wolf] Left to right, Kelly Adams, Laurie Pagano,Tonya McCarter, Susan Clayton, Em Drager, and their Starting Strength Coach Emily Socolinsky, competed in the 2015 Winter Wreckage Strongman Contest at MacMillan Training Systems in Pennsylvania. [photo courtesy of FiveX3 Training] 2015 Winter Wreckage Strongman Contest: Left, On her way to 2nd place in Women’s Heavyweight Novice, Tonya deadlifts the car for 24 reps. Right, Emily Socolinsky presses the 95# log. [photo courtesy of FiveX3 Training] 2015 Winter Wreckage Strongman Contest: Left, Susan throws the 100# keg over the bar. Right, Em carries the 150# sandbag for over 300 feet. [photo courtesy of FiveX3 Training] Anna pulls a 200 lb PR set of 5 deadlifts at WFAC. In just over two months of training with Nick Delgadillo, Anna has put over 100 lbs on her squat, 70 lbs on her deadlift and gained 5 lbs while losing bodyfat. [photo courtesy of Nick Delgadillo] Jon squats 250x3 in the WSC barbell club. He recently completed in the Starting Strength Fall Classic and has set new strength goals for the new year. [photo courtesy of Inna Koppel] Scott and Charity got in a few training sessions at Gardiner Athletics while visiting from Oklahoma. [photo courtesy of Kelli Nielson] Evan Zarotney deadlifts 225 x 5 as he works to get strong for football. [photo courtesy of Black Iron Training] Click images to view slideshow. Submit your images to report@startingstrength.com Submission guidelines to enter this month’s Under the Bar prize drawing. Best of the Week Is the press an unneeded accessory in the training program? RichieRich When I first did [the Starting Strength linear progression] I didn’t have a bench so I did squat, press and dead. First run though SS and advanced novice my press was 187 when my bench was 270. My bench is now 250 and with out pressing at all I did a test and found my press was 170. The bench press seems to be giving my shoulders the same ability I was achieving when I was doing both lifts 2 years ago. Why is the press advised if I don’t seem to be getting more bang for my buck? Callador Richie, this is just my personal recommendation based off my own trials and errors. Looking back at my log, when my shoulders were healthier, the combination of heavy overhead pressing (I was doing more of a press 1.5, not press 2.0) and benching seemed to help me the most. I worked up to a 465 bench TnG and a 315 OHP (could have probably done more). After tearing my supraspinatus 50-70% I couldn’t press anymore without feeling pain. I did find a way to bench, and I kept doing that. Fast forward now the present day, and even though I have been benching multiple times per week, I wasn’t seeing the same kind of progress. Now I messed up my other shoulder, so I think I am going to focus on rehabbing it by working full ROM press and bench (both with a pretty narrow grip). In the past I was trying to find a way to get weight back on the bench as fast as possible. This time I am just going to keep it really light and take the slow road while trying to push up my squat and DL. So if I were you I would do both. Matt Reynolds I’m not actually sure that I’ve ever met anyone who has actually followed the program who decided they didn’t like press MORE than bench press. Press is just the most bad ass lift there is. I love reading about guys like Bednarski who were just super humanly strong driving up these world record presses. This is much, much cooler than a big bench press. There are few things more satisfying than a PR press. Best of the Forum Question on rack pull/halting/deadlift cycle TravisRussellDC I set a goal to pull a 600 lb deadlift by the end of 2011, if not sooner (pulled 545x1 yesterday). Since I’m experiencing issues with recovery from heavy deadlifts I’ve chosen to start a program centered around haltings and rack pulls for my heavy pulling. The issue I have is that I love to deadlift. I always have; it’s my favorite of all the lifts. It’s going to be very strange for me to train without deadlifting. I’ll trust your judgement, though, and give it a go. I understand I’ll be alternating haltings and rack pulls every other week. I read that you only deadlifted in the warm-up room and on the platform on meet day. Since I have no plans to compete in a powerlifting meet at this time, I have a question for you. How long would you suggest cycling in the haltings and rack pulls before testing the full ROM deadlift again? 8 weeks, 12, 15…? My stiff legs end with 405x5 and I do heavy shrugs twice a week. I’m sure that’s not helping my recovery issues since that would be 2 days a week of heavy pulling with cleans on a 3rd day. I just love to pull… Mark Rippetoe It will be interesting to see if that is enough base for a 600 deadlift. Figure on 5 lb. jumps, so that would be 10 lbs/month for the 55 lb. span. Given a couple of resets, probably by October. TravisRussellDC Got it. Just to be clear, are you recommending the haltings/rack pulls straight thru until around October. Or do you suggest pulling from the floor a few times to chart my progress as I go? And my squat will be going up. I’m planning on a mid-400s set of 5 by summer. I’ve got a couple of issues to work out with recovery and cleaning up technique. The strength is there. builtbyrowan How many weeks after beginning the alternating of rack pulls/haltings before testing the deadlift? Would you wait to do it on the intensity day when you’re body’s a little bit less beat up? Mark Rippetoe I don’t know that you test the deadlift, because if you do you interrupt your training for the deadlift. Ironic, eh? Maybe once, Travis, after a reset and a recovery to the weight.

Daily Movement Snacks: 2 Tools to Move More at Home

Daily micro-movements are key to owning our big movements, like the squat, bench, and deadlift.

Today I’ll share two of my favorite ways to deck out your home for a more mobile lifestyle, without having to toss the couch. In the fitness industry we talk a lot about the big sexy movements, the best fat-burners, warrior-this, alpha-that. But we pay so little attention to micro-movements, those little snacks of movement spread throughout the day.

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Sunday, December 20, 2015

3 of the Best: This Week's Top Articles, Vol. 11

These pieces have caught your attention throughout the week. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Welcome to our brand new weekend roundup, Three of the Best! Every Sunday, we'll post up Breaking Muscle's top three articles of the week. These pieces have caught your attention throughout the last seven days. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Snatch Catch

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Saturday, December 19, 2015

A Massie Holiday: Bacon Butternut Turducken

Nick Massie of PaleoNick.com brings us a traditional holiday classic with a twist. Turducken is delicious and a great centerpiece for your holiday table, and if you add bacon and butternut squash—well, jackpot.

Step 1: Prepare the “stuffing.” Massie’s stuffing is mostly bacon and butternut squash, but he notes you can use your favorite stuffing recipe instead. When it’s time to prepare the meat, Massie shares an easy way to remember which comes first: the chicken or the duck?

“If you need to know the order, just think tur-duck-en,” he says. “Turkey’s first, duck is second and chicken is last.”

After building layers of bird and stuffing, wrap it up, skewer it, tie it and bake it. In just about four hours you’ll have a holiday dish that will please the eyes and the palate.

To download the recipe for bacon butternut squash turducken, click here.

Video by Nick Massie.

3min 57sec

Additional reading: “Seasons in the Abyss” by Emily Beers, published Dec. 14, 2014.

Strength Training for Yogis: Farmer’s Carries for Functional Strength

Getting stronger doesn't have to be complicated. Use farmer's carries to increase your strength and improve your yoga practice.

As yogis, we cross-train to improve our yoga practice. When you incorporate farmer’s carries into your training, you’ll find inversions and overall body strength increase. Poses like crow and balancing in general will become more effortless.

We also train to create ease in our everyday life movements. A farmer’s carry is like carrying bags of groceries out to the car. The concept is exactly the same. Your new strength will make these tasks much easier.

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Friday, December 18, 2015

Food for Thought

Regulation of nutrition practitioners is intended to protect the public, but critics suggest it reduces the innovative thought needed to fight obesity.

Amanda Petroccione thought she wanted to be a registered dietitian (RD), but Petroccione was disheartened when her studies highlighted flaws in a program designed to produce nutrition experts who lead the industry. During her time at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Potsdam, she had the opportunity to work with an RD in a hospital and was surprised by blanket prescriptions and food she said she thought was inadequate.

RDs are regulated by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND). Petroccione said she suspects one of the reasons the AND promotes what she considers ineffective nutrition guidelines is to protect the companies who fund it. Over the years, the AND’s sponsors have included companies such as Coca-Cola, PepsiCo and Hershey’s.

While the AND denies sponsorship influences its position on health and nutrition, a July 2013 International Business Times article by Christopher Zara argued that “anyone with a digestive system” has the right to be suspicious.

“The nation’s nutrition industry has been hijacked by the very companies whose products most contribute to our obesity and health problems,” Zara wrote.

Petroccione said the fact that Coca-Cola funds the AND made her wary of some of the concepts she was learning, such as the total-diet approach in which all foods can be good foods with moderation.

“That tells the public it’s OK to drink Coke,” she said.

Holiday Fuel for Endurance Athletes: Stuffed Acorn Squash

Endurance athletes eat for stamina. This vegetarian recipe provides the ideal balance of nutrients to support long training sessions.

The last few weeks of 2015 are upon us. Now is the time I try to be especially conscious of what I’m eating and creating in the kitchen. It’s easy to let it go at this time of year. One holiday party after another, a few missed workouts, an extra martini, and bam – you’ve put on several pounds and lost some fitness along the way.

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From the Archives: A Theoretical Approach to the Coach’s Cue

by Nicholas Soleyn “Effective cues come from the coach’s and lifter’s shared understanding of the lift, which is based on the coach’s explanation, the lifter’s development, and the coach’s own familiarity with the lifter’s perspective.” Read More var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true};

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Gaining Bodyweight Without GOMAD

Drinking a gallon of milk a day (GOMAD) is undeniably the most effective nutritional strategy for adding slabs of mass to young, underweight males. Milk is relatively cheap, painless to “prepare”, the macronutrient profile is very balanced, and calories are always easier to drink than eat. Unfortunately, those interested in muscular hypertrophy who are NOT “young, underweight and male” - populations where GOMAD is not recommended - will need to put more effort into the battle to avoid excess fat accumulation… Read More var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; by Cody Miller, SSC Drinking a gallon of milk a day (GOMAD) is undeniably the most effective nutritional strategy for adding slabs of mass to young, underweight males. Milk is relatively cheap, painless to “prepare”, the macronutrient profile is very balanced, and calories are always easier to drink than eat. Unfortunately, those interested in muscular hypertrophy who are NOT “young, underweight and male” – populations where GOMAD is NOT recommended – will need to put more effort into the battle to avoid excess fat accumulation.Body composition can be manipulated progressively much like barbell training to achieve the best results. For example, the Starting Strength novice linear progression holds exercise selection, frequency and volume variables constant . Every 48-72 hours, the load (stressor) is incrementally increased to elicit an adaptation in strength. If the load increase is too significant or insignificant, the desired adaptation won’t take place.Similarly, if calorie consumption and daily activity are relatively constant, one can manipulate body composition by increasing or decreasing food intake in a linear fashion on a weekly basis. In this case, calorie manipulation is the stressor and an increase that is too significant will favor fat accumulation while an insignificant increase will slow muscle gain down more than is necessary.Body recomposition specifics are highly individual but aiming for an increase of 0.5-1.5lb of bodyweight each week is a good place to start. Taking weekly photographs and using a simple waist measurement at the navel will help determine if muscle hypertrophy is being favored somewhat more than adipose tissue.Much like the productivity of adding 2.5-5lb to a barbell exercise, a weekly calorie increase of 2.5-5% can be highly effective. After each week of increase, one should compare his bodyweight to that of the week prior. If a lifter gains less than 0.5lb, he should increase calorie intake by 5%. If a lifter gains 0.5-1Ib, he should increase calorie intake by 2.5%, and if the lifter gains 1-1.5lb, he can choose to stay at the same calorie intake or increase by 2.5%.In Practice – RickRick is a 28-year-old intermediate lifter who is 6’1”, 210lb and ~14% bodyfat. His goal is to gain 10lb of lean body mass in order to improve his lifting leverages and appearance. He prefers to gain the weight gradually to avoid excess bodyfat accumulation.During week 1, Rick records his food intake on a mobile phone application for 7 days and then weighs himself the next morning. His average calorie intake ends up being 3,250 calories per day without any change in bodyweight. Rick decides that this calorie intake must be in the ballpark of what is needed to maintain weight. In hopes of jumpstarting the gain train, Rick aims to increase his calorie intake by roughly 5%: 3,250 calories x 0.05 = 163 calories To keep things simple, Rick adds 1 cup of whole milk to his typical diet (1 cup of milk = 150 calories). The rest of the process completes as follows: After week 2: 0.4Ib gained, calories increased 5%, 2 cups of milk/day After week 3: 0.7Ib gained, calories increased 2.5%, 2.5 cups of milk/day After week 4: 1.2Ib gained, maintained, 2.5 cups of milk/day After week 5: 1Ib gained, calories increased 2.5%, 3 cups of milk/day After week 6: 1.1Ib gained, calories maintained, 3 cups of milk/day After week 7: 0.8Ib gained, calories increased 2.5%, 3.5 cups of milk/day After week 8: 0.4Ib gained, calories increased 5%, 4.5 cups of milk/day After week 9: 0.7Ib gained, calories increased 2.5%, 5 cups of milk/day After week 10: 0.9Ib gained, calories increased 2.5%, 5.5 cups of milk/day After week 11: 1.4Ib gained, calories maintained, 5.5 cups of milk/day After week 12: 1Ib gained, calories maintained, 5.5 cups of milk/day After week 13: 0.4Ib gained (10Ib total), calories maintained At the end of 13 weeks, Rick finally reaches his goal of weighing 220Ib while only increasing his bodyfat to 15%. Notice that he only had to add a little over a quarter gallon of milk/day in total to make this happen. Individual results will vary.Linearly progressing food intake can be as complicated as one prefers. Rick chose to keep it simple but daily monitoring of each macronutrient does provide the benefits of a more tightly controlled experiment that is accurate, reliable and easy to adjust. GOMAD may be in your past, but simple dietary adjustments that are progressively managed over a longer duration of time can prove just as rewarding.

Missed Attempt: The CrossFit Liftoff Was Just CrossFit

CrossFit HQ brought us the same old run-of-the-mill event with a new title. When will they try something new?
Rich Froning and Sam Briggs won the CrossFit Liftoff. Zzzzzz.
The Games website described the event as:
“[A]n online, three-event competition consisting of different weight classes allowing athletes to compare their lifts with those of similar size around the world.”

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Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Starting Strength Coaches Association Series | Recovery via Barbell Training

Brian Jones describes how barbell training was the rehabilitation tool that gave him his life back after medical professionals had all but given up on his ever walking again.He tells his story in a very emotional, yet entertaining talk during the 2015 Starting Strength Coaches Association Conference held at Wichita Falls Athletic Club.Discuss

World Champion Weightlifters Are Just Like Us

A newbie might expect to see blinding speed and perfect technique at Worlds. But that is not always the case.

The 2015 Senior World Weightlifting Championships are now history. A record 584 lifters from at least 75 countries traveled to Houston in late November. In addition to the usual world bragging rights, athletes were also fighting to maximize their nation’s team size for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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Tuesday, December 15, 2015

The Athletic Power of Herbs

This flavorful fresh herb mix harnesses the nutritional benefits of herbs and supports athletic performance.

Herbs have fantastic therapeutic benefits that support the athlete in all of us. Today, we’ll discuss how common herbs can help your workouts and your everyday health.

Athletic Benefits of Herbs

Take a look at the athletic benefits of these common herbs:

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Anatomy and Physiology: A Primer for CrossFit Trainers

Trainers are in the business of creating fitness. They apply exercises to their clients in order to induce adaptations in structure and function that lead to improved fitness. In order to do this effectively, reliably and safely, working trainers must understand the structures they are stressing with exercise to produce the functional change that is fitness. This is the primary reason we learn anatomy and physiology. We need to understand the materials we work with in our occupation in order to accomplish the job we are expected to deliver.

Secondarily, there are communication reasons for learning structures and functions. Anatomy and physiology form a common language that connects the trainer, the therapist, the clinician and the client. We must learn our profession inside out to earn the respect and recognition due an expert.

Understanding how something is built will help you understand how it works. The biological and engineering adage “form equals function” is quite important in exercise and fitness. When we want to get better at an exercise we need to understand how the structure of the body contributes to its performance.

The best place to start in the study of what makes a human move is learning the bones and muscles that actually allow movement—in that order. The bones form a moveable scaffolding that allows the muscles attached to it to create gross (large scale) and fine (small scale) movement. Everything we do in the gym, at work, at play and in daily life is dependent on the ability of the muscles to move two or more bones through their ranges of motion.

Starting Strength Podcast | On Coaching with Tom Campitelli

Mark Rippetoe interviews Starting Strength Staff Coach, Tom Campitelli.Rip and Tom discuss the stunning good looks of other coaches as well as the Starting Strength Seminars, what it takes to be a Staff Coach, and the upcoming Starting Strength events in Australia. Audio version: Starting Strength Podcast 15-12-15 Subscribe: RSS | iTunes var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true};

Students Stop Soda

SF State groups beat back pouring-rights contract worth millions.

On Nov. 19, a group of about 20 college students in San Francisco, California, managed to do what countless community leaders and health advocates have failed to do: beat Big Soda.

After a five-month campaign protesting San Francisco State University’s pursuit of a 10-year pouring-rights contract with The Coca-Cola Co. or PepsiCo Inc., the student-run SF State chapter of Real Food Challenge (RFC) convinced SF State President Leslie Wong to stop the contract process. Sixteen other student organizations, two grassroots community-health collaborations, several SF State faculty members, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and more than 10 percent of the student body assisted the RFC.

Commonplace since the 1990s, pouring-rights contracts grant corporations exclusive sales and marketing opportunities on school campuses in exchange for funds, the use of which is often restricted to purposes designed to funnel money back to the provider. The SF State deal was poised to bring in a one-time minimum contribution of US$2 million and annual contributions of at least $125,000, according to a May SF State request for proposals obtained by the CrossFit Journal.

Though Big Soda dollars promise relief in the face of budget deficits and a lack of government funding for higher education, critics argue that ubiquitous on-campus marketing of sugar-sweetened beverages does more harm than good. Added sugar has been shown to increase risk for diabetes, tooth decay, obesity and a host of other health problems.

“The most questionable aspect of these contracts is that they link returns to the companies and to the schools to amounts that students drink,” Marion Nestle wrote in “Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health.”

SS Weekly Report December 14, 2015

The Starting Strength Weekly Report 2015-12-14: Topics from the Forums: “Thanks Coach” and “Theory on why the belt helps the squat.” This week Under the Bar: Full week. View report in browser View report archive var addthis_config = {"data_track_addressbar":true}; News Announcements Submit your images to enter this month’s Under the Bar prize drawing. Articles Adam Lauritzen shows the importance of Strength in Combat through examples of extraordinary and routine requirements. Training Log: Programming the Halting Deadlift - Nick Delgadillo shows us how to add pull variants to a program in this case study. Video (and etc) Pulling Heavy: Barbell Shrugs From the Coaches Get inspired by FiveX3 Training’s client profile of the month: Emily Hagan Under the Bar Mike squats 405 lb for his last set of 5 at Fivex3 Training’s Starting Strength Squat Camp in Baltimore. [photo courtesy of FiveX3 Training] After grinding through months of Texas Method, Samara hit double bodyweight on her squat. [photo courtesy of Feral Fitness] Doug Myers of Mount Airy, MD warms up before the Push/Pull Challenge to benefit Gilchrist Hospice of Towson. [photo courtesy of Shannon Khoury] A the same meet, Nikki Bellamy of Fivex3 Training opens her deadlifts with 235 lb. [photo courtesy of Shannon Khoury] Nicole Tribble of Tacoma Strength does her 80% squats at 5x3 and 170lbs with bright style! [photo courtesy of Anna Marie Oakes-Joudy] Michelle learns the Press 2.0 in the WSC Women’s Barbell Club. [photo courtesy of Inna Koppel] Brett McKay squats 295 x 5 at the December Starting Strength Seminar in Wichita Falls, December 11-13. [photo courtesy of Matt Reynolds] Jack shrugs into his lockout at last weekend’s NYC Pressing camp. [photo courtesy of Ryan O’Connell-Peller] Click images to view slideshow. Submit your images to report@startingstrength.com Submission guidelines to enter this month’s Under the Bar prize drawing. Best of the Week Thanks Coach slhuckstead I just wanted to thank you for your work, your tough as nails approach, your methodology, and your willingness to create (and put up with) a community of people who have adopted this program.I started this program last year and I was a mess—physically and emotionally. I had experienced a significant career setback and was not dealing well with the emotional letdown. I spun into clinical depression and as a result I got fat (really fat) and out of shape. My lower back began to deteriorate due to my desk job and was in constant pain from sciatica and arthritis (at 37 years old).Last January (2015), when my back went out, I decided I had enough, but I didn’t know what to do. Then the thriller author Brad Thor posted a link to an article about Starting Strength and I had to try out the program.Since that time I have gone from a 115 lbs squat to 400 lbs and a DL of 150 to 415. There have been setbacks (I should be higher) and frustrations (my upper body strength is progressing much slower. BP has gone from 95 to 215 and PR from 75 to 165).More, though, what has changed is my demeanor and confidence. I don’t take any prescription meds for depression any longer. I am happy again. I am less angry (my wife and eight children said I was unbearable). I feel good physically and I can think more clearly.I feel like a man once more. I have taken responsibility for my actions and have not let the pain of disappointment destroy my life. I can work through pain, I can keep going.Again, coach, thanks. Best of the Forum Theory on why the belt helps the squat Gene61 There has been a lot of discussion through the years on this forum about the use of the belt and what it does for the abs, back and power of the lift. I forgot to wear my belt on one set this week on light squat day and I had a very hard time completing the set even though the weight was only 85% of my heavy day. I had to think about why that was.I’ve read here that it helps to have the belt for the abs to push against and thus they can push harder. Sure, but why does that help? What is the actual mechanism by which tighter abs helps you lift? This might also explain why the valsalva maneuver is so helpful.The clue to me was that when I was at depth in the squat without the belt, my pelvic girdle felt “loose” and “hinged.” It felt like my posterior hip and thigh muscles didn’t have a solid anchor to pull against.So here’s the setup of my theory: When the glutes and hamstrings (and muscles in the anterior chain) are in strong contraction they will tend to rotate the front of the pelvis upward toward the chest with the pivot being the lower spine. This is countered by the lower back muscles. (Big powerful leg and hip muscles countered by much smaller muscles in the lower back.) However, with a valsalva maneuver the abdominal pressure provides a strong force against the upward rotation of the pelvic girdle, holding it in place against the powerful contraction of the leg and hip muscles. This is countered somewhat by the abs which create the valsalva pressure, pulling up on the front of the pelvic girdle, but it seems that the net force is to help keep the pelvic girdle static against the pull of the posterior hip and thigh muscles.My theory: Adding a belt increases the abdominal pressure you can create, providing even more pressure against the hip/pelvic girdle providing a very stable pelvic girdle platform from which to contract the powerful muscles of the hips and thigh. (While, to do this, you contract your abs more against the belt, this added upward rotational force is more that compensated by the additional pressure created in the abdomen pushing against the pelvic girdle.) Mark Rippetoe It’s good, but I think you’re unclear on the role of the abs. If the extended lumbar position is established by the erectors on the posterior, the abs and the other circumferential muscles around the spine, ribcage, and pelvis contract isometrically AFTER the lumbar erectors establish extension. There is no tendency for the abs to pull the system into posterior pelvic tilt/lumbar flexion unless you perform this setup incorrectly. And this would be an excellent argument against doing situps if you’re physically stupid: if you learn a lumbar flexion in a situp or a crunch, and if you’re physically stupid, the tendency might be to allow it to carry over into the squat or pull. But the lumbar extension is easy to teach, and any coach with any experience in this method should be able to correct even a physically stupid person who does this. JB47 This is the only information I could find on why a belt means more kilos on the bar. From the Baby, Bathwater, Gear article: ‘Higher ab tension means higher internal abdominal pressure, which means a more rigid spine which means a more secure spine that transmits energy to the bar more efficiently.’ I can’t wrap my head around the last part, maybe I just need it explained to me a different way. My two guesses prior to reading that were that the more rigid trunk means it’s harder for you to collapse over (explaining why a belt benefits low bar more than high bar) which would throw the bar in front of the midfoot/cause the hips to rise too fast in relation to the chest. That or that the increased tightness has a knock on effect, like how getting tight everywhere else benefits the bench press. stef The belt helps because it allows you to actively generate more pressure against its constraint. More pressure helps with improved force transmission. But it also helps because your nervous system will recruit better in a stable environment—improved stability = more force production. Better production, better efficiency, better training effect.