This is How I Train

by Ben Bruno – 6/29/2012 This is How I Train


Recently TC sent me an e-mail asking for an article detailing how and why I train.

It wasn't an easy write. Self-reflection, it seems, isn't always a walk in the park.

This is How I Train


When I first started seriously lifting weights, my goals were straightforward. I was coming off a major back surgery where I'd dropped from 163 pounds down to 122 and, not surprisingly, I felt and looked terrible.

I wanted to strengthen my back and put back on the weight I'd lost. I didn't particularly enjoy lifting weights but saw it as a necessary evil to get bigger and stronger, so I did what I always do when I try something new: I dove in head first.

I'm an all-or-nothing guy. I can't stand half-assing things.

Probably the best life advice I've ever gotten came from my good buddy's dad who recently passed away. Back in high school I was bitching about having to do something I didn't want to do and he pulled me aside and told me something I'll never forget:

If you have to eat shit, don't nibble.

That's exactly the approach I took to lifting.

I've made a lot of mistakes along the way and it continues to be a learning process, but one thing I can say with the utmost confidence is that I've always tried my absolute best right from day one. Any mistakes I've made sure haven't been from lack of effort, and if anything have probably come from trying too hard, which at the end of the day I can live with.

My biggest goal initially was to get rid of my back pain because it was essentially ruining my life.

I was told core strength was the key to feeling better so I began training the core like crazy, doing every exercise imaginable for hours on end. I didn't really know which exercises were best so I did them all, just to be safe. And lots of them.

Then I heard spinal stability was the ticket so I started planking like a banshee. I wouldn't be surprised if I spent more time in a side plank during 2006 than any other human being on the planet.

Talk about boring.

Lo and behold though, I started feeling better. Once that happened, I transitioned out of rehab patient mode and shifted my focus to getting "jacked."

Weighing about 145 pounds soaking wet at the time, I figured "jacked" was probably about 165 pounds. Little did I know what I was in for.

This is How I Train


I spun my wheels for a little while using volume routines out of the magazines before stumbling across the work of Dante Trudel, creator of DC Training, which I still believe to be one of the best programs around for building muscle.

DC Training really resonated with me. Reflecting back now, it's pretty basic stuff, but that's exactly what makes it so effective. Pick a few key compound exercises that work best for your body and attack them with reckless abandon, pushing yourself hard and keeping a logbook to chart progress. Rinse and repeat. I like simple.

I'm the type of person that likes to put my own spin on things so I never followed Dante's program exactly as he laid it out, but I definitely internalized his principles and still use them today to guide me.

If you want more specifics, here's the basic template I followed for almost four years.

I got a lot bigger and stronger training in that fashion, but more importantly, it made training fun. I enjoy pushing myself to my limits. Volume training certainly works, but to me it feels like a whole lot of foreplay with no real climax, like the training equivalent of blue balls. High intensity training is more my speed: all fun, no fluff.

Why I train now is completely different from why I used to train.

Getting bigger is no longer a priority. I've hovered between 178-185 pounds for the past three years or so and have no intention of going much over that. I realize that's small by internet standards where everyone's 250 pounds at 2% bodyfat, but I'm content where I am.

I've never been after the bodybuilder look. I guess if I had to tell you my ideal physique, it'd be a gymnast (just with bigger legs). Truth be told, I feel my best when I'm around 170, but every time I drop weight my lifts take a dive and I freak out and gain some weight back.

At this stage I want to get as strong as I can at my current size. I realize that this makes strength gains a lot harder to come by, but I'm okay with that.

My reasons for training are far more mental than just physical. I still want to get stronger and fight tooth and nail every day to do so, but it's not because I really care how much weight I can lift. I don't compete in any strength sports so the numbers really don't matter. What matters to me is that I'm always striving to get better.

I've become much more process oriented and much less results oriented, which is extremely important for long-term success. If you live and die by your numbers alone, you're bound to get discouraged when you hit plateaus, which are inevitable the longer you keep at it.

Training used to be a means to an end but it's morphed into an end in itself. I train for the sake of training.

I just feel so much better about life. In a lot of ways, the iron is my therapist.

It clears my head, relieves stress, gets rid of pent-up anger and aggression, and almost instantly puts me in a better mood regardless of what's going on in my life outside of the gym. It's very rare to find me in the gym without a smile on my face. The gym is my "happy place."

I might honestly have a mild addiction, but it's an addiction I intend to maintain for as long as I can.

This is How I Train


I've made some slight but important changes to my training to ensure that I stay healthy so I can continue making progress for years to come.

My basic training principles are still very similar. I prefer to pick a few exercises and really hammer them hard as opposed to doing a bunch of different exercises. I actually do even less now than I used to. A typical workout is 2-3 exercises, maybe four if I'm feeling frisky. I usually plan on three exercises and then adjust on the fly based on how I'm feeling.

I'll usually do 4-6 sets of each exercise staying in moderate rep ranges of 5-10 or so. Every so often I'll drop down and crush some really heavy weight or do a high-rep burnout set at the end of my workout just for kicks, but I find moderate reps to be my sweet spot to still get stronger and build muscle without beating myself up too much.

I alternate between total body training (as outlined here) and an upper/lower split, usually switching back and forth every three months or so. I resisted total body training for a while but the more I try it, the more I like it. When I'm doing full body workouts I'll lift 3-4 days a week, and when I'm using an upper/lower split I'll go 4-5 days a week depending on my schedule.

Time abiding, I try to end most workouts with some form of conditioning work, either heavy sled drags or something on the Airdyne bike (aka my nemesis).

I also still strongly believe in keeping a logbook. In fact, if you only take one thing away from this entire article, I hope it's this because it's the single most important thing you can do for yourself. I don't even care what program you do – as long as you're beating your logbook using mostly compound exercises, you're probably on the right track. I've developed a love/hate relationship with my logbook, heavier on the hate. That's what you want.

One big change I've made is that I now only train to technical failure as opposed to complete and utter failure. I used to take my sets deep into failure, letting my form slip quite a bit along the way. I have this uncanny ability to block out anything and everything during my sets, including pain. I've gotten nosebleeds, coughed blood, you name it (oddly though, I've never puked). I'd literally just shut my brain off and go until I couldn't move the weight anymore. It may sound crazy, but I loved training that way because it allowed me to test my mettle on a regular basis.

That being said, it's definitely not the smartest way to train if your goal is to stay healthy for the long haul. I accrued a bunch of minor injuries by getting greedy and trying for that one last rep when I should've put my ego aside and packed it in.

Training in that manner would also leave me brutally sore for days. Back when I was in school, that wasn't so much of a problem because all I had to do outside of my workouts was sit around and study, but now that I'm on my feet coaching and demonstrating exercises all day, I can't afford to be hobbling around like I just got my ass kicked.

I still push myself extremely hard, but now I terminate the set when I know I won't be able to get another rep with good form. When in doubt I end it early. Live to fight another day.

The other big change I've made is in regard to exercise selection. I used to base my lower body work primarily around the deadlift and squat (front squat actually). I love those exercises and if I had my druthers they'd still be the cornerstones of my program, but I started to find that as I got stronger at them, I began to break down.

It's one thing when you're deadlifting 315 and front squatting 185, but once I got up to deadlifting over three times my bodyweight and front squatting twice my bodyweight I could no longer justify it given my injury history, no matter how much I liked them. Those that haven't experienced a serious back problem may not understand this logic, but if you have, then you know exactly where I'm coming from.

I now use a lot of single-leg squatting and lunging variations to replace squats along with single-leg deadlifts, glute-ham raises, and bridges to replace deadlifts. If I get the urge to squat or deadlift, I do it at the end of the workout for higher reps so I don't need to use as much weight. An example of how I structure my lower body sessions can be found here.

I think everyone should learn how to squat and deadlift extremely well when starting out, but I don't think everyone is meant to load them extremely heavy. Let common sense be your guide on that one.

Find compound exercises that allow you to push hard without pain and make them your bitch and you'll be all set.

This is How I Train


My basic nutritional template is as follows:

I base my diet around healthy foods that I enjoy so it isn't a struggle to follow. Life is too short to be worrying about food all the time.4-5 meals a day.Protein at every meal. Protein sources include chicken, turkey, eggs, fish, and chocolate Metabolic Drive® Low Carb. I also love (rare) steak and eat it every chance I get when I'm out, but I don't eat it at home because I don't have a grill and steak cooked on a frying pan just sucks.Carbs earlier in the day. I lift in the morning, so I'll have carbs for breakfast before my workout and then in the next few meals afterwards. I eat fewer carbs on days I don't work out but I still have them in the first couple meals of the day. Carb sources include quinoa (the kind that looks like oatmeal but tastes way better), rice, potatoes, black beans, and fruit.Lots of healthy fats later in the day. These include nuts, eggs, and my absolute favorite, avocados.Eat vegetables and/or fruit with every meal.I've never counted calories but I'm a creature of habit and eat a lot of the same things every day so it's very easy to make adjustments. I lower my carbs slightly if I'm trying to lose weight or increase them if I'm trying to gain weight. Everything else stays pretty much the same.I don't keep any junk food in my place (which I highly recommend), but I do enjoy some treats when I'm out with friends. I'm not that anal.

I call it a nutritional template as opposed to a diet because it's really not that rigid. I suppose I should really just call it sensible eating.

I've tried other diets but this is what I always go back to because it allows me to feel good and maintain a body composition I'm comfortable with without feeling deprived and having food run my life. That's really the key in my mind. Find something you can sustain and roll with it.

I honestly don't know a whole lot about supplements so I really just defer to those that do. If enough people that I trust and respect recommend something and it seems safe, I'll try it.

With that in mind, I like Flameout™, Glucosamine, Curcumin, ZMA®, and BCAA Structured Peptides.

I'm a lightweight when it comes to stimulants, so except for the occasional cup of coffee, I avoid pre-workout stimulants.

For me, the best way to ensure a good workout is to get a good night's sleep the night before. Since that's not always possible, a close second is splashing some ice cold water on my face and blaring some loud hip hop in my car on my way to the gym.

I didn't include my actual training program because that's really not the point of this article. I want to get you thinking about how to start creating your own program based on your individual goals and needs.

In order to do that though, you first need to know what your goals and needs are. I can't give you that answer. They may be completely different from mine, and that's fine. I don't think there's a universal "best" program out there and you've got to find what it is that makes you tick.

To do that, take some time and do something similar to what I just did. Write out why you train and what your main goals are. Then ask yourself if your current program is in line with those goals. If the answer is yes, give yourself a pat on the back and carry on as you are. If the answer is no, then you've got some work to do.

I tried my best to outline what I do and why I do it, but if something wasn't clear or you'd like me to expand, just let me know in the Livespill below.


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172 Rock Songs to Train To

Welcome newcomers! If you want to build muscle, lose fat, boost your performance and improve your health you're in the right place. To make sure you don't miss out on any new updates you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed and sign up for my newsletter list. Thanks for visiting!

eddie 225x300 172 Rock Songs to Train ToI polled the Renegade Nation on my Facebook and Twitter pages asking for your favorite rock songs. I wanted strictly rock, not metal. So Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Social Distortion and that kind of stuff. Some of the answers we got could definitely be considered metal and what category do you put Rage Against the Machine in?

Anyway, here’s a compilation that will hopefully give you some good ideas to your workout play mixes.

Please do me a favor and post your top 3-10 favorite rock training songs that AREN’T already listed here.

Let’s get a huge list together for all members of the Renegade Nation to add to their libraries.

And share this with your friends so they can add theirs.

Thanks.

Here’s the list:

3 Doors Down- Life Starts Now
A Perfect Circle- Judith
AC/DC- Back in Black
AC/DC – For Those About to Rock
AC/DC- Hells Bells
AC/DC-If You Want Blood.
AC/DC- Shoot to Thrill
AC/DC- Thunderstruck
AC/DC- Whole Lotta Rosy
Aerosmith- Jailbait
Aerosmith- Lightning Strikes
Aerosmith – Reefer Head Woman
Alice in Chains- Check my Brain
Alice in Chains- We Die Young
Alice in Chains- Would
Alterbridge – Come to life
Arctic Monkeys – Brainstorm
Arctic Monkeys- Teddy Picker
Audioslave – Cochise
Audioslave–Show Me How To Live
Avenged Sevenfold – Chapter Four
Bloc Party – Helicopter
Blur – Beetlebum
Blur- Track Two
Brainiac – Hot Metal Dobermans
Breaking Benjamin- Shallow Bay
Breaking Benjamin-Simple design
Bruce Springsteen- Radio Nowhere
Bruce Springsteen- No Surrender
Bruce Springsteen- Any live version of Prove It All Night
Buckcherry- Crazy Bitch
Buckcherry- Lit Up
Burden Brothers- Come On Down
Cake- Going the Distance
Chevelle – Antisaint
COC- Clean My Wounds
Collective Soul- Gel
Creed- Are You Ready
Creed – On My Sleeve
Elliott Smith – Coast to Coast
Dropkick Murphys- Johnny I Hardly Knew Ya
Dropkick Murphys- Shipping Up to Boston
Dropkick Murphys- Warriors Code
ES-Posthumus-Pompeii
Faith No More- Everything’s Ruined
Filter – Hey Man Nice Shot
Finger Eleven – Livin’ in a Dream
Five Finger Death Punch- Bad Company cover
Foo Fighters- All My Life
Foo Fighters–Bridge Burning
Foo Fighters- Everlong
Foo Fighters- Monkey Wrench
Foo Fighters- My Hero
Foo Fighters- Pretender
Fuel – Bittersweet
Gaslight Anthem- 59 Sound
Godsmack – Awake
Godsmack – I Stand Alone
Godsmack-Keep Away
Godsmack- Sick of Life
Guns ‘n Roses- Mr. Brownstone
Guns ‘n Roses- Welcome to the Jungle
Hinder- All American Nightmare
Hinder – Get Stoned
Hives – Hate to Say I Told You
Incubus- Circles
Iggy Pop – Lust for Life
INXS – Disappear Kid Rock- Bawitdaba
Killing Joke- Democracy
Killing Joke- In Excelsis
Killing Joke- Savage Freedom
Korn- Twisted Transistor
Led Zepplin- Achilles Last Stand
Led Zeppelin- When the Levee Breaks
Lenny Kravitz- Are You Gonna Go My Way
Linkin Park- Bleed it Out
Linkin Park- Faint
Linkin Park- Numb
Liz Phair – Supernova
Lynnard Skynyrd- Gimme Three Steps
Matthew Good Band – Load Me Up
Motley Crue- Kickstart my Heart
Muse- Assassin
Muse- Hysteria
Mutemath – Electrify
My Chemical Romance – Helena
Nine Inch Nails – Ruiner
Nirvana – Blew
Nirvana- Smells Like Teen Spirit
Nonpoint – Bullet With a Name
Oasis – Hello
Papa Roach- Kick in the Teeth
Papa Roach – To Be Loved
Pearl Jam- Animal
Pearl Jam- Corduroy
Pearl Jam – Given to Fly (Live on Two Legs version)
Pearl Jam- Go
Pearl Jam- Last Exit
Pearl Jam- Love Reign O’er Me cover
Pearl Jam- Porch
Pearl Jam- Rearviewmirror
Pearl Jam- Sonic Reducer cover
Peal Jam- Spin the Black Circle
Pearl Jam- State of Love & Trust
Pixies – Debaser
Public Image- P.I.L.
Queen- Another One Bites the Dust
Queens of the Stone Age- Go With The Flow
Queens of the Stone Age- Millionaire
Queens of the Stone Age-The Sky is Falling
Rage Against the Machine- Bulls on Parade
Rage Against the Machine- Down Rodeo
Rage Against the Machine- Guerilla Radio
Rage Against the Machine- How I Could Just Kill a Man
Rage Against the Machine- Renegades of Funk
Rage Against the Machine- Sleep Now in the Fire
Rage Against the Machine- Testify
Red Hot Chilli Peppers – Parallel Universe
Red Hot Chilli Peppers- Suck My Kiss
Rev Theory – Hell Yeah
Rise Against – Give it All
Rollins Band – Get Some Go Again
Rollins Band- Illumination
Rollins Band- One Shot
Rollins Band- On My Way to the Cage
Rollins Band- Shine
Rollins Band- Starve
Rollins Band- Step Back
Rush – Tom Sawyer
Saliva – Back into Your System
Saliva- Superstar
Shaman’s Harvest – Dragonfly
Sparta – Taking Back Control
System of a Dow- White Limo
Stone Temple Pilots-Dead & Bloated
Stone Temple Pilots- Sex Type Thing
Stone Temple Pilots- Unglued
Social Distortion- Ball & Chain
Social Distortion- Don’t Take Me For Granted
Social Distortion- Far Behind
Social Distortion- Ring of Fire
Soundgarden- Jesus Christ Pose
Soundgarden- Loud Love
Soundgarden-Outshined
Soundgarden- Spoonman
Soundgarden- The Day I Tried to Live
Staind- So Far Away
Stevie Ray Vaughn- Little Wing
Ted Nugent-Stranglehold
Temple of the Dog-Times of Trouble
Them Crooked Vultures- No One Loves Me and Neither do You
The Killers – All These Things I Have Done
The Killjoys- Rave
The Raconteurs – Salute Your Salution
The Subways – Rock n Roll Queen
The Strokes- Juicebox
The Strokes- Subway
The Strokes- Reptilia
The Velvet Underground – Beginning to See the Light
The White Stripes- Icky Thump
The White Stripes- Seven Nation Army
Thousand Foot Crutch- All the Way Live
Three Days Grace-Animal I have Become
Toadies- Mister Love
Tom Morello & Bruce Springsteen- The Ghost of Tom Joad
Tool-Forty Six and 2
Van Halen- Hot For Teacher
Van Halen- Panama
Van Halen- Right Here
Van Halen- Running With the Devil
White Zombie – Thunderkiss 65

Tags: 3 Doors Down, Ac Dc Hells Bells, Ac Dc Thunderstruck, Alice In Chains, Arctic Monkeys, Bloc Party, Bloc Party Helicopter, Blur Beetlebum, Breaking Benjamin Shallow Bay, Bruce Springsteen, Bruce Springsteen No Surrender, Buckcherry, Burden Brothers, Cake Going The Distance, Es Posthumus, Facebook, No Surrender Bruce Springsteen, Reefer Head Woman, Rock Ac Dc, Stone Temple Pilots
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5 Big Reasons Why All Men Should Train Like Athletes

5 Big Reasons Why Men Should Train Like Athletes




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If you're like me, you probably want nothing more than to feel like a 'super-stud' every time you take your shirt off in public. You want to have the confidence to say, 'Boy, this sweaty shirt is chaffin' me', then reach over your shoulder and tear your shirt off like Brad Pitt in Fight Club. When you know that your pecs look like two soup bowls inserted beneath your skin, and your abs are as hard the asphalt you stand on, it's tough to keep your shirt on!


Today you are gonna learn the top 5 training principles that you MUST implement in order to make your physique and performance goals... a reality. But, before I open the info-floodgates, there is something you've got to understand. Men... all men, should recognize that we are athletes and our training programs must reflect this.


Even if you're a 'pencil pusher' or a 'white collar crook', the essence of your being is athletic. In order to see any type of fitness results it is essential to recognize that Squats, Power Cleans, 40 Yard Dashes and Vertical Jumps are not only for NFL Combine participants... they are for you!


1. You're An Athlete By Design


The foundation principle of everything that I teach all begins with one extremely powerful phrase:
"We are primal beings living in a modern world"


Our physical bodies have been unchanged for thousands of years. In fact, today, our bodies are an exact expression of what our ancestors were over 100,000 years ago. It is believed that it takes about 100,000 years for 0.001percent of a genome to change... so yourself and Primal Man are for all intents and purposes... the same.


What has changed is how WE have chosen to live, if you can even call it that. As we have 'advanced' in technology we have regressed in physical strength and stature.


We function at a much lower capacity than were inherently capable of. This is analogous to those people who buy off-road vehicles that will never see anything but concrete! You've been given the ultimate athletic tool... use it.


2. Short, Hard and Intense Workouts Yield Lean, Hard and Muscular Bodies


When you spend over an hour in the gym sitting on useless 'fitness machines' while you're waiting to do your 'next set'...your nervous system's primal response is to release Cortisol and Glucocorticoids - which are stress hormones, (these make you sick, sad, fat and, stupid) in response to your body thinking... "Holy Cow, we've been training for over an hour... perhaps we're being chased by a tiger and need to preserve body fat", then it begins sacrificing muscle tissue for energy! This is called The Catabolic Effect. Also, workouts exceeding 1 hour have been shown to be associated with a rapid decrease in androgen levels.


This is why marathon runners look so emaciated... id much rather look like one of those Lock, Stock & Ready Sprinters with muscles rippling across their backs and abs.


3. Aerobics and Cardio Training Is Boring & Ineffective


Strength coach Charles Poliquin has coined the phrase "Chunky Aerobic Instructor Syndrome" (CAIS).
You've seen them, they do cardio all day long... don't you think that they would be a bit leaner? Well, there is a scientific reason as to why they are cubby even though they bounce up and down on those colorful blocks all day long. In fact research has shown that aerobic instructors who taught an average of 3 hours a day maintained a body fat of 22-24% - mind you, that Olympic athletes hover around 9%.


Especially with repetitive exercises like aerobics the body adapts quickly to the stimulus and ceases to respond to the stimulus. Also, you begin to become very fuel-efficient... Listen, think of a metabolism that has adapted to long treks of cardio as being a Honda... it burns very little fuel (i.e. fat) but can go miles and miles. Think of a metabolism that is roaring with increased mitochondria activity (as is present in someone who weight trains with circuits) as a Hummer, large fuel combusting metabolism!


Here's Why this is so important! You want a stronger heart, without the fat saving response of long boring cardio treks. That is why I teach my clients how to do work capacity sets.
We take 4-6 exercises and complete them back to back with no rest and aim to complete them all with in about 2 minutes... if your heart is not ready to pound out of your chest after that, then maybe you should visit your veterinarian!


Here's a simple circuit that you can do at home - first 20 squats, then 20 lunges, then 'step ups' on a bench 10 each leg, finally do 10 squat jumps and get it all done in less than 90 seconds! Kick-ass workout!


We begin every session with Plyometrics and then get right into 3-5 "work capacity" sets for upper and lower body.


4. Get High on Oxygen & Sunshine


Besides the fact that training on treadmills and 'sit down' exercise equipment is less effective than getting your feet on the ground and learning how to use your own bodyweight, training indoors can be detrimental to your performance and fitness results.


As 'primal beings' we are in need of several vital elements and forms of energy. The suns rays are nourishing to your mind as well as body. It is well documented that those who live in the cooler northern climates that enjoy less sunshine through out the year are several times more likely to suffer from depression.


Also, if you're like most Americans you work and live indoors (maybe). In fact, the average person spends 90% of their time indoors. Several health experts have propounded that our homes and workplace are the most toxic environments in our lives. Many studies have stated that toxic particles and fumes found in your home and workplace include: air fresheners, spray starch, paints, mothballs and even 'new car' smell kills more people every year than automobile accidents!


So, what do you do? Train in the great outdoors! When I train my Strength Camp clients at Vinoy Park in St. Petersburg Florida, not only do we benefit from the sweet bay breeze but also the scenery is beautiful enough to give a nun spring fever!


5. It's Gotta Be Fun!


Drop out rates for exercise programs are almost as high as the drop out rate in my old middle school! The bottom line is, if you don't enjoy it - you wont do it. The most effective way to ensure that you stick with your training program is to change it often. This doesn't mean hop from one modality to the next before you get any results. It means stick with your weight-training program for a minimum of 90 day but change the exercises you use for each body part at least every 3 weeks.


This not only keeps you interested but also, your nervous system will be challenged with the new exercises and be forced to adapt. This yields fast and long-lasting results!


Coach Elliott Hulse CSCS is Tampa Bay’s most ‘in demand’ Strength Coach and Fitness Trainer. His programs get Athletes and “Tough Guys” fast, stronger, leaner and, meaner. Get Your FREE Audio Mp3 Report Men’s Fitness Secrets Revealed at [http://www.MensStrengthAndFitness.Com]


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