Archive for September, 2009
Waiters Walk Workout
What the heck is a waiters walk?
Well if you are into kettlebells at all then you know what it is.
Added that today to the routine.
Monday’s Kettlebell Blast
Arounds – 20 each way
Halos – 20 each way
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
Waiters Walk – 20 yards (no rest)
2 Hand Press – 10 (no rest)
Waiters Walk – 30 yards (60 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
Waiters Walk – 20 yards (no rest)
2 Hand Press – 10 (no rest)
Waiters Walk – 30 yards (60 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
Waiters Walk – 20 yards (no rest)
2 Hand Press – 10 (no rest)
Waiters Walk – 30 yards (60 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
2 Hand Swings – 20 – (no rest)
Snatch 10 – 5 each side – (30 seconds rest)
Waiters Walk – 20 yards (no rest)
2 Hand Press – 10 (no rest)
Waiters Walk – 30 yards (60 seconds rest)
2 Hand Press – 30 (15 each side)
Complete
No commentsFat Burning Bodyweight Circuit Exercises
Fat Burning Bodyweight Circuit Exercises
By: Craig Ballantyne, CSCS, MS
Turbulence Training for Fat Loss
When you travel, you worry about missing your workouts and eating poorly…So you must plan ahead for both (apples and almonds for planes, trains, & automobiles)…and bodyweight circuits for “no-equipment fat burning”.
And while I have bodyweight exercises that are just as hard as the bench press and barbell squat in one of my bodyweight workouts, today we’ll focus on replacing intervals with bodyweight circuits.
To do a bodyweight circuit…
a) Pick 3 lower body exercises
b) Pick 3 upper body exercises
c) Alternate between a lower and upper body exercise without rest, till you are done all 6 exercises
d) Rest a minute.
e) Repeat 2-3 more times until you are done 20 minutes
For example, this is a great circuit that doesn’t need any equipment
1) Prisoner Squat (12 repetitions)
2) Elevated Pushups (8 reps per side)
3) Single-Leg Deadlift (10 reps per side)
4) Close-grip Pushups (As many reps as possible)
5) Jumping Jacks (30-60 reps)
6) Cross-Body Mountain Climber (12 reps per side)
Whew. That’s pretty advanced…for a beginner, we’d slow it down like this and take some breaks between exercises…
1) Wall Squat (8 reps)
2) Kneeling Elevated Pushup (5 reps per side)
3) Lying 1-leg Hip Extension (8 reps per side)
4) Plank (30 second hold)
5) Jumping Jacks (5-10 reps)
6) Side Plank (15 second hold per side)
Safe travels, and of course, always check with your doctor before beginning a fat burning bodyweight circuit exercise program.
About the Author
Craig Ballantyne is a Certified Strength & Conditioning Specialist and writes for Men’s Health, Men’s Fitness, Maximum Fitness, Muscle and Fitness Hers, and Oxygen magazines. His trademarked Turbulence Training fat loss workouts have been featured multiple times in Men’s Fitness and Maximum Fitness magazines, and have helped thousands of men and women around the world lose fat, gain muscle, and get lean in less than 45 minutes three times per week. For more information on the Turbulence Training workouts that will help you burn fat without long, slow cardio sessions or fancy equipment, visit Turbulence Training for Fat Loss
No commentsPull Up Programming Beyond Your One Set Max
Article By Will Williams, Sr. RKC
www.rkc2005.blogspot.com
Team, you are lucky to be here. The pull up and I have been homies since 1997.
“How many can you do?” the USMC recruiter asked me.
“What’s a perfect score?” said a sloppy, uninitiated 18 year old variant of myself.
He then tells me that Marine Corps Physical Fitness standards require a minimum of 3, and that 20 is aces. Once you leave recruit training, however, most Marines can rip off a minimum set of 10.
“Well” I say, “here comes 20″. And out came 7. 7 pull ups. I wanted to disappear from the face of the Earth. And within 24 hours, my biceps and back muscles were so sore I contemplated calling in sick from my job as an appliance delivery boy. Soon I would be a man, but not before I learned to clear the bar, repeatedly, in my sleep.
The Presidential Fitness Exam, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and The Russian Kettlebell Challenge Level II Instructor Certification are some of the respected organizations that employ the pull up as a measuring stick. Not everyone who practices pull ups actually practices them, however. Many cats and kittens simply mount the bar and flex their joints. Some dig on pull ups for muscular development, adding degrees of sexiness to their frame by chiseling out back muscles. Some athletes use the pull up as a warm up, aerialists and gymnasts to name a few. Marines have to eat pull ups for morning chow and then chew on a 5KM run for lunch. In this space here, we speak only of one pull up, the Tactical Pull Up [TPU], as Russian Kettlebell Challenge Chief Instructor and flexibility guru Pavel Tsatsouline has dubbed it. Below are the factors which define a TPU. Before I list the standards, allow me to tell you that unless you are painfully short, or a 5th grader, no pull up unit sold on television to be mounted on your door, or in your door jamb, will suffice. You must begin from a dead-hang. ‘Nuff said.
* -The bar is of a height which allows the user to hang free of the ground, with arms and legs extended at the elbows and knees respectively.
* -The pull to ‘chinning’ is one controlled motion, with no jerking, kipping, or swinging.
* -The user’s neck touches the bar, satisfactory performance being accepted once the chin and jawbone are above and in front of the bar.
Performance of the pull up is clearly described here, yet cannot be taught online. You must operate with a bar, text nearby, and visual aid in the form of an excellent instructor who can demonstrate, communicate, and motivate. This token will cover how to improve the numbers of your perfect pull up, with simple programming following flawless execution of a pull up, meeting the markers listed above. If you have trouble performing a pull up correctly, seek out an RKC II or hop the train to 30Th Street Station in Philly and I’ll heal you.
Regardless of your one-set-max, if you can perform a minimum of three pull ups, you are able to train with me. Enjoy the simplicity of The Trinity, and email me when you hit 10 or more pull ups in one set. If you are under ownership of a sick strength-to-bodyweight-ratio, and you feel that you must add weight to your pull ups, so be it. Maintain the course I set for you, and hang a bell off each foot, tough guy.
I have calculated the time involved to perform each ascending set, or ‘ladder’ of 1-2-3 repetitions, heretofore known as ‘rungs’, and we are looking at about 3 minutes. I will not tell you why I selected this format, or how I know it works, but I will tell you that one the most cutting edge, knowledgeable, and ballsy trainers on this planet has accepted my request to help him write a book on the Pull Up. What I have learned about the pull up has come from my experience in the USMC, and in the RKC system. Listen to me, and every day is pay day. You will train to achieve a number of reps each session by performing multiple sets of low repetitions, opposed to a few maxed out sets that would leave you sore, and unschooled. Print this out when you are done, and head to the bar. Not the pub, the bar. Big difference.
Legend:
One ladder to 3 rungs is commonly known as 3 sets of 1, 2, 3 reps. You will complete this ladder of 3 rungs in 3 minutes, including your rest time of a full minute & thirty seconds, before repeating. In your rest time, perform shake out drills and vibrations that unravel your tissue, preventing residual tightness and reduced joint mobility. You may perform this initial workout as many times as you like before adding another ladder, but once you add another ladder, it may be wise to reduce other movements in your weight training arsenal. When you are ready to advance, check back to this group for further text tutelage, or email me. My online programming is only as good as your technique, be advised.
The Trinity:
1 pull up, rest :30
2 pull ups, rest :45
3 pull ups, rest 1:30
This is one LADDER of three RUNGS. Perform three ladders, and you have nailed 18 pull ups. If you had tried for 18 pull ups without getting off the bar, you may be in trouble. You may be humbled the way a fat, beer bellied Eric Williams Jr. was in ‘97 before he emerged from recruit training as his alter ego, Big Willy.
For the first 5 sessions, this is all you will do. On the sixth day, you will gain a ladder. The documented version of a 4 ladder, 3 rung session would look like this:
1 pull up, rest :30
2 pull ups, rest :45
3 pull ups, rest 1:30
1 pull up, rest :30
2 pull ups, rest :45
3 pull ups, rest 1:30
1 pull up, rest :30
2 pull ups, rest :45
3 pull ups, rest 1:30
1 pull up, rest :30
2 pull ups, rest :45
3 pull ups, done. 24 Pull ups total.
After 8 sessions of four ladders, you will test your one-set max. If it is ten reps or higher, add a fifth ladder and blast off. Stay tuned for more from this online user group created by Sandy Sommer RKC, and in due time you will know how to program yourself all the way to 20 reps.
Semper Fidelis,
Will Williams, Senior Instructor
Russian Kettlebell Challenge
www.rkc2005.blogspot.com
Obama, Health Care and Common Sense.
WARNING! – You may not like this post.

Is it ok for me to say the health care debate is making me SICK? Like ABC (The All Barack Channel), SWINE FLU get the public in a mass panic sick.
I know it’s a VERY touchy subject. I know people have VERY strong opinions about it.
But what nobody really wants to talk about is the fact we could simplify the heck out
of this by doing one thing:
Take better care of ourselves.
We have this incredible love affair with making things so complicated. It’s absurd really.
Small, simple changes to the way we live our lives and the entire country would be SOOO
much healthier.
Let me give an extreme example:
I heard of a story of someone eating TWO Big Macs every day for lunch. Yes, two of them.
And yes, EVERY day. At least that is what I was told.
Now, this person started at around 300 pounds when they made one simple change to their
life that caused them to drop 50 of those pounds very quickly.
Can you guess what it is?
This person started eating ONE Big Mac for lunch every day instead of two.
Is that ideal? Of course not.
Is it a start? Sure is.
Now, I’m afraid I do not know what happened to this person. I hope they used this as
a starting point and went on to make similar changes and shed a whole lot more weight.
But the moral of the story is simple: We’re making things a whole lot harder than
they need to be.
Small changes add up to BIG results. They always have and they always will.
Does it solve all our problems? No.
But does it solve a lot? Yeah, it really does.
So what do you do now? I suggest you read this awesome special report on
Six of the Most Powerful Antioxidants to help you better understand the role
nutrition plays in the anti-aging process.
Check out Pro/Grade Anti Aging.
Yours in health,
JP
PS – Just click the link below to discover some simple, but powerful, nutrients
that may have confused you in the past.


