Anytime's Come Back

Sat. night 5 o clock, stew’s cooking, it’s raining, girls are watching monster’s Inc 3d, and I decided to go bench, and I’m glad I did. Felt like the weights were spring loaded

bench--------TRX face pull with 3inch pipe(new fav exercise)basicaly rev bench holding on to 3" pipe
135x10------mex20
185x5-------mex20
225x5-------mex20
250x5-------mex5
275x5--------mex20, 275 felt like nothing, fastest reps I ever had, felt like could have got 10
250x10------mex28, killed it on both

45’DB incline-----Tbar row, I use a 4ft tow strap for rows, stand pretty upright

65sx10---------2pltsx20
90sx12--------3pltsx17
65sx17--------2pltsx23 didn’t feel like doing 5 sets like usual, so kicked up intensity, and dropped volume a bit, whatever

front plate raise-------rear latteral, screwing around with some EDT training, felt like blowing up shoulders

25plt-------10s went back and forth for 5min straight, didn’t count reps tonight, but might next time, and have a little contest to see how many reps I can get in 5min, at the end of each workout. Shoulders were on fire, littreraly had tears in my eyes

Throw togeather bench workout, loved it, loven training right now. It’s a bench workout, point is to hit numbers on bench, then have some fun with assistance. I think people forget this. As long as you don’t loose sight of goals (bench) have some fun, get some blood inthe targeted muscles. certainly did that. There’s a thread going on EDT gave me the idea. Google it, it’s a good way to finish a workout. Latter

The older, experienced lifters know exactly what I’m talking about. These are the guys that can do a biceps curl with a 20-pound dumbbell and get more out of it than a kid heaving a 135-pound barbell curl.

There’s an inverse relationship between what you do in the beginning of the workout and the end ? the guys pulling 600 pounds for reps seem to try less hard on the curls than the kid pulling 285 for his first double. Something to think about.

Quote from “Sir Wendler” himself, since it backs up everything I do, I thought it was cool.
If you haven’t scoured the net, and read every little thing the mans written, I highly recomend. Latter

Front squats day

sit ups-----step ups(side step 12" box-focus on blood in the quad)
mex20-----mex20per leg
+30x20----mex20per leg
+30x20—mex20per leg
me x45-----mex20per leg
Front squat----abwheel
135x5--------80x10
155x5--------80x10
185x3--------80x10
185x3--------80x10
185x3--------80x10
185x3--------65x20 switched to BB curls
185x3--------65x20
185x3--------65x20
185x3--------65x20
185x3--------65x20

Russian leg curls------KB swings
mex10----------65x10
mex10----------65x10
mex10---------65x10 hadn’t done these curls for a long while, had to help myself with a push up from the bottom, hams will be dead tomorow

All n all great assistance day for squat, and deads, if this day doesn`t help me get stronger at squat, and dead nothing will, 1500 or die haha. Latter

Woke up feeling sore in all the right places, my legs all around, without any lowback or butt soreness, just what I was after, also abs are sore as hell. The one thing that suprised me this morning is how sore my upper back is, it must be from front squats. Like I said I haven’t really done them before, and yesterday I did 10x3 with a fairly heavy weight for me, I tryed to stay as upright as posible, and the last couple sets my legs were still strong it was becomming a big struggle staying upright, and not leaning forward.

I guess thats why my upper back is so sore./ Anyway I’ll take any upper back work I can get, I love yesterdays workout, and I feel like I’m back in full swing, after a couple weeks of uncertainty switching a couple things around, things are locked in, and I can push the pedal back down to the floor. Latter

Quick workout today, woke up this morning to truck dropping off skid full of shingles, so I can do my roof :slight_smile: military day i’ve been doing it suported last couple weeks 75’ here goes

Military-----face pull TRX
135x10-------mex15
185x5---------mex15
225x3--------mex15
1885x11----mex22
10lb plate in each hand for 100 latterals, and out the door I go

Two things #1 100 reps rock, try it sometime. I use a 10 in each hand and keep reps super strict at first, get 40 easy, then a little work getting to 50, I rest 20esc still holding plates, then do 20 more, then rest 20 sec, then do 20 more, then the last 10–shoulders are screaming.

2 Ive been pushing and trying to put weight on the bar, on all six exercises at once ; Squat, dead, bench, military, front squat, clean, so Im reching my weight goals on a few, my short term goals for the front squat, military, and clean was 225, and then start adding reps instead of adding weight, so I`m there with military, and front squat.

With the dead, and squat, wanted to get to 365x5 and start adding volume withouit belt or wraps, and Im there with my dead, and for bench wanted to get 315x5 and add volume, play around with grip, and pause. So all my exercises but squat, and clean are at a weight Im happy with just add volume. This will let me really push my squat, and clean, and coast on the rest.

Im aiming for a mock meet at the end of Dec. To see where my maxes are, I need volume now to get in shape, so I wont fall apart at meet, and hurt myself, so other than squat pretty happy with progress, in 4mths. Latter

Don’t know if they’ll let me post a whole article but can’t seem to post link, and it’s the best thing I’ve read in years. Hope it shows up, if not mabey mods can link to article at, Lift-Run-Bang, thanks

Awesome write up from Stan Efferding

You don?t grow in the gym, you grow at the dinner table.

It?s never the training routine that?s limiting growth, it?s always the recovery phase, eating and sleeping. The vast majority of people who want to get bigger and stronger already train hard enough to grow, they just don?t eat and sleep enough to grow. They carry a notebook and want to show me every rep and set of every workout and routine they?ve done for the past three years, but there?s not one page with a record of their meals.

I feel bad for them because I know they work hard in the gym and they rarely miss a workout, but the notebook just documents all the muscle they?ve broken down and has no record of what they?ve been doing to build it up. I know because I did it myself. When I started college nearly 30 years ago there was no Internet and few reliable resources to find information about getting big and strong.

I started lifting two hours a day, six days a week, doing endless sets and reps of every exercise in Arnold Schwarzenegger?s Encyclopedia of Bodybuilding. I struggled to put on five pounds a year until I finally came across an experienced lifter who told me I was wasting my time with all that lifting and told me to go home and eat. By cutting my training back to an hour three days a week and hiking my calories up to over 5,000 a day, I was able to put on 20 pounds in less than a year!

In the book outliers, they speak of the 10,000 hour rule as the necessary amount of time to become an expert at any given sport. It doesn?t apply to bodybuilding or powerlifting. PowerBuilding is not a skill like pitching a baseball, sinking a three pointer, hitting a golf ball or even playing the piano. Those pursuits require thousands of hours of practice to perfect the motor skills necessary to become an expert.

PowerBuilding is very different. Lifting weights is not a skill (Olympic lifting not withstanding), it is simply a stimulus for size and strength, and it doesn?t actually build muscle, it just breaks down muscle. And lifting light weights that don?t force the body to adapt provide little to no stimulus at all for growth.

Don?t get me wrong, walking around the neighborhood and doing a few curls with the pink rubber hand weights is great for your mom to stay healthy, but you?ll never get huge and strong doing her workout ? I don?t care how many hours a day you do it!!

It really is this simple:

Lift heavy weights three times a week for an hour. Eat lots of food and sleep as much as you can.

That?s it. There?s nothing more to add. I?d love to be able to just stop there and trust that the person asking the question will do exactly those two things and get huge and strong.

But, there?s always a million nit picky questions to follow, the answers to which really make very little difference. People have become well informed and read everything they can about the sport, so they want to hear me confirm or negate every last theory, belief, bias, research study, proposal, hunch, testimonial and Dr. Oz episode they?ve ever watched.

The truth is, it doesn?t matter. It?s always a good idea to educate yourself and keep track of your training and diet, but there is no holy grail. Using a bunch of words nobody understands and trying to explain to yourself or others every detail of the Krebs cycle has very little effect on your progress.

I?m as bad as anyone about trying to learn all the latest training and nutritional information, but I understand that 99% of progress comes from those 2 simple rules: Lift heavy weights and eat and sleep a lot.

Therefore, I don?t let myself stray from the basics and I don?t waste half my time chasing the 1%, I spend most of my time and effort making sure I?m doing the 99% as hard and as consistent as I can. Train heavy, eat and sleep. Repeat.

What is heavy? Don?t over complicate the answer. If its too easy, add more weight. Repeat.

How much is enough food? If you?re not gaining muscle, eat more. Repeat.

Sure, if you try to lift too much weight with horrible technique, you?ll get hurt. Duh!

Sure, if you eat hot dogs and pizza all day, you?ll get fat. Duh!

Beyond that, don?t get caught up with all the details spewed out of the mouths of every card-carrying-weekend-online-personal-training certificate holder trying to tell you that you HAVE to keep your elbows tucked to your sides, arms perpendicular to the floor, don?t go past ninety degrees, slightly bend at the knees, breathe in, now breathe out, don?t lock out, two seconds on the way down, four seconds on the way up, 10 more, 9, 8, good, 7, 6 more, you can do it ? Somebody shoot me in my ?amp;@:/#? face so I don?t have to listen to that any more!

Likewise, don?t stock up on bags of shiitake mushrooms, seaweed and fish eyes because you heard Japanese people eat it and they live longer. They live longer because they have 1/10 the obesity rate of Americans so the fish eyes aren?t the answer, just stop being a fat ass and you won?t drop from a heart attack four years before a Japanese person!

Don?t chase the 1%, there is no magic training routine or diet that?s going to provide any measurable results over the basic principles for getting huge and strong: Train heavy, eat and sleep more.

Again, I should stop there because I don?t care if I piss off the wanna-be?s and know-it-alls we hear advising everyone who mistakenly comes within earshot of these self proclaimed experts and perennial advisers of the masses, but I know there?s some very hard working and passionate lifters out there who are struggling to get better results and need just a little more to chew on so they don?t keep wasting endless hours in the gym and untold dollars on the latest worthless pill or potion at the store.

For them, I will peel back one more layer of this simple recipe for results, but don?t be disappointed when you see behind the curtain and find out the Wizard of Oz has no magic powers. You?ll see it?s all common-sense stuff you already know and it boils down to hard work, discipline and consistency.

1 Train heavy
Hypertrophy is best achieved in the 5-10 rep range. Lift the heaviest weight you can handle for at least 5 reps and if you can lift it more than 10 times, increase the weight. Google ?Dorian Yates Workouts? to learn all about ?growth sets? so you understand that maximum intensity provides the stimulus for muscles to grow, not endless reps and sets.

For example, If you?re doing incline dumbbell presses and you do 10 reps with the 60′s, then ten reps with the 70′s, then 10 reps with the 80′s, then finally go to failure with seven reps plus two more assisted with the 100′s, you didn?t do four sets. The only set that counts is the growth set. The set you put maximum effort into, the one where you failed and struggled through a couple more assisted reps. You did one set.

The rest of those ?warm up? sets were a waste of time and only served to put unnecessary repetitive strain on your tendons and ligaments. Just do a few reps of each lighter weight to warm up on your first exercise then even fewer warm ups on subsequent exercises. Save your energy and your joints for the sets that count, the growth sets.

2 Don?t sweat the small stuff
How many sets and exercises? It doesn?t matter. I can build an entire workout around one or two max effort growth sets and go home and grow. Volume doesn?t improve results, intensity does. Don?t train for more than an hour and don?t count all the warm ups. Do one or two Max effort sets of a couple multi-joint mass building exercises and go home.

Don?t follow up a couple sets of 400 pound bench presses with cable crossovers and don?t do five reps of 500lb rack lockouts for triceps then try to follow that with some cable push downs, it?s a monumental waste of time!! If you can?t grow from heavy squats, the leg extension machine ain?t gonna help you one bit so skip it and do the squats! And quit doing curls in the squat rack simply because the lighting is better and the mirror is full length!

3 Less can be more
How often? Three days a week is plenty. Push, pull, legs is still a great way to grow. Chest, shoulders and triceps one day, back and biceps another and then legs. The basic movements like bench and dips work all the muscle groups in the push chain so you don?t need a bunch of isolation exercises if any. Same is true of T-bar rows and chins for the pull chain and squats for legs.

If you are powerlifting then transition from the hypertrophy phase into the powerlifting phase about 8 weeks out from a meet and begin doing heavy doubles and triples on the powerlifting movements followed by maybe one or two sets of one or two ancillary exercises afterwards.

For example, work up to two or three sets of doubles or triples on flat bench then follow that up with a heavy set or two of rack lockouts or dips and go home.

When I squatted 905 lbs raw in training, I was only squatting every OTHER week. Twice a month! I deadlifted on the alternate weeks and benched once a week. You heard correctly, I trained twice a week when I hit my 2,303 pound raw total and set the all-time world record. I would bench on Mondays and squat OR deadlift on Saturdays. Wednesdays was stretching, balance and core work. That?s it!

It?s about recovery. I didn?t do any ?light? days, waste of time. I have no idea what?s suppose to be accomplished by doing a few reps with 60% of your max. What about ?Speed work??. What about it? Waste of time!! If I don?t bench heavy on a Monday night then I sure as hell don?t do some really fast light reps or a bunch of push ups.

I load up the incline press with 500 pounds or grab the 200-pound dumbbells and knock out as many reps as I can or behind the neck press 315 for reps. I try to take my body somewhere it hasnt been before so it will adapt and grow when I eat and sleep.

The only reason to lift weights is to stimulate a growth response. Lifting half what you?re capable of isn?t going to stimulate anything.

I really have come to believe that all these fancy machines and ?cutting edge? routines are designed BY lazy people FOR lazy people who can?t or don?t want to do the hard work necessary to get results. How many years have you been going to gyms and see the same people lifting the same weights and looking the same as they did when they started?

Don?t let that be you. Take your body somewhere it hasn?t been before then give it enough food and rest so it can adapt and Grow!!! I know it?s difficult to look yourself in the mirror and admit that it?s your own fault if you?re not getting results.

It?s not because you don?t know something someone else knows or haven?t figured out the right set and rep scheme or bought the right blend of supplements, it?s because you need to get back to the basics and train heavy then eat and sleep with the kind of consistency and intensity that will create results.

4Eat lots of food and sleep as much as you can

The sleep part doesn?t need any explanation. Don?t run if you can walk, don?t stand if you can sit and don?t stay awake if you can sleep. Done.

What do you eat? The answer to this question has been made more confusing and complicated by everyone trying to sell you their version of the latest greatest diet or supplement program but it?s not rocket science either.

Eat numerous meals a day, each one consisting of a quality animal protein source (eggs, lean red meat, fish, chicken, milk) along with some complex carbs (rice, oatmeal, bread, pasta, vege?s). It?s that simple.

If you insist on percentages then go with 33/33/33 for fats/protein/carbs. If you?re gaining too much fat, reduce the calories. If you?re not gaining weight, increase the calories. Easy enough.

There?s your 99%. All the other stuff combined (meal timing, ratios, supplements, high carb, low carb, no carb, high fat, low fat, Atkins, Paleo, Zone, etc?) doesn?t add up to 1%. Most of the time, going to one extreme or another sets you back instead of improving your results.

I told you ? it?s common sense. Problem is, executing a successful plan every day, every week, every month and every year is the stumbling block. It?s easy to understand, but are you doing it?

Every time I?ve reached a ?plateau? in my results, I?ve never been able to solve the problem by implementing some new training routine or diet. I?ve always had to admit to myself that I wasn?t executing the 99% plan. You have to be honest with yourself about wasted workouts, missed meals or a few short nights of sleep. That?s always where the problem is.

So if you see me at the gym or a show, just tell me you already know what the problem is and you?re gonna train harder and eat and sleep better. That way we can skip all the worthless postulation about the 1% and talk about something more meaningful like your family or your business.

All my best!

Feel like shit picked up a bug, the whole family has had it I’m last, anyway going to try and train through it. Biggest day of the week for me Squats, and deads haha, see how it goes, I didn’t sleep 2hrs last night. Latter

Great read, I personally need to hear #2 about twice a month

Great words from Stan, thanks for posting

Really useful article, thanks for that.

The reason it’s even more awesome, and the reason most won’t tear it apart, and just take it for what it is, STAN, really BBing, or PLing, guy built a million dollar empire, than at 40 once he was rich as he could get, he turns all his effort, and focus to lifting, and isn’t satisfied with being a good BBer, or a good Pler,he has to kick ass at both. To those that don’t think he’s a great BBer, he didn’t really focus on it till in his 40’s, think about that. There’s a cribs episode on MD websight, where Shawn Ray goes to his house, it’s sick, million dollar home, with all the rides. He talks about waiting till he built his fortune before deciding to devote time to lifting. Awesome guy, awesome article. I think it should be read atleast once a week. Latter.

T Nation Thanks for letting me post it, A great article on the best sight

Alright Squat, and dead workout, Hangover effect always comes into save the day. Walked out to the garage to day feeling like shit, maybey 2hrs sleep, sick with some kind of bug. I warmed up with some squats shook off the bad feelings and broke both my PRs for the day, not only that but the bar speed was ridiculous, the 365 dead felt like I was going to clean it :slight_smile: So a bunch of factors at work here, #1 was the hangover effect. #2 my lower backs feeling more strong since I moved squat, and deads togeather. #3 It’s been hard switching to 1on, 1off routine, I really want to train more, but today made up for it, body felt rested, and weights felt light. Four days between lower body workouts, seems to be bang on !

Squat---------incline Db curl
135x10----------30x10-20
225x5-------------" "
275x3--------------" "
315x5---------------" " That was my max for the day, but it felt light, so I went heavier
350x3----------------" "
315x5----------------" ’
300x8----------------" " felt awesome by this point, set up for deads

Deads---------------" "
225x5----------------" "
315x5----------------" "
365x5----------------" "
315x5----------------" " reps came up like lightning, nice

Sumo
225x5 never done a sumo in my life, but felt like it, so
275x5 I’m sure my form was awefull, but it felt good
315x2
kirkrows
185 to failure

best workout I’ve had since I came back 4mths ago, hope they’re all like this from here on, but it was probably just the moon, or tides or somthing. Latter

Before I write out my bench workout, thought I’d take a min and explain my homemade TRX face pull set up. All I did was secure a hook in the wall at face level, I slide a 4ft tow strap through the hook (has a hoop stitched in each end), I then jamb my feet where the floor meets the wall, hold either side of the strap, and lean back. The 4ft strap puts me at about 60 degrees when my arms are straight, and about 40 degrees when I’m at the top of the movement.

I love these everyone should do them, I mainly use them for face pulls, but I do also have a 2’,6’, and 8ft length tow straps, they’re cheap at auto store, and I do use different lengths for rows, scarecrows, cubans. The longer the strap, the harder the pull is. Anyway lately I’ve been sliding a 3inch, by 4ft pipe through the straps, and pulling the pipe to my chest, from here on these will be called “rev bench” the 3" pipe is hard to hold onto, and works my forearms while I’m rowing to my chest, this pumps up my rear delts, and such real well. If I write face pull, this means I’m holding ends of strap, and pulling up by my ears. I like both these moves, and feel them in different areas. I would recomend anyone reading this, go spend 15$ and set this up for yourself at home. You can never do to many face pulls.

Bench Sun morn early, so I can get on and finish my roof :frowning:

Bench----------Rev bench
135x10----------mex20
225x5------------mex20
275x5------------mex20
315x3-------------mex20
275x5-------------mex20
250x9-------------mex20, pissed me off I didn’t get 10, felt tweak in left shoulder, so stopped pressing

'45 incline flyes-------------Tbar row (used 4ft tow strap here, to stay more upright, like a two handed krock row
65x10------------2pltsx20
65x10------------3pltsx15
65x10------------4pltsx15
65x10------------3pltsx20
65x10------------2pltsx27 everthings burning :0

100 laterals with 10lb plates. Latter

#1, If you don’t take care of workout supplementation, you might as well not train.
I guess I might as well throw in the towel now. :frowning:

The above post is somthing I read on TNation, a quote i thought was funny. Anyway today is Tues. I feel like shit, I’ve been going around the clock for a week, I’ve been shingling my roof every time I get a free hour, also picked up work with a local company, good money, but hard labour, and lots of hours.

My buddy moved this weekend, it was just me and him lugging fridges and washers, and such. Every part of me is beat up, hurt, and tired. Today I have the whole day off, wifes at work, and daughter’s at school. The house is a write off (needs to be cleaned) the roof still isn’t finished, the lawn needs to be cut, and I have a leg day to squeeze in :slight_smile:

I feel like going back to bed and forgetting it all, but it’s 10oclock and this is what I’m going to do, start with minimal workout, then get on roof for 3hrs, then pick up daughter from bus, come home and while I’m amusing her clean the house, and dishes. Love life !

My point is things aren’t always roses. This is where I love 531, i don’t really follow it, I use the number’s, and % roughly, but tripple the volume, and mangle the workout to suit my own needs, but on a day like today, where I have no time or energy, I can look at my 531 numbers and know exactly what the minimum I need to do is. Thats gold.

Today I need to warmup, and hit 205x3 in the front squat, thats it, thats a PR for me, and allows me to do 225x1 next week, hopefully when things are better, and I casn add more work. Latter

This was my feeling like shit Front squat workout I did at 10 this morning

Front Squat---------DB curls
135x10----------------30x20
155x5------------------30x20
205x4------------------30x20, only needed 3 for front squat PR, so 4 works on a day like this

This was it, had a rough sleepless few days, so did the min, and left. I had the day off so I ate much and rested much today, other than cleaning the house to keep wife happy, I didn’t do jack today, didn’t bother getting on the roof, even though it’s not done, somtimes you just need a me day. It’s 10 at night, and I’m feeling much better, I’m sure I’ll wake up in the morning, and attack the day at 110% like normal, I just tackled way to much, (even for me) the last 3-4 days, and it caught up today. Latter

Alright woke up this morning feeling like a million bucks, didn’t get a call for work so I decided to do my military day. I’ve hit my weight goal on these of 225, so i’ going to park the lift, and just hit arep max each day followed by a reverse ladder, same with my front squats @ 225, and my deads @ 365. This will allow me to p[ut more focus on my squat for a while, and bring up the weight there.

I also switched things up with my finisher, instead of one all out rest pause set of latterals, I’m doing seated DB clean, and press for awhile at thew end of both my upper body days for a couple different reasons. This is a great exercise with alot of carry over to the first 3-6 inches of the bench press. My goal is to get these up to 30s x 50reps, i got 20reps today, so hopefully add a rep a workout, till I get to 50

Military ---- pullups
135x10-----mex7
165x5-------mex7
225x5-------mex6
225x4------mex6
225x3------mex6
225x3------mex6
225x2------mex6
225x1------mex9-failure
Dips-------TRX,triset-- scarecrows-facepull-row (mechanical drop sets)
mex20-----mex10-7-10
mex20-----mex10-5-8
mex20----mex 7-7-7, love these, they kill my upper back,traps, and rear delts
Finisher
Seated DB Clean+Press, one all out set, rest pause–30lb DBs x 20reps, These are awesomw for the shoulders, if you’ve never done them, I highly recomend. Latter

Goals, It’s been on my mind alot lately, now that I’ve started to slow down with my weight increases. At first comming back after a long layoff, it was hard to program in my short, and medium term goals, because the weight increases were comming in spurts. Normaly if your training for a meet, you’d project what you wanted to lift at the meet, devide that by how long you had, and make up a program to reach your short, and mid goals, with a big number like 1500, or 2000 being your long term goal in the sport. Obviously 1500 (natty in my shorts, and shoes only) is my long term goals, but with no meet in the near future, I’m trying to figure out a plan for my goal setting.
What I’ve done in the past with some of the kids I’ve trained, is we do a mock meet, and then project a percentage increase for the year. Somtimes for 16-24yr olds, this could be a 25% increase on they’re total for the year, thats not likely for me at forty, lol. What I’ve been thinking, and what I’ve seen work well in the past for most average lifter’s is a 10-15 % increase for the year. I’m still feeling pretty out of shape right now, I feel like if I went for a max single in the squat opr dead right now, I fall apart on the floor ( my arms might pop off)

So I’m training for max reps right now, and doing light conditioning, and cardio, trying to get back in shape as my strength returns. With all that said, I’m going to tighten up my short, and mid goals, with 1500 being probably around a year, and a half a way realisticaly (no belts, no wraps, no drugs, this time anyway) So here goes !

Right now I have a mock meet planned for the week between Christmass, and New Years. We do this every year because the kids are home for collage, and we set they’re maxes for the year, This year for the first time, I’ll set my own as well
I liked to have my dead at 405x5, my squat at 365x5, and my bench at 315x5, This should hopefully give me around a 1200-1300 total. I can then project my 10-15% for the year, and design a proper percentage based program accordingly. pretty simple stufdf.

The only reason I did this long winded goal setting rant, other than to have to look at it every day, is because I really don’t think guys do thius enough. They just randomly go to the gym, and try to gewt stronger, with no defined goals. Latter

Squats, and Deads
squats/curls-DB incline
135x10—30sx15
225x5—30sx15
275x3—30sx15
315x3—30sx15
350x5—30sx15
315x5-4-3-2-1

Deads/sit ups
225x5—mex20
315x5—30x20
365x5—30x20
curled the MT bar for 100 reps

Today was a shit workout, but I learned alot, don’t know why I didn’t figure this out sooner. My legs are weak as shit, as soon as I go past 315 in the squat my back takes over, and moves the weight. I knew comming back from this extended weird layoff that I’d have some imbalances, and now I’ve found them. Today after the heavy squats I had nothing for the deads. Because of my strange workout past I have a overly strong back, and this is allowing me in the squat, and dead to move more weight than I should, and if I don’t take the time to fix this now, it’s only going to get worse. This is likely the reason I had to stop squatting, and deadlifting on seperate days. Anyway I’m not going to make any drastic changes, i think I’ll keep my squat at 315 for awhile, working on pausing and perfect form, keeping tension on my legs. I’m going to also start squatting 225x5 at the start of my other 3 days. This should up the volume, and force my legs to catch up. This is all a learning process, and hopefully stay on target to reach my goals for Jan. 1st. Latter