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T0ddday

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6600 on: August 21, 2016, 03:56:12 pm »
+2

lots of coding today.. got page views migrating over now too, so that we don't lose our page views on threads etc.. hehe.

just thought this looks cool.. obviously need to format things a bit better & make the date sexier, but dno, looks cool:



oh also.. i've got the forum imported several times on my local environment.. so several times * 111,000 posts and such. haha. developing locally mostly because the migration stuff is intense, runs faster locally. Hopefully some time in the near future I can pop this thing up onto the server and have people check it out. I'd like to get google authentication working before that though.. right now you can only log in via github. Need google + github.

I just want to take a moment to say how awesome it is to have the forum's most active poster, and the forum moderator, the web designer and the backend developer all be the same person.  Don't know of another forum like it.  Pretty amazing.

If there was one thing that I think would elevate the forum to new levels is some type of video logging archiving... Like some way to tag youtube links so I could click on LBSS's journal and see max effort 30'' vertical jumps, max effort 33'' vertical jumps a few years later, and max effort 37'' vertical jumps currently...  As of now video updates are really cool but if we could see progress without scrolling through pages and pages of journals that would be amazing...

T0ddday

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6601 on: August 21, 2016, 04:09:16 pm »
+1
The thing with LBSS though, in terms of quality jump sessions, is he does have alot of them. He knows when to perform ME jumps and when to backoff dunk attempts and go back to ME jumps etc. So he gets in alot of good quality when he's not down-shifting due to some knee aches etc. I'd easily say LBSS understands his body & how it is effected by training, better than scoob. He also doesn't veer off into major tangents like scoob does, and this is mostly because of how the previous point. He's also been following some solid programming/advice for several months :F Scoob takes advice from all angles and blends alot of it together. The one thing i'm glad he is doing lately is getting back to squatting heavy.


Forgot to reply to this before but this is such a great point everyone should read it multiple times!  The progress LBSS has made isn't necessarily because they guy he listens to is any good (me) but because he follows one set of instructions and downshifts advice and programming... 

This is basically the key to progress... Too many people treat training like making a salad or a pizza - you can't just throw some of this or that in and see how it tastes...

No coach is perfect and some coaches are better than others... No programming is perfect but the best results come from following one coach and one plan to get results...  Follow the plan and if you don't like the results of the coach/plan then get a new coach and follow his plan.  Do not modify instructions UP only DOWN.  If your coach says to do 30 ME jumps and your knees hurt then don't listen to him!  Downshift. Do 10.  Or do zero.  Downshift for your body... But if your feeling it that day don't do 60 ME jumps and then complain about how the workout the next day was too hard...

This is a really frustrating thing I get all the time with people I train...  I will train them and get them on a good program and they aren't making much gains and then I talk to them and they say "Oh yeah every Tuesday/Thurs I have been doing 100 vertimax jumps, and running 2 miles on the beach in the sand with a weight vest".   When I tell them this is stupid they have the same excuse "Well person X online who is way better at dunking than you (and therefore knows more I guess) swears by the vertimax and person Y who is faster than you said nothing got him faster than running on soft sand surfaces to build up his tendons".   

That's all well and good. Person X and Y may be better athletes than I ever was and may be better at coaching and than I ever will be...  I'm not the best.  I wouldn't have a problem with them soliciting person X and getting a coaching and training programming from that person instead of myself...  Person X's coaching may be 100x better than mine...  But I guarantee even if that's the case, my training program is still far better than my training program + piece of person X's training tools + a piece of person Y's training tools...  Scooby gets advice from so many talented people...  He gets advice on body composition from Kadour Ziani who is a legend... But Ziani doesn't squat...  He is also extremely flexible... He may be a legend but a one piece of his formula mixed with a bunch of different formulas (that may also be winning formulas) still won't be any good...

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6602 on: August 21, 2016, 05:30:21 pm »
+1

lots of coding today.. got page views migrating over now too, so that we don't lose our page views on threads etc.. hehe.

just thought this looks cool.. obviously need to format things a bit better & make the date sexier, but dno, looks cool:



oh also.. i've got the forum imported several times on my local environment.. so several times * 111,000 posts and such. haha. developing locally mostly because the migration stuff is intense, runs faster locally. Hopefully some time in the near future I can pop this thing up onto the server and have people check it out. I'd like to get google authentication working before that though.. right now you can only log in via github. Need google + github.

I just want to take a moment to say how awesome it is to have the forum's most active poster, and the forum moderator, the web designer and the backend developer all be the same person.  Don't know of another forum like it.  Pretty amazing.

hah thanks alot man!! ya it's a somewhat interesting combo. I just can't wait until we're all living in the "new code" (if that code is acceptable and works great). I'll just be alot happier when that day comes.



Quote
If there was one thing that I think would elevate the forum to new levels is some type of video logging archiving... Like some way to tag youtube links so I could click on LBSS's journal and see max effort 30'' vertical jumps, max effort 33'' vertical jumps a few years later, and max effort 37'' vertical jumps currently...  As of now video updates are really cool but if we could see progress without scrolling through pages and pages of journals that would be amazing...

nice thanks for the suggestion!

I have a few things planned for that.. the closest one that is actually implemented right now is "thread post tags" and "suggested tags". So, for example, we'll be able to tag posts as:
- workout
- workout-media
- rest
- injury
, pr / pb
- and custom tags: workout, dlrvj33, svj30, pr etc..

So with suggested tags, a forum can have a list of tags that we can choose from.. so a predefined set of tags so that we can just use those instead of custom, that way we will be able to search using a common "language".

The thing I don't have implemented yet is the search feature for that. But basically, we'll be able to just search all threads on a board, based on tags.. so, if we ONLY want to see workouts, we will be able to search by "workout".

This is an intermediary step before I (one day) implement some form of legit workout tracking. I have lots of ideas on that but, tbh, it's kinda far off for now. Had I gotten the forum done months ago in purescript, i'd probably be working on that right now.. but since I had to rewrite it from scratch in haskell, I lost alot of time. But eventually, I basically want us to be able to log workouts entirely in a "workout section", independent of the forum.. then, we'll be able to view workouts as data, with graphs/stats etc.

^^ That's one of the major goals of the new forum, is to be able to analyze our training history, see our progressions, etc. It'll also allow us to automatically figure out PR's and such, without us having to manually keep track.

So that's definitely in the eventual plans.

Unfortunately right now, the main plan is just getting this forum solid enough so we can all chat on it and use some new features like tags etc. It's been harder than expected but, that's also because i'm in a world of full-stack haskell which is VERY RARE in the programming world.. However, it has it's major upside: refactoring using haskell is the absolute best experience -> and that's one thing I always find myself doing in life, refactoring.. that's one of the main reasons I chose haskell... because I know that when I need to refactor, everything will make sense & I won't mess anything up - the language won't let me overlook anything .. ie, way less bugs this way.

I think pretty soon i'm going to deploy it to this server and let people login/check it out.. There's a few more things I need to do before that.. Then i'll open it up for anyone who wants to occasionally experiment with it / check it out etc.

The biggest step will be when we are all in it.. I think the code/project will actually accelerate when we are in it.

I'm going to try to limit features initially, like I mentioned earlier.. because I just want to get the core of this forum solid.. and, I have some other plans for it for example, I want a "console only client" etc.. So I can forum from a terminal, without a GUI ... stuff like that. The scaffolding is already there for that, so shouldn't be too difficult. But you can see where this thing is going, it's got alot of different facets to it.

When we launch the new forum, we'll have a subforum dedicated to suggestions/feedback/issues etc..

it'll be fun :D

peace!!!!!

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6603 on: August 22, 2016, 12:22:47 am »
0
The thing with LBSS though, in terms of quality jump sessions, is he does have alot of them. He knows when to perform ME jumps and when to backoff dunk attempts and go back to ME jumps etc. So he gets in alot of good quality when he's not down-shifting due to some knee aches etc. I'd easily say LBSS understands his body & how it is effected by training, better than scoob. He also doesn't veer off into major tangents like scoob does, and this is mostly because of how the previous point. He's also been following some solid programming/advice for several months :F Scoob takes advice from all angles and blends alot of it together. The one thing i'm glad he is doing lately is getting back to squatting heavy.


Forgot to reply to this before but this is such a great point everyone should read it multiple times!  The progress LBSS has made isn't necessarily because they guy he listens to is any good (me) but because he follows one set of instructions and downshifts advice and programming... 

This is basically the key to progress... Too many people treat training like making a salad or a pizza - you can't just throw some of this or that in and see how it tastes...

No coach is perfect and some coaches are better than others... No programming is perfect but the best results come from following one coach and one plan to get results...  Follow the plan and if you don't like the results of the coach/plan then get a new coach and follow his plan.  Do not modify instructions UP only DOWN.  If your coach says to do 30 ME jumps and your knees hurt then don't listen to him!  Downshift. Do 10.  Or do zero.  Downshift for your body... But if your feeling it that day don't do 60 ME jumps and then complain about how the workout the next day was too hard...

This is a really frustrating thing I get all the time with people I train...  I will train them and get them on a good program and they aren't making much gains and then I talk to them and they say "Oh yeah every Tuesday/Thurs I have been doing 100 vertimax jumps, and running 2 miles on the beach in the sand with a weight vest".   When I tell them this is stupid they have the same excuse "Well person X online who is way better at dunking than you (and therefore knows more I guess) swears by the vertimax and person Y who is faster than you said nothing got him faster than running on soft sand surfaces to build up his tendons".   

That's all well and good. Person X and Y may be better athletes than I ever was and may be better at coaching and than I ever will be...  I'm not the best.  I wouldn't have a problem with them soliciting person X and getting a coaching and training programming from that person instead of myself...  Person X's coaching may be 100x better than mine...  But I guarantee even if that's the case, my training program is still far better than my training program + piece of person X's training tools + a piece of person Y's training tools...  Scooby gets advice from so many talented people...  He gets advice on body composition from Kadour Ziani who is a legend... But Ziani doesn't squat...  He is also extremely flexible... He may be a legend but a one piece of his formula mixed with a bunch of different formulas (that may also be winning formulas) still won't be any good...

yup! well said. The downshift vs upshift analogy is helpful. Also as far as coaching, that's definitely really frustrating when an athlete taps into their recovery and doesn't let you know.. not only training, but partying/drinking etc. it can just wreck everything.

and as for the pizza analogy.. i'd prefer that people who are going to attempt the "making a pizza approach" pick only a few toppings -> few core exercises .. and just really try to improve those. Don't just throw in garlic rolls, 20 toppings, antipasto, tacos, and kung pao chicken. If you are winging it instead of following a very structured program/protocol, it's just essential to really understand progression; by reps/distances, sets, intensity, speed of reps, rest interval between sets, frequency of training, recovery requirements, consistency over time, etc.. People with a sense of progression generally make more progress IMHO. It's the main difference between novices and intermediates.. For example, novices will complete 3x5 at some weight and not pay attention to speed of reps, how recovered they felt using a specified rest period (if they are even using one to begin with), how they felt after & the next day. Intermediates & advanced athletes can usually tune into all of these little details .. allowing them to downshift, adjust, provide valuable feedback to coaches etc.

I've personally gone through many phases of mixing things together .. but usually in an attempt to find a groove that I want to stick too. I don't like throwing in tons of different training means, it usually stresses me out. Once I find a groove, I like to stick with it - injuries/aches permitting.

Also on the new forum, we could like, star, and tag this post. Likes work as usual. Stars are for things we don't want to forgot. Tags are for eventual searching.

pc!

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6604 on: August 22, 2016, 12:45:06 am »
0
oh you haven't heard? they call me quadzilla again.

time to get my legs back.. this time with more hamstring and calf.

need to safely get back to 225 x 45+ high rep half squatting, like in 2012.



08/21/2016

Bio: Morning

last night's sleep: ~8 hours
last night fell asleep: ~2 AM
wakeup = 8 AM
bw = 154 lb.
- water retention
- legs (quads/hamstrings/glutes) and calves feeling beefier
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = calves moderate, hamstrings alot (right more-so), shoulders alot
aches = none
injuries = none
standing desk (when on computer): mostly
feel = good
water = alot x 2
mosquito bites: 1

sickness: 5 canker sores in my mouth
- lmao wtf
- canker fest



Food

9 AM

- green tea
- banana
- 2 x wheat bread with peanut butter




Food

1 PM

- pre-made beet juice drink



Session: Afternoon

2 PM
- workout with a friend from h.s.. we still chat on IRC etc and he's been getting into lifting, so he wanted me to critique his form etc on all of his lifts.
- was fun

 :ibrunning:

treadmill warmup:
- this was actually crazy fun..
- i'm wary of treadmills .. i'm kind of afraid to fall off of them or get my shoelace caught in the belt.
- so anyway, i just said F it and got on it and started slowly turning up the speed
- got to 11.5 mph, was pushing it comfortably, then my shoelace came loose and I emergency stopped it.. hah
- so anyway, ~10 minutes, most of which over 9 mph .. slowly increasing.
- was probably over 11 mph for ~4 minutes
- was just about to try 12 mph.
- i wonder how fast it goes.. felt like it was shaking a bit.. it's not something that goes way over 10 mph, i imagine it tops out at 12-13 mph.


short warmup, then on to lifting. surprised my hamstrings held up so well. felt strong.

most exciting part about today ^^

so I might go back once or twice a month to use a treadmill and work on pacing/limb speed. was really fun.

squat fest.. i'm starting to hunger for acid. :ninja:

I used his weights on everything .. didn't want to add more weight etc, would have taken away from assisting him.

half squat variations:
- ~3 min rest between 90 lb. work sets
- 45 lb. x 10, shoulders width stance, fast
- 65 lb. x 10, shoulders width stance, fast
- 90 lb. x 30, shoulders width stance, fast
- 90 lb. x 20, very close stance, fast
- 90 lb. x 50, shoulders width stance, partials at the bottom, fast
-- these destroyed my quads
- 90 lb. x 15, wide stance, slow, need to be careful with wide stance
- 90 lb. x 40, very close stance, partials at the bottom, fast

actually pretty dead after that.. vision was teetering on blacking out, thought i felt good.. so it definitely wrecked me a bit.. MULTIPLE high rep sets is no joke.. welcome back to high-rep-nation adarqui.

chinups:
- BW @ 5 x 5
- he did overhead press.. i did it yesterday so skipped it

deadlift:
- 65 lb. x 10, wide stance, close grip, slow/controlled
- 120 lb. x 10, wide stance, close grip, slow/controlled
- only 1 set of DL




Food

5 PM

- whole chocolate milk



Food

6 PM

- broccoli + cheddar soup
- green tea
- some chips




Food

10 PM

- mixed nuts
- 4 x wheat bread with olive oil + black pepper + salt (dipping)
- greek yogurt
- a bunch of cherries



got a small bit of coding done today .. but not what i wanted. I was side tracked by a few things including this gym session... and editing a few youtube videos.

edit: got one thing done at least.. got a pull request accepted for "bench": https://github.com/Gabriel439/bench/pull/6  ... useful command.


I put gizmo's juke from ~5 years ago into its own video. it just looks so crazy in regular speed:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKCUy78Kai8" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKCUy78Kai8</a>



I also put a lob to myself dunk video up, for fun:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBzBn1wKWLY" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBzBn1wKWLY</a>

that's some decent editing.  :ninja:



i imagine tomorrow my hamstrings & calves will still be sore .. but would definitely like to get some light sprinting in and then do a high rep lift session.

both ankles/achilles slightly achey tonight after all of the squatting earlier today.

gn!!!

FP

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6605 on: August 22, 2016, 01:15:28 am »
+1

need to safely get back to 225 x 45+ high rep half squatting, like in 2012.

I put gizmo's juke from ~5 years ago into its own video. it just looks so crazy in regular speed:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKCUy78Kai8" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKCUy78Kai8</a>




So what's the point of super high rep squat? Isn't it just endurance training at that point?

Also that juke is soo quick and convincing, that's exactly what I need to be able to do to play O-line next year. My dog usually runs more curve-like patterns (maybe because of higher BW?)

I could never get someone to bite that hard on one step. I guess it has to be extremely quick and the rest of your body really has to look like you committing in order to sell it. No idea how you can step so quickly and also commit your body and still be able to reverse that momentum so quickly in the other direction
« Last Edit: August 22, 2016, 01:21:25 am by Final Phenom »

vag

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6606 on: August 22, 2016, 04:50:46 am »
+1
ya 34 now..

:highfive:

i'm now entering 'age vs vertical' territory.. :highfive: vag

Best age-vs-vertical era is yours, around 35. Old enough to get respect ( not that much deserved tbh, people seem very impressed from 35+yo  jumpers but it ain't that difficult ), young enough to make gains.

Happy bday!  :almostascoolasnyancat:
Target training paces (min/km), calculated from 5K PR 22:49 :
Easy run : 5:48
Tempo run : 4:50
VO2-max run :4:21
Speed form run : 4:02

---

it's the biggest trick in the run game.. go slow to go fast. it doesn't make sense until it smacks you in the face and you're like ....... wtf?

T0ddday

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6607 on: August 22, 2016, 12:57:19 pm »
0

need to safely get back to 225 x 45+ high rep half squatting, like in 2012.

I put gizmo's juke from ~5 years ago into its own video. it just looks so crazy in regular speed:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKCUy78Kai8" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKCUy78Kai8</a>




So what's the point of super high rep squat? Isn't it just endurance training at that point?

Also that juke is soo quick and convincing, that's exactly what I need to be able to do to play O-line next year. My dog usually runs more curve-like patterns (maybe because of higher BW?)

I could never get someone to bite that hard on one step. I guess it has to be extremely quick and the rest of your body really has to look like you committing in order to sell it. No idea how you can step so quickly and also commit your body and still be able to reverse that momentum so quickly in the other direction

Yeah you will never ever ever be able to juke like that.  None of us will.  But then again that is a dog - it's a million times more explosive and it's on four legs...  Four legged mechanics are completely different - walking and running become two different things...

Humans juke with athletic ability but moreso wizardry (skill) and sleight of body... I was training a 15 year old basketball prospect.   Terrible athlete.  But crazy range.  6'3 145.  Such a good player.  His hesitation and change of direction was incredible - he could fully commit his torso and pull it back and had tons of hands tricks (i.e. Putting his hand on the back of your leg or body to pull by ever so slightly).  The first step ability of a basketball player is hardly a function of athleticism -  it's the second step.   I could guard the kid by shuffling my feet (kind a lock down defender when I wanna be) but every move or change of direction he did made space for him - I just used recovery speed so he couldn't turn the corner... 

T0ddday

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6608 on: August 22, 2016, 01:02:57 pm »
+2
ya 34 now..

:highfive:

i'm now entering 'age vs vertical' territory.. :highfive: vag

Best age-vs-vertical era is yours, around 35. Old enough to get respect ( not that much deserved tbh, people seem very impressed from 35+yo  jumpers but it ain't that difficult ), young enough to make gains.

Happy bday!  :almostascoolasnyancat:

So true about age.  Awhile I was playing ball and it turned into an impromptu dunk contest and me and a kid were going at it - I could land windmills and he couldn't so I was pretty much the winner... After we were talking and he asked if I was in college (he was 22 - I look young but not that young) and I told him I finished college almost 10 years ago...  He asked me how old I was and I said 31 and he said "OMG!!!! You must have absolutely flown in your younger days!!!"

I wasn't sure if I should feel insulted... Didn't like being called old but then again... No.  I landed my first windmill cleanly at age 31!  My first legit 45" jumps were at 31... Sure I sprinted faster in my twenties but jump wise I never put it together until I got older...

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6609 on: August 22, 2016, 09:49:24 pm »
+1
So what's the point of super high rep squat? Isn't it just endurance training at that point?

well, in the case of high rep squatting, it's not necessarily just strength endurance -> because you can recover between reps. You can take extra breathes between reps and pump out rep after rep until you pass out. This is much different than say, bench press or curls where you prime movers in the movement can't relax and just hit their limit. So, in that sense, high rep squatting is somewhat more of hypertrophy/strength training than simply strength endurance.

I think one thing that separates strength endurance from high rep strength/hypertrophy work is tempo/rhythm. If every time you perform a high rep set, you perform it NON-STOP using a consistent pace, then after ~15-20+ reps it becomes more of a strength endurance effort. If however, you hit your "burning point" around reps 10-15, and then stand there recovering for several seconds/breathes, and keep pumping out additional reps, I think it falls more into the hypertrophy/strength spectrum. I could be entirely wrong, but, there aren't many people studying performing 10-12RM lifts being performed for ~20+ repetitions. I really think that is a different animal.

with high rep squatting (and potentially RDL and calf raise), you can train at much a lower percentage of 1RM (<= 70%) and just keep cranking out recovery-reps until you are just toast (mentally or physically). A good portion of those reps will have some decent speed, due to the % of 1RM .. so you're getting in some good explosive strength work. The time under tension is just crazy, so that's good for hypertrophy. And the percentage of 1RM isn't low enough (in the proper case: ~70%) to simply be a strength endurance exercise (~40-60%).

High rep lifting, once adapted, can also be done @ high frequency.. It's almost like running 400's every day, but, without the impacts.. It takes longer to get adapted to high frequency high rep lifting than it does high frequency low volume/low rep lifting, but people will adapt nonetheless. The best way to adapt to such a routine is to simply do "one" high rep exercise per day, not multiple sets. ie, you perform several warmup sets, get really loose, then you just bust ass on one work set until you basically pass out.

From personal experience, i've had some impressive gains from high rep lifting. I used to promote "high rep nation" on here, which was high rep squatting. I'd like to take it further and enter the world of high rep calf work, & high rep hamstring work. I've already got high rep quad/glute work covered with the half squatting. I'd love to hit my calves and hamstrings harder.

The type of gains i've gotten from high rep lifting are strength, hypertrophy & power. This is a decent example:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSmq5IopKuo" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSmq5IopKuo</a>

That video has more dislikes than likes, lmfao. For obvious reasons: I wasn't going deep, using plates under my heals, and I was touching pins. This video must drive purists crazy.

However, what can't be denied, is how easy i'm moving that weight (226 lb. @ ~154 lb)... and how many reps I hit. At that point in my lifting, I had been doing TONS of high rep squatting.. every day. 225 became a feather. I was just tossing it up like a toy at that time. And I also was getting up nasty on vert, with TONS of max effort attempts during those sessions. My work capacity was ridiculous.

Beyond all of that.. I think experiencing & working through that pain might be a good thing. There's something absolutely brutal but beautiful about heavy high rep lifting. It's a real fight to the death, mentally.

Here's another video, 275 x 21 @ 152 .. but this is more of a max effort high rep squat. You can see how bad it wrecks me. I'm completely toast. I'm surprised I was even able to joke around. Also you can see gizmo (the one with the juke) watching me beast out .. when he was a puppy. So i'm pretty sure he had good role models.

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

so ya i have nothing wrong with strength endurance .. but, this is legit strength + hypertrophy + power + strength endurance etc.. it's basically a big evil gumbo of torture.

lmfao @ "skin and bones crew".



Quote
Also that juke is soo quick and convincing, that's exactly what I need to be able to do to play O-line next year. My dog usually runs more curve-like patterns (maybe because of higher BW?)

ya my other dog runs curve-like patterns, he's also much beefier. the highest i've seen him jump is probably ~6" lmao... the other one (in the clip) is just a little freak. I've seen him jump ~25+ inches no joke on his best jump.. i mean he absolutely launched. he used to be even more athletic because i took him to the dog park alot .. but i can't take him anymore because he hates big dogs and will attack them if they come near him. He's been roughed up by a few big dogs so, he just goes apeshit when they come to mess with him or sniff him .. really sucks. He used play with the mini greyhounds and rat terriers which was incredible to watch.

:wowthatwasnutswtf:



Quote
I could never get someone to bite that hard on one step. I guess it has to be extremely quick and the rest of your body really has to look like you committing in order to sell it. No idea how you can step so quickly and also commit your body and still be able to reverse that momentum so quickly in the other direction

barry sanders style.......

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6610 on: August 22, 2016, 10:01:58 pm »
0
ya 34 now..

:highfive:

i'm now entering 'age vs vertical' territory.. :highfive: vag

Best age-vs-vertical era is yours, around 35. Old enough to get respect ( not that much deserved tbh, people seem very impressed from 35+yo  jumpers but it ain't that difficult ), young enough to make gains.

ya.. i think people just see 35 year olds and think, young dads who gave up on life .. or something. Or they just see how many NBA/NFL athletes lose their power come ~35 or so. But, as far as basketball players, man they put in so much volume on the court, their bodies "age quicker". And NFL guys just get wrecked, hard to make it to 35. So performance seems like a young man's game .. which i mean, it is, but, no reason people can't keep progressing into their 40's.. As for 50's, not sure.. Don't see many jumpers/sprinters in their 50's. Accumulating injuries come 50's has to suck.. imagine that's tough to avoid. That's why it's just SO important that we put health/safety above everything.

and ya.. i'm excited to be intensifying my training. time to increase the volume a bit.. :D



Quote
Happy bday!  :almostascoolasnyancat:

thanks alot man!!!

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6611 on: August 22, 2016, 10:14:07 pm »
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ya 34 now..

:highfive:

i'm now entering 'age vs vertical' territory.. :highfive: vag

Best age-vs-vertical era is yours, around 35. Old enough to get respect ( not that much deserved tbh, people seem very impressed from 35+yo  jumpers but it ain't that difficult ), young enough to make gains.

Happy bday!  :almostascoolasnyancat:

So true about age.  Awhile I was playing ball and it turned into an impromptu dunk contest and me and a kid were going at it - I could land windmills and he couldn't so I was pretty much the winner... After we were talking and he asked if I was in college (he was 22 - I look young but not that young) and I told him I finished college almost 10 years ago...  He asked me how old I was and I said 31 and he said "OMG!!!! You must have absolutely flown in your younger days!!!"

ha. nice!

Quote
I wasn't sure if I should feel insulted... Didn't like being called old but then again... No.  I landed my first windmill cleanly at age 31!  My first legit 45" jumps were at 31... Sure I sprinted faster in my twenties but jump wise I never put it together until I got older...

the 40 @ 40 club sounds pretty exclusive.. you think you are going to try and be in that club come 40's?

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6612 on: August 23, 2016, 01:19:31 am »
+1
hello. i'm gluteman.



08/22/2016

Bio: Morning

last night's sleep: ~8.5 hours
last night fell asleep: ~2 AM
wakeup = 10:30 AM
bw = 154 lb.
- legs (quads/hamstrings/glutes) and calves feeling beefier
morning resting heart rate = didn't measure
soreness = calves moderate, hamstrings alot (right more-so), shoulders alot, glutes alot alot
- glutes wrecked
aches = left bicep slight strain (probably from deadlifts)
injuries = left big toe (previously ingrown toenail, just feels weird.. eek)
standing desk (when on computer): mostly
feel = good
water = alot x 2
mosquito bites: 0

sickness: 5 canker sores in my mouth
- lmao wtf
- canker fest
- I think they are getting better



Food

11 AM

- green tea
- banana
- 2 x wheat bread with peanut butter



Session: Afternoon

3 PM
- ~92 F
- really hot

warmups and run to court:
- several light warmup runs
- 0.3 mi, forefoot, at 5:50 pace
- crossed street
- 0.3 mi, light, 6:30 pace

jumps at court:
- legs pretty dead
- worked up to a light ~10'4 SLRVJ, which was good .. but, left bicep was actually hurting really bad from arm swing
- had to stop after ~10 jumps each leg
- i've had this before, not worried

walk + submax sprints mixed in:
- fastest speed hit: ~16.4 mph
- felt really good on sprints, even though glutes/hamstrings sore

forefoot run:
- 0.37 mi @ ~5:50 pace

more walking

light dead run: ~0.4 mi @ 7 min pace, dead

Food
- 2% milk

high rep half squats:
- rest between sets: ~5 min
- 45 lb. x 10, shoulders width, fast
- 135 lb. x 30, shoulders width, fast
- 155 lb. x 20, shoulders width, fast
- 175 lb. x 21, shoulders width, moderate/slow, was toast but still felt strong
- 135 lb. x 20, very close stance, slow, dead

really dead at the end of the workout.

forefoot running:
- goal was to keep a submax intensity while focusing entirely on locking my ankle hard for the entire run... toes up
- I think I hit some interesting paces given my perceived exertion. I definitely couldn't hold it for a long time but, I was also toast from sprints and it was hot as fuq.
- but i'd like to be able to hold my forefoot form safely, for much longer.. ie, at least 1.x miles. then i'll re-evaluate.



Food

5 PM

- 2% milk



Food

6 PM

- big salad: 1 bag of spinach, tons of olive oil, 1 whole lemon, mixed nuts, croutons, asiago cheese
- green tea



Food

9 PM

- orange juice
- big bowl of cereal: 2% milk + cheerios + honey
- 2 x wheat bread with butter
- banana
- greek yogurt



not much programming today.. need to get alot more done tomorrow.. have a few things I want to start.

here's a pic of my salad, hehe.



feels healthy.




i'm so sore right now it's crazy.. hamstrings/glutes are destroyed. I do have a feeling they will feel alot better tomorrow morning, than they do right now.. but if not, would suck.. because I *MIGHT* visit a local running meetup tomorrow and just run a few miles or so.

pc!

T0ddday

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6613 on: August 23, 2016, 09:15:34 am »
+1
ya 34 now..

:highfive:

i'm now entering 'age vs vertical' territory.. :highfive: vag

Best age-vs-vertical era is yours, around 35. Old enough to get respect ( not that much deserved tbh, people seem very impressed from 35+yo  jumpers but it ain't that difficult ), young enough to make gains.

Happy bday!  :almostascoolasnyancat:

So true about age.  Awhile I was playing ball and it turned into an impromptu dunk contest and me and a kid were going at it - I could land windmills and he couldn't so I was pretty much the winner... After we were talking and he asked if I was in college (he was 22 - I look young but not that young) and I told him I finished college almost 10 years ago...  He asked me how old I was and I said 31 and he said "OMG!!!! You must have absolutely flown in your younger days!!!"

ha. nice!

Quote
I wasn't sure if I should feel insulted... Didn't like being called old but then again... No.  I landed my first windmill cleanly at age 31!  My first legit 45" jumps were at 31... Sure I sprinted faster in my twenties but jump wise I never put it together until I got older...

the 40 @ 40 club sounds pretty exclusive.. you think you are going to try and be in that club come 40's?

Wow. Never thought about 40/40 but barring any major life change.... Hell yes. 

Think of it like this.  If Kim Collins is running sub 10 at 40 (and running PRs) why the hell cant we jump 40 inches at 40?  I never really think about vertical but me and a friend were talking about dunking until as old as possible, I like 40/40 club though... Sounds cool...

^^^ About your high rep nation advocacy above.  I'm not against your high rep training (though I caution you about doing it for RDLs because of your back - I actually think high rep squats without full ROM like you do are better than high rep full ROM for the same reason).

And as far as your strength endurance argument I partially agree but I think the evidence suggests it's more like this:

Movement efficiency is extremely specific.  Gotta practice jumping high to jump high.  We know that.

Additionally, strength work and weight training is extremely non specific.  It's GPP.  It carries over but with much less specificity... Consider what makes us adapt to weight training...

Well it's load/work/force and intensity.  The first parameter is why we try to make the movement specific to our goal - ie we do explosive low rep squats cause we want to build power for an explosive single jump.  The second parameter is not so specific.  If we do something that absolutely destroys our legs, our body, our mind in the weight room our body WILL adapt.  Something that intense makes your body go into change mode and it builds bigger muscles, muscles more tolerant of work, stronger muscles, everything changes!

This is why IMO it's not the rest between reps that makes high rep squatting useful - it's the intensity that puts you into transformation mode...  I believe this because I have seen athletes make amazing gains with high rep timed band squats (you would love these) where you have to keep tempo and not rest.  I don't know if you have ever done band resisted sprints or high rep squat work but tension on your body has the effect of causing you to not "realize" the fatigue until you stop... After which you can hardly stand...

So, this is why I would answer FPs question to you moreso as:

"Only doing high rep squatting would be for strength endurance".  But your already doing tons of jumping and low rep squatting and other training to provide a stimulus for explosive adaptation - high rep squatting just turns up the dial on the adaption to crazy mode. 

*also really believe lactate has a ton of neural effects.  This is really new research and pretty complicated but looks promising... Getting lactate into our brain without H+ at such high loads (225 is still a lot compared even my body weight) could have so many health and training benefits that traditional strength research doesn't consider...

adarqui

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Re: ADARQ's journal
« Reply #6614 on: August 23, 2016, 01:58:56 pm »
0
ya 34 now..

:highfive:

i'm now entering 'age vs vertical' territory.. :highfive: vag

Best age-vs-vertical era is yours, around 35. Old enough to get respect ( not that much deserved tbh, people seem very impressed from 35+yo  jumpers but it ain't that difficult ), young enough to make gains.

Happy bday!  :almostascoolasnyancat:

So true about age.  Awhile I was playing ball and it turned into an impromptu dunk contest and me and a kid were going at it - I could land windmills and he couldn't so I was pretty much the winner... After we were talking and he asked if I was in college (he was 22 - I look young but not that young) and I told him I finished college almost 10 years ago...  He asked me how old I was and I said 31 and he said "OMG!!!! You must have absolutely flown in your younger days!!!"

ha. nice!

Quote
I wasn't sure if I should feel insulted... Didn't like being called old but then again... No.  I landed my first windmill cleanly at age 31!  My first legit 45" jumps were at 31... Sure I sprinted faster in my twenties but jump wise I never put it together until I got older...

the 40 @ 40 club sounds pretty exclusive.. you think you are going to try and be in that club come 40's?

Wow. Never thought about 40/40 but barring any major life change.... Hell yes. 

Think of it like this.  If Kim Collins is running sub 10 at 40 (and running PRs) why the hell cant we jump 40 inches at 40?  I never really think about vertical but me and a friend were talking about dunking until as old as possible, I like 40/40 club though... Sounds cool...

nice!

and ya that sub10 by Kim Collins is incredible. the biggest thing for us is just trying not to rack up injuries.

dunking as old as possible sounds fun too .. for me i'd need to have at least a ~34" SLRVJ or DLRVJ to be able to dunk.. so i'd need to maintain that into old age. Imaging dunking at 70 etc. Sounds awesome tbh ... i've watched a few people "fail" as they get older - systems just shut down slowly. Getting old scares me quite a bit. I need to make sure i'm very light yet very strong going into old age.



Quote
^^^ About your high rep nation advocacy above.  I'm not against your high rep training (though I caution you about doing it for RDLs because of your back - I actually think high rep squats without full ROM like you do are better than high rep full ROM for the same reason).

i'm glad you brought that up!! I didn't bring the plates to the floor on RDL, so I was not going full ROM. Even if I had 45's, I imagine I'd still have a little bit of ROM left. I definitely wouldn't do elevated-feet high rep RDL's that is for sure. So, in my previous mention of them, i'd like to point out that i'm doing them a bit less than full ROM & i'm making sure it's all hamstring/glute. Didn't have any fatigue in my low back. I definitely plan on keeping it this way when progressing the weight - ie, I don't plan on fighting through reps where my back is fatiguing.

so thanks for pointing that out.

also, i've never performed high rep calf raises OR high rep RDL for any extended period of time.. that's why this time it's very different. I plan on adapting to these two exercises - with heavy high rep work eventually, but still safely, in the hops that I trigger more adaptations in my calves and hamstrings. High rep heavy squatting has always caused my quads/glutes to really "grow" and adapt. So this time I plan on making sure I hit more musculature, especially since i'm now more interested in sprinting & middle distance running.



Quote
And as far as your strength endurance argument I partially agree but I think the evidence suggests it's more like this:

Movement efficiency is extremely specific.  Gotta practice jumping high to jump high.  We know that.

Additionally, strength work and weight training is extremely non specific.  It's GPP.  It carries over but with much less specificity... Consider what makes us adapt to weight training...

Well it's load/work/force and intensity.  The first parameter is why we try to make the movement specific to our goal - ie we do explosive low rep squats cause we want to build power for an explosive single jump.  The second parameter is not so specific.  If we do something that absolutely destroys our legs, our body, our mind in the weight room our body WILL adapt.  Something that intense makes your body go into change mode and it builds bigger muscles, muscles more tolerant of work, stronger muscles, everything changes!

ya that "transformation switch" is flicked on quicker than normal from my experience.. great point. I used to call high rep squatting "PED's" on here; because you just feel different once you start doing heavy high rep work somewhat frequently.. the body seems to just be accelerating it's adaptation processes.



Quote
This is why IMO it's not the rest between reps that makes high rep squatting useful - it's the intensity that puts you into transformation mode...  I believe this because I have seen athletes make amazing gains with high rep timed band squats (you would love these) where you have to keep tempo and not rest.  I don't know if you have ever done band resisted sprints or high rep squat work but tension on your body has the effect of causing you to not "realize" the fatigue until you stop... After which you can hardly stand...

I have done accommodating resistance + high rep squat work before, but with chains not bands. However, not a huge extended stint with it.. but I do know what you mean! It seems like a "fluid movement", like you get in this groove. It's hard to explain. Since the bottom is easier, and as you go up you are having to turn on more MU's, it's just a weird sensation when you do that for high reps.. and like you said, at the end you can barely walk. Almost feels like you've tweaked your body's ability to understand gravity, for a short period. hah.

I don't have my chains anymore; gave them to my dad to lock up his motorcycles ... hah. I had ~140 lb. of chain.. If I still had them, i'd EVENTUALLY incorporate them. I also don't have any band attachments.. However, when I went with my friend to that gym, the rack there has band attachments.. So maybe when I go there 1-2x/month to use the treadmill, I might incorporate some high rep banded squat work. Maybe in a few months. Would like to get back up to 225 for a safe 20 at least.. once I get there, i'm pretty much "almost back" in terms of my peak strength.



Quote
So, this is why I would answer FPs question to you moreso as:

"Only doing high rep squatting would be for strength endurance".  But your already doing tons of jumping and low rep squatting and other training to provide a stimulus for explosive adaptation - high rep squatting just turns up the dial on the adaption to crazy mode. 

ya  :ibsquatting:



Quote
*also really believe lactate has a ton of neural effects.  This is really new research and pretty complicated but looks promising... Getting lactate into our brain without H+ at such high loads (225 is still a lot compared even my body weight) could have so many health and training benefits that traditional strength research doesn't consider...

nice!

if you come across any interesting studies & such, maybe post them in the peer reviewed subforum.