Losing over 80 pounds is a lot easier on the joints and skeletal system. Shit hurts less just being smaller. I’m also not out of breath just walking the 10 steps from my office to my sweet Ram pickup.
I am also 100% sure that the proper inclusion of RPR techniques done consistently has made the biggest difference.
If you are unfamiliar with RPR and what it can do for you,
READ THIS.
I am so much a believer in RPR that we have made it a mandatory part of all client/athlete programs, and I’m having JL Holdsworth out next weekend for an RPS Level 2 Certification seminar. I perform RPR daily. Every morning before I get out of bed, I do Zone 1, which is the foundation of RPR. It targets breathing, Psoas and Glutes. These three things are pretty important to human movement and performance. To say the least. I also do RPR pre-training and it has replaced virtually all of my warmup work except a small amount of Acumobility ball work and lift specific warm up. EG: starting with an empty bar for the lift of the day and doing as many sets of 5-10 as I think I need. Since I returned to competing in Bench only, I’ve done two meets.
One ok.
One awful. My numbers at the first meet were excellent for me and where my body was, they were not what I wanted, but as it says in the article, I could not bench an empty bar about a year before that meet, so hitting 380 was a win, especially at the much lower weight. I always lifted in the 275's and 308's, mostly 308's classes, but these were in the 242’s. In both meets, we saw the bane of my existence (pun intended) rear it’s ugly head: my ass popping off the bench. I’ve never been able to keep it down on heavy benches. I’ve tried just about everything to fix it and nothing has worked. Until last week. During last week’s session in the awesome
Metal Jack shirt, my training partner Matt noticed that I was panicking as I tried to touch the shirt and letting my abs release. This made me pop my ass off the bench. We tried a few more sets and I focused on nothing but keeping my abs braced. It worked. Only problem, I worked on it raw as I was spent after the shirt work. It was a lot easier to do with the lighter weight. My other partners, Russ and Coach Candace agreed that I needed to move my feet way further forward than I ever had before. I was VERY reluctant to do it, but as I said in a
previous log I needed to stop being a dick, listen to and trust my partners. Russ went so far as to quote Vincent and said to move my feet to a position where the ass could not come off the bench no matter what.
The problem was that I was never able to find the position. So, after a few sets with a little less weight, they had my feet out about a mile in front of the bench and I tried as hard as I could to lift my ass, but it would not come up. HHMM! One problem arose. My hip hurt like a bastard after each set. This has not been an issue for a while now (a few months) and it gave me great concern. I shut the benching down and did some Edema JM presses after and told them I’d see how the hip felt the next day. Here’s the kicker. It felt as good as it has the next day, no ill effects. I think it just needed to get used to the new position. It will take some time. On the next training session (last Wednesday) I had
Box Squats planned. This in and of itself is amazing to me because I have not been able to squat for a LONG time due to pain in the hip which was made much worse if I even bent over, never mind squatted. The RPR, and Duffin’s KMS stuff has changed all that and I’ve been squatting. After figuring out what I could do over the course of a few weeks, we realized I can box squat to a height that keeps me out of the pain range which is meet depth. I’ve been using a 15 ½” box, which is the height I’ve always used to train for equipped meets, but I added a 6” block of foam. The addition of the foam did two things:
- Forced me to stay tighter on the box -which is GOOD
- Kept me about 1 ½”-2” above the pain zone, so all of you internet experts, don’t bother telling me it was high, I know. That is on purpose.
- I’d rather squat a little high (for now) than not squat at all.
Metal briefs and hit 315 for triples. The briefs do a lot to keep pain away, they aren’t just good for lifting more. As I was warming up Russ came over and said he had two nice Metal suits that would fit me in the office if I wanted to try them on. HHMM….
I said I am feeling stupid, why don’t you grab them and I’ll just try one on. He came out with a Jack suit and a Canvas suit. I have used the Jack suit a zillion times, but never the Metal canvas. I think you know here this is going. I tried the canvas suit on and it fit like it was custom made. So…….. - 365 goes on the bar.
- And it goes up.
- 405 goes on the bar.
- It went up.
- 455 goes on the bar.
- It went up.
I have not had that much weight on my back in a long time, and I wanted to shut it down and see how the old man hip felt the next day. Note: In the video you see me dumping a little. This is for a few reasons.
- I am not that strong.
- The Transformer bar, at the setting I used causes a much bigger dump than an ordinary Safety Squat Bar, at least for me.
- I think I forgot my groove after being away for squatting for so long.
- To keep my ass down
- To keep the pain from coming back
- Week 1: Squat, Overhead Press
- Week 2: Trap Bar Deadlift, Incline Bench Press
- Week 3: Good Morning, Floor Press
- Week 4: Split Squat, Dumbell Bench Press
- Week 5: back to week 1 and change reps scheme.
We’ve got a few spots left for JL’s RPR level 2 seminar next week. Info is on the RPR site. And:
If you like my logs and would like some in person coaching, we are running our monthly Training Day this Saturday at noon. We are coaching the Squat this week. For only $20 you can drag your ass to TPS and from noon until 2:00 pm my team of professional coaches will teach you: - RPR warmup
- Proper Rooting and Bracing
- Correct foot position for you
- Proper bar placement
- How to squat MORE and be strong(er)/strong(her)

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