Lifting Form (Stretching Rep Focus)

I dont. If i were to, I have a lot of mobility work to do before i even consider taking one up.

16 years of exclusively training for bodybuilding has taken it's toll on my mobility and overall athleticism. Another reason why I no longer have any interest in being bigger.
You might like practicing the stances, it keeps your spine, and body healthy and functional into old age. The wear on the joints is minimal because its a lot of static holding rather than grinding your joints with reps. Holding a deep shiko dachi stance for a while will give you a decent burn, and its functional healthy training.

I do these traditional Karate warmups everyday

Junbi Undo



And this a couple times a week.
Hojo Undo


And stance work everyday.


The thing your getting here its breathing, stretching, functional strength, and mobility, as opposed to MMA which I also trained , which is lacking these.

You can't see it, but the breathing is the hidden gem, and the relax tight, relax tight techniques, teach your body how to vary tension.
You feel better the more you do it rather than shittier lol
 
Preacher curls have your biceps at a slightly shortened position, you can still stretch them obviously but if you lay your back on a bench and curl or do a Bayesian curl your biceps hit a more stretched position than with a preacher curl. Another example would be like seated hamstring curls stretch the hamstring more than lying hamstring curls because the hamstring is pre stretched by sitting as opposed to lying but if you lean forward in the seat you can stretch them even more than a standard seated curl.
There's something about preacher curls that I think puts your biceps in a compramised position when stretched.. You see lots of tears on preacher curls, but not really with incline dumbell curls.
 
You might like practicing the stances, it keeps your spine, and body healthy and functional into old age. The wear on the joints is minimal because its a lot of static holding rather than grinding your joints with reps. Holding a deep shiko dachi stance for a while will give you a decent burn, and its functional healthy training.

I do these traditional Karate warmups everyday

Junbi Undo



And this a couple times a week.
Hojo Undo


And stance work everyday.


The thing your getting here its breathing, stretching, functional strength, and mobility, as opposed to MMA which I also trained , which is lacking these.

You can't see it, but the breathing is the hidden gem, and the relax tight, relax tight techniques, teach your body how to vary tension.
You feel better the more you do it rather than shittier lol

This is pretty much along the lines of what I was looking to do. I'll do some more digging into this. Thanks 🙂

Having taken a break from bodybuilding, I really see how restrictive it is on the body. This stuff and the kettlebells should go well together as they work to build functional strength and coordination.
 
There's something about preacher curls that I think puts your biceps in a compramised position when stretched.. You see lots of tears on preacher curls, but not really with incline dumbell curls.
If I do an isolation curl, I drop the weight alot ( like 1/3), 35 down to 25, high volume, never low
I try to get the pump from turning around fast with a low weight, rather than turning around slow with a heavy weight
 
Along the same topic, thoughts on if just plain stretching can increase size of a muscle???

I do a bicep stretch with a barbell 3x a week after I am done lifting.. I am doing it because my shoulder/bicep is giving me grief and this stretch has really seemed to improve on my issues, BUT my god the day after I do this stretch I feel the same soreness in both biceps (only one gives me grief).. It's not the same intensity of soreness, but its the same type of soreness..

I can't find a picutre and I'm late for work, I'll try later.
 
This is pretty much along the lines of what I was looking to do. I'll do some more digging into this. Thanks 🙂

Having taken a break from bodybuilding, I really see how restrictive it is on the body. This stuff and the kettlebells should go well together as they work to build functional strength and coordination.
Yeah dude, theres nothing healthier than being able to throw a bunch of kicks, learn front, side, round, hook, spin kicks, try them on the bag. Practice the boxing foot work. You will get what your looking for there way more than kettle bells and yoga ( do those too!).

Don't wait , or try to fix your mobility first, just go do trial classes at like 5 different clubs.

Goju Ryu Karate ( but make sure they are doing good stances and training hard, not a BS club)
Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, or real tradtiional judo or ju jitsu
MMA ( but be careful to find a smart club where they emphasize technique )


These are things you can learn and progress at for life, and stay healthy, but also build a positive mentality.
They are much more difficult and demanding than weight training, but your joints are safer. (just don't compete in BJJ lol)
 
Along the same topic, thoughts on if just plain stretching can increase size of a muscle???

I do a bicep stretch with a barbell 3x a week after I am done lifting.. I am doing it because my shoulder/bicep is giving me grief and this stretch has really seemed to improve on my issues, BUT my god the day after I do this stretch I feel the same soreness in both biceps (only one gives me grief).. It's not the same intensity of soreness, but its the same type of soreness..

I can't find a picutre and I'm late for work, I'll try later.
I would follow squat university on instagram, if you dont have insta go on youtube.
This guy has really smart solutions for pain and mobility issues,
The answer is almost never stretching from him though, its doing really strange resistance moves, that work you from angles you have never thought of.
And the take home is usually when you have pain in an area of a joint, its because you are either weak, or have limited mobility in the joints above and below that region.
If you knees hurt , its your hips you need to work on, that kind of idea. Hes usually right too.

If your bicep hurts try doing external shoulder rotations and stuff in these videos

 
Along the same topic, thoughts on if just plain stretching can increase size of a muscle
I mean maybe, but anecdotally if that were the case people wouldn't lift weights they would just stretch.

One thing is for sure, static stretching to elongate the muscle before working out is not the best idea, it reduces your performance during the lift, so the time do it is after.

Dynamic stretching before a lift seems to be good though.
 
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Along the same topic, thoughts on if just plain stretching can increase size of a muscle???

I do a bicep stretch with a barbell 3x a week after I am done lifting.. I am doing it because my shoulder/bicep is giving me grief and this stretch has really seemed to improve on my issues, BUT my god the day after I do this stretch I feel the same soreness in both biceps (only one gives me grief).. It's not the same intensity of soreness, but its the same type of soreness..

I can't find a picutre and I'm late for work, I'll try later.
There was a recent study about this type of hypertrophy. They used the calves and set up the leg in an apparatus to maintain the stretch. While there was hypertrophy it required much more than anyone would be willing to go through.
 
There's something about preacher curls that I think puts your biceps in a compramised position when stretched.. You see lots of tears on preacher curls, but not really with incline dumbell curls.
I think those injuries come from guys who typically do shortened partials, you know the easy part ego half reps, then on one eccentric they go deeper into the lift and tear a bicep. I do preacher curls because I like them and it's a fun variation for me but I work with less weight than most guys I see doing the half reps.
 
Along the same topic, thoughts on if just plain stretching can increase size of a muscle???

I do a bicep stretch with a barbell 3x a week after I am done lifting.. I am doing it because my shoulder/bicep is giving me grief and this stretch has really seemed to improve on my issues, BUT my god the day after I do this stretch I feel the same soreness in both biceps (only one gives me grief).. It's not the same intensity of soreness, but its the same type of soreness..

I can't find a picutre and I'm late for work, I'll try later.
There has been at least one good study that showed that just stretching under load will cause hypertrophy. However it was on untrained participants so I don't know if it would for a trained lifter. They do these studies on untrained lifters because it's easier to see gains than it would be for guys like us so it's easier to see if something was effective or not. Even if you see studies on trained lifters those lifters generally have less than 3 years of training age.
 
There has been at least one good study that showed that just stretching under load will cause hypertrophy. However it was on untrained participants so I don't know if it would for a trained lifter. They do these studies on untrained lifters because it's easier to see gains than it would be for guys like us so it's easier to see if something was effective or not. Even if you see studies on trained lifters those lifters generally have less than 3 years of training age.
I never got around to using Dante Trudel's methodology of intense stretching but he swore by this for growth as well.
 
Jay Cutler said "I never claimed to be the smartest guy, it was all trial and error" when he explain his sloppy technique.

Some shit is so complex, the logic escapes us, that's where experience comes in.

If you forget about it being musles, and body building, and you just think about how materials in general behave, you can get an intuition why the the pulsed stretching is a big part.

Try making a pizza from dough, stretch it with one long hard pull and see how it breaks.

Start over and make it with a bunch of small pulls gradually streching it into shape.

Same for elastic bands, metal, etc etc. Its a material property about deformation, elastic , inelastic, gradual deformation. Any material is going to deform better from multiple small deformations, rather than one big deformation.

Why should muscle be any different?
 
also consider that if you never go into the ROM where you muscle is elongated, are you really stretching at all ?

Its no wonder our muscles dont get much bigger from that limited ROM outside the stretch region. All we are doing is squeezing the muscle in the shortened position. Sure it gets tense from the electric current you pass through it, but its physically compressed there, not stretched.

Maybe thats why you get stronger, from a stronger CNS, stronger electrical stimulation. But your not getting bigger...hmmmmm......
 
Jay Cutler said "I never claimed to be the smartest guy, it was all trial and error" when he explain his sloppy technique.

Some shit is so complex, the logic escapes us, that's where experience comes in.

If you forget about it being musles, and body building, and you just think about how materials in general behave, you can get an intuition why the the pulsed stretching is a big part.

Try making a pizza from dough, stretch it with one long hard pull and see how it breaks.

Start over and make it with a bunch of small pulls gradually streching it into shape.

Same for elastic bands, metal, etc etc. Its a material property about deformation, elastic , inelastic, gradual deformation. Any material is going to deform better from multiple small deformations, rather than one big deformation.

Why should muscle be any different?
Yes, muscles are different. You're comparing inanimate objects to living tissue. The comparison only carries so much crossover.
Improving the elasticity of a muscle doesn't directly equate to similar hypertrophy. While stretching out shortened muscles, removing any scar tissue and freeing up glued fascia doesn't make a muscle larger it can provide better training outcomes and resulting in better growth stimulus.

It's cool that you're excited about your new growth but I can't help and wonder if it's just a result of better overall training. You said you used to train for strength and never paid much attention to range. Now you're more focused on the range and better form, I wonder if you're just getting the results of better training.
 
Yes, muscles are different. You're comparing inanimate objects to living tissue. The comparison only carries so much crossover.
Improving the elasticity of a muscle doesn't directly equate to similar hypertrophy. While stretching out shortened muscles, removing any scar tissue and freeing up glued fascia doesn't make a muscle larger it can provide better training outcomes and resulting in better growth stimulus.

It's cool that you're excited about your new growth but I can't help and wonder if it's just a result of better overall training. You said you used to train for strength and never paid much attention to range. Now you're more focused on the range and better form, I wonder if you're just getting the results of better training.
Muscles are still materials, theres still molecules forming structures, and they still have material properties.

I would be willing to bet if you took a corpse, and did a stress test trying to elongate the muscle, you would still get the most elongation from a series of small stretch pulses, than one long sustained pull.

Its because all materials have a range of stretch in which they are elastic. That means they go back to equilibrium position after the force is removed. If you exceed that range it becomes plastic meaning it wont go back to the same size before the force was applied after you remove the force. If you go too far into the plastic range of deformation, the material breaks, the molecules are not longer bound together.

What I am so focused on here, is specifically stretching to gradually enter the plastic zone, without breaking the material.

It is completely different from slowing down the reps, or contracting my muscles in some special way. I tried all that so masochistically for my whole life.

counting down for 8 seconds on the way down on every single bench rep, recording videos of it, holding 4 seconds, exploding out. I was a form Nazi. A martial artist turned weight lifter is going to try to make it as hard as possible, its the mentality.

Hitting 90degrees at the elbow, trying one fist off chest, trying a touch lower, that was how I did it most of my life.

I never tried to stretch before. When I say stretch I mean in the negative extreme, I literally focus on letting go and relaxing, and letting the weight stretch me. So to be clear that is the big change here in my training.
 
Muscles are still materials, theres still molecules forming structures, and they still have material properties.
Pretty sure I remember you from somewhere a while back, good to see you active again Sir.

Good thread. So many comments I could have made as it progressed due to not agreeing with many points or feeling like they were slightly off base so wanting to clarify. Love the subject matter though but just too busy rn to throw myself into it, I'd want to pull studies and shit to back up my thoughts and I just don't have the time or energy. I respect that the nuances are important and the effort you've used to back up your reasoning, I love it, I've just not had the time to bring any issues I've had to the thread. To do so now seems onerous.
Last bunch of posts have prompted me to put up a few thoughts in point form though. I really can't commit to any longer convo rn so here's some thoughts and opinions.

- I think it's possible that your newfound gains seem to be so dramatic because of the subpar methodology used previously. IOW partly because the delta between ROM then and now is so large that it's almost like you started fresh. Thinking of ur BP example of stopping well above sternum contact.

- Don't forget the freak factor. Most of the pro's would look superior to the gen pop no matter what they did in the gym. Often what they preach now at that level doesn't seem to be necessarily what got them there. Semi relevant example iirc Kai Greene is an ROM extremist (LOL) but I'm pretty sure I've seen him doing DB preacher curls using only about the top 40% ROM. The video of jay is another example he mentions locking the elbow a few times but when he demos the reps he is at least 15deg shy of locking.

- Re: materials elasticity. Living tissue has very different qualities than dead, this matters with respect to it's reaction to stress and it's hypertrophy response. This is an important part of the change of direction of mass stuff too.

-If a muscle is shortening under load it's working, I can see the benefits of emphasizing the stretch but other than in situations when you are trying to purposely take load away from another muscle it appears you are missing out on some stimulation of the target muscle. The Smith BP video you posted says the same I believe. Whether you feel it or not is almost immaterial, frankly this is bothersome to me because I believe in the whole mind muscle connection thing so accepting it's minimal contribution is hard.

- One way I can see a stretch working for "perceived" hypertrophy is through the fascia stretching. That's a very much debatable concept and I can't see it having a very big effect through exercise stretching. I bring it up because of my own anecdotal experience with a very painful "fascia planing" massage many many moons ago. Startling growth immediately.

- I believe in a deep stretch but not at the expense of the joints. For the longest time my hypertrophy recipe has been "just as much warmup as you need then 2 balls out sets, 1-2 movements per bodypart, roughly 2x a week" The warmup sets might include some sets of an easy 12-15 when you actually need to "warm up" or they might be as low as 1-3 reps with significantly sub maximal weights. Work sets 5-8 reps with last one coming very close to failure.
The warmup sets will have a relatively deep stretch, the work sets will hold back from the full stretch at the bottom when and where the joint might be compromised but otherwise form is identical.

-Eccentric. I'd love to throw about 20 papers up here that led me to my opinion below, I'd love it even more if some "name" somebody smarter than I would write an article expressing it better with all the correct terms and just enough science. I've taken a crack at it, the drafts could fill a dumpster if they were on paper lol.
Basically I think the biggest values from slightly slower eccentrics (with a measurable dead stop) come from two things.

First, they help to standardize what a rep looks like in a particular set. This is important when trying to measure progressive resistance. Call bullshit reps what they are, cheat, partial etc.

Second is all the things that we mostly look at as physiotherapy but improve hypertrophy outcomes by many means which add up-

You could consider much of this as indirect but here are some of the effects of Controlled lengthening of muscle tissue;
Upregulation of satellite cells, greater microtrauma, improved collagen synthesis in connective tissue, greater force production, improved tendon remodeling and alignment of cells (prevents bunching), improves all kinds of neuro functions including reinforcing pathways and adaptations to heavier load if loaded heavily. And maybe most importantly as already mentioned it does it more directly through the ways we are all more versed in (although not in a linear relationship with force production)

I emphasize Controlled because of the posts about Jay's sloppy form and the peak velocity stuff, I've never done the deep dive into how that affects things, interesting stuff though.

Anyhoo, above all in this game individual needs, comfort and strategies rule all else so I wish y'all the best in getting to your goals.
 
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All types of training will work and some will work better on some people, this is where I have a problem with all the science and technical aspects because every living being is different that’s a fact
Imo the real cheat code is finding what works for you, eating and sleeping like it’s your job and training like your child’s life depends on it
My friend loves flat bench and he has a monster chest, he trains just up down fast movements, no lock outs and limited rest period. I for the life of me can’t feel flat bench and much prefer and feel everything better and grow better doing a slow controlled motion on the way down and a real nice contraction at the top.
 
when you are trying to purposely take load away from another muscle it appears you are missing out on some stimulation of the target muscle
its true, and if your doing it in a way that is maximizing your stimulus and rest ratio, its an improvement.

take this example
@Rhyno
guy 1: does full rom, push pull but no iso moves.
He gets a tricep workout from benching

guy 2: does lower, or upper part of rom only, also no isolation moves
he gets mostly just chest, or mostly just triceps workout

guy1 is OK and not missing out
guy 2 is missing out

high volume, do every move guy well call him HVDEMG lol

HVDEMGuy: does lower part of bench press only
but the next day he does 3 tricep isolation moves
hes not missing out, and he can better tailor the stimulus without going overboard, because he has separated the moves out, tricep is not going to limit his chest, because his bench is mostly chest

Right now I am HVDEMGuy

Your not missing stimulation on the target muscle, you are actually targeting the target muscle more than you were before with the full ROM. ( target muscle in my case with lower half bench ROM is chest, not triceps, )

Same thing for dips. I do bottom half of dips only on chest day, its not some text book definition , I just stop going upwards in the ROM when I feel my triceps kicking in. Because I want to focus on working my chest, I want to stop when my chest is too tired to continue, not when my triceps are too tired to continue. Thats why I would argue against the "feel doesnt matter" and say feel is 100% what matters, and what you should be focussing on at all times for every move.

If you want to be a tough guy, and say well training harder you gain more, its not true we all know theres a sweet spot.

Its kind of like if you bougt a product that had vitamin B, and vitamin C in it, in a ratio of 60/40, and you had a max dosage of B that you cant exceed, but you never get enough C, you have to stop increasing the dose because your maxing out the B, you fail to ever reach enough C.
That situation describes shallow bench press. Triceps always gonna get tired out before the chest, if your move is 70% tricep, and 30% chest.

and if we just did arms everyday, were not getting any rest, so the point of just doing the bottom half of bench is actually to target the chest.
 
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1 arm dumbell rows done right
dude I figured it out

I went back and watched Jay Cutler explain this move.
The reason I could not get the stretch is at the bottom I tried to just hang straight down to stretch, didnt work.

He explains to move the weight forward away from your body to get the stretch at the very bottom.

So I did two things

1 put my foot on a cinder block so I can reach farther down before hitting the ground
2 move the weight away from me at the very deepest stretch ( tiny bit of a swing to my front in stretchy position)

Focused on trying to feel a stretch, and I got it !
 
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