I have been finding it increasingly difficult to answer all the questions asked through this
website, as well as the facebook group and my personal messages.
I decided to create a subreddit, as a forum of sorts to support the Start Bodyweight routine.
The forum format is more appropriate to questions and answers than a blog, and it will give followers of the program a chance to interact and support each other.
Feel free to post about your progress, to share your thoughts and suggestions about the program, and make sure to support new users.
http://www.reddit.com/r/startbodyweight/
Sunday, 30 March 2014
Saturday, 29 March 2014
Embodied knowledge and bodyweight training
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Long Jump, 1887, Eadweard Muybridge |
As I walked down the street, the stranger nodded at me
almost at the same time as I nodded back. There was a moment of instant
recognition, the way riders usually acknowledge each other when they come
across another motorbike on the road; a shared experience.
I am no great fighter, but I have trained in boxing and a
few other martial arts, and I can usually recognise a fighter, less by the
distinctive marks their face sometimes carry, but rather by the way they move,
and look at other people and gauge and assess them… This particular guy was
clearly a boxer.
Similarly, a dancer will move in a particular, almost
inexpressible way that makes them easy to spot: a certain poise and grace. Long
distance runners, sprinters, gymnasts, climbers… all have distinctive movement
patterns honed through countless hours of drilling the same motions. A tacit
knowledge that is carried within the body, and constantly accessed even in the
ordinary movements of daily life.
Saturday, 22 March 2014
Get lean with bodyweight exercises
This is the story of this site’s banner: the story of an
article that was never written. And it all started with my cat!
I must confess, I have limited amounts of energy: I let
work get the better of me quite easily, and when I get busy, my whole life
seems to collapse. Winter and springtime are always a busy time for me.
Around this time last year, I realized the winter months
had taken their toll: I’d fallen into a slump, my training had virtually become
non-existent, and I’d piled on a few pounds. At 80 kg (176lbs or 12 ½ stones) I
was the heaviest I’d been since I could remember.
It was then that I decided I could actually make the best
of a bad situation: I could use this opportunity to write an article on how
bodyweight strength training could be used for weight loss. I would put
together a 12 week program, and I would document my progress with weekly
pictures. No fake before and after pictures here, no photoshopping: just clear
weekly photos, from the same angle, illustrating my progress.
Monday, 3 March 2014
Twelve principles of bodyweight training
It’s
not about how much you can lift, but whether you can move and control your own bodyweight
in the first place.
2. Progressive
overload does not discriminate.
It does not matter if you lift
iron or your own bodyweight ; for the same weight lifted (or equivalent
mechanical disadvantage) your strength gains will be the same!
3. Stay out of the
comfort zone
Work
on your weaknesses: chances are, you’ve been avoiding certain movements and
patterns all your life simply because you weren’t very good at them. This will
create imbalances in the long run, and stall your progress. Venture out of your
comfort zone: it’s the only way to grow and improve!
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