Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The One-Ten-25 Exercise Plan

This workout is part of our compound conditioning series which is one of the styles of workouts we like to do.

Here are a couple of significant points. First this training follows the system of Super Strength. It just condenses it down into a particularly fast version and lets you work on not only every level of strength, but takes you endurance to a higher level due to the strength work combined into high level endurance workout and once you've evolved will take your strength higher because you are able to actually lift heavy while you're breathing hard and exhausted. By building the facility to do that you build the facility to sustain your strength in a fight, not just have enduring strength, but high level strength that endures. This is the missing factor for most self-defense skills conditioning and actually even for most athletic and pure power exercising. Everybody who trains endurance, trains so to maintain a moderate pace for a lengthy period of time, typically even people who are clever enough to use alternative type conditioning STILL miss this, however it opens up a whole new world when you are able to display intense power even if you are tired. Not just before fatigue or not just having endurance but lacking that basic savage strength to start with.

So here it is:

Pick one exercise that lets you train each level of strength. That is one max exercise, one rep exercise and one conditioning exercise. With the goal of this exercise, attempt to pick something that does not overlap too closely with each exercise. As an example you might pick max barbell squats or dumbbell presses, 10 to 20 rep barbell squats and 25 or more rep sledgehammer swings.

Each of these exercises is entire body and effects the other, although not in a way that you can't perform them in a fast sequence. Also remember that we pick the numbers for instance, not to be written in stone. 1-5 heavy reps, 10-20 moderate reps and 20 to 50 getting reay reps. I really like to perform 4 to 5 circuits of the exercise plan. Moving thru the entire thing as speedily as achievable. This takes a while to become used to, but it is worth it. I love to keep an eye fixed on the total time for the exercise plan and try and decrease that, but you could set a particular rest interval between the rounds and progress that way. You can work with the same weight thru out or add for the heavy sets or reduce as obligatory for the rep sets, but the endurance set should stay the same as much as possible. You can also change the exercises, we just listed one as an for instance.

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