3 Strategies

Have you ever found yourself bored with your workouts?

If so, you’re not alone.

In fact, I’ve recently received a bunch of emails from folks saying one of their biggest stumbling blocks with getting results is that their workouts are repetitive .

Let’s discuss 3 Strategies You Can Use to AVOID This Trap.

[1] The Reframe:

When I do a workout (or a “training session” as I typically call them), I’m never focused on being entertained.

I’m ALWAYS thinking about my goal.

That is -

What is the goal of my training?

What achievement do I want to accomplish?

I’m not looking to be entertained.

“Entertainment” is a completely unrelated category - a whole ‘nother box that gets checked.

So, when I’m hoisting bells overhead, or squatting, or whatever…

I’m ALWAYS thinking about the result .

Then, I’m focused on that process -

Feel of each rep…

Managing fatigue…

Body position…

And adjusting accordingly when necessary.

Then I log my work in my training journal read more so I can see what I’ve completed and look back on my work so I can measure what worked and what didn’t - to see what was effective or not.

So that makes the process simple .

It’s kinda like following a recipe.

No one ever becomes bored of following the recipe to bake chocolate chip cookies.

They’re focused on the scrumptious chocolatey gooey goodness they're about to enjoy.

So, reframe - look at the reason you train - differently .

Think “OUTCOME” NOT Entertainment.

From my coaching experience, this is THE MOST VITAL way to view your training and to avoid “being bored.”

[2] Variation vs. Variety:

Most people jump from workout to workout to “ keep things interesting” or

“ confuse their muscles ”...

You know, “switch things up .”

Part of this is because of #1 - boredom.

But the other part is bad information - the mistaken belief that variety is necessary to create an adaptation.

(Many times we can trace it back to P90X and “muscle confusion.”)

That's actually far from reality .

For example, legendary guitarist Eddie Van Halen, started playing the piano at age 6. He then moved to the drums. Played a short stint on the bass. Then he finally moved on to the guitar.

The result?

Voted #1 in a Guitar World Magazine poll for "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time" poll.

Ranked #4 in Rolling Stone’s 2023 list of the "250 Greatest Guitarists of All Time."

And “Eruption,” my favorite guitar solo of all time and voted number 2 in Guitar World's readers poll of the "100 Greatest Guitar Solos".

Eddie didn’t play the same song all the time. He played different chords and notes - mixed and matched - and made them his own.

Likewise, you can still use the same 2, 3, or even 5 exercises, but change your:

Load - heavier (yes really)

Sets - increased or decreased

Reps - fewer or more

Rest periods - brief, moderate, extended

Training frequency - 2,3,4,5 even 6x a week

This is called “variation”.

[3] Specialized Variety:

This is arguably one of my preferred approaches .

Simply put, it’s using different versions of the same exercise.

In his book, A System of Multi-Year Training In Weightlifting, World Champion Coach and lifter A.S. Medvedyev details over 100 different exercise variations for the Snatch, the Clean, and the Jerk.

Examples:

Power Snatch

Power Snatch from above knee

Power Snatch from below the knee

Power Snatch from the hip

Power Snatch from platforms

Power Snatch without hook grip

Power Snatch on a box

You catch my drift.

For your KB work, you can do the following :

Clean

Clean from a dead stop

Clean from dead stop beneath the body

Bottoms Up Clean

Clean outside the legs

Press

Press with a pause at the sticking point

Press with 2 pauses – sticking point and lockout

Bottoms Up Press

Push Press with a drop to rack

Push Press with a slow negative

Push Press with active negative

Again, you understand.

Apply these three approaches to your KB workouts – ahem – training – and you’ll never have to worry about being tired of it again.

Stay Strong,

Geoff Neupert.

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