2018 was a big year for me, a year of growth and change in both training and life. In this post, I want to go back and look at all the challenges and successes of my training over the past year.

2017 was a hard year, I was unhappy with where I was in life and knew I needed to make changes. I finished the year with a 959 total and it was a rough ride mentally. In my mind, I was capable of much more than my total and that wore on me.

2018 became a year of standing up for myself, learning from my past mistakes, and well... let's just say I finally grew a pair. I decided to do my own programming for the majority of the year, which ended up being pretty successful, giving me a 50lb total PR, something I'm pretty proud of. It gave me more confidence in myself and proved that I could do it on my own. With school stress and wanting to have a coach close by, I finished the year working with Brian Schwab after moving to Florida, and after only a few months of programming, we accomplished a 1025 total, a 66lb total PR from 2017. I'd say it was a pretty successful year.

Here's a look back at what my training looked like this year.


 

Jan-March Bench volume was higher, 6-10 rep range for 4 sets I had a secondary incline bench day weight was around 115-155 for 3x10

Squat volume was very high, for the first time I had two programmed squat days. Week one was back squat with a secondary front squat day and week two was yoke bar squats with front squats as the secondary again. I was only squatting in sleeves and hit some rep PRs.

Deadlifts I would pull from a deficit week one with moderate volume and week two I would pull from the rack with lower volume and follow the rack pull with a light sumo pull.


 

April-June In April I decided to start running my own programming, it was something I've wanted to do for a while, and at the time I couldn't to pay for coaching. I had signed up for a meet on June 9th.

Bench volume was still fairly high. My best bench to date was done after an equipped training cycle where I did a ton of board work. I would work up to two top sets to my chest, then do two heavier sets to a board after. I had a secondary paused bench day where I would work up to 165x5x5 each week. I took my last heavy bench one week out.

Squat training was spent figuring wraps out. I tried the metal orange wraps and just couldn't get them to work for me. Once I switched back to the Patriots it was a great time. I kept the cycle of one-week heavy w/wraps one-week lighter paused squat for this whole training cycle as I've done leading up to most of my other meets. I took my last heavy squat two weeks out.

This deadlift cycle was the best I've ever had, more so because I focused on resetting my reps instead of touch and go for the first time in years. I felt much more explosive and was able to hit much heavier numbers in training than before. I worked off of the previous training cycle, switching between deadlifts off the floor week one and pulling off blocks week two. I took my last heavy pull off 2' mats two weeks out.

I totaled 1011 at this meet for a 50lb PR.


 

July-Sept I really wish I had been able to keep the ball rolling after things were going so well over the last few months of training. Seth and I moved across Canada and it took about a week to drive, camping along the way. I had a hard time with the move at first and found it really hard to get the ball rolling in the gym. I felt sluggish and frustrated I was having a hard time. I focused on bodybuilding/volume work and hired a nutrition coach to help me get my shit together. Towards the end of the summer, I was looking lean and starting to get used to the gym... Just in time to move across the continent to Florida.


 

October-December M2 Method I decided to hire Brian Schwab as my coach while I'm in Florida. I wanted to have a coach I could trust and who is close by if I need any live input. I competed on December 1st in the 132 class after only 10 weeks of training under Brian. I totaled 1025, 66lbs higher than I totaled in 2017 and 14lbs more than my last meet in June.

I'm nothing but excited to see what training under the M2 method does in the longer term.

Meana Albersworth
Tagged: Training Log

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