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Messages - mj

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46
adjust your BSS to be more quad dominant. Front foot a little less forward should do it.

More unilateral work for a few weeks

47
Pics, Videos, & Links / Re: beast
« on: May 02, 2011, 07:05:14 am »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6XFVqB4zAaw" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6XFVqB4zAaw</a>

Deadlift rage @ 10 min = farkin awesomeness  :headbang:

48
Nutrition & Supplementation / Re: Cheap sources of Protein
« on: May 02, 2011, 06:49:19 am »
What are these changes?

Seans...... respect for what you achieved. Would you please share your insights. That's why we're all here  :)

49
if i was you i'd keep the same cal intake but make them better/cleaner calories initially then it that doesn't work then start to drop them slowly

:ninja:?

it = if

He means, he should try to get his calories from cleaner sources (and lose fat through hormonal manipulation) and if that doesn't work then start to eat less and less calories.

Hormonal manipulation is pretty marginal man. I doubt anyone here is eating so bad there hormonal balance would be shot from it.

Most people who lose weight by eating "right" are actually taking in less calories unintentionally. Like by eating heaps of lean protein and good dietary fat you end up so satisfied by smaller amounts of food that over eating takes a conscious effort. Try and take in a 1000 calorie surplus based on lean meat and veggies  :'(

Keeping carbs low is sensible in a calorie deficit so your body uses fat preferentially for fuel. If you're using carbs as a primary source your body will turn to protein breakdown (to glucose) when the carbs dry up... as they will on a cut.

Keeping carbs low at maintenance or in calorie surplus is sensible to avoid insulin spikes when excess energy is present, possibly leading to fat storage. Exception being maybe around a heavy lifting sesh when you're primed to use that stuff for good growth.

That advice of clean up and then drop intake if need be is solid  8)


50
Some bodybuilders use aspirin because it lowers cortisol effects (not production, just effects). But it also knocks t and GH levels at the same time so the whole thing is kinda redundant. The effect on protein synthesis relates to this hormonal profile change too I believe. Unless you have just been chased by a dinosaur and you're worried about failing your upcoming cortisol level test aspirin supplementation is not for you  ::)

If you have to use aspirin or similar regularly for something just follow the instructions on the box. They're conservative for a reason. I take aspirin once a week on average when my patellar tendons flare up no worries. The levels used to elicit a hormonal response in studies are pretty big. If you're gobbling that much over the counter pain med regularly you best get some professional help.

51
Depends on how strong you are man.

But my advice is don't be afraid to check your ego on this one. If the medicine ball is about throwing drills to get quicker etc you don't want a weight that slows you down appreciably. Just cause you can throw a heavy one doesn't make it the right solution.

Its counter intuitive to most dudes but speed training isn't speed training with a heavy load. Its resistance training. Light might be good.

52
ADARQ & LanceSTS - Q&A / Re: Proper Jump Squat technique
« on: April 24, 2011, 08:43:21 am »
interesting observation man.

I'll wait for Lance to respond as well before going into form too much but I tweaked my back late last week and can't quite stand up straight at the moment. Not sore, just tight in the low back and can't extend hips fully. That's after stretching and warm up too  :uhhhfacepalm:




53
ADARQ & LanceSTS - Q&A / Re: Proper Jump Squat technique
« on: April 24, 2011, 05:13:05 am »
Yo Lance check out the vid. Using your advice man. They're kinda exhausting! Tips???

Felt less 'fast' due to the upped weight but I can feel the 'catch' of the fast drop and stop into the descent.

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkigiharZY0" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkigiharZY0</a>


55
ADARQ & LanceSTS - Q&A / Re: Proper Jump Squat technique
« on: April 20, 2011, 10:51:08 pm »
So my takeaway from that is to;

* up the weight marginally. My program ramps from 10% to 30% over weeks so I will add 50% again to each of these.

* Drop fast and pause. How long to pause? Should I try to pause longer over time to train ability to hold the stretch?

* Focus on dropping fast and pausing (to settle the surface underfoot) in my game time too. I probably have some gains available there.

I train in vibrams so my foot muscles are good. Also my program already has some faster amortization type plyos so covered there. But I could add a few high box cleans and snatches. Might be good speed work on off days.

Thanks bro. THis is golden advice.

56
ADARQ & LanceSTS - Q&A / Re: Proper Jump Squat technique
« on: April 20, 2011, 07:02:35 pm »
Hey Lance I'm a beach volleyball player so my jumping goal is a little different. The sand takes away a lot of my reactive advantage.  That said I still obviously descend quickly and reverse the movement like everyone else.

My current program includes jump squats. How should I do these to maximise the advantage for my sport??? I'm comfortable with either technique, just don't get which one I should use. I've been doing paused in the belief that they'll help with my RFD and that sand jumping is all about raw strength and RFD.

57
Nutrition & Supplementation / Re: N.O. Xplode
« on: April 14, 2011, 12:10:26 am »
These things are a bad, bad, bad idea....and a waste of money...

Care to suggest why??? Your reasoning is a little thin so far.

No doubt overuse = health issues. But overuse of anything is dangerous.

58
Strength, Power, Reactivity, & Speed Discussion / I heart my trap bar
« on: April 12, 2011, 06:44:34 pm »
I bought a trap bar about 3 months ago. I spent a month before that agonising about whether it was a good idea, reading every forum post about trap bars I could etc. There's no gyms anywhere near me that have one so I couldn't try before buying.

At first I didn't like it much. Used it once and put it in the corner to collect dust. More recently though I've grown to really like it...... because;

* I can do a heap of concentric only lifting with it after squats or front squats. I use it every session now to beef out volume without trashing my nervous system
* I can do concentric only lifts without learning oly lifts or having a platform and bumpers (I'm learning them... just slow)
* I can get into a pretty upright position by pushing knees out, ass down and get decent leg volume after my back is stuffed from squats
* I can flip the bar over and get more ROM, just above paralell squat depth
* I can just drop the thing on grass
* I can also use it for more hip dominant pulls by standing back in the diamond a bit
* Its good for shrugs etc as well
* I have a few complete novices who come to use my home gym and even they can do compounds on it

I won't ever use it as my primary lift.... but its the best secondary out there for me  8)

That is all

59
I wanted it to be eggs but there is no way i can sneak in some eggs in class and I don't have the appetite to eat at 5:30-6:30

If your losing fat as goal and not hungry let it be man. Still gotta get protein in but since you're keeping carbs low your body will be set up to use fat preferentially so protein scavenging (ie muscle loss) will be minimal.

60
Yeah that's the only to bail safely.

Though when I low bar my hands don't support weight! My hands go over the bar and crush it into my back. Elbows are really high. The little shelf on my back holds the bar.

If you don't have a rack get some saw horses for cheap  8)

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