I believe CT once stated that he designs programs or program principles based on a problem he’s trying to solve.
I was wondering if anyone had any insight into the specific problems that are addressed by the more widely published programs written by CT, beyond the training for performance and the performance look.
I, Bodybuilder
HP Mass
Indigo Programs
Layers
I’m just trying to get some insight into how to best incorporate his principles in my training. I love a few of things I’ve picked up from CT along the way including his high frequency approach and his approach to lat/traps training. They’ve made a huge impact on how I look and feel.
It’s not just problems. I talked about this in an livespill.
My passion in life is not only training, but finding ways to get results.
The way my brain works is that I’m trying to find a specific way to get a lot of results. I become super passionate about that method and I try to find out all I can about why it works and how I can tweak it.
When I find what I consider to be the best application of that type of training, I lose my interest and start looking for a new way to stimulate results. I do not stop or change because the approach doesn’t work anymore but rather because I KNOW it works well and I want to find something else that works great.I was as passionate about golf as I am about training. Each month I would study the swing of a pro and try to understand it and copy it. When I thought that I understood it well, I lost interest and tried to uncover the mysteries of another golf swing.
[quote]Christian Thibaudeau wrote:
It’s not just problems. I talked about this in an livespill.
My passion in life is not only training, but finding ways to get results.
The way my brain works is that I’m trying to find a specific way to get a lot of results. I become super passionate about that method and I try to find out all I can about why it works and how I can tweak it.
When I find what I consider to be the best application of that type of training, I lose my interest and start looking for a new way to stimulate results. I do not stop or change because the approach doesn’t work anymore but rather because I KNOW it works well and I want to find something else that works great.I was as passionate about golf as I am about training. Each month I would study the swing of a pro and try to understand it and copy it. When I thought that I understood it well, I lost interest and tried to uncover the mysteries of another golf swing.
[/quote]
Sounds like CT is a program hopper… Maybe you’d get better results if you stuck with the same program for a few years, CT.
[quote]Christian Thibaudeau wrote:
It’s not just problems. I talked about this in an livespill.
My passion in life is not only training, but finding ways to get results.
The way my brain works is that I’m trying to find a specific way to get a lot of results. I become super passionate about that method and I try to find out all I can about why it works and how I can tweak it.
When I find what I consider to be the best application of that type of training, I lose my interest and start looking for a new way to stimulate results. I do not stop or change because the approach doesn’t work anymore but rather because I KNOW it works well and I want to find something else that works great.I was as passionate about golf as I am about training. Each month I would study the swing of a pro and try to understand it and copy it. When I thought that I understood it well, I lost interest and tried to uncover the mysteries of another golf swing.
[/quote]
Sounds like CT is a program hopper… Maybe you’d get better results if you stuck with the same program for a few years, CT.
[/quote]
Actually I would! That’s why I’m a much better coach than athlete
[quote]Christian Thibaudeau wrote:
It’s not just problems. I talked about this in an livespill.
My passion in life is not only training, but finding ways to get results.
The way my brain works is that I’m trying to find a specific way to get a lot of results. I become super passionate about that method and I try to find out all I can about why it works and how I can tweak it.
When I find what I consider to be the best application of that type of training, I lose my interest and start looking for a new way to stimulate results. I do not stop or change because the approach doesn’t work anymore but rather because I KNOW it works well and I want to find something else that works great.I was as passionate about golf as I am about training. Each month I would study the swing of a pro and try to understand it and copy it. When I thought that I understood it well, I lost interest and tried to uncover the mysteries of another golf swing.
[/quote]
Sounds like CT is a program hopper… Maybe you’d get better results if you stuck with the same program for a few years, CT.
[/quote]
Actually I would! That’s why I’m a much better coach than athlete
[/quote]
i resemble that remark.
thats a line from the bowery boys.
it is rewarding .
dont you think?