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Fixing Injuries With Barbell Training

Over the years as a bmx rider I have had my fair share of injuries. From  shoulder injuries, to numerous lower back injuries to tendon tears, knee injuries and various bumps, bruises, knockouts and much more. My passion for weight training, muscularity and strength helped prevent many injuries but once I had an injury the secret to fixing it was mostly my determination to go to the gym.

A lot of people look down on people who are just determined to go the gym regardless of injury. They just don’t understand that Friday is arm day and injury or not, it’s still arm day so fuck it, lets go! On the face of it this may seem like a stupid, egotistical thing to do but in my personal experience this mindset has been the key to rehabbing my numerous injuries in a very short span of time.

Every time I had a shoulder injury I would still be determined to go to the gym on chest or shoulder day. Many times this meant using very light weights that I wouldn’t ordinarily use or doing certain exercises that I would never do otherwise. The point was to begin working my shoulder thru the greatest range of motion while under load that I could. Sometimes this meant bench pressing with just the bar, or having to only to side lateral raises with 10 pound dumbells. Each week I would try to work thru that range of motion with greater and greater weight. Sometimes this process took two weeks, sometimes it took 2 months, but every single time I would get back to my previous level of strength or surpass it and it would be without any lingering pain. Now I know this is anecdotal and not a controlled experiment but I’ve done it enough times that I firmly believe that weight training is one of the major keys to rehabbing and preventing injury.

Another example was an injury I received when I was 18 in which I crashed on a tailwhip and trapped my foot under the pedal and it got pulled into an extremely extended position and it pulled the tendon on the front of my ankle off of the bone and pulled a chunk of bone off of it. Within a minute it swelled up to the size of a tennis ball. Within a few days my whole lower leg was swelled up and crazy looking. The orthopedic surgeon told me that this could take up to a year to heal properly.  I spent 2 weeks in a moon boot cast thing but I still went to work and moved around on it.  As soon as the boot came off I was back in the gym. I didn’t have the range of motion to do a real squat so I would use the leg extension machine to get some use in my leg. then I would slowly progress to very light weight on the leg press machine, and slowly and slowly I worked back to doing squats and deadlifts.  Within 8 weeks I was back to riding again and squatting again at about 90 percent of my previous strength and intensity. If I had listened to the orthopedic surgeon I would still have 10 more months left before it was healed.  Oddly enough last year at the age of 30 I had the exact same thing happen  and I was back to 100 percent in half of the time. The key was getting the inured area back into activity as soon as possible but without overdoing it and re injuring it.

I’ve had a similar problem with my back over the years. Numerous times  I have injured my lower back while riding and the key to fixing it was pretty similar. Now the low back is a weird thing and sometimes certain exercises i did that did help me can actually aggravate it more, one of them being back extensions. I felt those helped me in my early injuries but many people have reported that they made their pain much worse. That is not a topic I am qualified enough to go into. What I can talk about though is that the more deadlifting I did and the stronger I got, the less I got injured and the quicker I was able to recover.

I basically used the deadlift and back extension to rehab my back injuries in the same way I rehabbed my shoulder and ankle, by gradually working the injured area thru a greater and greater range of motion with heavier and heavier weights. At one point in my life I had been neglecting deadlifts for a while, I was injury free but every time I would deadlift my back would feel extremely fatigued, and tired and sore and would stay sore for a few days. It was extremely uncomfortable, but not what I would call painful. At the time I decided to enter a push/pull powerlifting contest at my local gym. I had only 6 weeks to prepare and  decided to try a radical experiment, I was going to deadlift and bench press every day or 5 days a week until contest time. The whole process is going to be part of another article but the strangest thing happened, my back pain went away.  With each workout I got more and more comfortable. My warmup sets got more and more comfortable and it took less and less of them to get up to being comfortable at heavier weights. I became less sore after the workouts and over the 6 weeks I added 20 pounds to my deadlift. Basically getting stronger thru the range of motion is what contributed to the decrease in pain and discomfort. Strength was the key component in the reduction of my pain.

At the end of the day I feel like it isn’t the big lifts that create pain or discomfort and injuries, its not doing those exercises that contributes to pain and a greater risk of injury. So when you get hurt, get back to some kind of training as soon as possible. Start super light and just get some movement in and gradually increase from there. Leave your ego at home to avoid re injuring it but get back on it as soon as possible.

 

A case Against Dumbells

A Case Against Dumbells

The title of this post is actually a bit of a paradox for me as in many ways I am actually a big fan of dumbells for certain things. I was very fond of dumbells during my college years. The dumbell bench press and dumbell shoulder press were staples of my routine for probably 10 years or so.

I used dumbells to great effect to build some pretty impressive shoulders as well as rehabbing those shoulders from various injuries I sustained thru bmx riding over the years. While I am very fond of dumbells due to a few favorable experiences with them, I would have trained differently had I known what I know now.

Everyone has read about the various upsides of dumbells, they let you isolate a muscle better, they can increase the range of motion in exercises like the bench press, they allow you to work the bicep thru it’s fullest range of motion which includes supination which can not be achieved using a barbell, and they are pretty easily found in most gyms. There are even whole workout plans and books out there devoted only to dumbell training. We’ve all seen articles in bodybuilding magazines where some huge guy advocates using dumbell bench press as his primary chest exercise, and hell I even followed that myself for a very long time and I was happy with the results-at the time.

There is however a very dark side to dumbells.

It’s actually not that dark of a side, so far there have been no studies released (yet) that link dumbell use to colon cancer or something else terrible but the best way to put it is that dumbells are not the most effective tools for you to base a training program around.

Dumbell exercises should not make up the bulk of your training ever! They can be acceptable if you absolutely have no other option. They are better then sitting on the couch anyday.

Why is this? What is wrong with dumbells?

The main reason that dumbell exercises should not make up the bulk of your training is actually very simple, they are not scale-able. Unlike the main barbell exercises, the squat, bench press, overhead press, and deadlift, dumbell versions of these exercises can not be scaled up for a very long time. You can always add weight to the bar in the main barbell exercises but the point of diminishing returns and risk of injury arrives very quickly with dumbells.

Any guy who has progressed past the 100 pound dumbells for bench or shoulder presses starts to see this very quickly. How exactly are you going to safely get 120 pound dumbells into position for the bench press? Have you ever seen this procedure before? It either involves multiple people to help steady and hold the dumbells in place and then spot them, or it involves some half ass dumbell power clean, to box squat position then you have to lay down, under control backwards holding 240 pounds in your hands. All this is before you have even done a rep yet. And then what happens when your done? How do you set down in a safe and controlled manner two dumbells that were almost too heavy to pick up in the first place? Have you ever seen someone get “out of the groove” when doing heavy dumbell bench presses? Imagine dropping that 120 pound dumbell square onto your face.

At some point dumbells heavy enough to effectively create a training stimulus become extremely difficult to handle safely. Here in lies the next problem, if we are substituting dumbells for major barbell exercises, how exactly are we going to create an effective training stimulus while at the same time minimizing our risk of injury? Lets just say you’re a bodybuilder (a natural one) with a 300 pound max bench press, your best weight to stimulate the most muscle growth is about 75% of that, that roughly works out to about 225 pounds. We will probably have to round down and we get 110 pound dumbells needed to create an effective training response. The problem just gets worse if we decide focus more on strength.

Even if you can handle those 110 pound dumbells, how exactly are you going to increase weight from week to week? Most dumbells only come in 5 pound increments, but lots of research has shown that for upper body lifts, gains of 5 pounds per week are too high to sustain for long. Most dumbells that big aren’t modular, so we cannot use micro plates to make smaller jumps in weight as we do with the barbell. So what are we left with? Adding more reps, more sets? At some point you will reach a point of diminishing returns and you wont have the time or recovery ability to do enough volume with those weights to create a training response.

Do we even have to cover the two biggest lifts-the squat and deadlift and talk about how useless dumbells are for those? The limiting factor for weight used for either of those variations is your grip, or your arms. How exactly are you going to do goblet squats with a weight heavy enough to create a strength stimulus? If you think front squats are awkward to hold in the racked position try doing the goblet squat with a 100 pound dumbell. Split Squats or lunges become problematic as well. Even when using straps to take your grip out of the equation, you will still get to a point where getting into the proper position for these exercises with a heavy enough weight puts you in a very awkward and potentially dangerous situation.

Dumbells definitely do have a place in your gym bag, just not as your primary exercise. Dumbells are better suited for lighter exercises after the muscles have been pre-fatigued by a large compound movement. They can effectively be used to rehab an injury when the range of motion is so limited that a barbell cannot be used. Even then the point is to get back to a real barbell as soon as possible and continue the rehab. The problem with all the exercises that actually work well with dumbells is that none of them utilize a large enough amount of muscle mass or exhibit significant progress potential to warrant using them as a primary training movement. Those exercises are what they call accessory movements and you just can not base an effective program around them.

Despite all of this it isn’t impossible to see significant gains using only dumbells for certain exercises. I found the seated dumbell shoulder press to be a very good exercise back in my college years. I also thought I had great success with regular and incline dumbell bench press. I didn’t actually get to compare though so its possible I made shitty progress and didn’t even know it. I did eventually hit a plateau training that way and it is a 100% certainty that using the barbell bench press and overhead press as my staples during that time would have increased my progress dramatically.

Are you full of shit??

I’d like to welcome everyone to StrengthCycle.com, the goal of this site is to provide a place where people interested in acquiring general strength can come to find answers to their questions and helpful resources that will allow them to achieve their goals. This is my first official blog post and I’d like to begin with one major question that we should all ask ourselves, Am I full of Shit?

I’m going to assume that since you found this site that you already have an interest in getting strong and building muscle so that will not be a question we should ask ourselves, instead I challenge you, me and everyone else to ask this question of yourself. Knowing the answer will be the first step to achieving your/our goals, and not just in the realm of strength training, but in all of life in general.  Am I full of shit?

What prompted this question was a Sunday gym session. My current gym has just started doing a Sunday seminar/brain storm session on the topic of the three major lifts for powerlifting, the squat, bench and the deadlift. The plan is to have some experienced competitors troubleshoot the squat for everyone, have everyone lift and hit new pr’s and for everyone to share helpful tips and tricks they’ve learned over the years in relation to what helped them improve their lifts, technique or cope with injuries. This past Sunday was the squat seminar. Being that for my weight and experience my squat is my weakest lift and I am very self conscious about it, I jumped at the chance to attend.

What I saw at the gym was less then I expected, by a lot. I was expecting a lot of serious guys coming to lift and share their experience they had gained over the years and we all contribute something and learn from each other. Instead, with the exception of the experienced instructors, it was basically a shit show of meathead “bros” who have a huge ego and a very small, technically incorrect squat. Basically everyone was in a huge hurry to load 4 plates or more on the bar and attempt a huge new pr.  Lots of talk of 425 and 500 maxes and fake modesty. Everyone was talking about their knee wraps and their fancy training bullshit and their contest prep and yet in the end, with the exception of myself and the instructors there wasnt anyone there who could even squat double body weight to proper depth despite their fancy gear and advanced methods.

Now my squat is nothing special in the athletic world, and certainly nothing special in the real powerlifting world so I am the first to admit that I need work and advice and I welcome it. That brings me to the point of this article, Are you full of shit??

Are you lying to yourself and less importantly all the people you brag to about you real ability and skill level? Are you busy with all the bullshit advanced training articles and advice out there about building a big squat (or any other lift for that matter?) and not focusing on building some real baseline strength first?

I dont feel like a dick asking this question because I myself found myself in a very similar position not so long ago. due to my advanced “training age”, which is a subject for a different day, I thought of myself as an advanced lifter. I trained for a few local powerlifting contests at my local gym and I had actually done a 405 squat. Training for those contests as an advanced powerlifter set my progress back immensly. I was doing all sorts of advanced techniques like pin presses, heavy lock outs, chains, overload reps, 10 sets of 1, deadlift/bench everyday and all sorts of crap. I came to find out that my 405 squat was about 5 inches high despite looking parallel in the mirror and so on…I never told people I could lift numbers i had never lifted, I wasnt that full of shit but in regards to my level of advancement, I was certainly full of shit and my gains for the year ultimately suffered.

The minute I realized that I was a lot less advanced as far as training response is the moment that my numbers started going up. As soon as I picked a simple plan and started focusing on reps, and technique and not heavy singles my numbers quickly began to surpass my old B.S. numbers.

The point is this, being an advanced lifter has nothing to do with your knowledge of training, it has to do with your response to the training stimulus. As soon as you put you ego away and be honest with yourself your numbers will sky rocket.  At the small numbers it seems like bad technique helps you add weight to the bar but in reality bad technique hinders your true strength because first and foremost, bad technique is inefficient. Secondly since it is inefficient it can ultimately put the stress in the wrong place and cause injury.

Being an advanced lifter means you have gone up thru the weights to a point where linear progression is no longer working and new methods must be employed. This is specific topic is one for another day in  but a double bodyweight or less squat is noone’s genetic limit. If you’re full of shit and realize it, put your ego away and start over small, practice technique, progress smartly and before you know it your gains will have surpassed your b.s. totals and you’ll be in a whole new realm. You’re only lying to yourself. You’re only impressing people who dont lift. Stop trying to impress others and start trying to be honest with yourself and learning more and pretty soon it will be yourself that you have impressed the most.